Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 18 Mar 1963, p. 3

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U.S. Plans To Continue GM Suit LOS ANGELES (AP)--Fed- eral authorities, losers in one skirmish of their anti-trust bat- tle against General Motors, pushed: ahead Friday on an- other front against the largest U.S. corporation. U.S. Judge Thurmond Clarke acquitted the automotive giant Thursday in a criminal suit that defendants claimed threat- ened the franchise system. The justice department con- tended General Motors illegally restrained trade by conspiring with dealers' associations to stop sale of Chevrolet cars to discount houses. The- same complaint, prose- cutors announced after acquit-) tal, will be pursued as a civil matter in a suit filed earlier, : as a parallel to the criminal j ; "in Wat CHURCH TO DEDICATE NEW AUDITORIUM In Washington, a House of Representatives . anti-trust sub- committee heard its chairman] 4 service of special signi-~ when the Presbytery of East of the interior of the church, Jen, pastor of the church, has say that a Canadian newsprint] ficance to, the members of 'Toronto of the Presbyterian get eon given leadership to the build- i 0 looking toward the chancel, Pt the congregation of St. Paul's Church in Canada will dedi- ing program Presbyterian Church will be cate the new church audit- taken during Sunday morn- ; ing's service. Rev. Derek Al- Oshawa Times Photo cartel "places the business of newspapers in a bind." held at 3 p.m. next Sunday orium, Seen here is a view ane 28 Killed Hall Says In Accid ents Truth Squad) Family Walks Publicity From Barrie 'Pwenty-dwo of Canada's 28 re should take steps if illegai prac- ported accidental deaths during CAFIK OPENS OSHAWA COMMITTEE ROOMS - Norman Cafik, extreme he officially opened the party east, Also present were from Liberal candidate for the next right, the Liberal candidate (ommittee rooms Saturday, left: Ralph Jones, Russel Mur- provincial election. fae Gihers Baling Ss Oe OS located at 153 King street phy, and Robert Stroud, the Oshawa Times Photo Crime Probe Reports |, "30 On Illegal Gambling |),.22=: tices are behind increases in newsprint prices. The subcom- mittee is investigating news media, After the hearing, Celler said that if the price for Canadian newsprint on which many U.S. newspapers are printed is not reduced the U.S. government should threaten to put a tariff on newsprint -- Canada's most It is learned that no reception will be held in connecton with the celebration of the 90th birth- (Continued from Page 1), Stringer had discussed with Ww. Jack Shrubb--then - ecdyre bli wad corporal and no' peed "thief at Peterborough-- 'the possibility of getting Shrubb off the squad and under Strin- ger's jurisdiction, then at Co- bourg. The next year, Feeley had disclosed to Shrubb that he knew of the 1955 discussions, and the judge said -he could have learned of this only from Stringer. In 1958, the inspector had de- livered from Peterborough to the anti-gambling squad a brief outlining in detail how to raid the Ramsay Club at Niagara Falls, then a rival to a club in which McDermott and Feeley were interested. GOT IT IN MAIL Stringer had stated he got it in the mail ne two unidenti- fied "young lawyers" in BF snr but Mr. Justice ous men is so fantastic as to be unworthy belief," the judge said. He also noted that Stringer had some oral information about the layout of the Ramsay building, which was not in the i commissioner noted, too, two long distance a Toronto-area tele- number used secretly by cDermott and Feeley had traced to Stringer's Peter- ih home, though the offi- he could not recall thought one might from a real estate this man could not ae fs eeeet ie Summing-up, the judge said: "In my opinion, Stringer's usefulness as a member of the Ontario Provincial Police is ended." He had commendation for the igrity of Shrubb and Insp. W. J. Hatch, now head of the anti-gambling squad, whom he said Stringer had tried to woo away from the Windsor area when Hatch was trying--with eventual success--to close the big Roseland gambling club there. The royal commission, which was formed in late 1961 on the heels of a tough legislature speech by Liberal leader John Wintermeyer alleging malad- ministration of charters by the provincial secretary's depart- ment and improper relation- ships involving some attorney- general's department officials, gave some substantiation to some allegations and rejected others. NO IMPROPER RELATIONS "There were not," Mr. Jus- tice Roach said, "any improper relationships between senior of- ficials of the legal staff of the attorney-general and any per- son or persons and, in partic- ular, there was no improper termination of any investiga- tion, no suppression of evidence and no payment of money." Dealing with a tangle scores of club charters stretch- ing back to 1950, Mr. Jy8tice Roach reported that: 1, There was evi of il- legal trafficking in seven--they either were sold or were put up for sale. 2, In some cases the provin- cial secretary's department did nothing about information that charters had been virtually abandoned. 3. There was strong evidence of illegal gambling on some club premises but this was not ees @ Commercial and Industria! Sites Leasebock Paul Ristow REALTOR 52% Simcoe N. 728-9474 used as the basis for cancella- tion until 1960 .the judge noted that present Provincial Secre- tary Yaremko took office that year). 4. In some instances the de- partment was notified that false returns had been made to the government but did nothing about it. ACTED WITH DESPATCH However, the judge added that where eventually there were convictions and notice of them given by the police, the provincial secretary acted with "reasonable despatch" to start cancellation proceedings. There was little mention 'in the report of former attorney- general Kelso Roberts--a favor- ite opposition target concerning crime, who was made lands and forests minister late last year and who had stated he will stake his political career on the report. Mr. Justice Roach com- mented at one stage that op- jerators of pinball machines should have been prosecuted more vigorously by the attor- ney-general's department 1959. He did not uphold Mr. Winter. meyer's contention that Mr. Roberts had halted Const. Scott's undercover investigation when the police wanted to con- tinue it. He said Mr, Roberts had agreed to let it continue until a date set by OPP Com- missioner Clark. Another Progressive Conserv- ative politician--Arthur C, Jol- ley, MLA for Niagara Falls in 1958--was treated more roughly by Mr. Justice Roach as the result of signing testimonial let- ters for McDermott and Feeley and being on their telephoning list. SAYS NOT IMPRESSED "I was not very much im- pressed by Mr. Jolley's idea of the fitness of things," the jus- tice commented. "Indeed, I was not impressed by his evidence at all." Another Niagara Falls figure received an exoneration from the commissioner. McDermott has been quoted by Const. Scott as saying that Assistant Crown Attorney Don Scott was '"'a pal of ours." Mr. Justice Roach com- mented that McDermott's au- dacity in making that state- ment was "staggering." All evi- dence showed that official heat was on clubs in the Niagara Penjnsula. Likewise, there was "not a tittle of evidence" to back up a reported statement by Wright in 1960 that "the fix was on at Queen's Park." This was in reference to the McDermott- Feeley veterans' club at nearby Cooksville. Mr, Justice Roach also gave a clean bill of health to Deputy Attorney-General W. B. "Com- mon, who had been described by McDermott in a conversa- tion with Scott as getting "a lot of money" from the gam- blers. VICIOUS FALSEHOOD "There is not a tittle of evi- dence that any money was ever offered or received by Mr. Common, and that statement by McDermott was a vicious falsehood," ' the commissioner said. He also exonerated his pres- emt senior, Chief Justice /Dana Porter, of any interference in two incidents while the chief justice was a Progressive Con- servative cabinet minister. "KINDNESS BEYOND PRICE, YET WITHIN REACH OF ALL" GERROW FUNERAL CHAPEL 390 King W. 728-6226 A group of found-ins at the Cooksville Club had been inter- rogated before a magistrate at Brampton, and police evidence had suggested the proceedings were. dropped on instructions' from then Attorney - General Porter. Mr. Justice Roach found that the examining magistrate had ended the proceedings, for lack of evidence, before the attor- ney-general could have done anything. Mr, Justice Roach also found nothing "'reflecting adversely" on the provincial secretary's department in the fact that in 1949 Provincial Secretary Por- ter had his deputy examine an application for a charter for the Spadina Social and Card Club, which got the charter despite an unfavorable Toronto police report. CLUB LOST LICENCE But the commissioner said a later application by this club for permission to change its lo- cation should not have been granted by then secretary George Dunbar. The club sub- sequently lost its licence for in| gaming. The judge was critical, too, of Mackinnon Phillips, provin- cial secretary in 1949 and now legislature member for Grey North, for permitting the Club Macedonia in Toronto to change its address despite irregulari- ties. Despite a police report, the minister appeared to have ignored the facts. The club later lost its charter. The commissioner also re- viewed evidence that Dr. Phil- lips. in 1959 had ordered two Toronto Chinese clubs to be exempted from a_ regulatory provision banning gambling equipment from the premises of social clubs. This situation still existed at these two places. Surcharge Lift Favored By GM If the federal government lifts the 10 per cent surcharge on imported European automo- biles it could have a decided effect on the Canadian auto manufacturing industry, a Gen- eral Motors spokesman said to- day. Finance Minister Nowlan is reported to have stated during the weekend that he is planning an announcement on the subject within the next few days. "Canada is the only country I know of that has a' surcharge on imported cars,"' the spokes- man said, '"'and with our inter- national trade agreements, it seems unrealistic now to leave it on." ;: The surcharge was establish- ed to bring about a_ better trade-balance in Canada. GM imports such vehicles as Vaux- hall from Britain. "Our imports have been cut since the surcharge was insti- tuted," the company spokesman said. If the 10 per cent surcharge is dropped, it will mean a $100 to $200 cut in the price of Brit- ish, German and French manu- factured cars. FIRST ON CONTINENT The first successful electric railway on the North Americam continent was a big attraction at Toronto's Canadian National Exhibition in the 1880s. day, Tuesday, March 19, of Rev. Hugh Crozier of Whitby. Mr. Crozier has been a resident of Whitby for many years and was a former pastor of Cedardale United Church in Oshawa. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SUBJECT The deep, spiritual nature of real 'Substance' was the sub- Canadian newsprint Miss Aileen Hall, NDP can- didate in Ontario Riding, in an address Sunday at a meeting of Local 494, United Rubber Work- ers, in the Oshawa UAW Hall, termed the Liberal. Party "Truth Squad" a publicity stunt. important export. He called the current price of $135 a ton for "in- PORT PERRY (Staff) -- A local father-son-daughter team inished a measured 50-mile walk from the outskirts of Bar- rie to Toronto Saturday night, in the above order. ordinate." Celler contended that because there was no drop in newsprint prices after nine New York City newspapers closed because of "regardless' -f a strike that ject at Christian Science serv- ices Sunday. supply and demand the oy, is fiked in Canada because a group of willful men." She said the squad was a cheap gimmick dreamed up by Madison avenue and abandoned fas unsuccessful in recent U.S. Fox Eyes Started Silver Stampede COBALT, Ont. (CP) -- One September night in 1903 Fred LaRose saw a pair of fox eyes and started one of the most all- fired, get-rich-quick stampedes in history. That's he legend anyway. Cynics may doubt it happened just that way but the town of Cobalt is hete to prove that wha followed was the real thing. In 1903 Cobalt was a name- less railhead on the Ontario Northland Railway 90 miles north of North Bay. Fred LaRose was a steel. driving blacksmith and, so the story goes, when he saw the fox's eyes glinting at him he slung his hammer. The glint was part of the world's richest silver vein. The assays brought the pro. vincial geologist, Dr. W. G. Millet, high - stepping to the scene, which he promptly named Cobalt because of the presence of cobalt in the ore. From Matawa in the south came the Timmins ad Mc- Martin brothers and Dave Chunlap, who paid LaRose $30,- 000 for his claim. They were to emerge as th efirst great silver kings of the north, SPARKED RUSH Th efirst strikes sparked the treasure hunger of the 1905 elections. She also held up to ridicule the coloring books re- Ncenitly issued by the Liberal ty. Continuing she said the Pro- gressive Conservative Party seemed to be suffering from a persecution mania. She said the minister of labor's claim that hecklers had been sent into the riding was far fetched as there Fifty-year-old Jesse Buxcey came third over-all in 10 hours, 56 minutes in a contest which saw 155 pedestrians start and only 39 finish. Almost one and one - half hours behind Mr, Buxcey came his son Don, 25, and daughter, Patricia, 15, to finish fourth. These two walked together and finished together. The race, sponsored by a To- ronto radio station, was won by professional walker John Rowe, 34, of Toronto, in nine hours, 35 minutes. Arthur Keay, a re- tired Toronto detective, was second. HIGHWAY 11 USED Highway 11 was used as a race course. The route lay straight south from Alcona Cor- ners (Eighth Concession of In- nisfail township), just south of had been no profusion of public meetings at which Mr. Starr had spoken. "Mr. Starr is not satisfied with his 2963 majority over me in the City of Oshawa last June. I'm not satisfied either. His workers said it was not good enough for a political campaign- er of his stature. rush, one of the greatest in his- tory. Cobalt became a turmoil of tents, shacks, mines and rocks that by 1915 had a pop- ulation of 30,000 and had gouged out $300,000,000 of silver. Only the richest ores were crushed, Valuable tailings were dumped into Cobalt Lake by the 50 mines. 'ali the weekend occurred on high- ways. The hardest-hit province was Quebec with 10, eight in a Single accident Saturday. A Canadian Press survey from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight Sunday showed four highway deaths each in Ontario and Brit- ish Columbia and two each in Nova Scotia and Alberta, Manitoba, Prince Edward Is- land and Saskatchewan re- ported no accidental deaths. The survey does not include known slayings or suicides, in- dustrial accidents or natural deaths. Ontario deaths: Barrie, to the station in mid- town Toronto. From his home today, Don Buxcey said his only complaint during the race was "'a terrific wind blowing." He and Patri- cia, who attends Port Perry High School, have a few blist- ers on their feet today, he said. Don had special words of praise for 68-year-old George Easton, of Agnes street, Osh- awa, who gave the family of walkers rubdowns. Buxcey Sen- jor went to work today, Pat- ricia went to school and Don will be at work tonight -- a tribute to Mr. Easton's ability. Both walkers are General Motors employees: father in the maintenance department, son on the Buick line. Training for the walk con- sisted of a 15 mile walk-run from Port Perry to Oshawa nine days ago and two five mile walks into the Port while returning from work last week. Both father and son are for- mer Army physical training in- structors, They have lived in Port Perry since 1954. Friday John C. Landriault, 49, father of six, killed when flung from.a wildly careering car that went out of control near Orillia. Saturday ' Sandra Lukas, 28, of Kit bora homes when a car in wi she was a passenger crashed into a bridge near Kit- chener. Carol Kirby, 4, killed her sled slid under a truck ne: her at Vi ] "T say it's not good ig for the New Democratic Party to come second to a Conserva- tive in any city or riding. We have a strong platform, and a strong leader, and a strong organization. All we need now is a strong vote on April 8," Miss Hall said. Queen, Philip Make Visit To 'Leper Hunter' DARWIN (AP)--Queen Eliza- beth and Prince Philip made an unscheduled call today at the home here of Waipulsanya Wadjiri-Wadjiri, known among the natives over 100,000 square miles of Australia's far north as "the leper hunter." When the lode trailed off, Cobalt hit depression times and in the years between 1935 and 1946 no mines were worked. After 1950 the world demand for cobalt increased and four mines opened again to provide the steel - grey metal, used mainly by the metallurgical industry. Some cobalt is used in ce- ramics in the form of cobalt oxide and many of the high- temperature alloys developed in recent years for the aircraft industry contain cobalt. The town of Cobalt now is 60 years old and the home of some 2,070 persons. It cele- gg the anniversary Aug. Mayor Mamie Cunningham and her anniversary committee have ordered a first minting of 10,000 silver commemorative medals containing 114 ounces of Abandon Ship, But Project Still Planned LONG BEACH, Calif. (AP)-- A missionary group that set out in a homemade boat to help Haiti's poor has abandoned its leaking ship off Mexico--but not the project, a spokesman says. If the good ship Crusader sank --and authorities were having trouble confirming it did--the missionaries planned building another. "We're just talking about it," said Jerry Smith, 21. 'We're going to do it." The Haitian government, he added, has ap- proved the mission. home miles east o* Kirtland Take. Sunday Emerie Champagne, $7, of Crysler, killed when his car col- lided with another on a curve near Crysler, about 30 miles north of Cornwall. : Thieves Busy During Weekend BOWMANVILLE | (Staff) Thieves were busy here over the weekend after a week of inactivity. Police reported that area am- bulance operator William Har- vey found $71 worth of equip- ment missing from his spar ar.bulance Saturday. Harvey said the theft must have occurred in the last three days, Saturday morning, police found the back door of Higgon's Electric had been forced open and an undetermined amount of cash taken from the cash register. Shortly after, the Central School janitor found burned GUM MARION, Ind. (AP) -- Bar. bara Hodge, 31, asked her mother, Mrs. Harold Hodge, for a half a stick of chewing gum at a religious revival service here, A few minutes later, the grade school teacher collapsed and died, Coroner Dr. Russell Lavengood said an autopsy showed a one-inch strip of gum lodged in her windpipe. 99.9-per-cent silver mined and Waipuldanya, 42, whose refined in the town. The committee may also ap- "white". name is Phillip Rob- erts, is the Northern Territory's Smith's father, Rev. Howard) A. Smith, 51, was the captain of the 101-foot craft that set out matches on the floors of sever- al classrooms and in one room found a burned candle. NOW MARKET PRICES most famous aborigine. As high priest of the Kunapipi fertility rites, his authority reaches through a hundred tribes. ply for a special commemora. tive postage stamp. The medals will sell for $5 to help pay for the celebrations. They will de. with a crew of eight including three women, last Feb. 16 de- spite coast guard warnings it was not seaworthy. Mr. Smith Police believe the thieves lit the candle to see what they could take, but left empty-hand- ed. Entrance was gained by breaking a window. To have that carpet or chest- erfield cleaned professionally in TORONTO (CP) -- Churning cream and butter print prices were reported unchanged today as the egg market opened steady with receipts adequate for a light demand. Country dealers are quoted by the federal department of agriculture on Canada grade eggs, delivered Toronto, in fi- bre cases: A large 45; A me- dium 44; A small 39; B and C grades, no market, Butter prices: Canada first grade: Ontario tenderable 51- 52; non-tenderable 51%4-41% ,in light trading: Western 51-52 (nominal). Runaway Auto Hit Store Front BOWMANVILLE (Staff)--- A runaway car here Saturday knocked over a parking' meter and crashed into the front of the Beaver Lumber Company store. Police say the car owned by Neil Hooey of 26 Liberty street north, was parked on King street, when it started to roll ahead. There has been no esti- mate of damage. pict a headframe, hoistroom, pick, shovel and evergreen trees. But Fred LaRose and the fox aren't forgotten. That hammer. hurling man and his bright- eyed target meet once again on the medal. Bitten Boy, 4, In Good Health CHERBOURG,. France (AP) Andrew McLeod, four-year-old Canadian boy for whom anti- rabies vaccine was airlifted to the liner Queen Elizabeth in the North Atlantic, was reported in the Roper River until He lived as a warrior along 1953, when a Darwin doctor engaged him for a medical: expedition. Since then Waipuldanya has Studied and today is a fully qualified medical aide with the department of health. His fame has come from a series of lone expeditions into the wilds of Arnhem Land, seeking native lepers and per- suading them to come to Dar- win for treatment. The Queen opened this last day of her five-day visit to the territory with a broadcast from the royal yacht Britannia. Later she and her husband drove to Darwin Oval, where nearly 10,000 people--two-thirds is the pastor of the Calvary Church of the Full Gospel in nearby Wilmington. The U.S. Coast Guard re- A set of 1963 licence plates was reported stolen by John Carter, 15 Park street. ported the group was taken off its vessel in choppy seas by an American tuna boat. All were believed safe. Coast guardsmen presumed the boat sank. But young Smith, left here because his wife was to have a baby, held out hope. The missi ded cet. set 'ies int MUSKOKA RESORTS Paignton House, Milford Manor, Delawana Inn, Fern Cottage. For information and summer reservations . . . Oshawa's Original Carpet Cleaning Centre . . . where fully guaranteed satisfaction is. assured, Phone 728-4681 NU-WAY RUG CO. LTD. 174 MARY ST. ting up craft training >entres, hospitals and orphanages for Haiti's poor. NEW HOME SPECIALISTS TROUD |before leaving his home in Kil- perfect health today. The Queen Elizabeth arrived here this morning, en route to Southampton. The boy was believed bitten or scratched lightly by a dog of the population and the big- gest crowd ever to gather in Darwin for any event--waited for a civic reception. FUEL OIL for automatic delivery by our metered trucks Phone DX OIL CO, 668-3341-42 IMA Real Estote Ltd. TRADES ACCEPTED 728-6286 323 King St. W. lam, Alta., to travel with his mother and two sisters to Eng- land. When the dog died soon after- wards, it was feared it might have had rabies, and tests were begun. Meanwhile, serum was flown to the liner so that anti- rabies injections could begun at sea. QUALIFIED THERE IS A BETTER DEAL for YOU in AUTO INSURANCE well over 1000 New Customers iggy py rect fgg fer) save money. SCHOFIELD-AKER LIMITED 360 King West nee WE LIST ONLY TO SELL SPOT CASH OR 'sp JOHN A. J. BOLAHOOD REAL ESTATE -- MORTGAGES 725-6544 | PHYSIOTHERAPIST Urgently required for Crippled Children's School and Treatment Centre (Full or Part-time) APPLY--SIMCOE HALL, 387 Simcoe St. S., Oshawa Telephone 728-7525 COOPER'S TEXACO SERVICE Quality tune-up Auto Electric and General Repairs 56 BRUCE ST. 723-9632 410 RITSON RD, N. 725-8033 54 SIMCOE NORTH S GOVERNMENT-INSPECTED MEAT - SKINLESS c WIENERS tb RINDLESS BACON BRAISING LEAN TENDER CLUB STEAKS LEAN MINCED BEEF 4

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