Oshawa Times (1958-), 27 Feb 1963, p. 3

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AT NDP COMMITTEE ROOM for Ontario riding in the April 8 Federal election. Miss Hall was nominated as Party stan- dard-bearer in the riding at a meeting last Monday night in the R. S. McLaughlin Colle- giate and Vocational Institute Mrs. Christine Thomas, on left, former mayor of Oshawa, presents the key to the recent- ly-opened New Democratic Party Committee rooms, 92 Simcoe street north, to Miss Aileen Hall, NDP candidate CAPSULE NEWS Roasted Whale On Show Menu TORONTO (CP) -- Shark(nival prank. 'Ihe 'association m iGovernor J. 4 |who retires March 1, was pre- steaks, roast whale, mooseburg- ers and duckballs will be on the menu at the Canadian Na- tional Sportsmen's Show this year. A "camp chef kitchen' was announced Tuesday by offi- cials in which housewives can learn how to prepare delicacies; that their husbands bring home after a hard day's hunting. GIVEN PAINTING 'TORONTO (CP)--Lieutenant- Eeiller Mackay, sented an oil painting of Queen f |Elizabeth as a farewell gift at Miss Hall made her debut in politics last June as an NDP candidate and polled the high- est vote ever recorded by a CCF or NDP candidate in the riding. --Oshawa Times Photo Uxbridge PUC Well Balanced Uxbridge Public Utilities has|to town council in 1925 and a well-balanced, capable Com-|served as mayor in 1937 and mission. Two of the three mem- bers of Uxbridge PUC have served on the town council and ur the chairman, John "Jack" Low/in that position in 1936. is a former mayor and county; A well-known furniture store warden. joperator and funeral director for Uxbridge this year, for the|40 years, Jack Low carried on| first time in its history has ajthé tradition started by his lady mayor, Mrs. Nellie Kydd, grandfather and continued by) at the municipal helm. Mrs.|his father. Four generations of Kydd is one of the few lady|the Low family have operated) chief magistrates in the prov-|this business in Uxbridge span-| ince. She is a former school/"ing more than 100 years be- teacher, and therefore, is no|Cause Jack Low's son, William, novice in directing and keeping|"0W Is in charge of the family| affairs running smoothly. Gane at te bore cred The nig ag soya pet TS he also owned Uxbridge) ; | pj | peor business man who has|_/2%0 and Organ Company and sami }made caskets. been a merchant in Uxbridge) yo, Tow is a 'native of Ux- Or Seat |bridge and after his retirement| |from the family business he ey --_ So rg ong RE in| chased a golf course on Reach} the old red school house, SS No.|Road which he operates in the| 5, and at Uxbridge High School.|spring, summer and fall. He is Then she attended Toronto Nor-|a charter president of the Ux- mal School from where she|bridge Kinsmen Club and is graduated and taught school for| greatly interested in the public a few years in Lloydtown and in| affairs of "the friendly town". a stag dinner Tuesday night at- tended by members of the leg- islature. The painting, by Cana- dian artist Edwin McCormick, was presented by Premier John Robarts. It depicts the queen in uniform as colonel-in-chief of the Canadian Guards, BREAKS DUCK LIMIT PRESCOTT (CP)--A Brock- ville man was remanded to March 6 for sentence after pleading guilty Tuesday to hav- ing possession of more wild ducks than regulations allow. Police said they found 59 frozen ducks hanging in a barn owned by William Fulford Hyslop, 34. The limit is 14. Talks Continue Between UAWA Locals, Firm AJAX (Staff) -- Strike set- tlemen | talks between two |1938 and also in 1953 and 1954.|UAWA locals and L. A. Young) He was the youngest Warden of|Sprsig and Wire Corp. officials) Ontario County when he served! are continuing today in Toronto.|have to spend more than $200,- The talks began at midninght. Earlier in the day, Canadian Auto Trim _ representatives (Ajax) met with the Ajax local 1090 in the Hotel Genosha. -- Canadian Auto Trim is a sis- ter company of L. A, Young Spring and Wire, Windsor. Workers at both plants struck last Wednesday. A 'spokesman for the 300- member Ajax local said today that pickets are still on duty at the Ajax plant. A Chrysler of Canada spokes- man said Tuesday the company will not have to interrupt its production of 'cars if the strikes continue, The two firms hit by the strikes supply the four major auto industries with cotton pads, seat and door covers and springs. / The Chrysler spokesman did not name the source of seat springs that has apparently been located. Cannington. After her marriage, Toronto with -her RS CRC who was| a general contractor. In 1932) N th. they returned to their home| or ern area and farmed in Uxbridge) Township. Mr. Kydd retired) from farming 10 years ago and) their son George, took over the farm. Mayor Kydd and her hus-| band are proud grandparents} NEW YORK (CP) -- For the, with two grand children. jdast couple of years tishermen| Although Mrs, Kydd has been|in search of record - smashing) away from the teaching profes-| brook trout have found a new) sion for a number of years she|land of promise in nor'hern| is still interested in the welfare| Quebec. It's looking more prom-| of young people. She was one of|ising all the time. those - public-spirited citizens of| Its boundaries can be fairly Uxbridge who were responsible) we]] defined. Start at Chibouga- for increasing interest in the) mau, a mining centre about 350 arena and getting hockey teams) miles north of Montreal. Take organized in the town. Uxbridge|in such lakes as Assinica, Mis- has the distinction of having|tassini, Albanel. Swing north-| three championship hockey| west to James Bay and its tri- teams last year and much credit butary rivers such as the Ru- is given to Mayor Nellie Kydd) pert, Broadback, Eastmain and and other supporters for the en | Nemiscau. couragement they have Ppro-| Fish from these waters have vided. dominated the brook trout di-| |vision of Field and Stream ma- FIFTH YEAR "Tac Sie./gazine's annual fishing contest Commissioner L. "Les" Sie- tor the lait two Years grist is serving his fifth year as| '°° bale Aumesdet member of Uxbridge Public} The authoritative outdoor ma- Utilities Commission. He came|gazine, which compiles world to Uxbridge in 1931 and started|fresh - water records, releases a variety store; then opened ajresults of the 1962 contest in its second variety store in Oakville|March issue. in 1932, operating both stores but) Northern Quebec waters came! living in Oakville for 20 years.| through with their best perform.| However, Les Siegrist has al-jance to date. Three brookies ways been keenly interested in| above 10 pounds were recorded. Uxbridge and returned to the| The biggest, 11% pounds, was community in 1954 and has lived aught by Edward H. Hall of in Uxbridge since then. A native Fitchburg, Mass., last Aug. 28 of Wiarton, Mr. Siegrist Te-\in the Broadback. He used an ceived his early education there,/Qryjs Norwegian lure on an and moved to London, where he) gight-pound-test line. joined the £. W. Woolworth Company working for that firm| CLOSE TO RECORD for two years. After gaining) Hall's fish was big enough to much valuable experience, hejindicate the brook trout record managed several variety stores|which has,stood almost 50 years in different communities in On-|may no longer be secure. The tario. Today, his son, Tom, is ajall-time champ, 14% pounds, partner in the variety store busi-|came from Northwestern Onta- ness with him. |rio's- Nipigon River in 1914, Les Siegrist is active in com-| Other Quebec giants in the munity affairs. He is a member/open division were 1014 pounds, of the Kiwanis Club and former|caught by George V. McKinney president. He is also active in|of Spencerport, N.Y., in the Ru- the Hospital Board and in the|pert; 10 Ib. 3 0z., John McAdam, Red Cross Branch in Uxbridge. \Chibougamau; Nemiscau River; Chairman Jack -Lew has\and 9 lb. 9 oz., B. Brier, Dear- served on the Commission for ajborn, Mich., Assinica Lake. | total of 22 years. He was elected| Three 814-pounders vied for! honors in the fly-casting divi- sion. The anglers were Stanley PICTURE CAPTION |Karboski, Parish, N.Y., Mistas-| In the Business Review andjcini Lake: Donal C. O'Brien, | Forecast edition published this| New Canaan, Conn., Assinica! week by the Oshawa Times ititake: and George H. Sator,| wil erroneously stated that Mr.!Cieveland, .Broadback River. + tocar Mes pe $ McLeughbn| While the brook trout record and some members of GM's 50-|femained intact, the old mark} yearClub. The name should Quebec Fishing Heaven was broken for its northern cousin, the Arctic char. Lloyd V. McKinney 'of Spring- field, Mo., pulled a 24-pounder from Tree River which flows into Coronation Gulf northeast of Great Bear Lake in the Northwest Territories. It topped the old mark of 19 lb. 15 0z., caught by E. T. Asselin in Que. bec's Finger Lake in 1959, |NEAR MUSKIE MARK Three others of 16 pounds and| the Tree and) were prize winners in the open) up came from division. They included one of 16 lb. 7 oz, caught by Jim Far- rell of Winnipeg and an 18%4- pounder that fell to Myron Ol- son of Hay River, N.W.T. No other records were bro- ken but Leonard Hartman of Ogdensburg, N.Y., kept ham. mering away at the muskie mark of 69 lb. 15 oz. set in the Thousand Islands area of the St. Lawrence River in 1959. Hartman, also fighting the St. Lawrence, got four muskies into the 1962 rankings. Biggest was a 65-pounder. His smallest was 31 lb. 10 0z., caught on a fly rod. For Atlantic salmon northern New Brunswick's Restigouche River, always a hot spot, pro- duced the champ -- a 32 pounder to John L. Baxter of Brunswick, Me, Quebec's St. Jean River, on the St. Lawrence north shore about 450 miles northeast of Quebec City, came through with second and third places -- 28% pounds to Edith C and 28 pounds to Emile H. Cummings of Lake Forest, Ill. Top steelhead--rainbow trout which migrate to salt water-- was a 33-pounder caught in - ford of Brantford, Ont., won Munson of} |\Washington, D.C., | PROTEST DELAY : QUEBEC (CP)--Laval Uni- versity students have decided they will picket the provincial \legislature 24 hours a day un- less they 'get the second pay-| ments of their provincial gov- jernment bursaries by midnight, Feb, 28. JETS COME HIGH MONTREAL (CP)--TCA may }000,000 to replace its Viscounts and Vanguards in the late |1960's, air line officials said |Tuesday, They said TCA plans \to start retiring the turbo-prop jairliners in late 1965 or early 1966 ands is already shopping jaround for medium-range jet jaircraft to replace them. | SNIFFS GLUE, DIES KINTERSVILLE, Pa. (AP)-- An 18-year-old college student jfound dead in this eastern |Pennsylvania town last Thurs- day apparently died after sniff- jing the fumes from airplane glue, the office of the county coroner said Tuesday night. A spokesman for the office of Dr. Charles Kachel said the death of John Ponce Fenley resulted from accidental suffocation. REDS WIN, NATURALLY VIENNA, Austria (Reuters)-- Candidates approved by the Communist party received 98.9 per cent of the total vote in last Sunday's Hungarian elec- tions, the Hungarian news agency MTI announced Tues- day. Out of a total of 6,915,644 voters, 6,813,058 voted for the single list of candidates put for- ward by. the Communist-con- trolled Patriotic People's Front. MUSICIAN SENTENCED LONDON (Reuters)--United States jazz trumpeter Chesney (Chet) Baker, 33, was sen-| tenced Tuesday to a month's imprisonment and rec- ommended for deportation on dope charges. Baker denied the! charges of procuring heroin and} cocaine without authority and making a false statement to a doctor to obtain prescriptions for the drugs, SENTENCE TWO TAIPEI, Formosa (Reuters) A local court Tuesday sen- jtenced two men to death and |two others do life imprisonment for the murder of Lt.-Col. Tom 1. Glover of Texas. Glover, 51, |was murdered last October at his residence at Taipei. | STUDENTS APOLOGIZE | QUEBEC (CP)--The Laval University . Students' Associa- tion has offered its apologies jto four radio stations raided by | Laval students as a winter car- 33-pounder from the Kispiox River which flows into the Skeena at Hazelton, B.C. Ontario's Great Lakes tribu- jtaries continued to gain prom. inence in the open division for eastern rainbow trout. Gar Bed- with a lunker of 15 Ib. 12 oz. from Big Creek, which flows into Lake Erie south of his hometown, while John Allen of |Owen Sound, Ont., caught one of 15 lb. 5 oz. in Owen Sound: Bay. Lee Straight of Vancouver took the fly . casting prize for western rainbows with a 1014. pounder from Takla Lake, 150 jmiles northwest of Prince George, B.C. The open division was dominated, as usual, » by said letters: of apology will be sent shortly, along with an offer to pay indemnities, 'o radio sta- tions CHRC, CKCV, CJLR and CJQC. No material damages oc- curred when the students, .in bands of about 20, simultane- ously descended on the stations two weeks ago and broadcast news about the carnival. | PRINTS RATION BOOKS LONDON (Reujers) -- Ration) ooks for use in Ya war emer- gency" are being} printed and stored at a cost off $672,000, the British governme disclosed Monday. ASK INDEPENDENCE ZANZIBAR (Reuters)--Zanzi- bar's two. major political par- ties--the Nationalists and the opposition Afro-Shirazis -- have faced a British official with de- mands for early elections and independence for this British protectorate. Colonial Secretary Duncan Sandys received lead- ers of the parties separately after he arrived on this spice island off the east African coast from Kenya Sunday for a three- day stay. 4 PERSONS KILLED ELISABETHVILLE (Reuters) Four persons were killed Tues- day night in an outbreak of shooting between central gov- ernment troops and Katangans, it was disclosed today. |TO ATTEND INAUGURATION | SANTO DOMINGO, Domini- can Republic (Reuters)--Vice- President Lyndon Johnson and |his wife arrived here by air to- |day to attend the inauguration 'of the Dominican Republic's new president, Juan Bosch. AMNESTY GRANTED ISTANBUL (Reuters)--about 8,000 to 10,000 prisoners are being released throughout Tur- key following parliamentary ap- proval of a general amnesty last week, officials said today, SUFFERS HEART ATTACK WARSAW (AP) -- Foreign Minister Adam Rapacki, 55, au- thor of the Polish plan for nu- clear disengagement in central Europe, has been in a hospital for several days. Diplomatic sources reported today he had suffered a heart attack. The foreign ministry said his condi- tion was not serious. 60 YEARS IN PRISON VIBORG, Sweden (AP) Mozart Lindberg Hansen is get- ting freedom at 82 after spend. ing most of the last 60 years in prison--first as a petty thief and swindler, then as a kidnapper. A district judge today ordered Hansen's release on probation. The kidnapping of a priest in 1938 was the apparently point- less highlight of Hansen's crim- inal career. SUES ACTRESS LOS ANGELES. (AP)--Exotic dancer Beverly Hills sued ex- otic actress France Nuyen Tues- day for $100,000 damages. Miss Hills, in private life Beverly Jean Powers, alleged she re. ceived head injuries in a two. car collision March 20, 1961. Be- sides damages the dancer- model-cover girl asks reim- bursement of hospital expenses and lost earnings. BUBONIC PLAGUE BLANTYRE, Nyasaland (AP) At least 10 pérsons have died in an outbreak of bubonic plague, a~*medical spokesman reported here today. SOPRANO TO REST NEW YORK (AP) -- Renata Tebaldi, Italian soprano star of the Metropolitan Opera, is suf- fering from general fatigue and her doctors have ordered a long rest, Met General Manager Ru- dolf Bing said Tuesday, He said Miss Tebaldi's scheduled ap- pearances will be cancelled for the rest of the New York season and the company's annual spring tour. SEND SATELLITES ALOFT TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP)-- Two more Tiros satellites will be sent aloft this year to help keep an eye on hurricane breed. ing grounds in the northern hemisphere, a federal spokes. man said Tuesday. Robert Ra- dos, project manager of the Tiros project, told a meteorol- ogy meeting at Florida State University that Tiros VII will be launched in the second quar. ter this year and Tiros VIII in the third or fourth quarter. BUY COTTON FABRIC KEY WEST, Fla. (AP)--The Cuban government, which has ordered clothes rationing in the Havana area, will buy more than 70,000,000 yards of cotton fabric from Red China this Washington's Snake River by|Lake Pend Oreille in Idaho) year, Havana radio said today. Homer Scott. A bruiser of 3044|Where the biggest was George | som jpounds came from the Skeena River in northern British Co- lumbia and fell to Robert L. Hack of Kitwanga, B.C. In the fly-casting division the winner was Karl Mausser of Burlingame, Calif.. who took a |L, Weisshaar's 3114-pounder. Other Canadian winners: Northern pike -- 39% pounds caught by James L. Burst, St Louis, Mo., in Saskatchewan's \Black Lake, 500 miles northeast jof Saskatoon. LIST have read "Mr. Cyril Lemon" who was the gentleman stand- ing. **KINDNESS BEYOND PRICE, YET WITHIN REACH OF ALL" GERROW FUNERAL CHAPEL 390 King W. 728-6226 EYE EXAMINATIONS PHONE 723-4191 by oppointment F. R. BLACK, O.D. 136 SIMCOE ST. NORTH NOW! we have the Knowledge Buyers Financing JOHN A, J. BOLAHOOD REAL ESTATE -- MORTGAGES 725-6544, oe ¢ JOHN WILSON SIGNS THE BEST FOR LEAST You will be surprised when you Call for an Estimate 728-5071 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. Actress Born In Vancouver Not Toronto TORONTO (CP) -- Former movie star Ann ° Rutherford came to town to appear on CBC television's Flashback, but she could' have also qualified for I've Got a Secret. Vancouver, not in Toronto as she had claimed for many years, Miss Rutherford, who co- starred for 17 years with Mickey Rooney in the Andy Hardy series jof movies, said in an interview, 'her father's family had come : from Toronto and "I guess I just wanted to identify myself with his family, so for years 1 told everyone I came from Tor- onto," She was born-while her father, the late Metropolitan Opera singer John Ruthérford, lived in Vancouver. The family moved to Los Angeles early in her life and she got her first taste of show business at. the age of 12 when she appeared on a chil- dren's radio program. In movies, she was. playing the part of a prostitute. at the Pride and Prejudice, and The Secret Life of Walter Mitty. Miss Rutherford's last movie was Don Juan in 1948 with Hr- |rol Flynn, Then she realized that work was keeping her away from her young daughter and quit. Now she stays close to her home in Beverly Hills, husband William Dozier, a vice-president of Screen Gems, two daughters and six dogs. "I also paint," "quite badly." India Students Combat Red Youth Unions By RUKMINI DEVI Canadian Press Correspondent BOMBAY (CP) -- Indian stu she said, Her secret: She was born in| ; age of 14 and went on to such]? films as Gone With the Wind,| , Nowadays solving riddles, jingles and rhymes wins around- the-werld cruises, groceries for a-year and sleek automobiles every day for the common |folks who couldn't afford them in 10 years otherwise. The story about the happy contest winner is not too unusual any- more, But if it happens to you, then it is that once-in-a-lifetime fairy- tale-come-true that makes you the hero of the street in which you live. That is what happened to Mr. |dents no longer are easy grist \for the Communist propaganda trouble all over the country. University elections in many areas show that Communist and pro - Communist office - holders are being steadily ejected from key positions, A survey of student politics in the state of Kerala, once a Communist stronghold, dis- closed that more than 75 per __}cent of union positions now are held by non-Communists. Ker- ala was ruled by the Commu- nist party for 28 months in 1957-59. keep a watch on pro-Communist and pro-Chinese elements. FIGHT MAO Communist students have adopted a résolution that: "'Hon- est patriots are being witch- hunted." "Give China and her agents a bloody nose!" says a giant poster in Delhi University. An- other announces: 'Youth is ready to fight Mao and his minions." Girl students of Rajasthan colleges are spending their holi- days telling illiterate rural peo- Ple about the: 'Himalayan perfidy of Red China." A group of six Jaipur girls |nas been travelling by bullock- cart on what they describe as a "mission of political aware- ness." mill, Red youth unions are' in| Red fortunes are no brighter in Calcutta, where highly emo- tional Bengali students, always @ problem to university author- ities» have organized "vigilance brigades" against pro-Commu- nist sympathizers.. Committees have been formed in colleges to and Mrs. Robert A. Beharrell, of 531 Coleridge street, just re- jturned from a one-week trip to | Nassau they won by solving the |Fix-the-Mixup contest sponsor- led by The Oshawa Times. They are mot in the least blase about it. "It was the first real air- plane trip for us and the first time we left the kids for more than two days," said Mrs. Beharrell. "It was beautiful," said Mr. Beharrell, a clerk at Dunlop Canada Limited. The Beharrells enjoyed. the trip from the moment their plane circled over the small Car Smashes would win," gest laugh," terjected. the four rell's mother, Win Trip To Nassau island for a landing, throughout five days of tours, seeing the world's only dancing flamingos, exploring idyllic corners of the island, being pampered friendly hotel staff and taking in the sun, right up to the mo- ment their plane dumped them back in the cold at Malton Air- port Sunday, Feb. 16. Mr. Beharrell is now prob- ably known on Nassau as the man who introduced the "Osh- awa Foxtrot' to the island. "There was a contest during a dance," Mrs, Beharrell said, "where you could demonstrate a certain dance, Who was best "It was just who was the big- Mr. Beharrell in- He chose to demonstrate a foxtrot and wound up doing a not so tame jitterbug. The feat won him a bottle of champagne, While their parents were splashing in the blue Atlantic, young Beharrells, Elliott, 15, Michael, annen, 8, ad David, 4, were be- ing looked after by Mrs. Behar- By now they know just as much about the trip as their parents, thanks to four dozen colored slides taken by Mr. Beharrell. Although Mrs, Beharrel] claims she gained five pounds from lavish hotel meals, this was no calamity, because she lost seven pounds worrying dur- 10, Suz- Hindu Scholar" Dies At 137 Years Of Age BOMBAY (CP) -- A Hindu scholar and globetrotter who became a monk when he was 100 and lived for another 37 years has just died in Nepal, a ae kingdom adjoining® © ' Baba (Saintly Old Man) Shiv- puri was described in the In dian press as "the oldest man living in the Himalayas." Some of his devotees--he had a mil- lion of them all over Asia and even in Europe and America-- assert that he was more than 150 years old A bachelor, Shivpuri claimed to have hitchhiked around the world as long ago as 1860 when he was 35. "The whole jour." ney," he used to say, "cost me only 200 rupees (about $50,'") An illiterate until he was 25, he mastered a dozen Indian and an equal number of foreign lan- guages, including English, French, German and Chinese, In 1926, when he had lived @ century, he announced he wags "pained and disgusted" with the foibles of mankind and re- tired to a cave in the Himer layan Mountains. CELEBRATING BIRTHDAYS Congratulations and best wishes to the following resi- dents of Oshawa and district Window A car smashed through the window of the General Motors paint shop at Mary and William streets, Tuesday, causing a ing the preparation of the trip. They admit they just were not equipped for this sort of thing. But the whole neighborhood helped out, and came forth with some extra suitcases, d who are celebrating. their birthdays today: Mrs. Ann Illig, 149 Rox- borough; Darlene Nugent, 324 Oshawa Blvd., South; Phone ~ 723-3474, work stoppage for 30 minutes. |the extra sewing and various other chores that accompany the preliminaries for a journey like this. "We are very grateful to all of them," say the Beharrells, and they don't exclude Mrs, Beharrell's mother, who stay- ed in the cold to rum the house- | The car, driven by Mrs. Clau- jdia Joyce Clark, 305 French |street, collided with a PUC bus jand veered off into the building. [She suffered a cut lip, John Prentice Pendergest, 189 Bloor street east, was the bus driver, Total property damage was estimated at $350. Earlier, a collision between two cars at King street east and Mary street, caused a total of $500 damage. The -- drivers were Sifroid DuPuis, 130 Col- |borne street east and Otto Hil- jler, 14 Rockeliffe street. 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