2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, September 26, 1961 GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN DuPLATE RESEARCH CHIEF TO ITALY When the annual meeting of the International Com- mission on Glass is held in Florence, Italy, this week, an Oshawa man will be the only Canadian ct 7% delegate present. He is Dr. Stanley Bate= son, director of research at DuPlate Canada Ltd. here. The purpose of his cur- rent 10 - day visit to Florence is two-fold: To attend the ICG meet~ ing (of which he is a mem-~ ber) as the representative TORONTO (CP). -- Provin- cial Treasurer James Allan, 66, announced Monday he will seek the leadership of the Ontario Progressive Conservative party at a convention here Oct. 23-25. Mr. Allan si he had delayed ] Ss didacy ' |cause he liked short campaigns. He was nominated as PC can- didate for Haldimand - Norfolk riding in 1951 just four weeks before the election. Chairman of Mr. Allan's or- ganization committee is High- ways Minister Fred Cass. Ear- lier, Mr. Cass was rumored to] be a candidate for the leader- ship. Treasurer Seeks PC Leadership be-|to give their names. States Fear | For Life Of Brother HAMILTON (CP) -- The brother of a man executed Sa- turday by a Cuban firing squad said Monday he feared for the {life of another brother. Lloyd Tabares was comment- jing on the execution by the Cas- tro government of William Ta- bares, 35, for "counter-revolu- tionary activities." He said Monday he was afraid Mr. Cass said he had been as- sured of support for Mr. Allan by Public Works Minister Con- nell, two other cabinet min- isters, one minister without port- folio and a number of members of the legislature. He declined FEELS YOUNG ENOUGH Asked whether he felt young enough for the office of pre- mier, Mr. Allan said: "If I didn't feel young enough 1 NOISY REMEDY VANCOUVER (CP) -- The woman in the downstairs suite, alarmed by an unexplained rumbling noise upstairs, called police. Counterfeiters, she guessed. No so said the elderly man upstairs as he explained how he rolled a bottle beneath his feet for 30 minutes each night--an exercise to help his arthritis. / BACKACHE May be Warning by wouldn't be undertaking it." Premier Leslie Frost an- nounced his retirement as party leader in early August. He is 65. Others seeking the leadership an older brother, Frank, now living in New York, would go to Cuba "and if he does it'll be 'shoot on sight' for him, too." William, one-time captain in Castro's r e v o 1 u tionary army, "I.believe that a smooth tran- are Energy Resources Minister sition of authority will be in the |Robert M a c a u lay, Education best interests of both our prov-| Minister John Robarts, Health| chief of police. ince and our party," Mr. Allan {Minister Dr. Matthew Dym- [loud said William became said at a press conference. ond, Attorney-General Kelso Ro one of Castro's top advisers but | As a former minister of trans berts, Reform Institutions Min-|tha¢ the next word he received port, highways and public|ister Wardrope and Rev. A. W. here said the dictator had a works, Mr. Allan said he be-| Downer, former Speaker of the go on sight" order out for lieves the people of Ontario|legislature. him. "will want a vigorous leader of | _-- of the American Ceramic Society. To present two papers at the European Scientific Union of Glass Symposium on "Strength of Mater- ials" -- the subject of his papers will be "The Strength of Glass". was executed in Camaguey province where he was briefly Kidney Pills now. LIFE . ... Is Just A Bowl Of . Dr. Bateson is a grad- DR. BATESON uate of Dalhousie Univer- sity, N.S. and received a Ph.D, in Physics from the Uni- versity of Toronto in 1936. He did considerable work in- "Atomic Physics" at U of T and Dalhousie in the broad experience and seasoned judgment to guide the affairs of | the province at this decisive time." Relates Seeing | Man Beaten-Up "Bill finally got fed up with Castro's ideals and got out when| he saw how the Communist in-| fluence was infiltrating the! country. "Bill wrote me a letter saying | he had joined the United States Cherries When you have new, easy-care carpets on Choose the floors. from the largest sel- ection of imported and domestic carpets in Oshawa. Nu-Way Rug Co. 174 MARY ST. HAMILTON (CP)--Mrs. Mary |Central Intelligence Agency and Zadvorny testified Monday that had volunteered to go under- f saw Frederick Sweet kick ground and set up a communi-| strike a 51 - year - old man| cations system to overthrow] 16, then flee down the|Castro." Re Sad William Feliived 10 " Cuba in disguise in June but| ard Bonnet fas betrayed by his girlfriend. | Mr. Tabares did not say why| Frank might be going to Cuba. | da 1930's, working part of the time under a fellowship. ROUND AIR TRIP DAILY NEEDED The news that Nordair Airlines will include Osh- awa in its new "Seaway-Route" -- effective October 1st. -- is a big step forward, yet there is at least one disappointing angle to the announced schedules. It will be impossible to make a round trip in a day from Oshawa to such points as Windsor or Montreal, yet Nordair will have flights from these points passing over Oshawa daily -- if these flights included Oshawa the round-trip would be possible. Perhaps it is a lot to ask for a start, especially in view of the fact that Nordair had so many reservations about coming here, but the two-way, daily trip would be of great advantage to local businessmen, many of whom plumped hard for the Oshawa service, The Windsor flight leaves Oshawa at 9:15 a.m, and the Montreal hop takes off from here at 9:30 a.m. RAPS "PRO" INFLUENCE IN MINORS "Jackie" Cole, son of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Cole of 277 Division street, has declined a try-out offer with Boston Bruins of the NHL, He has enrolled in an engineering course at the 'Advises Canad Drop Criticism CALGARY (CP)--Canada will|street. |improve ifs trade situation in, Sweet and Edw {the long run if it "plays its/both 22, are being tried fo cards right" over Britain's en manslaughter in connection try into the European Common with the death of Ettore Ben-| Market, Liberal Leader Lester venuti, who died in hospital 13 Pearson said Monday. days after a streetcorner beat- Mr, Pearson said Canada Ing. speech to UN General Assem- | Valerian Zorin looked down at must drop its criticism of the, Mrs. Zadvorny said she saw fice has received a receipt for | --(AP Wirephoto) |inevitable U.K. move, and try Sweet kick Benvenuti' twice in a clasp which George Browns | bly at United Nations in New | some papers and V. S. Seme- i | wid x b : ---- ---- ---- re v x -- |instead to convince the mem-|the stomach then hit him in the|of Victoria, B.C., won for serv- 3 bers of the ECM to form an|face. ice in the Boer War. t Atlantic free trade area. | Benvenuti's "whole body OVEIMMEINT mis process of conomic in seemed lo sen" "ve sed tegration is essential if we are He fell over backwards, hitting Shelters lems that face us," Mr. Pear-|said Bennett did not strike the| SU RVIV : L 2] k R ] Canadian Club of Calgary. {Benvenuti suffered « skull frac-| Dread u es {ture and died of a blood clot] - artim' near the lung. HAMILTON (CP)--The type Stabbing Victim's -- "RUSSIANS HEAR KENNEDY Members of the Russian | York today. Foreign Minister | nov, deputy minister for for- | delegation looked like this dur- | Andrei Gromyko leaned back | ¢ion affairs, cradled his head ing President Kennedy's | in his seat, UN Ambassador iit his. hands LATE RECEIPT LONDON (CP)--The war of- N ew Leadership Approach For UN QUEBEC (CP) -- The princi-|94 votes, a margin so narrow ple of one-man leadership which that observers feel only close characterized the Union Nation-| co-operation between the two for delivery to the Women's| pf.gical evidence indicated| | to solve other international prob- his head on the sidewalk. She son said in an address prepared |yictim. IS THE CONCERN OF EVERYONE the can University of Michigan instead. "Jackie", a starry right-winger with St. Michael's Junior "A's" for the past three winters was unable to try his first-year exams at the University of Toronto (in Arts) because of hockey injuries, He suffered a head concussion and neck injuries in one game at the Maple Leaf Gardens; in a playoff game later in Edmonton, he lost two teeth and required 20 stitches. "Jackie" has long been outspoken about what he calls "the disturbing influence of professionalism on minor league hockey," the system whereby the pros are allowed to help subsidize minor leagues in return for chattel rights to the top players (as is done in the Oshawa Minor Hockey Association). When he was a star in the OMHA, he was const- antly pestered by the Boston Bruins via long-distance phone with try-out offers; when he finally succumbed to the lure of the professional dollar and moved to their ale party for many years is ap- parently going tu be scrapped, | at the wish of both the party-| members and Daniel Johnson, their new leader. The 'new look" was ex- pressed in resolutions adopted|Would deal with policy, the con- 4 young lawyers keep party intact. HANDLES FUNDS The three committees which the convention voted to set up at the leadership convention last duct of legislature debates and (weekend. The membership decided to (turn over to three committees formerly controlled exclusively | by the leader or men in his con-| fidence who remained in the background. And Mr. Johnson, 46, say in-| consult Jean-Jacques Bertrand, runner-up in the leadership race on policy and strategy. membership of three a large part of the key functions| Per S01 on each of the commit- party funds. The convention called for a to five The policy committee's func- tion would be to organize and| Plans for the shelters are in- guide the party's doctrine in all/cluded in a pamphlet endorsed | fundamental Q parliamentary committee would|and h formed party sources, plans 10|assist the leader during each|ceiling in the shelters. uebec issues. The| legislature session. The finance committee would administer the would be supported by wooden |18 were held as material wit-! Council deferred debate on beams; ' party's funds, now controlled by Mr. Johnson edged Mr. Ber-lone man, and the various party farm system in Barrie he saw things that he didn't like |trand at the convention by only assets. -- too many teen-age players had abandoned their edu- cation and home-life to follow the hockey trail, that held high-promise for only a few. "Jackie" readily admits that professionalism has helped to finance his education thus far ("I'm one of the lucky ones," he says), but he claims that it hurts far more players than it helps. It instills too many of them with false hopes, he adds, at a tender age when they're impressionable, when they should be concentrating on more important things. POLL TAX BIG CHORE FOR CITY Did you know that the City took in more than $20,000 last year in Poll Tax collections, and that the amount is approximately $15,000 to date this year? This sounds like a big bonanza for the City treas- ury in these days of rapidly-mounting municipal costs, but the picture isn't as bright as it would appear, 4 This is especially so if you would listen to some members of the city tax department who point out that the Poll Tax revenue is big only if you disregard the cost of enforcing this bylaw (started in 1887 when some $57 was col- lected here). Some people state quite bluntly that the cost of en- forcing the bylaw is almost as great as the revenue re- ceived. The strain on the tax- collector's staff and the ' secretarial work is heavy, : they say -- other costly CLARENCE COX items are printed notices, stamps, Court summonses, informations, serving sum- monses and attendance at court when prosecutions follow. No less than 11 males were convicled one day last week for non-payment of Poll Tax (the fine was $10, plus $1.50 court costs, plus $10 payment of the tax)-- many more of those summoned failed to show up. A total of 150 Poll Tax summonses were issued and mailed for court appearances one day last month, but only three of the accused showed up. Then, re-issue of summons by police. Some of the accused, incidentally, were pretty sore because women are not subjected to a similar tax, as they are in such places as Nova Scotia where the Poll Tax assessment runs between $20-$30. IMPS FAIL TO DRAW HOME CROWDS Too bad Coach Bill Zock's hard-driving Imps of the six-team Junior Football Conference (sponsored by Argos of the Big Four) don't draw better home crowds. Did you see their performance last Friday when they dropped a cliff-hanger, 7-0, to Balmy Beach with seven minutes to go? The Imps were outweighed but never outplayed. Their defensive performance was superb. They were tough, aggressive and skillful -- rarely does a junior game produce a more skillful display of quarterbacking than that provided by Oshawa's Dave Nicholishen. His 60-yard pass to Bob Boission was typical of the kind of football seen in this loop (Lakeshore, Butlington, In- victus-and U. of T. are the other teams). Imps play Burlington Ti-Cats at Kinsmen Stadium Wedngsday, They need your support. SUNNY, COOL WEDNESDAY WEATHER FORECAST Cooler, Drier Air Coming In Forecasst issued by the Tor- onot weather office at 5 a.m.: Synopsis: A vigorous disturb- {ance moved through Southern Ontario overnight, spreading| {vigorous showers and thunder-| | storms over most of the south-| fern and central parts of the province. Cooler, "drier air is/ | pushing into the province. | Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, |Lake Huron, Niagara regions, | Windsor, London, Hamilton, | Toronto: Cloudy with a few {sprinkles of rain early this morning, clearing ny noon. Cooler. Mainly sunny Wednes- day with little change in tem- perature, Winds northwest 15 to |20 becoming southwest 15 Wed- nesday. | Lake Ontario, Georgian Bay, Haliburton, Timagami regions, (light rain . Clearing by North Bay, Sudbury: Cloudy this morning with intermitte cooler. Mostly sunny Wednesda with little change in temper ture. For Haliburton and I Ontario regions winds southwes 20 and gusty early this morn- ing shifting to northwest 15 to 20 this afternoon and then be- coming southwest 15 Wed- nesday. For Georgian Bay and Timagami regions, North Bay and Sudbury, winds northerly 20 gusting to 30 decreasing tol northwest 15 to 20 this afternoon| nt| noon, | Y|St. Catharines 2 Toronto ake |p, t Trenton of fallout shelter the govern- . Wife Faces Charge ment is urging people to build] in their basements is prohibited by the national building code,] BARRIE (CP) -- John Rich board of control was told Mon- ard Crawford, 23, was knifed to ay. death Monday night and his wife Building commissioner Fred Lydia Anne, 18, was charged Veale said the design of the With murder. shelters also contravened Ham-| The mother of two children ilton's building bylaws. He was| Was taken to Simcoe County jail instructed to prepare an amend- | to await a court appearance Fri- ment that would make the shelt- day. ers legal. Police said Crawford stum- bled from his home and was picked up by two youths who drove him to hospital. He was dead on arrival from a knife [rou in Mis chest. : ws oug raser of Barrie and Mr. Veale said the ceiling| patrick Doris of Toronto, both by Prime Minister Diefenbaker | and call for a cement block] a type of construction nesses, 'Suggests Halting | Exodus Of Plants | WINDSOR (CP) -- Federal controls to halt the exodus of |manufactuing plants from areas (like Windsor to large districis] AND such as Montreal and Toronto were advocated Monday night by a Windsor alderman. | Ald. Bert Weeks said a re- ++ « THE TIME TO As President Kennedy told the Nation, NATIONS FAMILIES NOT KILLED IN A NU- CLEAR BLAST OR BY FIRE WOULD BE SAVED IF THEY CAN BE WARNED TO TAKE SHELTER IF THE SHELTER owe that kind of insurance to our families . . , "THE IS AVAILABLE. We START IS NOW!" |port on 'runaway. firms", pre-| [Greater Windsor Industrial Commission, failed to make any recommendations on how the/ problem could be solved. |the subject. prohibited by the national build- ing code and Hamilton bylaws | "| INTERPRETING THE NEWS By JOSEPH MacSWEEN | Canadian Press Staff Writer | President Kennedy scored al provocative point in his first| United Nations speech by re-| minding the Soviet Union that even a trojka of three horses ' |has but one driver. It was the sort of sally that might raise a smile from Soviet | Premier Khrushchev, whose : [fondness for the apt remark or proverb became well known in| {his visits to the UN. Khrushchev's attendance at the last UN General Assembly % was as head of his delegation| and he was not accorded the « |head-of-state formalities given| _ [to Kennedy Monday. | On the other hand, he per- formed against an historic in southern areas and wet snow | backdrop -- the greatest - ever in extreme northern areas. Con. 8athering of world leaders and i areas. LOM} ich-ranking diplomats. He was linuing warm Wednesday with a| ig vi ne 1p Ey trend toward much cooler| e to step in his lively way weather beginning in the north-|around 'the assembly hall to west Wednesday and spreading greet, for instance, Cuba's Pre- southeast during the day. mier Castro with a rugged bear Forecast temperatures: hug. wy tonight High Wednesday | rnp aor UNCERTAIN JUMSOr os 3 7 | These differences make it dif- 1.ondon ficult to compare the impact of Kitchener {the two men. But when Khrush- Wingham |chve first came to the UN in Hamilton [1959, he came as a visiting [head of state and at that time |acted a little more in the sub- {dued manner of Kennedy. | It's next to impossible fo im- agine the impeccably - correct New Englander banging his | shoe on his desk as Khrushchev | did last year. But he seems will- ing to exchange cutting refer- | ences. Referring to the wall erected HATTERAS 45 45 eterborough Killaloe Muskoka North Bay Sudbury Earlton Kapuskasing White River 5 | Calls Kennedy's Talk 'Realistic' [sented to city council by thei} FREE ESTIMATES -- NO OBLIGATION | Call FAMILY FALLOUT SHELTER | PHONE 728-7942 GIVE YOUR FAMILY LIFE INSURANCE NOW! by the East Germans to check | the flow of refugees from East Berlin to the West, Kennedy said: "Peaceful circulation has| been interrupted by barbed wire and concrete blocks. "One recalls the order of the| czar in Pushkin's Boris Gudu-| nov: 'Take steps at this very| hour that our frontiers be| fenced by barriers . . . that not a single soul pass o'er the bor-| der, that not a hare be able to] run or the crow fly."" PLEA TO NEUTRALS Perhaps Kennedy's most pointed plea which also sounded as -a warning--to the non-aligned nations came when he urged the appointment of a single, able executive to suc-| ceed the late UN secretary-gen-| eral Dag Hammarskjold. | "The secretary-general, in a very real sense, is the servant of this assembly. Diminish his authority and you diminish the authority of the only body where all nations, regardless of power, are equal and sover- eign. Until all the powerful are just, the weak will be secure only in the strength of this as-| sembly." Practically all delegates out- side the Soviet bloc spoke highly of Kennedy's speech. Typical was Nigeria's Jaja Wachuku, who called it "realistic, filled] with practical suggestions." | But there was no fervent out- burst of support during the ac- tual speech and only in the long haul will it become known just what was Kennedy's impact on the non-aligned countries he so Shop & Save at Specials! for MEATY SHOULDER PORK RIBS BUEHLER'S « « « for "Quality Meats at Lowest Prices"! CHUCK ROAST e CUT-UP CHICKEN eo LEGS - THIGHS AND BREASTS WINGS 2, 25c @ NECKS 2 ,, 19° Wed. Only! 1b. 39¢ 2 lbs. 25¢ Ib. 39c ardently sought to impress. | and becoming southwest 15 to 20! Wednesday. Algoma, White River, Coch- rane, regions Sault Ste. Marie: Sunny and a little warmer to- day. Increasing cloudiness Wed: | nesday with scattered showers ges TEaNn HIGH S are invited to write for FREE earn your High School Diploma. AT HOME IN AMERICAN SCHOOL 100 DUNDAS ST. 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