Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 11 Mar 1966, p. 3

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PEARSON ALSO SUFFERS HIS SHARE Cardin Target In Tory Attack By KEN CLARK OTTAWA CP -- day as former calinet ministers reacted an- grily to Justice Minister Car- din's charge that two or more of tiem _Munsinger. Cardin, who made charge at a morning press con- ference, was a key target for Prime the Conservatives but Minister Pearson also suffered his share. Douglas Harkness PC--Cal- gary North demanded Mr. Car- din substantiate his charges or resign. The former defence minister said the claim put all former Conservative cabinet members in the 1960-62 period! under suspicion. Alvin Hamilton PC--Qu'Ap- pelle, former agriculture min- ister, compared Mr. Cardin to an animal with rabies in the forest biting everything in sight If it came close to human habi- tation it should be put out of its misery "and the man who cen put the minister of justice out of his misery is 'the prime minister." 'WATCH YOUR LANGUAGE' When Mr. The Com- iL mons hit a vitriolic peak Thurs-|Cardin statement Conservative}. . were involved with a) Communist woman spy named} the Hamilton tried to oid tin to Watch nis aang aaee: Mr. Hamilton also said the was "pure . McCarthyism." The prime minister, by condoning the ac- tion, laid himself open to the same charge. The Hamilton attack moved David Lewis NDP York South to ask the Speaker whether there is "any way which you or we can avoid spending any more time this evening in personal attack and personal dirt." Richard A. Bell PC--Carle- ton termed the Cardin charges an '"unholly slander' against men who served their country well. The former immigration min- ister invited Mr. Pearson to live up to prime ministerial tradi- tion and do something about it. He is "about to be the first man to disgrace the office if he does not do anything." Mr. Pearson invited Mr. Bell to support a judiciai inquiry into the case but got no affirmative reply At noting said from TAKE IT ON CHIN Mr, Bell absence, fled"' another Mr. Cardin's he had "cowardly the chamber point, ee Cardin ex- une Secs Once when plained his position, Michail Starr PC Ontario, former Conservative labor minister, termed him "the minister of mud." Gordon Churchill, who held several Conservative portfolios,. flemanded that Mr. Cardin rise and apologize. Mr. Cardin did not. | Mr. Churchill, member or | Winnipeg South Centre, along |with others. talked of "slur," |"innuendo" and "scandal." | Walter Dinsdale PC -- Bran- don-Souris, former northern af- fairs miniser, said the govern- ment was guilty of q "grant conspiracy' to engage in a "wholesale witch hunt.' | Hugh John Flemming PC -- Victoria-Carleton another for- mer cabinet minister, said his |high regard for Mr. Cardin was} disappearing. | Erik Nielsen PC who sparked. the judicial in- quiry into the Lucien Rivard) affair with his revelations, also} joined the anti government! | chorus Mr. Nielsen, who was not in the diefenbaker cabinet, said |Mr. Cardin's insinuations dem- onstrated his total failure to Yukon, | SA LASSIE FOILS CROOKS LONDON (AP) -- As the wages gang swooped for the snatch, Maj. Marion Dunn of the Salvation Army biked into battle. Her war cry shrilled through the street: 'God is watching. You will go to heil." With that she jumped off her bike and marched into ac- Gon at mewUinty "witir wer baie ner and its motto: "Blood and Fire." As the three crooks waded into two men who had just left a bank with a £1,500 ($4,500) payroll, Maj. Marion mobilized her forces. She ealled on a group of women to link arms across the road. One of the gang tried to break through the' cor- don. A truck driver jumped from his cab and felled him. Another was grabbed by the arriving police. The third es- caped. It happened Thursday in London's tough dockland area. Said the militant Maj. Mar- fon, 51: "T suppose I got a bit car- ried away. "T tried to kick one of them gehen he was on the ground but too many people got in my way and I couldn't get near him." And with that she pedalled off to play the organ at a prayer meeting THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, March 11, 1966 3 By CYNTHIA LOWRY NEW YORK (AP)--The tele- vision networks, occasionally: and reluctantly, poo) manpower and equipment for such events as space shots and political con- ventions, but their fierce rivalry and competion" retains: Bennett Cerf, long-time panel- ist of CBS' What's my Line?, heads a publishing house which is being acquired by the Radio Corp. of America. He is ex- pected to become a member of the RCA board. NBC is a sub- sidiary of RCA. Mark Goodson, producer of game shows including What's my Line? said in a recent radio interview that Cerf had been under '"'great pressure' by RCA to leave the panel, This awkward situation has been adjusted somehow, since Cerf is expected to continue on the show. Readers of television columns often write furious letters, be- seeching the columnist to right some television wrongs--which most often turn out to be noisy commercials, commer- icials which interrupt 'movie re- runs at awkward times, laugh Fierce Competition Reigns. Between Big TV Networks tracks on comedy shows, loud background music which makes it difficult to hear the dialogue. Recently, however, there has been some anguished mail from sports viewers fretting about announcers and hosts on pre- lapoa gol slows" Wie" Ug iS camera with dull palaver in- stead of concentrating on the play. And no all the viewers are happy about the quality of color on their c@jor sets, either. The problem sems to be most acute when shift(ng channels. What was the right shade of flesh tones on one becomes a deep purple flush on another, Goodman Ace, in one of his sprightly columns in The Satur- day Review, suggested that this year many of the commercials have been more interesting than the show that surrounds them. And indeed some of them have been witty, tuneful, imaginative and non-irritating. But when an audience research company asked a national sample to pick the commercial that most im- pressed them--it didn't say how |--the largest number picked the fones featuring cigarette smok- 'ers with black eyes 90% MORE | DISDAINED SCHOLARS Emperor Ch'in Shi Huang Ti, of who built the Great Wall ) 100% MORE NTEREST HOURS China, burned all classic books and buried alive 460 scholars | who refused to believe that his- For the most part, the targetsjeven grasp a 'glimmering of of the abuse took it on the chin|the responsibility'? of his posi-| ition. | draw the parallel earlier he was interrupted by Commons Central Ontario Trust PARTY WHIPS ERIE Thursday as division bells The motion by Stnley Know- WINKLER (left) of the Con- servatives and Bernard Pi- lon of the Liberals sit side by side outside the House of Commons at Ottawa New WASHINGTON (AP) -- New tlectronic personnel detectors which help combat soldiers avoid ambushes by enemy guer- rillas in Viet Nam jungles and rice paddies were described for U.S. senators Thursday. The new device records) "sounds such as rustling of bushes or a click of a gun) safety, heard from a distance," Lt.-Gen. William W. Dick Jr. told the Senate armed services and appropriations committees. It is normally carried by the lead man in a patrol and "in our tests has repeatedly de- tected concealed troops," the general said. Dick, chief of army research and development, told of numer- ous new military tactics and equipment items being used in the Vietnamese conflict as he urged approval of more than| $1,500,000,000 in the new fiscal | year for these purposes Device Aids Troops ring to summon members for a vote. When the two men get up and enter the Commons it is the signal for the roll to be called Among them were: --A folding steel' net landing} pad for helicopters which can} be dropped on top of trees or jungle growth in eight min- utes, It consists of two strips} of steel nets, 20 by 200 feet,| laid crosswise, with an 18-foot central platform. --Used with this is a new low- ering device which soldiers use to get to the jungle floor | from helicopters, trees or the) elevated temporary landing pad. | --A new electrically operated grenade launcher which can toss as many as 240 of the missiles in a minute for dis- tances: up to 1,200 metres) (3,937 feet). --A new lightweight meal kit, | weighing 10 ounces, for long patrols. The soldier heats a canteen cup of water, pours it in the packet and after a few minutes has a hot meal.| Big Summerwear Collection On Display In Montreal MONTREAL (CP) -- A sum- merwear collection specially de signed by couturier Raoul-Jean Foure for recent showings in Barbados was shown here Thursday And, as was the case with the West Indies showings, the pres- entation began with a collection | of furs Swakara, the supple and bulk less African. lamb, was prom fnent in th tt eollection Notable was a black swakara street-length coat with a detach able bottom strip of saga blue fox that turned the daytime coat into a mosi elegant fioor-iengin evening wrap. Champagne was a prominent color. A champagne swakara Persian lamb jacket was belted and had a coarser texture for more casual wear Many jackets had banded bot toms. A black Persian lamb jacket looked almost nautical Living-Cost Hike Draws Criticism OTTAWA (CP)--A rising cost of living is putting such "bed- rock essentials'? as milk and oranges beyond the income of many families, Mrs. Grace MacInnis (NDP Vancouver- Kingsway) said Thursday night We have been here fighting about everything under the sun,"' she said in a Com- mons adjournment debate. "Is it not time to do something about one of the reaily impor- tant problems of the country?" The cost of beef, fruits, vege- tables. and housing was rising beyond family incomes Mrs. Maclinnis's questions about oranges and milk were answered by Jean Chretien L-- St. Maurice-Lafleche), who said drought had caused an increase in the price of meat, Services in general had gone up in price. Mr. Chretien, parliamentary secretary to Finance Minister Sharp. said Mr Sharp had asked restraint on prices The government had also taken steps to "stretch out" construction and stabilize the economy. sitting Good Nemes Te Remember When Buying or Selling REAL ESTATE Reg. Aker--Presiaent Bil) MeFestere--Vice Pres. Schofield-Aker Ltd, 723-2265 with gold buttons and buttoned shoulder tabs A black swakara sweater-type wrap had. short wide-open sleeves trimmed with white mink Horizontal seaming--creating a neat and flat look with small dyed ermine pelts and a fluffy effect with long-haired fox--re- mained for the '66 season. The summer clothes, ranging from beachwear to evening} dresses, came in the brilliant} colors of the exotic island. Flow-| ered prints were everywhere, and evervthing..was..inention, The top art trend showed up in a contrasted polka dot and! striped slack set, and in other ensembles that drew upon the popular contrasted stripes, The nude look came in a pair of blue slacks with a strip of lat- tice lacing up each side Many dresses had bare backs hidden' only by fairly narrow criss-cross straps A new fabric was a velvet-finished terrycloth from Germany A cement dress and coat en- enble had porthole cutouts that showed emerald green. A hostess' dress had a bodice en- tirely embroidered in sea shells Sequins glittered on a two-piece black and white knit dress patio les (NDP -- Winnipeg North Centre) for adjournment was ° defeated by a vote of 124-98. (CP Wirephoto) (PARLIAMENT AT-A-GLANCE By THE CANADIAN PRESS | THURSDAY, March 10, 1966 The Munsinger case blew up | in the Commons following a morning press conference by | Justice minister Cardin. A series of motions were put forward calling for him to name | names in the case or resign immediately. Prime Minister Pearson promised to set up a judicial inquiry into the matter if that is what MPs wanted. But by adjournment time, | no final agreement had been obtained and the matter was left in the air. | Mr. Cardin told the press conference at least two for- mer Conservative ministers were involved with a woman named Munsinger. He said the woman once was engaged in espionage for the Communists and died a few years ago in East Ger- many. Harsh words flew across the Commons floor as almost the entire sitting was spent on points of privilege about the case. FRIDAY, March 11 The Commons meets at 11 a.m. EST to continue the Munsinger affair debate, The Senate stands adjourned until March 22 Conservative | Belgian Students 'Due For Harvest TORONTO (CP)--Definite ar-| j rangements have been made to bring 340 Belgian. students to help harvest tobacco in the southwestern Ontario -- districts of Delhi and Langton, a ik tie Ontario Cured Tobacco Growers Market- ing Board said Thursday. Mr. Newell of Bowmanville, head of the board's export pro motion committee, said in an in terview talks have also been held in the last three weeks with representatives of Britain West Germany and Portugal about expanding the student program to ease the shortage of help Rey. R. G. Langan of Langton said he and the Delhi Belgian Club arranged for the arrival of the Belgian students and the im- migration department approved final plans about Feb. 20 The students from the Univer- sities of Louvain and Ghent ere expected to be in Canada from of ride | sterlin | Speaker Lucien Lamoureux whoi without much reply. However, UK. Election Campaign Starts In Earnest Today LONDON (Reuters) paigning started in earnest to day for Britain's general elec-| tion, already dominated by a only nine members in the House,| pound| Thursday issued its elect ion g, under pressure in for- platform, declaring Britai n} party clash over the eign exchange markets Prime Minister Wilson Thurs day night appealed for the pound|should concentrate on West E Is terling, under pressure in for eign exchange markets. Prime Minister Wilson Thurs day night appealed for the|'BALANCE pound to be kept out of party politics in the March 31 election |fe lfor 630 members of the House!ac of Commons. He was answering a state- ment by Conservative Opposi- tion Leader Edward Heath that the return of a Labor govern- large majority ment with a might well damage the pound. Parliament, in which the rul- Cam- dissolved Thursday until a new|ment -jone meets April 18. The Liberal party, which ha should cease trying to be a big power in the Far East and fi; -|rope, defence and a-quick en- |try into the European Common -| Market PAYMENTS' Labor's Platform published a w days earlier promised to hieve a balance in Britain's international payments by the jend of this year. j} The party, running under the slogan "a govern- ment that works,"' is heavily favored in public opinion polls. The \Conservatives, whose election platform concentrates ing Labor party had a slenderjon domestic affairs, has prom three-seat over - all edge, was'ised yJority for a new manage- 'To Remember MONTREAL (CP) -- Jean \Charles Harvey, editorial direc jtor of the French - newspapers Le Petit and Photo Journal, said Thurs day French Canadians not forget they are Nort | Americans Speaking at a service meeting, Mr. Harvey said of hi fellow Quebecers "Under the pretext of safe guarding our language, tradi tions, and culture they... \dreaming of creating some kind of third force in North America| by establishing closer ties, no only with France but former colonies of France. e . They feed on the illu sion that with a policy of gran ; Laiigan 'said. Father Langan said the stu language| poliay Journal} 000,000 French-speaking people the world-- should | they club are with 'French - Canadians Urged American Role jdeur, based on the once advo- -lcated by Charles de Gaulle--a representing about around can counterbalance the ,/overwhelming influence of the English-speaking world." Mr. Harvey said that s| 'trouble with these that they have learned their his- tory in such a way that they lfail.to realize that they live and have to live in North America ". . . It seems the only coun- try which understands the im- portance of being North Amerl- can is the United States--the richest, most progressive and most powerful nation in the world, "As for us, | am sorry to say that we have been more inte- dispersed the t Peter) about July 31 to Sept. 20, Father! rected in being French or Brit-| ish than in fostering a Canadian ifeeling with the idea that we dents will return to Europe with|are here not to establish an old jabout $400 each. 'world but a new world." 180,- people is of the economy and a ifresh bid to-enter the Common | Market, sion Thursday night, also sai |he would call for international jaction if a tanker approached |Beira, the Mozambique oil port jwhich formerly supplied break- away Rhodesia. He said: "We would have then to have recourse to what I don't want to jhave to do, and that is inter- Inational action to tighten the | blockade." British aircraft and warships | keep an ocean watch in the area oil intended for Rhodesia, which seized independence from Brit- ain Nov. 11. Wilson, who spoke on televi-) | | | for office|for signs of any tanker bringing| tory began with him. 30% OFF Greeting Cards Toys - Hobby Kits Purchases Over $1.00 Special Change-Over Sale at Newton's 23 ATHOL ST. WEST, OSHAWA OFFERS the Oshawa working man Your Clothes } @ Will Look Like New @ Will Feel Like New When Cleaned By "The Best In Town" Phone 725-1191 @ 4% Personal Chequing Accounts--ne. service charges @ 6% Guorenteed Investment Certificates--1 te & years @ Investment Funds Central Ontario Trust 19 Simcoe Street North, Oshawa 50% More Interest on savings (We ALWAYS heve) 44% paid end compounded guerterly. from the dey the eccount Is epened. No welting sa | period. Minimum aceount. 100% More Saving Hours 9 a.m. te 6 p.m, Mondey te Thursday ss 9 a.m. te 9 p.m. Fridey 9 a.m. te 5 p.m. Seturdey Estete Planning Mortgege Loans Real Estate Sales and Purchases Pre-paid Seve-by-Mail kits Free Hockey Ticket Draw & Savings Corporation 723-5221 DON'T Continental GENOSH Che KRih Room NOW OPEN SUNDAY 4 TO 7:30 P.M. Served Daily 11:30 - FORGET French Buffet 2 p.m, -- 5 to 8 p.m. A HOTEL TAKE NOTICE THAT: From Grondview St, South limit of Lot 4, Plan M.87 Grandview St South Grandview St South limit of Pian M-75 South 2 3 and ony owner mo work being undertaken The said Boord ma 276.0' south of south South Limit of Lot 4, DATED at Oshewe this 11th day To Plan M-87 68.06 north ef north 281.36! north of north limit of Belvedere Ave limit of Belvedere Ave. Lot 34, King St. East within twenty-one days after the first publication of this notice, file approve of the said work being undertaken, objection to the said work will be considered of March, 1966 Width 28' LOCAL IMPROVEMENT NOTICE 1, The Couneil ef The Corporation ef the City ef Oshawa intends te eonstruct granulor base for asphalt pavement, as 6 locel im Provement, ond intends to specially assess « part of the cost upon the lend abutting directly on the work: ESTIMATED COST City's Share Per Total Owner's Cost Owner's' Annual Ft. Fige. Rate Per Ft. Ftge $3,109.65 $1,505.85 1,400.29 696.40 153.71 1,633.75 The estimated cost of the work is $6,663.65. The special assessment is to be paid in ten equal annuol instalments Application will be made by the Corporation to The Ontario Municipal Board for its approval of the undertak with the Ci b ut before doing so L. R. BARRAND, Clerk, City of Oshawe $3.30 $0.45 3.30 3.30 ng of the said work ty Clerk his objection to the said int a time ond place when any ae CANADIAN RYE Stake your claim on ADAMS GOLD STRIPE WHISKY Get in on the Gold Rush--to Adams Gold Stripe. Gold Stripe has that robust "unsinkable flavor" to. enjoy with any mix--right to the bottom of the drink. Now's the time to strike it rich with Adams Gold Stripe--at a popular price.

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