Oshawa Times (1958-), 6 Jun 1962, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesdey, June 6, 1962 TX p65 57] International Flavor elas GOOD EVENING) @: 7 : : Sol oe 1 Pian . (For Voting Campaign For Orhitin By JACK GEARIN lp , Bsa: a QI) For Orbiting Mae | NEW YORK (AP)--Astronaut ° Malcolm Scott Carpenter was acclaimed in Washington and New York Tuesday for nis cliff- hanging orbital flight of last month, The 37-year-old navy lieuten- ant-commander told a_ civie luncheon at New York's Wal- dorf-Astoria Hotel that future space flights "can bring you I back riches in all fields of sci- government has had to adopt ajence that will stagger your high-interest-rate, tight money| imagination." policy to protect the exchange) "Greater steps will be made rate on the dollar, recently de-\in all fields of science since valued to 92% cents in U.S.|possibly the discovery of fire," on wel surely result i eager ger ; . nN! In' the capacity luncheon * higher unemployment, when|orowd 'were former presidents Canada's 'crying need' was for easy money to get the econ- a alge Fg ppp oth Mr" Pearson and Mr_(2ctetistie candor, told the at Douglas cast scorn on Mr. Dief- "gig peer i enbaker's prediction that Can.| "He has done something I ada soon will have virtually full|Wouldn't do, even if he prom- employment. jised to give me the moon if he The Liberal leader said the|Culd. forecast of 535,000 unemployed| Earlier, Carpenter, his blonde in 1964 was prepared for the|wife, Rene, and their fonr c™'l- special committee on the unem-|dren had flown from Langley ployment insurance fund headed|Field, Va., to Washington ' «e by Toronto insurance executive|°eive personal congratulations E. C.. Gill, from President Kennedy. DENIES STATEMENT _ | "I cannot imagine better rep- eit cts eave ue! Lib: |resentatives of what we like to statement about!,,; $62,000,000 in foreign help for|think our country stands for Canada's exchange reserves|than the . . . men who have after the dollar was pegged|taken part in these flights," the May 3 "is without truth what-|president said soever."" | The money represented U.S.) AUCTION payments for defence purchases Saturday, June 9 and exchange settlements for) 1 P.M. other purchases--"a purely rou-) 75 MEARNES AVE. tine transaction." | Mr. Thompson's Social Credit BOWMANVILLE Household, carpentry and gar- TORONTO (CP)--A_ Torontojciation and unsuccessful provin-jrally in Toronto drew fewer) den equipment. Terms Cash. lawyer who has acted for gam-|cial PC candidate for Toronto|than 1,000 people to 2,700-seat| ALLEN CURTIS Whitby, Auctioneer By THE CANADIAN PRESS T. C. Douglas injected an in- ternaticaal flavor into the elec- tion camnaign Tuesday night. The New Democratic Party leader said that if he formed the government after June 18, Canadian economic aid to un- derdeveloped countries would be boosted to $600,000,000 a year --10 times the present figure. Even if it meant sacrifices, he said on a CBC national free- time telecast, "the Canadian people would make those sacri- fices willingly " Social Credit Leader Robert N. Thompson, at a Toronto rally, lumped Progressive Con- overflow meeting at the Trois- Rivieres Armories, said Mr. Pearson had taken "'a desper- ate political gamble' and had struck at Canada's financial in- tegrity. Mr. Pearson, campaigning in southwest Ontario, returned to the unemployment issue in a speech at Walkerton. He renewed his statement that a report prepared by gov- ernment experts for a special inquiry on unemployment in- surance indicates an average 535,000 jobless in 1964, com- pared with 469,000 in 1961. One of the targets of Prime Minister Diefenbaker's cam- Pearson continues his intensive bid for support in southwest Ontario. Mr. Douglas flies from Toronto to the Lakehead and Mr. Thompson heads west also, to Portage la Prairie and Min- nedosa, Man. Mr, Douglas himself was in Peterborough, where he told a capacity audience of 1,400 in a high school auditorium that the "BILL" HARRIS AT COMMONWEALTH PARLEY William G. Harris, son of John E. Harris, the Oshawa lawyer, is a member of the Canadian delegation at the Sec- ond Commonwealth Study Conference. Mr. Harris, a graduate of * Trinity College School, Port | Hope, and an honor grad- uate in Forestry Engineer- ing at the University of Tor- onto, is managing director of Northern Plywoods Ltd., i Nipigon, Ontario. He has been in his present position five years and was formerly plant quality control engi- neer with the firm. He has resided in Western Canada, and the U.S. He has also travelled extensively in Eur- ope, Russia and the Carib- bean. He was born in Oshawa. He is 29 and sin- gle. The Duke of Edinburgh's Second Commonwealth Study Conference is being held to study the human consequences of the chang- ing industrial environment in the Commonwealth and Empire. "% SUNNY WEATHER PREVAILS» | WEATHER FORECAST Mild Weather ' Across Ontario WILLIAM HARRIS 2 | NDP's A DEDICATED LOT -- AILEEN Miss Aileen Hall, the NDP candidate in Ontario riding for the June 18 election, has called attention to what she con- | siders '"'a most important point" as follows: When the rain started to | come down in buckets about | 6:45 a.m. Tuesday, election canvassers for the Liberal Party in the area of the GM South Plant gates quickly ran for their cars and departed, but not the NDP workers, in- cluding Miss Hall. They gamely stuck their ground, continued to hand out NDP pamphlets, chat with the workers (expound on the teachings of T. C. "Tommy" Douglas, the Party's Great White Father). blers Vincent Feeley and Jo-|St. Andrew in 1951, did legal) Massey Hall to hear him attack! seph McDermott said Tuesday) work for the club between 1954jeconomic policies of both old- he had no knowledge of any il-|and its closure under hrovincial|line parties. legal gambling at clubs he has|police pressure in 1957. He said the increasing load of represented. | Mr. MacKinnon read fromjtaxes on the Canadian con-| Lawyer Louis Herman was|eVidence . given commissioner|/sumer--46 cents of every dollar| testifying before Ontario's royal|Justice W. D. Roach behind earned--has been accompanied| commission on crime. He spent| closed doors in April by Frank by "'an ever-increasing restric | most of the day describing the| (Curly) Gardner, ostensibly op-|tion of freedom and initiative." | character and extent of his/erator of the club, who in 1957 legal services for Feeley and|Was en on a gaming) count. servatives and Liberals to-|paign attacks, former deputy gether and said both parties|trade minister Mitchell Sharp, are "married to a deficit fi-|made a reply in Hamilton nance policy as outdated and|Tuesday. night. ridiculous as the bustle and| 'Few people had ever heard high-button shoes." jof me before . . . but to be at- Educators. Tal | Meanwhile Prime Minister|tacked by John Diefenbaker is |Diefenbaker, at Trois-Rivieres,|to be made a friend of the peo- accused Libera' Leader 'Lesteriple," said Mr. Sharp, Liberal out 00. B. Pearson of "unworthy" tac-| candidate in Toronto Eglinton tics for having suggested Mon-|against Finance Minister Flem- D 0 ts day night that Canada's foreignjing. rop- u lexchange reserves had been| "I'm beginning to think he HAMILTON (CP)--The Cana-|aided by a Roc og '$62,-/doesn't hore Mr. Fleming to |dian Association of Professors | 000.000, ol ong from peli habe in Eglinton. a tik ' : jof Education, meeting here} nese |GO EAST, WEST Oger gansist Mg vit 7 wind yer iy ie to20 this| Tuesday as part of the Confer-| CRITICIZES STAND | Today Mr. Diefenbaker car- oe ae tern age Th Ta after.|0ce of Learned Societies, heard] The prime minister, speaking|ries his campaign to Quebec's pb : Mi yw enhiceaabe icon \findings on grade school drop-|tg about 1,500 persons in an!Lake St. John region and Mr. Synopsis: Mild sunny weather) noon. late ee pbeiias Forecast Temperatures |. Pierre Bellanger of Laval ' Mali adi Low tonight High Thursday University's Institute of Educa-| Lake St. Clair, western Lake)". Pe ) | trie. ; Huron re-|Windsor ..+.cs0+e tion reported that a survey of t. Vy Un e ie gn rol pe Ping Fate - peerent> [11,000 Quebec school children aw eT awar i this orning, sunny|/ondon ..- \° me z | baa -- this "apenioon and|Kitchener | 1. City-bred children stay in e Thursday. Winds northerly 15)Wingham ......++. |school longer than rural chil- 1en Ss am e to 20 except light overnight. |Hamilton . jdren, ; a Eastern Lake Erie, Northern|St. Catharines. : 5 | 2. Children fro big families; Lake Huron, Lake Ontario, Hal-/Toronto 0 jare inspired to stay in school. iburton, Georgian Bay regions, Peterborough . ee om The greater the material Hamilton, Toronto: Sunny and/|Trenton .....+. * | Possessions of a family, the warm today and Thursday.)Killaloe ... greater is the urge in a child Winds northerly 15 to 20 except|Muskoka .. a! year pony hi i light tonight. North Bay. | In another report, Freeman} iiaes a, Timagami, White|Sudbury .. |K. Stewart of Toronto, ied River, Cochrane regions, North Earlton : jtive secretary of the Cana ian) Bay, Sudbury, Sault Ste. Marie: Kapuskasing {Education Association, said un-| Sunny today and Thursday, lit-|W hite River... derdeveloped countries no tle change in temperature to-|Moosonee |longer want experts and advis-| | ---- SRD anes sera SUS = SS ers. "These countries are suffi- ciently developed, or think they INTERPRETING THE NEWS "Doesn't that prove some- thing?" asked the blonde OCVI Maths-English teacher who at 31, must certainly be one of the youngest (if not the youngest) Federal elec- tion candidates in the Domin- MISS AILEEN HALL jon. "Doesn't that prove that we're made of iougher stuff than the Liberals and that we're a far more dedicated Party group?" she asked with a wry smile and a mild Scot- Algerian Vote Drawing Near By CARMAN CUMMING Canadian Press Staff Writer |planes took off from Saturday alone 67 refugee Algiers are, that they now want people \from abroad who will do a par- jticular job, usually teaching, rather than advice on how jobs might be done by someone else." James Whipple of Chicago's Liberal Education for Adults Centre, said universities must \not think of themselves as Ox- fords and Cambridges but must }meet community needs. | But things could go to the op- McDermott. | | B. J. MacKinnon, Liberal counsel at the hearings, asked the witness whether he had heard of McDermott's and Feeley's reputation and char- acter, The lawyer replied he heard rumors they were gamblers after he had been retained as their counsel. He said he be- came so worried at the rumors that he went with a Jack Mc- Namara to a Cooksville club The Secret Army Organiza-|and Oran. the pair were supposed to have) Gardner had suggested Mr. Herman was retained because] "maybe someone closer to the! seat of the provincial adminis- tration" would be better than/ {a Windsor lawyer. The witness said such ques- tions of "influence" had not been mentioned in his dealings with Gardner. McDermott had originally told him a "'friend") in Windsor wanted a lawyer to! defend club personnel against) a charge of obstructing police. | City of Oshawa -- Second instalment 1962 TAXES DUE Color of Bills Realty yellow pink Ward Nos, Second Instalment 3and 4 June 7th 5 and 6 June 11th PAY TAXES BY MAIL by cheque or money order (if con- venient) enclosing COMPLETE tax bill--receipted bill will be returned. AVOID STANDING IN LINE by paying before any due date OR by depositing sealed envelope containing cheque and Tax While this outflow could deal|posite extreme, he said, citing of time in its desperate cam-|a damaging blow to the Alger-|a course in chicken-plucking at |paign to keep Algeria French.j/ian economy, now in European! Michigan State University as an | Less than four weeks remainjhands, it also indicates a less-| example. |before the self - determination ening faith in the Secret Army's| ences) was eating breakfast hurriedly in the Genosha coffee jreferendum in Wied, tbe ae ges ag of ie 1s cael i. Nelcy remark provoked laugh- : sal Waste a Ff 000 Moslems in the huge North} Most encouragi , Per-| M k A t iter. | -- ee ere : ary weliege a Rhe war saeheag opis African territory are expected/haps, was the Secret Army de-| ar. et t alns and bean, a favorite dish in high NDP-Tory campaign circles ito swamp the 1,000,000 or so|cision last Thursday to call a} NOT IMPARTIAL sore European settlers. lone - sided truce and its con-| Small Advance Mr. MacKinnon said Jack Mc- Miss Hall, one of 24 women candidates in the Federal The referendum is scheduled|nued attempts to seek negoti-| Namara, president of the Cooks- : ints: \for July 1. This is the date the) ations with the Moslem leader-| NEW YORK (AP)--The stock ville club before its charter was, Siacteens srrenmns these "polis: /Moslems have been waiting for|ship even after the truce ex-| e ' Tuesd ' dissolved in 1960, would, hardly, She has averaged little more than four or five hours' |_holding on grimly in the face|pired at midnight Monday. eenmtiy senlin af ae be an impartial observer. sleep in the past two weeks, thanks to the campaign. 'ss | tish burr that smacked of her beloved Edinburgh where she was born, where she was graduated from Edinburgh Univer- sity with an M.A. degree. tion appears to be running out Bill in "'City Hall Mail' letter drop. at City Hall main entrance any time, ALL OSHAWA CANADIAN IMPERIAL BANKS OF COM- MERCE will accept current taxes within two weeks before ony instalment date providing Tax Bill is. presented for re- || ceipting AND PROVIDING NO INSTALMENT IS PAST DUE | WITHOUT CHARGE. ALSO PAYABLE AT CITY HALL if preferred. Office Hours: 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Closed Saturdays SPECIAL HOURS 7 TO 9 P.M. INSTALMENT DATES ONLY been opertaing. | He had found 40 to 50 men in the club listening to a lec- ture on aircraft observation. MORTGAGES Miss Hall (fresh from her early-morn GM gate appear- Ample Funds for Ist MORTGAGES | 2nd MORTGAGES | We Also Purchase Ist and. 2nd Mortgages N.H.A. LOANS ARRANGED \of Secret Army attempts to pro-| While its exact strength has} The Liberal counsel brought She has conducted an intensive door-to-door campaign, not only in Oshawa but in the hinterlands and the reception has been "heart-warming". (She added: 'You can quote me as saying that almost 100 percent, of the people with whom I visited will vote for the New Democratic Party June 18"). Miss Hall will spend most of her time between 6:30 and 8 a.m. at the GM south plant gates from here on in. She again displayed her versatility with languages Sat- urday night at a meeting of the Friends of Polish Youth-- that was when a few of her opening remarks were in Polish (she spoke briefly in German at the opening of the Loreley Club). Miss Hall introduced T. C. "Tommy" Douglas at a Tor- onto reception for NDP supporters last Sunday -- she also assisted Mrs. Douglas in the receiving line. Some of her upcoming speaking engagements include, Dunbarton: Kiwanis Club, June 11; Westmount Kiwanis Club, June 7; Oshawa Builders, June 13, Whitby Rotary, June' 12 St. Gregory's Young People's Club, June 14. QUOTES FROM THE HUSTINGS: "I have always cherished the friendship of John James the former Liberal member for Durham riding and now the publisher of the Bowmanville Statesman. Of course, we don't all see and think alike. If we did, we would not be thinking-- this is the essence of. democracy." Prime Minister John Diefenbaker nt Bowmanville June 4 "We, as the voting public, are responsible for the fate of Canada and I hope that future generations can look back to June 18 as the beginning our nation's recovery. Democrac 1S an equal partnership between the voters and the ana. Gates. It requires just as much interest to be informed "a to inform, and every man and woman must vote intelli. gently, with as much 'informa i ation a imi of their capabilities." o_o Liberal Candidate Norman Cafik at Port Perry May 80 « Liberal candidate Norman Cafik is the proud father of ei baby daughters -- Monica, 16 months; and Juliana ree months -- he says it keeps his wife, Pat, extra busy these days caring for them a i i nd i i Wadlater ec. helping with his campaign The Oshawa and District Labor Council has decided to cancel its proposed open forum for Ontario ridi i rio riding cand s in the Federal election June 18. : sais OSHAWA HARBOR BUSY PLACE THESE DAYS Oshawa"s harbor is a busy place these days with the amount of building going on in the area. Work has almost been completed on the $500,000, 500- foot seawall on the east side for the unloading of ships. A $390,000 dredging job has also been completed. Construction work on the new Marina will be finished by the end of June -- this project will be capable of handling about 20 craft in basin and slipways. When completed it will have repair and storage facilities, gas pumps on dock and marina railway for lifting boats out: of the water for repair and storage. As a result of the Federal government's grant, dredging has bexn done to a depth of 24 feet to accomodate ocean- going vessels. Ty lvoke their retaliation and lian independence and the return from Tunis of the insurgent pro-| Secret Army warne the 40,000 tough troops now | stationed n Tunsa and Mor- jocco, | FIRMER HAND | They can be counted on to jput down terrorism with a jmuch harder hand than has been used by the French-Mos- |lem provsional executive now in control. | French officials say the mil-} litary and political leaders of |the Secret Army are seriously divided, with the politicians jurging negotiations with the aceon 9 and the military wing terror campaign. tlers, which averaged about |1,000 a day during April and May, now is reported running at about 8,000 a day. Last FOR SALE TODAY! SOLD TOMORROW! LIST TO SELL! DON'T ASK -WHO- CALL JOHN A. J. BOLAHOOD LIMITED -- REALTOR 725-6544 4 de-| never | stroy the peace accord worked) French officials have estimated| lout with the French in March.|that it now has a nucleus of| | If the referendum goes off asjonly | scheduled, the way will almost|/backed by some 15,000 Europe-| |certainly be cleared for Alger-| ans. been known, some | trading. The margin was narrow with kez issues putting the averages up the question of politics in cross - examining Mr. Herman about his work on behalf of the 200 terrorists, actively advances in the general list. Only a definitive" that would '"change|Kennedy administration wil the course of events" before|seek a general income tax re-| } duction. to be} the July 1 referendum. Now there appears mount such See Ee OBE SGA B25 EVE PROS -- |to $1 or $2. . . | The Associated Press average Liberal Candidate lof 60 stocks inched up .10 to 19.30. The Dow Jones average) }of 30 industrials gained 1.28 to 594.96. Dies In Hospital CORNWALL (CP) -- Albert) ---- Lavigne, Liberal candidate for Stormont in the June 18 federal election, died in hospital here BEST SELLER Mr. Lavigne, 53, 'countries each year. ahead while declines exceeded Some of the credit for more} few weeks ago the/enthusiastic buying was given d of an ac-|by brokers to Treasury Secre-| |visional government, along with|tion "hard violent, terrible and|taty Dillon's statement that the Steels, motors, utilities, rails) doubt as to whether the organ-|and electronics showed a higher ization still has the strength to|trend. Gains and losses of blue an action. \chips ranged from a few cents The American Bible Society pressing for continuation of the| Tuesday night. jsells more than 15,000,000 cop- suffered ajies of the Bible to about 60 | The exodus of European set-jheart attack last' Sunday. now-defunct Roseland Club near) Windsor, reputed to have been} controlled by McDermott and Feeley. Mr. Herman, now secretary jjof the Metropolitan Toronto Progressive Conservative Asso- You Will Find | OUR SERVICE IS FASTER} OUR COST IS LOWER | SCHOFIELD-AKER || Limited ] 723-2265 -- 360 King West || After Hours -- 728-3376 | FAILURE TO PAY ANY ONE INSTALMENT on or before due date necessitates the Tax Collector to proceed to collect by several Statutory and Local By-Law provisions such as Collec- tion of Rents where property is tenant occupied. Division Court Action in some cases and iby possible 'Bailiff Sefzure" of chattels, subject to additional costs. Telephones: 725-1153; Evenings Dial 728-6881 CLARFNCE L. COX City Tox Collector CIVIC ADMINISTRATION BLDG, City of Oshawa EYE EXAMINATIONS appointment PHONE 723-4191 F. R. BLACK, O.D. 136 SIMCOE ST. NORTH | | | Everybody SHOPS and SAVES at fe Our Newest Location . . 909 SIMCOE NORTH - 728-7041 -- 7) BLADE or SHORT RIB ROAST GRADE 'A', FRESH, FRYING OR ROASTING CHICKENS" ":. 37° ESSEX, SKINLESS WIENERS 85° LB. 57* BONELESS BRISKET PLATE POT ROAST DURING MAY, JUNE, JULY, AUGUST OPEN TUES., WED., SAT. 8 A.M. TO 6 P.M. SWEET PICKLED CRYOVAC WRAPPED LB. 39° OUR STORES WILL BE THURS. ond FRI. 9 A.M, TO 9 P.M. 2-LB. BAG COTTAGE ROLLS CLOSED ALL DAY MONDAY ee | Why Arthur Murray Offers a°30 course $y E00 for only LIMITED TIME | | 1 i We are offering a special $30 | introductory course for only | | $15 because we want you to see | for yourself how quickly and | easily you can learn the new | steps in an Arthur Murray fran- | chised studio. Find out how | much fun it is to master the Fox Trot, Cha-Cha, Twist, etc. Free Studio Parties Even if you've never danced be- fore, you can go dancing after a | lesson or two! And at gay student parties, you'll meet new friends... gain poise and popularity. There are no strangers at Arthur Murray's. | Everybody dances and has fun. This $30 course for $45 is good for a limited time only. | ARTHUR MURRAY School of Dancing AIR-CONDITIONED Open from 1 to 10 p.m. daily LICENSEE Va MARKS 114 Simeoe St. S. Phone 728-1681 TOMORROW, JUNE 7th--1:30 to 4:30, 6:00 to 9:00 P.M. at ST. GREGORY'S AUDITORIUM, SIMCOE ST. NORTH RECEIVING ORAL POLIO VACCINE HAS NO EFFECT ON GIVING BLOOD DONATIONS Regular blood donors are urgently requested to attend with or without an appointment WE ARE DESPERATELY SHORT OF ALL NEGATIVE TYPE BLOOD We need 400 bottlgs of blood to replenish our blood bank.

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