Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 12 Nov 1963, p. 12

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12 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesd jay, November 12, 1963 = CHILD OUTWITS GUNMEN Six-year-old Anne-Marie Se- guin with her mother, holds shears that she used to help free her parents after masked men left them bound early Monday morning. Little Anne- Admiral Holds Rally In Department Store PHILADELPHIA (CP)--Can- ~ ada put on a splashy front Mon- iday as she opened a drive for ja bigger share of the U.S. mar- |ket with a week-long trade fatr, |biggest of its kind. _. | Accompanying it wes some vf, the eye-appealing hoopla of an international carnival as this City of Brotherly Love re- sponded by officially marking this as Canada week. ' | While concentration was on an lexhibition of Canadian products in the basement concourse of a pik, a stuffed Arctic owl, totem tree. The extravangaza also US. Auto Plants Post Record Week DETROIT (AP) Marie pretented to be asleep until the thugs left the Seguin home in Eastview, Ont., with $5000 in money and jewels --(CP Wirephoto) PESTICIDE USE Suburban Gardeners 'Biggest Off KANSAS CITY (AP) -- Ex: perts, including a Canadian, have called the backyard gard- ner the biggest offender in dan- gerous use of pesticides. The do - it - yourself gardner hasn't been reading lables on insect sprays and other chem-' ical weapons carefully and '"'un- intentionally has been doing more harm to himself and his neighbor". than the farmer who is aware of the hazards, said Dr. Henry Hurtig of Canada's department of agriculture in Ot- tawa. "And no farmer would likely use four pounds of a pesticide when directions call for half a pound--it costs too much, and he knows his crops might have a residue exceeding legal limits," said Dr, Robert Whit e- Stevens| of the American Cyanamid) Company. | These and other experts,/ speaking to the American Pu lic Health Association, took is- sue with charges that wide- spread use of pesticide and ag-) ricultural chmicals is causing) vast harm to human and wild) life | Chemicls combatting insect and plant diseases have been a major foundation stone of North America's remarkable food production, they noted, | NEED INFORMATION "We need more information, alter the balance and keep it) facts and education and Jess | emotion, passion and bias' on more cars last week than in any previous week in their history e they stro.e to meet cus- tomer demand, Output for the week was es- timated unofficially at more than 188,000 cars, erasing the old production high mark of 184,114 set in April, 1955. An official count set October's production at 799,388 cars--the biggest total ever in a month. The old 'mark of 794,168 was set in March, 1955. Indicating the strong demand for new cars, so 33 auto as- sembly plants were operated overtime last Saturday. General Motors had 14 plants on overtime operation while Ford had .15, Chrysler Corp. enders' the question of health and pes- ticides said Dr, Bernard IL Oser, Food and Drug Research Laboratories, Inc., Maspeth N.Y He said the hazards had been jexaggerated Half the persuns dying from p« icide poisoning are children downtown hotel, Canadian fair officials whipped up local en- thusiasm by an exhibition of Canadiana that included Ook- poles and Eskimo craft, free movies and RCMP officers in|t scanlet uniforms, highland danc- ers and pipers and promises of a 60-foot Canadian Christmas in- cluded five Canadian destroyers lined up on the Philadelphia wa- terfront and manned by 1,300 United | 100 U.S. companies States auto plants turned out|mile radius of Philadelphia have| ada imported more than 125,000 tons of Pennsylvania coal last year, he said, In the same year Canada shippe. more than piece RCAF band crammed|5,000,000 tons of iron ore, val- against the display counters. ued at $53,000,000, to feed Phil- There were skating exhibi-\adelphia steel mills. tions by Canadian champions, A total of 105 Canadian man- including 14-year-old Linda Car-\ufacturens, representing indus- bonetto of Ottawa, daughter of|tries across the country, parti- Ben Carbonetto, Canadian vice-|cipate in the fair with their jconsul in Detroit; @ display ofjeye on rich Pennsylvania mar- ancient Quebec military drills;|kets. Thene were displays of a model of the Canadian satel-|fine Canadian furniture, quality lite Alouette; and a taste of ajclothing, utensils, food and some Canadian marine delicacy, Arc-|innovations such ae a new kind tic char, fish that caught Phil-|of wheel chair that can climb adelphia's fancy and was fea-|stairs and an amphibious road- tured in several restaurants. |ster that can take to water like In opening ceremonies, Cana-|a duck, dian Trade Minister Sharp em-| Rear-Admiral D. W. Piers of ihasized the imp of Ca-|Halifax, chairman of the Cana- nadian-U.S. trade and the im:|dian joint military staff in Wash- portance of preserving close|ington, led the Canadian contin- cross-border co-operation. igent at Veterans Day memor- "Closer commercial ties de.|ial services and later made the velop closer friendships and|speech in the centre court of the these friendships will outlive the department store. differences which may arise be- 'He told a crowd of shoppers tween us," Sharp said. that "in times of international He said in 1962 $8,500,000,000|tension and war, our countries in goods and services crossed|stand together in arms, resolut- the U.S.-Canadian border." The/ely allied in a common cause." trade minister said more than| 'In times of peace and pros- 68 per cent of Canadian imports|perity, we have more time to are from the United States.jenjoy and enhanc the warm More than 22 per cent of Amer-|cultural associations between ican exports go to Canada. our two countries and to foster Responding for the city gov-jour mutual prosperity through ernment, councilman Henryjtrade and commerce to our Carr mentioned that more than|common advantage." ithin a 50-! sailors, a speech by a Canadian admiral in a downtown depart- ment store with a 100 - man naval guard of honor and a 55- ee a MORE WELCOMED jeubsidiaries in Canada. | Britain welcomed nearly. |GET IRON ORE |2,000,000 visitors in 1962, an in- Through the local port, Can-'crease of 132,000 over 1961. 'BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT Frozen Fillets Aid Maritimes PETIT DE GRAT, N.S (CP)|ment in the area, which already Fresh frozen fillets and fish|has a flourishing economy sticks are helping to boost the) The plant produces frozen fil- economy of this Cape Breton|lets, packaged fish sticks, fish Island community. portions and fish meal. Mar- Expect End To Coca Cola exchange rose : 25.51. 'Speculative Issues. Strike 'Up Dull MarketDay = itz" HAMILTON (CP) -- A strike| TORONTO (CP) Action 'which has been in progress 11/8mong speculative issues was jmonths at the Coca Cola 'Lim-|the. main feature in a generally lited plant here is expected to/@ull day on the stock market lend Thursday. Monday. Employees at the plant, mem-|, CToinor traded 911,000 shares ner gee bd Bi et aed Soft Drink, Mak and Dis+!tor some days following favor. iors, tillery Workers (CLC), agreed | ane reports from the com- pany's drilling operations on its i a meeting Monday night to |Manitoba property. -- a company offer. contract is expected to be) ; 'i jsigned Wednesday before pick-|,, Consolidated Mogul, drilling ets will' be reoved from the|i" Ireland, advanced six cents nlant which has been closed! 7° $2.20 ch 319,600 shares and since Dec. 4, 1962, by the walk-|199 Boron --_-- ere out of 70 workers. On eae pe shined bani | Except for a minor change in, e industava' 1 DOMES jvacaiion provisions, the propo-|closed ahead, although _back- jsal accepted by the strikers was tracking slightly from early ad- lthe same as an offer they|Vances: Montreal was up % and turned Gown mote than two|Lmperial Bank of Commerce %. iweeks ago. [Royal dipped %. : The first contract between the|,, Walker - Gooderham climbed] |company and the local will pro-| 4 = Me jvide for an across-the -board|, Pipelines host ground, Inter- |wage increase of $4 a week. it\Provincial and Trans-Canada will bring the minimum wage|POth losing ¥4. Steels softened at the plant to $1.99 an hour, With Algoma down 4. -| Noranda declined '4, Interna- FAMOUS SIRE tional Nickel gained % and Li- After finishing an illustrious|berian jumped 1% to 15% harness racing cafeer, Peterjamong senior base metals, |Volo sired 377 trotters ang 156|Golds weakened. | pacers, '! Dome Petnoleum and Hudson _ Bay Oil and Gas rose 4 each) in senior western oils. } The foreign market had a, quiet day. On index, western oils were ahead .58 to 82.27, industri~is .21--approximately equal to one CANADIAN LAUNCHED The Royal William, 182-foot wooden paddle wheeler launched at Quebec City in 1831, became the first British steam- ship to enter a U.S. port in 1833. GANGWAY FOR THIS YEAR'S BIG ADVENTURE! JOHN WAYNE "DONOVAN'S R EEF" in TECHNICOLOR 28. BILTMORE 19 GREATEST OF THEM ALL! The New Spectacular TARZAN The Magnificent" in Breath-Taking COLOR with GORDON SCOTT SHOW STARTS 6:45 P.M, NEXT STOP for oe "BUS STOP"! HOME OWNER'S | vaca THEATRE LOAN PLAN! NOVEMBER 19, 20, 21, 22, 23. Now you can borrow the money you need STARTS 8:30 SHARP to pay off big bills . . . to buy an automo- bile . . . to finance a university education ... to remodel your entire home . . . pur- chase a summer cottage...or for any good, big-money reason. It's the Associates' new Home Owner's Loan Plan: big money, for today's bigger needs. Here's how it works. If you're a home owner, you can use the equity in your home as collateral for the loan. And you may qualify whether your home is OSHAWA LITTLE THEATRE BOX OFFICE: HENDERSON'S BOOK STORE Friday, Nov.. 15 -- 4:30 to 7:00 Saturday, Nov, 16 -- 8:30 to 6:00 Monday, Nov. 18 -- 4:30 to 7:00 LIBRARY THEATRE Nights of Play -- from 7:00 p.m. on GENERAL ADMISSION $1.25 who get their hands on these chemicals and swailow them, said Dr. Wayland J. Hayes Jr worked its Los Angeles force an| In.1950 Booth Fisheries Cana-|kets are the United States and extra day, as well as those inidian Co. Ltd., built a small fish|Canada, with the U.S. buying the Detroit, Plymouth and Ham-|plant here and for two years|about 60 per cent. ; | 0 paid for or not: You get cash at a reason- able rate of interest -- no bonus charge or RICHARD of the Communicable Disease tramck, Mich', plants. loperated without profits. It had Booth Fisheries Chicago Centre in Atlanta, Ga American motors plants| four employees and a few. in- also operates a plant at For- White-Stevens declared there worked overtime too shore fishing boats. tune, Nfld. is "not one medically annotated| General Motors accounted for) Thirteen years later the plant|--= . case of death on record caused just over 5¢ per cent of produc-jdeclared an annual turnover of by human cons rption of any|tion last week; Ford about 29,/more than $3,000,000. It has six| foodstuff which has been treated|Chrysler 13.5, American Motors|trawlers and employs more| with any registered pesticide|6.2 and Studebaker. about one/than 200 workers ashore. The} hidden fees added. Stop in at your near- est Associates office and ask about our new Home Owner's Loan Plan -- it's the easy, worry-free way to enjoy the things you want now! it Si TREVOR' LYNLEY used in accordance with ap- proved label reco mendations, nor has any relationship ever been shown between correct and approved use of any pesticide and incidents of any diagnos- able disease'"' including leuke- mia, arthritis and liver or blood diseases. "Most research seeking prove damage to wild life has failed to do so," Hays said "There have been instances in which fish were killed but these nistances are evidentially rare." As for the cha»ge that man's use of chemicals is 'upsetting the balance of nature, that is the whole purpose of mar upset in his favor," White-Stev- ens said. Luxury Liner Pirate Triggers UN UNITED NATIONS (AP) Capt. Henrique Galvao, who} electrified the world and infur-|take UN ~ headquarters Hassle minded the there have been committee that proposals out iated Portugal. when he seized|New York and said he favors a luxury liner in 1961, has be- come the centre of a fresh con- troversy. The new fuss produced sharp criticism of the United States Monday and a demand that the| United Nations consider moving} its headquarters from NeW! phe committee decided that) shooting York It was touched off by a pro- posal that Galvao--a pirate in the eyes of Portugal but a pat- riot to many others for his op- position to Portuguese Premier Antonio Salazar -- testify before! the 1ll-nation UN trusteeship committee. U.S. Ambassador Sidney R Yates told the commi'tes that if Galvao comes here, the US might have to extradite him to Portugal, which has wanted to get its hands on the captain ever since the se'zure of the liner Santa Maria in January 1961 Galvao, who said he seized the ship to call attention to Sala- zar's dictatorial policies, has been in exile in Brazil NO OBJECTION Yates emphasized' that the U.S. had no objection to Gal- vao's appearance but reminded the committee that while Gal- vao was on U.S. soil he would be subject to the extradition treaty between the United States and Portugal Galvao is a former governor- general of Angola, a Portuguese African territory whose status is being debated by the com- mittee. Toge's Emmanuel. Bruce re- DIVIDENDS By THE CANADIAN PRESS Laurentide Financial Corp. Ltd., common 17% cents, $2 pid. 50 cents, $1.40 pfd. 35 cents Dec. 31, record Dec; 10; 6% per cent pfd. 31% cents, Jan. 31, ~~ 1964, record.Jan. 10, 1964, lreview of these proposals Bruce questioned the appro- priateness of having UN head- |quarters in a country which can- jnot guarantee the safety of peo- ple coming to appear before UN committees. consideration of Galvao's ap- pearance be put off 48 hours. 'MA | i i= © 1--to| year-old girl. leave after holding a family at/steel trawlers go into operation) t 7 of| Wounded him a second time. | lannual shore workers payroll is! ened ~|more than $750,000. The plant is a subsidiary of {Booth Fisheries Corporation of| |Chicago, one of the largest: fish} iprocessing firms in North] |America, But plant manager) Man Killed Trying To gi ees Sea | Steal Girl | Fish landings over' a 10-year \period have averaged Be ct |000 ds annually, producing| WOODLAWN, Ont, (CP)---Po-|12,000,000 pounds of. finished! \lice said Monday that Alexander! products. Zadow, a 47-year-old vierk with the treasury department in Ot-/CITES GOAL tawa, was killed Saturday night) Mr. Gordon says the compa-| while attempting to abduct a 16-/ny's immediate goal is 15,000,-| 000 pounds of finished product Zadow was killed by a shot-|@ year. This objective is expected to when three new} [eee jgun blast and by a shot from his own rifle as 'e attempted to|get a boost gunpoint for three hours. at the plant in January. One of} Aylen McCaffrey, his wife and|the $500,000 vessels has already| 16-year-old daughter Eileen had|been delivered and the second) been held at gunpoint in their|is expected from the shipyards| Woodlawn grocery store. Police|next week. The other will be} said Zadow was shot. by Mrs.|dlivered in mid-December. McCaffrey as he attempted to} The additional trawlers, First and second mortgage loans $1,600 to $16,000 or more ASSOCIATES REALTY CREDIT LTD. 111 Simcoe St, South Phone: 725-6531 Mr. G. Sloggett, Mgr. ASSOCIATES HARDBOARD GRILLEWORK ¢ PaAraArars Kika 4E-4 DO IT YOURSELF USES order the daughter into a car.|which have a carrying capac-| Zadow fell and the rifle he} ity of 300,000 pounds of fish, are| was carrying discharged and|expected to increase employ-| Zadow had entered the Mc-| Caffrey home by a back door NET EARNINGS Saturday and ordered the fam- jily to sit down. Eileen said that} By THE CANADIAN PRESS three hours later he ordered her} Consumers Gas Company, joutside and told her to get into|year ended Sept. 30: 1963, ja car $7,736,947, 49 cents a_ share; Police said no charge is being| 1962, $6,562,511, 42 cents. laid in connection with the! Provincial Bank of Canada year ended Oct. 31, 1963 $1,985- Woodiawn is 15 miles west of/237, $1.52 a share; 1962, $1,950,- |Ottawa. 1626, $1.45. 'DRUGS 28 KING STREET EAST PHONE 723-4621 OPEN EVENINGS TILL 9 P.M. hab 4E- ata as The Story Of CinennScore ROBERT WEBBER OURS NYE GYPSY ROSE LEE kegels @ iN COLOR "NEW KIND OF LOVE" Adult Entertainment 100 res K4bdk-d 4h bd b- Kikdikdk-4 fe - 4h 4h bd 4h 4 4 KH ol +. ri 7 . > a kik ty KARA HELD OVER- 2nd WEEK! BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR! WINNER OF ACADEMY MAKE YOUR OWN @ ROOM DIVIDERS © SLIDING DOORS © WINDOW FILIGREE Oshawa to: Vancouver $42.80 $15.25 North Bay $ 6.40 Quebec (via Levis) Halifax Winnipeg $21.80 Edmonton $33.80 BARGAI 4ahilit dability All coach seat no extra cost @ FLOOR SCREENS CABINET GRILLES @ RADIATOR COVERS CHOICE OF CONVENIENT SIZES FRAMING AND OTHER ACCESSORIES beexpensive PANELAIRE bordboord grille. work dresses wp your home quickly ond ecsily! Installs in @ tow minutes, Hendrede 16'x72" grille. .only 9.00 | 24°K72" gritte. .onty 7,60 COMPLETE 26" x 96" sty $19.10 ROOM DIVIDER KIT... SCREEN PANEL KIT ...... only $11.90 COMPLETE 18" x 74" FILIGREE SHUTTERS RADIATOR COVERS 4, ROOM DIVIDERS BI-FOLD DOORS Deal With the Best and Get the Best Oshawa Wood Products LTD HEAD OFFICE & SHOWROOM OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE COURTICE--728-1611 728-1617 Columbia Pictures preserits Ne" THE SAM SPIEGEL : DAVID LEAN Production of TAWRENCE OF ARABIA ANTHONY QUAYLE - CLAUIDE RAINS - ARTHUR KENNEDY sv OMAR SHARIF » ner PETER TOOL « emence TS fe TS, SBT PLAZA RY THEATRE PLAYING MATINEE 2 P.M.-- NIGHT 8 P.M. PRICES FOR THIS ENGAGEMENT ONLY! MATINEE ADULTS NIGHT 1.25]ADULTS $1.50 CHILDREN 75c {CHILDREN __75c SORRY -- NO PASSES _ NO RESERVED SEATS DOORS OPEN 1 - 7 P.M.

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