Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 6 Nov 1964, p. 21

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(32 iorele 75 Sherritt "a5 +5 --s Siscoe 245 Yk Bear 500 132 132 132 --6 IVANOFF--Alek and Frances (nee " ac) ore heney ree rag s. fhe Oshawa Generel, Hospital. A. brother for Nicholas, Barbera and 'nai Many thanks fo Dr. Halam-Andres. By JAMES NELSON OTTAWA (CP)--No House of DEATHS |Commons is expected to be the |very epitome of the nation's best in statesmanship, dedica- TER, Judith Loraine be Suddenly, the result of a car accident, 'at the Oshawa General Hospital on Wed- nesday, November 4, 1964, Judith Lor- aine Pike (of 925 Annis Street, Whitby) mond L. Clouter; loving daughter of Mr. and Mrs. S. of Whitby deer sister of Mrs. C. Graves flaatsie), Mrs. H, Foskett Top and | nowned R MecNAUL, Annie Entered into rest in the family resi- ~ Masson Street, Oshews, on y, November 4, 1964, Annie -- of Benjamin MoNeui, ertridge dence, 'Wednesda' age Helen 'and William of Port Glasgow, land. and John of Australia in her 66th Resting at the Arms! Funeral » Oshawa, Bangle gy Sigg nan-f until 1 p.m. Friday, Then at Reid tion to public. service, and gen- tlemanliness--even if its mem- bers grow to think it is. One of its greatest merits, as the late Professor R. Mac- gregor Dawson said in his re- book, The Government rot Can Canada, is that it is not a selection of the ablest or most .| brilliant men in the country. "Rather, (it is) a sampling S\of the best of an average run, an assembly of diverse types and varied experience, the members of which are genuinely and actively concerned with the promotion of the national wel- " eng | fare. In every body of 265 men and women--and the current Com- mons is the 26th freely-elected House since Confederation in 1667--there are a few who sometimes slip from the high Fe 1 Home, Kingston, Friday evening bing wzeryice i the, Chapel Saturday, t 2. p.m, interment Serevent Cemetery. WhnStER, Penge A Suddenly at le © ister, Rev. S. Armstrong. LOCKE'S FLORISTS Funeral arrangements ond floral requirements for all " eecasions. diay SHOPPING ENTRE 24 HOUR PHONE SERVICE 728-6555 Kindness beyond Price, yet Within. reach of all GERROW FUNERAL HOME 390 KING STREET WEST TELEPHONE 728-6226 Playboy Booze :| Charge Laid NEW YORK (AP) -- Ralph Berger, real estate broker' and public relations man, has been convicted as the go-between in a plot to pay a $50,000 bribe for a state liquor -- for the Playboy Club Berger, 60, a former Chicago night lub operator, also stands convicted of the same role in a $10,000 bribe plot to get a liquor licence for The Tene- ment, a Manhattan supper club. The defendant. remains free - 42,500 bail pending sentenc- ing. A jury found Berger guilty late Wednesday. His iawyer said he will appeal. IN MEMORIAM OBITUARIES BATEMAN -- In loving memory of 8 dear sister, Hazel Kellar, = who 6 of wry S i vo we were tog ~Ever euber by sisters and brothers. LEST WE FORGET Honor the Memory Of Your Departed Loved One On ARMISTICE DAY NOVEMBER 11th Friends and relotives are in- vited to place their 'In Mem- oriam- Tributes' in memory of those who paid the Sup- reme Sacrifice during the two Great World Wars. For further information and rates PHONE 723-3492 MONUMENTS -- MARKERS RIMAR tr MEMORIALS OFFICE 152 SIMCOE ST. S$. OSHAWA EVENINGS 723-1002 728-6627 @ MOUNT LAWN MEMORIAL PARK @ ASSURES PERPETUAL MEMORIALIZATION @ EIGHT NATURAL FLORAL GARDENS Courteous information at the Park Office. Phone 723-2633 CARD OF THANKS MeWILLIAMS -- | would like to ex- and flow. uring my recent stay in the Oshawa Hospital. Special thenks to nur- tes of 2A and Dr, Stanley. --Grete Me iiiame | STANLEY G. WHEELER Stanley G. Wheeler, 707 Athol ,| Street, Whitby, died at his resi- dence Thursday after a one year illness. He was in his 60th year. Son of the late Mr. and Mrs. in Bristol, England. He came to Canada at the age of six. He married the former Dorilba en in Cleveland, Ohio in the late Mr. Wheeler lived in Whitby for the past 16 years, coming here from Toronto. He was an adherent of the Anglican Church, He was well-known in Toronto as a musician having played with the Toronto Symphony Or- chestra on the CBC, at O'Keefe Centre and at the Royal York Hotel. He was associated with come- dians Wayne and Shuster and with the orchestras of Jack Bogart, Trump Davidson and Bert Niosi. He lately operated Stan's TV Repair shop in Whitby. The late Mr. Wheeler is sur- vived by his wife. He was pre- deceased by a brother Fred. Resting at the W. C. Town |Funeral Home, service for the late Mr. Wheeler will be held in ithe chapel on Saturday at 3.30 p.m. Rev. S/ Armstrong, All Saints Anglican Church, will conduct the service. Interment will be in Groveside Cemetery, Brooklin. FUNERAL OF WOLFE M. MILLER The funeral of Wolfe M. Mill- er, 63, who died in Oshawa Gen- jeral Hospital Tuesday, Nov. 3, |was held at 2 p.m., Thursday, in Christ Memorial Church. The service was conducted by Archdeacon H. D. Cleverdon. Interment was in Mount Lawn cemetery, Pallbearers were Jack Ander- son, John Borrowdale, John Charlton, Walter Hoe, Jake Vos and Real Proux. 6 Frederick Wheeler, he was born|M Prof's Book Says MP's Not Best Nor Worst ideals of honorable and gentle- manly conduct. REVIVE GIMMICK While this House of Commons hasn't produced anything like some of the scandals of dishon- esty and moral misbehavior that have marred the Canadian Parliament's distant and nearly forgotten past, it has revived a distasteful gimmick under the nominal heading of "debating tactics" which hasn't been seen here for a decade. That's the childish--and anon- ymous--noise that is designed to do nothing more than spite- fully annoy an individual MP. A decade ago, the tanget of this was Karl K. Homuth, Con- servative MP for Waterloo South, a big rotund man with a booming but particularly rau cous voice who had been an MP since 1938 and an Ontario MLA before that. Whenever he rose to ask @ question or make @ speech, he was greeted by a chorus of "quack, quack, quack" from Liberal back-benchers, None of them were identified because they did it surreptitiously. COULDN'T BEAT IT But Karl Homuth found it was an interruption he was never able to deal with effec- tively. He died in 1951 after a long and distinguished parlia- mentary career. Then there was Walter Tucker, Liberal MP for Ros- thern, Sask., and parliamentary assistant to the veterans minis- ter in the previous Liberal gov- ernment. Once during an election cam- paign, a farmer was reported to have become so annoyed at something Mr. Tucker had said in a television broadcast that he took a shotgun and blasted the TV set. From then on, until Mr. Tuck- er's defeat in the 1958 Conserv- ative sweep of Saskatchewan, whenever he rose in the House he was greeted with a series of loud retorts--"bang, bang, bang"--while members on the opposite side banged their desk tops just to throw him off stride. NOW NEW TARGET ' Now this anonymous annoy- ance - by - design has started again, and the target is Donald acInnis (PC -- Cape Breton South), a war veteran and coal miner, and an outspoken critic of the government. Lately, his attempts to get the floor of the Commons have been greeted by barely-audible hissing from a number of Lib- eral backbenchers, somewhere behind and to the south end of the chamber from the govern- ment benches, No one knows the source or the real reason for these at- tempts to get Mr. MacInnis' goat. But he has found a phrase which seems to put a stop to them: "Mr. Speaker," he said Thursday, "the snakes are out again." NEWS IN BRIEF CALL FOR REPORTS TORONTO (CP) -- Board of control Wednesday called for le- gal and welfare department re- ports on whether the cify can set up birth. control clinics. Ald. May Birchard, who proposed the move, said a clinic should be established in the downtown Regent Park low-income public |housing complex. | TAUGHT THE BLIND BRANTFORD (CP) -- Fun- eral services will be held Fri- day for Dr. Harold J. Vallen- ser 75, former superintendent and principal of the Ontario |School for the Blind here, He died in hospital Tuesday. Dr. Vallentyne was a graduate of Queen's University, Kingston, and served with the school for |the blind from 1935. until his re- ltirement in 1955. He teceived an | honorary doctorate of laws from |Queen's in 1056 for his work in the education of the blind. By JAMES MARLOW WASHINGTON (AP) -- Sena. |" tor Barry Goldwater said of himself and his advisers on the day after Tuesday's election, with the wreckage still being counted from coast to coast: "I can't think of any major mis- take we made." They made some beauts. But Goldwater does not seem to con- sider his defeat in the igpama tial campaign, one of the worst in American political history, a repudiation of him or his philos- ophy of government. He says he does not think the conservative cause has been burt, indicates he intends to re- tain party teadership, Some other Republicans don't share his opinion when he calls himself @ conservative. There- fore, an understanding of the label is essential to the party's future. It requires a definition. The dictionary says: ". , , A political party whose characteristic principle is sition to change in the institu- tions of the country." This was the classic conservative view in the 19th century when the gov- ernment participated little in American life. But by this same definition Goldwater is not a conservative at all for he has proposed not only changing but eliminating many government functions, long accepted by Democrats and Republicans, which have be- come institutions over the years of this century. Through his philosophy he made a major mistake before the campaign began in advo- cating the elimination of vari- Where Did We Err? Wonders Goldwater ous government functions and programs. He suggested getting rid of the graduated income tax, sell- ing the publi Tennes- see Valley Authority - tric power project, making s0- cial security voluntary, pulling the government out of public housing and power, eliminating cutting veterans' benefits. LOST NEGRO VOTE It was before he was a can- ¢|didate needing votes that he felt free to make such state- But when he became a cam didate in need of votes he soft- (pedalled much he had said be- .\fore or fogged it with vague- ness. He made only two specifi. cally constructive proposals > ad taxes and. ending the aft: He made some statements on how he'd handle ipod but he later soft: in order to overcome the Rend of irresponsibility tacked on him by the Democrats. Building Loan opro-| Will Aid Queen's OTTAWA (CP)--A $3,325,000 federal joan to aid construction of dormitory facilities for 475 residents students of Queen's University in Kingston was an- nounced Thursday by Central Mortgage and Housing Corpo- ration. A new building, consisting of four seven-storey wings project- ing from an octagonal core, is to house 370 female students. A six-storey addition to an ex- isting building will hold 105 male students. The National Housing Act loan is repayable over 50 years at a 5% annual interest rate. .Jantibiotic drug likely to prove 4 deared him to the right 'wing in | American politics. He even gave voters cause to question his ability to run the country--just a few. weeks be- about himself. In an interview in -- magazine he was ted: quoted: "Doggone it, I'm not even sure that I've got the brains to | Whites Vote THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridley, November 6, 1964 23 ---- Sun Still Shines Despite Predictions Of Ht Early Set By DOUGLAS MARSHALL LONDON (CP) -- The sun | wanted Britain's first new national in 34 years, In Favor Of Independence - SALISBURY peor a predominantly - Rhode- oe -- wane appeared ave voted overwhelmingly in favor of independence now under the existing conmiienion daily in a referendum Thursday. With results in Seain'36 of the country's 50 voting districts, |@g0. 44,640 votes were cast in favor of -- and only 5,065 ee "heeutts indicated a high proportion of the 12,729 Rhode- sian Negroes entitled to vote had abstained. Blacks outnumber whites 16 to 1 in the country, but there are 83,000 whites and only 13,- 000 blacks on the voting rolls. Early last month it was prerg ee wb gh aby Tan Smith would use the referen- dum result as a mandate to|/Conporation, owners of the proclaim immediate independ-|mass-circulation Daily Mirror, ence. But after the British gov-|the newspaper was conceived ernment said this would outlaw|by the conporation's chairman, Rhodesia from the Common- wealth and isolate it from most of the world, Smith wii his threat, Ford Sales Set Record TORONTO (CP)--Ford Motor Co. of Canada, Ltd, says its dealers sold more cars and trucks last month than in any October in the company's- his- tory. Retail sales totalled 18,283 units, an increase of 12.4 per cent from the same month last year when the previous record was established. management ack- nowledges that the newspaper faces some problems, though not of the kind that are insur-| pent mountable. Periodic review may lead to some in the format and 000. there is no anticipation that The Sun will go under. A multi«nillion-pound gamble 'of the International Publishing King tiene, and oo? 3 ing and now, Jo IMPORTS UP mond, Liberal party leader. OTTAWA (CP)--Imports of nonfarm machinery shot up 32 per cent in the first five months of this year. The Dominion Bu-|; reau of Statistics Wednesday placed the January-May total at $368,985,000 compared with $279,762,000 in the same period of 1963. L RAID OFFICES BERLIN (Reuters) -- Police here, acting on a judge's order, raided the offices of two weekly newspapers against which West Berlin Mayor Willi Brandt has filed a libel action, West Berlin justice officials announced Thursday. They said 3,000 cop- ies of the papers--Siebenuhr- Blatt and Wochen-Echo--as well as office files and correspond- be the president of the United States."' ence, were confiscated in the raids Wednesday night. "MIRACULOUS" RESULTS LONDON (Reuters)--A new the biggest discovery since pen- icillin has been developed by British scientists, it was an- nounced today. Equally as potent as penicil- lin, the new antibiotic, ceporin, works even faster, will be cheaper to produce, and is suc- cessful with patients allergic to penicillin itself, according to scientists who produced the drug. Ceporin was developed' and will be produced solely in Brit- ain. A research team of hun- dreds spent eight years on the project which cost a total of £1,500,000. The firm which undertook de- velopment of the drug was Glaxo Laboratories. SAYS IT'S BREAKTHROUGH Dr. F. J. Wilkins, chairman and managing director of Glaxo, told a press conference the discovery was 'a major breakthrough for' the British pharmaceutical industry." Ceporin, he said, had been found to be highly successful' in the treatment of infections to the lungs, kidneys, bladder and infections resistant to penicillin. About 200 patients had been treated with ceporin, he said and the a were "'miracu- led: '"'Another impor- tant feature is that it is non- New Antibiotic Drug Biggest Find In Years side effects have been observed. Clinical trials have shown that (patients who are allergic to penicillin can be given ceporin quite safely as this new anti- biotic shows no cross-sensitivity with any of the penicillins'. Magistrate Flays Police On Island TORONTO (CP)--Magistrate Thomas Graham, a member of the Ontario Police Commission, said Thursday that policing of Pelee Island in Lake Erie, the most southerly point in Canada, and in the national park on the mainland is unsatisfactory in summer and fall. He said Thursday in an inter- view that there are only two po- licemnen--one part time--a sin- gle RCMP officer and a few provincial police constables to handle tens of thousands of tourists, campers, pheasant hunters and others who swarm into the district. Mr. Graham said the justice department has also become concerned about the lack of po- licing in the Pelee district at certain times and will be con- sulted by the Ontario Police IS NOW OPEN and READY TO SERVE YOU in a pleasant . . . intimate and relaxing atmosphere OPEN DAILY MON.-FRI, eee 12 NOON to 1 A.M, SATURDAY .., 12 NOON to 11:30 P.M. RELAX and ENJOY YOURSELF AT (Licensed under the Liquor Act) Genosua Hore toxic and so far absolutely no Commission. lownaw (And we live in No matter what I whip up for an evening meal, I've a wine on hand to make it mean something. Stew will do--if there's chilled DuBarry Sparkling Vin Rosé on the table. And just taste what Manor Claret can do for hamburgers, Manor Seuterne for fish and chips! And my whole cellar hardly cost the price of @ box of good handkerchiefs. 74 Sherry An appetizer wine, most popular in Canada. Serve with hors oeuvres, and the soup course. 74 Port A digit desert wine After nner, with snacks, with cheese ra Mladen Chilled, it does wonders for white meat ine cellar an apartment |) of any Kind--fish, fowl or pork--and salads. Manor St. Davids Claret Canada's most distinctive "wine of the country". ideal with steaks, hamburgers, rod meat of any kind, Mazel Tov A rich "kosher" wine. Delicioue--appeais to everyone, DuBarry Sparkling Vin Rosé An "anytime" wine that's fight and tingling on the tongue. Serve before, during and after eny meal at all. You? ee Brights me ensse WANES nce PHONE BRIGHTS FOR FREE HOME DELIVERY! What more pleasant or welcome gift than @ cellar of Brights fine Canadian wines ? never get a warmer "thank you I". |

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