Oshawa Times (1958-), 15 Jan 1963, p. 3

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4 | ment. Hi Barbershoppers Chapter were installed at a meeting at the Oshawa Re- creation Centre Monday night. The newly installed president, Vie McAdam, centre, seated is seen flanked by Past Presi- dent Merv Scott, right and Hilton Howe, left, installing officer, Standing from left are: John Wilson, treasurer; Vic Porteous, vice-president (programming). Bill Tweedie, vice - president, (member- ship) and Allan Cooper, secre- tary. The Motor City chapter of the SPEBSQSA was found- ed in 1958. Mr. McAdam was the chapter's charter presi- dent, and was re-elected in 1959 and again in 1960, Ted McLaughlin became president for 1961 followed by Merv Scott for 1962, --Oshawa Times Photo CAPSULE NEWS Ten People Die In Bus Accident QUITO, Ecuador (AP)--Ten persons were killed and 25 in- jured Sunday when a bus ran off the road and crashed into a tree near the port city of Guayaquil, The bus was taking its passengers to a soccer game. ESTABLISH RELATIONS SEOUL (AP)--Canada and South Korea have agreed to es- tablish formal diplomatic rela- tidns, the foreign ministry an- nounced today. It also said that Korean ambaseador at the United Nations, Lee Soo-Yung, will serve concurrently as South Korea's first ambassador to Canada. TAXES HIT RECORD -WASHINGTON yt gar 8. rnment a eal 5309, 400,000,000 in taxes Monday. all the money went toward udget, which is certain to a deficit this fiscal year did last. Social security CITY AND DISTRICT Waterford coast, by the Irish) corvette Maeva Jan, 7. 'ESCAPE' TO EAST LUBECK (AP) -- Two West German youths rammed their car through a border gate Mon- day and fled into Communist Germany, police reported, Nor- mally, a West German who wants to move into East Ger- many can cross over at any authorized checkpoint. WOULD HONOR WINNIE WASHINGTON (AP)--Senator Stephen M. Young, Ohio Demo- crat, Monday introduced a res- olution to confer honorary U.S. citizenship on Sir Winston Churchill. A similar resolution was not acted upon last year. GAS HITS TESTER DENVER (AP) -- Clyde W. Thomas, 35, was seriously ill today after inhaling nerve gas fumes at the U.S.» Army's nearby Rocky Mountain ar- senal. Officials said Thomas was preparing to take samples for tests Monday when the gas , for example, totalled al- $11,700,000,000--which goes to a trust fund. FIND SKELETONS AMMAN, Jordan (Reuters)-- More than 300 skeletons have been found in a remote cave in the Jordan Valley and are thought to be those of Samari- tan refugees caught and killed by troops of Alexander the Great in the fourth century BC, it was announced Monday. The Jordan es Ps r covery as hopeful. spilled from a tank. Doctors described his chances for re- CANBERRA HEADS HOME VALETTA, Malta (AP)--The British luxury liner Canberra, which caught fire in the Medi- terranean 10 days ago with more than 2,000 passengers on board, sailed for Belfast, North- ern Ireland, Monday for re- pairs. The liner was bound for Australia when the fire forced her to put in here. Most of the ment said Bedoui who unearthed the cave also found official documents in the Aramaic language from the city of Samaria, which Alexander captured in 331 BC. MINISTERS RETURN OTTAWA (CP)--Justice Min- {ster Fleming and Fisheries Minister MacLean returned early today from trade talks in Japan after a 6,640-mile, non- stop flight from Tokyo. HONOR CAQUETTE OTTAWA (CP)--The north- western Quebec mining town of has proclaimed Saturday a civic holiday in honor of Real Caouette, deputy leader of the Social Credit party, it was learned Monday. Mr. Caouette, a native of Rouyn, is to attend a civic banquet Saturday. LEAVES HOSPITAL MONTREAL (CP) -- Paul- Emile Cardinal Leger was dis- charged from Hotel Dieu Hos- pital Monday night and a med- ical bulletin said bis "state of health is very satisfactory." The 58-year-old Roman Catholic Archbishop of Montreal entered hospital Jan. 7 with what church officials described as "heart fatigue." JET LOSES WHEEL TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -- All 53 persons aboard a Miami - to- Atlanta Delta DC-8 jetliner es- caped injury Monday when part of the aircraft's landing gear broke loose as it landed. The , Capt. R, ©. Sandberg, kept the big jet upright on the right hand gear until the air- craft lest speed. G SAUD BETTER LAUSANNE (AP)--King Saud has recovered from an illness that landed him in a clinic in this Swiss centre a month ago. The Saudi Arabian monarch was suffering from hyperten- sion and heart weakness follow- ing a bout with pneumonia, a medical bulletin said Monday. FINE RUSSIAN TRAWLER pa, s have been flown to Australia, JOSE BACK HOME? BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP)--Actor Jose Ferrer, di- vorced 'ast May by singer Rose- mary Clooney, is back in their, home. But he would not com- mnet on reports of a reconcili- ation. "You can draw your own conclusions," Ferrer told a re- porter. SEEK POLICY MONTREAL (CP)--The exec- utive of L'Union Canadienne des Journalistes de Langue Francaise announced Monday it has written to Prime Minister Diefenbaker asking that govern- ment policy on the question of acquisition of nuclear weapons be made known as soon as possible. The Frency-language journalists group sent to the prime minister 1 copy of a res- olution approved by its execu- tive that said a statement by the government on its nuclear weapons policy was needed to remove "uncertainty and 'am-| {nominee for District suspension, was Monday ROTARY VISITORS Dalton Morrison, of the East York Olub, district governor- 707 «of Rotary Internatonal was a guest at the Monday meeting of the Rotary Club of Oshawa. Other guests inc!:ded Rotarian Terry Moore, Whitby and Ro- tarian Ewart MacKay, of Ajax. BIRTHDAYS REMEMBERED Four members of the Ro- tary Club of Oshawa were hon- ored Monday on the celebration of their birthdays. They were Angus Dixon, Michael Rudka, Al Evans and Stewart J. Storie. CASE ADJOURNED A charge of permitting per- sons under 21 on premises where liquor is sold against the Cadil- lac Hotel, Simcoe street south, was remanded to Feb. 11 by Magistrate C. W. Guest Mon- day. Leonard Smith, 738 Lake- view avenue, who is charged with consuming liquor as a minor was remanded to the same day. REMANDED ONE WEEK A Bobcaygeon man, Gordon Grant Pogue, charged with theft, false pretences and driv- ing while his licence is under re- manded for one week. The court was told other charges by Metro Toronto police will be added. REMAND ASSAULT CASES Three women, charged with assaulting another were Monday remanded till Jan. 28. Remand- ed were Eleanor Taillon, 24% Church street; Mildred Bar- rett, Apartment 6, 200 King street west and Lynda Dilla- bough, 92 Burke street. They are charged with assault o7 Elaine Snudden, 299 Vimy av- enue. ISSUE WARRANT A warrant for Allan Gilmour, 53% Peter street, Lindsay, was issued Monday when he failed to appear in Oshawa court to answer a charge of intoxication. The court was told Gilmour was out on $25 bail. CHILLY MORNING Oshawa is today in the grip of another cold wave. The tem- perature at 7.30 a.m. was zero. HOSPITAL REPORT Following is the report of the Oshawa General, Hospital for the week ending Jan. 12: ad- missions 331; Births -- male 24, female 23; discharges 308; new- born births -- male 24, female 26; major surgery 58; minor surgery 135; eye, ear, nose and throat 54; treatments and ex- aminations 178; casts 22; phy- siotherapy treatments 334. biguity which may have arisen) as a result of statements made in recent months." | RESUME TALKS CLEVELAND (AP) -- The \Cleveland Newspaper Guild re- sumed talks Monday with pub- lishers' representatives in a strike that has closed the city's two daily newspapers for 4 days. Before the session began with negotiators for the morn- ing Plain Dealer and the eve- ning Cleveland Press and News, a guild spokesman said the out- look was somewhat better than usual, EXPORTS JUMP CHATHAM (CP)--Export of WANT AD HELPS FIND ELEPHANTS Dr. W. N. Mach, research scientist, ran ads offering to remove warts free to get subjects for tumor research, His ads got more than a thousand answers and aided his study greatly. It's a thousand to one you have things around you don't use--so turn them into cash with Oshawa Times Classified ads. Easy and in- expensive. Just dial 723-3492 to place your "'for sale" ad. Ontario tomato juice to the United Kingdom jumped to 402,- 887 cases last year from 77,000 in 1961, Frank Parry of the On- tario Vegetable Growers Mar- keting Board said Monday. He predicted the province will ex- port 1,000,000 cases this year, with the bulk coming from Kent and Essex countries. WATERFORD, Ireland (AP) Aw Irish court fined a Russian trawler skipper £30 Monday and ordered the confisca- tion of his catch and fas le was ide Irish territorial wa- ing tone trawler,, the Paltus, skippered by ©: GOOD FOOD Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner BUSINESS MEN'S LUNCH 12-2 P.M. Hotel Lancaster SHORGAS HEATING & APPLIANCES Industrial and Commercial The established, relicble Ges Dealer in your area. 31 CELINA ST. (Corner of Athol) 728-9441 Publishing Aid Described As Essential WEST PALM BEACH, Fila. (AP) -- Newspaper executives witnessed a demonstration Mon. day of electronic newspaper publishing devices described by John Perry Jr. as "essential to the survival of our business." Perry, president of Perry Publications Inc., was host with the Radio Corporation of Amer- ica at a two-day seminar on tyepsetting by computer. The 150 executives saw a computer helping to set a news story and classified advertising type at electronic speed for the Palm Beach Post-Times. Participating in the seminar were C. H. Tingley, managing director of the American News- paper Publishing Association Research Institute, and Otis Booth Jr., operating director of the Los Angeles Times, The Los Angeles Times also is using an automatic typesetting system built around a computer. USE 'DICTIONARY' The principal difference be- tween the systems used by the two newspapers is that at the Palm Beach Post-Times a "dic- tionary" had been fed into the computer, as a reference source in the hyphenation of words, while the Los Angeles Times used a "'logic system" in which the computer analyzes each word to be hyphenated. In setting newspaper copy, hyphenation of words at the end of lines so they will fit evenly into columns has been a ma- jor publishing problem. Both systems are expected to save approximately 43 per cent in typesetting operations. At West Palm Beach, newspa- per copy is converted into coded punched paper tape by typists. This tape is fed into the com. puter system, which electronic. ally makes the necessary line- ending hyphenation to produce justified lines of type. At Los Angelés, reporters type their stories directly on special machines. which also produce punched tape for line casting machines. The stories are then edited in the regular manner and a correction tape is punched. Both papers are then fed into the computer which produces a final tape for line casting machines. Guard Locked Up, Men Take $108,500 MIAMI, Fla. (AP)--Two men wearing. green uniforms dis- armed a guard, locked him and a cashier in a closet at Tropical Park race track and fled with approximately $108,500, includ- ing $80,000 in cash. uniforms similar to those worn by Tropical Park workmen, held up Volney Waite, 63, the cashier, and John Murphy, 62, a guard. The track had just concluded a nine-race program Monday and the money was being trans- ferred from the Turf Club, on the third floor of the clubhouse, to the counting room on the main floor of the grandstand Reliet List Low Here Last October, Oshawa ranked third lowest' in. percentage of population on welfare in a study of the 40 Ontario municipalities with the largest accounts. A 29.5 per cent decreasé over, the year, from October, 1961, put Oshawa behind East Sand- wich Township (42.3 per cent) and Brantford (37.5 per cent). Oshawa had only 651 persons on welfare three months ago, representing 1.06 per cent of the! city's population. There were' 923 persons receiving welfare assistance in October, 1961, October, 1962, welfare e * ditures for Oshawa totalled $18,- 898, down from $25,296 for the same month in 1961. This repre- sczis a 25.3 per cent decrease, Township's 49.1 per cent drop, over the last year. Unemployment in Ontario fell during October, 1962, according The two white men, wearing} to a provincial Department of Welfare report, while rising dur- ing the same period in four other areas examined, From late September to Oct. 20 last year, numbers on wel- fare decreased from 74,000 to 68,009 in Ontario. This repre- sents three-tenths. of one per cent or a drop from 3.1 to 2.8 per cent of the labor force. Other areas compared inthe study were Atlantic Regicn, Quebec, Prairie Region and British Columbia, Four People Die In Burning House ASBURY PARK, N.J. (AP)-- Four persons died and two others were injured Monday night when fire swept through a three-storey frame rooming house, Firemen said they helped 17 other persons escape the flames, All of the victims were Negroes, police said. Police Chief Lester Johnson said the fire apparently was caused by faulty wiring in the cellar. Farm Land Tax Cut Is Refused A bid for a cut in farmland taxes was turned down in*the East Whitby Township Council by a tie vote Monday. Walter Holliday, deputy-reeve, presented a motion calling for a bylaw exempting 75 per cent of the assessment on farmlands from fire protection costs and the costs of street lights. The motion was defeated with Councillors Holliday and Wil- liam Gordon voting in favor and Councillors Rudi Maeder and Al Evans voting against. The town- ship bylaws require a negative vote from the reeve in the case of a tie vote. 'Why should the farmers have any special privileges" said Councillor Maeder. Councillor Evans said they should find out first what amount of money is involved. Reeve Smith was in agree- ment with that, "We should get a break-down of the figures,"' he said, A bylaw similar to the one proposed was passed in Whitby Township last year. Councillor Holliday said that land forms the least risk with regards to fire protection. He said barns and other buildings were not to be included in the motion. Councillor Gordon said he agreed with Mr. Holliday, but poinied out that all the grass fires last year cost the township a lot of money. Witness Weeps Describing Knife-Slaying TORONTO (CP)--Mrs. Mary Harting, 26, an_ attractive mother of three and a former London, Ont., dance band singer, on trial for manslaugh- ter in the Sept. 17 knife-slaying of the man with whom she lived, wept as a witness Monday de- scribed events following the death, Mrs. Elizabeth Anchelson, landlady of the house in which Mrs. Harting occupied a base- ment apartment with her four. year-old son and James Steele, 34, said Mrs. Harting pounded on her door screaming for a doctor. topped only by East Sandwich) * men have settled a new "vil- lage" off-shore from Leam- Windsor, Catches are reported good, but fishermen were Township chief constable Roy Boles to watch for north winds NEW VILLAGE SPRINGS UP ON LAKE ERIE Hundreds of perch fisher- ington, 38 miles southeast of warned today by. Mersea which can move the ice field away from the shore maroon fishermen. ~ --CP Wirephoto Group Fails In Attempt To Unseat BROUGHAM Pickering Township Rural Ratepayers As- sociation tried again Monday night to unseat Township As- t Commissi Delbert F. Goslin. Led by Prof. F. Labrie, the group charged that Goslin is "incompetent, incapable of in- terpreting the Assessment Act, and unwilling to submit to his superiors' authority." After their unsuccessful bid to force Mr. Goslin's resigna- tion, Prof. Labrie promised that a group would bring in a peti- tion at the next council meet- ing calling for the resignation of the assessment commission- er. Councillor Colin Beal spoke out in t of Commissi Goslin. "It is difficult to determine th value of rural land,"' he said "Mr. Goslin is only trying to do his job." Councillor Spang obtained the admission from Councillor Beal that he had not read the As- sessment Act. Councillor Spang indicated that he was in favor of Mr. Goslin resigning. Another ratepayers' group, PP Stephen Jarvie, son of Mr. and Mrs, Gordon Jarvie, Mas son street, was the Oshawa re- presentative at the 42nd Older Boys' Parliament, held during the Christmas holidays at Al- bert College, Belleville. Stephen' gave a report of the pariia- ment at the morning service of worship at Northminster Unit- ed Oburch on Sunday. One hundred and fifteen boys represented as many Ontario constituencies at the pariia- ment. Stephen said in part "I had thought it was a mock gov- ernment but I was wrong. Older Boys' Parliament decides what the groups, associated with the Boys's Work Board, will do dur- ing the next year. The real purpose of the par- liament is to encourage Chris- tian fellowship and discipleship among young people. Unfortun- ately 90 per cent of the offices were filled by acclamation . . This denotes an apathy, with resulting dis-interest in the Boys' Work Board . . . With Scouts, Cubs, Tyro and Hi-C en- titled to register with the Boys' Work Board, only. two groups in Oshawa have done so." Stephen told about a panel discussion concerning the con- ditions in Africa. Chairman of headed by Scarboro Township resident James McCallum, did mot officially appear before council but approached Reeve Sherman Scott before the meet in g. McCallum urged the reeve to try and postpone the date of the court of revision. Council later passed a bylaw changing the court of revision date from Jan. 31 to March 31 Ice In Falls Raises Water Level 39 Feet NIAGARA FALLS Ont. (CP) --A customs shed was swept away and a docks caretaker was forced to evacuate his fam- ily Monday as chunks of ice plunged over Niagara Falls into the frozen river and raised the water level 39.feet above nor- mal, Officials of the Maid of the Mist Steamboat Company Lim- ited estimated damage to their docks, a quarter of a mile downstream from the falls, at $10,000. The buffetting ice swept away a customs shed upstream from the docks, smashed a landing and tore away iron railings. Caretaker Charles Blair, who lives near the docks, evacuated his wife Lola and children Charles, 7, and Carol Lee, 11, when ice and water crept near their house. The two Maid of the Mist boats, hauled into dry dock ear- lier, were not damaged. COMIC CADDY Comedian Bob Hope has been named "Honorary Caddy Mas- ter" of Ha-Ho, an international golfing fraternity in England which donates its proceeds to charity. .|The common meats are fish, chief consultant to the clerk in the provincial and federal gov- ernments, Panel members in- eluded: Harvey Putnam, of Belleville, who has visited Af- rica many times ;David Pan- paplu, of Ghana, a first-year student at the University of To- ronto; Fenehas Machawa, of Kenya, a second-year student at McMaster University; Dun- can Wido Oooko, representing Kenya at the parliament; Paul Wilson, Speaker of the House, who, with nine other university students, went to Africa last summer to assist in building a school. From this panel, it was learn- ed that Africa has modern, spa- cious cities with wide paved roads, few automobiles, street cars and modern homes, The majority of Africans are fairly well-fed but their diet lacks pro- tein and body-building nutrients, donkey and monkey meat. Af- rica's greatest need is educa- tion. Although African people are ignorant and superstitious, many have been won over by missionaries, because the mis- sionaries have brought them education and services such as Delegate Presents Report On Older Boys Parliament Africa, but in a city of 23,000 there is only one doctor. Russia seems to be the only country trying to do something about the situation, Along with Russia's help goes communism, During the sessions, many bills were discussed, One im- portant one read as follows: "WHEREAS each Christian faces war or the threat of war in the current situation of the world, and WHEREAS we find that (a) Christ asks us to love all men with a love that harms no man; (b) God loves ail men and places an infinite value on each person, BE IT THEREFORE RE- SOLVED THAT (1) We will not participate in war or prepara- tion for war until we have stud- ied Christ's teaching on war and on meeting evil and until we have studied and considered its relevance." After much heated discussion, the whole bill was defeated. While each mem- ber held with the commandment "Thou shalt not kill" yet it was felt that a Christian must be willing to fight for his faith. One bill which was passed was a resolution that each member of the parliament save one dol- doctors, nurses, agriculturailists, the panel was Lioyd Perry, and 'scientists give. Ghana is lar a month for the of support a child in Hong Kong TORONTO (CP)--Indians who have left reservations and are living in "filth and degreda- tion" in tar-paper shacks on the fringes of. towns may not yet be ready for housing assistance, the Ontario Housing Advisory Committee has been told. "It is taking a long time to bring some of these stone age Indians up to the 20th century viewpoint--not that perhaps the 20th century is without blame in this situation," Thomas Kel- lett, an official of the commit- tee, a branch of the Ontario economics and development de- partment, said Monday. The committee made no deci- sion on the Indian housing situ- ation, but recommended an in- vestigation into the housing problems of immigrants and urged legislation which would permit municipalities to pass anti-blight bylaws. Mr. Kellett said the living conditions of' Indians on the fringes of Red Lake, Horne- payne and Sioux Lookout in Northern Ontario were beyond description. QUESTIONS IF READY He said his department had planned to institute a co-opera- tive scheme that would provide 10 small units for Indians in the Red Lake area, but. now seemed to stick to the job bet- ter" with houses on the fringe of the community. Eventually, all the Indians had to be evicted for failing to pay rent and lack of maintenance on the houses. He said he and representa- tives of the federal Indian af- fairs branch and the Co-opera- tive Union of Ontario will visit Northern Ontario again in Feb- -- to reappraise the situa- on. HEARS REPORT The committee proposed a thorough investigation of the housing problems of immigrants after it heard a report from Rev. Joseph Carraro of St. Helen's Roman Catholic Church the most developed country injand one in Viet Nam. Indians Said Not Prepared For Aid Whitby Ri In Finals -- PETERBOROUGH Five rinks -- only one from Peter- finals of the Canada Packers, Adams, Dominion Tire Stores men's open curling bonspiel Curling Club. In third position was Ra' Risebrough's "4 Whitby, made up of Bill Sori- chetti, lead; Al Morrison, sec- ond and Roy Howe, vice. They had 29 points from three wins, gram of the host club 10-6 in the first match, outlasted Ned Williams of the PCC 7-6 and Don Lewis of Avonelea 12-5 in the other game. Toronto. He said the high price of housing and mortgages forced 148 families, totalling 651 peo- ple, to cram into 76 downtown Toronto houses. One family of seven paid $140 a month in mortgage payments, taxes and services and had only about 50 cents a person a day to spend on food. MUCH SCOTCH There are some 5,000 differ- ent blends of Scotch whisky pro- duced to meet_an ever-increas- ing world demand. Ausus-G CARPET questions '"'whether the Indians of Red Lake are ready for this assistance," He said a recent attempt to provide Red Lake Indians with good homes failed. I A mining company had pro- vided eight Indians "who The haul included $25,000 worth of cheques and $3,500 ir cashed tote itckets. | 1} | CLEANERS and LAUNDERERS OSHAWA ~ PORT HOPE WHITBY - COBOURG BOWMANVILLE - SCARBORO Curtains, Drapes, Blankets, Rugs OSHAWA'S ONLY UNIONIZED SHOP 723-4631 50 MILL seavict ! | H] Hi | OSHAWA'S ORIGINAL CARPET CENTRE | at Nu-Way, carpet and broad- loom has been a specialty for ! 18 years . . . with thousands | of yards on display to select | from, PHONE 728-4681 NU-WAY RUG CO. LTD. 174 MARY ST. ALBERT OBEY THE TR IT COULD SAVE YOUR LIFE. NOTICE Vehicles Southbound On STREET are now required to STOP AT ATHOL STREET EAST AFFIC SIGNS. ALD. J. G. BRADY, Chairman, Traffic Committee, City of Oshewe. | POT ROAST Tender EAT'N TRUE- TRIM BEEF ( 12 KING E, -- 723-3633 Meal Specials! WED. & THURS. | BONELESS RUMP ROAST BONELESS ROUND STEAK ROAST LB. 8 Steaks T-BONE WING BONELESS .4 _* in . Ree ae pose a borough -- advanced into the : Saturday at the Peterborough quaftet from ~» Risebrough defeated Al In- * '

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