4@ +THE OSHAWA TIMES, Scturdey, January 5, 1963 set in Hard-Drinking Scot Rolls Back Frontier . By THE CANADIAN PRESS |tles an upholstered|the sea and American rum-run- Columbus Hosts| Teachers Annoyed Visitors From North Carolina BY MRS. E, LAVIOLETTE OTTAWA (CP)--The Cana- dian Association of University Teachers has asked the govern- By RCMP Probes has been charges that RCMP investigations are not limited to the matter of security clear. Zlev {-/ners in St, Pierre-Miquelon, | COLUMBUS -- Mr, and Mrs. Eleven of the bo Whits tha Havel je i tiie ju. ¢ Naylor aad as ga ment for a met pre ne we ; . ; ic . ' sivenile appetite it makes good|@inner guests r. _and/concerning ¥ investiga- oe ait ina Canadian which ad _ _-- yen omg ontee. too, Mowat ci | Stanley Naylor, John and/tions on. university campuses. as brawny, red-haired| The frontier rolled back too|idly recalls the poverty-stricken|Brian Naylor of Toronto. | The formal request, made Scot who came to Canada as a|qickly for Dunlop. He belittled|days of the 1930s in Newfound.| | Mrs. ey Haye's areoe public Friday, was included in doctor with a British army regi-|responsible government an diand's coastal villages and) John Mc yes Wa erton, a statement issued by the asso- ment that fought at the Battle|yearned for the heyday of one-|booming St. Pierre when it was Spent the Christmas holidays | cjation's executive and finance of Lundy's Lane in the War of/man rule by the representative|shipping liquor to the .arid)With Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hayes/committee to be sent to Prime|have not applied for any post |1812. At first sight he formed anjof the Crown. Dunlop became|United States before the repeal|@nd family. Minister Diefenbaker, Justice/at all, much less a post for B enduring affecsion for the back-|more of a figure of derision than|of prohibition, | v9 tome Mrs. C. aged John Minister Fleming, opposition! which security clearance is ré- . |woods of Canada. a representative of his Huron} The novel takes Johnathan Crossman. Saw te aly party leaders and the press. (quired. This hard-drinking eccentric Constituents during his second)Spence and his two boys, Kye, eae Te ae association, representing "it has been alleged that is the subject of W. H. Gra-jterm as a member of the leg-jand Peter, on a voyage in their }faculty associations at 39 uni. | 'surveillance is being main- 'ham's The Tiger of Canadajislature of the united Canadas.|schooner Black Joke to St. Pi- blett held a Christmas: party fo | versities, said it is concerned | tained over such organizations West (Clarke, Irwin), an inti-| Early in 1846 he resigned hisjerre. Their successful effort tol their family 8 Par) "with the question of RCMP in.|as the University Committees mate and lively biography)Safe Tory seat to create a vac-|save the schooner after tussles) yy. and' Mrs Frank Hayes, Yestiations on campuses "only|on Nuclear Disarmament, and drawn from the meagre docu-,ancy for a government minis- with corrupt' French officials Marilyn and Beverley Toroyta, because of the adverse effect that this 'surveillance' is being lments, letters and newspaper|ter. In return he was given a and merchants in St. Pierre and Me Nha Wire Tack fhe | which indiscriminate investiga-|maintained by officers whose \clippings of the time. |job as superintendent of the new a gang of rum-runners makes aheth and John: Mrs. H. Haves:| U0", is bound to have on aca-|presence on the campus is not Dunlop got his nickname by|Lachine canal near Montreal. suspenseful reading. Jolin Mokinnon Waikartoh he! demic freedom." brought to the attention of the lwiping out the tiger population|He died two years later, aj IMrs. M. Beath were Christmas|, "The whole basis of academic|Proper university authorities. lof Saugur Island off the coast|tragic figure dissipated by Day guests of Mr. and Mrs./{reedom will be impaired if the) "It has been alleged that stu- lof India, He is said to have shot|drink, crushed by change and) Walter Beath and family '|student is aware that what he,dents have been asked to act one tiger after tossing snuff into|fat from his beloved Huron) Mr. and Mrs, Grady Cox, 888. or does in exercising anjas informers about other stu- its eyes to.gain time to pick country, | |Mary. Lou, Freda and Marjory, inquiring mind and attempting) dents and about suspected cam- lup his pistol, and to have dis-. This is a first book for Gra-| Oxford, North Carolina spent to make independent jitdg- pus organizations. ha \the holidays with Mr. and ments, may at some later date We do not assert that these = patched another with his sword|ham: vice-president and direc-| j | after using the same tactic. tor of MacLaren Advertising| Mrs. William Gordon and other Prejudice his future because r-) charges are true; we do ear- William (Tiger) Dunlop was|wooden box, one of the most paradoxical fig-|tles contained liquor. The 12th, | ance for persons who have ap- plied for posts requiring such clearance, "Specifically, it has been al- leged that faculty members have been questioned about the political viws of students who as. Mr. and Mrs, Norman Gim- Important dates in Cana- dian and world history, list- ed both in alphabetical order and under the days of the month, are contained in Baxter's Dictionary of Dates and Events, just published SEEKS AID FOR FAMILY Board which granted $925 in full settlement for permanent disability suffered by her hus- band in a gold mine accident three years ago, Mrs. Peter- Lena Peterson of Kirkland Lake, Ont., and three of her six children--Beverly, Jimmy and Debbie (left to right)-- display letter from Ontario Workmen's Compensation son was in Toronto to seek more help for her family and her husband, now in a North Bay, Ont., 'mental hospital. --(CP Wirephoto) " |land, Dunlop returned to Can- \Company of Toronto, WARDEN OF WOGDS | After earning a reputation as a slayer of tigers and a racon- teur and literary figure in Eng- Ridley -- the Story of a School by Kim Beattie is a two - volume history pub- lished by Ridley College, St, jada in 1826 as agent for John Galt's Canada Company. | The Tiger was given the gran- diose title of Warden of the Woods and Forests of the Can- ada Company, He set up head-| quarters at what now is God- erich, Ont. His job was to pro- tory of the prep school from 1889 to the' present. Aimed at graduates the book con- tains names of all old boys and present students, | by the Baxter Publishing | Company of Toronto, The North West Company, great fur-trading rival of the Hudson's Bay Company by Catharines, Ont., of the hise whom it was subsequently ab- and Bill, Mrs. Ma sorbed, is the special field of Toronto writer Marjorie Wilkins Campbell | In McGillivray Lord of the Northwest (Clarke, Irwin), Mrs. Campbell has written the bio- Farley Mowat, whose Lost in,graphy of William McGillivray, |tained girl lrelatives in the area Mr, and Mrs. William Gor- don» Tommy and Wayne spent Christmas with Mr. and Mrs. John Partridge, Orono Mr, and Mrs. Roy Ratcliffe rgaret Hould- ing and girls, Mrs. W. McLaugh- students, no matter what their lin, Burketon and Mr, and Mrs H of Mr. and Mrs. lin and family, Miss Pat McLaughlin enter- friends from Port Ted MclLaugh- . Wright, Oshawa, were guests CHARGES DISTURBING ports of his opinions hav found nestly request the department their way into an RCMP file,"'| of-justice to give us some in- the statement says. formation as to their truth or "The existence of this danger) falsity." will seriously affect the rela- asta alata, tionships that exist between the university teacher and all of his DAVID'S Drive-In BAR-B-Q CHICKENS and STEAKS Hwy 2 W. Whitby PH, 668-4066 views The association said an even| more disturbing development) mote settlement of the com-|the Barrens won the Governor-|the Scot who emigrated to Can-\Perry and neighbors with a to- |pany's huge tract of lard on the|General's Award for Juvenile ada at the age of 20 to be aboggan party recently jeast shore of Lake Huron. Fiction in 1956, has produced|clerk in his uncle Simon Mc- - Satan He soon built his fame as ajanother, The Black Joke (Me-| Tavish's fur-trading company. : frontiersman in the storybook|Clelland and Stewart). McGillivray eventually be-| STUDENT BODY GROWS tradition, able to outmarch and) It's the story of two lads came chief director of the North) MONTREAL (CP) -- A sta- outdrink any man in the Huron/from a depression-stricken out-|\West Company and_ his life, | tistical survey at the University lili aiiaeeeeeal DANCE TONIGHT Old Time -- Modern RED BARN ADMISSION--$1.00 JET NONSTOP TOS ity Without Paper Hurts Every Field NEW YORK (AP) -- Silent;ment rentals, employment serv-the idle editorial and other em- city rooms. Jobless men andiices and charitable activities. |ployees--men and women lined women. Slackened business.| In the newspaper industry it-)up regularly to collect weekly Lost income. Substitute chan-jself, the Columbia reporters strike benefits. DANCE PARTY PAT RICCIO & HIS ORCHESTRA 5 3 oF PAVILION. 4: ' \ O'KEEFE CENTRE 2 WEEKS, JAN 7-19 RALPH JOHN RICHARDSON GIELGUD THE SCHOOL Tract. He seldom travelled with-|port on the south coast of New- 1784-1825, . spanned the com-'of Montreal shows it will have out his 'Twelve Apostles, 12 bot-foundland and their jousts with/pany's great years and ithe|an enrolment of 18,500 in the " oe " : work of its intrepid explorer-| 1966-67 academic year. The uni-| jemployees: Simon Fraser, Alex-|Versity now has 12,032 students, | bd be jander McKenzie, Alexander|an increase of 10 per cent over| ar ind it ¥. |Henry and David Thompson, jlast year. Four years of research as- ; sisi y gr f - nels of information. Annoy-/rounded up these a ii an Mating htere get from é e ' eae Getta cn te ORGANIST ances, problems, revised plans.) Some 18,500 employees idle, $68 a week for unmarr Hea t F t e | he ' ' ; : And deadlock, |with losses in wages and bene-|strikers to $96.80 for married) T re | 1 u etlae O ai eoctiies fed LILA TREDWELL These were among the fea-|fits running $3,000,000 a week. (persons. ; count of the personality and laa Nigh tures cited in a special report) Newspaper advertising losses Newspaper Guild members| wonTREAL (CP) -- "Heart)keeper in Valleyfield, Que., the|hard life that contributed to one Appearing ightly on a city bereft of its newspa-jestimated by a union spokes-/get $30 a week, plus $10 foriratigue' has forced Paul-Emile|cardinal was ordained to thelof the most exciting periods in} GENOSHA HOTEL Pesome 80 reporters of Colum ore eemagpa 'usu os nace $7.50" a week,{cardinal Leger e nae x Fie ood hs and joined! Canadian history. 0 A & ' spigpcgayly yptis or "loutsi tivities indefi-}the Sulpician Order in 1930. |--------___---__---- bia "Univeteliy'e Graduatelcirculation sales averaged more; The Columbia reporting aad gael acta antoanced| Th ro he pa to. Japan| School of Journalism took part|than $500,000 daily visited each of the closed news-| Friday night, lwhete: he. tounded (@ Catholic in gathering data for the 74-' Using the two figures, the papers. They were almost The a : ay tnéleomindcy. He seticned ts Can. | page report on effects of the|losses would amount to a total/empty, 'h he y Ghise ar ih Y hble Piss ie 16h) ahd: Wan ape slates pia newspaper shutdown on Newlof $1,800:000 daily to the news-| Executives did what was| ancery office 0 Porahe fl aden of tae Hor " Pil York. The strike began Dec. 8|papers alone. jcalled "light housekeeping"'| >? yen or ik. 'a wa lan hy "Aonitenl peg f the mt and affected nine newspapers.| As for losses in other busi-/chores in most places. rh nae gos nee hd Joys oh ke ti value Dede | The findings showed wide-|nesses, no figures were avail-| The New York Times plans to| pars Sit '4 ayes months|s ' e suplician' Order. | spread repercussions, direct andjable. But various sources indi-/publish all its back issues, once|° Pes age ith ~ He returned to his home town indirect» from the press black-|cated serious reverberations. '|the strikeends, for schools, li-| tt dR un oC holt A ie following year as pastor of out brought on by a printers'| 'The strike is having an enor-jbraries and other institutions.|e2?-0l4 Roman Catholic Arch-|the cathedral there and vicar- strike. mous effect on business, and is|Unlike the other closed news-|bishop of Montreal would not! genera' of the diocese. Besides the impact on the|touching almost every industry newspaper industry itself, thel/in the city," said James W.| situation also was being felt in') Danahy, executive vice - presi- many other fields, including: dent of the West Side Associa- Retail business, restaurants,|tion of Commerce. entertainment, sports, schools,) At union offices--not only of; municipal government, apart-|the striking printers but also of Rural Taxati | | | Study Continues | By ARCH MacKENZIE mittee chairman under the Pro- OTTAWA (CP) -- A study of|gressive Conservatives and he rural taxation is being mounted Calls the tax study a logical ap- by the Senate land use commit-/plication of the committee's tee, continuing its lengthy ap-\terms of reference, which in- praisal of the problems and/clude farm production costs. trends in the country. Dr. J. M. Booth, retired eco- The examination will supple-/nomist formerly with the fed- ment the work of the royal com-/¢ a1 agriculture department, mission on taxation, expected to Will conduct the study. Current begin hearings shortly. plans call for consultations with The Senate land use commit-|the Ontario, and perhaps Man- tee was established under the t0ba or Nova Scotia, govern- tnd jments. Others may he ap- eg ol paced garpgper rebar tte to determine how and -|graph desk jenter hospital but would re- main at the palace. The announcement said a} papers, a skeleton Times staff is making up a daily paper, al- though it is not being printed. New Year's reception for the SUMMARY OF NEWS clergy, scheduled for next Mon-| At the Daily News, Jack Tur-|4ay, has been postponed indefi- cott, labor editor, said the tele-|mitely. | is maintaining aj, Phe spiritual leader of some summary of news to be pub.| 2,000,000 Roman Catholics ap- lished when the strike is over--|peared gf ng | along with re: s of jlast Dec. rom the ecumeni-| ied ----- oe cal council in Rome. He said) At the Herald Tribune, Mur-\4t the time that the flight home| ray Weiss, executive editor, said|W@S "my first free day since] some of the paper's idle editor-|t%e council sessions started Oct.| ial staffers have found work|!1. elsewhere and may not return. GIVEN TESTS an Micapee Eater Woder In October, 1959, the cardinal sun, 4 & Yiente spi > fi se- Fir sid the paper Planned noltagt at'4, Met et ti effort to update the news when|cardinal's secretary said he eos hg 2 pele voc Roig was not at liberty to discuss ris nav 1 "ithe nature of the illness. Net oan of, The foun cana, Later wns Teens ' < ~\from ital early in Novem- American, The Post and Thejper ana ince that time has re-| Mirror also were virtually de-\cumed a full schedule of activ- serted Seven years later he was ap- pointed rector of the Pontificial Canadian College in Rome where he remained, except for brief visits to Canada, until his consecration as head of the Montreal archdiocese -- largest aoe Commonwealth--early in He took the oath as cardinal Jan. 15, 1953. FOR SCANDAL ONE WEEK ONLY, JANE 21-26 MAURICE CHEVALIER O'KEEFE CENTRE, FRONT AND YONGE, TORONTO BOX OFFICE 11 A.M.--9 P.M., EM.3-6633 SHORGAS | HEATING & APPLIANCES Industrial and Commercial The established, reliable Ges Deoler in your area. 31 CELINA ST. (Corner of Athol) 728-9441 ity. Activity continued at the Long| "The son of a country store-| Island Press, which still was -- -- publishing its Nassau County oud not its New York City editions RECOMMENDED FOR THE FAMILY TODAY JERRY'S LOUDEST LAUGHING HIT!!! pause--one of the few parlia. why they employ existing rural mentary committees that inde- pendently from year to year continues to examine related as- pects of a general theme. Most are appointed for a spe- cial purpose or to process legis- lation in a particular field. So far, most of the land use committee's work has been ded- icated to a comprehensive look at the United States rural devel- tax schemes. Tax problems in selected Ontario counties will be assessed. Ontario itself has announced The Star - Journal, operations were suspended, and Suffolk County editions, but) ¢ [ost suernsno AFFAIR OF THE YEAR! | | M-G-M Presents At another New York paper,| it will undertake a_ similar study. Farmers and municipalities also will be approached and the committee may undertake an examination of urban tax as it affects surrounding farm land, Property tax has been the OSHAWA'S ORIGINAL AN ARCOLA PRODUCTION Starring Glenn bord + Debbie Reynolds It StaRTeED WiTH A kiss In CinemaScope and METROCOLOR ADULT ENTERTAINMENT (Storing MONDAY. Se re a M-G:M posse BILL TRAVERS, THE GREEN HE o pace COLOR CARTOON TRAVEL © SPORTS een | TODAY & SUNDAY "COWBOY" in Color Plus "MRS. MIKE" > 8 FEATURE DAILY AT: 1:30--3:30--5:25--7:30--9:35 WEXICO NOW ONLY 199 ROUND TRIP BILTMORE 19 opment system, with possible|mainstay of the rural munici- CARPET CENTRE ats Now you can fly to Mexico's warm sun at new low fares! application to Canada. pality and Senator Pearson saysi ot Nu-Way, carpet and broad- Only $199. 17-day economy round trip. It's just 4% It has dealt to some extent education costs alone have with conservation. Last session' brought these local governments loom has been a specialty for 18 years . , . with thousands hours non-stop on your Super DC-8 Jet Empress from McLAUGHLIN PUBLIC LIBRARY Tuesday, January 8th --- Power Store, King St. East 2:00 - 5:00 P.M. Thursday, _-- 10th -- A&P North Oshawa 2:30 - 5:00 P.M. and 6:00 - 8:30 P.M. Friday, January 11th -- Simcoe Plaza 2:30 - 5:30 P.M. Saturday, January 12th -- Rosslynn Plaza 10:00 A.+4.- Noon and 1:30 - 4:00 P.M. WE WILL VISIT EACH POINT EVERY OTHER WEEK Look for the Blue and White Trailer was spent in hearing expert tes- 'nearly to the end of their timony on provincial efforts in| rope," the general field covered by the! Variations across the country Agricultural Rehabilitation and are the rule rather than the ex-| Development Act which hasjception. Saskatchewan for ex- been launched by master agree- ample imposes no extra tax for ments with all 10 provinces. farm improvements. But this is Committee recommendations not the case in Ontario--which on conservation, use of mar- Senator Pearson takes as one ginal land, community rehabili-|reason for the weather-beaten tation and rural retraining have !ook of many Ontario farm found expression in the ARDA|buildings that might be more Provisions for specific federal.|heavily taxed if painted. provincial schemes. wih bones erated | , DRUG STORES OPEN THIS SUNDAY 12:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. Senator A. M. Pearson, a Lumsden, Sask.» farmer and 241 KING ST. EAST 725-1169 real estate man, has been com- MITCHELL'S DRUGS LTD 9 SIMCOE ST, NORTH 723-3431 TAMBLYN DRUG STORE SHOPPING CENTRE 728-5101 Toronto. And Mexico's everything you ever dreamed of amigo! Fiestas at the drop of a sombrero . . ..shopping for serapes, silver, leather goods, at native markets. Or taking it easy at luxurious resorts or hotels amid all the color and charm of Old Mexico! 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