Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 4 Sep 1965, p. 3

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

= PO Farmers Roadblock Will Go On CHICOUTIMI, Qut. (CP)-- Farmers in the Lake St. John and 'Saguenay region tied up traffic on the roads Friday in their battle to get financial compensation of $5,000,000 for crop damage. farmers plan to resume traffic jams in the area today, while Agriculture Minis- ter Alcide Courcy meets mem- bers of the Catholic Farmers' Union in Quebec City. "It will provide pressure," one union officer said, unions in the area, sa news of Mr. Courcy's willing- ness to talk with representa- tives of the farmers came from Lucien Colore, the Liberal member of the legislative as- sembly for Lake St. John. Subject of the talk is expected to be the gap between the $5,000,000 that the farmers want and the $1,000,000 that the agri- culture department in Quebec has offered. As for the traffic tie-up, a re- inforeed patrol of Quebec pro- vinclal policemen reported it was peaceful, but entangling. The farmers drove their trac- tors on both sides of roads in the area. They moved along when police told them to do s0, but slowly. 2,000 INVOLVED About 2,000 tractors were in-| volved Friday. The demonstra.) tion was called off at nightfall! but was scheduled to resume at) 9 a.m. The farmers have another weapon against the provincial) vernment, on whose shoul-| pr they place responsibility) for their needs now that Ottawa has offered to match Quebec payments. They are refusing to repay loans from the Quebec Farm Credit Bureau. Mr. Dore said the combina- tion of physical and financial! tactics has won the sympathy of the public. The action would be kept within 'legality'? and would continue as long as nec- RAYMOND = McGILLiv- RAY, 16 months, rests in the Toronto Hospital for Sick Children Friday after he was attacked by rats in his crib at his home in the city's area. His his par- Cabbagetown screams brought ents to his bedside. They found him covered with blood from. dozens of bites, mostly on his face and one BEFORE THE MAGISTRATE arm. Hospital officials Fri- day described his condition as "fairly good" but he will stay in hospital for anti- rabies shots, (CP) Rats Attack, f Oshawa Fair. |was cheating young children." "SCAVENCERS CHEATING CHILDREN' -- AFFLECK A Windsor woman was fined $500 and costs or four months in jail at Oshawa yesterday after she had been found guilty of cheating young children out of their money at the recent Charged with cheating at play was 28-year-old Mrs. Maria Laham, of Bridge. st., Windsor. She pleaded not guilty to the charge and was represented by Anthony Laskowsky,. "These people are scaveng- ers', Crown Attorney Bruce Af- fleck said in demanding a heavy sentence, 'This woman "We have something like this every time the Oshawa Fair is held, It.js about time these peo- ple were taught a lesson. This was a cheap kind of fraud -- this woman was taking advan- tage of children who did not know any better." Police constable Darrell Stan- ley said he was making a rou- tine check of the Fair booths in company with a colleague from the OPP anti-gambling squad. 'DUCK POND' The booth in question, he said, Four Charged In BROCKVILLE (CP) -- Four) men, charged with non-capital murder in the Aug. 15 death of Death Remanded » was a game known as "The Duck Pond", He observed the booth and its operator, Mrs. Laham, for some 20 to 25 minutes, During that time, he said, some.12 young children accompanied by adults tried the game, Describing the game he said that some 46 plastic ducks were floating on the surface of two large tanks of water, On the bottom of each duck was written a number, For 25 cents a go a participant chose a duck. The operator then lifted the duck out of the water and checked the number against a list of prizes. At the back of the booth, he went on, was a large doll, A sign on the doll indicated that if the participant picked out number five he, or she, would win the doll, When he checked the ducks there were no number fives. At the back too, he said, were two watch sets. The winning number in this case was 21. A check of ducks revealed that there were no 21's in the pond. THREE 11's Another watch, he added, could be won by picking out three number 11's. There were only two number 11's in the ond, Every child who participated in the game won a prize, he cheap being given out were Carl Smith, 39, of Glenburnie, Ont., who died in hospital at Kingston eight days after he was beaten, were remanded Friday to Sept. 16 for prelim. inary hearing. Smith was beaten when he in- tervened in a fight among four men at Westport, about 30 miles north of Kingston, Aug: 7. He Woman Draws $150 Fine Feast Upon A 21-year-old Oshawa woman appeared for sentence - before Magistrate Harry Jermyn at Oshawa yesterday on charges of obstructing the police and essary, pausing for Labor Day out of sympathy for industrial disorderly conduct Linda Knight, of 326 Linden For Trouble With Police | For having liquor in his pos- session Edward Mullen, of 70 Metro Baby TORONTO (CP)--A rat-erad- Celina st., was given a 30 dayjication program including sub- jail sentence, Mullen pleaded guilty. to the charge, his third liquor offence this year. sidies to home owners who par. had been in a coma during the jeight days prior to his death. | Charged are Joseph Michael |White, 33, of Brockville, John Mark Cawley, 23, of Ottawa, Harold George Renaud, 27, of Westport and Edward Speagle, 23, of Montreal. Oshawa Fair 'Operator' Fined $500 For Cheating plastic items costing no more than five or six cents each, When Mrs. Laham was search- ed, he added, she was found to have over $38 on her person. daa money was the booth tak- ngs, Police constable Dick Crowley who took part in the investiga- tion said that it was impossible to win any of the more expen- sive prizes in the booth. Sgt. of Detectives William Jor- dan, who took part in the check, said that the children he saw playing the game were nearly all between the ages. of six and 12, ; In the witness box Mrs. Laham said she was only the operator of the booth, It was owned by someone else, She, in fact, had only joined the fair a week before it arriv- ed in Oshawa. The booth, she added, had been erected and set up ready for play by the owner. She agreed that the game was rigged but added that she knew nothing about it. Cross examined by Mr, Af- fleck she said that the discovery that the game was rigged had come as a "* LINK SCHOOLS BY TV | A closed - circuit television isystem is being built in Scot- land t6 link 300 schools and col- said; but all the prizes he SAW ileges at an annual cost of $150,-| 000. Now Is The Time To Your Winter Fuel .2..c%0: | SAVE | PHONE | DX FU Order 7 6: GAL, On Premium Quality FUEL OIL 668-3341 EL OIL | Serving Oshawa - Whitby - Ajax and District THE OSHAWA TIMES, Soturdey, September 4, 1965 9 Wheat Crops Set Records OTTAWA (CP)--The bureau of statistics Friday estimated 1965 wheat production at a rec- ord 759,804,000 bushels, beating the old high of 723,400,000 bush- els in 1963, Many other crop records also were forecast, The predicted wheat yield per acre of 26.9 bushels would also be a record by a paper-thin margin. The current record is 26.8 set. in 1952, Estimate prairie wheat yield of 743,000,000 bushels is 29 per cent ahead of Jast year's of 578,000,000 and also ahead of the 1963 record pro- duction of 703,000,000, Predicted production of On- tario winter wheat is well off last year's 18,246,000 bushels at 13,160,000 GOOD FOOD BUSINESS MEN'S LUNCH 12 Neon to2 P.M, - DINNER 5/30 to 8 P.M, FULLY LICENSED DINING ROOM HOTEL LANCASTER 27 King St. W., Oshewe 4% 1 Year to 4 Year Guaranteed Investment Certificates, | 5 year to 10 year G.1.C.'s -- 534% 4% SAVINGS ACCOUNTS Interest calculated and paid quarterly Effective yield over 10 years -- 5.6% P.A. SERVICE COMMUNITY SAVINGS ® GROWTH | | | | SAVING HOURS: Mon.-Thurs. - 906 Friday 909 Seturdey 9toS CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST aa 19 Simeoe St. N, Oshawa fount AINHEAD «Tel, 723-5221 & SAVINGS CORPORATION ticipate in the campaign was urged Friday by Ald, June Marks after a 16-month-old boy Seventeen - year - old Daniel; Was severely bitten by rats Poritras, 26, Gladstone ave.,| Thursday night. pleaded guilty to a charge of} Raymond McGillivray was minor consuming and was fined) bitten while he slept in his crib $50 and costs or seven days injin a mid-Toronto home. Bern- ard McGillivray, his father and jan unemployed truck driver, -- st., was found guilty of the) "Anyone who has a registered| charges at a hearing Jast week vehicle has a right to use the! at that time she was remanded roads," Mr. Dore said. in custody for a week for a pre-) "The public has a right to sentence report use the roads and is going to) She was fined $75 and costs jail. do so," said a provincial police or 15 days on the charge of ob- officer. jstructing police and $75, costs A Sunderland man, Joh n/said doctors told him a younger For being drunk in a_ public! Electric heating costs far less than you may think $130.70 is all Mr. and Mrs. J. Reist, of Ayton, near Walkerton, Ontario paid last year to heat their three-bedroom home, includ-. "ing the basement. 'If we were building another home," says Mr. Reist, "It would be electrically heated because of the low operating cost and the comfort." $161.28 5 sic. ore Mactan of Hanmer, near Sudbury, Ontario paid last year.to-heattheir_six-room house,'Our cost- is below our neighbours' who have an identical- size house with another kind of heating," says Mrs. MacLellan, 'We'll never go back to any other system." $117.56, sree anavieu8.R. Warnica paid last year to heat their 1200 eq. ft. home in Grimsby, Ontario. "Tt's even less than the sati-_ mate Hydro gave us," says Mrs. Warnica. "We iike it because it's quiet, gentle heat. You never hear it." Strike Hits | | | | | | | | SN a --jand 15 days on the disorderly|Reid, was given a six month|son would have died if he had . lconduct charge suspended sentence and proba-|been the victim of the attack. Planes, Pilots She was given 14 days to payjtion, after pleading guilty to a} "His (Raymond's) head was ' lic place, was badly chewed." T, The suspended sentence was| The infant was in good con- or anzanla jplace Harry R. Jones, of Peter-| given on the understanding that) dition in hospital, |borough, was fined $10 andihe live with a Mr, A. Carley,| Ald. Marks, who distributed DAR ES SALAAM, Tanzaniajcosts or 10 days in jail. of Sunderland, who offered as: |rat poison to all homes on the provide a 50-man training team,| acute liquor problem, reside, said the city should aircraft and equipment in al A former Oshawa resident.) --------------------__---- make developers eradicate the five-year program to help Tan- ae Bandy, Rng to e rats before tearing down houses vania establish a military air ays in jail after pleading N WwW Ar onauts for new buildings. i s announced here'guilty to a charge of false pre- wee} Vee WILL BE REPLACED About 25 Tanzanian trainees, Crown Attorney Bruce Affleck Sh B mainly pilots, are expected tojsaid that Bandy had opened an OWS Drawn cated in an area third on the be under training in Canada byjaccount at a city clothing store . city's list of blighted regions the end of this month, In all,jin another name. And Brains Too and will be demolished and re- Canada will train about 400 Tan-| He had bought goods to the placed by low-rental housing. port work When the man whose nameiiong, Toronto Argonaut half-imedical officer of health, said Informed sources said the airjhad been used queried the @c-ihacks have had difficulty get-|his officials visited the McGil- __wing will be trained mainly for|count, saying he had not boughtiting past their own offensive|livray house at least three operations in suppuri of the po-|the items listed, the police were cuards. Bob Shaw, coach of the| times this year, the last 'time lice and army, and will be es-/called_ in winleas--Blastern- #oothalt- "Con: Aug 2¢ disaster situations : ae wie tage gre ae and!the bushes for replacements, {rats was found and the McGil- Tanzania requested Cariada's y . : Assis nak . : |livrays were advised what steps assistance sariier this year, Bandy, said Mr. Affleck, had wares 'Wiceaitied Pa ggg kn we chock after West Germany, which had/a previous conviction for {0F-| Priday to. pick up Jim Baffico,|/again in two weeks." been handling the project, with-|gery back in 1963. a late cut from the Bills of the| The father said the home was protest against the decision to Found sleeping in bushes offiiin hack in time fo tice: He saw rats-in the house a few allow East Germany to estab-|Thomas st., Mrs. Doreen Angus! fin same evening F& Practice months ago but thought the lish a consulate-general in Dar of John st., Toronto, was taken . sroblem had been solved when es Salaam to Oshawa Police Station and) AS Ackerman = and Baffico : put oul rat poison, The Canadian offer will in-jlodged for the night Yesterday|drove the 80 miles back to Tor- Mr. McGillivray said he will port planes, ideally. suited to the at bathe Atak 9 ponte place | estan recruit on Argonaut tac- children to his grandmother's Tanzanian terrain, with support/she was fine oan costs i home until he finds other ac- eqilipment and spare parts. with a choice of seven days in 'From Niagara Falls to Ham- commodation, Thirty Canadian Army per: jail ilton | gave him the plays to) ---- Ser OeAORS ete sonnel already are here train- ~~ learn,' said Ackerman, 'From si : Nim tote mes Ethics Code When they got to Toronto, Mars Same As Raffico watched two plays, then stepped into the lineup and ex- J Pre-Life Earth DALLAS, Tex. (AP)--The at- mosphere of Mars, two' scien- tists said here Friday, is much developed on this planet. They said their study of Mar: iner IV data shows the Martian atmosphere to contain 20 times the amount of carbon dioxide A. 9 pulsion laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., and Von R. Eshleman of Stanford University, Palo Alto, Calif., spoke at the American the fines. ;charge of being drunk in a pub-|a mass of blood. and one hand (Reuters) -- Canada plans to |sistance in helping him over an|street where the McGillivrays Priday. ee The McGillivray home is lo- ranians for air, ground and sup-|value of $31.75 on the account., TORONTO (CP)--All season) Dr. G. W. 0. Moss, deputy pecially useful in emergency or| The storekeeper was shown Alference club, has been beating On the last visit @vidence of| drew all military assistance in American League, and bring|the only one he could afford, clude Caribow and Otter trans-|she pleaded guilty to a charge/Onto, the coach briefed his 260-1 hic 'wife and five other ing Tanzanian so.diers Hamilton to Toronto asked like that of the earth before life as the earth's atmosphere Geophysical Union's fifth west-/ University were based on radio propagation measurements the Mars atmosphere Both men said the measure-| ments seem to point to a neces-| sity for longer orbiting exer- cises and probes before sending astronauts there 'CAN'T SERVE, I'M TOO DEAD' MADISON, Wis. (AP) -- U.S. federal court clerk John Adams sent out 1,600 jury notices and chose a panel of | 36. One notice was still be- | ing checked Friday. It was | returned with "I am dead" scrawled across it. 0 And Hurts 1-Firm City KENOSHA, Wis. (AP)--When a strikey hits a one-industry town it can mean only one thing --emotional and financial trouble, That is precisely what has happened to this southern Wis- consin city of 70,000 The United Auto Corp. shiny 1966 Ramblers came to a halt a week after the models went into production, Immediately _ silenced bers walked off the job. ecuted every assignment with- out a hitch, Magna Carta sent To U.S. WASHINGTON (AP) -- Brit-| ain formally loaned one of its) r Workers steatest treasures, the Magnalty draft Kliore of the jet pro- union struck American Motors|[arta Of 1225, to the United tives will be chosen from On- Aug. 23 and the flow of|States Friday Shortly after the document's new/arrival here by jet plane from London, U.S. archivist Dr ee : : were|Wayne C. Grover accepted the! rent bar association convention, eri national meeting. Their re-ithe two big assembly lines in/time - marks at Southern Methodist} Kenosha as 11,200 union mem- British Ambassador Sir Patrickjined figures on lawyers default- worn parchment from} Dean in a brief ceremony at Then came a shutdown on the the ambassador's residence. AMC body where not on strike, were laid off. Federal mediators have joined representatives of both sides in negotiations, but the issues are numerous The company accuses the union of featherbedding prac- tices, production bottlenecks, illegal work stoppages and in- terference with Kenosha plant management, The unton claims of too many short work weeks. The real is- sues, it says, include work Standards, stewards and chief stewards, the 40 hour work week. Penalties and "past prac- tices," plant in Milwaukee 5,800 production workers, ipressed | Chief Justice Earl Warren ex- the gratitude of the United States to the British gov- ernment and the Queen for the loan of the treasured paper, Warren said that the hun dreds of thousands. of Amer-| icans who will view the docu-! ment while it is on display here| will he better world citizens for having seen it. jtown, retiring president of the CONDITION SERIOUS MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (AP) Mrs, John Blanchard, wife of Kansas City Athletics catcher was in serious condition at a hospital Friday after being in-| jured in an auto accident. For Lawyers, TORONTO (CP)--Plans have been launched for a code of 'eth- ics for all Canadian lawyers, the Canadian Bar Association was told Friday, | A report from the conference| of Governing Bodies of the Le- gal Profession--a permanent group which co-ordinates the work of the governing provin- cial law societies--said it has decided to set up a committee a code, Representa- $214.2 7 is all Mr. and Mrs. R. Moyer paid last year to heat their 2348 sq. ft. home in Woodstock, Ontario. "We're very happy with the cost," says Mra. Moyer. 'We would definite- ly put electric heating in if we built again," adds Mr. Moyer, of Scarborough, Ontario paid last year just fantastic!" | Electrically heated homes, insulated to | iario, Quebee and British Co-| lumbia for a start. The conference, which held closed meetings during the cur- Hydro standards, cost no more to heat = for the comfort, cleanliness and than homes with other systems. ae Electric heating is one of the nine repartad that 1 ban Gel Flameless electric heating is depend- ing on clients' trust funds and able, safe, and completely clean, since has found the profession is ful- filling its obligation to the pub- lic to make up lawyers' defalca- tions, (A report circulated privately) among delegates this week said that last year the Law Society of Upper Canada (Ontario) paid out $258,290 to clients defrauded by lawyers, while claims for the rest of Canada amounted to there is no combustion to produce dust, dirt, film or soot. No wonder so many contractor, or your Hydro. $125.28 is all Mr. and Mrs. G. Angus their six-room house, "I'd never go back to any other system now," says Mrs. Angus. 'We are very comfortable and it's so economical it's people are turning to electric heating omy they want in a heating system. features of the famous Medallion all- electric homes. For full information, consult a qualified electric heating $127.69 to heat is all Mr. and Mrs. M. Pal paid last year to heat their home in Maitland, near Brockville, Ontario. "Hydro rates have dropped twice since we installed electric heat- ing," says Mr, Pal. "The complete lack of maine tenance saves us money, too," adds Mrs. Pal, econ- many electric heating ELECTRIC NEATING FOR YOUR PRESENT HOME If you are planning home extensions or if parts of your home are not now properly heated, you can install supplementary extend your present heating system, for less than it costs to LOT - ay Arran! your hydro ELECTRIC HEATING IS THE SUPERIOR HEATING SYSTEM only $22,423.) A, W. Matheson of Charlotte- conference and former premier of Prince Edward Island, deliv- ered the report, The new pres- ident is St. M. DuMoulin of Vancouver, former British Co- lumbia vice-president of the bar| DOWNSVIEW Adelaide Street East HARMONY VILLAGE Walnut Court Norwich Street SEE MEDALLION ALL-ELECTRIC HOMES ON DISPLAY IN THESE COMMUNITIES ROSSLYN HEIGHTS BEAU VALLEY Oshawa Blvd. N. North of Rossland Rd. W. BELLE VISTA Melrose Street association,

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy