Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 26 Jun 1967, p. 3

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Your One Step Building Supply Centre '6291 tedwood 2-6 x 6-6 2-10 x 6-10 -- DIEFENBAKERS ADVANTAGE? VICTORIA (CP)--John Dief- enbaker. will be given a debat- ing advantage over his oppon- ents if he decided to' seek re- election as national leader of the Progressive Conservative party in Toronto in September. He will be allowed to address the party's September leader- ship convention in Toronio twice, if he is a candidate, while all other candidates will be able to address delegates only once. The party's national executive committee unanimously ruled Saturday--after long and heated debate--that Mr. Diefenbaker will be invited to speak Sept. 7, the opening day, as present party leader. On the same day, the com- mittee decided, nominations for the leadership will officially close. The next night the can- didates will go before the con- vention, which, for Mr. Diefen- baker, would be his second or- ation, should he enter the lead- ership contest. Announcement of the conven- tion ground rules was made at the conclusion of the policy-set- ting session here by E. A, Goodman, a Toronto lawyer, and Roger Regimbal, MP for Quebec's Argenteuil riding, co- chairman of the executive com- mittee. VOTE BY MACHINE They also announced that, political history, voting ma- chines will be used to tally the leadership vote Mr. Regimbal and Peter Lougheed, Alberta Conserva- tive leader, will be keynoie speakers at the convention. Up to 2,403 voting delegates could attend the convention compared with 1,742 when Mr. Diefenbaker was elected party leader in 1956. Voting this time will start at 1 p.m. Sept. 9, in Toronto's Maple Leaf Gardens. Three of the leadership hope- fuls--George Hees, Alvin Ham- ilton and Donald Fleming--were in Victoria for celebrations hon- oring Esquimalt - Saanich MP THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondoy, June 26, 1967 3 Subscribers To one @ BLUE CROSS e for the first time in Canadian George Chatterton. as @ GREEN SHIELD NEED NOT | - ..| HAMILTON, HEES, FLEMING 'Seven Given PAY CASH! You Give Us Three At B.C. Rally | 2 St Ask For Tory Unity | "®t We do the rest. VICTORIA (CP) -- Three} FREE City-Wide Delivery {prime candidates in the leader-} | jship race of the Progressive | ' | Joseph Lalonde, 28, of Planta-| Conservative party took the| ecutive, holding a weekend con-! Mr. Hamilton drew wide ap- MITCHELL S igeed Her who escaped June! same platform here Saturday Seve here. Although the|plause when he graised Mr. DRUGS 7, received 12 months. He also/a plea for post-September party | meeting was closed to the press, | |Diefenbaker for leading the * Ptsehooll ae rernaking an unity. . jit was announced that Opposi- |Conservatives to victory in 1953 9 Simcoe N. 723-3431 ------ | utiv nce for breaking and) At an outdoor barbecue hon-| nd 1958 i e entering a summer cottage. |oring George Bn osantog vet_| tion Leader Diefenbaker will be and 1958 in an uphill battle VISIT GIANT POWER. STATION Two prisoners who ran away|eran MP for Esquimalt, candi-|48ked to speak at the Toronto | rom a church parade June 18,|dates Alvin Hamilton, George|convention, regardless of| but were caught minutes later,|Hees and Donald Fleming told|whether he is a candidate. | also were sentenced. Frank|a crowd of about 700 that the a Barrett, 54, of Owen Sound re-|Conservatives can form the| PERSPECTIVE NEEDED | ceived six months and Michael|next government, if they act) Mr. Fleming, a former fi- Murray, 19, of Collingwood, got|wisely now and achieve unity| parce minister, warned specta- nine months. at the leadership convention at t to k the perspective in| Stephen Villeaneuve, 18, of|!0rento Sept. 7 ors to keep perspective in| But|Toronto, received nine months| Asked to comment on reports| Selecting a new leader. in a/for running away from a work|# Provincial premier, possibly! "One thing transcends all oth-| Duff Roblin of Manitoba, will)ers in importance," he said, | Pen Terms SUDBURY (CP)--Seven Es- capees from the nearby Bur- wash industrial farm have been sentenced to terms in Kingston penitentiary. All sentences are to be served consecutively with the remainder of their current jjail terms. | BOWMANVILLE HAS CENTENNIAL PARADE Senior Baton Twirlers of back riders as well as viding the music. Added The country and western the Bowmanville Recreation children and adults dressed attractions were old time dancing was a lead up to a Department are seen in in Centennial costumes, The fiddler, Gerald Elliott and bi Wester Cc t action during the town's big treat in the evening was senior caller for the dances 8 Ps gg asteeenea Sg Centennial tee-off parade a program of round danc- was James Coyle. The pa- planned for July 5, at the on Saturday. The parade ing at the Dominion Store rade was sponsored by the Dominion Store parking lot. featured the Imperial Drum parking lot with "The Coun- town council and construct- Corps; antique cars, horses try Gentlemen," an old ed by the Bowmanville and _and carriages and horse- time and modern band pro- Recreation Depart ment. _ MAKES HONEYMOONERS' TOUR Kosygin Visits At Niagara possible side|port that the Soviet party had/10:08 a.m. at Niagara Falls, Ten RCMPilahded at Montreal Interna-|N.Y., Municipal Airport. them-|tional Airport and was en route|the Russian party was Attending the outdoor meet-;have the 100-per-cent backing of ing was the party's national ex-/all of us." --Oshawa Times Photo er Aluminum ing double diamond x 68" x 1%". x 610" x 1%", ONLY 26% No By BOB TRIMBEE arations for a NIAGARA FALLS, N.Y. (CP)|trip into Canada. Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin|security men_ stationed JMIGOLOR elf Storing Brown ond Red. x 68" x 1%" x 610" x 1%" ONLY 3 9-95 STORING th.s.d. glass. x 6B" x 1%". x 610" x 1%". 24.95. SPECIAL 23% TIC NATE made the honeymooners' tour of|selves on the Canadian end ofjto the fair site in a motorcade. famed Niagara Falls, but Ca- nadian security men were left at the altar. Mr. Kosygin came to the United States to attend the United Nations during the Mid- dle East debate. The trip ex- tended into summit talks with President Johnson of the U.S. After a day off Saturday they resumed Sunday. Because Mr. Kosygin's itiner- ary was uncertain and since the best: view of the falls is from the Canadian side, se- curity men here did not want * to get caught napping if he de- cided to enter Canada. The Russian premier and his entourage stayed on the Amer- ican side during a 44-hour visit to the district. Technically, he slipped into Canada while view- ing the falls from the middle of the -riverin the Maid of the Mist, but he never stepped on Canadian soil. 1,700-foot Rainbow Bridge and one toll gate was kept clear of traffic. Immigration officials stood by and efforts were made to find Secretary of State Judy La- Marsh. She was here earlier Saturday for an wunassociated; function. Bulgarian Premier Todor Zhivkov and a 16-man delega- tion arrived here for a visit to several rural farms, but he did not meet the. Russian premier. A spokesman for his party said Mr. Zhivkov had earlier meet- ings in New York City with Mr. Kosygin. Once word was received that Mr. Kosygin and his party had left by plane on the return trip to New York City, the RCMP men departed from the bridge. Up to then neither they nor customs. officials had any def- inite word on the _ possible movements of the Russian visi- It proved false. PROVIDES PLANE President Johnson loaned the Russian premier one of his White House planes for the. trip to the American falls. He sug- gested the trip after Mr. Kos- ygin said he was interested in seeing more sights. The Rus- sian leader earlier made a tour. of New York City. Mr. Kosygin's party included his daughter, Ludmila Gvishi- ani, and Soviet-bloc premiers of Czechoslovakia, Mongolia, the Ukraine and Byelorussia as well as Soviet Foreign Minister Gromyko and his Hungarian counterpart. Back in New York City after the tour, Mr. Kosygin happily told reporters: 'I enjoyed it, I enjoyed it." Mrs. Gvishiani told an at- tendant at the restaurant where the party ate, "I'm glad to see land again. I don't like New York because there is no land hurry to see the falls and left/party June 5 and three months t for breaking and entering an Greetings were warm every-|unattended residence 20 miles where the Russians went_on the|/from the farm. before this was done. American side of the falls. Pre- vious visitors from Communist ford, who escaped June 19, was ; A _ sentenced t i Ss. é strations in this area which has/other June "i Ges ba a large anti-Communist ethnic Theberge, 19, of Crystal Beach B Ont., 7 In 1960 the mayor of Moscow Sontie countries have faced demon- community. was hit with an egg thrown by a youth. Mr, Kosygin waved to tour- of Horseshoe Falls--half in Can- sor, who also escaped June 19| . { and was caught the next y | ists as he boarded the Maid of|near the farm, was scismesl| the Mist for the run to the base|tg nine months. | Gordon Saans, 20, of Brant- enter race, all three said they would| tional convention should come, Stand as candidates regardless. candidates had shared the same stage since each announced his| Mr. entrance into th the national leadership|that is, that out of that na- : 7 complete unity, unity of pur-! It was the first time the three! pose, unity of loyalty." Hees said that whoever in September ' race is chosen sentenced to 12) Daniel Danychuk, 19, of Wind-| ada and half in the United States. He asked whether there were fish in the river and was told no. Mr. Kosygin wore a rain coat and hood to protect him from the spray. from the vicinity. He then road to the top of a 218 - foot observation tower Ss Kidder, Justice J. 0. Wilson of the British Columbia Supreme . Court, was awarded a bache- While aboard thelior of arts degree by the Uni- vessel other boats were keptiversity of B.C. recently. At the year-old mother of five was given an honorary doctor of MOTHER GETS DEGREE VANCOUVER (CP)--Jocelyn a daughter of Chief |] throuh @ TECHNICIAL or COMMERCIAL High EDUCATION for TOMORROW ] If you lack VOCATIONAL SKILL and a HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA, you can now study at home to qualify as: @ ORAFTSMAN AND DESIGNER @ ACCOUNTANT AND BUSINESS ADMINISTRATOR @ PRIVATE SECRETARY OR BOOKKEEPER | | School Course, Earn a "HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA" and "CERTI- FICATE OF PROFICIENCY" in the vocation of your choice, with only one course, Supervised final examinations in your area for certificates, upon completion of course. All books, instruction and supplies for as little as $2.00 weekl ly. "ACADEMIC STANDARDS INSTITUTE" 40 Main St. W., HAMILTON, Ont, ADDRESS write: ame time the father of the 43- | | | 'will fine print... erection and thereafter, will forthwith assign, trans! ind if the Mortgagor shall in a pre-planned mortgage from the Royal Bank: Discuss your plans, your wants, your needs with r HIT HIGH SPOTS |tors. t! hich inoks bars, counte Mr. Kosygin and his party; Not only were Canadian offi-|(open ground). acted at iB geen ge laws degree. I, your Royal Banker--before you go house- 12 95 also toured the giant Robert|cials here on the alert for aj At the luncheon, Mayor E.| oer station, returned to Ni- hunting! (That's what pre-planning means). ug Moses hydro power station and|visit by Mr. Kosygin, but also|Dent Lackey gave Mr. Kosygin| ,,ara Falls, N.Y.. for lunch and Then youcan buy with peace of mind: you koow: ate lunch at a posh restaurant/at Montreal where rumors cir-|the key to the city and a silver/then headed back to New York CALL OR SEE The Royals behind you--all the way! ue aie ee onatineel in Niagara Falls, N.Y., before|culated for three hours that the pe rn Set Re oes City, a ! returning by plane to New)Soviet premier would make an|annivers: , n DIXON gy ' tai York City at mid-afternoon. j|unscheduled visit to the Expo|city's incorporation. Other Blhescigg ins iy at ye 0 ARD While he was in the vicinity, |site pees nedbey Fo gon sacha 000 ibe 2. wie 'aw 'him oe FOR OYAL BAN K Canadian officials made prep-) At one point there was a re-|@ 8 y ing his travels around the bor- OIL FURNACES . cain, de we eee it tes cia Tuesday and Wednesday Specials , baths, utility 9.60 ay UNIT 'ome finish. Ideal int or skeet club, LASS PANELS ranslucent pan- 1d selection of ok Item) 19e SO. FT. from 816 Tornadoes Rip NW Europe At Least 22 Persons Die werp was flooded by torren- tial rains. EXPLORERS DROWN Torrential rains also fell on LONDON (CP) -- Tornadoes and violent thunderstorms roar- ing across .orthwestern Europe during the weekend killed at least 22 persons and injured nearly 200. A tornado that smashed parts of a half dozen villages . near Douai, France, left seven dead and about 40 injured. Six per- sons were killed and 17 injured when a tornado swept through parts of the Netherlands. Weathermen said it was the same tornado that struck the French villages. One person was killed and about 100 others injured at Oostmalle, a small Belgian town near the Dutch border. A 12-year-old cyclist was killed near Gruges, Belgium, when hit by an uprooted tree. Ant- Two Men Escape As Boat Drops PETERBOROUGH (CP) -- Two men escaped injury Satur- day when their 15-foot outboard- motor boat dropped about 15 feet from the pontoon of a hy- draulic liftlock on the Trent Ca- nal here. An equipment malfunction has been tentatively blamed for allowing a metal gate to open and the pontoon to begin climb- ing. ough, dived into the canal sec- onds before his $3,000 craft top- pled out of the drained pontoon and struck a metal guardrail. He was pulled from the water by tourists visiting the lock. His nephew, Ronald Abraham of Peterborough, clung to the side of the pontoon and rode it _ 65 feet to the top. Garnet Emerson of Peterbor- London. Five cave explorers drowned in an _ underground cave at Conistone when water rushed in from a stream swollen by torrents of rain. Two other persons died in miscellaneous accidents con- nected with the storm through- out Europe. Helicopters and boats res- cued more than 500 yachtsmen off the southeast coast of Brit- ain. Many houses were struck by lightning. almost derailed when a farm building was scattered across the tracks by the storm. The engineer stopped the train in time. Weathermen said the extreme conditions were traceable to the collision of a hot, dry mass of A Dutch passenger train was} DID NOT WAIT The mayor had attempted to make the presentation to Mr. Kosygin when he arrived at Support Seen For India Stand | NEW DELHI (AP) -- Prime Minister Indira Gandhi said Sunday night some Western! countries had swung over to In- dia's view that Israel was the) aggressor in the war with the} Arabs. She told the closing session of| a national meeting of her rul- ing Congress party that India's opinion as to who escalated the} crisis had been corroborated by) subsequent reports and develop-| ments. LOOKING FOR A COMMFORTABLE QUIET RENDEZVOUS DOWTOWN? THEN GO TO THE Tally-Ho Room Hotel Lancaster 27 KING ST, WEST air with a damp air mass off the Atlantic. ON TERM FREE Estimates, Reasonable Rates, Repair Specialist. 24 Hour Service Fast Depeoseme Radio prenters Plumbing Servie SERVICE MADE us, Call 723-1191 Tanks Installed FEDERALLY INCORPOR Deposits over Tel. 72 22 King St. (citi GUARANTY TRUST Capital and Reserve $26,000,000 Rein Harmatare, Manager EARNS 7 DEPOSITS ATED AND SUPERVISED $400,000,000 8-1653 E., Oshawa had left a "memorable impres- sion" on him While touring an estimated 150 secret service, state and city police kept a tight cloak of security around him. Even helicopters were pressed into} service. SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS 24-HOUR SERVICE 313 ALBERT ST. 723-4663 $1,900.00 DO 2 STOREY -- 3 BEDROOM SEMI-DETACHED HOME In Oshawa's choice North-End Area. 3 Huge Bedrooms, Large Modern Kitchen, Dining Room and Family Size Living Room, 4 piece Bath with Vanity. Electrie Heat. Carries for $123. 00, principal, interest and taxes. OWNER TRANSFERRED AND MUST SELL FOR APPOINTMENT TO GEO. TWAITES SCHOFIELD-AKER INSPECT CALL... -- 723-2008 LTD., REALTOR MINCED BEEF TASTY SKINLESS WIENERS LEAN TENDER CLUB STEAKS BONELESS STEWING BEEF 39: 3 lbs | 69° LOCAL IMPROVEMENT NOTICE TAKE NOTICE THAT: 1, The Council of The Corporation of the City of Oshawa intends to construct asphalt pavement on granular base with curb and land abutting directly on the w Name of Street BL ork as follows: rom ws. ASPHALT PAVEMENT ON "GRANULAR BASE | WITH CONCRETE CURB / AND GUTTER gutter, and granulor base for asphalt pavement, as a local improvement, and intends to specially assess a part of the cost upon the ESTIMATED COST _ Owner's Annual Cost Annual Per Ft. Rate Per Ftge. Ft. Ftge. Owner's City's wi __ Width Total Share Adelaide Ave. East 19.5' East Sheet 6, Albert St. Athol St. East Athol St. East Ritson Rd. North East) William St. East Wentworth SR East Wilson Rd. North Wilson Rd. said work being undertaker. objection to the said work will DATED at Oshawa this 26th doy Ritson Rd. North South Limit Lot C-5, Sheet 1, Plan 335 (North of Adelaide Ave. East) of E. Limit Lot C-18%, Plan 335 Ritson Rd. North 13.03' West of W. Limit Plan 115 44° 13.03' West of E. Limit 35.0' West of W. Limit of Lot 11, 63.0' South of N. Limit 502.27' North of §, Limit Lot C-20, Sheet 4, Plan 335 (Bonds St. of Lot 11, Plan 115 of Charles St. Lot C-32, Sheet 4, Ave.) of Ritson Rd, North GRANULAR BASE FOR Plan 335 (Rosedale 92.00' West of W. Limit 46° $ 3,650.00 $ 3,538.94 $7.71 38,677.00 32,901.84 7.71 Transition 44' to 28' 13,823.00 10,969.10 7.71 46' 310,710.00 269,980.77 32' 4,550.00 ASPHALT PAVEMENT 3,177.36 South Farewell St. North Limit Lot C-3, Sheet 1, Plan 335 (South of Oakwood Ave.) . The estimated cost of the work is $464,335.00. The special assessment is to be paid in ten equal annual: instalments. . Application will be made by the Corporation to The Ontario Municipal Board for its approval of the undertaking of the soid work and any owner may, within twenty-one days after the first publication of this notice, file with the City Clerk his objection to the 4. The said Board may approve of the said work being undertaken, but before doing so, it may appoint @ time and place when any be considered. of June, 1967, 47' Do 00 37,849.03 36' 47,000.00 39,562.30 3.31 0.45 L. R. BARRAND, Clerk, City of Oshawa, PRE-PLANNED ALL GLASSES ONE LOW PRICE SINGLE VISION BIFOCALS 43% $7995 COMPLETE WITH FRAME, LENSES AND CASE 65 STYLES, SHAPES AND COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM FIRST QUALITY LENSES @ FINEST NATIONAL BRAND FRAMES. BROKEN FRAMES REPAIRED OR REPLACED WHILE YOU WAIT BIFOCALS, IF REQUIRED (KRYPTOK, ULTEX OR FLAT-TOPS) . WE FILL ALL PSI, OCULISTS AND OPTOMETRISTS PRESCRIPTIONS. AT SAME OW PRICES, SATISFIED CUSTOMERS HOURS: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Daily Closed Wed. All Day Phone 728-1261 OPTICIANS 17 Bond St. East 2nd Floor OVER 3.000.000

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