Oshawa Times (1958-), 21 Jul 1962, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Saturday, July 21, 1962 GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN RUSS "IRON CURTAIN" TRIP SHOCKS WOMAN (Mrs. Walter Branch, wife of the City alderman, returned July 14 from a 43-day European tour of 14 countries. She spent 10 days behind the Iron Curtain and gives some of her impressions of this journey in the following letter written to her husband from London, on her recent return from Moscow). i "Dear Walter: *{ don't know how to explain the Iron Curtain in words. I am so emo- tionally upset about the 'trip. "Spent several hours sitting in the tourist bus at check points (enroute to West Berlin) with Communist soldiers walk- ing up and down with machine guns at the "ready position'. "Barbed wire for miles --search lights and tow- ers. When we finally drove through the last Red barrier and saw an American jeep go by, most of us cried (even the students); one had MBS. BRANCE violent cramps in his stomach. An elderly man had a mild heart attack. "As for me, I wanted to rush up the road and never stop until I was home. I was completely shaken. "My cards home must have sounded odd, but I was trying to tell you how awful it was and how grateful we should be to live in a free country. All mail leaving Russia is read. Baggage in our hotel rooms was search- ed, "Despite this the over-all trip has been wonderful, in places like Poland, France, Italy and England. I have seen for myself the Communists in action. It is a horify- ing thing. It surpasses the slavery of ancient times because of what it does to the human mind and personal+ ~ "By the time I come home I will be more objective; but now I am numb, mentally. 2 "One rarely sees children in Russia. They are tightly disciplined and completely indoctrinated. Family life CHARLOTTETOWN (CP) -- The 41st annual meeting of the Canadian Teachers' Federation ended here Friday after four days of speeches and discus- sions on teacher training, in- creased membership fees, work- ing conditions and education in a technical age. Rey. E. J. Roche, registrar of; St. Dunstan's University in| Charlottetown, told the 100 del-| egates Friday that "the prefer- able road" to teacher training is that of '"'a bachelor's degree plus a year or two of profes- sional training." He said the "day of uniform education for teachers will be a dark day."' J. A. McDonald, past president | of the Alberta Teachers' Federa-| tion said the integrated program) of teacher training was best. He said the integrated pro- gram leaves teacher education in the hands of "'those concerned with the preparation, of teach ers.' This system is more likely to retain teachers and makes| the student teacher more} acquainted with his future pro- fession, he said. "No college can produce resulst by adding offer- ings of the faculty of education to a regular college course." BOOST FEES Delegates from eight prov- | inces voted Thursday to boost! annual membership fees in the| 116,000-member federation from| $1.25 to $1.75. Ontario and New-| foundland voted against the in- | crease. Rev- J. H. Conway, president of the Ontario Teachers' Fed- eration, said a meeting of his| ONE FOR EVERY HOME? Private Aline Hebert of | box plugs into any electrical outlet and would ring like an Teachers Hikes Annual Fee Guild fession is going to have to state its own working conditions. | He said a teacher works 50) hours a week but only spends 50 per cent of the time actually teaching. From 20 to 25 per cent of a teacher's working time is spent in clerical, supervisory or other extra-curricula work, he said. : He suggested that this work could be done by other people, leaving the teacher more time to upgrade his own work. John England, president of the National Union of Teachers of England and Wales, said a teacher is an expert and must Five New Polio Cases In Hull HULL, 'Que. (CP)--Five new polio cases were reported in the Hull area Friday as thousands jammed clinics for immunizing doses of the Sabin oral polio faccine. There now have been 15 con- firmed polio cases in the dis- trict since early June. Up to the end of last week only 32 cases had been reported in all Canada, 19 of them in Quebec- The new victims are a 23- year-old man and two ll-year- old girls from St. Andre Avellin, a 14-year-old girl from Thurso and a small boy from Comfort Point. Sabin vaccine clinics opened! here Wednesday, hours after] PENNIES BROUGHT DOLLARS Former Vancouver Alder- | man John Moffitt, right, found Ottawa holds in her right | hand the small warning de- | | vice which may be installed | | in every Canadian home to | warn householders of an enemy attack on Canada. The | Build New Stations alarm clock. It would be the signal for families to turn on their radios or TV to await | instructions, (CP Wirephoto) _ |ity or withdraws from the CTF./saik or Sabin vaccine protec- organization next month would)two new cases were confirmed.| decide whether to accept or|They administered 1341. doses| {reject the increase. lof vaccine in the first two days.| A province either accepts &) Health authorities said none of ~ |fee increase voted by the major-|the polio victims had received) several 1923 pennies while sorting through $112 worth he | A. J. Brennan of St. John's, | tj . Wid seit Ws delegation hed ee ee been authorized to support an} increase of 25 cents so they had| to vote against the 50-cent raise. | Floyd G. Robinson of Ottawa, the CTF's research director, 4 'Snake Bite Light Smoker Inquest Ordered of banking them, he sold the | 11,245 old pennies to Winnipeg coin collector Nick Gerbinski | for $1,800. Mr. Mofftt spent collected in 35 years. Instead | many hours wrapping the | Death coins for the bank before he ~~ saw a collector's advertise- ment and decided to look at the pennies again, (CP Wirephoto) Tug In Port 24 Hours Late NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP) The Theresa M docked at Port Colborne, Ont., with all three hardly exists. God help us when these generations are loosened on the world. "Fast Berlin is a city of the dead -- with a few zom- : crew mb TORONTO (CP)--An earlier,have been of the massasauga\ almost 24 poetegine A pot tae decision that an inquest into the|species, the only known Poison-|nolice nad combed the shore- Cancer Risk, |said Thursday the teaching pro CBC Told By BBG bies walking around. We all asked: "'Where are the peo- ple?' and 'Where are the children?" "T am shaking inside as I write this -- I feel certain that all the dreadful things we have read about Russia are true. "What propaganda! I attended the July 1 reception at the Canadian Embassy and even they have little freedom. "I heard so many stories about tourists having their diaries confiscated I destroyed several pages of mine before we left Moscow. I was really scared. "We went 14 hours without food one day because In- tourist -- the government-sponsored Soviet travel agency --would not allow our bus into a town, where dinner had been arranged by the tour sponsors. This was a last- minute decision. No explanation was given. "People flying into Moscow may be impressed, but they have no idea what the country is really like. Poland is wonderful. What a contrast. But can they hold out? God alone knows. Love to all, EVALYN" IMPERIAL PLANS SUPER SERVICE CENTRE ¥OR CITY Imperial Oil Ltd. is finalizing plans for its new $150,000 auto service centre--one of the first of its kind in Canada-- which is to be opened in the late Fall at the southwest corner of Park road and King street west. City Council Monday night voted to rezone the four properties owned by the firm on the west side of Park road south from R3 to Cl -- this needs the approval of the Ontario Municipal Board. Imperial is hopeful that construction will start in early September. Architect's plans could be changed but at present they call for a store, service station and approximately 12 gas pumps. Imperial paid $148,000 for the six lots last Spring. Carl Olsen was the realtor. TELLER SNARES BOGUS $10 BILL A phoney $10 Canadian bill turned up in a downtown Oshawa store this week, but passed undetected until it got into the hands of a teller at the King street east branch of the Toronto-Dominion Bank. The bill was a remarkable reproduction of the real thing, according to a bank spokesman, except for two points -- the extra-soft feel of it would give it away and it tore too easily. The Oshawa C of C quickly alerted its membership to be on guard for similar bogus bills. This was the only re- port on counterfeit money made to City police this week. BOARD RULING DEEMED UNLIKELY The Board of Transport Commissioners may not bother to render a decision in the case of the Oshawa CNR railway tracks because of the recent agreement reached by all par- ties concerned. This was learned by the Ottawa bureau of The Oshawa Times this week. : The Board held a two-day hearing here last April 3 on the City's application for the tracks' removal, but did not make any recommendations. Commissioner Rod Kerr of the Board is currently on holidays -- he is expected back in Ottawa for a brief period at the end of the month; then will leave again in August. No action would be likely, in any case, until he returned. A Board spokesman said that there are precedents for matters being dropped by the Board after a hearing because the parties concerned reach agreement on their own in the interim. "Tf the Oty and the CNR advised us that they had reach- ed an agreement, it would be tantamount to the matter | OTTAWA (CP)--The Board of,CBC outlets plus 30 privately- . lowned stations and 80 low-| Multiple Stabs Broadcast Governors has sug-) gested that the publicly - owned|power CBC radio relay trans-| CBC build more of its own ra-|mitters in small communities.| ® dio stations rather than rely so|The Dominion network consists) Killed Mother heavily on privately - owned af-|of one CBC station feeding pro- | filiates to achieve complete net-|grams to 49 private ones. | work radio coverage. Some stations on both net- | The BBG said it is ready to|works would be dropped from jrecommend a government allo-|the consolidated system. And KITCHENER (CP) -- A cor- cation of unoccupied radio fre-|some other stations: not on ei-joner's jury ruled Friday that) quencies for CBC use, so the/ther of the networks now, would/Mrs. Joyce Brown, 31, slain) corporation "will not be im-jbe brought-in for the first time.|with her three children and her| peded in its progress toward the| CBC President long-run objective." |Ouimet .n his annual report last|tiple stab wounds believed in-| | The solution was offered by|Monday said some private affil-|flicted by the husband while} the progress toward the long-runjiates also have suggested the)temporarily) insane. j objective." CBC build more of its own sta-| The children -- Neil, 5, Ste) | This solution was offered by tions. iven, 38, a&d Russell, eight) the BBG to the current sticki-| 'The proposal will be stud-|months -- were drowned in the ness in negotiations under which| died," he said- bathtub. Walter Brown, 31, died the CBC plans to dismantle its) Under the CBC proposals, the of a gunshot wound in the head. Trans-Canada and Dominion ra-|following privately-owned sta-| The wife was stabbed eight dio networks and instead build tions in Ontario would be affili- times in the back. one English - language consoli-|ated to the consolidated net-| Police said four notes were) dated network. The French net-| work: found in the home -- one told| work would be left intact. CJKL Kirkland Lake, CNJR/ police whom to notify; another The BBG enters the picture|Blind River, CKGB Timmins, /|left instructions on what to do with its statutory authority to|CJIC Sault Ste. Marie, CHEX|with the Brown assets; a third, require privately-owned stations|/Peterborough, CJCS Stratford,|/attached to a stepladder, named to affiliate with the CBC. iCJSS Cornwall, CHO Pem-|the ladder's owner. | To set up the new radio sys-|broke, CFOB Fort Frances,; A fourth note was pinned to) tem, the CBC has asked the|CFJR Brockville, CKCR Kitch-'a baby's stroller and identified governors to make affiliation ajener, CKLY Lindsay, CJET/it as belonging to a neighbor. condition of licence for 61 pri-|Smiths Falls, CKWS Kingston,| Cpl Arthur Woods of the vately owned radio~stations;CKSO Sudbury, CFCH North\Kitchener police force said he across Canada. The network|Bay, CHOK Sarnia' CFOR Oril-|believed Brown trie d three also would take in 24 CBC-jlia, CFPL London, CFOS Owen|times to kill himself -- once by owned stations. Sound, CFPA Port Arthur,;/hanging and a second time by At present, the Trans-Canada|CJBQ Belleville, CJRL Kenora, |cutting his wrists and finally by network is comprised' of e'CKAR Huntsvill shooting. | CLEAR SKY ACROSS 5 PROVINCES SUNDAY RENO GSES SERS WEATHER FORECAST oo Humidity Drop | |St. a | Kitchener .ecsseee | | Wingham ..scsesee | Hamilton wa aSarmruvwuac Doctor Says LONDON (Reuters) -- The light smoker is just as likely to develop lung cancer as the heavy smoker and both are} Of Three-Ju jlikely to get it at about the|nam ' ry jsame age--in the late 50s--a| inquest will pathology professor reported to-| Prof. R. D. Passey of Leeds/Armitage, daughter of Mr. and'did not give the girl serum be- University reported in the medi-|Mrs. James Armitage of Grosse cause it was not established she cal magazine, The Lancet, on He said the disease developed} at approximately the same age| in those who started smoking} the amount smoked made lititle| difference. The average age for starting) was 17; the average number of! cigarettes smoked daily was 23; | and the mean age for discover- ing cancer was 57- Passey also suggested that the) climate and air pollution played an important part in develop-| ing lung. cancer. | "In South Africa, where the average white male is one of the heaviest smokers in the} world, the age - rate from cancer. . . is, if any-| thing, less than in Denmark| ber of ciagarettes," he said. | death of a 10-year-old girl from a rattlesnake bite this week ous snake in Ontario. Dr. W. G Brown,' Ontario's| jlines looking for them. The Theresa M arrived at would not be held has been re-ideputy minister of health said/5:30 p.m. Friday, but police versed and tive the inquest tenta- Friday the girl would not havejcalled off their car search and ly scheduled for next week./died from an injection of anti-|a scheduled air search when the Chief Coroner Dr. H. B. Cot- venin even if she had not been|United States Coast Guard re- n of Ontario said Friday the|bitten by a snake. He said only|ported the boat heading through likely be hele at Bracebridge, Ont., Wednesday into the death of Nora Jean Pointe, Mich. | hus 27, di B hove abe, ' : ; b J Alphonse| husband June 27, died from mul-| tugies into the smoking habits) Coroner; Dr. A. D. MacKenzie |they feared it might produce ill| of 499 men with lung cancer.|of Barrie had ruled no inquest/effects. \ was necessary but Dr. Cotnam said Dr. MacKenzie now 'has talked with us and agrees with jearly or started late and that|our decision to hold an inquest." Dr. Cotnam said Dr. Mac- Kenzie should have conferred with the chief coroner's office before making such a decision. "The cause of death was of course accidental, but the girl did not die of usual or normal causes and therefore an inquest must be held,' Dr Cotnam said. BITTEN NEAR COTTAGE The girl was bitten by a rat specific death|tlesnake near her family's cot-| tage at Cognashene Point, 12 miles northeast of Penetangui- |where the average male smokes|Shene on Georgian Bay. She died vehicles. lless than one-third of the num-|€n route to hospital by boat. The rattlesnake is believed to | INTERPRETING THE NEWS | Summer Thaws _ Heats War Fear By DOUG MARSHALL Canadian Press Staff Writer When the snows melt each summer the high-altitude tight- rope that is the Himalaya fron- ier between Red China and|hand, to make a. stand despite the al-;Senate, which last month voted | most insuperable difficulties of/t0 bar almost all U.S. aid to| conducting a shooting war along the roof of the world. | | The Chinese, on. the other|900 foreign aid bill stripped of} are probably under no India stretches taut with ten-jillusion about the economic or sion. Confused reports about the latest incidents in the Galwan) ,, valley of the Ladakh area of, Kashmir suggest the war of} nerves and propaganda coul A oat strategic value of the desolate} mountainous area they claim. | More than anything they seem| liberately set on keeping the issue smouldering for political easily 'urn into a military clash. An Indian outpost is said to have been encircled by Chinese) troops who came as close as 15) yards hefore the coolness of a Gurkha officer persuaded them to fall back. The outpost was 10 miles be- yond the furthest extension of territorial claims by China India reports that the Chinese have set up seven new military, posts along the line they have claimed as the international border since 1960. INDIANS WORRIED Now the Indians are alarmed Beau Valley IS GROWING! Come and see our 1962 "Dream Homes' now under construction, DRIVE UP TONIGHT Salesmen On Location 7-9 P.M. Daily 'A PLEASANT PLACE TO LIVE' OSHAWA BLVD. N. Uust East of Simcoe) allergy suffers would react un- favorably to the serum. Two vacationing U.S. doctors had been bitten by a snake and i | \ 2 Women Die 'In Car Crash | BRANTFORD (CP) -- Two women were fatally injured when their car collided with an-| other on a small hill on High- jway 53, just inside the- city limits. Police said the accident hap- |pened Friday when a car pulled out of a line of vehicles going up the hill, edged in again and! then swerved into the downhill! |line, hitting the women's car head-on. Two other cars hit the Dead are Mrs. Jennie O'Reilly) and Mrs. Doris Mclsaac, both of Scotland, Ont. William Polczer, 38, of Mount Pleasant, Ont., is in serous con-| dition in, hospital with a frac-| tured skull and other injuries. Police said he was a passenger | in the car of Ceza Komives, 41, of Mount Pleasant, PASSES FOREIGN BILL WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Communist countries, passed Friday a compromise 4,700,000,-| the restrictive feature. The measure now goes to the House of Representatives, where pas- jthe Black Rock Canal near Buffalo, at 1:30 pm. BOLAHOOD WILL TURN YOUR PROPERTY INTO CASH! Spot Cash -- or Terms PRICE Salable listings alone can over- come sales resistance, any pro- perty well listed is half sold. Why list high and lose a sale? The market price must be met, or no 'sale. Only a realistic price sells readily under todays teal estate market conditions. PHONE US NOW 725-6544 JOHN A. J. BOLAHOOD LTD. INSURANCE REALTOR -- MORTGAGES ARRANGED -- BOUGHT -- SOLD sage is expected next week. | SERVICE STATIONS OPEN THIS SUNDAY 7:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. PRESTON'S SUNOCO STATION 925 SIMCOE ST. NORTH HOUSTON'S TEXACO STATION 67 KING ST. WEST being withdrawn and the Board would. in all probability, drop it," said the spokesman. : DON'T SELL TRACKS TO DIEF Af JUNK! Time marches on! Friends of Donald Blake Dodds -- City lawyer, bird watcher and sedulous toiler in the w-rid of Oshawa's. Little Theatre -- report that he is already « "ganizing a group ten- tatively known as, "'The Oshawa Socie 7 for the Preservation of the King Street CNR Tracks as an "listorical Attraction". Mr. Dodds has not decided where I:e would re-locate the tracks in the form of a municipal shrine, where young and old could pay homage in future years and learn about the terrible battles that once raged around them -- but he sin- cerely feels that they will be an item of great historical value in the not-too-distant future, and that they should be pre- served, like a curio of interest from the U.S. Civil War or an antiquated cannon used by the British at the Battle of Wa- terloo. Mr. Dodds was shocked recently when he heard an un confirmed report to the effect that Russell Humphreys, QC, had suggested publicly that the tracks should be sold to the Diefenbaker government for junk. 4 CRANFIELD'S B.A. STATION 331 PARK RD, SOUTH FOOTE'S SHELL STATION 97 KING ST, EAST GANGEMI'S SERVICE STATION 809 SIMCOE ST SOUTH ROBINSON'S ESSO STATION 89 SIMCOE ST SOUTH VIVIAN'S B.A. STATION NONQUON ROAD FLOYD PRICE SUNOCO STATION 531 RITSON RO. SOUTH PLEASURE VALLEY VW/HITE ROSE SIMCOE ST, NORTH | (at city. limits) ON ROSSLAND SCHOFIELD-AKER LIMITED 360 KING WEST 723-2265 wn |St. Catharines..... jthat the Chinese are going to jestablish themselves along the /entire lower reaches of the Gal-| |wan Valley. | | Nehru, under pressure at {home during the last election \for taking too soft a line on the dispute, may find it. necessary Sunny Sunday | showers ending this morning, Killalo jweather office at 5 a.m.: clearing this evening. SUNNY | Muskoka Synopsis: Rain has ended over| With little' change in tempera) oi) pay. western sections of the province ture Sunday. Winds southwest)¢ ai. | land is expected to end in east-|20, becoming northwest 15 to 20/7 ern Ontario by noon today, The! this afternoon: light Sunday. Rapuakesitig eee |disturbance will be followed by) Georgian Bay, Timagami, Al-| White River \a gradual clearing to forecast|goma, 'North Bay, Sudbury, Moosonee jregions. Mainly sunny skies are Sault Ste. Marie: Cloudy with a| Timmins |forecast for Sunday. ifew sunny intervals today. A Lake St. Clair, -Lake Erie,|few brief afternoon showers. Lake Huron, Niagara, western|Clear and cooler tonight. Sunny Lake Ontario regions, Windsor,|Sunday with little change i |London, Hamilton, Toronto: |temperature. Winds northwest | |Cloudy with sunny intervals and/15 ot 20 today, light Sunday. becoming less humid today'| White River, Cochrane re- \Clearing and cooler tonight.) gions: Sunny with cloudy inter-| Sunny with little change-in tem-|yals today and a few isolated perature Sunday. Winds north-|afternoon showers. Clear to west 15 today, light Sunday. night. Sunny with little change Eastern Lake Ontario, Hali-jin temperature Sunday. Winds) 'burton regions: Cloudy with|northerly 15, = an Peterborough Trenton wet sum Forecasts issued by the, wu ws -- ww Fe Question: When were your rugs cleaned: last ? [] 1 year, [] 2 years, Ti 3 years, [1] longer. If you have checked any of the above, its time to cal! NU-WAY RUG ©. 174 MARY STREET 728-468) "AN work done in Oshawa by Qualified Oshawa Technicians" FOR A QUALITY HOME... LOOK FOR FOLEY PLUMBING INSTALLATION

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