Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 6 Aug 1964, p. 3

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Glen Pray, an ex-teacher who has turned auto manu- facturer, stands beside the first model of the Cord Sports- man 8-10, a scaled down ver- sion of the classic Cord auto of 1936. Pray and Wayne Mc- Kinley, a Belleville, Illinois, auto dealer, unveiled the car Wednesday. They hope to start producing the car and sell at least 2,000 of them. The body BILE IS REBORN is a laminated plastic said to be more durable than steel. The car has a Chevrolet Cor- vair engine. It will sell for be a design on the fender is the reflection of overhead light fixtures. --AP Wirephoto Industrials Sink Lower On Market TORONTO (CP) -- Industrial stocks were sharply 'cver on stock market Wednesday while speculative mining issues were all but ignored, The session opened on a sour inote with hefty losses going to key blue-chip stocks as inves- tors. were concerned with the United States-North Viet Nam conflict. At the same time, prices were slashed on the New York market. Around 1 p.m., a rally cut losses as bargain hunters moved in. In New York, the bar- gain hunting became a_ full- fledged rally, but here the rally never got off the groun«. Union Gas dipped 1% to 235 while Distillers Seagram gave up 1 to 61, Banks, were weak. Senior base metals were also marked down. Falconbridge and Noranda eased 1 each to 71% and 47% while Inco lost 4 to 83%. In golds, Dome slumped % to 30% while Dickenson lost 15 cents to $4.75. There was a long list of 5-10-cent losers in junior issues. RAGLAN UNCHANGED In speculative mining issues, DOUBT ATTACK (Continued from Page 1) The Johnson administration obviously was bracing itself for a siege of trouble in Southeast Asia, and hoping it would not turn into another Korea. It or- dered more planes and ships to- ward the crisis zone including one of the world's largest air- craft carriers, the Ranger, and 12 destroyers from the West Coast. The 7th Fleet units were or- dered back to normal patrol duty in the Gulf of Tonkin in line with the U.S. position laid before the United Nations that the air strikes were "a limited and measured response"' to the North Vietnamese naval action against American warships, and that the U.S. wants no exten. sion of the war in South Viet Nam. Defence Secretary Robert Mc- Namara shortly after the raids said Wednesday that in 64 sor- ties planes from navy carriers destroyed or damaged some 25 patrol boats, heavily damaged four torpedo bases and de- stroyed an oil depot capable of 10 per cent vf North Viet Nam's petroleum. He said ' e from the oil tanks was rising 14,000 feet. McNamara gave the Ameri- wan losses: as two planes shot / down and two damaged. Later he revised the damage estimate! to. a single plane. In a television interview Wed- nesday night McNamara dis- closed that the Americans had undertaken reconnaissance mis- sions over the bombed areas that confirmed the air strikes were 'very successful" -- and that the immediate crisis in the gulf was over. The U.S. defence chief said the reconnaissance flights drew no anti-aircraft fire such as shot down the two attacking Ameri- can planes, but McNamara noted that the American bomb- ing and strafing attacks had knocked out some anti-aircraft batteries. The estimates, McNamara added, indicated the air strikes' wiped out two-thirds to three- fourths of North Viet Nam's op- erational patrol boat fleet. PARK USERS First users of Algonquin Park in Ontario were Indians more' than 4,000 years ago. 'Television personality Ed Sulli- CAPSULE NEWS Defects To ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP)--An RCMP spokesman said Wednes- day a doctor of an East Ger- lman trawler, fishing on the Grand Banks, has defected to the West. The spokesman said the unidentified doctor was transferred aboard the British trawler Ross Fighter about two weeks ago to treat two ailing crew members. The doctor or- dered two seamen transferred to the East German trawler, Johanne R, Becker, but vetused to return to his own ship. : CHARGE NEGRO LEADER NEW YORK (AP)--William Epton, self-styled Communist who led an abortive Harlem demonstration in defiance of a court order, was indicted Wed- nesday on charges of advocat- ing the violent overthrow of the New York state government. The 32-year-old Negro leader of Harlem's Progressive Labor Movement also was charged with calling for the assassina- tion of policemen and judges. SULLIVAN AILING STATELINE, Nev, (AP)-- van was in hospital Wednesday for observation for what was described as an "intestinal dis- order." Sullivan complained of feeling ill after his midnight show at Harrah's Tahoe Casino, a spokesman for the entertainer said. A Harrah's spokesman said Sullivan's condition was not believed serious. about $4,000. What appears to East German Doctor The West Callao. The move coincided with a crime wave in Lima, the capital of Peru, which authori- ties said has reached "'alarming proportions." Police said those detained would be sent to penal colonies in the heart of tie Amazon jungle. LOVERS DIE ALLAHABAD (AP) -- Two young lovers, the boy a mem- ber of India's ranking Brahmin caste and the girl an '"'Untouch- able,"" committed suicide Thurs- day because their parents re- fused to let them marry. Police said the couple hanged them- selves and left a letter explain- ing their parents denied them permission to wed. PATROLS CLASH TEL AVIV (AP)--An Israeli soldier was reported killed and another missing after a one- hour border clash early Thurs- day between an Israeli patrol and a Syrian detachment, An Israeli military spokesman said an Israeli patrol making a rou- tine border inspection crossed by mistake into Syrian territory, = the upper Jordan River yal- ley. PETS IN CLOVER AMESBURY, Mass. (AP) -- Two dogs and two cats have a trust fund of more than $50,000. Annie E. Webster, 84, who. died June 8, directed in her will that the bulk of her $68,000 estate, after $14,000 in charitable be- quests, should be placed in trust REDS ORDER SHIPS LONDON (AP) -- Communist China is expected to place an order for merchant shipping with a British shipyard and more orders may follow, a spokesman for a British ship- building mission said Thursday. The mission returned from a two-week visit to Peking. HIT VICE LIMA (CP-Reuters) -- More than 1,500 persons, many of them juvenile delinquents and homosexuals, were arrested Wednesday in a vice crackdown by police in the red-light dis- |tricts of Lima and the port of FORT ERIE ENTRIES FRIDAY, AUGUST 7 for her pets. After their death, the remainder of the estate goes to a church. 'Clean' Thieves Steal Towels Thieves "'rubbed'"' Toronto de- livery man Arnold Amos the wrong way Wednesday night by breaking into his van and steal- ing 2,000 towels. Mr. Amos told police this morning he parked his van in the municipal parking lot, on Athol street west (at the rear of the Casino Restaurant), at |8.30 p.m. Wednesday, and when he returned at 7.30 a.m. today, he found his truck looted. Police describe the towels as being of the cloth service sta- tion type. They are grey and one foot square. The truck and towels belong to Canadian Silk Manufacturing Co. Ltd., Hamilton, Two Arrested At Bowmanville BOWMANVILLE -- Two men were taken. into custody at Bowmanville early Wednesday, following an attempted break- in about 2.30-a.m. at Kent's Men's Wear, ~ Temperance street, ; Corporal K, Freethy and Con- stable Ian Smith were on patrol duty when they. spotted three men at the rear of Mr. Nicks' store. The men fled as soon as they saw the police car. Michael Joseph Murdock, 155 Garrard road, Oshawa,.was ap- prehended in the vicinity short- ly afterwards and Cliff Good- ridge, also believed to have eome,from Oshawa, was ar- rested about three hours later. Police also recovered a car stolen in Oshawa and a radio Raglan traded more than 218,- 000 shares and closed un- changed at $3.15. It traded in a $2.91 to $3.20 range. Canadian Dyno which owns 2,800,000 shares of Raglan was up eight cents to $2.10. Timmins - area stocks were mainly quiet. Windfall fell five cents to 73 cents and sold as low as 60 cents. Consolidated Golden Arrow dipped four cents to 26 cents. This company, whose president, Viola MacMillan is the wife of Windfall's president, George MacMillan, has been told by the Toronto Stock Exchange to pre- pare an up-to-date financial statement by the end of this month. The company revealed Wed- nesday that it sold a block of Windfall at a large profit. On index, industrials were down 1.17 to 158.47, gols 3.23 to 131.81, base metals .13 to 64.44, western oils .12 to 96.32 and the exchange Index 1.06 to 147.77. Volume for the day was 4,159,000 shares compared with 4,458,000 Wednesday. Ranch in Marystown, Nfid., transported from a ranch in on their way to the Flying L The 700 head of cattle, being were unloaded from rail cars ttain and in Moncton to await the re- REFRESHING BREAK FOR WESTERN CATTLE A large herd of beef cattle, graze in a field near Moncton. Alberta to Newfoundland, mainder of their journey by p. --CP Wire 2 Navy Nursing Sisters Drowned HALIFAX (CP)--Two Royal Canadian Navy nursing sisters wre drowned and a third was injured when a car in which they were riding plunged over a naval dockyard jetty here into 24 feet of water Wednes- day night. A navy spokesman said one of the women managed to es- cape from the car after it had | submerged. ' COBOURG -- Cobourg's High- land games society will be lucky if it breaks even this year when it balances a decrease in gate receipts with 'an increase in ex- penditures for this year's one- day Scotch broth of highland ac- tivity. CELEBRATING BIRTHDAYS Congratulations and best wishes are extended to the following residents of the Oshawa area who are cele- brating their birthdays today. Betty Wright, Enniskillen; Frank Watson, 682:Lakeview avenue; Wayne Watson, 31% Bruce street, and Murray Ax- ford, Hampton. Financial chairman James Inglis said that he hesitated to make an estimate of the final total including gate receipts, concession rentals and grand- stand receipts but thought the final figure would be approxi- mately $5,600 or about $1,500 less than last year's financial return. The annual games held Tues- day for the second year at Co- bourg's Donegan Park attracted a total of 4,484 paid adult ad- missions. When 220 society Debate UNITED NATIONS (CP)-- Diplomats predicted today the United Nations Security Council would invite both North and South Viet Nam to take part in debate on North Vietnamese as- saults on American warships and U.S. retaliation. Council President Sivert A. Nielsen of Norway' suspended debate today so he could sound out delegates to the 11-nation body on the proposal to hear representatives of the two Viet- namese governments. Nielsen said he believes he can convene: believed to have been stolen. In UN Is Predicted th council again Friday to re- port results, If the North and South both send spokesmen it probably will produce a heated debate on the roles the United States, North Viet Nam and Red China play in South Viet Nam's war. The debate opened" Wednes- day at the request of the United States which asked for an urgent counci] meeting to con- sider '"'the serious situation cre- ated by deliberate attacks of the Hanoi (North Viet Nam) regime on United States naval vessels FIRST RACE -- Purse $2300. Maidens, three-year-olds, foaled in Canada, One and one-sixteenth Miles. Royal Picture, McComb 113 Exhortator, Cuthbertson XXX108 Take A Gander, No Boy 118 Squatters Rights, Shuk 118 Prince Sied, Parnell 118 Sept Erin, Harris X113 King City, Rogers 118 SECOND RACE -- Purse $1900. ($2500 Claiming. Three- and four-year-vids. 6 F No Boy, 112; Teo K., No Boy, 107; Daumont, 1143 A Ticket Home, No Boy, 1123 Taranto, Harris, X107; Abitibi, Tur- "K Farms and The Pheasant Stable Entry. THIRD RACE -- Purse $2200. Maidens, two-year-olds. 5Va Furlongs. Market Bid, Shuk 115 Now | Wonder, Turcotte A-X110 North Woods, Shuk 117 Shiny Dice, Lebainc 115 Sleepy Native, Gordon 120 Princess Sadi, Fitzsimmons B-117 Balacomba, Parsons X115 Purly Sark. Airdrie, Bailey 117 Bahia Bianca, Fitzsimmons B-117 4 Garden King, Turcofte A-XX113 'A Shermand and Garden City Stable B--Mrs H A Luro Entry QUINELLA BETTING SIXTH RACE -- Purse $2200. ($4500 |claiming. Three-year-olds. 6 Furlongs, Apache Dancer, Shuk 114 Gertrude Q, No Boy A-111 My First Duchess, Harris B-X106 Chinese Girl, Dittfach 106 Mr. Flirt, No Boy 111 Roman Scholar, Leblanc 117 Maple Way, Remillard 106 Rah Rah, Balley 116 Prince Anthony, Turcotte X112 Hannibra, No Boy 111 Cairnarctic, Fitzsimmons 112 ae gp et No Boy 106 iso Eligible: Raysiad, No Bo 1167 Damen, Harris, Boe Oe NTS A--E B Seedhouse Entry B--S Cocomile and D Krever Entry SEVENTH RACE -- Purse $2300. "Cherry Hill Country Club". ($4500 claim- Ing), Three-year-olds and up. About one and one-sixteenth Miles, turf course, Gray Mouse, No Boy 113 Action Station, Harrison 111 Tough Kennamon, Bailey 120 Willhooks, No Boy 113 Em's Pride, Rogers 110 Sun White, Fitzsimmons 116 Cloud Princess, No Boy 108 EIGHTH RACE -- Purse $2300. ($4500 Claiming). Three-year-olds and up. About one and one-sixteenth Miles, turf course. Argo Bowhd, Dittfach 113 Silver Beau, Dalton 116 Field Trial, Gomez 118 Crucial Hit, Harris X111 Crystal Fire, No Boy 111 Lafn Bid, Shuk 113 Raven Wing, Parnell 116 Split The Loot, Leblanc 115 X--5 Ibs AAC XX--7 Ibs AAC The parents of Andrew Goodman hold hands in their New York apartment yester- day as they tell their feelings after learning that the bodies of their son and two other civil rights workers had been XXX--10 tbs AAC POST TIME 2 P.M. found in Mississippi. Robert FOURTH RACE -- Purse $2200. ( claiming: '$5000 ). Two-year-old fillies. 5¥2 Fur- er, Easy Ella, Harris X109 Doll Odell, Bailey 114 FIFTH RACE -- Purse $2200. ($5000 claiming). Two-year-old fillies. Si Fur- Rea Shield, No Boy 107 Real Kal, Fitzsimmons 114 Cocktall Date, Shuk 114 Greek Tar, No Boy 107 Denied Hope, Ditifach 116. Benalow, Turcotte Xt Blue Week, No Boy | City Dancer, Turcotte X107 BUILDING ience necessary. To be Hy * ENGINEER CITY OF OSHAWA SALARY RANGE -- $6,750 to $8,250 per annum Must be graduate Civil Engineer, previous municipal exper- buildi for enf yon tend Field Inspectors and Apply by letter only giving oll p perform pplications close 5:00 p.m., August 14th, 1964. g regulations, ete., necessary office duties, to; Personnel Officer City H Oshawa, Onterie Goodman and his wife, Caro- lyn, said that, "This tragedy is not private, it is part of the public conscience of our "OUR GRIEF BELONGS TO OUR NATION" country."" The bodies of the three youths, who had been shot, were found after a 44- day search. --AP Wirephoto CAUTION seumnems, DO NOT BUY A WATER SOFTENER If your water supply has any one of the following conditions -- 'OLLUTE D -- DIRTY -- ODORS -- BAD TASHING -- You can have a WATER PU (UNLESS NEEDED) RUSTY -- RED -- STRONG HARD -- or GREEN STAINS. RIFIER to suit your individual needs. NO REGENERATING -- NO BACKWASHING -- NO WASTE OF WATER. INSTALLED $40.00 TO $75.00 JIM HURVID PLUMBING 215 Wilson Rd. South -- Oshawa --. 725-8563 in international waters." The question of Vietnamese participation in the debate was brought up by Soviet delegate Platon D,. Morozov, who intro- duced a resolution to have the council seek information from North Viet Nam relating to the U.S. complaint and to invite North Vietnamese representa- tives to take part in the debate. Chief U.S. delegate Adlai E. Stevenson said the United States ha dno objection to inviting North Viet Nam but the South Vietnamese should be asked, too. Stevenson charged that the North Vietnamese torpedo boats attacked the U.S, destroyers in the Gulf of Tonkin and the at- tacks were part of a plan to subjugate all Southeast Asia. He said the U.S. counterblow was "limited and measured" to dis- courage further acts of aggres- sion. Stevenson said the air strike was designed "'only to make it unmistakeably clear that the United States cannot be di- verted by mliitary attack from its obligations to help its friends establish and protect their inde- pendence." The U.S. had acted in self-defence and in accord with the UN charter. memberships were added, said Mr, Inglis, the total is 4,704. "On top of that, there ere about 2,500 children all of whom were admitted free, so that our total attendance would be push- ing the 8,000 mark," Mr. Inglis said. Cobourg Games Coul Show Loss At Gate RAIN BLAMED He suggested that the de- crease in attendance (down from: 1964's estimated 11,000) could be attributed to the prom- ise of rain Sunday evening and the light rain early Monday morning, "I know that several long dis- tance calls were received by various society members, en- quiring whether the games had been washed out. I'm sure that for every person who was in- terested enough to place a long distance call, there were hun- dreds who intended to come but simply called the whole thing off," he said. Was there any question that the games might not be sched- uled next year? "None whatsoever," Mr. Ing- lis said. 'The games will be on next year and I think you can count on that absolutely. Con- sidering our improvements to Summer Takes CITY AND DISTRICT GENERAL MANAGER Dan Dillon, age 38, of 157 Albert street, Oshawa, a black- belt-holder and instructor of the Maple Leaf Judo Club, has been appointed to the position of gen- eral manager in the onganiza- tion. Mr. Dillon started Judo in 1955 and received the much cov- eted Black Belt in 1963. BULLDOZER BLAZE Oshawa firefighters were call- ed to the Oshawa Industrial Disposal (Oshawa) Ltd. plant, Harmony road north, Wednes- day to put out a fire in a bull- dozer. There is no report of damage to the machine. The department also reports that in the 24-hour period up to 9 a.m. today four ambulance calls were answered, POPULATION UP The population of the Town of Uxbridge now stands at 2,549. This is an increase of 37 over last year. Just before the Second World War there were 1,400 residents of the town. Special Weekly Message To Members Of CHAMBERS FOOD CLUB 209 247 261 262 277 298 50 56 65 76 199 200 201 168 153 102 52 78 78 78 - 48 That's refreshing. This beer, perfect for summer. Modern and light, yet Holiday is a// beer, all the way down. O'KEEFE Holiday BREWED FOR SUMMER THIRST a hot, hot day with a cooling Holiday Reserve yourself the shadiest tree, the most com- fortable lounge chair. Now a cooling Holiday Beer. is Ontario's light-tasting A Chilly Tum TORONTO (CP) -- Summer took a- chilly turn during the night with temperatures plung- ing to record lows in parts of Ontario. At Toronto International Air- port a minimum of 44 degrees broke the previous Aug. 6 low there of 45 set in 1951, said the Toronto Weather Office. Timmins shivered in 37 de- grees, equalling the Aug. 6 rec- ord low of 1957. The mercury dropped to the freezing point, 32 degrees, at Killaloe, 33 in Earlton and 36 at Muskoka. Just A Minute... » « « how about planning your fall or winter cruise to include one of the many Caribbean tours now being booked. Call DONALD: TRA- VEL for the right type of service. 668-3304, d the track, addition of a new dancing platform and installa- tion of new toilet facilities, breaking even on the year will be a noteworthy accomplish- ment." MAYBE TWO DAYS Although some games society executive members are already eyeing an expansion to two days for next year's events, Mr. Ing- lis said that nothing definite had been decided on the question. "It is something which will take a lot of thought and which will have to be considered by the whole executive," he said. Mr, Inglis said that the group had already received many compliments both from partici- pants and spectators on the gen- eral organization of the simul- taneous events which made up the games program. "Everything went off on schedule, I believe, and I think this was appreciated by all con- cerned," he stated, He suggested that continuance of the same planning while not increasing the of the event could lead to a very at- tractive financial pleture after next year's event. MITCHELL'S DRUGS 9 Simcoe North 723-3431 $500 REWARD For information leading to the arrest and conviction of a person or persons involved in the theft of the following 12 G.E, 16" Port. able T.V, sets. Model 61-T-41, Serial Numbers 259, 260, 1375, 1376, 1362, 0351, 0352, 1359, 1360, 0364, 353 and 667. ALL REPLIES CONFIDENTIAL TO BOX oid » a 'gine THE TIMES Oshawa Shopping Centre Open-to 9 p.m. Thurs & Fri. Are at Dunn's Outfit yourself. in « quality suit at prices as low as 49,50. Choose from an outstand- ing selection. OPEN A CHARGE ACCOUNT No Down Payment No Interest No Carrying Charges 36 King E. Open to 9 p.m .m. Fri.

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