The Oshawa Times, 19 Jul 1960, p. 2

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i 2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, July 19, 1960 | | GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN THOSE RUMORS ABOUT KRUPP Tracking down rumors on the Krupp deal (which has to do with that West German firm's alleged pur- chase of 500 acres of- Whitby township land) is not un- like walking on a treadmill--you never quite reach the end. Despite assurances from some pretty influential people (such as lawyers and realtors) that something big is cooking, that a deal has been consummated, the Krupp story has been the toughest journalistic nut in Oshawa district to crack for the past five years, and INTERPRETING THE NEWS Monroe Doctrine Out Khrushchev Charges By CARMAN CUMMING Canadian Press Staff Writer |aska and fron} the desighs of Ed 2 ki ropean imperialism on e weak) Kiron ody ne + "tery and newly-independent Latin Am-| conference, is dead. |erican republics. | : . Monroe solemnly pronounced The statement was greeted in|¢hat the United States would con-| Washington with the indignant| gqer any attempt on the part of| reply that the Monroe doctrine is|the European powers "to extend| very much alive. Nevertheless their system to any portion of Washington is showing obvious|this hemisphere" as dangerous to| (from Russian settlements in Al- the "inter - American security system through the Organization of American States." "Specifically, the Organization| of American States charter and the Rio Treaty provide the means for common action to protect the hemisphere against the interven- tion and aggressive designs of in- ternational communism." The Rio Treaty of 1947 links 21 Parliament At-A-Glance By THE CANADIAN PRESS Monday, July 18, 1960 Armas Dumas (L--Villeneuve) read into the Commons record three affidavits indicating pay- roll padding on a river dredging contract in his northwestern Que- bec constituency. Works Minister Walker in- dicated the government will ask the RCMP to investigate, widen- ing an inquiry into similar ire regularities at Malarctic, Que., also in Mr. Dumas's riding. Mr, Walker announced a sharp bo | rg hi A pag tho| US. peace and safety. |American republics, includ- venerable principle. |SEES NEW THREAT {ing Cuba, in a pact specifying With a wary eye on Cuba, U.S.| Today the U.S. sees a similar|that an attack against any Am- diplomats have begun repainting threat to its security in Soviet) erican state would be considered the "keep out" signs posted Premier Khrushchev's apparent|an attack against all of them. It still is. The issues involved are great because such a trans- action would have a tremendous effect on the district's economic and industrial picture, would spurt real estate easing of restrictions governing direct mortgage loans by the government; after Sept. 1 in- come ceilings for prospective | i sales and building and eventually result in a large in- flux of new residents. When the latest Krupp-Whitby township rumor was fed 10 a gullible public recently--following a news story in Hamburg that a West German firm had brought a large Whitby township site--some press, radio and television news media were caught well off first base because they had failed to check their facts. One Toronto paper quoted a Whitby real estate salesman as saying the deal had been completed, but the salesman later denied to this department that he had made such a statement, although he said he might 137 years ago by President! James Monroe. The threat then--in 1823--was | § Based In around the Western Hemisphere desire to take the Cubans under defines a 38. against aggression' his protective wing. The U.S. state department says the doctrine was supported by "Anatomy" Plot Fact? security encircling the two continents and including Greenland and the West Indies. SHOV' CONCERN What action the OAS would or could take against a member country peacefully choosing an "zone of unpopular kind of government is| debatable. Argentina, in a carefully- worded note, urged Cuba to dis- {home owners will be boosted by | $2,000 to a $7,000-$7,600 range. | Transport Minister Hees re- {fused to reply to Liberal de- mands on whether John Bassett, Toronto Telegram publisher, and John David Eaton of Toronto were shareholders in Georgian Bay Airways Limited, granted an operating licence by cabinet order. 4 The Commons gave final ap- proval to a $15,000,000 subsidy to avow any "statement which may ease the freight rates burden for CHICAGO (AP) -- Was Anat-jof the book, and Columbia Pic-'be construed as interference by| another nine months after July omy of a Murder, a best-selling|tures Corporation, which released an extra - continental power in|3L. jf [novel and hit movié, based en-|the movie starring James Stew- American hemispheric affairs." | Diefenbaker have "inferred" as much in an interview. di : 1 The Canadian Press carried a positive lead to the 4 i" | effect that the sale had been finalized, and quoted the Prime Minister Wy lashed back said Canadian missionaries in bids & i same salesman. Some radio stations were equally as far off the track in their reporting. The need for top secrecy in such a deal is under- standable and it is most unlikely that Krupps would act without an intermediary, but let's not be carried too far away by rumor and innuendo. We're not saying such rumors are unfounded and #hat the Krupp deal isn't around the corner---what we are saying is that we'd like to see one concrete bit of evidence to substantiate these stories which have been eirculated for more than five years now. ¥¥ YOU'RE GOING TO VENEZUELA If you're an eligible bachelor with romantic inclin- ations, if you're going to Venezuela (that's in South America), these lines are for you. Most Venezuelan girls won't go on dates with new male acquaintances unless chaperones go along. This does not necessarily mean one chaperone, but sometimes as many as two or three. This can be costly, for instance, when you take such a crowd to one of the better Caracas restaurants for dinner where the tab can run from $9 per person up. There's also another hazard -- once a swain is ac- eepted, he can accompany his fiance out alone, but he must state his matrimonial intentions within six months. Authority for the above is John H. Young, a 29- year -old chartered ac- eountant (and a bachelor) who has been in Venezuela since 1958 with a U.S. firm -- he formerly lived in Ajax and was associated in Oshawa with' Gordon W. Riehl and Co. Young, here recently, pays $170 monthly for a 'one - bed unfurnished a- partment in Caracas, which he described as "a modern, attractive city architecturally." He says the eost of living in Caracas is twice as high as Toronto and adds: Venezuelans eat about the same food as Canadians. The average noonday lunch costs $3 to $4. Champagne eosts $30 a bottle but imported Scoich sells at $15. He detected littie anti-American feeling, but Ameri- eans say it is widespread there. He says the Venezuelan financial boom is over be- eause the country's main commodity -- oil -- is not now in such demand as it was previously. Canadians are regarded as Americans and little is known about Canada. Spanish is the official language, but you ean get by with English. ; i JACK YOUNG COUPLE MARRIED 55 YEARS Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Grant of Vancouver, B.C., whe are currently visiting relatives in Oshawa and district, were married '355 years June 28. They are now at the home of Benjamin "Pat" Bayly of Ajax, who was the first mayor of that town. The highlight of their trip will be the July 23 wedding of their grandson, James Grant Harris (son of Mr. and Mrs. John E. Harris of 512 Sim- coe street north) to Miss Donna Dodwell, Oshawa. . . . Metropoliton Opera Star Theresa Stratas, who spent most of her childhood in Oshawa, is in Vancouver to appear in International Festival's Madame Butterfly, JJuly 23 - Aug.5. MR. AND MRS. C. F, GRANT CARS SEEN GRAVE TEENAGE PROBLEM Parents who do not watch carefully over the use of their car by their teenagers are endangering his high school grades, his future and maybe his life. This was the finding of a study to determine the sutomobile's influence on teenage behavior. It was con- ducted by the Allstate Insurance Companies in co- operation with 30 high schools in Canada and the U.S.-- Added the report: Teenagé drivers are causing grave concern to parents, educators and law enforcement agencies because of unusually high accident rates. Outstanding feature of the report is the overwhelming substantiation of the basic im- portance of parental control of the teenager. Parents must realize the urgency of ex- ercising more authority over their teenagers in the matters of how and when to drive. The accident involvement rate of teenagers is phout twice as high as the average aduli, ELGIUM TOO MARKS INDEPENDENCE Behind the Belgian tricolors, | Dame Church during an ad- | Yerealy Belgium became in- women of Montreal's Belgian | vance celebration of their ependent of Holland July 21, community march into Notre | homeland's independence anni- Parkinson Raps Heavy Spending Construction Associati TORONTO (CP)--Unless gov- spent on this department was/ Prime Minister Diefenbaker's ernments take preventive meas-| completely wasted. Civil defence bill of rights should be amended ures they are going to spend|literature churned out by the|to guarantee the right of an in- themselves to destruction, Brit- Britleh government before the|dividual to earn a living without ish professor C. Northcote Park- Second World War was an im-|belonging to a trade union. inson said Monday. | pressive collection of drivel In a brief made public Mon- (CP Wirephoto) | | Union-Free Right Asked OTTAWA (CP)--The Canadian says| tirely on fiction? Or was its back-|art. ground taken from a real - life| The answer must now come|trial of an army lieutenant who | {Judge Michael L. Igoe, in a $9,-/ing her husband in their tavern| |000,000 libel suit filed by a|in Big Bay, Mich. i | Michigan nurse and her 18-year. Mrs. Wheeler's suit said the! |old daughter. [novel invaded her privacy and Mrs. Hazel A. Wheeler, 47, and |the movie placed the stigma of her daughter, Terry Ann Cheno-| illegitimacy on her daughter, weth, of Three Rivers, Mich.,,| Both the fictional and real-life ¢laim in their suit that since the events took place in Michigan's novel by John D. Voelker, who| upper peninsula, wrote under the pen name ofl The suit said Mrs. Wheeler's Robert Traver, she and her|jate husband, Maurice (Mike) daughter: |Chenoweth, was shot and killed "Have been held up to public|in the tavern July 31, 1952, | | contempt, ridicule and shame, Army Lieut. Coleman A. Peter- land have been placed in the|son, who was stationed near Big {glare of unfavorable and un-|Bay, was tried for the murder in | warranted publicity." | Marquette County circuit court The suit was filed against Dell and acquitted, The outspoken creator of Park- Cuban spokesmen And at an emergency meeting Saturday and Monday, all 21 request | members endorsed a | Mrs. Wheeler charges that the|that the Argentine government the Congo do not appear to be | murder trial in Michigan in 1952?) nove] was taken from the actual | bad "sold out" to the U.S. in immediate danger and are still unwilling to leave their posts. from United State district court/was charged with fatally shoot- of the OAS council in Washington Tuesday, July 19 The Commons meets at 11 a.m. to debate finanee department from Peru for a foreign minis-| spending estimates. The Senate ters' meeting to consider an un-| sits at 8 p.m, named *" security, cracy. Canada is neither a member of the OAS nor a signatory to the Rio Treaty although it has shown signs recently of moving closer t~ the grouping. | The New York Times, ric | solidarity and demo-| {touched a key point when it ob- served that 'so long as he United States has the power to enforce it, the Monroe doctrine will be alive and kicking." Parkinson's Law states, in es- day the association welcomed in- CHEAP CASTLE | REHAU, Germany (AP)--Who- ever spends $28,000 on repairs can have a $100,000 baroque style castle, says the owner, A fire recently did that much damage however|to the old castle in this area in |West Germany, but the insur. |ance company promised reim- |bursement only on condition the - damage is repaired and the owner, a woman, prefers rather than investing in repairs, # | SOME SUGGESTIONS Publishing Company, publisher inson's Law, cut a wide swath sence, that work expands to fill|troduction of the bill in Parlia- of criticism through all govern-|time available for its completion. ment ments as he spoke before the! Jt says that in any organiza- The brief, expected to bel I** il legislature select committee on jon the number of subordinates|placed before a special core Fine 1 es the administrative and executive multiplies at a predeterminable| mons committee today, hits hard problems of government. annual rate regardless of the|at the closed shop arrangement, He said the paper work govern- work a staff turns out. {under which the employer may es Toy ments contend with is rubbish/ in hire only men already members and that electronic computers de-| EVERYONE ESSENTIAL of the union, A similar view was| EASTVIEW. Ont. (CP) All signed to speed things up made| Inquiries were not the answer. expressed last week in a brief receipts for fines paid into the more work than they saved. When governments conducted in-|filed with the committee by the| Eastview police court up to 1959 Apart from criticizing need. uiries fo learn whether a per- Canadian Chamber of Com- have been destroyed ; son's work was essential every- | ; : less work he told the committee| vo" hed Was to be iy perce, «oo. | Town clerk Leopold A. Labelle it should establish a three-mem- 2 . '| {told a public inquiry into the ber tribunal to consider, adopt| His most acid remarks were, years ahead of the U.S. in prac-|town's affairs Monday that he Fy reward acceptable proposals|directed at Wiis Lu Salley use-| tices of British law for slashing public expenditure,|!€58 paper work. Ilectronic com- "consulting" with Police Chief He gave several suggestions for|Puters made more of this be- CHESSMAN CASE Richard Manion. such slashing. | cause one group had to feed the| "There is no risk in Canada of Chief Manion now is holidaying hungry machive, another group|someone being convicted of ai; Treland interpreted its findings and a|capital charge and being exe-| " Ontario should. scrap its civil|third group filed the results. cuted years later," he said, ob- Mr. Labelle told the Omaiio " | A ' | government-ordered inquiry that defence branch and save $400-| A British chain store had re- viously referring to the Caryllye had taken the action on his 000 a year; abolish the eco-|quced its staff by 8,000 last year Chessman case in California this| own intiative to provide more nomics department and save phy three "decisions of monumen-|year. | room for other documents in the $343,000 annually and save an-\ta] common sense." They de-| 'The American education sys-|to 11 vault other $100,000 by abandoning the| cided to trust their staff, never|tem had failed because millions| 3 ball va was ordered afte Ontario racing Commission. |argue with customers and hot had been spent on grade and some of 'the 23,000 residents of To top off his suggestions he accumulate data which there high school to "produce people|this town within Ottawa signed & advocated a straight 20 per cent/ would be no time to study. |who can't spell." | petition questioning municipal reduction in spending in the next| He criticized the United States| He said he was upset that the|land sales. fiscal year. legal and educational systems, U.S. approach to all problems| It was to swing into its second Prof. Parkinson dwelt at length saying Americans were "essen- was that money solved all prob-|day today with an examination on civil defence. He said money|tially soft." Canada was 300'lems. |of the banking records statement fies RE - - _-- - {of Mrs. Laurette Robert, wife of |Reeve Marcel Robert, and rec- ords of their joint account. | Mrs. Robert was ordered to produce the statements Monday when she could not remember, |details of a 1953 transaction in which she purchased town lots, | built an apartment building on} [the lots and later sold the build- |ing at a profit Mr. Robert was |reeve at the time. 'MP PLEADS FOR LOVERS LANE OTTAWA (CP) -- Urbane, | white-haired H. W. Herridge went to bat in the Commons Monday night for lovers' lane. The particular haunt of the starry-eyed for which he made a plea was the broken - down and disused walk behind Par- liament Hill overlooking the Ot- been closed off to the public. The CCF MP for Kootenay West said he thinks the money the government spent cleaning the bronze statues of D'Arcy McGree and other historic fig- ures on Parliament Hill would be better spent restoring lov- | ers' lane. "I have walked around the back of the building," said the | | | 65-year-old socialist but laugh- sentence. "Mind you, I have only been there because I wanted to see the beauty from the bottom. "As it is, this wonderful | river walk is denied to mem- | bers of the House of Commons and of the Senate, as well as to resident of Ottawa and visit- ors to the city." (More laughter) | tawa River. For years, it has | ter prevented him finishing his | | a---- { destroyed the receipts after | Nelson Rockefeller, New York's governor, half turns to- | day as newsmen question him at Midway airport in Chicago. | The New York chief executive ROCKEFELLER REPLIES 101 AA Ne 6) peau Valley TONIGHT GOOD FOOD Business Men's Lunch 2 - 2 Daily Air Conditioned DINING ROOM HOTEL LANCASTER Business man presently employed in Oshawe seeks change. Has 20 to $30,000 available for in- vestment in established business, manufacturing, wholesale or retail, that can show substantial re- turns and can stand thorough investigation. One requir part or full time seticipetion." All replies treated Write BOX 811 Oshawa Times --not avowed presidential can- didate--arrived in this Repub- lican National Convention city to give his ideas to the plat. form committee, --(AP Wirephoto) | May Use Fluorine In Milk TORONTO (CP)--A suggestion that fluorides might be supplied {to the public in milk instead of | water has been made by Con- troller Jean Newman. At the board of control meet- |ing Wednesday, she says she will | ask for a report from Dr. A, R. J. | Boyd, medical officer of health, on the feasibility of distributing fluoridated milk. Such a scheme, she said, would allow persons to select fluoridated {milk only if they want it. This {would remove the compulsory | aspect, one of the main objec- tions to fluoridating public water Travelling Overseas WHY NOT FLY "The modern way te travel is by air.' For information regarding any form of travel . . . DIAL RA 3-944] We have a direct Toronto telephone line for prompt Airline Reservations MEADOWS TRAVEL SERVICE Owned and operated by Thomas Meadows en d Co., Canade Lid. 22 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH, OSHAWA DIAL RA 3.9441 supplies. | Prestige Homes from Did You Know . .. the GENOSHA HOTEL you can BAFFIN ISLAND BOUND | Dublin-born Brian Rothery | ward look before heading north | living in Canada, plan {o ex- |fhave a Full-course Dinner for | HARRY MILLEN 3: In the main Dining Room of |i (left) and Belfast-born Dr. Philip Gribbon cast one back- to Baffin Island by plane from Montreal. The pair, both now | plore the island's rugged, moun- tainous interior. ONLY 95e. --(CP Wirephoto) also considerably higher. It's simple not true and the average severity of their accidents is that a small minority of 'the youngsters are responsible for most of the accidents. Driving in itself does not have an adverse effect on school grades, but when the use of the car is permitted to infringe on school work, serious problems develop. Grades start to suffer when the car is used more than two days out of the five-day school week, Good students who yield to the car craze suffer the sharpest drop in grades, : The longer a car has been owned, the less Ms the chance of a bog being a good student, PREFERRED by people who enjoy a friendly and relaxing atmosphere STARLIT E ROOM Completely Air-Conditioned garage Modern 3 bedroom home in spotless condition. Very large rooms throughout. Broadloomed living and dining room. Gracious marble fireplace. Attached FOR FURTHER INFORMATION PHONE RA 8-1679

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