Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 13 Nov 1961, p. 14

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4& THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, November 13, 1961 'Man In Orbit 'Hopes Fading CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP)--Hopes of putting a man into earth orbit this year faded almost completely Sunday with the indefinite postponement of a planned orbital flight by a chim- panzee The U.S. man-in-orbit effort depended wholly upon the suc- cess of the projected ape shot, originally planned for Tuesday. Walter Williams, Project Mer- cury operations director, ad- mitted only that the launching had '"'some problems." This was as far as Williams would go. Lt.-Col. John Powers, spokesman for the National Ae- ronautics and Space Adminis- tration, meanwhile was casually advising reporters that the launching had been delayed a week to 10 days. Powers said there would be no announcement of the delay be- cause the agency had never an- ncsered a specific launching date, except that it would not be before Nov. 14. Meanwhile the body of a tiny squirrel monkey that died in an exploding missile was found Sunday in wreckage dredged|shelter for 30,000 people, nearly from the Atlantic. \Jeep Travellers 7 |CAPSULE NEWS Met By Fire Chief HAMILTON (CP) -- Two Ar- gentinians whe travelled 35,000 miles in a jeep were greeted here Friday by Fire Chief Reg Swanborough with a written welcome describing them - as "illustrious visitors from «Ar- gentina" and a $5 bill to buy their dinner Manuel Abelairas de Castro, 33, and Ramon Inguanzo Col lado, 38, are volunteer firemen at home. Ramon said the object of the trip, which began more than years ago and included United States cities, is to) "study the customs and idiosyn-|move and decided to send co- crasies of people." |pies to provincial authorities. The traveliers, who will also| ayy aRp TAKES OVER Fhe hippi LA visit Montreal, hope a shipping HEREFORD, West Germany comnany will give them a lift E ith their jeep. (Reuters)--Maj.-Gen. Jtan Vic- be cla i tor Allard became the first Ca- nadian in charge of a British Fallout Shelter Army denden" in peacetime Capacity 30,000 when he took over command Sunday of the British Rhine NIAGARA FALLS, N.Y. (CP) The city of Niagara Falls may Army's 4th Division here. Allard have the nucleus of a fallout LAC BEAUPORT, Que. (CP) The Quebec division of the Ca- nadian Cancer Society Sunday was told the school commissions in Quebec City and Trois-Rivi- eres, Que., are considering plans to install cigarette-vend- ing machines in secondary schools. Delegates adopted a such 1% t resolution oposing any until recently was vice-chief of the Canadian Army's general staff in Ottawa. WINS $19,596 | QUEBEC (CP)--M. C. Aum- ja third of its citizens, a hundred LONDON (Reuters) Queen Mother and other mem- bers of the Royal Family Sun- day led Britain's homage to the dead of two world wars in wreath - placing ceremonies at the War Memorial in Whitehall. Cigarettes In School Fought lence in Argentina's two-week- old railway strike. LEAD IN HOMAGE OPEN WELSH PUBS CARDIFF, Wales (Reuters)-- About 2,500 taverns in Wales opened their doors on a Sunday for the first time in 80 years as the clocks struck noon Sunday. Customers got the first drink on the house. Nine areas of Wales decided in an area-by-area vott on Wednesday to open the pubs on Sunday while eight other areas, mainly in the north, de- cided to keep them shut. NEAR NAPOLEON HOARD? MOSCOW (Reuters) -- Soviet -- The jont of Ste. Julienne, Que., won archeologists believe they are Letters Claimed Never Delivered TORONTO (CP) -- John B. Maskell, representative of the Nationat Union of Public Em- ployees (CLC), said Saturday that of 400 letters mailed by his organization two weeks ago, only 150 were delivered. : He said the letters concerned a unio drive to organize North nouncement Sunday said equip-/York school caretakers and ad- ment will be installed at Carp,|ministration workers. 15 miles west of Ottawa, and at! Reginald Bigson, postmaster Richardson, 45 miles southwest, |for suburban Willowdale, said he following a recent series of|would inquire into the matter if trials. supplied with names and ad- The anouncement said their|dresses of persons who did not normal role will be as parts of|receive the mail. the Canadian Army signals sys- tem. However, they will also Kiwanis Cl ub Holds Meeting form part of the attack warning system designed by the govern- ment's Emergency Measures) BOWMANVILLE -- The reg- ular dinner meeting of the Kiwanis Club was held at the '2 New Stations Installed Soon OTTAWA (CP)--Two new un- jderground army signals stations in eastern Ontario, part of the civil defence communications| system, soon will be ready for installation of equipment. A defence department an- Organization to alert the public federal government sites in the | riving Dutchman. The elec- The Carp station is entirely) acclamation. First vice - presi- tion, near Perth, is partly un-| in case of attack. communication for emergency Ottawa area. As many as 200 | tion of officers for the coming in peacetime. man was elected president by underground ina rocky ridge|qent, Ron Brooks; second vice- of Carp, The Richardson sta-|-ocretary, Don Mountjoy; treas- jurer, Gordon Beech. Directors derground. The stations also would supply soldiers will man the stations) oar took place. Mr. Ross Jack- near the Ottawa Valley village) ,recident, Dr. John Hendry; for one year: Gerald Brown, William Cobban, Harry Locke and Cranston Scott. Directors for two years, Gordon Clarke, inear to uncovering a fabulous) KEEPS CLEAN SLATE | thoard of gold, silver and preci-} ' . ® ten | NEW YORK (AP)--Tony Al- feteats pacino Rat i 7 jongi of Hollywood, Fla., won his| Hank Jensen, Jim Colliss and treat from Moscow, the: ne 28th straight heavyweight bout / George Bebee. paper Komsomolskava Pravda without a defeat Saturdaf night! Mr. Robert Taft introduced reported Sunday as when he outpointed George Lo-|the guest speaker, Charles Tem- oe gan of Boise, Idaho, in a tele-)plar, Oshawa, who gave an illus- vised 10-rounder. jtrated talk on shipping in the Alongi, at 19544 pounds, was|Great Lakes, the Welland Canal nine pounds lighter than Loganjand the harbors of New York, and was able to counter every-|Brooklyn and Miami. Mr. Temp- thing thrown at him. This was|lar has had 27 years' experience the 22-year-old Alongi's stiffest|in shipping on the Great Lakes. test since. he turned profes-/Mr. Templar was thanked by sional. Don Mountjoy. be HORSE INJURES CROWD LOS ALAMITOS, Calif. (AP) A bucking bronco hurled off its rider, lunged through a fence and plunged into a rodeo throng Sunday, injuring 15 persons, four severely. As spectators scat- tered in wild panic, the horse went down a patch between the| fence and the grandstand, leay- ing screaming injured in its wake, before cowboys captured|* it. RUSSIANS ARRIVE MONTREAL (CP) -- A four- man delegation from Russia's co-operative movement arrived Saturday to begin a two-week tour of co-operatives in Quebec, Ontario and the western proy- inces, MILD MENTHOL "'GARETTES A NEW not a R'S CIRCULATION IS A FACT- guess or a rating Canada's largest and most successful retail advertisers invest 82% of their advertising budgets in daily newspapers. They have proved without question that newspaper advertisements give them, by far, the best value for their money. They also know exactly what they are buying. Daily newspapers in Canada have an audited count of the number of copies they 8 POS when an Atlas missile blew|structed 40 years ago to carry|Handicap in Manchester, Eng- PICKET US. CONSULATE --------------|River to generators at the Ni-|naid 106 to eight. Mr. Aumont Blasted and chiselled out of|Unit 33, Army, Navy and Air stration at the United States | of a planned Remembrance | ----| LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- Fiye)made idle by the state power) accepted $1,200 worth of bad) The tunnel is 32 feet wide and|jnight the cancellation of 68 TORONTO (CP)--The Cana-|lieved by police to be part ofl entire tube is lined with two feet|second week of a wage strike By HARVEY HUDSON | |seven - year term. But added(devastated Belize, capital of|°@Shed in Windsor last week. | , Within the next six months the|strike, which is confined to Lon- "man of change," wears an un-|of the Algerian situation. Chills} Officials said the materials, |'¢t 22, Randolph Scott and|Checks on the tunnel. | His outlook is focused onjlast September that de Gaulle|taminated when hurricane Hat-|forgery and passing forged doc-|defence rate of 10 square feetja train in Santa Fe province Police said more of the Lon-} cures--his standard prescription WHO FOLLOWS | guard repelled them with gun- jalready collected. may be discovered. storage and living room. most Frenchmen stop listening. returned to power in 1958. He killers and hoping for a mira-|a political crown princee, and career has been notable for his} A number of possible succes-| health, the futility of the war in|yville, president of the senate; | ism, and the dangers of a con-|premier Guy Mollet. Gaulle break out of his present political) out helm of France came in 1954, strong, and now he has spotted|French politics ever since in an Mendes-France warns fice by a jeering national as- one is greatly shocked by Men-ja steady decline. His efforts to} ; about that a right-wing putsch|party ended in a fiasco, with semi-alert to smother the men-/signed from the party Mendes - France has. worked|1958. After this defeat he also) He says a transitional govern-|now holds no public office. into the breach if President. Ve provinces for a series of tp sees T L . furrowed the brow of almost 0 earming De Gaulle now is 70, in ap-|ance of the importance of higher seam a ot le ------|old inertia," Dr. Claude Bissell, | But in striking this note of| of Canadian Universities and} Strikers 'to tackle the problem of growth and Club Employees Union tives of educational institutions, | the union's strike against the'ments since a 1956 conference! jections of a delegate from the |"universities in a new age." opposition to the increase when|"we have all detected a far| quired by the union consitution./sumptions about the importance | of the Westbury opposing the in-jneeds, and acceptance has de- : : hs seconde hen he proosed|NOW NEED EXPANSION sell. There's no guessing or estimating, no seasonal fluctuations. Summer and winter, day after | _The 1%4-pound primate, named /feet below its streets. |$19,596.87 Saturday for his ticket : Goliath, was in the nose cone| It's a mile ~ long tunnel con-|on the winner of the November Sa és 1g japart over the cape Friday. |water from the upper Niagara|jand The horse, Henry's Choice, | yes jagara Mohwk Power Corpora-/heid a ticket in the 97th Charity About 30-ban-the-bombers ; Consulate in Toronto Sunday. | Day picketing of U.S. and So- Five Men Arrested jtion's Schoellkopf Station. Subscription Fund of Quebec : i viet diplomatic missions | | took part in a 24-hour demon- | The demonstration was part | across Canada. 'In Cheque Forgery |bedrock, the "great tunnel," as|Force Veterans in Canada. --(CP Wirephoto) lits builders called it, has been} : Sacra NS BEA CANCELS FLIGHTS . ' jmen were arrested on forgery|authority's Niagara power pro-} LONDON (AP)--British Euro- Future Disaster | Devastated Belize [charzes after London stores ject. \pean Airways anounced Sunday In Need Of Soa {cheques durirg the weekend. lits domed ceiling reaches 32/flights to and from London air- S F Fr p The London operation is be-|\raet above the level floor. The port today at the start of the ee or an e dian Red Cross has received an area cheque ring. Bogus| ' jby baggage loaders. BEA is the nh Cc argent rentast from hurricane (One dues worth $3,000 were|°! reinforced concrete. lonly airline affected by the PARIS (AP)--Pierre Mendes-|to the normal uncertainties of|British Honduras, for soap and) Joseph Walter Warnholz, ro bakenglh andl a airport. France, once hailed as France's|age are the explosive passions| disinfectants. jot Kitchener and Ruddell Hot-| | ATTACK TRAIN ~pheg 1 | ry E span ess andiof fear rippled through most! ' |George Bocall, 26, all of Lon-| The tunnel has an area of} BUENOS AIRES (Reuters)-- enaneine mask of sadn Frenchmen when they heard| "eee to clean buildings con-|don, have been charged with|192,000 square feet. At the civil A crowd of 300 persons attacked ; i & i ents. la person, 15,000 people could be|Sunday and six were reported gloom and disaster for France.|had escaped death in a road tie ripped through the area, will) U™°" ja | F d @. y king about|side ambush. ' : | jshielded for an undetermined | wounded when the train's police But when he starts talking jbt sent by plane with large! aon cheques, all cashed as pay|length of time. An estimated|g is quick, ruthless surgery to| Aloof and alone, de Gaulle Pa eagonage of children's clothing) cheques valued at about $80,|42,000 feet would be needed for|fire and tear gas. The attack spare a lengthy future agony--jrun France with only token} Was the first outbreak: of 'vio- flareups of opposition since he The public usually yields to the temptation of relying on painjhas made no effort to build up cle _.__|has given no hint of who he! Mendes-France's long political|thinks should succeed him. mournful statements about|sors have been mentioned, how- France's precarious economicjeyer, including Gaston Monner- Indochina, the hopeless struggle; Premier Michel Debre; former against North African ational-|premier Antoin Pinay; former stitution tailored to the specific! Then, there is Mendes- measure of General Charles De|France. He, too, would like to On most points he has seen! obscurity. his gloomiest predictions borne! Mendes - France's hour at the} His campaign against the Dejand he has been struggling| Gaulle constitution still isjagainst the vicious riptides of | § a new danger on the horizon. (effort for a comeback "Civil was is threatening,"| Since he was voted out of of- After three armed uprisings|sembly in 1955, Mendes-France's| ; 7 in three years in Algeria, nojpolitical fortunes have been in| 4% des-France's dark view. Since|take over and remodel the mid- t last summer rumors have flitted/|dle-of-the-road radical Socialist} ' in Paris was almost ready to|the party badly weakened and hatch. Shock troops are on aidivided, Mendes - France re-| ; ace His opposition to de Gaulle WORKS OUT FORMULA cost him his job as a deputy in) out a quick action formula to|resigned as mayor of the Nor- meet the threat. |mandy town of Louviers. He ment must be organized im-! mediately so that it can sap i o a Gaulle disappears. Optimistic He has started touring the) s vate- meetings to line up sup- 0 Att t d port for his views and his pro-! n I UW e Basically, Mendes - France's concern is the same that has every Frenchman. What after By KEN KELLY de. Gaulle? - | OTTAWA (CP)--New accept- parent- excellent health with education and the need to pro-| four more years to serve on his|vide for it 'thas destroyed the) president of the University of More Dues |Toronto, said today. cautious optimism at the open-! T H ] ling of the National Conference) 0 e p Colleges, Dr. Bissell and other! speakers threw out a challenge jand cost in a national and united | TORONTO (CP)--A member-| The three-day conference, at-| ship meeting of Local 299, Hotel|tended by some 200 representa- |} (CLC), Sunday approved a $1,-\governments and organizations, | a-month increase in dues to aidjis meeting to review achieve-| Royal York Hotel. jon "The crisis is higher educa-} The approval came over ob- tion" and to chart a course for Westbury Hotel. Norman God-| Dr Bissell, the keynote! dard said he will continue his|speaker, said that since 1956) it is voted upon again in two/greater readiness in all sectors} forthcoming meetings, as re-|of society to accept our own as-| Goddard, who said he has alof higher education and the nec-| petition signed by 130 employees|essity of meeting its enormous crease, was supported only by|stroyed the old inertia." his seconder when he proposed/ NOW NEED EXPANSION of authority to administer union about universities, not in terms funds. of subsistence, but in terms of| day, Canadian families buy 4,091,025 daily newspapers. And, even more important, they are A. R. Johnstone, Ganadian|expansion; not as_ production} vice - president of the union/lines for business and the state, read b not less thar . i ( i ws = ie i eS ee. ae Wee rte y 1 2.5 people per family. The biggest ready-made audience for any advertiser. April 24, said the dues increase| whereby our economy, our po-| --to $4 a month--was sought be-|jitical structure and our culture, cause the strike had exhausted/ grow and change... ." the local's funds, including a| Universities had become indis-| $250,000 strike kitty. pensable to closing the gap be-| jtween the less well - developed countries and the affluent soci- flavour KOOL | BE YOUR REFRESHER Daily Newspapers--the best meeting placr for advertisers and their customers. FIRST PERCOLATOR The percolator was invented by the Frenchman Jean de Bel- loy in 1800, about 800 years after coffee was first used as # beverage in the East. jeties. He forecast more empha- jsis on post-graduate work, one of the main topics for discus sion during the three-day meet- ing CANADIAN DAILY NEWSPAPERS PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION 55 UNIVERSITY AVE.. TORONTO 14. ONTARIO--GENERAL MANAGER. R. A. BARFORD. Pol

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