Oshawa Times (1958-), 15 Aug 1962, p. 2

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THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, August 15, 1962 GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN GOTTLIEB SELLS PINE RIDGE FARM So Arthur Gottlieb has moved from this area? The recent sale of his farm and palatial estate known as Pine Ridge Farm must surely mark-the end of a colorful era in Pickering Township. He lived at Pine Ridge, lo- cated three miles north- west of Pickering Village, for more than 30 years dur- ing which time he played host to some of the biggest names in show business and the sports world. Ex-World Heavyweight Champion "Rocky" Maricano was a frequent Pine Ridge guest up until two years ago; when he threatened to make a ring comeback he wanted to set up a training camp there, but nothing came of it. He liked to tell about the 5s : time one of Mr. Gottlieb's grea bulls cornered him near the ARTHUR GOTTLIEB barn and made him 'sweat it out" for a tense three or four minutes. Marciano and Gott- lieb once contemplated a business partnership in a Pickering subdivision deal, but this didn't materialize. Joe DiMaggio, former husband of the late Marilyn Monroe, was also a guest. Gottlieb is president of Audio Pictures Ltd., a large-scale studio at Sunnyside, Toronto, where some of the top television films of the day are produced (including Walt Disney releases) -- born in Brooklin, N.Y. he was associated with the produc- tion and distribution of the films for the two Dempsey-Tunney fights. He is now living in Toronto. Mr. Gottlieb's wife is former. Gladys Glad of Ziegfeld Follies fame--she was co-starred in the last edition of the Follies with Harry Richman and was generally regarded by the Broadway critics as one of the most beautiful of the all- time beauties of the colorful show. She also wrote a syndi- cated newspaper column on beauty hints following her retire- ment from the stage. Her first husband was the late Mark Hellinger, famous Hollywood film producer (two of his top pictures were, Hemingway's "'The Killers" and "The Naked City"). Mr Hellinger was a-syndicated newspaper columnist before his departure for Hollywood. Pine Ridge is set well back from the road in the picturesque rolling countryside northwest of Pickering Village -- it has a large swimming pool and several guest homes nearby the main house. There is also a farm house at the entrance. The Gottliebs liked Pine Ridge because of its quiet seclu- sion, but there was a time when it got into the headlines. That was back in September 17, 1953, when it made page-one headlines in the Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa) as follows: "Stage Star Loses $37,000 Pickering Jewel Robbery', The story told how Mrs. Gottlieb discovered $37,000 worth of jew- ellry missing from Pine Ridge on retiring at 4 a.m. on the morning of Wednesday, September 16. She went to the drawer in which she kept the jewellery. She found the drawer and the contents missing. The drawer was in her bedroom on the second floor of the luxurious country home. Full details of the sale of Pine Ridge have not been re- leased, but the purchaser is Ron Blake of the Bokar Farms located on Highway No. 2 west of Whitby. It was a colorful place, "a little bit of Hollywood right in the heart of Ontario County" (as one local wag once des- cribed it.) 5 AWARD TENDER FOR ARENA ANNEX $8,000,000 Racket In Taxi Permits city's taxi-owners and drivers into branches of its Montreal lo- cal, H. R. Green, the Teamsters' regional representative, said last week agreement has been reached with holders of nearly 2,000 of the 4,295 taxi permits. Mr. Saulnier said the Teams- ters are making a futile effort to organize opposition to the new taxi bylaw. .He said "a vast majority" of owners and driv- ers understand that the bylaw's MONTREAL (CP) -- Specula- tion in taxi permits has amounted to an $8,000,000 racket in Montreal during the last few years, the civic administration charged Tuesday before the Quebec transportation board, The number of taxi permits in Montreal has been frozen at 4,925 by a provincial law in ef- fect since 1951. Since then a black market has existed for taxi permits; Lucien Saulnier, chairman of city coun- cil's executive committee, told|purpose is 'to rescue the taxi the board. industry from rackets and spec- A small group got control ofjulation." an ever increasing number of permits and an individual who wanted one often had to pay D A between $10,000 and sis,00 xe DOCTtOYS Accept it, Mr. Saulnier said. | 95 P LIMITS OWNERSHIP | Of Fees Mayor Jean Drapeau said al PRINCE ALBERT, Sask. new taxi bylaw, passed June 28,/(CP) -- Doctors here working The official permit price is $81 but the city had none to has wiped out the field for fur-| outside the government's medi- ther speculation by lingiting |cal care insurance plan, have sell. They were ail taken up years ago. every individual to one permit|decided to accept 85 per cent in future. of their fees as full payment | It might be years before the from private medical jmit'" was realized in practice! plans or not. but, in the meantime, a person| turning them into the city. | Meanwhile |Brotherhood (Ind.) is trying to onganize the| |patients approve. | MSI reimbursement is 85 per jcent of the schedule of fees set |by the College of Physicians and Surgeons. In other parts of Saskat- |chewan, doctors working out- Firms Won't Obey Order coe bar cate ar wee WASHINGTON (AP) -- Sena-|Private plans only if the patient tor Estes Kefauver (Dem.|'S 2 member of the private Tenn.) said Tuesday four major|/°oMPany. U.S. steel companies have -"'in-| If not, patients are billed the dicated they will not comply" |full amount and are responsible |with subpoenas demanding de-|for full payment. The patient tails of their costs and pricing}can obtain 85 per cent of the | practices. He said he will seek|cost by submitting the bill to their prosecution on contempt of|the medical care insurance | Congress charges. commission. Kefauver listed the four as CPA Reports Big | Bethlehem Steel Corp., Republic} Steel Corp., Nationa] Steel Passenger Boost MONTREAL (CP)--Canadian Kefauver Says Corp. and Armco Steel Corp. | | The companies had protested jthat Kefauver's. Senate anti-'- |trust:and monopoly subcommit- | tee was demanding information ira board its chartered flights ompetitors, is| gers aboard i er ights lead Meonie. " jhas increased this year by 320 | Kefauver said in a statement|per cent. : |that eight other steel compan-| The airline said about 10,000 lies, including U.S. Steel, the;passengers will be carried this largest in the United States,jsummer aboard 104 chartered have agreed to comply with the/ flights, compared with 2,460 subpoenas although "'expressing| passengers on 30 flights last strong objections." summer. He_ denies It n plans, principle of "one man one per-|whether patients belong to the Dr. R. K. Johnstone, presi- could not add to the number of/dent of the Prince Albert and permits he possessed and he|District Medical Society, said 22 could dispose of permits only by| of its 28-members work outside : ithe government plan. He said the International|they have made an arrange- of Teamsters|ment with Medical Services In- corporated to have all accounts submitted to the company, if which might tip off trade secrets|Pacific Airlines reported Tues- luable to foreign and other/day that the number of passen- way point of the seven-mile-| long highway tunnel. The | workmen started __ blasting | through the mountain from op- | posite sides in January, 1959. | The road through the Alpine barrier from the Vicinity of French, left, and Italian diggers clasp hands 9,000 feet down in the heart of Mont Blanc, western Europe's loft- iest peak, after blasting through the final obstruction Tuesday to meet at the half- ONT BLANC Chamonix, France, and Cour- mayeur will speed internation- al road traffic and eliminate the long drive over the moun- tainous border. --(AP Wirephoto via from Rome) radio Anti-Bomber D By DAVE McINTOSH Am i | OTTAWA (CP) -- A Defence| Way missions and, despite what) a "reasonably strong" | American amti-bomber defence|@dvanced types of bombers. | possibly decades and that Can-jas there is a reasonably strong ada must contribute to it. |North American air defence R. J. Sutherland of the|System, an attempt to knock) board's operational research|out the U.S. retaliatory force| group--the 'backroom boys" of|¥sing either bombers or mis- defence planning--adds that "no siles is not likely to succeed. one can say when, if ever, it; "If there were no air de-| will be possible to dispense with} zi | active defences against the} ' bomber." Rabid Cats Loose Mr. Sutherland, writing in the current issue of The Interna-| tional Journal, published by the Canadian Institute of Interna-| ages ag PoP iopgpc: infected erry are running r ' oose_ in uebec's Joliette versatile than the long icine County, a public health officer ang eg can carry a bigger! said Tuesday. om) ; He says Russia has roughly) +, BERTHIER, Que. (CP)--Cats ier, 45 miles northeast of 1,000 planes which could reac' North Of Montreal | efence System Need Outlined |North American targets on one-|fences, by using their bomber|Coiumbia Supreme Court to use force the Soviets could mount Research Board scientist says|Soviet Premier Khrushchev|a very damaging attack on fixed|thoce involved. North|Says, is continuing to develop) missile bases and there is a se-| rious risk that they could knock system must be maintained for| "The result is this: As long|ut the American command sys-| tem:" At another point, Mr. Suther- land says in his article, en- titled Canada's Long Term Strategic Situation, that the U.S. is bound to defend Canada from external aggression "al- most regardless of whether or not Canadians wish to be de. fended." "For as far ahead as one can possibly foresee, this will be the central fact of Canadian strategy and the basis of Can. ada's external security." he adds. Other points Sutherland: made by Mr. 1, Canada's legal claim to its Dr. Ulysse Laferriere of Ber-|arctic islands 'is still not be- If Canada} | Montreal, said at least one case|wished to retain the islands it|* ; lof a person bitten by an en-|must continue to recognize a re-|J00-Slashing work schedule into yond question," SALISBURY, Southern Rho- desia (Reuters) -- The first Negro to hold an executive post in the Central African Rhode- sian Federation resigned Tues- day charging that Europeans are 'incapable' of treating other races fairly. Jasper Savanhu, parliamen- tary secretary to the Rhodesian federal home affairs ministry, quit in protest against what he called the government's failure to implement racial partner- ship. He told a press conference fol- lowing his resignation: "The European must always be protected against the African Vancouver Sun Rapped For -- Trial By Press VANCOUVER (CP)--A law- yer said in police court Tuesday a murder trial may have to be moved out of Vancouver be- cause of a Vancouver newspa- |per report. H- A. D, Oliver criticized The Sun for holding. what he said was "trial by newspaper" in coverage of the fatal shooting) of Mrs. Shirley Ballash, 22, here Aug. 6. He referred to an article in the newspaper the following d jthe same day Mrs. Ballash's jhusband, Raymond, 26, was charged with capital murder. Mr, Oliver, lawyer for the ac- cused, said the article contained alleged interviews with prospec- tive witnesses in the' case. It may be necessary to have a change of venue to some re-| mote part of the province where The Sun is not read, said Mr. | Oliver. He said he will ask the British jits powers to the utmost against The hearing was adjourned juntil Aug. 21 at Mr, Oliver's re- quest. Mrs. Ballash, mother of a three-year-old girl, was shot through the back of the head with a rifle on the steps of the Ballash home. Job-Slashing Curb Asked By Rail Unions | CHICAGO (AP) --Five rail- jroad operating unions asked the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals! |Tuesday to keep in force al jlower court order restraining) U.S. railroads from putting a | a ee ee Negro Quits Post. In Rhodesia Rule . +. the Africans must be the underdogs all the time." His resignation came as Southern Rhodesian government bills to extend police powers came under heavy att: from the liberal Central Africa Party and members of the Southern Rhodesia _ bar. In his letter of resignation to Premier Sir Roy Welensky, Sa- vanhu said: "Your government, despite strong representations from the Africa' Party members and other quarters, has failed or has no intention of fully implement- ing a policy of partnership." |CLAIMS DISCRIMINATES At his press conference he said Negroes "have suffered un- duly at the hands of the Euro- pean in terms of discrimination, humiliation and at times even persecuitons."' Southern Rhodesian Justice Minister Reginald Knight told Parliament the proposed police bills were necessary to main- tain order months. Fourteen bar members said the laws would give the justice minister power to "stifle all po- litical opposition." The Rhodesian Federation is in the next few composed of the British colony of Southern Rhodesia and the protectorates of Northern Rho- desia and Nyasaland. Public Funds Proposed For Metro Transit TORONTO (CP)--The Metro- politan Toronto executive com- mittee has proposed that the city transit system be subsidized with public funds, At the conclusion of a meet- ing with the Toronto Transit Commission Tuesday, the com- mittee decided to recommend that Metro council seek legisla- tion to pay an annual transit operating subsidy, reduce the terms of office for the five com- missioners from five to three years and pay all the cost of future rapid transit right-of-way construction. During the meeting, TTC chairman Clarence Downey said fares would have to be in- creased by next year or the commission's deficit would soar to $3,000,000. He proposed three progressive fare increases, the first sched- uled for Jan. 1, Mr. Downey said Metropolitan Chairman William Allen's pro- posal for a one-cent-per-passen- gérs annual grant "would not be sufficient to pay the losses, pay the capital costs and ex- jraged cat has been confirmed|sponsibility for their defence, |@ffect Thursday. All is well that ends well. Ga eT BOTT ee The Osh Children's A Commissi h Ived i ee ih * lin the last few weeks and two! 2.There is no major threat! : 5 4 ices." Cee eras Steen eres mae Oy , hee Tepaaetoee F088. | other cases are suspected. of Soviet invasion of the Cana-\2, motion by the railroads for) S*rvices. its problem regarding the building of an urgently-needed | : ee pe Pe Ss ; Ale eal situation is par-\di i 'wy .|dismissal of the injunction. | The Metropolitan executive annex. ; we . : \siegiarty bal atte tes 'illage| tally pot tis eRhiwege al If the Appeals Court 'dismisses| approved in principle Mr. | Al- This was done this week when the Commission accepted |the lower court injunction, the|len's subsidy plan -- aimed at the low tender of Mel Ron Construction Co. for $15,981 five operating unions involved| Preventing fare nego (next high tender was Goulding Bros. Ltd. for $16,800). P dumm "> Work will start almost immediately. The Commission called for tenders earlier after getting a grant for $17,000 from City Council for the work -- people like Commission Chairman Bill Kurela and Commissioner Robert Wilson were up in arms when the first low tenders for the job were as high as $24,215. The new low tender was arrived at by cutting out one floor of the annex. The unions were replying to tend and increase the existing | |of St. Norbert and he has ap-|a real Soviet capability." * |pealed to the public to kill all) 3. There is 'not much of a } cats within a 10-mile radius ofjcase" for basing U.S. long-|&te expected to serve strike no- the place. 'range missiles in Canada. jtices. President Kennedy then peciae ----jcould prevent any work stop- INTERPRETING THE NEWS Reds May Have Big Space Lead finding board to review the dis- pute and make recommenda- tions. | The railroads contend they are losing $1,600,000 a day be- cause of "featherbedding," or unnecessary jobs. The new work rules change now ordered would eliminate : immediately the jobs of 40,000 By HAROLD MORRISON _ time in the event of enemy at-)"iesel firemen and lop off an-| '| Canadian Press Staff Writer |tack by intercontinental ballis-| ther 25,000 jobs in the next five! '| Russia may well have be-|tic missile. And the U.S, has|Years. L '|tween two'and 10 years of mili-/found it can get a lot of its >| tary space leadership over the nuclear bombers away in just) /United States -- a prospect that)15 minutes. But how much) |poses an ominous challence for| Warning could the U.S. hope to} \Western defence, technology) Set from a nuclear missile fired) land resources. from orbiting space ships speed- Some U.S. authorities, despite|ing over the U.S.? | 15|the Russian achievement of put-| Defence Secretary Robert Mc-| 5\ ting two manned space ve-namara is known to be wor- lhicles in companion - orbit for ried. He has stated American | days, predict the U.S, will catch| ability to operate in space mil- lup in a year or two. itarily is an absolute essential. | | But beneath the confidence is President Kennedy has been) la grave concern. While the U.S,\checked by budget limitations) |strives to overtake the Rus-|at a time when the U.S. econ-| \s ; rahe | sians, there is no likelihood that}omy is not functioning at full) |Russia will stand still. jsieann and Congress is worried} | Aside from the prestige in-| about the impact of the mount-) | volved in the race for the moon,|ing national debt on the} there is the thought that Russia Strength of the American' dol- might be able to dominate! lar. space for military purposes for; Kennedy has pledged to look years. for government economies and} EXAMPLE CITED to withhold a tax cut until 1963. Observers ponder the possibil-;And when the tax cut comes it lity of a nuclear force in space,jis likely to be a lot less than speeding with precise ground|some Americans might expect. J {control around the earth at Site a ah ER CT RES some 17,000 miles an hour--for {days and weeks--and capable jof aiming a bomb load over ' |some vulnerable area. | Timmins . ot 5.| The present U.S, detection) Sault Ste. Marie.. |system is designed to provide Mount Forest..... 'about 30 minutes of warning} EVENING CLASSES COURSES: 1--Clerk-typist 3--Secretary LITTLE NOTES FROM HERE AND THERE Labor Minister Michael Starr and Provincial Health Minister Dr. Matthew B. Dymond will be the special honored guests next Saturday at Greenwood Park at the annual pic- nic of the Progressive Conservative Association of Ontario County. This is a gala affair for PC Party members when "Mike" and 'Doc' kiss the babies and. shake hands with the Party faithful. Incidentally it's the seventh annual out- ing of this kind. . . . Master Ted Dulny of 130% Olive Ave. has a 10-year-old German Shepherd named 'Rex' who res- ponds only to order spoken in Polish -- "Rex" was a pet show classification. at Cowan Park recently because of this unique trait. . The Ontario County Council has asked Oshawa City Council for an early meeting to settle the ques- tion of a new courthouse for Whitby. raemor qa rdens LEARN .... living in Braemor means, living convenient to $ schools, (2 public 1 senior public, 1 High and | Separate School), LIVE , . . living In Braemor means, living amongst the __ friendliest | people, in 'individually designed \f homes at sensible prices. PRAY ... in Braemor gardens, you are close to churches of virtually |} all denominations. PLAY. .. .. In Braemor, (a com- munity designed with your children in mind) there is no through traf- fic, lots of sun and fun, other children to play with and Braemor || is within a stone throw from parks |} and playgrounds. CONTACT LENSES Cc ion by A i Phone 723-4191 F. R. BLACK, O.D. 136 SIMCOE NORTH SHORGAS HEATING & APPLIANCES Industrial and Commercial The established, reliable Gos Dealer in your area. 31 CELINA ST. (Corner of Athol) 728-9441 VERY WARM i sporti THUNDERSHOWERS EXPECTED WEATHER FORECAST Partly Cloudy With Showers Forecasts issued by the Tor-|warmer today. Partly Reta : bis :|with a few isolated showers eo a ee ee thundershowers Thursday. ; eee |Winds light today, southerly 15 pressure centred over Lake/thursday, [Brie is giving clear skies | Algoma, Timagami, northern |southern and northeastern sec-/Georgian Bay regions, North tions of Ontario. A disturbance/Bay, Sudbury, Sault Ste. Marie: moving into the north country|Increasing cloudiness today.!} today will bring scattered show.|Cloudy Thursday. Scattered ers and scattered thundershow-/ showers and thundershowers be- ers into southern Ontario Thurs-| ginning tonight and Thursday, day. |warmer. Winds southerly 15 to Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie,|25 today, shifting to northwest |Lake Huron, Lake Ontario,|/15 to 25 Thursday. southern Georgian Bay, Ni-| White River and Cochrane re- agara, Haliburton regions,|gions: Cloudy with occasional Windsor, London, Hamilton, T: owers today and Thursday. A ronto: Mainly sunny and a little' few isolated thundershowers to- AUTO INSURANCE For Under 25 Age Group day, warm. Winds southerly to 25, shifting to northwest 1 to 25 tonight. Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, High Thursday Windsor .... 55 St. Thomas.. 55 London 50 Kitchener .... 50 Wingham .... Hamilton St. Catharines..... Toronto Peterborougli Trenton Killaloe Muskoka North Bay Sudbury . Earlton ...¢ Kapuskasing .... White River... Moosonee ... WITH MALCOLM SMITH IN THE HIGHLANDS President Malcolm Smith of Local 222, UAW-CLC writes from Ayrshire, Scotland, as follows: "We have reached the halfway mark in our holiday. We are having such a good time it seems to be only a couple of days instead of a couple of weeks since we got here. We have travelled a lot, besides renewing old ac- quaintances, and visiting places where I used to go when I called Scotland home. We have been for an all-day boat cruise on the Clyde. It is impossible to describe the scenery 'as you sail up through the huge hills, alive with color. "We also had an all-day bus trip into the Highlands and there again the rugged scenery has to be seen to be believed. The price of travel is fantastically cheap when compared with our Canadian standards. For instance, in Oshawa we pay, two bucks for a return trip to Toronto via bus. On the all-day bus trip into the Highlands (which left Kilmarnock at 10 a.m. and got back at 9:30 p.m. with two stops to eat), I invited four relatives to be my guests, which, with daughter Mary, made a party of six -- the cost for Exclusive Realtor HARRY MILLEN REAL ESTATE 1 11 ONTARIO ST. 728-1679 | If your present furnace is old and inefficient, now is the time to have us re- place it. A smart, new, en- closed model will give you more usable space in your basement; improve the value of your home and You can have your new oil furnace installed for less than $10 a month! 2--Stenogropher 4--Accountant's Assistant 5--Business Administration sak OIE ass SUBJECTS: Take any of our 29 business or secretarial subject separately, FALL CLASSES give you better, more ec- onomical heating. Let us quote you on the unit of your choice. @ Just a small deposit is needed, and you can spread the payments over the next 5 years. the entire trip was the equi- valent of $9.50 in our money. "Today we are going to Glasgow to see a big soccer game. Tomorrow we are going to Edinburgh and the Forth Bridge -- vou can see there is no grass growing under our feet. There Js another thing that is murder and this is the price of ciga- rettes. They are 70 cents for a packet of 20; but this doesn't seem to stop smoking (they are practically chain smokers). Be seeing you. Malc." MALCOLM SMITH We can provide AND With: easy monthly payme: SCHOFIE 360 KING ST. WEST ® Don Ellison © Gerry Osborne AMPLE FREE PARKING required coverage at special low rates. ies nts spread over 9 months. LD-AKER LIMITED PHONE 723-2265 @ Ralph Schofield @ Reg Aker AMPLE FREE PARKING STARTING SEPT. 4th, 1962 Please write or phone for free catalogue about our night classes or day, school. THE CANADIAN SCHOOL OF BUSINESS 52% SIMCOE ST. NORTH PHONE 728-7081 uae: 43 KING STREET WEST, OSHAWA A We PHONE 725-3581

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