Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 19 Jul 1965, p. 3

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SOVIET PREMIER SOUNDS WARNING vce Yager Alexei N. © gamble in Viet Nam. Kosy- osygin is shown during gin spoke in the Latvian speech Saturday in which he P ' a Se warned that the Communist Pita of Riga. This picture world is prepared to meet is from Tass, the Soviet every American raise in the agency. stakes of what he called the "extremely dangerous" U.S. --AP Wirephoto via cable from Moscow OTTAWA TUESDAY MEET VITAL VANCOUVER (CP) -- Postal employees in Vancouver and Victoria voted Sunday to en- dorse a plan to strike in major cities across Canada as a pro- test against the size of federal government salary increases announced last week, , However, strike action will be delayed until after a meeting of the Postal Workers Brotherhood in Ottawa Tuesday. The broth- erhood is composed of the Ca- nadian Postal Employees Asso- ciation, the Federated Associa- tion of Letter Carriers and the Canadian Railway Mail Clerks Federation. At a mass meeting Sunday, the Vancouver branch of the Postal Employees Association voted to join the Montreal local of the brotherhood in a strike to back up demands for a sal- ary increase of $660 a year. The Montreal decision was taken last week. The Victoria branch endorsed the Vancouver vote Sunday. In other western cities, post- men took less drastic action against a federal announcement granting some 22,000 postal workers increases ranging from $300 to $350 a year. NEEDS APPROVAL In Calgary, Bill Givennus, re- Postal Employees Hold Strike Action much as three days behind. Montreal members of the Postal, Employees Association were asked Sunday to vote at special meetings Tuesday whether to take strike action. In Toronto, Edward Polis- chuik, Ontario regional vice- president of the Letter: Carriers Association, said union branches from Oakville to Osh- awa support strike action. "I have asked them to hold off until the brotherhood meets and I hope they will." A. P. Penney, president of the gional vice-president of the Postal Employees Association, said any strike in a major city must be sanctioned at Tues- day's meeting in Ottawa. Any walkouts in Vancouver or Mont- real would be 'wildcat strikes." William Kay, general secre- tary of the Vancouver branch of the association, leaves for Ot- tawa today for talks which he said may decide whether a na- tional strike will be called. He warned there could be a lengthy walkout 'until .a negoti- ated settlement is reached." HERE'S A KEY LOS ANGELES (AP)--Tee- totalers may grimace, but Dr. Richard F. Docter has a the- ory that will set elbow-bend- ers the world over cheering in boozy chorus: "I'll drink to that!" To wit: A couple of good belts perk you up mentally, make you more vigilant, more perceptive to your sur- roundings. Impeding general accept- ance of this doctrine has been the lack, heretofore, of scien- tific seal of approval. Enter Dr. Docter, assistant professor of medical psychol- ogy at the Neuropsychiatric Institute of the University of California. Dr. Docter and his col- Toronto branch of the Postal Employees, termed the govern- ment's offer a slap in the face for clerks and sorters. The Greater Vancouver walk- out decision was backed, Mr. Kay said, by the International Woodworkers of America-- largest union in the province-- and the Canadian Union of Pub- lic Employees. The Teamsters Union prom- ised support in the event of a He said the Montreal workers have the support of mailmen in all of Quebec and Ottawa, Ham- ilton and 'St. Catharines in On- tario. "Other centres are joining the) strike movement. Toronto| postal workers are waiting until after the meeting in Ottawa Tuesday before taking a stand." VOTE TO PROTEST At Edmonton, postal workers and railway mail clerks voted|strike. ' Sunday to protest "inadequate| Postal union spokesmen here wage increases' by instituting|said letter carriers earn a top after giving eye tests and electroencephalograms to alcoholics, announced that the mental responses were duller in the subjects who drank straight tomato juice than in those who'd quaffed five Bloody Marys--tomato juice with two jiggers (three ounces) of vodka. INCREASES FLOW But, cautioned Dr. Docter, "This does not mean that a few drinks make people think more intelligently. It only suggests that a drink or two, MESSAGE FOR ELBOW-BENDING SET or three, increases the flow of ideas and perhaps makes the drinker notice more of what's going on around him." However, Dr. Docter points out that though drinkers may notice more, physically they can do less about it. Thus, he says, some peo- ple's notion that they drive better after a few drinks is a dangerous fallacy. In his experiments with al- coholics, Dr. Docter set up seven 15-minute periods, in the first two of which the sub- jects drank straight tomato juice, chased with strong Bloody Marys in the succeed- ing five. Mentally, at least, the sub- jects' alertness improved with each succeeding drink. In the case of the alcoholic subjects, Dr. Docter said, the drinks may have served to take the drinker out of him- self, thus furnishing a clue to why alcohol appeals to the drunkard. "It may be that increased vigilance and mental activity is the chief reward of alcohol, 'at least to alcoholics," says Dr. Docter. "It gives them things to think about other THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, July 19, 1965 3 « BLOOMINGTON, Ill. (AP)-- Adlai E. Stevenson goes to his final rest today. A double farewell was ar- ranged by his old hometown--a community memorial service for 8,000 in the Horton Field- house of Illinois State Univer- sity followed by funeral rites in the Unitarian Church. Invitations to the church serv- ice went to President and Mrs. Johnson, Vice-President and Mrs. Humphrey, Chief Justice} and Mrs. Earl Warren and Adlai Goes To Last Rest erned Illinois, ran unsucces& fully for the presidency on aot to the UN un killed him W: past coffin in the church Sunday the rate of 700 or more an hour, Stevenson plot area was roped off and guarded by two army reservists. om % Democratic ticket in 1952 and. 1956 and served as ambass 7 a heart atta lesday in a on, " Thousands of persons filed: Stevenson's flag - dra Many persons walked to Sunday. The others for a ceremony limited by the 200-person capacity to the family and close friends and officials. President and Mrs. Johnson and Humphrey Indicated they would attend. Police blocked off streets along the route from the church on the east side to 112-year-old Evergreen Memorial Cemetery on the south side. GRAVE PREPARED The grave was prepared there than their own besetting prob- lems. They may drink not so much to forget as to think." a work-to-rule campaign, per-|rate of $4,380 a year and postal forming duties. exactly as laidjclerks second grade $4,680. down in various manuals, Asso-|They claim the wages are $1,200 ciation officials said the move|a year less than workers in could put mail deliveries as|comparable jobs. UNITED NATIONS OAS Says Priest Slain = After He Rapped Arrests | pulpit and in appearances be- in a corner of the family plot. The tranquil glade is marked by a tall, square-cut monument that bears the name of four members of the family, topped by that of Adlai Ewing Steven- son, vice-president of the United States in the second adminis- tration of president Grover Cleveland. the things you want 62 Killed Accidentally Traffic Mishaps Claim 40 By THE CANADIAN PRESS when struck by a car as he ' At least 62 persons died acci-|crossed Highway 17 east of] entally in Canada during the|Sault Ste. Marie. ANTIGONISH, N.S. (CP) -- weekend, 40 of them in traffic) Joseph Stanley Scanlon, 64,|Rich tethutte dressed in colorful mishaps. : |Toronto, of asphyxiation in his|Gaelic tradition was paid Sat- A Canadian Press survey) jail cell, | | within your reach Three criminologists of the Or-|fore the central authority in the) He was the grandfather of ganization of American States|republic, which culminated in|Adlai E. Stevenson, who gov- have reported that the June 22/the freeing of some prisoners ener pe ener eter execution of a Canadian priest 7 my ei soae . pe police in the Dominican Republic took|official responsible for the mass 3 place after the priest publicly|arrests. ac ee py an bd SP protested mass arrests by po-| It says the execution probably|@nt. won the 26-mile peal el lice. was the work of two policemen|swim down the Saguenay River The conclusion is contained in|who were shot by a soldier im-/from Chicoutimi Saturday in the a report to Secretary-General|mediately after committing the! -ecord time of six hours 59 min- U Thant of the United Nations/act. utes. He took top money of $1,- from Jose A. Mora, OAS secre-| |000, The $700 second prize went tary-general. | Three Critica to George Park, 30, of Hamilton The report concludes that 17 who finished in 7:17. Cliff Lums- persons found shot to death in m don, 34, of Toronto was third in After Accident SUDBURY (CP)--Three of} territory controlled by the junta 7:22 Previous record was 7:29, probably were executed with set in 1963 by Robert Cossette the knowledge of junta authori- of Quebec. four persons injured in a car crash which killed two others Friday night remain in critical ties. The junta, referred to throughout the report as the condition in hospital here. In semi-conscious condition government of national recon- with extensive head injuries is struction, is led by Brig.-Gen. Antonio Imbert, and has op- Allan Fraser, of Sudbury, for- |merly of Harcourt, N.B. Dr. King In Disagreement With Bogalusa Deacons By BILL CRIDER jare reluctant to be specific. BOGALUSA, La. (AP) --|Leaders say pinpointing other Street lights glint on gun bar-|chapters will only subject them rels as armed men patrol|to unnecessary trouble. around the homes of Negro} Ernest Thomas of Jonesboro, leaders these summer nights injregional vice-president of the Bogalusa. |Deacons; said chapters are be- | Cars moving into the Negro|ing formed in areas beset by a sector of this tense city after|strong Klam movement and dark come under observation, |weak, or hostile, law enforce- The watchful eyes, are those ment. agencies. of the Deacons of Defence and| Non-violent civil rights groups Justice, whose guns haye trig-/have not disavowed the Dea- gered an uneasy debate among|cons, despite Dr. King's opposi- Deceased PM Honored SETS MARATHON MARK BANK OF MonrTrREAL Family Finance A ; jurday to the late Angus L. Mac- Pope eligi padre ee John LaFlamme, 21, of Tor-|donald, former premier of Nova arounih t aps she i fi jonto, who drowned in the Rouge Scotia, in this university town. and ae gg he har viveag: [RINE 15 miles east of Toronto.) The Gaelic melodies Premier Quebec led with 17 deaths--15| SATURDAY {Macdonald loved were sung by traffic and two drownings | Stella Demarco, 42, Toronto,|@ Choir of 21 lassies and a pro- British Columbia reported six|when the car in which she was|cession of political, clerical and highway deaths, six by drown-|2 Passenger was involved in ajacademic figures was piped ing, a fire fatality and a death three-car collision on Highway|4cross the campus of St. Fran- catised by a fall. 27 near Highway 5. cis Xavier University to a new Ontario also had 14 fatalities) | Aubrey Ross Boyce, 14, mb named after the late 10 on the highways, three|Brockville when struck by aj : ivil rights lead tion. : | i | The $100,000 Angus L, Mac-|¢ gnts ers. + aa -- ecsadaanal ag 4 Lol age Fruitland,|donald. Library, a trim red-| Dr. Martin Luther King calls) 'CORE is non-violent," said Nova. Scotia and: New b suns. whel run over by a car as helPtick building on the century-|the Negro organization a stra-\James Farmer, national direc- wick each had four fatalities: |lay in the middle of the road.\d campus, "ef barred em ay hoger which may endan-|tor of CORE, which backs the Scoti , <| Christoph Rickey illsi 'jopened by Prime nister/ger the movement. Bogalusa Civic and Voter og aM ge acl etme ol ye A gr Pearson. "IT know our opponents in the| League, "'but I don't feel I have OR ALL YOUR DRUG STORE NEED posed rebels led by Col. Fran- cisco Camaano Deno. The Canadian priest was Rev. James Arthur MacKinnon, a Phone 723-2245 and two drownings, New Bruns- 6, Wallaceburg, drowned in the) wick three traffic deaths and|Sydenham River after he was one fire fatality. jseen playing with an empty Three persons were drowned/boat. in Newfoundland. | Barry Scott Beckwith, 5, New Two persons died in Saskatch-|Milford, Pa., drowned in Bob's ewan traffic accidents and one|Lake near Charbot Lake, Ont., ge was drowned. Alberta|while playing. id two highway deaths. Mani- FR toba reported one drowning. Gary Fraser, 17, of Sudbury Only Prince Edward Island|and formerly of Harcourt, N.B., was fatality-free. jand Marie Louise Roy, 15, of The survey does not include|Val Caron, Ont., when the car known suicides, slayings, indus-jin which they were passengers trial or natural deaths. went off the road and smashed The Ontario dead: into a tree six miles north of SUNDAY Sudbury. 1 awarded an honorary doctor of vocation The prime minister letters degree at a special con- that presented doc- torates in law to Harry John Carmichael, a Toronto philan- thropist and industrial leader, and Dr. Daniel C. Harvey, for 25 years keeper of Nova Sco- tia's public archives. The wife of the late premier) unveiled a full-length portrait of him as a young man in Clan Ranald kilt. GREETED BY CROWD Prime' Minister Pearson ar- rived here Friday night by hell- copter and was greeted by a crowd of several hundred at the WaS|South would like tus to turn to|any right to tell a Negro com- violence," said King, the civil; vocate of passive resistance. "They know violence and they rights movement's leading ad-|their homes. CORE is not paci- native of Nova Scotia. The 32-) year-old priest, a member of the Scarboro Foreign Mission Society, was stationed in Monta Plaza Paris, 55 miles northwest munity they should not defend fist." and a Louise crash. The car in which they were returning from a dance His brother, Gary Fraser, 17, Sudbury girl, Marie- Roy, 15, died in the FREE (-WIDE-DELIVERY A view from the National As- of Santo Domingo. know how to deal with it." |sociation for the Advancement "Martin Luther King and mejof Colored People comes from) have never seen eye to eye,"'|Clarence Laws of Dallas, south-| said Charles Sims, 41, the west regional director: stocky head of the Bogalusa| 'We don't want to see such Deacons. groups as the Deacons spread, "He has never been to Boga-|but we are afraid they will un- usa. If we didn't have the Deal-|less legitimate law enforcement cons here there is no tellingjagencies, from federal to' local how many killings there would|level, start giving adequate pro- have been." tection to all citizens. Sims contends that his armed! Gunfire cracked in Bogalusa's forces do not move out to pro-|Negro section last April during rests It says he protested mass ar- in a sermon from the missed a turn and hit a tree near Val Caron, six miles north JURY AND LOVELL of here. Now you can get up to 20 tect civil rights demonstrators.| what the Deacons called an at- "We stand guard here in the/tack on the home of Robert Negro quarter," he said. "We/Hicks, civic league vice-presi- are the defensive team. We will/dent. |never go on the offence. But if} In Jonesboro two days later, the Klan or anybody else comesS'g Deacon cut loose with four in here to his us, I guarantee) 38-calibre pistol shots when his they will get it back." auto was fired upon while he The Deacons were formed|was driving four University of last December in Jonesboro, an-/Kansas students around the other sensitive civil rights point| grea. in Louisiana and home of the|---- state's Ku Klux Klan grand dragon. NEED A NEW Reports are that the Deacons FURNACE? now have 50 chapters in five|| Ne Down Payment--First Payment other states -- Mississippi, Ala- December--Call bama, Florida, North Carolina PERRY and South Carolina. This- was . unconfirmed, however, Deacons} Dey or Night. . . 7233463 more miles from a tankful of Blue Sunoco TUESDAY AND ALL DAY WEDNESDAY SPECIAL BLADE STEAKS 39: SMALL LINK PURE PORK SAUSAGE LBS. 1.00 HINDQUARTERS o BEEF 59: BUEHLER' 12 KING ST. EAST -- 723-3633 MONEY TO INVEST? Earn the highest rate -- @A new clean-fuel filter is now stand- ard equipment on all Sunoco Pumps. It traps impurities so small you can't see them with the naked eye...makes Blue Sunoco the purest gasoline sold today. Two major improvements @a new carburetor cleaner has been have bee nm ad e Th ey added to all siz Custom Blends of Blue ; ' ' Sunoco. This advanced additive (known as will give you better mile- L-110) cleans deposits from your carburetor. age...fewer carburetor Results? 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Stop at Sunoco this week and enjoy the purest form of power you can putin your car...new Custom-Blended Blue Sunoco! a per ennum for 5 years (and up to 10 years) CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST GUARANTEED INVESTMENT CERTIFICATES are Guaranteed -- os to Principal and Interest Flexible --- may be used as Collateral for loans Redeemable -- upon death Authorized -- os Trustee Act Investments Lloyd Dougherty, 63, West-| John Angus Dunlop, 28, Sud- meath, when he walked into the|/bury, when his car went off the ath of a car near Pembroke.|road and into a ditch two miles) r ' . Eugene King, 60, Preston,|west of Sudbury. juniversity -- sg - hae died in hospital of injuries suf-| William Bartlett, 13, of Orillia,|'" good "3 rits, after hearing ie fered in a two-car collision 10|when the car in which he was a\Toute of the capture of narcotics miles west of Hamilton. lpassenger was involved in ajSuspect Lucien Rivard near Richard McLeod, 47, of ang ge collision and exploded gig waa Gbntinened ie Garden River Indian reserve,ion Highway 11. radio teleph communication : jwith Ottawa as he rode here in R s H : t T lk |the RCAF helicopter. When omanlans ope 1e a Senator John Connolly sent a note to him in the cockpit, the 7 E R P ki F d prime minister scratched in re-| am ply: 0 ase USS e ing eu "It's been confirmed, senator. BUCHAREST (AP)--The Ro-| Marxist Leninism remains the|°S! 8" election at once." manian Communists hope forjofficial state ideology, but it) ,aqress dealt mainly with Ot- quiet talks to ease the Peking-jhas been given a "Romania)tawa's war on poverty, in which Moscow dispute this week asifirst" character. Romania has! ne atresia the responsibilit of | leaders of all factions in thejavoided involvement in the con-lthe provinces for what unt isl Red world meet at the fourth'flict with China, resisting eco-| me , Romanian party congress. jnomic integration with the other| BS hirty-four Communist par-|members of the bloc, pushing] ties or ai phades of opinion are|ahead with her own industria-| a a represented at the five - day|lization and developing trade ST, GEORGES, Que. (CP)-- meeting, which opened today.|With the West. jOne hotel, pe oer hr and a This reflects Romania's avowed! The first Soviet response was scone hha rig oF -- neutrality in the Soviet-Chinese| chilly, but there have been no| whi seo fh ' af n a wind: auattie. ' 7 , |whipped fire in this community, jsigns of Soviet economic sanc-|70 miles southeast of Quebec Soviet Party Leader Leonid/tions such as those imposed on/City. There were no injuries re-| A. Brezhnev headed the Soviet)Yugoslavia after its expulsion|ported. Firemen estimated| delegation. The Chinese delega-|\from the bloc in 1948. damage at $1,000,000 tion was led by Teng Hsiao- cnn antes nectar ping, secretary-general of the) Chinese party and considered | by many to be No. 5 in the Peking hierarchy. | Some Western diplomats be- lieve the meeting might bring an attempt by the new Soviet leadership to patch up the quar- | re] with Peking. But there also 'as speculation over the possi- bility of a new open clash be- tween the two camps. The Viet Nam war, which has become a new source of fric- tion between the Soviet Union and China, inevitably will fig- | ure prominently in any talks between the Soviets and Chi- nese. But, with the Soviets dis- | creetly urging the North Viet- | namese to be more conciliatory | and the Chinese urging a hard | line, it is difficult to see how | they can find common ground on this issue. UNIQUE EXPERIMENT Western diplomats said they regard Brezhnev's presence as | proof that the Soviet leadership finally has given its blessing to Romania's unique experiment in political and economic inde- pendence within the Soviet bloc. BUSINESS MEN'S LUNCH 12 Neon te 2 P.M, CUT AND WRAPPED FREE >) % ©) » ah 5 fai 3233904, ma, 2: $5555 2: y -- « Heed Office: 19 Simcoe St. N. Oshawa Tel. 723-5221 "SAVING HOURS: Mon.-Thurs, 9 to 6 Friday 9te9 Seturdey 9toS FOUNTAINHEAD OF SERVICE CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST & SAVINGS CORPORATION on 2 \ CUSTOM-BLENDED GASOLINES DINNER 5:30 to 8 P.M. FULLY LICENSED ' DINING ROOM HOTEL LANCASTER 27 King St. W., Oshewe a

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