Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 26 Aug 1966, p. 3

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Cee ee a | a 2 Twelve - year - old Frank McQuillan got into a bit of a mess when his golf ball OH BOTHER! headed into a culvert at the 18th hole during the annual Don Valley Junior Golf Tournament Wednesday at Toronto, Frank, undaunted, went on -to finish with a 126, (CP Wirephoto) Reds End Press Parley By Viet Nam War Critic MOSCOW (AP) -- Soviet au-| thorities today broke up a press tonferénce by U.S. Prof. Stephen Smale and two men hustled him away. Smale, of the University of| committee on un-American ac- tivities. He had been expected to limit today's conference to a further denunciation of the | United States in Viet Nam. Instead he turned on the So-| California at Berkeleyn has been| viet Union as well. a persistent critic of U.S. policy in Viet Nam and had been sub- poenaed to appear before the U.S. House of Representatives He said he has found Soviet intellectuals discontented over internal conditions here without having any.means of expression. Smale called a press confer- ence to answer questions by a North Vietnamese correspon- dent about his attitude toward |the Viet Nam war. Smale termed U.S. actions in Viet Nam horrible and brutal but added the Soviet interven- tion in Hungary in 1956 also had been brutal. A Soviet woman appeared to CPR Transcontinental Will Get Back On Rails OTTAWA (CP) -- The can- celled Dominion or something like "it has been ordered back mext year in what may be a temporary reprieve for the CPR Vancouver - Montreal passenger break up the press conference with an urgent summons for Smale to talk with an official of the International Congress of Mathematicians, which he is at- tending. Smale, 36, received one of its awards for the world's outstanding young mathemati- tained in a government state-|°!2"5. ment released Thursday about; Later two Soviet men, appeals to the cabinet objecting to federal authorization for the} Dominion cancellation last Jan-|car. With Western correspon- uary. who acted like policemen, escorted Smale from the meeting to a |dents following, it went to No- BERLIN (Reuters)--A 'fqur- year-old Canadian girl, Audr Klewer, was found alive and ap- parentlywell today after a four- day police hunt following her kidnapping from her. wealthy pianwmauics © HUMIS lite Cally Monday. The girls's mother, Regina Klewer, 28, a German who lives in Montreal, wept with joy as she embraced her young daugh- ter at the end of the ordeal, Audrey was found by a Ber- lin man with her hands and feet bound by a rope in a small hut in.a garden in the West Berlin district of Spandau. Police said she appeared sleepy and they presumed the kidnapper, so far unidentified, gave her drugs. Meanwhile, the West Berlin police, working on their first kidnap-for-ransom case since the Second World War, contin- ued their hunt for the kidnapper, who has apparently been in touch with the Klewer family several times. CAME FOR REUNION © Regina Klewer arrived here with her daughter Sunday for a Kidnapped Girl Found Hunt On For Abductor Mrom her grandfather's home Police said the details of the case -- Audrey was snatched early Monday morning after her mother was chloroformed by an iniruder--indicated the niunapper was lamar wilh ine Klewer family. She was found alone in the hut at about 8 a.m, by a man who was asked to look after the small garden by its owners. The man immediately called police, who took Audrey to a po- lice station. She sat on a chair half asleep. Earlier today, they lifted a four - day ban on press reports of the kidnapping and called on the public to help find the girl, snatched from her grandfather's home at gunpoint Monday. Audrey and her mother were alone when a masked gunman entered the house of wealth antique dealer, Herbert Klewer 3 He bound Regina and later chlorophormed her. In a note he demanded a ransom of. 35,000 marks ($8,600). The kidnapper also threatened Audrey's life should the Klewer AUDREY KLEWER Safety reunion with her family. family inform the press or po- lice. ; WASHINGTON (AP) --Com- mittees of the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives have reached agreement on a com- promise auto saftey bill th at would require mandatory safety standards on 1968 model cars. | They completed their work late Thursday and said the final version would be ready for ex- pected Senate and House pas- sage next week. Under the measuré; the -sec-| retary of commerce would be directed to fix interim safety jstandards by Jan. 1 of next |year for cars, trucks, buses and |motorcycles, including imported | vehicles. A year later, permanent |standards would be 'established. | The secretary is expected to use 26 items currently required lon all government - purchased jears as the interim require- | ments. ROLL BARS INCLUDED Included are such things as seat belts, recessed instrument panels, safety door latches, four- way flashers for emergencies, roll bars, air pollution control devices, dual brake systems, headrests, collapsible steering Agreement Reached On -- Compromise Safety Law Scrutiny TORONTO (CP) -- The On- tario department of labor will conduct an examination of the province's safety. inspection sys- tem at construction sites, T. M. Eberlee, deputy labor' minister, announced Thursday. Mr. Eberlee made the an- nouncement after meeting with Gerald Gallagher, business agent of the Toronto local of the Laborers International Union. Mr. Gallagher, whose union has pulled men off construction jobs it considers unsafe, sought the meeting with provincial of- ficials after a bridge collapse in Ottawa which killed eight workers. Mr. Eberlee said he is hold- ing discussions with provincial |Officials to determine how the examination of safety inspec- jtion procedures should be car- ried out. Mr. Gallagher said his union has offered to present the gov- ernment with specific examples of cases where municipal in- |spection had proved inade- | quate. He said he plans to call on the government every week to check on the progress of the in- |vestigation. He promised to Fines would total as much as|keep up the union's practice of $400,000 for a related series of|pulling men off jobs it consid- manufacturers. at!oers unsafe i ers, at) crs unsafe, would direct the secretary to promulgate safety standards for used cars in two years. En- forcement of these would be up| to the states. The measure also would in- clude safetv provisions for tires. A car must be equipped with tires designed to operate safely | when the vehicle is carrying its | maximum passengers load and 240 pounds of luggage. The secretary also could re- quire tires to be labeled with} information giving the number| of plies, the composition and maximum permissible load, ESTABLISH GRADING In addition, he would be in- structed to establish within two years a uniform quality grading system for tires. The bill would require a car manufacturer to notify the first) purchaser of an auto by regis- tered mail of any safety-related defect along with a statement of the necessary repair meas- ures, | The companies would be re-| quired to buy back all cars found to violate the federal standards, pinintinn the a. columns aiid standard heights. Many of the items are ex- pected to be included on 1967 ears scheduled to go 'on sale next month and in October. The compromise bill also ¥ the rate of $1,000 for each vio- lation. if The bill would authorize $56,- 800,000 for the first three years to pay the cost of the federal program. FOOD LAGS BEHIND India increased food produc- jtion to 80,000,000 tons in 1964 {from 51,000,000 tons in 1950 but |now has 492,000,000 mouths to THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, August 26, 1966 3 P.E.I. Ferry Hopes Die CHARLOTTETOWN (CP) -- Fared with a nation-wide rail- way strike that could stifle transportation between Prince Edward Island and the main- land, Premier Alex Campbell wae sympnthetic snd isa pointed Thursdav | "I don't question the right of the local to join the strike," Mr. "Tt was a great flight and we're looking forward to flying on the vehicle ourselves on Apollo 1." | ment, were the U.S. astronauts Heaviest U.S. Spacecraft Does Good Flight, Landing CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP)| The three astronauts will train with the expectation that they will ride into space in Decem- her, for un te 14 dowe in orbit, Tha " enananualt Mul. vived a searing dive back through the earth's atmosphere from a péak altitude of 706 Speaking, in a joint state- Measure who may be circling the globe next Christmas in a three-man Apollo moonship. The three are Lt.-Col. Virgil I. Grissom, who travelled into space in both the Mercury and Gemini programs; Lt.-Col. Ed- ward H. White II, the first UMS. space walker, and Lieut. Roger B. Chaffee. A mammoth Saturn I rocket, the most powerful in the U.S., hurled an nned Apollo moogship Overs bistering sub- orfital course that carried it) three - quarters cof the way around the world Thursday to a safe parachute landing, in the Pacific Ocean. The flight was intended to qualify the spacecraft and the |b Saturn I for launching the Ast-|y ronauts into earth orbit. Before they go into space, two Campbell said after learning 300 union workers at Borden, P.E.I. would join in the strike. The local's decision will cut off the the mainland. "However, I am concerned about the possible serious reper- cussions which could result." The premier has described the ferry service as the. Islands 'lifeline." The railway employees, mem- bers of the Canadian Brotherd General Workers, voted unani- mously Thursday night to join the strike. A union spokesman said the men were opposed to operating the ferries even on a limited basis. The move killed Mr. Camp- bell's hopes of maintaining nor- mal ferry service from Borden to Cape Tormentine, N.B. Long lines of cars awaited transpor- tation from the island following q miles, Its heat shield protected it ranged up to 2,700 degrees. from temperatures th at The spacecraft on launch weighed 28 tons, the heaviest ever sent into space by the United States. The 5%-ton cabin section in which astronauts will ride separated before re-entry. It landed southeast of Wake Island in the Pacific affer a 93- minute flight of nearly 18,000 th les--about 200 miles short of ended bullseye, The main recovery ship, the aircraft carrier Hornet, re- uired several hours to reach the scene for a pickup Thurs- day night. Airplanes spotted the obbing vehicle about 45 min- tes after splashdown and dropped frogmen to secure it. his declaration of his state of emergency Wednesday. Minister Urges Tax Payments PORT ELGIN, Ont. (CP)--An Anglican canon said Thursday ministers should pay personal income taxes and churches property taxes, Rev. Trevor P. Jones, direc- tor of resident schools and hos- more two-man Gemini flights, in September and October, will conclude that second - genera- tion program. FIND FEW PROBLEMS The National Aeronautics and Space. Administration reported that preliminary evaluation of data indicated no problems with the Saturn I and only a few mi- nor ones with the spacecraft. Lemays Look Good Names To Remember When Buying or Selling REAL ESTATE Reg. Aker -- President Bill MeFeeters -- Vice Pres, SCHOFIELD-AKER LTD. 723-2265 pitals for the Anglican Church Grim In Court of Canada, told delegates at the Ontario conference on_ inter- group relations that there are too many legislative exceptions for charitable and religious in- Stitutions. He said ministers who re- ceive up to $10,000 a year and up in salary and benefits should pay income taxes. And any con- gregation that can afford prop- erty worth $500,000 should pay property taxes. If the churches are to give leadership they have "to give up some of their privileges and prejudices and learn to behave like responsible citizens." LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) -- George Lemay, 41, and his wife, Lise, 24, were arraigned in court Thursday on Florida fugi- tive warrants. They appeared grim when Judge Delwin Potter set bail at $100,000 cash or $200,- 000 property bail apiece, Lemay was nabbed by FBI agents last week as he left the men's room of the western- atmosphere Golden Nugget ca- sino. here. He gained notoriety when his picture, issued by the RCMP, was broadcast via Early Bird and he was subse- quently seen and arrested in Florida, He is wanted in Can- SWIMS STRAIT MESSINA, Sicily (AP)--A 23- year-old Roman student, Fabri- zio Spano, swam the three-mile Strait of Messina underwater Thursday in 49 minutes, beat- ing the underwater record by almost three hours. He was ac- companied by four skin divers on a boat, who jumped into the masterminded the looting of a Montreal branch of the Bank of| Nova Scotia of between $300,000 and $500,000 in 1961. The sheriff in Miami, Fia., has said Lemay bought his way out of the county's ultra-modern fail far $35,006. ada to answer charges that hej] -Resistered deal for ALCAN SIDING Guaranteed 100% By Alcan Of Canada @ Permanent Decor Finish @ Maintenance Free @ 20 Year Guarantee Against Paint Chipping @ Free One Year Supply 'of Alcan Foil Price with no obligation, i ee Dead, P ALCAN SIDING OF CANADA Call Anytime 728-8606 water three times to change oxygen tanks for the swimmer. HELP SALARY RANGE: $5,088.00 to 8kt for $55. SS "CITY OF OSHAWA REQUIRES ENGINEERING ACCOUNTING CLERK hour week) train. | Appeals were filed by railway Return of the privately-owned|unions and Western provincial railway's second service was |sovernments following the de-| disclosed Thursday by the fed-|cision by the board of transport eral government. It will operate | COmmussioners. from April 30 to Oct. 28 next year, The five-month summer serv-|jants have been asked to recon-| |ASKED TO RECONSIDER | The statement said the appel-| vosti, a Soviet news and pub- licity agency. Back At Work | Over After Accident Cabinet Vetoes Gas Pipeline U.S. Short - Quebec-Vermont border to con- feed. Cut Planning U.S. government, which was concerned with protecting the American interest. --Trans-Canada's plan to sell 87,600,000 cubic feet of gas daily to its U.S. subsidiary and import American gas at KIDNEYS PASS 3 LBS. A DAY Most people pass about three pints of liquid a day or about three pounds of liquid-waste. Now, if kidneys become sluggish, urinary irritation and blad- der discomfort may follow. The result $5,973.00 (361 Under the direction of the Subdivis) intro} sible for the maintaining of Subdivisio of Preliminary and Fi tion of Local improvement Assessmen application for subsidy to the Ontario Construction projects done under the the preparation of annual applications ngineer to be respon- ts and the preparation ividers; for the preparae 3 for the preparation of the partment of Highways for the pied Pk gh onal for " " 'or subsidies from irtment of Highways of Ontario for Land Purchases on subsidizable projects ee: keeping pi rere val Land Purchases; establishing and ing a system o udgetary contro] coveri all divisions of ed Sorigg Works Department; Girectlon of pare time stoff es ssigned. OTTAWA (CP)--A project for $21 nect with a Vermont pipeline. AROUSED OPPOSITION The project aroused strong op- position in Northern Ontario be- cause Trans-Canada proposed to build a section south of the Great Lakes through Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan. The 98§ - mile U.S. section would have linked Emerson, Man., and Sarnia and enabled Trans-Canada to sell gas to American consumers along the way. Construction was slated to begin this year. can be backache and restless nights, This is when Dodd's Kidney Pills can help bring relief. Dodd's stimulate kidney action, help relieve the irri- tated condition that causes the back- ache. Take Dodd's and see if you don't feel better, rest better. Used success- fully by millions for over 70 years. New large size saves money. with a smooth QUALIFICATIONS: ior Matriculation or equivalent, including bookkeeping, elementary accounting, statistical methods, Familiarity with Municipal Accounting and Engineering is desirable. Applications giving age, marital status, experience, etc., should be received before 5:00 p.m. Friday, September 2nd, 1966, PERSONNEL OFFICER, CITY HALL, OSHAWA, ONTARIO. ice was offered by CPR Presi-|sider their appeals in the light| . x siiac, | 4,9212:000,000 east-west gas pipe- dent Ian Sinclair in an Aug. 18|of the CPR rie ey SIMCOE (CP) William|line was killed by the federal letter to' Transport Minister |Helka drove an eight-ton mobile} cabinet Thursday because it in- t n Reaction from Joe Macaluso, | aay" . "s é Pickersgill. The service will be|chairman of the Commons oy gpg cad pd det capa f wie ata -- in addition to the railway's reg-|transport committee, indicated|°9Y. °° ; ular Vancouver-Montreal pas-| the yeurtoke controversy over|vchicle smash-up on Highway 3) prime Minister Pearson an- | : jabout seven miles east of here.| nounced the decision Thursday 'senger train, The Canadian. | the Dominion is far from dead. Be te : ! I The Sinclair letter was con-} Mr Macaluso (L--Hamilton| AS the 33-year-old Simcoe| night, saying the American sec- tion of the line would not be in |West) said he is happy to see |truck driver was approaching \ 1 Ithe train back but disappointed|@" intersection at the same| Canada's best interest. Dead Man | The national energy board in Still Lost" Sarnia would adversely affect Canada's balance of pay- ments. --The U.S. loop almost in- evitably would become Trans- Canada's main pipeline, rele- gating the existing 30 - inch Northern Ontario line to a secondary position and killing | hopes for a twinning of the Ontario line. Canada Sona jat the shortness of the period. time as 'three or four cars and | At least a year's trial is needed,/@ Couple of trucks" he found lhe said that his brakes weren't holding. After cross-Canada hearings,| "I had two alternatives--ride |his committee last spring rec-|her straight across the highway jommended that the train be re-|and risk a collision or take to hearings last March, conditiond ally approved the U.S.-Canada route favored by Trans-Canada Pipe Lines Ltd., but the cabinet decided otherwise. thus lose a large capital in-| vestment. | --A Trans-Canada main line cutting across U.S. territory|| the ditch," he said afterwards. Mr. Pearsons statement cited would violate the spirit of the ELLIOT LAKE, Ont. (CP)--|5 Mr. and Mrs. Antoine Blais re- turned Thursday to their home|"nanswered questions 3 miles north- | >Ctairs ever ana ne plans t0\g@ tree west of North Bay, still without|©@!! the railway president when) «1 hearing from their son, Lionel|the committee resumes hearings) gi. » at Field, Ont. tarted early next year. Mr. Macaluso sé whom they had come here to|this fall buty last week. Meanwhile, the body of Leon- ard Blais, 55, the man Vancou- there are in .Mr.|the shallow ditch and aimed for He of: ng the big truck into thought I was going to Growers Will jits side and slid another 75 feet jinto the middle of the highway. | The vehicle went through the| jeight-inch tree, spilled over on| "The government," Mr. Pear- son said in a press statement, "was guided by basic considera- | ions Of NatidVidl poucy, and net by reason of any technical de- fects or shortcomings in the ap- plication or in the board's treat- ment of it." . Trans-Canada applied to the energy board for permission to| build a 36-inch-diameter pipe-/ several arguments to support the cabinet decision: | --It was not in Canada's best} interest tor gas 'Consumers 'i Eastern Canada to depend on a pipeline regulated by the pipeline act passed by Parlia- ment 10 years ago in a_his- toric and violent debate. The act requires the main iine Yo be built exclusively within Canada. ver authorities mistakenly sent j A few hours later, Mr. Helka| line from the Alberta gas fields | new bottle and a celebrated here as Mr. and Mrs. Blais' son, was shipped to Ottawa for bu- rial by his brother, Peter. Lionel's sister, Mrs. A. Lessard, who lives in this com- munity, said her parents de- cided Thursday they had waited here long enough for Lionel to get in touch with them. "Someone from the family may have to go-to. Vancwiver to get this all cleared up if we dont receive word soon," Mrs Lessard said. "I can't under-|,.; stand that he hasn't called us. There' are not enough trucks Lionel, 38, was reported ir licensed now to move a bumper | Calgary earlier this week after| crop to market, said John Sand- the family discovered he, was| man, secretary - treasurer of not the man found dead follow-| the Fresh Fruit Marketing ing a fall in a Vancouver hotel.' Board. | that's how agin should be That's how White Satin is. Still made to Sir Robert Burnett's original 1770 London Dry formula; still exactly as dry and Satin-smooth today as it ever was. After all, when great taste can keep a gin famous for generations on both sides of the ocean--we wouldn't dream of changihg it. What we have done, though, is change the White Satin bottle. It's the best way we know to salute a celebrated gin. Have a look, Have a buy. White Satin! That's how a gin shouldbe. Get | icences bibl yg at bye Aas a similar|to Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., Tor- jcement mixer truck. | 'onto, Montreal and on to the qg| TORONTO (CP) -- Tempor-| "lary public commercial vehicle! licences will be issued to help| fruit and vegetable growers move produce to market when the rail strike begins at noon/ today, A..G. McNab, deputy) transport minister, said Thurs- Applications will be judged on| necessity and the public inter-| Tne 4 C's of Saving CONFIDENCE ! CONVENIENCE ! COMFORT ! 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