Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 2 Mar 1967, p. 15

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ire vented euff, Two 1.88 red ris -- Sanfor- loth. "Hi- tton euff. T° LER | chrome 2s: teles- nge can- BEFORE THE MAGISTRATE Salesmen Meet On Highway But Not For Sales Meeting BOWMANVILLE -- Salesmen don't all meet at sales meetings. Three' of them met at the inter- section of Highway 115 and the cut-off to Newcastle, Alfred Oliver, 25, of Peter- borough, a commercial travel- ler, was on his way to two busi- ness calls in Newcastle and sev- eral in Oshawa. He slowed his car and pulled to the right. George Sabourin, Peter- borough and Thomas Janetville, on their way to a sales meeting in Hamilton, at- tempted to pass just as Mr. Oliver swung to the left toward Newcastle. He pleaded not guilty to making an improper left turn and was represented by Don Bark, Peterborough. Magistrate R. B. Baxter fined him $10 and $26.80 costs, or five days here Tuesday. WILD CHASE A wild 15-mile chase resulted in the driver going to reforma- tory for six months definite and one indeterminate. George An- drew Harrison, 80 Forest Manor Road, Don Mills, pleaded guilty of dangerous driving. Bowmanville and Whitby De- tachment cruisers were involved in the midnight chase and two of them collided resulting in minor damage. A given by a passenger in the Whitby Magistrate Court Brief Smyth, | |two. vehicles jthey were racing and tried un- |Bruce explained that his |was a sports mode. | Volkswagen," commented Mag-| statement istrate R. B. Baxter. "'They pass me all the time." OTTAWA (CP)--The cabinet Harrison car revealed that they| will be able to regulate closely left Toronto and drove to Fene-\(he number of sponsorship |lon Falls. On their way back to|cases that may come before Toronto they passed a police car|{he immigration appeal board "with the accelerator right tojiinder a bill given Commons |the floor' and police cruisers')assage Wednesday. jahead of and behind them. | Manpower Minister Marchand | Police evidence was that dur-j!old the House that the law will jing the chase the Harrison ve-|!make Canada the first country thicle reached speeds of 100/jne knows of to allow sponsors jto 105 miles an hour, fishtailing|!1an avenue of appeal. and forcing other vehicles off, The present board is limited the road. 'to hearing appeals against de- portation on points of law. Its decisions may be reversed by the immigration minister. |$25 AND COSTS A St. Catharines man was |fined $25 and $20.80 costs, or| 'The new board will be an ad- |seven days, for careless driving.| ministrative tribunal able to |Eric Dobie, 30, pleaded not/take' humanitarian factors into |guilty. |account in hearing appeals on | et a ed pace deportation and_ sponsorship ment officer for the Depart-|cases. The only appeal will be |ment of Transport, said that,}t9 the Supreme rite of Can- {northbound on Highway 115, hejiada on points of law. \tried three times to pass Mr.| However, the legislation gives Dobie's 1966 model vehicle. }the cabinet the power to decide Each time Mr. Bruce's car was\hy regulation the classifications pe pod perce when thelof sponsorship appeal. : Opposition MPs argued that this could allow a minister to rule that non - whites can't ap-| peal, or to limit appeals to those involving the closest of relatives. WANTS TO GO SIDW Mr. Marchand said the limi- tation is there because the new right is an experiment and the government wants to go slow at first. A government policy state- ment on immigration, which is being studied by a parliament- ary committee, warns against "the explosive potential' of sponsored immigration and pro- poses measures-that would probably check it. Some 90 per cent of Italian immigrants in 1965 were sponsored. The New Democratic Party led a strong assault on the spon- sorship appeal limitation. It twice attempted to have the bill returned to the committee stage before third reading was won, with some MPs shouting "on An OPP officer following the thought at first West Germany successfully to clock them. Mr. "Don't apologize for your! By ALEXANDER FARRELL | Canadian Press Staff Writer | West Germany's next major) diplomatic success in Eastern} Europe, certain to come in Hun;| ygary, will probably be the last kone for some time. | The Bonn Republic's drive to! Short Dockets, Several Remands} up official contacts in the) WHITBY: -- The Whitby Mag-| istrate's Court session, Tuesday was completed within the hour. A combination of a short docket and several remands brought brevity to the court. Within the past two months there has been several convic- tions for people operating: illi- cit stills and having illicit spir- its. An Ajax man and his father with an Uxbridge man were convicted several weeks ago in an Ajax Court. In the Whitby Court Tuesday there were three convictions dealing with illicit spirits. Soviet bloc, reversing the for-| mer policy known as the Hall-} stein Doctrine, has led to the) startling and defensive creation of a sub-bloc within the Soviet bloc. Until this year, West Germany had no diplomatic relations with! any Communist state except the Soviet Union. Now it has estab- lished relations with Romania, As a result of a RCMP raid made Feb. 9, 1967 three Brook- lin area men appeared before Magistrate H. W. Jermyn last Tuesday. Nikola Kolaroff and Visil Yankoff were each fined $100 or three months in jail. They were charged with having and operating a still for the I manufacture of illegal spirits.}and Hunga rian Communist Spas Markoff was fined $100 or leader Janos Kadar = said last three months in jail on the| week that his country \is ready charge of being in possession of|to exchange ambassadérs with unlawfully manufactured spir-| Bonn. its. The three accused are from| However, Poland and Czecho- slovakia, it was announced Wed- ee ee, nesday, have renewed a 1947 No Regrets From Corporal Who Snubbed Quebec Students VANCOUVER (CP)--An air force corporal who snubbed a group of Quebec students by-re- fusing to answer a letter writ- ten in French, says he has no regrets. Cpl. Egar Baker, 33, made the comment Wednesday in a telephone interview from Tor- ento. Baker, also a member of the Comox Flying Club at Comox, B.C., told the students of St. Georges de Beauce Seminary he would not answer their in- quiries about the flying club be- cause they were written in French. Contents of the letter were printed in Montreal La Presse. WORRIED ABOUT JOB Baker was in Toronto taking delivery of an airplane for the flying club. Reached there by the Vancouver Sun, his first concern was for his job in the RCAF 'where there is no divi- sion between English and French." | Asked whether he wanted to) withdraw his comments, he, said: H "No, what is there to take back? I only implied that I can't read French and if they sent out another letter in Eng- lish I would be able to answer it." | | LACKED SOME POLISH | LONDON (CP) -- Laurence) Coyle thought his seven-year- old automobile had been stolen from outside his home but po-! lice discovered municipal auth- orities had towed it away to be scrapped, It had been mistaken for an abandoned wreck parked next to it. He rescued his car from the junk yard and was) paid £100 compensation for) damage done to it. | APPOINTMENT : oo | Douglas A. G. Winstanley J. B. McMullan and Co. announces' the appointment of Douglas A. G. Winstanley representative in Whitby. 120 Dundes St. Phone 668-6201 J.B, MeMULLAN and CO, Real Estate | treaty of mutual military assist- ance aimed at West Germany-- despite the fact that the War- saw Pact commits the Soviet Union and all European Com- ""| Probably Last For Awhile Diplomatics ee : QUEBEC (CP) -- Premier joiviston to register their oppo- Daniel: Johnson of Quebec ex- sition. ipressed puzzlement Wednesday The first vote came on an night over why anyone should jamendment by David Lewis|be alarmed about the duties of (NDP--York South' 2-7 was!Quebec's projected department defeated 97 to 80, the NDP get- of inter-governmental affairs. ung Conservative ouppori. During Wednesday's session A second attempt to get the of the Commons, Prime Mini- bill back to committee was de-|ster Pearson said the federal feated 151 to 17, with the NDP|government has exclusive juris- voting alone in an amendmentjdiction over Canada's external \by Andrew Brewin (Toronto/yelations. Greenwood) based on a security} The constitution does not per- feature in the bill. Imit provincial governments to Mr. Brown said the bill will/negotiate agreements with for- allow the minister to refuse ajeign countries, added Mr. Pear- person entry on securit y|son, answering Opposition ques- grounds without telling anyone/tions relating to the projected why. Quebec department. Meanwhile, royal assent was| Mr. Johnson told reporters in given a series of other bills |\Quebec City: "I don't think any- dealt with by the Senate after one has anything to fear," con- Commons passage. cerning the inter-governmental They provide for: affairs department, 1. Agreements to avoid double, The department would take iaxation between Canada andjover, among other things, work Trinidad and Tobago, Ireland,|now handled by the department Norway and the United King- of federal-provincial affairs, of dom, There is also a supple- which Mr. Johnson is minister. mentary tax convention with | A bill providing for the de- the United States. |partment passed first reading 2. A larger role for the treas-|in the Quebec assembly Tues- ury board in civil service per- day. derstanding" in Cenfral and Eastern Europe, in order to give West Germany a beiter chance to influence events in} the looser Communist bloc of to-} day and to create, eventually,| the conditions for peaceful uni-; fication of Germany. | These objectives have divided! Communist governments, how-| ever, into those who are willing! to consider West German views, namely the Hungarians and Ro- manians, and those who want to hear Bonn admit publicly that the frontiers created at the end of the Second World War in 1945 are permanent and that the di-! vision of Germany is perma-| nent, namely the East Ger- mans, the Poles and the Czechs. It would be startling, indeed, if the Bonn government were ever to say Germany cannot be reunited. It may in time, how- ever, accept the Oder-Neisse river line as the German-Polish frontier. Such a_ concession would probably shatter the Po- lish - Czech - East German sub- sonnel and finance manage-| The bill, said Mr. Johnson ment. This is the last of three; Wednesday night, "proposes bills implementing collective|nothing more than administra- bargaining in the civil service.|tive changes in the present de 3. Financial relief to those| partment of federal - provincial who suffered losses during a affairs." 1965 postal strike. The bill is; é aimed mainly at cases in which | ASKS IF BILL READ x copyrights failed to make dead-| Have they read the bill?' lines because of postal delays,|25ked Mr. Johnson of anyone A fourth bill made law pro- | Worried about the measure's vides $5,000 annual raises to Su- °Diectives. : preme Court of Canada justices; Atticle 3 of the bill reads and those on provincial trial rent ne and appellate courts. District and county court John Ovens 0.2. from $16,000 a year. OPTOMETRIST The bill also provides incen- lighting and makes some] 8 BOND ST. E., OSHAWA changes in their pension plans. | ' judges will get raises to $19,000 tives to keep judges from moon- PH. 723-4811 the authorization 'Government Can Regulate Johnson Attitude, Puzzled' Sponsored Immigration Inter-Government Affairs authorization of the lieutenant- governor, conclude any agree-;a number of departments. ment which he judges to be in| a Ce een accordance with and rights of Quebec, with any| other government or organiza-, Michael tion outside Quebec. "This given to the minister even injof the case where a law prevents|Cindy, a person other than himself'clippings to make the interests | SAVING THE CLIPS HARROGATE, England (CP)! a Yorkshire his Garnett, jcloth manufacturer, the rom concluding such an agree- ment."' Mr. Johnson told the news! conference "The minister can, with the| co-ordinate under a single min- ister duties now spread through bill can be|sports coat made from the hair) two-year-old sheepdog | It took 12 pounds OOD BOY FURNITURE MART 161 KING ST. W. THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdoy; Morch 2,-1967 15 1 5 : and Garnett now is saving more hair for a skirt for his wife. THE WHOLE FAMILY ENJOYS Skiing -- Curling -- all winter sports and the best of evertyhing at sifannia Kingsway ®.0. Lake of Bays t| TEL. 705-635-2221 aims to has a Ck 728-5712 LAST BIG WEEK TO SAVE AT. OUR CLEARANCE SALE WINNER! THE WINNER OF THE $90 MATTRESS DRAW MRS. A. ROGOZA, 149 Ritson Rd. South eee Wes Drawn By Mr. Bruce Ross, manoger ef bloc. munist countries to help each) other in the event of attack. FAST ACTION LIKELY | East Germany is expected to attach itself formally to this Po- lish-Czech arrangement without delay. As long as West Germany followed its Hallstein Doctrine, which said that no country ex-| cept the Soviet Union could have formal ties with Bonn if it recognized East Germany, then Communist solidarity on Eu- ropean questions was guaran- teed. Bonn's doctrine was a solid Baker said he questioned the | right of the Montreal news- paper to print his reply, term- ing it a "private business let- ter." In Comox Tuesday, James Swan, president of the flying club, said it was Baker's own idea to answer the letter. The letter is being translated and answers will be provided, he added, EDMONTON (CP) -- The president of an Edmonton firm SPECIAL WEEKLY MESSAGE TO MEMBERS OF ALE) FOOD CLUB said Wednesday he knew noth- ing about a letter apparently sent by his company which said the company does not appreci- ate receiving letters in French. Airspray Ltd. was one of two Western Canada companies that) Russians and snubbed later by informed some Quebec students|the prosperous West, East Ger-| that if they wanted information| many has nevertheless become | they should ask for it in Eng-)a viable state, and Germany re- | Ish. mains divided. The Airspray letter was}. The new Bonn government of signed "J. C."' but Dave Har-||Chancellor Kurt Georg Kiesin- rington, company president,|ger has decided, therefore, that said he knows no one with apa should try to establish what | success in Africa, Asia and| South America, where the East (German presence has been ex- cluded from most places, but it was a flop in Europe. Plundered 20 years ago by the | 37 -- 40 , 222-- 22 1s0-- 68 324 -- 174 220-- 58 468 -- 72 221 -- 82 481-- 58 233-- 44 23 -- 28 253-- 62 636 -- 72 274--- 72 646 -- 132 284-- 48 7--7 286 -- 48 650 -- 99 302 -- 32 694 -- 82 309 -- 78 830 -- 82 Phone 723-1163 Enquire about the new Compact APARTMENT (SIZE FREEZERS initials working for Airspray. !diplomats call "a climate of un- sand her Atafp To Her New Salon. ORIOLE COIFF Formerly Bobette EN Eka GRASS: JUDY SIBLOCK (Prop.) Mrs. Dowe Has Been a Top Stylist With Linda's Hairstyling For the Past Two Years JEAN CROWE Apprentice) FOR AN APPOINTMENT C 576-0630 \ OPENING TODAY Gudy. Siblock Wish to Welcome Clientele Both Old and New KING/PARK PLAZA | OSHAWA | Mrs. Siblock is of Beauty. _~ NOW OPEN URES of The Salon Ambassador és more car. In these ways. 'The way it's built. The way it's big. The way it performs, The way it's comfortable. The way it's built. Tight. Rattle-free. Rustproof, Beauti- fully finished. It's Single-Unit Con- struction with Uniside. All of the body parts are welded together into one solid, single unit for greater strength and durability. Ambassador lasts longer. A lot longer. interior, The way it's big. you need it--outside. Thousands of welds form sturdy box MS section members thatremaintight and rattle-free, The entire assembled body goes through seven rustproofing baths. We dunk the body right to the roofline. Every nook, every cranny gets the treatment. Deep-dipping is far supe- rior to the spraying used by many manufacturers, Look. Two practice golf balls. One sprayed. One dipped. Cut open: a ARE Sprayed ball has a spotty appearance inside, The way it performs, transmission. sompletely coated, inside and out. We paint Ambassador with a harder, longer-lasting acrylic enamel. It stays bright. It resists fading. power loss, Lynda Dowe (Hairstylist) More room where you want it--in- side. More maneuverability where Ambassador sits six in all-day com- fort. Three in the back can stretch legs, move elbows and generally spread themselves around. In fact, Ambassador has more rear seat leg room than any other standard-size car. The trunk is full-size, too. It takes an honest 18.2 cu. ft. of anything. Outside, Ambassador has a turning radius of 39'. It parks easily. It's the most maneuverable standard-size car, With elan. With less gasoline. With your choice of engines. With a great gines designed to fit your kind of driving. But these engines have a practical side, too. They're all of lightweight construction so they don't add needless extra pounds to the weight they have to pull. There's less Automatic insmission You get your choice of the industry's newest and most modern engines. En- ie with three forward speeds. The way it's comfortable. Coil spring ride. Coil spring seats, Less driver fatigue. Ambassador DPL, One of 9 Ambassador models, We can show you the same kind of The top performer is Ambassador's protective care a hundred times be- fore Ambassador is completed, Here are just three. A ceramic-armoured muffler and exhaust system that resists corrosion. Double weatherproofing door seals to put an end to drafts and dust and seeping water. Plastic kick panels to guard and beautify the 280 hp, 4-barrel V-8 option. Other options include 2 Y-8's and 2 high performance Torque-Command 6's, Ambassador's automatic transmis- sion has an advantage: a 3rd speed, so the engine operates closer to peak performance for better passing power. Transmission options include Shift- Command, for manual or automatic shifting and 4-on-the-floor. Ambassador Typhoon Y-8 Precision cast block for more strength with less weight, Recliningeseat adjusts all the way back. Got 3 minutes? We'll show you how Ambassador gives you more car for your money, -- (Worthwhile reading for anyone about to spend around 3 grand on a standard-size car.) In any car, there are two primary comfort systems: suspension and seating. Take the coil spring suspension. One coil spring sits over every wheel. It absorbs bumps and jolts like « sponge. It delivers a far better ride than a leaf system, Take the seats, Coil springs are standard in every Ambassador seat. Front and rear. They give even, restful support and stand wp to years of use. Riding on seats this well made can actually re- duce driver fatigue. Coils have an individual action that provides even, But Ambassador seats go beyond the basic (our idea of basic) comfort re- quirements--all the way to an op- tional reclining seat with safety headrest. It's one of » . many small points about Ambassador that you just won't find on other standard-size cars. And when you add them all up, they're what make Ambassador a better car; more car for your money. Worthwhile thinking about before you buy a standard-size car? You bet your lifetime satisfaction it is! ILS SEE YOUR AMERICAN MOTORS/RAMBLER DEALER, EEE § Py R WHERE THE BASIC DIFFERENCE IS A BETTER CAR. SEE THE FULL-SIZE AMBASSADOR, THE INTERMEDIATE REBEL, THE ECONOMICAL RAMBLER AMERICAN AND SELECT USED CARS AT YOUR AMERICAN MOTORS/RAMBLER DEALERS'. ALL WELLMAN MOTORS LIMITED 100 NONQUON ROAD NORTH 728-7352 PORT PERRY HARRY PEEL RAN RLEP CAIE eek EN er he Be ¢ ed NICOLS MOTOR SALES LTD. 668-3331 1190 KINGSTON ROAD A qna ER w v Val IVE isin, > 2

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