Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 13 Oct 1962, p. 2

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Gestapo Tactics Said In Election Campaign MONTREAL (CP) -- Charges of police '"'Gestapo tactics' and countercharges of "lies and fab- rications" are being made al- most ve in the civie cam- paign lea a to the Montreal election Sunday, Oct. 28. Senator Sarto Fournier, seek- | 2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Saturday, October 13, 1962 GOOD EVENING -- By JACK GEARIN MUNICIPAL SURVEY REPORT LOOMS (AT LAST) Monday night should be a big one in City Council. 5 Nothing is certain in love and war, but unless something unforeseen occurs, the secrecy wraps should be removed from one of the City's most important reports -- the Municipal Survey Report prepared by the firm of Woods, Gordon, Tor- the mayor set up the social se- curity squad as a political police force to serve. "undemocratic ends." Mr. Drapeau and many of his supporters in city council broke away from the CAL shortly be- The Civic Party termed this charge "nonsense.'" Senator Fournier's party put forward a program calling -for a re-routing of the subway "through working-class aréas." It also promised' an end to school onto municipal consultants, earlier this year at a cost of fore the 1960 election to form taxes, lower propérty $10,700. This could be one of the most important documents to be unfolded in Council in years, could provide a much- needed blueprint for an ef- fective overhaul and mod- @ffiization of Oshawa's anti- quated, horse - and - buggy municipal administration set- up. (Let's hope it does be- fore our whopping $18,412,- 865 debenture debt--the in- terest.alone in 1961 was $821,- ing to regain the mayoralty he lost to Jean Drapeau in 1960, says he is subjected to myste- tious telephone threats and "Gestapo-style" shadowing tac- |ties by Montreal policemen. Mayor Drapeau's outgoing ad- ministration says the charges a lies from beginning to en " A member of Senator Four- nier's Citizens' Party, Antonio Capobianco, accused morality squad policemen of "terror tac- tics' when they seized letters from his car addressed to the city administration. their victorious Civic Party. Mr. Drapeau's attempts to se- cure the 1967 world's fair have largely overshadowed political attacks, traditional in Montreal elections. SUBWAY ATTACKED The administration's start on its $150,000,000 subway has come under heavy fire. Senator Fournier says the city|world's fair, negotiated a $300,000,000 loan to' It wants to scrap the subway pay for the subway and esti-/ and build a. monorail system mates it could eventually cost/ and underground based on éxist- taxes and an extensive program of slum clearance and express- ' av building. The provincial. and federal governments would be expected to pay & major cost of these construction projects. The Civic Action League pro- poses building a huge Champs Elysee Paris boulevard type of project to prepare for the $800,000,000. ing railway lines. Lucien Saulnier, chairman of the Montreal executive commit-| tee, expressed astonishment that, copies of a letter, which he said) was addressed to him by a New York financial firm, should reach others before the original was delivered to his office. SAYS HE WAS 'BUGGED' bie Gakcitcy cee) OLD STYLE PLOWING. AT MATCH --in senior competition Fri-} national Plowing Match near day at the 49h annual Inter- Owen Sound. Coaching him is Burlesque Back Norris Requests Special To Aging Casino Session 0f Labor Probe } . F | OTTAWA (CP)--Mr. Justice)sailors, employed by McAllister | .TORONTO CP)--That aging] are back. Hae T. G. Norris has called an ex-|Towing Company of Montreal, | Jezebel of Toronto show places| Even so, the Casino seemed traordinary session of his one-|refused to handle the Red Wing the Casino, has returned to her|to be having trouble reajusting| 44, public inquiry into ship-|when it artived at Montreal ribald old ways after a fumb-|to ed old habits after a year's! jing disruptions on the Great|harbor earlier this week. After hy aay to go straight ad gg one quarter of the|#Kes, it was learned Friday/protsts from the Shipping Fed. Burlesque came back to the) 1,100 seats were occupied for an| Tight. es eran a oe Mr. Pg Queen St. theatre Friday the|opening playbill that featured, The special sitting, to be Held resident Hal ¢ eines "fh call |way it left exactly a year ear-/Tina Kay, The Shaking Step ;|Monday in Ottawa, was OF oft the boycott, lier -- with a resounding rattle|Grace Reed, The Bouncing|/dered by the Vancouver jurist! Attar 4h tt t tl of gymbals and a swirl of dia-|Beauty; Tee Tee Red, Bur-lto investigate a boycott this|, er these efforts apparently |phahous costumes, sinuously|lesque's New TNT Girl, and the| oy ay ty sailors belonging (ne the judge issued orders shed. |four (count 'em ) four Casino ve * \for the special meting. The Casino, senior sister; Chorettes. to the Seafarers International) ww, commission's last public among three Toronto strip pal-| The colored spotlight had|Union of Canada. The boycott) a ot tes aces, turned her back on slap-|trouble at times chasing the|Was. directed against a freigh-/SeS' vias eles . stick and strippers Oct. 12, 1961| performers around the stage.|ter, the Red Wing, owned by/Mr. Justice Norris had planned 'after a quarter-century dedi-|The migraphone went dead|Upper Lakes Shipping Limited|to resume his public inquiry cated to the unsettled arts. onc®, reducing an introductory|of Toronto. Oct. 22 in Montreal to hear tes- The downtown showhouse un-| Spiel to shouting level. The jug-| Informants here said the tugitimony from the SIU. foved.' When the report appeared to be bogged down at |derwent an uneasy conversion|glet dropped a ball and the; "oe AAS ec eP Bi EMEC H ne Te THOT the Council level (and the public started to clamor for its |to repertory drama even| comedian's -- en were publication) he did some gentle prodding, via questions, and |changing the name to Civic gee yin vis p AP te o got results. Square Theatre -- that fizzled ut tee tee, a A head, put the enterprise back The long-awaited two-year Traffic Survey Report (handed pega pose Pega track with a courageous to Council last June) is still pretty much of a question mark, 4 | Bob McNab. --(CP Wirephoto) Church Reception Held By Canada ROME (CP)--Leading digni- Another Citizens' Party can-|taries of the Roman Catholic didate, Lucien Croteau, said he,/Church in Italy and Canada at- too, was being shadowed by the|tended a Canadian reception \police and a wire-taping device|here Thursday night. was discovered connecting his} 'those present from the Vati- telephone toa vacant apartment) can hierarchy included Cardin- beside .a police station. als Alfredo Ottovaiani, the Vat- Chairman Saulnier said the|ican's top civil servant: Eu- --e were "pure fabrica-| pene Tisserant, bearded French on. : dean of the College of Cardin- The Citizens Party and thejais and Valerio Valeri, prefect Civic Action League are attack-|---- sitat'squads--ahe morally diet : am Jehovah Witness Couple Seeks Court Appeal sion and the social security branch. Lieut. Jean Saulnier, brother jof the executive committee KINGSTON (CP)--Counsel for Mr. and Mrs. Robert Forsyth said Friday the Jehovah's Wit- nesses couple are appealing a To say that Council has been dilatory to date in its general handling of the re- port, which has been in its hands since late August, is to make the understatement - of the year; but that is all ALDER N BASTEDO water over the dam, The thing for councillors to do now is to forget their personal prejudices (especially those who hotly oppose such surveys in principle) and to unite in common effort to appraise it for its real worth, whatever that may be. Let's throw petty politics out of the window. Let's not make use of this report as a political football. | The light' were aglow in Council Chamber on the fifth | floor Wednesday night as Council held a three-hour pow-wow on the Municipal Report. The doors were closed to depart- mental heads and to the Press ("Even McIntyré Hood would have been barred," said one councillor), Special guests were John Fitzgerald of Woods, Gordon and three of his associates. Three motions were prepared for presentation to Council Monday. The origin of the report actually dates back to 1959 when Ernest Marks, QC, then an alderman, headed a committee that recommended a survey somewhat along the same lines -- Alderman Edgar F, Bastedo did much to pilot it through Council to the point where the $10,700 expenditure was ap- Jim Paterson of al | Sound, Ont., plows--old style of the Congregation of Religi- ous Orders. ; Cardinal Valeri is protector of the Sisters of St. Joseph of Lon- don, Ont., and of the Sisters of Charity at St, Hyacinthe, Que. ¢ The reception was given 'by Jean Bruchesi, Canada's am- bassador extraordinary to the ecumenical council. Virtually all the Canadian cardinals and bishops here for the conference were in attend- ance, including Paul - Emile Cardinal Leger, Archbishop of Montreal; Most Rev. Maurice Roy, Archbishop of Quebec, and James Cardinal McGuigan, Archbishop of Toronto. Also among the guests was Quintin Gwyn of Montreal, bail. iff president of the Sovereign Order of Malta, who was spe- cially invited by the Pope to at- tend the opening of the Roman Catholic ecumenical conference. MIX WITH REPORTERS The top - ranking prelates mixed with the handful of news- paper men present and talked of the significance of the speech las mayoralty candidate, says |chairman, was appointed head of the morality division after the Drapeau administration won power in 1960. The Civic Action. League, Gcourt order under which their infant child was made a ward of the Children's Aid Society so it could be given a blood trans- usion. backing architect Paul Lambert Counsel Glen How of Toronto the theatre into an art-movie|Performance. The headliner) even on Council. Nobody seems to know wheniit willbe re- | house also floundered. even maintained her composure leased, although some of its contents (if not all) are well known The seduction that. brought to many owtside of City Hall circles. This report could dras- back burlesque was easy. Ray tically change the traffic picture of the City, could have Lux and Elliot Abells, direc- wide repercussions in real estate circles, yet it has only been | tors of the re 4 a Lux ms, ue discussed by Council at one meeting since last June (and Pong ves wih {ee tabioial some 'councillors were absent on vacation). Mayor Thomas | weekly Flash, moved downtown) has not given the slightest indication as to when it will be | and got the - Casino bumping| released. Council has scheduled a tentative meeting for next Wednesday night to discuss the report -- an engineer. from the Toronto firm of Dumas and Smith (that prepared it) and granding along in the old| |familiar groove, - | CHANGES WERE FEW | when a purple slide clattered from a spoilight just as she was striking her climatic, se- quined post. Tee Tee flashed a '"'that's show business' smile and gy- rated into the wings. EARNING PROFIT LONDON (CP)--After a series of early mishaps the Comet jet has, been invited to attend. Planning Board, for one, has been groaning for months that this report is holding up its work, It seems incredible that in a City of 62,400 there could be such a serious backlog of important Council work. Speaking of City Hall backlogs -- Council's County Court- house committee will meet next week with its counterpart committee from Ontario County Council to discuss a matter that has been dragging for more than a year. HERB COOK MEETS THE McLAUGHLINS Remember Herb Cook, the Oshawa boy who made good in a big way in the world-wide chain store dynasty of the F. W. Woolworth Co. (He retired last January as executive vice-president and now resides !n Toronto) ? } iupport his widowed mofher. Few changes were needed. A} canvas banner that had altered the theatre's name came down from the marquee and up went a pattern of pictures to estab-| lish that the burlesque queens airliner now is making a profit for Britain, says the aircraft firm of de Havilland. Airlines in Canada, Argentina, Mexico)? and Greece have bought the comet. INTERPRETING THE NEWS -- He was in the news this week--he is still a director and resides in Toronto where the Woolworth board of directors met for the first time instead of in New York City. He started to /ork in- Oshawa in 1913 (in 1 bakery at $7 weekly) to By DOUG MARSHALL Canadian Press Staff Writer Britain is threatened a sec- ond national rail strike soon. It is likely to be longer and more damaging than last week's one- day "holiday" stoppage. The leaders of the three big rail unions have already met in |London to plan tactics. They The City tendered him a |are debating whether the strike banquet May 7, 1959 at the should last 48 hours or a week. U.K. Threatened By Rail. Strike Beeching admits that he puts employee relations a long way down the list in his thinking. His first aim is to improve efficiency. So far dozens of uneconomical jbranch lines have been aban- doned. In the near future 12 of the country's 29 major railway workshops, some of them sus- taining whole communities, will be. closed down. WEATHER FORECAST Cloudy Periods Today, Sunday cloudy intervals today and Sun- day. Continuing cool, Winds light today, southeast 15 Sun- day. Algoma, White River regions, Sault Ste. Marie: Maimy cloudy Forecasts issued by the Tor- onto weather office at 5 a.m,: Cool weather will continue through Sunday. While some cloudy intervals are expected, generally sunny skies during CONTINUING COOL WEATHER Hotel Genosha when Lyman Gifford was mayor--he turn- ed out to be an amiable, but modest and unassuming man with a hearty down-to- | earth attitude towards life, vinced Whatever the duration, the irail unions will give the gov- ernment a minimum of notice, They also expect the co-opera- tion of road and dock workers. The. railwaymen are con- the government will With an estimated 19,000 rail- waymen likely to be put out of work in the next five years, the unions objgct that the govern- ment has neither consulted with them fully nor made plans: for retraining and resettling the the day should produce rather pleasant conditions, Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Niagara, Lake On- tario, Georgian Bay, Haliburton regions, Windsor, London, Ham- ilton, Toronto: Sunny with today. Sunny with clou/ly inter. vals Sunday. Continuing cool. Winds light today, southeast 15 Sunday, Cochrane Mainly sunny and continuing cool today and Sun- aid the appeal, td be heard by he Supreme Court of Ontario Oct. 22, is the first of its kind vever launched by Jehovah's Wit- nesses in Canada, The baby, Gregory Forsyth, was born Sept, 29 with an RH blood factor. A few hours after the child's birth, Judge James Garvin ordered him made a ward for a month. Doctors later made a successful transfusion. "We are asking that the order be quashed because no hearing nd Beret ree ee i many years as apostolic déie- gate in Canada. in any legal sense was held," Mr. How said. "The whole pro- made by the Pope at Thurs- day's opening of the council. , Cardinal Leger told a repor- er: "It was a speech that opened the way to many omy oppor- tunities, It was the first time in history that a distinction has been made between teaching and the manner of teaching." A familiar face to the Cana- dians was that of Iidebrando Cardinal Antoniutti, now 'with Rome. for ceeding was a travesty of jus- tice and contrary to the statute (the Ontario Child Welfare Act) they were enforcing. "The statute gives right of aA hae tice and the Forsyths did not : know anything unti] the hearing was actually under way." The Forsyths say they are op- posed to blood transfusions on medical as well as religious grounds. Mrs. Forsyth after her second confinement--Gregory was her sixth child--was given a trans- fusion which the couple have blamed for illnesses in the four subsequent children. London ... Kitchener Perterborough .... Trenton ..++. aoe Killaloe .. 18th ANNIVERSARY BROADLOOM SALE COMING SOON pad 174 MARY ST. 728-4681 Sudbury .. Earlton Kapuskasing ..... White River...... Moosonee ...... Timmins .. FIRST TEACHER TRAINING In the 1960-61 academic year, there were nearly 34,000 stu- TIME HERB COOK Laughlin and W. Earle McLaughlin, the former Mary Street Public School (Oshawa) student who is now president of the Royal Bank of Canada at the Yipe old age of 48. Col. R. S, and W. Earle McLaughlin are second cousins -- the latter is the son of the late Mrs. Frank McLaughlin of Oshawa and brother of Mrs. J, H. Lockwood, also of Oshawa. LITTLE NOTES FROM HERE AND THERE | The irate reader who phoned to complain about that "Lost and Found' ad in last Thursday's paper is right -- the word "'nigger" (even when used affectionately as the name of a canine) is most objectionable, sets a bad example for children, especially. . . . If you.are walking around the streets of Dallas, Texas, next week keep a sharp lookout for some members of Oshawa's Board of Education who will be attending (of all things) the annual convention of The " ciation of School Business Officials of the U.S. and Herb attended the direc- tors' meeting and later a luncheon when he chatted with two other gentlemen whose names need no intro- duction here--Col, R. S. Me- sure. Their determination is jalso on of the many danger signals facing the ruling Con- \servative party's whole trans- |port policy. Economists have long been |warning that Britain's vital transport system is dangerously jnear collapse. The rail network jis withering with age, roads are becoming increasingly con- gested, ports are being patched jup rather than rebuilt and the |government-owned airlines are \limping in the red, The government's answer, \through Transport Marples, jhas been sweeping moderniza- jtion schemes to make the rail- ways pay and ease the bumper- to-bumper highway flow. The unions agree the railways ineed to be streamlined but they object to the way British Rail- ways' Chairman Richard Beeching has been going about da. it, Brougham WI | | Delegate To Attend Rally By MRS. M. ANNIS BROUGHAM -- A recent SECRETARIAL i TRAINING " Offered at Full Day, i eventually give way under pres-| "| DRUG STORES | _meeting of the Brougham Wom- en's Institute was held in the Half Day, or Evening Classes Pickering Township Hall. BY men. | The rail workers plan a series of crippling token strikes to force the government to with. draw its "inhuman" plan for workshop closures, LABOR CRITICAL Meanwhile the opposition La- bor party at its recent confer- ence voted for a long-term solu- | For Legal Bingos LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- John White, Progressive Conservative Ontario legislature member for London South, says he and Pre-|S day, Winds light. PC Reports Plans | Sudbury: Sunny with cloudy in- | tervals today and Sunday. Con: \tinuing cool. Winds light today southeast 15 to 25 Sunday. Low tonight, High Sunday dents in 155 teachers' colleges in England and Wales. DR. J N. LOWES PHYSICIAN announces the opening of his office at 178 SIMCOE ST. N. 728-2101 Timagami region, North Bay, Forecast Temperatures t. Thomas tion to the transport crisis. La-|mier Robarts have a plan to legalize charitable bingo games. Mr .White said Friday he and the premier will present their plan to the federal government after seeking advice from char- ity and service groups. | The plan would legalize bingo) for charity purposes under, li-, censed supervision. It * clude "professionals" m ou of town and "their friends here," bor is bitter about the govern- ment's applying the sole crite- rion of profit in its moderniza- tion projects. The socialists suggest defects can be remedied by co-ordinat- ing road and rail services. But some critics advocate an even more radical policy, What is needed, says the weekly New Statesman, is a 'coherent phil- osophy of transport ranking. OPEN THIS SUNDAY 12:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. JAMIESON DRUGS 241 KING ST, EAST 725-1169 NOTICE TO ALL EX-SERVICE MEN WOMEN AND DEPENDANTS All ex-service personnel and their dependents are invited te take advantage of a FREE LEGION SERVICE W. R. BUCK Assistant Sécretary, Service Bureau, Toronto LEGION HALL, BRANCH NO. 43 Wednesday, Oct. 17th AVAILABLE HAVE YOU AN AUTO INSURANCE | PROBLEM? Regardless of age or driving record, as long as you have a drivers' license, we can provide insurance for your auto IMMEDIATELY! . Monthly Payments Available @ Call Us For Fast Service @ NOTICE TO... © CAR DEALERS © CAR SALESMEN @ FINANCE COMPANIES FROM 2:00 TO 4:30 P.M. WE INSURE THE GAR WITHIN 24 HOURS You Are Safer with .. . Also from 7:00 p.m, to completion of business .. . to give skilled advice on Veteran's Benefjts. Any- one with questions on war disability pension, War Veteran's Allowance (Burnt-Out Pension) .. . Treat- ment or Hospital care is urged to call or write to MR, A. C. BRISBOIS, Business Manager of Royal Canadian Legion, Branch 43, 90 Centre Street, Oshawa, who will arrange an appointment. GOVERNMENT APPROVED TRADE SCHOOL THE CANADIAN SCHOOL OF BUSINESS 52' SIMCOE ST. NORTH PHONE 728-7081 MITCHELL'S DRUGS LTD. 9 SIMCOE ST. NORTH 723-3431 | TAMBLYN DRUG STORE OSHAWA: SHOPPING CENTRE 728-5101 Plans were made to send a delegate to the Area Convention to be held at the Royal York Hotel in Toronto on November} 7, 8 and 9, és | Mrs. Fallis introduced Mr.) Williams who showed very in-| teresting movies of their recent trip to England and Scotland. SCHOFIELD -AKER LIMITED _360 KING WEST PHONE 723-2265 © Don Ellison @ Gerry Osborne @ Ralph Schofield © Reg Aker .

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