Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 8 Aug 1964, p. 2

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REPRESENT CANADA AT CONFERENCE Athorig 900 attenditig a Con- ference for Tomoértow's America at the Moral Re- Armament Assembly Centre at Mackinac Island, Mich., are 81 young Cafiadians. F4- Win Burnstick (left), a Stoney Indian chicken dancer from Duffield, Alta., fratnes in his hoop Marie George of Van- couver Miss Indian Princess of British Columbia. Behind is Barrie Reynolds of Ottawa ang Trudy Visman of Edmon- ton. Sen. O'Leary Protests But Supply Bill Passed By BRENDA LARGE OTTAWA (CP)--Over a briet but bitter protest trom Senator Grattan O'Leary, the Senate Gave speedy approval Friday to the --" interim sup- b he bill, giving the govern- ment $1,037,030,109 worth of spéetiding authority to meet rou- tine expefises in August, Sep- tember and October, later re- ' ceived royal assent. For a few moments it looked to observers as though Senator O'Leaty would repeat his action of last April when he héld up 'passage of a government supply ate was being asked to act as) "a mere gramophone of the House of Commons." The Ontario Conservative re-} peated this charge Friday, say-} ing the dignity of the Senate) to the supply bill. ANSWERS NEEDED Criticizing the government for not answering opposition ques- tions in the Commons about the bill, Senator O'Leary said: "There are certain people in | ll Markham Strikers | Remanded RICHMOND HILL, Ont. (OP)| Eleven strikers from the Amal.| gamated Electric Corporation| plant at nearby Markham vil-| lage were remanded Friday un- til Sept. 18 on charges ranging from intimidation to improper parking. | A 12th striker, Robert Davis, charged with intimidation, was) acquitted when no one appeared to prosecute the charge. They| @re members of the United} Electrical Workers. Union {ind.). Frank Taylor, John Gilroy| prunswick) and Senator Wal-| At and John Peel are charged with intimidating a truck driver who was driving his vehicle through @ picket line at the plant. Taylor and Gilroy also face charges of creating a disturb- 'ance by singing in the rear seat of a car. They were ordered to appear on the latter charges next Tuesday. Charged with improper park- 'ing when their cars allegedly blocked the road leading to the plant June 23, second day of the strike, in this Toronto - area community, are David Puddis- ter, Reginald Gibbard, Walter O'Hagan, Reuben Godard, Lam- bert Van der Vleuten, Blair Hughes and Knud Johansen. Mrs. Beverley Evans is charged with obstructing a high- high places who do not seem to understand that freed of country. "The whole question of gov- ernment spending is a cause 0! great concern,' said Senator Brooks. Senator McCutcheon said he was being insulted by the haste|"shuddered a little' when he CANADA HOPEFUL with which it was asked to give|read the recently-released re-| first, second and third readifig| port of the royal commission on|ta health services, "which said. we can afford to divert $2,400,000,- 000 as of 1971 from the private to the public sector" for a medi- care program. "We'd better stop running into this thing in an unconsid- ered and untidy way," the Tor- onto senator warned. speech involves more than a freedom to speak--it also in- volves a freedom to answer | That is the very heart of a free Parliament." The Senate appeared to the press and public as being "merely a doormat for the! House of Commons" because there were people in the Com-| mons who did not understand! that the Senate was "an inte-| gral' part of Parliament. "It has its dignities, its rights, its responsibilities." The first and most important step in reforming the Senate should be to cémpel the. Com- mons to recognize those digni- ties, rights and responsibilities, "eau, 19, Gail Noble, 22, Lwura/ing the bandit to a parked car,| he added. THREATENS DELAY The senator warned that he|Stave, 24, of Port Arthur and) : ; would not give his approval 'to|Robert McAvoy, 26, of Hamil-|bandit panicked when the car) a similar bill if the circum- stances are repeated in the fall.) Two other opposition critics, Senator A. J; Brooks (PC--New lace McCutcheon (PC -- On tario), commended Premier Roblin of Manitoba for his sug- | gestion that federal and provin-|tles, Sledge was jailed on ajkeys in the ignition which gave jcial governments should hold a|charge of selling and possessing|him his second chance to es- jconference to set up a system Seven Charged Drug Possession TORONTO (CP) -- Seven per- sons were arrested here Friday|\from a bank in a suburban when two ROMP officers, as- sisted by 10 city policemen,|' As the bandit fled the bank, raided an apartment. The metropolitan police were called in when the RCMP offi-|ciation here, was outside. When cers found themselves outnum- bered. Charged with illegal posses- sion of narcotics are James Thomas Harris, 22, Donna Cor- Pittoscia, 18 and John Brasseur, 24, all of Toronto, Peter Cos- ton. MOONSHINER JAILED BAKERSFIELD, Calif. (AP) ithorities raided the home of 93 - year - old Otis Sledge and found 15 gallons of modonshine corn whisky and 250 empty bot- illegal whisky. | ARCTIC ACTIVITY -PART 5 'One Man Stirs Early By ALLEN SACKMANN MOULD BAY, N.W.T. (CP)-- |Only one man stirs in this) |Arctic camp of 50 men at: 5) ja.m, He's Wilfred Pigeau. Amid the snores of sleeping meat and vegetables have to be airlifted from Uranium City, Sask., or Inuvik, N.W.T. "T have to be pretty careful with my ordering when the jcorner grocer is 1,300 miles way in connection with a picket-/ companions, he climbs into his} away," he says line incident in which she was|clothes and takes a short hike) struck by 4 car léading a truck|to the camp kitchen, a framejand it often is in the into the plant The company is still operat-| The 50-year-old cook gathers, make dwindlin ing the plant. Judge's Girls Raped, Killed JACKSON, Wyo. (AP)--Two young daughters of an Illinois wireult court judge were raped and murdered in their beds at a downtown motor hotel in this tourist - jammed resort town A third gitl.in the same bed- room was not harmed by a kil- ler who strangled one girl to death and bludgeoned the other, apparently with a rock he had carried into the room. Dead were Cindy, 8, and , 12, the daughters of Judge and Mrs. Robert Mc-Au- Uffe of Maywood, Ill. The girl's father heard the children screaming, raced to the room and found a man lying on the floor. He said the man ap- feigned drunkeness. 4 building on a hillside |the ingredients for baking jbread and measures them into|his larder is well stocked, are| this oversized mixing bowl. | By the time the rest of the jcamp arrives for breakfast, |they are greeted by the aroma of a dozen golden loaves cool- ing on a sideboard, | This is the early . morning routine seven days a week dur- ing the six months the Polar Continental Shelf Project is ex- ploring the unknowns of the Western Arctic each year. shipped in but the flights were too irregular and the bread was! too buiky to také up fom in the planes," he says. Mr. Pigeau spends a lot of time baking because "the more! pastry the mén eat, the less meat they want." And that's important because shipping costs are more than the initial |price of the meat. ORDERS WITH CARE 'Supplies are a regular cause of concern. Bulk foods, many dehydrated, are shipped in six 'months in advance but fresh | When flying weather is bad-- spring-- Pigeau. is hard-pressed to iz meat supplies last. Canned meats, with which {Mr disguised in multitude of | ways. | But while he hasn't jany complaints, he's |that his popularity rises in di- jrect proportion to the number of steaks and choice roasts in }the shipment that arrives when the weather turns good. One of his chores, when new supplies come in, is distributing the food among the dozens of heard "I used to have the bread/two- and three-man camps that) spread out in the Princess Eliz- abeth Islafds from the Mould Bay base, 1,800 miles north of PAUL RISTOW LTD. REALTOR 728-9474 187 King St. East INTERPRETING THE NEWS Canada Is Sure It Can Help Lessen Tensions In Viet Nam --CP Wirephoto | aware) By JAMES NELSON Canadian Press Staff Writer The Canadian government is confident it can play an effec- tive role in lessening critical tensions in Viet Nam, given sufficient time and a reason- able attitude on both sides. The role initially is as a member of the three - power International Control Commis- sion set up 10 years ago by a conference in Geneva which brought Communist China and the West to the negotiating table for the first time. But diplomatic sources in Ot- tawa indicate that if Canada's efforts do not bear fruit within the commission -- composed of Canada, India and Poland -- Canada will go outside it. Prep- arations for such an eventuality Rialready are under way in the United Nations. The international control com- and Cambodia were set up at Geneva in 1954 withthe obvious intent that the three members would roughly represent the three divisions then existing in |world politics: Canada repre- \genting the West, Poland the Communist East, and India the unaligned countries. WORK HAMPERED Although the c om mis sions generally have done some ef- fective work at the observer level, their full effectiveness at leritical. times of decision on |policy matters have been ham- |Pered by lack of agreement at |the higher level. - Canada believes a majority idecision should prevail. Poland has insisted there be unanimity. But diplomatic sources say the divisions within the ¢com- {mission cannot be. stated quite so simply as, that.Polish rep- resentatives, for instance, have lappeared willing at times to go along with the majority views of Canadian and Indian members, | but have held back for fear of appearing to side with the West Indian members, in like man- bill after charging that the Sen-jof economic priorities for the ner, have at crucial times hes- litated to cast their lot with either Polish or Canadian rep- resentatives for fear Of tarnish- ing India's non-alignment pos- ture in international affairs, in Ot- Government sources Police Believ Bank Bandit 'Panicked, Shot TORONTO (CP)-Police be- lieve lack of planning by a beatle - wigged bank robher caused him to shoot down John Blane, 56, of Toronto who at- tempted to stop him fleeing e | | shopping plaza July 24. Mr. Blanc, an instructor with the Young Men's Hebrew Asso- jhe took in the situation, Mr. Blane grabbed a pistol from a bank attendant who was follow- ing. He took up the chase, follow-| jand fired one shot just as the }man was entering the vehicle. However, police believe, the \faileq to start. He jumped from the car and, taking careful aim, sent two bullets into the body of) \Mr. Blane from his high-pow-| ered rifle | After firing on the first po- jlice car to arrive, the bandit }found an abandoned car with 'cape. He is still being sought. Edmonton. Mr. Pigeau person. jally packs and checks each |food box to make sure the men }get enough of the right foods. | Mr. Pigeau, a French-Cana- dian, has been preparing food for 32 years. And his family has produced at least one cook a generation since coming to Canada 200 years ago | He started his career in lum- | ber and construction camps and worked as a relief cook in army |camps during the Second World | War. He came here from North |Bay, Ont. One of his jobs here is to jkeep an eye on the water sup- ply, hauled from a lake. two miles away. A washroom sign tells the crews not to shower during storms. 'No one wants to haul water during a blizzard | with 50 or 60 m.p.h. winds," he missions for Viet Nam, Laos) | Chairman Quits to return to their cells. | jin the jail hopes through the pressure of the current crisis to break through these hesitancies. In this, Canada is limited by some diplomatic niceties. Apart from its membership in the In- ternational Control Commission for instance, Canada has no diplomatic representatives in [North or South Viet Nam. Nor has it sn embassy in Red China. However, as Prime Minister Pearson said in the Commons Friday, Canada is hopeful that "this possibility of ineffective- ness because of the inability of the commission to work as a group" -- in other words, the Polish insistence on unanimity in the commission -- "will not arise." Canada's diplomatic efforts now are bent to this end. If they fail, Canada is pre- vared to try through other channels in the United Nations and independently. It may be a test of Canada's image in world politics, but if the Viet Nam crisis reaches major pro- portioris between East and West Membership TORONTO (CP)--Local 91 of the Toronto Typographical Un- jon (CLL), on strike against three Toronto Daily newspapers since July 9, has called a mem- bership meeting for this morn- ing on the written request of a group of ITU members explor- ing new avenues for re-opening negotiations between the union and the papers. Negotiations, under I.ovis Fine, the, Ontario labor depart- ment's chief conciliation officer, collapsed last Tuesday when both sides took firm stands on the demands posed by the pub- lishers. The publishers asked for re- moval of foremen and assistant Paper Printers Call Meeting against layoffs due to automa- tion. The papers have continued to publish since the walkout, us- ing supervisory and non-union workers to carry out compos- ing room functions. Ray Illing, a member of the The Star, said this morning's meeting would be most impor- tant in the history of Local 91. In another development, the number of printers who have) returned to work at the- invita- tion of the publishers was in- creased' to 10 Friday. Seven re- ported for work at The Star Fri- day, in addition to the three foremen from union jurisdic- tion; elimination of cértain | make-work practices; and the} right of the newspapers to in-| troduce and use new equip-| ment afd processes and to) make the most effective use of their staff. In réturn, the newspapers--| the Globe and Mail, a morning) paper, and The Star and The Telegram, evening pape fered all printers what they de- scribed as a lifetime guarantee | Sask. Liberal SASKATOON (CP) -- Otto} wa now indicate CanadajLang of Saskatoon announced] awrence Adler. Friday his resignation "for, purely political. reasons" as) for Saskatchewan. His statement indicated there the party's federal and provin- cial wings in Saskatchewan, al- though this has been denied. Mr. Lang said "control of | provincial executive has passed) fairly completely into the hands} of the. provincial leader and it has been difficult to keep his co-operation in federal affairs."| He said the resignation will create an opportunity to start fresh, '"'seeking good relations between federal and provincial) parts of the party." | Premier Thatcher said ear-} lier in Regina that Prime Min-) ister Pearson had notified him} of Mr. Lang's resignation. Mr. given. hen an Attempt Halted QUEBEC (CP)--Some 90 pro-| vincial and municipal police halted ah apparent escape at- tempt in-the Quebec Prison on the Plains of Abraham Friday night. Aime Pettigrew, assistant governor of the jail, said a group of prisoners set fire to a wooden shed near an exit to distract guards. The fire was put out by prison staff, however, an po- licemen summoned to the jail shortly after 6 p.m. use night- sticks to persuade the prisoners | The 175 prisoners who wi(h) rtyard at the time) of the incident constitute a ma- jority of the 230 men held at the institution. Its official capa- city is 180. oo cou Two Passengers Feared Drowned | DUESSELDORF (AP)--Two passengers from a Dutch pleas- ure boat were missing and feared drowned Friday after their vessel and a West German tanker barge collided here, po- lice reported, They identified the Dutch ves- sel as the Ahoy, from Rotter- dam, She was on the home jour- ney from a pleasure cruise along the banks of the Rhine River with 64 passengers and explains. crew, ' LIFE INSURAN or James McGeown, | YOUR MEMBERSHIP IN THE CANADIAN ORDER OF FORESTERS Entitles You to a CE PROGRAM Plus FRATERNAL AND SOCIAL ACTIVITIES For Further Information Contact: Duncan Lowden, Phone 668-4381 Phone 725-2532 Distriet Representatives -- who reported to work at The Telegram Thursday. Fountain Coins Belong To City LONDON (AP) -- Magistrate Edward Robey ruled Friday thee until the council cares to collect them. At the same time he dis- charged three students -- Mich- ael John Chaplin, 18, a son of actor Charlie Chaplin, Peter , 20, a son of harmonica player Larry Adler, and Alexanda Franke - Ruta, |chairman of the federal Liberal|15 after fining them technic: party's co-ordination committee) sijy guilty of stealing from the pond around the fountain. The coins involved were 123 English 'have peen differences between pennies, 24 halfpennies, a French franc, a Belgian two- centime piece and a U.S. cent. climbed into the fountain and collected the coins they did not think they were stealing or be- ing dishonest. negotiating committee from) Canada may try to play the role of go-between. It is reported that during the prelude to: the current crisis this week, the United States sought out Canadian assistance Vietnamese in Hanoi. The international Control Commission had never done such a thing before and it would have required a meeting of the whole commission to de- cide whether Canada could play such a role as postman. The jnote wasn'l delivered | If it reach@s the stage of |playing jntermediary between the United -States and Red China, the real test of Canada's posture would come, Canada |prides itself on being a friend jof the Unifed States, but with |sufficient independence to be jan interpreter of other nations' views. | Canada is without a mission lin Red China, but contacts | built up through Canadian trade in Saigon, South Viet Nam, to deliver a note to the North) § |with the: Chinese Communists jand through the British -- who |have an embassy in Peking --/} ;may provide openings. OTTAWA (CP) --_ Stanley} \K nowles (NDP -- Winnipeg) |North Centre) Friday presented \a bill to the House of Commons |to increase its quorum to 50 from 20, | When he «ose to present his} case there were 29 members in| |the House. At the conclusion of| lithe debate there were 22. | Seconds before the debate was schduled to end, Revenue Minister E. J. Benson moved |that the subject matter of the |bill be referred to a Commons committee for study. He said "Ithat coins tossed into London's| the idea was worth further con- |Marble Arch Fountain belong to|Sideration. |Westminster city council, which| However, |maintains it, and must be left|(PC--Winnipeg South Centre) Gordon Churchill jadjourned the debate, sending |the bill to the bottom of a long \list of private bills on the or- |der paper. This action affec- jtively killed the bill for this ses- sion. Mr. Knowles said no one seems to know just how the | Commons quorum was set at 20) | members. | Opposition Leader Diefen- lbaker said that the British House of Commons, with a membership of more than 600, has a quorum of 40. However, Mr. Knowles said that quorum of the United States Congress the| The three said that when they|and the U.S. Senate was a ma- jority of total membership. | "We should be coticerned }with our own quorum, not that lof other countries," he said. War Scare Leaves Mark By GORDON GRANT A war scare this week did what good corporate and eco- nomic reports failed to do, push market spotlight trading Speculative mines fell into disfavor with the collapse of | Windfall and the United States) assault on North Viet Nam. Industrials moved lower in Toronto, as the decline in key- issues extended to the world's major markets. Tuesday, when the Toronto market opened after a civic hol- iday, the industrial index took its sharpest loss in two months. Stocks opened lower Wednes- day but late in the session bar- gain hunters moved in along with those who were impressed by President Johnson's South- east Asia stand, Banks, favorites in although Impeial Commerce and Royal scored small gains. Primary steel makers weré easier, but Algoma dipped 2%. Stelco, Dofasco and Dosco moved fractionally. Auto stocks were mixed with little intefest shown. Ford of Canada which reported de- creased profits was down six points at $192 while Chrysler was off 1 at $55 Massey-Ferguson, dipped 2 to 27% in profit taking following a rise on news of record earn- ngs. Elsewhere in the list, CPR was off a fraction while Union Gas climbed % to 24%. Last week Windfall collapsed from $4.25 to 80 cents on news the company failed to find min- erals in quantity on its Pros+ recent} weeks, were fractionally lower} On Stock Mart Trading -- {ser Township property near Thatcher said no reason was|Canadian Press Staff Writer| Timmins, Ont. | The Ontario government an- {nounced plans for a royal com- mission to look into the heavy lindustrials into Canadian stock! trading and wild price gyra- tions that took place in the stock prior to the release of ase) | A brief flurry Friday quickly} pushed Windfall to $1.10, but | selling drove it back to 78 cents, | down 26 cents on the week. | Other speculative issues traded lightly Senior producers were all \lower, Inco off a point, Co-| jminco, Noranda and Falcon- bridge down lessér amounts. Golds took losses while West- ern Oils were down. On index, industrials fell 1.69 to 158.49, golds 1.83 to 133.42, base metals .13 to 64.93, West- ern. Oils 2.11 to 96.11 and the |exchange index 1.58 to 147 83, Volume for the week was 14,- 387,660 shares compared with 30,812,063, Dollar value was $41,743,713 against $62,591,899, In Montreal, industrial vol- ume was 727,382 and mining 4,345,070 against 688,949 and 5,982,287 shares. Fifty five issues advanced,| 178 declined and 159 were un-! changed | On index, industrials off 1 1,8 to 158.1, utilities 1.1 to 138.9, banks 6 to 182.9, composite 1,7 to 249.0 and papers 1.0 to 139.6. | | Pay No More Than 4% -- When -- Selling Your Property he G LL Real Estate nck Broker . PERRY, Sales M Day or Night--728-4 For information leadi conviction of a person the theft of the following 12 G.E, 16" Port- able T.V, sets. Model 61-T-41, Serial Numbers 0351, 0352, 1359, 1360, 036 ALL REPLIES CONFIDENTIAL TO BOX "'D" Ce 285 EWARD ng to the arrest and or persons involved in 259, 260, 1375, 1376, 1362, 4, 353 and 667, THE TIMES Workmen repair stonework | on the Parliament Hill Peace Tower. Hanging from ropes TOUCH UP TOWER Friday, the workmen point the stonework from platforms. Quorum Bill wearer FORECAST --CP Wirephoto Mainly Sunny Warmer Official forecast issued by the Toronto weather office at 5:30 a.m.: _ Synopsis: An outbreak of Are: tic air will cover the province today, giving considerable cloudiness and holding the mer- cury to near 70 in the south and in the fifties throughout North- ern Ontario. Clearing skies are expected Sunday but tempera- tures will continue on the cool side g Lake St. Clair, Lake Erte, southern Lake: Huron, Lake On- tario, Niagara, Hamilton, Wind- sor, London, Toronto: Cloudy with sunny intervals, windy and much cooler today. Mainly sunny and not so cool Sunday. Georgian Bay, Haliburton, northern Lake Huron, Killaloe, Algoma, Timagami, North Bay, Sudbury: Cloudy, cool and windy with a few scattered showers today, Sunny with j cool Sunday. Cochrane, White River, west- ern James Bay: Cloudy, windy and cold with occasional drizzle today, clearing overnight, Sun- day, sunny with cloudy periods and a little warmer, TORONTO (CP) -- Marine forecast issued at 8:15 a.m, EDT, valid until 11 a.m. Sun- day: Lake Superior: Winds nor |to northwest 20 to 30 knots de- creasing to 15 to 25. this eve. ning and becoming variable 10 jto 15 tonight; variable cloui- cloudy periods and continuing! Sunday Lake Ontario: Winds north. west 25 to 35 knots decreasing to northwest 20 to 25 tonight; mainly cloudy clearing tonight. Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, High Sunday: Windsor «..secesees 50 St. Thomas «....... 48 London ....secsees. 48 Kitchener ......000. 4 Hamilton ..... St. Catharines Peterborough . Muskoka . North Bay e Kapuskasing .++++« White River CLAIM VICTORY VIENTIANE (AP) -- Laotian rightist forces claimed: Friday they killed 30 Pathet Lao troops in an attack on Communist posi- tions on the road linking Vien- tiane and the royal capital, Luang Prabang. The rightists said they suffered one dead and 10 wounded and captured a number of prisoners, guns, and vehicles. ness Clearing tonight. Lake Huron, Georgian Bay: Winds northwest 25 to 35 de- creasing to 20 knots tonight; mainly cloudy clearing tonight. Lake Erie: Winds northwest 20 to 25 knots decreasing to 15 tonight; partly cloudy. COSENS & MARTIR Insurance 67 King St. E., Oshawa 728-7518 ties" Insurence Res: 725-2802 or 725-7413 SERVICE STATIONS OPEN THIS SUNDAY 7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. R. J. TUMEY'S SHELL STATION 962 SIMCOE ST. NORTH ALEX NATHAN'S SUNOCO STATION 215 KING ST. WEST COOPER'S TEXACO STATION 56 BRUCE STREET WHITE ROSE STATION 38 PRINCE STREET | 'T. GOCH SUPERTEST STATION 437 SIMCOE ST. SCUTH WINDER'S ESSO STATION KING and RITSON RCAD SOUTH TOM CULLEN'S 288 BLOOR (formerly ESSO STATION ST. WEST Kemp's) George Brown's SUPERTEST STATION 324 PARK ROAD SOUTH CLINT'S TEXACO STATION WENTWORTH BRUCE'S WHITE AND CEDAR ROSE STATION 480 PARK RD. SOUTH DOVE'S FINA STATION 792 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH SHELI COR. KING ST. and HANDY - ANDY STEVENSON'S RD,

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