Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 22 Nov 1961, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, November 22, 1961 GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN TORONTO (CP) -- Voters in SOME BOUQUETS FOR THE BUS DRIVERS We hate to sit idly on the sidelines and see Osh- awa's friendly bus drivers get kicked around verbally, especially by irate writers of letters-to-the editor (whose pens drip acid). Our bus drivers, collect- ively speaking, are the best good - will ambassa- jJors Manager George Shreve and the PUC has, yet no one in an official post (especially Mr. Shreve) comes to their de- fence when they are sub- jected to some low-blow punches. ; Did you read that recent letter (signed by L. An- drews) in which the writer suggested that the PUC open a training school in good manners for their drivers? From our jaundiced viewpoint (based on sev- eral years of bus commut- ing via PUC), such a sug- gestion is grossly unfair, could not possibly be made by a regular commuter, Has reader Andrews ever seen driver Dorland Windover delay his bus at a suburbia spot for as much as two minutes so a young mother, infant in arms, can board and not be forced to wait around in the zero cold for an extra 30 minutes? Has reader Andrews travelled the. Apple Hill Express route with drivers like Howard Oke, a dedicated employee whose friendly, whimsical humor does so much to brighten the commut- ers' day, hasten the journey? They are only two. There are many others, driv- ers who serve well beyond the call of duty. We don't mean to infer that every PUC driver acts like a Dale Carnegie Institute grad (no more than every GM or Fittings employee). Some may be impolite, even down- right rude, but they are in the minority. Let's toss a few well-deserved bouquets at the driv- ers instead of arrow-shots. Reader Andrews is right about one thing: Oshawa's bus service is poor, very poor on Sundays and also at nights after 9 p.m. when so many without ears urgently need it; but this is not the fault of the drivers -- this is the fault of the thousands who never use the service, although each taxpayer will be assessed for any deficit in the bus operation. : Reader Andrews is irked, and understandably so, because there is little or no bus service Sundays in a city of 60,000 -- the irony of it is that the taxpayer has been asked to carry a-greater burden each year than ever in this regard. There was a reminder of this the other week when the City reluctantly gave the green light for the purchase of three new buses (the PUC asked for eight), although 13 new buses were put into service last year. When the City got into the bus business it got into a costly, if necessary, venture for the taxpayer. It will be all the more costly, if he doesn't use it as often as he should GEORGE SHREVE TAYLOR TWINS -- ANDY, LEFT, AND CHARLEY Oshawa's dancing Taylor Twins -- the sons of Mr. and Mrs. A. Horchik of 762 Palace -- drew rave notices from the Vancouver press during their recent appearance at the Cave theatre-restaurant with Ford and Hines, the international comedy stars, Here's what they said: The Vancouver Province -- (Nov. 9): "|... .The show has another Canadian flavor in the form of The Taylor Twins from Oshawa who are one of the best supporting acts seen here for some time. Tap-dancing of their standard is a rare commodity these days and their-discovery by Phil Ford and their attachment to the comedy team should see them hurry along to the top of their field". The Sun -- (Nov. 10 in Jack Wasserman's Column): "Canadian dance team, the Taylor Twins, currently at the Cave, are as good an opening act as I've seen in years: commercial enough for the 'A Fanr' circuit; classy enough for the Waldorf Astoria. All they need is some other bow music than Fine and Dandy", The boys are currently playing Calgary, while doing a good promotion job for Oshawa. Speaking of Oshawa show folks who are getting good reviews from the critics, the comedy team of Barry Authors and Howard Swinson drew the following com- ment in the November 15 issue of "Variety" (The Bible of show business) following one of their recent appear- ances at The Barclay Hotel, Toronto, where they are currently appearing: "With knowledge and timing gained in European, Australia and Coast niteries, Authors and Swinson prove themselves zany comedians who are all over the stage in tested acrobatics and jungle sounds. But a highlight is their elaborate comedy pantomine to offstage record- ings arranged and pieced together by themselves. "Barry Authors and Granite-jawed Howard Swin- son also display a pair of pipes in their straight harmon- izing of "Up A Lazy River," but it is their continuous clowning that gets the applause. Team was on 30 min- utes." | five Ontario ridings will cast ballots Jan. 18 in a "'little gen- jeral election" that should pro- | vide some political wind-testing. | Premier Robarts and his ca- | binet set the polling date Tues- day at a 34-hour meeting on the eve of the opening of Onta- roi's legislature. Nomination day will be Jan. 4 in the ridings of Beaches, Eg- linton, Brant, Kenora and Ren- frew South, all vacant through the deaths of members. There will be a sobering re- minder of those deaths today when Lieutenant - Governor J. Keiller Mackay reads the speech from the throne at about 3 p.m. Three of the 98 members' seats in the legislature. will be |hooded in black cloaks trimmed with funeral purple, and black cloth facings will cover the front of their desks. HONORS MEMBERS Ontario Ridings Ballot Jan. 18 The redistribution study will go on as scheduled. As to the hazards of mid-win- ter vote - getting, the premier commented: "I would say cam- paigning in winter will certainly not be as easy as in summer. But in recent years, with the development of snow removal equipment and other tech- niques, it will not be as diffi- cult as it was previously." |TESTS VOTER REACTION The byelections, forecast for some time at Queen's Park, are|% expected to serve a threefold purpose: 1, Return representation in the legislature to the approxi- mately 150,000 electors in the five ridings. , | 2. Test the political attrac- |tion of Mr. Robarts' new ad- |ministration, the first test since {Mr. Frost resigned after 12 years as premier. 3 3. Get a widespread sampiing Murder Probe Leading To Chicago Man TORONTO (CP) -- The hunt for the killers of a former De- troit couple.in a gangland ex- ecution here last Friday has veered toward Chicago. Police said Tuesday that a man named White, registered at a downtown Toronto hotel along with murder suspect Ar- thur Lucas, 53, may have been a "Willie White" of Chicago. Police in the Illinois city have been asked to trace him. Lucas is held without bond in Detroit. on a fugitive warrant for an extradition hearing Dec. 19. Toronto police have issued a warrant charging him with murder. He is charged in the slaying of Therland Crater, 43, and Jean Crater, 21, found shot and slashed to death in a rooming house. Police said it was first be- lieved that White was from De- troit, but a search of records suggested he may be a Chicago figure. They said there is a tie- The gesture honors the late|of yoter opinion in the Con- mines minister James Maloney) seryative stronghold of Ontario up in the drug traffic between Chicago and Detroit. of Renfrew South, Liberal Harry Nixon of Brant and Lib- of Beaches and William Dun- jlop of Eglinton near the end of |the previous session were sim-|* l\ilarly marked at the time. | Mr. Robarts said it was the |three most recent deaths which forced a change in government jattitude toward byelections. eral-Labor member Albert Wren) of Kenora, who died during re-| cent weeks. The deaths of Con-\ter Diefenbaker and Premier, servatives William H. Collings j--in effect a junior-version gen- eral election--to provide an in- dication of Conservative party strength for both Prime Minis- Robarts for the general elec-| itions that both may call next) year. Crater was reported to be an undercover operator for the United States Narcotics Bu-| reau, prepared to testify against Detroit drug interests. TRUJILLO FAMILY ARRIVES Gen. Garcia Trujillo, broth- | Monday, met Gen. Jose Oliva, | companied by members of er of the late Dominican Re- | right, who arrived Tuesday | pis family. public dictator, left, who ar- | enroute to Ottawa, Canada, ' rived in Fort Lauderdale | as consul. Gen. Oliva was ac- --(AP Wirephoto) | The Conservatives hold 68 seats in the 98-seat legislature, | the Liberals 20 and the New| INTERPRETING THE NEWS -- Throne Speech Farm Group Highlights Democratic Party five. | Returning officers for the five! |Former premier Leslie Frost|Tidings, formally approved by) |had refused to hold byelections|/hte cabinet Tuesday, are: jin Beaches and Eglinton be- cause of a Toronto-area_ redis- |tribution study scheduled for ithis session "I think it is an entirely dif- I ferent situation now,". Mr. Rob- jarts told reporters when ques- {tioned about the change of 'at- jtitude. "We have had three deaths in a relatively short time .. OFFICIAL RANK | ARMSTRONG, B.C. (CP)--W. fed Fyvie has been acting as se- 'nior sanitary inspector of the {municipality of Spallumcheen, jand Dr. Duncan Black as health lofficer, since 1946. Their ap- pointments have just been offi- cially confirmed by the muni-| cipal council, Beaches, Paul Oetiker; Brant, John F, Fraser; Eglinton, C. W. Robinson; Kenora, Jo- seph O'Flaherty; Renfrew South, John S. Findlay. MORE FOR TAX | THAN FOR FUEL TORONTO (CP) -- Tor- |q onto Transit Commission lel and Gray Coach Lanes will | pay more in tax for their with which throngs greeted the Queen in |Gha Ghana Response Urges ECM Outlined Parting Gesture (Support of the speech from the throne, OTTAWA (CP) -- Canada's read today at the opening of the |Ontario legislature by Lieuten- jant-Governor J. Keiller Mac- ; 4 , |kay: By DOUG MARSHALL Others admit that the future basic attitude should be one of] ¢ i i issi Canadian Press Staff Writer |of Ghana's relations with Brit-|support for Britain's ne alate pokes commission, 14 Beneath the joy and affection|ain and the West still hangs|tions to join the six - nation i the tumultuous) dangerously in the balance. European Common Market, thelice lena ond waiversliy' shener THe pivot on which these de-jlargest national farm 8TOUP | tion, etect an alien sound of melan-| unpredictable and enigmatic fig- holy ure of President Nkrumah him-), One question they have been self | gotia-|he created, British correspondents|Cisions res' stil! remains the|said Tuesday Expansion of industrial re- Dangers exist from the mar-|search under new department t itself and from Britain's|of economics and development. |possible entry, President H. H.| Northern and southern hydro- Canadians With UN Killed In Accident UNITED NATIONS (CP) -- Two Canadian soldiers serving with the. United Nations Emer- gency Force in the Middle East were killed and four others in- jured in a car accident Sunday, it was announced Tuesday in a cable from the UNEF com- mand, Cpl. J. M. Albert of Saint John, N.B., and Pete. Ss. Roster of Richmond, Que., were killed, The other four Canadian sol- diers, who were not injured se- riously, are at the UNEF hos- pital in Rafah, United Arab Re- public, the cable said. They are Cpl. N. G. Lovewen, Pete. J. K. Drew, Pte. R. L. Ferguson and Pte. N, R. Vernon. Their home- towns were not given. FIVE DIE IN FIRE DARIEN CENTER, N.Y. (AP)--A family of five died Tuesday night in a fire that swept through their two-storey frame farm house on a rural road near this Genesee County community. Two other persons who lived in the house were rescued. The victims were John Amedick, 46, his wife, Margaret Mary, 43, and their three daughters, Noreen, 6, Patricia Ann, 5, and Jacqueline, 10 months. LOANS to pay all your bills LOANS to complete the down payment on a home LOANS for car or home repairs LOANS to buy the things you and 1962 petroleum supply than }seriously asking themselves is Most correspondents agree|Hannam of the Canadian Fed-\electric systems to be consolid- they will for the actual die- sel oil and gasoline. The TTC Tuesday ap- proved an order for $1,5%9,- 977 worth cf petroleum pro- ducts. $879,290 of which is provincial fuel tax. Pp | olitical hail of farewell. The bureau of statistics re- WEATHER FORECAST AND RAIN Occasional Rain |inQuebec Milder Thursday Official forecasts issued injsional freezing drizzle today.| |Cloudy with occasional snow|come the principal topic of po-| Synposis: a series of weather|Tuesday, little change in tem-| litical argument in the old prov-| disturbances will move across! perature. Winds southerly 15 to) ince. Toronto at 4:30 a.m.: the Great Lakes area during to-|20 today and light Thursday. | day and Thursday. The snow) |now falling in the north country} Observed temperatures: i Max. | will continue into Thursday and) nawson rain will be spreading into the| victoria rest of the province during to-| famonton. . ay. Lake St. Clair; Lake Erie Regina >| Winnipeg Lake Huron, southern Georgian|y ayehead .. Bay regins, Windsor, London: Cloudy today with rain begin- White River ning in the afternoon. Overcast with occasional rain Thursday milder. Winds southerly 15 te 20. Niagara, Lake Ontario, Hali- burton regions, Hamilton, Tor: on'o: Increasing cloudiness to day, becoming overcast his af- | ternoon. Occasional rain tonight jand Thursday, milder. Light winds becoming southerly 15 to }20 this afternoon Northern Georgian Bay, Ti- | magami regions, North Bay | Sudbury: |Thursday. Snow, S.S. Marie ...-.e0+ $ Kapuskasing ......+ ,|North Bay ..sccoee Sudbury ... Muskoka . Windsor . "London .. |Toronto .. Ottawa Montreal Quebec . Halifax Forecast Temperatures Low tonight High Thursday: 40 45 Overcast today and| Windsor occasionally|St. Thomas |mixed with freezing drizzle, be-| London 35 ginning this morning and|Kitchener changing to rain in the after-| Wingham jnoon. Occasional rain on Thurs-|Hamilton -- jday. Little change in tempera-| St. Catharines jture. Algoma, Cochrane, Sault Ste |Marie, White River, regions |Overcast with snow and occa- FILL |Toronto | Peterborough Killaloe THEM AT he ei sv eee Hinks |by observers are the clear rifts) ment, jsuccessful in post-war history--|in the foreign policy between] submission reflecting the stand Ghana may leave the Common-| Britain and Ghana, evidence of|of one of the elements of the |wealth in a few months. whether the spontaneous dem-|that politically speaking one ofjeration of Agriculture told the| ated onstrations and tributes were a}the few positive results of the! federal - ; |tour was to raise Nkrumah's Some pessimistic Britons be-| sagging prestige lieve that despite the tour--on| the surface probably the most provincial agriculture | conference. . i : But the smart move appears Among the chief points raised|to be to assist such a develop- Dr. Hannam said in a economic crisis behind Ghana's|economy most prestige window-dressing, signs|trade disruption. of a volatile struggle for power! The National Farmers' Union in Nkrumah's government and) representing farm groups in seeds of suspicion sown by press| western. Canada and Ontario, criticism on both sides. took a more muted line by ask: Patrick O'Donovan, writing in|ing the federal government to the London Observer, says the|attempt to maintain trade rela- royal tour has failed to provide|tionships with Britain and the a basis of understanding be|Market countries and to give tween a Ghana that sees every-|"more serious consideration to thing in terms of African am-)the possibilities of becoming a bitions and grievances and a/partner in an Atlantic free trade Briatin still tinged with impe-| area." rialism. Said Dr. Hannam, in a state- O'Donovan and others see|ment at odds with the federal Ghana moving toward a highly| government's lack of enthusi- centralized and directed social-|asm for Britain's application to ism sought by the militant left-|join the Common Market: wing ministers around Nkru-| 'The Canadian Federation of mah | Agriculture has always looked Britain's failure to see this pol-| upon the development of the icy in the correct light and her|uropean Common Market as resultant criticism has "'bitterly,|péing in principle a policy of vulnerable to | Agricultural research institute |to be created. | Revisions in driver demerit system and provision of mobile vehicle inspection units. Expanded welfare aid for children, including possible community children's villages. Increased provincial contribu- tions in some municipal high-} way projects... | Advisory sub - committee on economic development planned for Northern Ontario. Japanese Village Bombing Accident TOKYO (AP) -- Japan; has asked United States military forces to suspend immediately manoeuvres at the Mito firin range, the newspaper |Shimbun reports. Asahi said the request made following the acciden firing of 16 non-explosive cat non shells by a U.S. bombe: As 5, your family want and need NOW without waiting LOANS for any purpose EXAMPLES OF LOANS You Receive $506.94 Monthly Payments 22.00 $1,526.72 $60.00 $2,500.00 $98.25 | - arger amounts and many other plans to suit your budget $50 1 $5000 ~thout endorsers er bankeble » security SUPERIOR FINANCE are Ps Lig [Ap oeo fon' Loan pict Cs fot "+ Finance, Ltd. Loe yt fp St. N. 725-6541 . SAV EDNESDAY NIGHT UNTIL 8 AY UNTIL 12 NOON venings by Appointment FFICES IN ONTARIO Political Topic Is Separatism --the movement for an indepen-| dent. Quebec state -- has be-| personally and profoundly up-|statesmanship and wisdom." Monday into a village north of eT set" the power elite in Ghana,| Assuredly there were grave O'Donovan says. | dangers, particularly in the pos- Another view is that the tour] sipility that Britain, biggest pur- has demonstrated one principal| chaser of Canadian wheat plus advantage Britain has over Rus-| other farm produce, would join. sia's friendship and support for|-- si --$---- .|the drastic measures in Ghana.) | The Times of London corres-| |pondent says this is the im-| ___|mense hold which Britain and ithe Queen have on the people's laffections, a hold which swung) -- jiidiy Medicated the government-controlled press} Mentholatum around from crude abuse to rec-} Ointment ognition of the Queen as the| greatest socialist monarch. Ease Cold Misery Mentholatum Ointment used in vaporizer eases cold misery fast. Medicated vapors | penetrate to relieve stuffy head congestion and miserable mouth breathing. QUEBEC (CP) -- Separatism| Planning To Travel? --Whether It's-- Currently, the wave of discus-| ELECTROHOME j}sion of nationalist ideas is re- garded in Quebec political cir- cles as growing into a major is-| jsue for the next federal elec-| | tion. | For many politicians and in- |tellectuals, the separatist idea) |was a concept tossed about| more or less seriously only six] |months ago. | | Some now feel it may crys-| tallize around the person of Dr.} Marcel Chaput, leader of Que-) bec's most publicized movement} for independence -- Le Rassem- blement pour I|'Independance | Nationale. | Dr. Chaput, a scientist with the Defence Research Board in Ottawa, openly defied his sup-| jeriors last Friday by coming to) {Quebec City to address the La- jval University conference on} Canadian affairs, at which many prominent Canadians ex-/ pressed their views of Confed-| ) eration. ' aA MEADOWS OUTH, NORTH or OVERSEAS ... By Bus, Plane or Steamship . . . For CONTACT 22 SIMCOE STREET SOUTH We moke all arrangements PHONE 723-9441 for complete information TRAVEL SERVICE THE STRATTON -- Dramatic Deilcraft cesign is just one feature of the Stratton. Housed in the solid wood cabinet is the 1961 Custom Duramotic Chassis, The 18 multi-purpose tubes of this modern unit perform 27-tube functions. The Duramatic chassis is transformer powered and completely hand-wired. A 23" picture tube gives a shorp, photo-crisp image, with the filter glass sealed against dust. Provision is made for the exclusive Electrohome A.1.D. system, | > : 7 ode ' Cliff Mills 48-Hour Special 1959 CHEVROLET BEL AIR 4-DOOR STATION WAGON lis, wheel radio, white discs. Spotless condition, GENEROUS TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE 349 = ee Chain ies Sales ported today that sales in the January-Sertember period rose 3.4 per cent to $2,511,389,000 as MEDICAL PHARMACY "1795 Higher This Year OTTAWA (CP)--Chain stores across Canada reported sales valued at $304,863,000 in Sep- tember, a 2.7 - per - cent in- compared with the same riod in 1960, Grocery and 1960 rg of $296,835,000. ifirst nine months. stores increased their sales 3. crease over the corresponding) per cent to $1,204,681,000 in the pe- combination 300 KING ST. WEST 7] MEDICAL ARTS BLDG. "Prescription Centre of Oshawa" FREE CAR DELIVERY FROM 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M. PHONE 728-6277 THE CLIFF MILLS MOTORS LTD. 230 KING STREET WEST 725-6651 5 KING ST. W. MEAGHERS 723-3425 t

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