2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesdey, May 29, 1962 GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN IMPERIAL OIL BUYS SIX CITY PROPERTIES Imperial Oil Ltd. recently purchased six residential properties on the southwest corner of King street west and Park road for a total price of approximately $150,000. The company did not announce what the site (zoned Commercial) will be used for. It covers 1% acres. The City recently bought a service station lot owned by Imperial Oil at the corner of Centre and King street west for $55,000 to allow for the widening of the road -- this deal was completed after almost five years of negotiating. Carl Olsen was the realtor. MORLEY WYMAN ENDS LONG SERVICE Morley Wyman of Oshawa is retiring soon after serving for 31 years with Zellers Ltd. : He started with Walter P. Zellers when the chain store group was first organized 31 years ago and has man- aged the Oshawa store on Simcoe street south for the past 21 years. ; Morley, who has been in the retail merchandising business for 43 years alto- gether, was born on Mani- toulin Island. Few local citizens have given so free- ly of their time in the pro- tion of civic enterprises. He is a former president of the Oshawa C of C and is currently a director of that group. He is also a director of the Provincial Board of i s - the Ontario C of C. He . has been a member of the soning Kiwanis Club for 33 years-- 21 years of this time he has spent with the Oshawa Club. He is also a member of St. Andrew's United Church and the Scottish Rite, Fellow-employees are holding a testimonial dinner for him here Wednesday night at the Hotel Genosha. OSHAWA LOSES MOSPORT HEADQUARTERS Was Oshawa asleep at the switch when Peterborough ob- tained Mosport's operations headquarters (or nerve centre) for its City, or was such a move inevitable? Peterborough has some definite advantages for such a locale, including easy accessibility to the lush Kawartha Lakes tourist trade and a goodly share of district luxury motels, but what about Oshawa? This City is directly on the Toronto-Mosport route which means that thousands of Mosport fans will be passing through here, or nearby. Mosport, which attracted 200,000 fans last year, is still in its infancy but its poten- tial staggers the imagina- tion, Little wonder is it then that Mayor Stanley Mc- Bride went into such an ecstatic spin the other day when he learned officially that "Peterborough will soon be the motor sport capi- tal of Canada" (as The Pe- terborough Examiner hailed it). Said Mayor McBride: "This is the most excit- ing thing that I have heard of in a long time. This could be the biggest success to hit Peterborough yet. Location of Mosport headquarters in the city could pay dividends that many citizens could not imagine. Everyone knows what the 500-mile race does for Indianapolis. It could happen to Pe- terborough." Mr. McBride has called on every businessman to "'roll out the red carpet" for Mosport officials -- City Council and other groups will do all they can to make the racing group's stay a lengthy one. Oshawa is-16 miles from Mosport via the. Taunton road route. ie C. A. BUNING Heckling Boosts Fun In Voting Campaign Hecklers had some fun with|leaders during the campaign. |Prime Minister John Diefen-jbut have generally gone un- baker and Liberal Leader Les-jnoticed or unheard. 'ter B. Pearson Monday night.| Meanwhile. T. C. Douglas, They enlivened the election|New Democratic Party leader, |meetings, but didn't fluster the|urged voters to declare them- lparty leaders. |selves in favor of a nation-wide Mr. Diefenbaker squelched|comprehensive health care plan one heckler at Prince George, |by sending 150 NDP members B.C. during a speech citing the|to Parliament in the June 18 his govern: election. INTENTIONS 'NOT SERIOUS' Speaking on the CBC national \ THE CANADIAN PRESS jother meetings of the party achievements of ment. "Why don't you bring up the 190s?" said an anonymous TV network, Me. Deuses ald "Ho " ;,qineither the Conservatives nor Mr. Dietenbaker Mervour anes {the Liberals have "any serious tion indicates you weren't even|intention" of sao ag up a com- born then." Pedarga- git -- insurance \plan if elected. | At Vernon, B.C., the prime} ; ini if 4-., Honorary NDP President |minister took on another heck- 3: Coldcet sald the Liber: a be en ge eae PM and the Conservatives have The only sellout, said Mr. shown nothing but callous in- rot temgyecya te ed cai ae then offering niggling charity in ldarkness there." old age pensions at election time. He spoke in Victoria. |WANTS RATIFICATION Social Credit Leader Robert } He said he hopes ratification Thompson accused the Liberals \of the Canada-Unifed States Co-/of trying to divide his party lumbia River treaty will be one with religious propaganda, of the first acts of the new Par- playing Roman Catholic Quebec liament. : against Protestants on_ the In Winnipeg, Mr. Pearson) Prairies. sald he is sorry Mr.. Diefen-| "This is the kind of poppy- baker won't debate the election cock . . . slander they're throw- issues on television. ing at us, trying to divide us Ice-Pierced Coastal Ship ee Are you a socialist?"'| Safe In Port "How?" replied Mr. Pearson.| "By electing a Liberal govern-| LEWISPORTE, Nfld. (CP)-- jment pledged to put into effect/The CNR coastal steamer Hope- ja Liberal program. dale reached here safely Mon- | Hecklers have turned up at day after it was pierced by ice "lin Notre Dame Bay while on a 'United Church i se uo 'Sends $10,000 izs"cril"tn crete to. ' 'Refugee Aid pital case Monday when ice ler. "If I'm lucky, it's surprising he didn't take me up,"' retorted Mr. Pearson. When Mr. Pearson promised that-a Liberal government would eliminate chronic unem:- |ployment, another heckler pierced her hull below the wa- terline on the starboard side. Capt. Wilfred Morgan ordered the five passengers and 23 crew TORONTO (CP)--The United|members over the side in life- Church of Canada Monday|boats as waier gushed into the called on the government to ad-|ship's hold. It filled in 10 min- jmit a "substantial number" of/utes, and the ship's bow tipped Chinese refugees into Canada|/down, heaving her rudder and and to assist Hong Kong in the|two propellors out of the water. relief of refugees. The lifeboats -- with the se- This decision was made by/riously ill man on a stretcher in the church's sub-executive injone--stayed in the water near support of a similar resolution|the vessel for about 90 minutes jpassed recently by the Cana-jbefore the Hopedale _ settled dian Council of Churches. |back on a more even keel and | 'The sub-executive also de-|Capt. Morgan decided it was cided to send $10,000 to Hong] safe to go aboard. {Kong to help meet the needs of} About. dawn Monday the refugees fleeing Communist|transport department ice- China. jbreaker Sir Humphrey Gilbert | A copy of the resolution sent|reached the scene, and cleared to External Affairs Minister|a path through the ice. Green. The Hopedale followed the The church promised assis-| Gilbert into port here under her tance in helping any refugees}own power. There was no esti- |\that are admitted. imate of the damage t6 the ship. | WEATHER FORECAST difference to senior citizens--| 'Minneapolis, when the last provincial byelec- 'ion in Alberta was won by.a 'nan born in Quebec," said Mr. Thompson in Ste. Foye, a su- burb of Quebec City. Today all four party leaders will be on the campaign trail in the West. Mr. Diefenbaker tours Kelowna, Abbotsford and Clearbrook in mainland British Columbia, then flies to Vic- toria. Mr. Pearson flies from Winnipeg to North Battleford, Sask., then on to Edmonton. Mr. Douglas, stumping his home province, flies from Leader to Melfort, Sask., while Mr. Thompson flies to Calgary for a night meeting at Caroline, Alta. In Prince George, Mr. Dief- enbaker. urged Canadians to write him at any time on any- subject. Paper Strike In 7th Week MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -- Some newspaper hawkers were still peddling out-of-town Sunday edi- tions at scalpers' prices as the Minneapolis Star and Tribune strike continued in its seventh week Monday with no early set. Ulement in sight. Representatives of mandge- ment and the Mailers union were scheduled to meet again today in a continuation of nu- merous sessions over a manage- ment proposal to introduce new procedures in distribution of the Papers. | While regular news dealers) generally were holding to the| established price for out-of-town newspapers, complaints were received that some street hawk- ers were charging from 35 to thd cents for Sunday papérs from neighboring St. Paul. downtown Minneapolis dealer reported lines continue to| form morning and evening to| 'buy the limited number. of St.| Paul papers available. An official of the Minneapolis Herald, which started publica- tion May 1 of a daily paper Mon-| day through Friday, said Mon- day that its circulation has| are being formed for home de-| livery. | Four separate unions are in-| volved formally in The Star and Tribune strike and have posted pickets. The walkout started April 12 when Teamsters union drivers left their jobs. Mailers, Typographical union workers and stereotypers later joined the picket line. Newspaper guild- men have been respecting the picket lines. Mail rs contend proposed changes in work procedures will shift mailers' work to other per- sonnel outside the plant. Man- agement says the new distribu- tion system will merely elimi- nate cumbersome and outdated processes. Health Plans ORIENTAL Minn Yoko Tani, a Japanese , film actress, stopped over in Montreal enroute to Vancou- | ver to make a new Canadian | movie. The petite, almond- BEAUTY éyed star will play the lead in '"'The Sweet and the Bitter', a feature - length movie set in British Columbia. --CP Wirephoto Isotope Phobia Harms Industry OTTAWA (CP)--A panel of Monday that are preventing greater public use of one of the most useful) of all the phenomena discovered) by man--radioactive isotopes. The five-man panel discussed the use of isotopes in industry, | medicine, agriculture and re-| search at the annual interna-| tional conferefice of the Cana-) dian Nuclear Association. Members of the panel in- cluded Dr. R. E. Jervis of the| department of chemical engin-| eering at the University of Tor-| onto; Dr. E. E. Fowler, deputy director, division of isotopes de-) velopment, United States Atomic Energy Commission; Dr. w.| Van Winkle, vice-president of} Research Ethicon Inc., U.S.A.;| Dr, G. G. Eichholz, head of the} physics and radio-tracer subdi-| vision of the federal mines de-| partment, and E. W. Leaver, | president of Electronic Asso-} ciates Limited, Canada. | The panel agreed that there ;workmanship in the supply, in- grown to 105,000 and that routes|atomic experts agreed here | stallation and inspection of misguided fears|standard components for Can- ada's first atomic power plant. J. _L. Gray, president of Atomic Energy of Canada Lim- jited, said in a luncheon address that Canada's nuclear power program has advanced to the point where the Crown agency he heads should soon leave the design and _ construction of power reactors to engineering consultants and industry. Mr. Gray said: "We must have a very high standard of reliability in much of the equip- ment used in nuclear plants." Guild Strike _ At Milwaukee Continues MILWAUKEE (AP) -- The | Late Showers, Cool Wednesday Official forecasts issued by the Toronto office at 5 a.m.: Will Spread Forecast Temperatures must be greater education of the|American Newspaper Guild public to,bring about an aware-| Strike against the iMlwaukee ness that there is no danger of|Sentinel, which Monday missed atomic radio - activity through publication for the first time in INTERPRETING THE NEWS By HAROLD MORRISON Canadian Press Staff Writer Some crocodile tears are be- ing shed by the United States government for the hungry peo- ple of Red China. While U.S. authdrities pub- licly say they wouldn't like to see the Chinese starve, there's a widespread private hope in the administration that the food and economic shortages on the mainland will become worse. The reasoning goes like this: The greater the suffering of the masses the greater the possibil- ty of an internal uprising to crush the Communist regime which has caused the U.S, and the West so much anguish in the Far East. On this basis, there will no sudden rush by the Kennedy administration to pour surplus food into areas where the eas- Thomson Buys Georgia Paper | DALTON, Ga. (CP)--The Dal- jton Daily News and the Dalton Citizen, a weekly, have been purchased by Thomson News- papers Incorporated. L. A. Lee, publisher of both newspapers, announced the sale Monday. Terms of the sale were not announced. Other U.S. papers operated by Thomson Newspapers Incorpor- ated include the Laurel, Miss., Leader - Call, the Petersburg, Va., Progress Index, the Austin, Minn., Daily News and the St. |Petersburg, Fla., Independent. K. R, Thomson, son of Canadian newspaper publisher Roy Thom- son, is president of Thomson Newspapers Incorporated. St. Clair McCabe, vice-presi- jdent and general manager for Thomson's U.S. operations, said there would be no change in the staff at the two papers or in editorial policy. The changeover is effective June 30. Starts Plea 'For Freedom | LONDON (CP)--Spanish poet Marcos Ana, released last No- vember after 22 years as a po- litical prisoner.of Gen, Franco, has arrived here to plead the cause of freedom in Spain. | In 1939 Ana, whose real name \is Fernando Macarro Castillo, was sentenced to 30 years in |jail at the age of 18 fordis- Burgos, where he said 465 po- litical prisoners are still being held, he smuggled poems out by jhiding them in his shoes, He was tortured and twice con-|) jdemned to death. | "The message I bring is that all my comrades should be | given liberty. These things I |say are full of love, not hate. I letf the prison full of love. "My comrades do not think of vengeance. They hope that men in prison can return to their homes. I made all my poems in prison and there is not Spanish Poet " ' China Starvation US. Secret Hope ing of hunger pangs may bene - on the Mao Tse - Tung leader- Ship. ; PROBLEM GROWS Despite large grain imporis from Canada, Australia and other countries, hunger igs likely to continue in Red Ching for at least another two years, maybe longer. In a land of some 700,000,000 people, the number of mouths to feed is estima' by the U'S. to have increa by about 90,000,000 in the la five years. Chinese food production is rea ported no greater today than it was five years ago--and there was grumbling about shortages then. Numerous humanitarians the U.S. have urged the gv: ernment to rush fdod to the China mainland. President Ken- nedy countered jhat the Reds agi asked for American elp. WILL AID BARGAINING Some of Kennedy's aides in- dicate intensified shortages in China will enhance the U.S. bar+ gaining position in the Far East. ; The U.S. may be able to use food to free American prisoners known to be held on the maim land and may even be able to exact an agreement from the Reds to reduce tensions in that turbulent area. Among hardened experts the anguish felt over Red China is not so much that millions may be going without food -- though they lament that--but that some countries, Canada included, may be delaying the demise of the Mao regime by willingly selling grain to the Chinese Salt Poisoning Of 6 Children Said Accidental BINGHAMTON, N.Y. (AP)-- No one will be prosecuted for the salt-poisoning of six infants who later died at Binghamton General Hospital; District - At- torney Stephen Smyk said Mon- ay. A verdict of accidental death has been returned. The babies died last March after being fed formula laden with salt from a container that should have contained sugar. Hospital officials said a practi- cal nurse, Mrs. Lillie Mae Coi- vin, was believed to have filled the container from a large salt can standing next to a matching sugar can-in the hospital's main kitchen. Mrs, Colvin insisted she had scooped from the right Bishop Says LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- Rt. DON GALLINGER, Managing Direster former National Hockey League Player with "Boston Bruins" one that speaks of hate.' Ana's exit from Spain was was secret and illegal. With in- Peterborough is 26 miles from Mosport along Highway Low tonight, High Wednesday © 115. Windsor its 125-year history, continues with no further bargaining ses- sions scheduled. proper use of isotopes. Members said this could be accomplished through the press, radio, tele- Synopsis: A disturbance cen- tred over Kansas is heading for cy In all fairness to the Oshawa C of C, it made several efforts to have Mosport locate here ;but it appears to have received little support in the venture, Clifford Alan Bunting, president of Mosport Ltd., visited Oshawa last June 21 to confer with C of C Officials on "Osh- awa's position relative to the track." Mr. Bunting said Oshawa's close proximity to Mosport should make the City more attractive for tourists, more prosperous because of Mosport money spent here. He fore- saw the possibility of drivers using local garages as a base of operations from which they would have easy access to Mosport. Mr. Bunting said nothing at that time about the possible transfer of Mosport's headquarters -- then located in Bow- manville -- to another site, such as Peterborough. The decision to move from Bowmanville caught that com- munity completely by surprise. Harold W. Hunter, Mosport's vice-president, explained the Bowmanville exodus by saying, 'We felt it was time we associated ourselves with a larger city. He said Mosport would make Peterborough a mecca for tourists from all over North America. "Tt will be another Wakins Glen," he forecast. "You have no idea what this will do for the City. Mr, Hunter will be guest speaker at the annual Peterborough Chamber of Commerce dinner June 7. He will elaborate then in Peter- borough's future role in car racing. "Few in Peterborough had been aware of the potential of Mosport when it first opened," said Mayor McBride, "'but realization of its importance has not come too late." NOTES FROM THE HUSTINGS OF ONTARIO RIDING: Miss Eileen Hall, NDP candidate in Ontario riding in the June 18 election, stole a march on her political opposition Saturday -- appearing at the official opening of the, new German social club -- Club Lorely -- in Oshawa's southeast sector she opened some brief remarks with a salutation in German, which greatly pleased the guests. ("Guten Abend Meine Freunde" or "Good Evening, My Friends," said the blonde school teacher). Miss Hall is not yet on leave-of- absence from her OCVI teaching post, as erroneously indi- cated here Saturday -- she won't leave until June 6, which will mark the start of examinations. TOMMY GILBERT REPORTS ON NEW ORLEANS Tomy Gilbert (who once conducted an unsuccessful one-man campaign to have the bagpipes barred from the Oshawa Arm- ories in particular and the City in general) has returned from New Orleans, La., with some glowing stories. of Dixieland | Jazz. He heard performers like Pete Fountain (clarinet); Al Hirt (trumpet); Deacon Jones (trumpet in a tour of the niteries with his wife. The Gilberts also heard the Bourbon Street Bar- | ons, took a night trip down the Mississippin on a paddle- wheeler, eeeees Lake Superior and northern) Lake Huron, while Southern On- Srgecger tek tario will have only a few scat-| Wingham a tered showers and thundershow-| vrount Forest. ers. Slightly cooler air, accoOM-| Hamilton .. panied by generally cloudy Toronto ... skies, will invade northern sec- Peterborough tions of the province Wed-itrenton .., nesday, but warm weather will) Kjjjaloe .... continue in the southern sec-| Muskoka ... tions. North Bay.. Lake St. Clair, Lake Huron,) sudbury . Lake Erie, Niagara, Windsor, fariton Ss, London, Toronto, Hamilton: | Kapuskasing ..... Variable cloudiness today and| white River.. Wednesday. A few showers and|Moosonee ......++ | isolated poronso g teyl op to-| Sault Ste, Marie... day and tonight. Warm Wednes-| day. Winds south to southeast Observed Temperatures 15 to 25 with gusts briefly to|Low overnight, High Monday 50 in thunderstorms becoming|/Dawson .......+++« 64 | west to southwest 15 to 25 Wed-| victoria .. |nesday morning. lt | Lake Ontario, Hariburton,| Region |southern Georgian Bay regions: Winnipeg ... {Variable cloudiness today and Fort William.. | Wednesday, not much change in White River. \temperature. Winds south to Kapuskasing . |southeast 15 to 25 with gusts Sault Ste. Marie.. briefly to 50 in isolated thunder-| North Bay.......+ storms becoming southwesterly|s 15 to 25 Wednesday. | Timagami, Algoma, White River, Cochrane, northern Geor- gian Bay Sudbury regions: Cloudy with showers today and Wednesday. A few isolated thun- \dershowers late today and to- |night, cooler Wednesday. Winds east to southeast 20 to 30 be- coming southwest 15 to 25 Wed- nesday. ) Windsor .... London ... Toronto .. Ottawa «0+ Montreal Quebec Fredericton .. Saint John2..6 Moncton . Halifax Rev. Ronald R. Williams, Bi- shop of Leicester, England, said Monday national health plans such as Britain's are '"'bound to spread." Further, he said in an inter-| view, any political party that) tried to remove Britain's plan} would not last a week, | Bishop Williams is on a lec- ture tour of North America. Wasaga Beach Toll 'Charge Announced WASAGA BEACH, Ont. (CP) Visitors will have to pay to get on the five-mile stretch of beach on Georgian Bay here this sum- mer, it was learned Monday. Fees of 50 cents a car or $3 for the season will be collected by the Ontario department of lands and forests which took over the area in stages in 1959 and ,1960 to form a provincial park. ' Lorne O'Dell, park superin- tendent, said only four of the 36 entry points to the beach will be kept open. The department plans to make extensive im- provements to the beach area this year. Wasaga Beach is 20 miles northwest of Barrie. : | vision and in educational jour- nals such as business maga- zines. ° FEAR HALTS USE se Mr. Leaver. said it is ironic that concern over negligible ra- dioactivity should preclude the use of isotopes which could pro- vide a very real improvement) in industrial safety. Radioactive isotopes are used) for food preservation, to detect flaws in castings, to guide ma- chines in processing of mate- rials, to improve accuracy of production methods and for many types o fresearch. "In view of the tremendous number of applications that ex- ist for isotopes it is highly re- grettable that newspapers, mag- azines and pamphlets have thor- oughly indoctrinated the public with a terrible fear of radioac- tivity,' Mr, Leaver said. He said man has always ex- isted in a sda of radiation and has managed to survive suc- cessfully. It was ludicrous that small amounts of man-made ra- diation could be viewed with! alarm. CRITICIZES WORK Earlier, the head of Canada's atomic energy project criticized Canadian industry for poor ANG Local 51, representing some 350 editorial, circulation and advertising department em- ployees, established a picket line around the morning paper's plant Sunday afternoon, just be- fore a mediation session broke up. Publisher Wallace Hughes told non-striking workers not to re- }port for work until further no- tice. Al Redman, president of In- ternational Typographers Union Local 23, asked the int rnational union to begin payment of bene- fits to printers and compositors. He said they were "'locked out" at The Sentinel. Meanwhile, Anthony Ingrassia, executive vice - president and chief negotiator for the ANG lo- cal, said negotiators were warned during earlier sessions that if they "persisted in seek- ing contract improvements, The Sentinel would follow other Hearst newspapers into the 'cemetery of other extinct or- ganizations.'" volve wages, vacations, medical insurance and the union's re- quest for a pension plan. Pres- ent Sentinel scale, under the two-year contract that expired April 24, ranges from $79.60 to $141.10 for reporters. Key issues in the strike in-| vitations to speak from all over the world, he has no immediate Complete Co-operation With Travel Agente An AAA, ATRO Recommended Resort Telephone Toronte Hickory 7-3376 SIMCOE STREET 245 Simcoe St. S. PENTECOSTAL CHURCH Pastor: REV. R. A. BOMBAY | TONIGHT WED., THURS. and "COME AND ME a ; & PARMENTER-MASON | EVANGELISTIC TEAM. * 7.30 and FRI. -- 7:30 P.M. 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