poms Speman yy eee 2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, November 12, 1964 REUNITED James "Bucky" Welch, who home today with the puppy jured when he reached beneath fost both arms in a railroad accident in August, is back that figured in the accident. The 7-year-old boy was in- a train to pull "Smokey" away from undér the wheels. Six Die In Set Tenemen HOLYOKE, Mass. (AP)--At least six persons--four of them children -- died early today when a fire reported to have been set by an arsonist swept @ five-storey tenement. vege ge reports set the death toll possibly as high as eight. i oe Examiner Edmund J. Zielinski said six bodies were brought to Holyoke Hospital shortly after the general alarm fire broke out just before mid- night. Zielinski identified the six as: Mrs. Anita Dupont, 52; Pauline Dupont, 20; Maurice Dupont, 3; Mary Anne Pronovost, 9; Leo Roberge, 10, and * wri brother, t Fire ment building. Some of them apparently tried to flee down Stairways but were overcome by smoke and flames. Some 50 to 60 occupants of 23 apartments in the building fled to safety or were carried over aerial ladders. Speed Up Inquests: Chief Coroner TORONTO Ned inquests RGart 5 pa B medical examiner and enema at the scene both said one or two more bodies might still be inside the building. FIVE IN HOSPITAL Five other persons including the Roberge boys' parents and a brother and sister were taken to hospital with injuries not considered critical. The injured were Edward R. Roberge, Sr., about 50; his wife, Norris, 43, their daughter, Barbara, 16; their son, Gerald, 3, and Gerald Pronovost, 3, brother of Mary Anne. Fire Chief William Mahoney said the blaze "definitely was set" and called in the state fire marshal's office to investigate. The victims were trapped or the two top floors of the apart- are to be held wi month of the date of death, ath, niet Coro- ner Dr. Morton Shulman of Metropolitan Toronto ordered Wednesday. The order came after Dr. Shulman changed the date of an inquest on a woman who died in a police cell Saturday from Jan. 12 to Nov. 26. He made the change Tuesday night. The women, Ethel Eleda Kaake, 58, of Toronto died in a cell after police found her sick on a streetcar and charged her with drunkenness. An au- topsy showed she died of a cerebral hemorrhage. Dr. Shulman said Coroner Dr.} K. R. Baxter first set the in- quest for January because in- quests into previous death were booked until then. WEATHER FORECAST Cloudy, Cooler A Few Showers TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts issued by the weather office at 5:30 a.m. Synopsis: On Friday it will be cooler with considerable cloudi- ness in the south and continu- ing cool and cloudy north. Lake St. Clair, Lake Huron, Winds light. Lake Erie, Niagara regions, , Windsor, London, Hamilton: | Variable cloudiness and cooler. Muskoka .. North Bay. Sudbury Earlton Sault Ste. Marie. oe Kapuskasing :.. White River.. Moosonee Timmins seeeeees seeeeees . Observed Temperatures |Dawson .. Low overnight, high Wednesday Court Slaps Smith With 'Jail Ruling SALISBURY (AP) -- Rhode- sia's high court handed Prime} Minister Iar Smith's white gov-| ernment a sharp setback today, lruling that African nationalist| [leader Joshua Nkomo and 16) jother Africans are being de- |tained illegally in Gwelo jail. | Chief Justice Sir Hugh Bea- | dle and two other judges agreed| |that the. Preventive Detention | Act under which the 17 Africans | }were held is inconsistent with ithe constitution's declaration of | Tights. The court ruled that the gov-| ernment's orders jailing the) men should be cancelled. Nkomio and his associates will not be released immediately, however. The judges suspended their order until Nov. 20 to give the government time to appeal to the Privy Council in London. Recent threats by Smith to grab independence under a uni-| lateral declaration have split) his country's white population. Under the 1961 constitution, independence for Rhodesia re- quires an act of the British Parliament. The British govern- ment wants to assure the Ne- gro majority of ultimate power before giving the territory in- | dependence. Most white Rhodesians are of} |British stock, retaining close| | ties with Britain. Their homes} Siare decorated with pictures of the Queen; they hold British | passports. | "The unconstitutional act of \grabbing. independence by a unilateral declaration would) make me feel like a traitor to |the Queen,"' said one business- | man. |. But many whites born and ed- jucated in Rhodesia look south- ward to white-ruled South Af- rica--a country which quit the Commonwealth rather than change its apartheid policy. of |racial segregation. It is enjoy- jing an economic boom, guided 4.900 AFFECTED OAKVILLE (CP)--A second Canadian auto company is facing layoffs because of strikes in the United States. Ford of Canada said Wednes- day it hopes to be able to keep turning out cars this week, but after ihat shortages of vital parts imported from the U.S. will mean layoffs for at least the assembly lines. The truck 'production lines, Strike Ends At GNi's New Plant STE. THERESE, Que. (CP)-- A week-long strike by 130 con- struction workers against con- tractors building a General Mo- tors 'assembly plant in this com- munity 20 miles north of Mont- real ended Wednesday night. A spokesman for the Quebec Federation of Labor (QFL) said the contractors had agreed to recognize the Montreal Building Trades Construction Council (CLC) as bargaining agent for the employees who are sched- some of the 4,900 workers on Ford Layoffs Imminent where 1,100 men work, will be able to keep going until next week, the company said. Ford said its engine and stamping plants at Windsor will continue scheduled work at least temporarily, with produc- tion being stockpiled. But a spokesman added that if the U.S. walkouts continue for GM Wants 600 More Autos TORONTO (CP) -- General Motors has scheduled 5,920 cars for production this week com- pared with 5,323 turned out. last week. And production is ex- pected to keep on climbing as the company scrambles to fill back orders which piled up because of a strike in the | United States. Chrysler production will tai| this week as the company plant closed for a holiday Wednes- day, the Motor Vehicle Manu- uled tc return to work today. facturers' Association reports. |fileet, j said. |party in the Bundestag (pariia- |ment), read the statement say- bers, Erhard and former chan- \from a meeting in Paris with |President de Gaulle, who is op- sed BONN (AP)--Chancellor Lud- |wig Erhard decided Wednesday |that the West German govern- ment will stop pressing for the |soonest possible creation of 4 NATO avultilateral nuchear an authorized. statement Reiner Barzel, acting head of Erhard's Christian Democratic ing this decision was taken in a closed meeting of party mem- celior Konrad Adenauer. Adenauer came back Tuesday to the U.S. - proposed INATO fleet and has been seek- by a white minority ment. govern- | EAGLE LAYS EGG, |" NOW AN OMELET SAANICH, B.C. (CP) -- Su- san, a 12-year-old golden ea- gle at a private aviary, has confounded zoologists by lay- ing an egg. Aviary owner Cecil Hynd- man said the egg was laid Wednesday morning. He de- scribed it as "an extraordin- ary occurrence" in view of the fact that Susan has never seen another golden eagle since she was taken as & nestling at Whitehorse, Y.T. Mr. Hyndman said that as far as he knows it is the first time a "hand-reared" golden eagle has produced an egg. "At least I'm sure it's the first time in Canada." He said' the bird will per- form for his wife--even kiss her--"but 'she takes an atti- tude of extreme violence to anyone else, including myself." He said golden eagles sel- | dom lay more than one or two eggs in their lives--and then in late spring. Susan, whose seven - foot wingspan often terrifies visit- ors to the Hyndman home, occupies what once served as the master bedroom. She was moved indoors several years ago when she started to suf- fer from the damp climate. Evidently the eagle didn't even take to the company of the egg. She stepped on it and now all that remains is the broken blue-green shell. TOWNSHIP OF WHITBY West Germany Drops NATO Nuclear Fleet before to join in the creation decided that because of pend- ing to get West Germany to give it up. There were reports that de Gaulle had offered a package deal under which Er- hard would co-operate on this in return for getting France to put off its demand for a lowering of the West German grain price, The statement emphasized that the decision does not mean West German is less ready than of the fleet. - "The chancellor and the party ing negotiations on this matter while its Oshawa plant was idle). long the Windsor operations will be affected too. The U.S. strikes started last Friday over disagreements on local issues in nine points. These supply many key parts to the Canadian firm. The possible layoffs came two weeks after General Motors of Canada swung back into pro- duction following a one-month shutdown caused by a strike at its parent company in the U.S. The GM shutdown affected more than 10,000 workers in Oshawa and at GM _ feeder plants. "Ford had scheduled 3,900 cars and 750 trucks for production this week. Total production this year so far is 130,378 cars and 31,296 trucks. Hate Our Fate? TORONTO (CP) -- Ontario is powerless to act against a wave of hate literature spreading across the province, Attorney- General Arthur Wishart said Wednesday. He said in an interview that under present law it would be almost impossible to win a con- viction against disseminators of literature attacking Jews, Ne- groes and so-called Commu- nists. And, the attorney said, it would be difficult to add teeth to the relevant sections of the Criminal Code without in- fringing on the traditional rights of freedom of expression. Mr. Wishart said that al- though the hate literature could not be considered obscene in terms of law, he considers it "obscene, in my thinking, PM Promises To Review 'Inadequate' By DAVE McINTOSH OTTAWA (OP) -- President Fred T. O'Brecht of the Royal Canadian Legion said Wednes- day Prime Minister Pearson has promised to review the 10- per-cent increase in war disabil- ity pensions announced Tuesday by the government. Mr. O'Brecht, from Durham, Ont., made the comment in an interview after a delegation gion made its annual submigs- sion to the cabinet: The 'Legion brief 'described the increase, retroactive to Sept. 1, 1964, as "grossly inade- quate." Maximum disability pension is $2,160 a year plus $720 for the wife of a pensioner and $324 for one child, Mr. O'Brecht said Mr. Pear- son also promised to study the possibility of pre-dating the in- crease before Sept. 1. The increase will not go. into effect until approved by Parlia- ment, ARE HOPEFUL Mr. O'Brecht said the received a "very kind which leaves us hopeful will get what we hope tain," The Legion asked for @ maxi- mum war disability pension of $3,500 a year with proportionate increases for widows and chil- dren. The Legion president said the "very. lowances which cover 50,000 "burnt - out,' veterans and 25,000 widows and children. The Legion brief said more than 60 per cent of the 148,705 disabled veterans receive a pen- sion of 20 per cent or less of the maximum. For veterans in this group, the pension increase general | Would be $3.60 a month, OTHERS' CARS POPULAR LONDON (CP) -- A report from the British Automobile Association says there were more than 15,000 cars stolen in England and Wales last year. The peak hours for theft were between 8 p.m. and 11 p.m. dirty." there is no cause for the Ger- man side: to pressure for the creation of the nuclear force,"| it said. The Erhard government had) been trying to get the fleet of| nuclear ships agreed on before the pend of this year. Pilot Dies | After Jet Landing si NEW YORK (AP) -- A pilot landed a jet at Kennedy Inter- national Airport with 64 pas- sengers from England Wednes- day night, then collapsed and died in the cockpit. Kazimierz Fraser, 50, pilot of the British Overseas Airways Corporation Boeing 707, had made a "beautiful landing," said co-pilot Michael King. King took over the controls while other crew members vainly administered oxygen to Fraser, who had a heart attack while awaiting taxiing instruc- tions. King steered the plane to He said his department came i\to these conclusions after a ithorough examination of all hate literature seized by police during the last year. The attorney- -general said On- tario is anxious to initiate suc- ~\cessful prosecutions against |hatemongers and he had out- lined this viewpoint in discus- sions with federal Justice Min- lister Guy Favreau. However, it was outside his power to make suggestions to Mr. Favreau: Micmacs Design IODE Calendar TORONTO (CP) -- Two Mic- mac Indians have designed the 1965 IODE calendar, the 40th put out by the women's organ- ization since Wilhelmina Gordon of Kitchener, Ont., orig- inally suggested the project. The new calendar, depicting \legends from Indian tribes across Canada, is the work of Michael France and Stephen Dedam of Big Cove, N.B., with accompanying text by Dr. Ivan H. Crowell of the New Bruns- the ramp where the passengers left, unaware of the incident. wick department of and development. Precision made in Switzerland -- Your guarantee of lasting satisfaction. YOU CAN HARDLY TELL WHEN A ZOOM STARTS OR ENDS WITH THE AMAZINGLY industry Special Weekly Message To Members Of 222 -- 34 P.S.--Be « Chambers Member and Seve. from the 265,000-member Le-|Sinc 2 janitor's 388. per "There Mr. O'B: WILSON'S Furniture Are Pleased To Announce The Winner Of Their SEALY MATTRESS CONTEST Miss Dey Brownlee 211 Stevenson Rd. North A RRR pot meus gone up , the. brief said, tremendous gap; said. a gap, War Pension The brief said 58,386 veterans receive a pension of 10 per cent or less of the $2,160 maximum. For 5,000 of them, the pension increase would amount to only 90 cents a month. -- AS JANITOR'S APOLOGY We. regret any inconvenience to our customers os we will not be in a position to render our usual service this week as we ore attending an Internationa! Educotional Conference of the Refrigeration Service Engineer Society to serve you better, OSHAWA REFRIGERATION SERVICE LTD. 654 KING ST. EAST 728-5115 MERCURY TAXI a 725-4771---- OSHAWA'S LARGEST AND MOST MODERN TAX! AND U-DRIVE-----OVER 30 CARS AND TRUCKS AT YOUR SERVICE! RENT-A-CAR *1.00 A DAY GEO. RUTHERFORD 'Oshewe) LTD.--14 ALBERT ST. PLUS LOW MILEAGE CHARGE OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE FARMERS MARKET OPEN EVERY FRIDAY NOON UNTIL 9 P.M FRUIT -- VEGETABLES FLOWERS -- PLANTS FRESH EGGS , igs ED) WHAT YOUR COMMUNITY _ CHRISTMAS CHEER FUND The 1964 Christmas Cheer Com- mittee has already been active. -- tentative plans and a budget set up. What are the prospects for this Christmas? . The cost of living has gone up, our City has grown, employ- ment is comparable to last year and the number of Pensioners has _in- creased. This would indicate that our reed will be as great if not increased. TENDER Southern Georgian Bay, West- SMOOTH NEW BOLEX POWER Z00M Victoria .. ern Lake Ontario regions Tor- onto: Variable cloudiness and cooler. Winds light. Eastern Lake Ontario, Al- oma, Haliburton, southern ite River, Timagami, north- ern White "River, northern Georgian Bay, North Bay, Sud- bury, Killaloe: Mainly cloudy and cool. Winds light. Western James Bay: Cloudy with sunny periods, Not much Edmonton Regina .. Winnipeg . Lakehead . White River... Sault Ste. Marie.. Kapuskasing Earlton ..... North Bay... Sudbury ..+s Muskoka ., change in temperature. Winds| light: Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, wisest ey Windsor ...... Windsor ....++.04+ noon, COSENS & MARTIN Insurance 67 King St. E., Oshawa pie laud ole Insurence Res: 725-2802 or 725-7413 NEED A NEW... OIL, FURNACE? Call PERRY Dey or night 723-3443 PAUL RISTOW LTD. REALTOR 187 King East 728-9474 up Truck FOR %4 TON TRUCK SEALED TENDERS clearly marked as to contents will be received by the undersigned until 12 o'clock Friday, November 20th, 1964 for 1 Only 7,500 Ib. GVW Pick-Up Truck To Trade: 1 - 1961 Mercury 2 Ton Pick- Specifications and tender forms may be obtained at the office of the undersigned. Lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted. Murray Robinson, Clerk King and. Church Sts. BROOKLIN, Ont. And the proven Pan Cinor lens on this new Bolex Com- era gives sharper pictures than most 8mm comeras. These are the 2 new features which make the P3 so out- standing. 1, Co-incident image range- finder. When focus is incor- rect two separate images of subject ere seen in the view- finder, 2. Power Zoom. An electric- ally driven zoom ensures ob- solutely steady movement of perfect smoothness, (Can also be operated manually). SIMPLE TO USE: Just frome your subject ond focus. Cor- rect exposure indicator visible in the viewfinder. It's that simple to shoot perfect movies every time. Whot's more, Your Local BOLEX Dealer URY & LOVELL LIMITED "For Everything Photographic" 8 KING STREET EAST OSHAWA -- 723-2245 those few adjustments can all be made with: one hand! SURPRISINGLY VERSATILE. You can do fades, dissolves, slow-motion and animation like a professional with the P3.° We'll be glad to show you the whole bag of tricks. NEW BOLEX PROJECTOR. The new 18-5 has a new normal speed of 18. frames per second plus a revolution- ory ultra slow motion system which projects your movies at only 5 frames per second! Loading is easy, You insert the film into the upper sprocket and it threads itself automatically! Come in for a demonstration. We are specialists in quality home movie-making equip- ment, Do visit us soon, MR. GORDON GARRISON PRESIDENT space to work in to the Girl Guides for the use of their gymnasium and to the volun- teer helpers from different organizations that packed the hamp- With funds from the Community Chest (Red Feather) food, fowl, fruit, etc., was purchased by the Committet and packed into 193 cartons; 168 Old Age Pensioners, 104 Disabled Person Al- lowance, 45 Widows and Unmarried Women's Allowance and 125 Single Persons received cheques. $4, 099-87 for these items. ers. It will only be through the generosity of the Community Chest that all these will be provided with Christmas Cheer. -- GREATER OSHAWA COMMUNITY CHEST HAROLD E. PIERSON, Pres. 11 ONTARIO STREET Last year early in December the Christmas Cheer Committee swung into action. This was the first year the Committee had the required pack hampers and toys. Grateful thanks to The total cost was ROBERT J. BRANCH, Executive Secretary PHONE 728-0203 \