Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 30 May 1964, p. 2

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* 2. THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturdey, Moy 30, 1964 oe Hk ta ti nena i tes le GOOD EVENING -- By JACK GEARIN -- Unruly Cyprus City Guarded By Van Doos 'THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF COSTLY BUSES (CHAP. 5) Who says some bus lines don't make money? Gray Coach Lines Ltd. carried ynore than 900,000 passen- gers on their Oshawa-Toronto run in 1963 -- there was no breakdown on the number of round-trip passengers and the total included interim points. J. G, Inglis, GCL's gener- al-manager, is authority for the above. He said 34 trips were made each way daily. He was speaking at a luncheon in the Canadiana Hotel, Toronto, to a group of Ontario municipal lead- ers. Alderman Walter Branch, representing Mayor Lyman Gifford, headed the Oshawa delegation which also included Aldermen Gor- don Attersiey, Alice Rear- don, Finley Dafoe, R. Cecil Bint, City Clerk Roy Bar- rand and City Assessor El- don Kerr. The Oshawa guests were tr; orted to and from ee Pa in one of 'the line's new GM diesels. GCL recently purchased 15 for the Hamil- tom-Toronto-Oshawa run at a cost of $48,300 each. They're 40-foot long, air-conditioned with a PA system and special recording device for speed, Miss Nancy Higgins, formerly of Oshawa, played the accordion. "TOMMY" THOMAS DUE IN MONTREAL JUNE 12 Oshawa won't vote until Monday, December 7 next, but municipal election winds should start to blow soon. It's about time, too, because the electorate will be asked to decide some major issues, aside from the Ward system ni ratiks of the candidates, so sadly missing in recent years; Council, PUC and the Board of Education all need a good shuffle if the City's business is to be efficiently administered in the crucial days ahead, but too few able candidates will allow their names to stand, a problem not unique to Oshawa alone. City Clerk Roy Barrand said Thursday two clerks are working fulltime up-dating the municipal election rolls which should include about 35,000 names by the end of September. Speaking of the December election -- T. D, "Tommy" Thomes and his wife, Christine, expect to arrive in Mont- real June 12, according to friends. They are on the last lap of an extensive South African tour that stared last January in Johannesburg. They were in the North Cape of Good Hope May 21 -- the previous day they visited Port Elizabeth (where they toured a GM assem- bly plant), They will return via ship, the way they departed last December. The Thomas's' return will undoubtedly stimulate much speculation locally as to what their future political plans may be. Will "Tommy" run for mayor and Christine for Council, or vice-versa? The Thomas name would be an im- portant factor in any serious appraisal of the upcoming meayoralty race, uniess each emphatically made it known thet he or she had no designs on such office (Politics being what {it is, such announcements are traditionally delayed until the last minute.) GM'S "PROGRESS PREVIEW" WOWS THE WEST Terry Shortt, 23, and James Shaw, 24, spoke before " 80,217 during their recent Western Canada tour as #ars of. GM's colorful sci- ence show, Preview of Prog- gress -- it opened in Van- couver last January. They'll _ return here Monday for a brief rest. Terry is the son of Mr. and Mrs. J. P. im Shortt, Newcastle, 'Jim' is @ the son of Mr. and Mrs. William Shaw, of 505 King we street east -- his mother is 44 Trustee Margaret Shaw of the Board of Education... . m Reg. Lancaser is feeling s much better in the Toronto %G Me By PETER BUCKLEY NICOSIA (CP) Canadian troops were on watch against further trouble Friday night in the Cyprus north coast city of Kyrenia. after Greek - Cypriot demonstrations against' British troops. 4 The Greek - Cypriots had showed their displeasure with the British by breaking windows in the city's Harbor Club, a gen- teel outpost of empire whose food is famous throughout the Mediterranean area, A patrol led by 2nd Lieut. Pierre Gadbois of Quebec City stood by in case of more dem- onstrations. During the Greek demonstra- tions, one of a series of anti- British parades on Cyprus since the arrest of a British airman for alleged gun-running to the Turkish - Cypriots, about 250 demonstrators unexpectedly sur- rounded the Harbor Club and smashed all the windows with stones. There were no injuries to persons inside, Greek secur- ity police dispersed the stone |throwers. ' | During oratory preceding the! attack, a sealed letter was pre- sented by the demonstrators to Maj. Pat Tremblay, commander of C Company of the Royal 22nd Regiment, stationed at Kyrenia. The letter is, believed to have contained already - familiar de- mands for withdrawal of Brit- ish troops from Cyprus. Charge Probe |mons privileges committee met twice in secret Friday and scheduled no further public meetings for the present in its investigation of Gerard Girou- ard's claim that Liberal Direc- tor Keith Davey tried to bribe him into joining the Liberal group in the Commons, Mr. Girouard, Labelle who previously sat with the So- cial Credit group and joined the Progressive Conservatives, charged that Mr, Davey had of- fered him a campaign fund if he would become a Liberal--an offer which, Mr. Girouard re- ported, was withdrawn at Prime Minister. Pearson's instruction. The committee met early Fri- day to deal with a motion sug- gesting that the committee sim- ply report to the Commons it found no evidence of bribery and so no breach of Commons privileges. By a show of hands over the protests of Gilles Gregoire (Cre- ditiste -- Lapointe), the com- mittee decided to consider in secret whether it was worth-| while carrying on. No announcement was made after the closed meeting but it was learned the committee tossed the ball to its. seven- member steering committee.| OTTAWA (CP). -- The Com-| MP) YOUR HEART HAS NINE LIVES: PART 10 Warning For Men: Take Action Now By ALTON BLAKESLEE and JEREMIAH STAMLER, MD The rusting disease of men's arteries piles up bit by bit. Special warning flags begin flying when a man is 25 to 30, when he is optimistically cer- tain he has in inexhaustible plenitude of days and years ahead to spend or waste and enjoy. ,. Others. come when he's 50 to 60, when life still is sweet, when there's a. vintage of years. to savor, and so much still to be done, Dr, Paul Dudley White di- vides man's life into five ages, reaching ultimately perhaps to a full century. The first age is from 'birth to 20, when nowadays the main hazards in life for U.S. chil- dren are accidents and poi- sons The second spans the years 20 to 40, and these are "'the critical years for countless numbers of men who look so healthy, in whom this process of atherosclerosis begins to be laid down. 'The average' man in America settles down at about 25 to a life of physical indolence although often with _.| great nervous activity in his profession or business." Secrecy Covers. In the third age, 40 to 60, the hazards tolerated earlier | begin to ripen into heart at- | tacks and strokes. But there is an antidote, through "middle - aged fit- ness", Dr, White declares. And "what we do from 40 to 60 will decide what will hap- pen to us" in the next two ages -- 60 to 80, and then 80 |. and beyond. | Youlg men are not immune from heart attacks. By age | 25, their arteries contain de- | posits of cholesterol and fats. Coronary artery disease takes about one in 12 of all Americans who die between the ages of 25 and 34, and al- most one in four of all those whose lives end between 35 and 44. A first potential danger period comes when our phy- sical growth ends: and the need for food declines, but the old habit of high food in- take continues. After schooling, most young men drop out of team sports, and few have jobs calling' for heavy work. These are also the years when the smok- ing habit becomes fixed, so that our man acquires the grim triad so common among us -- eating too richly and too much, sitting too much and exercising too little, and smoking too heavily. MARRIAGE A DANGER POINT A second" danger point comes with marriage, when many young men not only begin to eat better but as hus- bands and fathers lack time or money to continue regular exercise. Take-home pay rises with promotions and seniority, but take-home poundage can also creep up if less call is put upon muscular energy and more is put on brain power and decision making. Labor- saving tools and devices are very fine, but what do you do with the savings? , Many young men_ gain weight most rapidly in their 20's and 30's. Half of Ameri- can men are at least 10 per cent over desirable weight when they are only 30 years old, One-fourth add 20 per cent to the pounds they were carrying when first able to vote. With youthful years being a time of general good health, most young men never seek a checkup or readings on blood pressure, blood choles- terol, or incipient diabetes. With time, the young men's 40th or 50th birthday anni- versaries come along. This is a time of far graver aver- age risk of heart attacks, un- less they have lived sensibly. More danger flags begin flapping at this time. One such flag is resigna- tion to the idea that a heart attack is inevitable sooner or later because of hereditary susceptibility, While we may inherit some _ susceptibilities to high blood pressure or high cholestrol, or diabetes, the oulcome depends upon how we live to give them chances to be effective -- or to blunt these risks. "Risks? My life is full of risks, I can't avoid them," says one middle-aged man. He is right, but this same man provides insurance against risks such as fire and automo- bile accidents. By middle age, most men have gained weight, lengthen- ing belt spans at heavy risk of reducing life spans. Carrying this extra weight around might be considered a bit of exercise in a way, Dr. White remarks, though it's a | bit hard to bend down, The fat under the skin is not the real problem -- it's the few ounces of fat accumulating in danger- ous places in the arteries. MIDDLE-AGE FITNESS In the third stage of life, he adds, "much of the disease that has been slowly building up becomes apparent by symptoms, signs, or sudden death." Health at this time becomes largely dependent upon what happened -- not in childhood-- but in the years 20 to 40. Be- \sides physical fitness in child- hood, Dr. White urges physi- el fitness in middle-age. You can eat heartily on a diet lower in saturated fats and cholesterol, without over- doing on calories, and you can lose weight thereby. 'You can see better phy- sical condition, recovering the young feeling of being fit, alert and vigorous. But, of course, don't rush off into some sud- den and intense change of habits You can work gradually, at activities you like, to restore the verve and endurance you once had. and the sense of physical well being, and aid your arteries and your heart in the process, The key is to start a new habit that under- mines and replaces the old deadly habit of life. "We seem to delight in the End Discussion Of Sentencing TORONTO (CP) -- Elimina- tion of any anomalies in sen- tencing policies in criminal courts was recommeded Fri- day after a two-day national conference of jurists and law of- ficers on the problems of sen- tencing. The conference of 75 top au- thorities--first of its kind in Canada--did not make public any specific proposals after its closed sessions but proposed further judicial conferences on "matters pertaining to the ad- ministration of justice." The meeting was convened by the University of Toronto's cen- tre of criminology to discuss mainly the problem of appar- ent inconsistencies in sentences handed differet persons for th same type of crime. t A statmet issued after the sessions said it was agreed that "if justice is to be done, there will inevitably be apparent dis- parities in the type and sever- ity of sentencess." "This aim," it added, "should be to eliminate disparities where they exist in the philo- sophy, policy and practice in imposing sentence." absurd 'belief that we must avo: strains, either physical or mental, that we must pam- per ourselves and not walk upstairs or work physically Doctors Blasted hard or mentally either -- whereas on occasions the mid- night oi] should be bummed," Dr. White says Early retirement, too short a week at work, and other seemingly wonderful attrac- tions may penalize our arter- ies unless we are careful, he and others warn. Many intelligent men in all walks of life "think nothing .of continuing in their 70's to row, play tennis, climb moun- tains or walk many miles daily. And they continue to be more mentally alert than if they were sitting in an arm- | chair waiting for an end to | their retirement in life." | ' (Tomorrow: Hearts, and | Wotic::} | (Condensed from "Your | Heart Has Nine Lives," pub- | lished by Prentice Hall, copy- | right 1964 by Alton Balkeslee) | By Chiropractor TORONTO (CP)--Lioyd Mac- dougall, president of the Ontario Chiropractic Association, said Friday the medical profession is not acting in the best inter- ests of Ontario citizens by re- fusing to establish professional contact with chiropractors. Heated Exchange OTTAWA (CP) -- The inflam- mable flag issue, which the government hopes to keep in check until it officially comes before the Commons, was ig- nited indirectly by Premier Smiiwood of Newfoundland Friday. The resulting flareup, which Speaker Alan Macnaughton prompted External Affairs Min- ister Martin and Opposition Leader Diefenbaker -- often at the same time--to exchange starchy comments, oe "I do not propose to take any lectures from him," said an an- gry Mr. Martin, acting prime minister in Lester Pearson's ab- sence, in a reference to the leader of the Opposition. Th government thinks it has some divine right, retorted Mr. Diefenbaker. The attitude of Mr. Martin was '"'when I open my mouth, let no dog bark." The spark was a telegram Veteran News | Editor Dies VANCOUVER (CP) -- George Graham Finlay, 65, a chapter in the history of Canadian jour- nalism, died Friday, Mr. Finlay, "Pop" to hun- dreds of Canadian journalists, died suddenly in hospita' which he had entered three weeks ear- lier following a fall at his home resolution passes T. lature Thursday. mons Friday asked what . the Seance wigs e reso! be by Parliament, Mr. Martin said that along with other would be answered resolution comes up Justice Minister Fa later Friday that the would be told Monday or \day when the debate could expected. i ¢ Telegram Spar cS ion Jack if and when Porimeeat™ 'ABLES TELEGRAM Mr. Smallwood tabled the tele- 'aor in the Newfoundland leg- bal i ily Fe When the external affairs minister answered, the opposi- tion leader intervened on a ques- tion of privilege to "point out itists, Speaking to the Canadian and Ontario chiropractors associa- tions, he said it' was high time the Ontario Medical Association "came down out of its ivory tower and realized that some- s one else is in the field of heal-|Sathering agency, after a caree ing besides themselves." jof 50 years. He said chiropractors, optometrists and osteo-| and an attack of pneumonia. He had retired jast Septem ber as news editor"of the Van den- J the respect and affection 0 During those years he gained) prime jnied any information, said Mr. -|Martin. 'In accordance with 'our rules any question having ;couver bureau of The Canadian|to do with this matter should Press, Canada's national news|be discussed when the subject t| matter is before the House." | Anyway, said the acting | minister, Me. Diefen- f\baker didn't want information paths are not included in the|"ewspaper men across the coun-|but "he hopes by these single try, many of whom \their craft under him. He joined the Western Asso proposed provincial Medical Services Insurance Act. Mr. MacDougall said this de- nies the public the freedom to|ciated choose a doctor it wants and| Winnipeg PARIS (AP)--Soviet Premier Khrushchev was quoted Friday as saying Soviet spies-in-the skies were taking pictures of |military installations and sug- gesting that the United States rely on its own camera-satel- lites for surveillance of Com- munist Cuba, "Neither President Johnson nor I want another crisis over Cuba," former Senator William Benton of Connecticut said Khrushchev told him in a Mos- cow interview Thursday. "'It is time for sober sense to reign." The United States has had a The steering committee will re-| port back next week to arfother| closed meeting of the privileges! committee. Man Stabbed On Sidewalk | TORONTO (CP) -- Michae! |Wosczyna, 36, proprietor of a cut-rate clothing store, Friday) was. charged with manslaugh- ter in the stabbing death of a} 21-year-old youth in a street fight, | Police said David Modesty | was stabbed with a pair of scis- sors on a crowded sidewalk as startled rush - hour spectators WEATHER FORECAST Cloudy, Chilly Sunday Forecasts issued by the Tor- Picture EDT today, valid until 11 a.m onto weather office at 5:30 a.m.|Sunday: Synopsis: A low pressure area) Lake Superior: Winds north centred in northern Quebec con-|erly 10 to 15 knots; fair. \tinues to control the weather| throughout Eastern Canada, \Cold air is being forced south- |ward from Hudson Bay into On- tario, A low pressure area cen-|\tario: Winds light variable. \tred in western Texas is ex-| \pected to move eastnortheast-| late tonight; fair, Forecast temperatures: Lake Huron and Erie: Winds|QUOTES KHRUSHCHEV light variable becoming east 15 Georgian Bay and Lake On- successful global surveillance by satellite system since 1959, but Khrushchev had never ac- knowledged that the Kremlin has another one going in outer space. The discussion, Benton told reporters, arose when he ques- tioned Khrushchey about U.S.- Cuban relations, Whether Khrushchev meant the Russians had pictures of U.S. bases was not spelled out, -Ibut reporters who talked with Benton thought that was the meaning. Benton said Khrushchev told) hi im: "If you wish, I can show you Victoria. ciated Press as a ingereng os in 1913, saw.the WAP) Coffee breaks in 17th-century type of treatment it prefers. \grow into The Canadian Press| - 'and watehed CP expand into a |news gathering agency stretch- ing from 6t, John's, Nfld. to learned | questions to cause confusion and disunity." MEN LIKED COFFEE England were so popular that the women signed a petition, mentioning that they couldn't find their husbands "even to Satellite Spies For Cuba Urged Soviet missile crisis of 1962 to guard against another secret buildup of offensive missiles. Benton said Khrushchev sug- gested the United States aban- don these flights. IS INTERNATIONAL He quoted Khrushchev as say- ing the aerial inspection issue is "bigger than just the United States and Cuba . . . it is some- thing of international concem. It involves. international] law." In Washington, the defence deprtment maintained its us- ual silence about the U.S. pho- tographic satellite program, These satellites have been photographing the earth, includ- ing Russia and its allies, for five years. The United States has dozens or scores of them orbiting the earth, snapping everything on it. The Soviet Union had never disclosed whether or not it had similar means of snooping on the United States. NEED... FUEL OIL ? PERRY Day or Night 723-3443 photos. of military installations call a midwife." NO DISHES TO WASH «.. when you serve CHICKEN mn we ROUGH we. WE DELIVER--728-7321 Mr. Finlay worked in CP bu- reaus from Ottawa to Vancou- ver. He reported events that have become part of Canadian jhistory, notably the growth of Social Credit in Alberta and the \Coalhurst, Alta., mine disaster. {He was news editor here for 11 years. | HONEST CAL'S Furniture & Appliances WILL BE CLOSED ALL DAY MONDAY JUNE Ist For INVENTORY Watch For Special Values Next Week taken from outer space. I will show them to President John- 3 " yee UD oud Uke: oes |watched. He was pronounced) rq and may bring some light} .|son if he wishes." Khrushchev did not make en- General Hospital. . . . Keith Kearns of the City Engineer- ing Department is in the JAMES SHAW Oshawa General Hospital ; after a mild heart attack last 'Tuesday. SHRINE CLUB VARIETY SHOW DUE TONIGHT | Don't forget the Second Annual Variety Show of the Osh- awa Shrine Club which is to be presented twice tonight in the R. §. McLaughlin Collegiate and. Technical School Auditorium at 7 and 9.30 p.m. This is an imported production, The Todd Allen Variety Show, and features acrobats, singers, clowns and musicians. 4 HOME FOLKS WOULD DEARLY LOVE TO SEE DANCER MEMO TO CITY COUNCIL: : Oshawa usually recognizes its champions appropriately. Don Jackson and Alex Oakley got plaques and medals, and well-deserved ones; the Oshawa Green Gaels, Minto Cup champs, got gold rings (more than $600 worth collec- tively.) : So what's to be done about Northern Dancer, Mr. E. P. Taylor's dazzling bundle of horseflesh? He could easily romp home with the coveted silverware (more specifically, the triple crown) in the classi¢ Belmont Stakes June 6, What if he does? Are you going to look the other way and treat the Dancer Hke a poor relation, or will you accord him some unique municipal honor, such as a parade along downtown King street (now that the pot-holes have been filled) with His Worship Mayor Gifford, Mr, Taylor, Col. R. &. McLaughlin, the Band of the Ontario Regiment, plus prominent local members of the horse racing aristocracy (such as Jim Fleming, Sam Jackson, Russell Humphreys, QC, Gordon Riehl, etc.) : The Dancer will be around these parts soon for his upcom- ing appearance in the Queen's Plate, Toronto, Saturday, June 20, but he won't make the Stud Farm his headquarters. The folks would dearly love to see him, Don't forget he's @ local product, born at the nearby National Stud Farm, May 27, 1962, where his parents (Na- tala and Nearctic) still reside. Don't forget also, he has helped spread the fair name of our city in a short time far more than the Industrial Com- mission could ever hope to. The National Stud Farm, incidentally, will be closed weekends until after Sunday, June 20. . |dead on arrival at hospital with) | a wound in the stomach Homicide detectives said Mo- desty and Woszezyna had been arguing over a personal matter, | Beikdets Meet | Peace Walkers | MIAMI, Fla. (AP) ~ Queber- \to-Cuba peace marchers got |splattered with red paint Fri- jday and jousted with Cuban jhecklers in a battle of songs at Miami's Torch of Friendship plaza, Three men were arrested, one for grabbing a peace marcher's sign and two for squirting marchers with paint from syringes. Police finally ordered the marchers to leave the plaza and they did so. Bediam resulted when march- ers attempted to make speeches lat the torch site and anti-Cas- tro. Cubans began stridently singing to drown them out. Later the marchers raised their own voices in song and the Cu- bans once again sang at the top of their lungs. Shouts of "Communist" were hurled at the:group. The peace marchers--12 men and women --are plodding from Quebec to Cuba to demonstrate their dis- approval of war No Canadians are believed to be among the marchers, though Canadians participated in the earlier stages of the march. rain to the southwestern regions |Sunday afternoon. | | Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, iuake Huron, Windsor, London: {Mostly clear tonight becoming 'cloudy late tonight followed by occasional rain Sunday after- noon and evening, Continuing cold. Winds light becoming east 15 Sunday. Niagara, Lake Ontario, Hamil- ton: Clear and cold tonight with risk of ground frost. Increasing cloudiness Sunday. Winds light becoming east 15 Sunday after- noon. Toronto; Clear tonight, In- creasing cloudiness Sunday. Continuing cold. Winds light be- coming east 15 Sunday after-| noon, | Georgian Bay, Haliburton, Ti- Low tonight, high Sunday: . |Windsor f St, Thomas London . Kitchener Mount Forest . Wingham ... Hamilton ... St. Catharines Toronto Peterborough . Trenton Killaloe ... Muskoka . North Bay Sudbury .... Earlton eee Sault Ste. Marie ... Kapuskasing .. White River ..ecse- 3 Moosonee .. ae oeee tirely clear whether he referred to photographs taken by Soviet spacemen on orbital flights or photos from satellites -- the widely discussed spy-in-the sky system; that the Russian have said the United States is using. Discussion of the space photo- graphs came up while they talked about the reconnaissance flights the United States has maintained over Cuba since the CONTINENTAL |STEAM BATH 144 Ontario St. Oshawa Finnish Saune Ph, 728-2460 magami, North Bay, Sudbury: Clearing early this evening. Clear and cold with frost to- night. Increasing cloudiness \Sundy. Winds light. | Algoma; White River: Clear) tonight. Sunday sunny and cold. | Winds light. Cochrane: A few scattered) showers or snowflurries becom: | ing mainly clear tonight. Sunny | with cloudy periods Sunday. | Continuing cold. | | TORONTO '(CP) -- Marine forecasts issued at 8:30 a.m. , CAMERON ! r For Expert Building | GEORGE C, MARTIN 'asurance 67 King St, E., Oshawa BUS: 728-4511 RES: 725-2802 All kines of Insurance | j DEMOLITION SMALL JOBS--BIG JOBS P1617 Mill St. Oshawa ) 725-4285 ae Se ae aR me Faster 24-Hour DELIVERY McLaughlin Coal & Supplies Delivery Service -- With our Fleet of -- RADIO-CONTROLLED TRUCKS !! : Budget Plan = Automatic Weather-Controlled Delivery i "Turn To Modern Living With Oil Heat' TELEPHONE 723-3481 McLaurhlir "oal & Supplies 'td. 110 KING ST. WEST OSHAWA Once again Rudy, International Creator of Men's Hairstyling, will tour ali European. Countries on behalf of the Canadian Heirstylists for Men. He plans to exchonge trends and ideas for the betterment of the Canadian and European Barbering and Men's Hairstyling Industry. Rudy believes thot he has the best staff in the coun- try and that they are c WILSON ROAD SOUTH 'onsultants on solving any hair problems for men at 364 OSHAWA 728-6007

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