Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 9 Sep 1964, p. 15

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3 Sentenced fter Rioting (CP)--Charges against 26 ons ar. Labor midtowr. when flags were | cars overturned and a n beaten. ut three pleaded guilty es of obstructing pedes- and were sentenced for the other three, who H not guilty, were set for londay, y-one received time-in- and were re- Two were fined $10 "™ noted they had ntences, ckgrounds of the 26 charged gave ccupations as students ers were listed as labor. d clerks. the others arrested, 30 juveniles and turned over pcial welfare authorities /Mi@remaining 20 were released questioning. 'CALLS THEM 'KIDS' Day When police moved in among them on horseback, firecrack- ers were thrown to frighten the Insufficient Personnel Funds Hampering Police SASKATOON (CP)--AI- though an adequate police de- partment is still the best de- terrent to crime, police depart- ments are hampered by insuf- ficient personnel and funds, the Canadian Association of Chiefs animals. Police charged into the crowd with sticks raised.| SHOUT SLOGANS The youth had been shouting slogans such as "Vive le Que- bec libre" (long live free Que- bec); "Vive le FLQ" (long live "| Le Front de Liberation Quebec- is); and "Vive l'independ- ance' (Long live independ- ence), The clash with police took /McClelland told |tion: "Nothing reduces the of Police was told Tuesday. RCMP Commissioner George the conven- Yet, he said it is difficult to interest young men to seek a career in police work and few departments can obtain suffici- ent funds to carry out their in- creasing responsibilities. Commissioner McClelland said increased concern for civil rights for the accused or con- victed has not yet been matched by a concern for vic- TORONTO 11 AM. STOCKS | Canadian Press ly Toronte Sock Bx change--Sept. (Quotations in cents uniess marked $. lot, xd--x-dividend, xr--Ex- rights, xw--x-werrants. Net change Is from previous board-lot closing sale.) INDUSTRIALS | Sales High Low a.m. Ch'ge 1--Odd Stock Abitibi Alta Gas Alta Nat Alg Cen Algoma Alumini 15% 33%. 21% 37 " Stock Hewker-S Home A Home B Horne Pf H Smith. pr HBC H BONG Husky Husky w imp Oj} 353 Imp Tob 4000 $132 1 Accep xd 1045 $22% intand Gas 7225 $8% Ww $77 Sales 1% 200 200 400 25 sh ™" se 68hlU $18% 184 19% 300 295 «495 $44 4444 316% 16% 16% 1207 $15% 450 $10% a4 12 $51% 51% 51% 1% 13% 300 600 High Low a.m. Ch'ge| wi --) os --!l Al + +¥ Stock 'Nhlte Pass 'oodwd A Zenith Cdn Cent Gridoi! Mill City Ae den Re vl nt SFE RG OLI, EEG ON ANG OG PGES Sg ge 4 we 11 Net 3 High Low a.m. Ch'ge Sales High Low a.m. Ch'ge wo oNet 1000 39% 9% 9% 0 82% 26 1% 300 425 428 425 OILS 365 % 1 "u i WS + ww» 16% We 1% +10 64 64 495 aI iminex bo * Sup Oll Del 300 ic Int Nickey Int Util Intpr Dis Inter PL Inv. Syn A Jeff Bw Jockey C Jock C pr Jock wis Kelvinator Labatt LOnt Cem $36 $28% 260 260 260 $88% 89% 69% $12% 134 194+ Ve 335-335 «335 5 425 420 425 +§ yh me | eT 4 4 45 8 $8% 84 8% $20% 20% 20% -- 315 315 315 hoodlum to a good citizen more quickly than the sudden appear- ance of a police officer." Man Is Charged Anthes A Argus Arg C P or Arg 250 pr Atl Sugar 850 200 720 575 500 2575 100 600 525 200 125 tims or the police. In another address, Joseph J. Jasper, assistant director of the FBI 1n Washington, said about 75 per cent of all con- victed criminals in the United States have been arrested more than once. He said repeated 51% TM" 1 Ve 10$103 103 103 + '% 25 $68' \ 5 68% 684 -- Ve 300 $7 7 ==" 866 $57%4 57 = S7e+ 100 $1314 13% 13% . 210 .$51% 51% 51% ..... place at a monument to Dol- lard des Ormeaux, a 17th cen-) tury Indian fighter who saved) Montreal from capture. Two youths set a Union Jack) .jafire, but the blaze died out) when police scattered the! crowd, A youth grabbed the smouldering emblem and ran} ff. .| Splitting into small groups and still chanting their slogans, they ran across Rachel Street,| holding up traffic for more than! a half-hour. sp. Paul Picard said after / ie rioting Monday night nad Been quelled that the demon ) Sators were mostly "hot- peed kids striving for pop. u a: S "Once we got to the leaders L of the others left," "Those arrested spent ht in police cells. scores of youths Mags and shouting revolution slogans marched into La- he the carrying MAKE MOVE -| Then they moved to a build- ing occupied by Montreal Matin, a French - language morning Raping Dancer, 22 HAMILTON (CP) -- Edward Koczak, 24, of nearby Dundas was committed Tuesday for trial on two charges of having raped a 22-year-old dancer. He also was charged with breaking and entering in connection with the alleged attacks. The dancer, a mother of two, testified at a preliminary hear- ing that Koczak raped her in her apartment June 23 and again four days later. She said 210 350 350 350 +5 400 $35% 35% 35% 2 $16 16 16 22 $16% V2 16'2 70 $105V2 105¥2 10512 + 4 150 $13% 13% 13% + 1%4| 275 $24% 24Va 24% | z10$103 103° (103 125 $47 47 47 525 $39Ve 39% 394-- Ve 150 $70% 70% 70e-- % 133 369% 69% -- Va 97% -- % 6% Vv le 9 9% $10% 10% 10% $10% 10% W*A--% 300 135 135 135 +5 | Cdn Can A 2300 $142 142 l4a-- Colli 69pr 100 S19% 19% 19%--~ Ve Found pr 100 $17% 17% | Hydro 225 $20% 20% ice M 225 $8% 88 imp Bk C 300 $6814 68% Ind Gas 1430 $11% 11% Ilin+ % ind Gas p 200 $144 M2 142 crimes contribute substantially to rising crime rates. COST IS HIGH He said crime costs the United States $27,000,000,000 a year, not including the cost of law enforcement. The figure came from propérty loss, dam- age caused by crime and crim- inal action, and claims result. ing from civil action, The Canadian Pacific rail- jway's deputy chief, J. F. John- he held a knife to her throat|ston of Montreal, told a panel on the first occasion and held|that modern parents are using LOnt Cem p LO Cem w Lakeland 225 900 265 100 200 170 100 100 920 1296 50 4190 615 2055 2100 WwW 220 110 25 100 525 $7 210 $56 00° $5% $47 $22% 300 $19% 209 $14% $13% 13% 19% 5454 SAD | 362 64 64 | $2044 204 20% | 355 355 S55 g | $17% 17% lTe-- Ve $25%4 25% 25M -- Ve $12% 12% 12% $8% 82 84 38% 8% $322 32% $11% 11% $32% 32% $29%4 29% 315 315 nou 39% 9% $22'4 2214 $35%4 35% $6% Lakeland pr Lakeland wt Lav Fin Lav Fin 140 Levy A pr LobCo A LobCo B LobG 1 pr Loeb M MB PR | Mass-F | MEPC | MEPC rts Met Stores Met St p Molson B Montex Montex pr Moore Nat Contain Noranda NO. NGas Ocean Cem Onilvie C Safe 4pr CSL pr new Can Wire B £ 90 x4 z10 300 340 500 c 17% 20% 8% 68% 1469 300 newspaper. Two cars were ,,overturned near the building, a block north of the park, At the Same time, another automobile was upset at the western end of the park. A policeman who attempted -|to arrest some demonstrations in a laneway near the news-, Marc 700 425 425 425 CPR 787 $5)% 5) Si" + Cdn Pef 220 $13% 13% 13% CWN Gas 735 $172 172 17% Obsco Pac Pete Pembina 200 $8 Pow Corp 220 $12% 12 100 175 250 $12% 12% & 12% CWN G pr 215 $16%4 16% 16% C Westng 200 $37% 37% 37%4--% | Cap Bldg 200 175 175 75 +5 47% + Vb 10% + % Price Bros 32 $47% QN Gas 625 $10% Ponder 1000 Prairie Ol; 1000 Provo Gas 900 Scurry Rain 111 Spooner Triad Oil Un Reef P Vandoo Yen Can Acad gUran Advocate Agnico | Ansil All C. Cop Atlas Yk . Bankfleld | Bethim Bevcon Bibis Cc Dyno Cdn Keeley ¢ Silica Candore Cheskirk Chester | Chib M | Chime | Coch Will Coniagas Con Shaw C Bellek 220 220 70 315% 15% 15% 1000 14% Me MA+ 3000 236 233 236 +9 1000 30 3 HT 500 | ee 100° 10) «101 101 1810 216 212 216 +5 0 CS $s ££ ' +4 MINES 3500 ™% Th Mek 00 450 650 A450 65 65 7 7 102 9 - 8 -1 03 9 12 2 750 "us --S 10 io + 2424 4 1% 10% 1% +1 15a 15% 54--- 0 40 40 ml $114 11% 1i*+ ™" % % 1397 (137) «137: - 42 32% 32 32 --) 72 72 12 =3 sdk! Aelia A Austral 9 9 9 44 4h Ut le 0% 0 we Ww 6 6% 6¥e N Goldvue New Hosco N Kelore Nick Rim Wiltsey Windfall Wr Herg Yellorex Zenmac 2 Zulapa $15% 15% NY Whe "6k 7 16% Vs" 2 6 70250 123«118 119 sh 6 Oh m7 209 «(+3 3 13, FT "% r Moore Cc Halll Deerhorn 13 16 Sherritt West Mines 1000 Yale Lead Sales to 1) a.m.: OD Toronto 11 A. " FOREIGN Dickenson e8eSeusb tise 2500 5 2 OSS 500 114 1% 11% 23% 23% 23Ve 290 283 5% Sie 5% 45 485 2000 12% 12% 12 mu 4 MM 2034 7 1000 2000 12500 500 " 32 "7 1,055,000. M, stocks TRADING 100 %& &% 10000 34¥a 34 a 60 100 495 495 495 TOO 450 480 480 142 28 28 12 1% -- Ve 78% -- V4 15% + 9% 16% 64 Ve 10% 380 42% ™ 16% 65% +1% 6 10% 38s 42% + Ve $9% $16% $65% $6Ve $10% $38Ve his hand on her neck the sec-|the television set as a substi- ond time tute for their own responsibil- : ities in guiding their children. \He said three of the largest DEATHS |American television networks 'have 55 per cent of their pro- gramming related to crime, "a) By THE CANADIAN PRESS {terrible indictment." ON Gas pr 10 $142 Hyannis, Mass, -- Walter ONG 9 w 140 28 Brown, 59, owner of the Bos-| Reichhold 25 ton Bruins hockey club, the| tdci 109 Boston Celtics basketball team| Royal Bank 100 oyalite 0 Chemcell xd 725 Chrysler 370 Cleirtone 350 Cc Savings 100 955 275 $28 $12 $15% $78 815% 503 Public School | =, 342% LL 11s Ut t/ ' +4 +5 7 +4 Lf OSLER LOR TERRA POO SO OT e THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesdey, September 9, 1964 15° Today's Toronto Stock Market Listings + | Teachers Strike fontaine Park about 7 p.m. to|paper building was pulled from|and Boston Garden; of a heart Salada 515 Sayvette 400 $124 325 Con Gas n 440 $12% 124 12% + Vo 12a + Ve Wigger the demonstration, 'Police, tipped i advance that there might be trouble, had a id of mounted police, armed heavy night sticks, ready When trouble broke out. About 50 of the policemen at- tempted to disperse some 150 Youths carrying Quebec fleur de lis flags. The youths moved fo the restaurant at the centre Of the park. By 9 p.m. their numbers had swelled to 300. his horse and beaten, He later received hospital treatment for minor face cuts, Although the crowd yelled FIA slogans, police said the demonstrators were not asso- ciated with a particular organ- ization. The FLQ, smashed by police last year, was a terrorist ring responsible for a_ series of bombing that killed one man and maimed another. Four Charged Under Riot Act At Grand Bend | GRAND BEND, Ont, (CP)-- Four persons charged with fail- pemee y were remanded to i Sept. in Sarnia when they appeared in magistrate's court | here Tuesday, A fifth person, Rodney Coul- | ter, 18, of Grand Bend, about | 35 \miles northwest of here, harged with assaulting a police Ex-Cabinet Minister Still Hale EMBRO, Ont. (CP)--Dona]d/| M. Sutherland, physician, old) soldier and former federal cab-| inet minister, spends his time mow as he nears his 85th birth-| day doctoring his garden, fighit-'| ing brush for a clear view of birds and studying politics of | the past. Dr. Sutherland, who will be attack. | Edmonton -- Mrs. Frederick Casselman, former Liberal member of Parliament for Ed. monton East; after a long ill- ness Ottawa Dr. .A. .Edward Cameron, 86, former veterinary director-general for Canada. Vancouver--David Sturdy, 57, a lawyer who touched off the Sommers bribery scandal in British Columbia in 1955. PUBLICITY MONEY Nova Stotia's Travel Bureau and Information. Service plans to spend more than $1,240,000 jduring the current year in at- | teachers. tracting tourists. EAST ST. LOUIS, Ill. (AP)--| |About two-thirds of East St.| |Louis' 722 teachers went on strike in this industrial city's 35 public schools Tuesday, and only 10,000 of 22,500 enrolled} pupils arrived for classes. } The strike, over a 10-per-cent salary increase, climaxed pro- tests by members of Local 1220 jof the American Federation of Teachers (AFL-CIO). Union President Clyde Rey- nolds 'said about 450 of the school system's teachers were picketing. He said 503 were on strike, and estimated that at least five schools were without } Dom Glass 225 19% 745 250 215 2106 215 22 240 395 500 Dosco 200 Dom Stores 250 Dom Ter 2925 Dom Text 300 $28% Du Pont $53% Falcon 1010 $752 Fed Grain « 50 $89 Ford Cda 710.9184 FPE-Pion A 100 $10 10 25 $31% 31% 300 $6% 6 60 $39 24 $104 1041/2 100 $26% 261% 150 95% 51% 620 $17% 17% 1000 9595 $19% $5% $12 $61% $20 $17% $28 $12% $23% $16% $18 $22 $23% Corby vt Coronation Crush Int Dist Seag D Bridge D Dairies D Dair pr Dom Elect Dofasco 89 184 Fraser Gen Bake -- $19 650 $s $18 250 25% $597% $69% $15 $13% $41 58 $20% $8% $9% so $24% 24 $11'% 11% 345 340 $12 12% $36 35% 3 $17%8 17% $1i% $374 $17% $18 Shell Can 331 Shell | wts 3456 Shop Save 750 Stater Stee; 400 Slater A wis 100 Steel Can 435 Texaco 402 Tor-Dom Bk 35 Tor tron 600 T Fin A 700 Tr Can PL "40! Trc PL rt 16133 "| Trans-Mt 1450 | Trans PPL 250 Turnbull 150 Union Ace 210 Un Gas 257 U Corp B 205 *) Versafood 400 } Vie G Tr 215 Walk GW 045 ' WCoast Tr 330 Westee! 200 Westfair 100 W Pacifie 100 Westn A xd 300 620 17% 250 25% 59% 69% ee 13% 132% 0% 4 56 SB 20% 20% a AM 9% % 25% 59% 69% | Westn B xd $18% 18Ve + M --% + Ve +3 -- %! Welcome Home *y ~~ VO When vacation time is over, there's no place like home . . . and there's no SALE like GLE- COFF'S "WELCOME HOME SALE"to greet you with BIG SAVINGS. Our marketful of aa Ftc will dick pe park Lewd try and fi r freezer wi r favor' foods". and our store-wide LOW PRICES will make your budget feel right at home. QUAL- ITY... ECONOMY .. . FRIENDLINESS... SERVICE -- ALL say "WELCOME BACK to GLECOFF'S. 24-02. or. BREAD 5 1.00 MEAT SPECIALS officer, was remanded to Sept. M. Charged with violating the ot Act were Joseph Matte, 23, station Centralia; Rob- Fisher, 18, Wyoming, Ont.; ard Minielly, 21, Watford, 'Ont. and David Irwin, 23, st. Catharines. - Boulter is free on $2,000 prop- | erty bail and the others on $200 or $400 property bail. 85, Dec. 3, pursues gardening, bitd-watching and history with the same quiet enthusiasm he once displayed as a small-town family doctor, a battalion com- mander during the First World War and as minister of na- tional defence in the cabinet of R. B, Bennett in the early 1930s. Clear-eyed and erect with a pom 4 egy of white hair, the bache- or doctor li i \ fn gh A ee di lives in a two. storey | frame home on spactous by Murray Desjardins,| grounds in this village a few. clerk and justice of the|miles outside Woodstock, where lace, to on disorders thatine went to high school and oak eal cetiten un Revctioed medicine and politics , » i \after studying at University of| with provincial police/Toronto, The home was built by attempted to break uP/nis grandfather 110 years ago. | A militia major when war broke in 1914, he was the! criginal commander of A Com- pany of the Ist Battalion of the Canadian Expeditionary Force. | Wounded in the second battle of Ypres in February, 1915, he/ was invalided home, returned liquor offences, the next year as a battalion of 85 persons paidj¢?™man der, was wounded ither liquor offences|4840 during the battle of the a disturbance in con-/S°™me, but was back in| h the incidents when|Ftance by April, 1918, leaving éd n court Tues-|/nally with a Distinguished Service Order. 7a He lost out on his first ven- ture into politics in the Khaki lquor offences whilejeiection of 1917 while home on! pleaded guilty to}medical leave, but won Oxford isturbance and paid|North in 1925 and sat at Ot- tawa for a year before losing ----|the 1926 contest, |JOINS CABINET Returned in 1930, Mr. Ben- nett appointed him minister of national defence. The job in " : those Depression years, he re- ais ot Candice (eal now, was mainly a mat- Limited's. -plant ter of 'cutting down" and rou- P soy Seaieinretien, although is department was responsible P ~ operating camps for home- Reg. 59c 4 ess men without jobs. off the job Aug:)n, Sutherland took on 'the jadded portfolio of health briefly before the Bennett administra-| tion, Dr. Sutherland with it, was defeated in 1935. "Bennett had a real time then," Dr. Sutherland re- calls. 'Na progress could be made and he was easily blamed for everything." | Pd | a | On doctoring, Dr. Sutherland e . . epenteeamanees med 4 i yh closing jaments the decline of the old- : : nis amma use of parts|style family physician who "used to nurse the soul as well las the body" and the drift of ldoctors to large communities, leaving rural districts doctor-| DOOR CRASHER SPECIALS! FIVE RED-HOT BARGAINS FOR YOU THUR.-FRI.-SAT. ae ane 9 -- a a Double Knitting Wool Reg. 39c ball PORTERHOUSE - T-BONE or WING STEAKS ee. ee Lowney's Bridge Mixture Reg. 69c Ib. LESS lorcing the act police Shoulder Veal Chops ». 59° HAMBURG CHICKEN Legs or Breasis 4, 45* | BACON of the act were lifted Sunday. er 125 charges were g the weekend, 70 of! HURRY & SAVE BIG BARGAINS! | = | di) sPPEANUT BUTTER laa ee ae | a eee 39° Cal Food 35e, "#ALADA TEA BAGS ROTTER gar GRADE A SNOWFLAKE Shortening 2, 59° EGGS... oo: 35° POTATOES CARROTS LETTUCE APPLES "" SHOP & SAVE at GLECOFF'S SPECIALS EFFECTIVE THURS., FRI., SAT., SEPT, 10, 11 AND 12 @ OPEN DAILY TILL 10 P.M. @ FREE PARKING We Cash Baby Bonus, Pension and Pay Cheques. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED OR nen PURR 15-02. TINS 29° wo, 53" 60 were fined from after they pleaded Bn ko Be A ee 4 General Electric Nylon Chiffon Head Squares Lady Patricia HAIR SPRAY SPECIAL 63 } € § E ARI he, BULBS Reg. 2 for 59c Ree ere oeperere sonore 10 .:. 30° 3-LB. CELLO 25° BAGS 2 x 29° 6-QUART 69° BASKET e plant said full id be restored by all employees They are mem- 55 of the United 1) | rough ea f fe val pee en eS eee Ae ee 2 KRESGE LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU! DOWNTOWN OSHAWA OSHAWA | SHOPPING CENTRE 15 Simcoe St. South - are awaiting seal tg as! "Patients are just strangers ty most doctors now," he says, Now he looks after his gar- dens and lawns, cutting a "'lit- Ue bit" of grass eath day with a hand mower, and takes an active part in several regional TER historical societies. He keeps cent of totalicareful records of his bird. enmark and|watching activitie.. and has om natural|lists of sightings going back 30 the ground.'years, | scheduled for

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