Oshawa Times (1958-), 10 Aug 1963, p. 2

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Saturday, August 10, 1963 GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN CITIES CAN'T BORROW MUCH MORE Pity the poor Austerity mayor! His is not an easy role, despite loud acclaim from outside Council walls. His trials and tribulations are big enough to test the patience of a saint, let alone a politician. He is the butt for ridicule, He is openly rebuffed on many sides as a crackpot with a hankering for headlines, es- pecially by selfish colleagues who care not a whit for the City's welfare, who constantly put roadblocks in his way. Who else can step on so many official toes in a short period whether it be in City Council, the PUC or Board of Education? His road is beset with frustrations; unless he is made of pretty tough stuff, he must have serious and fre- : rd ; uent misgivings about keep- MAYOR GIFFORD rina Sn The one thing that undoubtedly keeps him going in these dark hours is the secure knowledge that, although surrounded by many skeptics, un-civic minded adversaries and others of that backward ilk, he has the overwhelming support of the ma- jority of the electorate; all he can do is keep on and hope that enough of his colleagues will eventually see it his way and thus permit him to implement the program he has in mind. There was a reminder of this Wednesday in Toronto when Lorne R. Cumming, deputy minister of Municipal Affairs for Gntario, uttered a few blunt words on municipal spending that oust have brought joy to Mr. Gifford's. heart if not to some of his free-spending associates in Oshawa's municipal world. o ROR: tenemmenienas ! Ontario municipalities will Have-w «a. = SKY te raise taxes or cut costs The limits have nearly been reached on the amounts mun- icipalities can borrow or can expect as subsidies from senior jevels of goverrment, Ontario's municipalities spent $960,000,000 last year, nearly three 'times the 1953 figure and almost equal to the budget of the entire provincial government Mr, Cumming urged service-minded citizens to support can- didates for municipal office who will bring a halt to the ex- pansion of non-essential! municipal services IN THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF POLITICS "City aldermen in my home city of Eastbourne, England, are elected for six-year terms. They are rarely defeated. They either retire or die. In Eastbourne now, eight of the 10 City aldermen are Conservatives. The others are Labor'. MRS, KATIE JULIETTE UNDERHAY, CITY COUNCIL- LOR FROM EASTBOURNE, COUNTY OF SUSSEX, ENG- LAND (in a recent Oshawa press interview) (EDITOR'S NOTE:) What's so wotderful about East- bourne? About the only advantage is that their Cduncil has' a six-year term, ours a two; perhaps they have a few more Tories than Oshawa. Where do aldermen enjoy a longer public-life span than in Oshawa, once they gain admittance to the exclusive "12" circle? Its almost like getting a ticket to the Senate, a lif term. Oshawa's electorate immediately forgets about its alder- men after the ballots are counted; like their British counter- parts over in dear old Essex, Oshawa's aldermen are rarely defeated. They either retire or die, or take up missionary work for some political party. The same Council faces. show up year after year like on a@ merry-go-round. This is what happens when the electorate doesn't care too much about municipal politics In fairness to Mrs. Underhay, Oshawa would do. well to emulate Eastbourne's ward system at election time (there are 30 councillors and 10 aldermen for 61,000 population) -- the 30 councillors represent 19 wards, Each ward has three rep- Yesentatives who serve three-year terms. They come up for re-election in rotation so that only one-third of the 30 (one drom each ward) runs in any one year Eastbourne councillors wear tricornes and biue robes The councille ; The saldermen's robes have collars edged avear velvet-edged collars. The mayor and deputy-mayor wear yed robes (those of the deputy a deeper. shade) Wouldn't that make a 4 OTES FROM THE HUSTINGS: The Liberals will soon be faced. with a final decision Ontario Riding (Provincial). Who is to be the party standard- "bearer in the upcoming election, whenever that may be, to _ ge Health Minister Dr. Matthew Dymond, the Port ~Perry member who should be one of the toughest PC's of all to Nopple? The Libs suddenly cancelied a nomination meet last "June and their plans seem to be in a state of flux in Ontario The name of Stanley P. Hollingsworth, head of the 'History Department at Pickering District High School, keeps "cropping up as a possibility. He lives on a farm near Brooklin, n fur rs - picture? N in : ch of Pc eiection Wednesday night at Barrie of John Vivash as presi- alent of Central District of the Young Progressive Concerva- iggest news the week in local circles was the : ve Association of On 'This automatically gives the 32-year-old Oshawa investment broker a seat on the executive of the Ontario YPC, as well as the more senior Ontario Progressive Conservative As- sociation of Ontario... George "Martin, who won favor with "the local PC hierarchy for his -effective promotional work on Tbehalf of the recent Premier "Robaris banquet at the Hotel -Genosha, is running around like mad these days on another PC project the '"'Mike" Starr -- "Doc" Dymond picnic at Greenwood Park next Sat- *urday. KING ST. CLEAN-UP ON SCHEDULE -- CROME E. A. Cote, Deputy Minister of Northern Affairs and Nat- tional Resources, will be guest speaker here, September 23, to mark the official opening of the Canadian Automotive Mu- = seum, 99 Simcoe street south. The Museum has been open for » two weeks. General Manager Douglas Fisher of the Oshawa > C of C, the sponsor, says more than 1,000 visitors (including + 400 non-paying children) have seen the exhibits . . . City En- « gineer Fred Crome returned this week from: a four-week Continental tour. He said he was "well satisfied" with struction progress made to. date on the King sireet clean-up and that work was on schedule. JOHN VIVASH con . ' | LONDON, Ont. (CP)--Church leaders representing 44,000,000) | Anglicans throughout the world) lwere to wind up preliminary) talks here today. before depart.) ing over the weekend fo; the} Anglican. World Congress in| Toronto, | Scheduled to hold their final) discussions were the advisory ended their conference Friday Some of the delegates to the conferences here will be preach. ing in southwestern Ontario churches Snday, One church primate who at- tended talks here will be unable to go on to. Toronto for the cun- gress, |" Most Rev, Alan J, Knight, Archbishop of the West Indies, council on missionary s'rategy : and the Lambeth consultative! was to leave today for his head: ; are arters in Georgetown, British body, both composed of arch-)quat 8 i bishops of the 18 auton mous /GGuiana, because he fears a Anglican Churchmen Ready o World Congress Talks cussions here in Toronto Mon: day, was one of several church leaders who discussed contem- porary affairs in addresses and interviews Friday, Most Rev, Michael Ramsey, the communion's spiritual leader, told London Kiwanians and Rotarians he believes co-ex- istence is possible between Christianity and communism, With co-existence, there was al- ways the chance of a "break- through" such as that achieved by the recent nuclear test ban churches in 75 countries within fresh national strike there with the Anglican Communion, The heads of 48 Anglican col- lleges from all over the wor US. Trade Flow Mostly Smooth | NEW YORK (AP) --. The mainstream of U.S, commerce flowed smoothly this week but there were disturbances in two important tributaries -- Wall Street and world trade, Wall Streeters third and final the U.S. Securities change Commission report on market activity, finding some things they liked and some they considered controversial. And in world trade, the threat of back-and-forth tariff retalia- tion was raised at the same time that debate continued over the problem of 'assuring 'at there is enough money-credit to ying com « He eer enc "business sentiment iwas.. cheered, meanwhile, by the way major indicators keep pointing upward. Also, new assessments sug gest that two domestic prob loms may be easing, The threat of a rail strike Aug. 29 contin Beckwith Mental | Testing Halted CARTHAGE, Miss. (AP) State Circuit Judge 0. H. Bar- nett Friday ordered a perma nent halt to mental tests of By- ron de la Beckwith, accused siayer of Negro civil rights leader Medgar Evers. Judge Barnett also ruled that Beckwith sould be returned to jail at Jackson and held for tna. Evers was shot to death in the yard of his Jackson home ast June 12. Beckwith was ar- rested 10 days later and charged. The sanity hearing had been asked by Hinds County. District Attorney. Bill. Waller, Beck- with's defence lawyers opposed it i installment of and Ex- . Buddhist Leaders *. Call Off Suicide SAIGON (Reuters) -- Budd- hist leaders what would have been South Viet Nam's third recent public suicide by burning, saying they feared it would touch off a wave of similar suicides The suicide attempt northern city of Hue planned by a young student as a further protest by the Budd- hists against alleged religious discrimination by the country's Roman Catholic Ngo family Instead, the Buddhist ent a strongly-worded letter tc President Ngo Dinh Diem at tacking his sister-in-law, Mrs Ngo Dinn Ne meddlin with affairs of state Observers said the politica powerful Mrs. Nhu a pnt wished to take a tough stand égainst the Buddhists while the president wanted - peaceful hahon the n was for y con WEATHER FORECAST id'bury, who wi received the) cancelled Friday rj leaders ! agreement. Seminaries in the West must relate their teachings to the iscience and technology of con- temporary society, Very Rev. Charles Harris, episcopalian president of the Seabury West- ern Theological Seminary, Ev- anston, Ill, said in an jnter- view, In the East; he continued, it must be related to the culture of the Asians and Africans, It was no longer possible to util- ize a Western approach, a for- eign Janguage and style of wor- ifurther violence. The Archbishop of Canter- It outline the dis: ues, but meetings by union leaders. over contract proposals lare sited for Tuesday and derstanding between it and the country's Buddhists, who make up the majority of the popula- tion, The Buddhists say the govern- ment is infringing on their re- ligious rights. The delegate, Professor Paul Kenzo Sakai, who teaches Eng- lish at Kyoto, noted that in his country Christians are shunned, although "treated kindly," by non-Christians. For most of the 100 delegates attending the conference here, the gathering was almost like an old school reunion, At least half of them attended Oxford or Cambridge, while many others went to St, Augustine's College Canterbury. The colleges grad uates plan to hold a real reunion in Toronto Sunday. Group Seeks Location Of some drew hope that a hold-off plan could emerge, Also, though steel production continued to fall, encouragement grew that this decline will be reversed ship, A Japanese ay degate io the congress in Toronto :aid 150 Christians and Buddhists are preparing an appeal to the gov- soon to meet construction and) ernment of South Viet Nam call-|soufces Minister Macaulay that) Duke fall Bator Sane: ing for an end.to the ret.gious CONTENT WELCOMED unrest there, : The SEC report on the stock The peace committee will rt market didn't cause a big ini.| ition the government, Bday tial stir. Wall streeters we]. Composed of omen Catholic comed its comments that there/(Or_more: co-qperalon and un. was apparently no manipula-| leon or illegal activity in the big) Imarket break of May, 1962.) Still, some frowned at the idea . | Chlorine Gas lof tighter control of mutual S d 530 [tunds and.at.tte closer super.) ETIGS To Hospitals International trade Ctveies| PHILADELPHIA AP) were set abuzz by the U.S, an Dense clouds of chlorine gas nouncement that it would. retal- iate against' Eurepean Com- 8 escaping: through a broken pipe from a. railroad tank car bil, mon Market jmports if the mar- poul.!) ket persists in its refusal ower levies against U.S try ce ee hee hard lowed through a heavily popu: ne by the United States mi ht| a oa prace pidge op Act neha 4 : ° S\delphia Friday. sending more shake ioose =concessions rom than 350 persons to hospitals the Common Market, Many oth:/There were an tating es eare yever | Ww wuld abet Deis sca TAY DATSon), seine verte i Parone : and screaming because oj the The © searing fumes, tried to flee on ne payments foot and were overcome, Some question, meanwhile, drew the of those stricken were unpro- attention. of four leading inter-jtected firemen and policemen national bankers. They lauded|who went into the area on existing world systems for keep-|mercy missions ing money and credit available.| Police said the chlorine But they said that the United) stored in liquid form in the tank States must remedy jts balance/car. started escaping when a of payments deficit or run the pipe broke risk of long-term, widespread) The car. a Pennsylvania Rail consequences road tanker, apparently was Domestic busine $s, mean-/rammed by another car, Inves while, continues to reflect thetigators said : Siow cast by the automotive in- 'The leaking chlorine turned to dustry even as it shuts down for a thick, yellow as, Heavier model changeover, New reports than air, it was nudged through list sales of new cars in July the neighborhood by a 19-mile- at 603,000, against 511,700 a/an-hour wind : year previous and close to the! The incident marked the sec- all ~ time Jul 000 set in 1955, Construction outlays for July|A leaking chlorine valve in a continued at June's high level/Reading swimming pool sick for a seven month total ofjened 59 bathers July 26. $34,800,000,000. That's 4 per cent higher than the same 1962 pe- FELLED RESCUERS od Consumers balance of boosted their in. Police tried to enter the stricken stallment debt in June against/@tea in Philadelphia, many fell/resolution calling for an arms/weapons designed to repel by amo crease same if their tracks the The leak started p.m. at the Wonder Company. The owner, Lanza, 50, was in his almost exactly the $433,000,000 as in May in- about 1:35 Arnold of. ice SALES INCREASE Earnings and sales figures;when he smelled the escaping| that have little or nothing to do are for external defence. But it!9o9, has asked that his Israeli continue to disclose many rec.'gas ords. Sears, Roebuck and Co "I grabbed a mask I keep just sted a 14:8 per cent rise in/for such emergencies, called in the first half of a to-/for my 15. men to leave. the more than $250,000,000 pliant and ran outside.' he high counted +s atest} Lanza said he saw that a one weekly production figures werelinch copper pipe connecting the owest for a non holiday|car and a vat had snapped at erio d since November atiboth ends. The chlorine was 1,782,000 tons, off 4 per cent./spilling onto the tank car. over However, trade sources say anithe rack and into the upturn should come soon as/which akes laundry buyers deplete stocks they had/and detergents built up 'against a strike that Shouting warnings Ss fidn't come bied up an embankment turned off the valve Residents poured from build including mothers carry SUM industry s ble 'ACh he am and Partly Cloudy Cool Weather Forecasts. by } weather office at 5 a.n Synopsis: Cool weather pected to iday but afternoon tempr ishould be only a few deg tbelow normal. Sunny skies w jcover Southern and central On jtario today, Some cloudines: will spread through Northern Ontario and some of this will reach Southern Sunday, Lake persist through i rature ees cloud Be On air, Lake Lake Huron, Niagara, Lake tario, Georgian Bay, Halibur ton regions, Windsor, London Hamilton, Toronto, North Bay Sudbury: Partly cloudy Sunday and continuing cool. Winds light tonight and Sunday Timagami, Alzoma, River regions, Sault Ste. Ma rie: Mainly cloudy this. after noon. Few scattered light show : White Toronta,<¢ Ontlane ¢ ng for 'Trying babies and searching children at play The fumes moved nearby swimming burned us like' fire," lithe girl When nie water over a ge fs one poo said jumped hurt we the vorse,"" Hospital soon it even emergency room oudy Were overflowing Abou admitted pokeoman iltered { pain vod continuing d cool Winds Few light 70 persons A hospital the ga ne callers showers were Foretast Temperatures Low tonight, high Sunday St a) " ny 45 " 43 vietim hor S of breath sore throat SHORGAS HEATING & APPLIANCES Industrial and Commercial che anal Thoma London , ; Kitchener 7h , 3 Toronto Peterborough Trenton Killaloe Muskoka North Ba Sudbury The established, setiable Gas Deates tw your area 31 CELINA ST. iCorme: at Athal 728-9441 ; ; ; ' , 7 Earito aa Sauit Ma' Kapuskasing White R Moosonce Ste " 6x ' > 44 , 62 45 ers late today and tonight. Con tinuing: cool. Sunday = mainly sunny. Winds light Cochrane erion - Partly WE MOVED ! Bo you know where BAGOT ST. 13? Right . ' Across from the port office, {just Nerth of the P.U.C. We hove lerger, more efficient quorters there, 20 we con serve you better HARRY MILLEN Reel Estote 728.1679 ROY WHITTINGTON RADIO & TELEVISION 3S Bond St. W. Oshawe Wilt BE CLOSED FOR VACATION AUG. 5 to AUG. 10 Reopening Aug. 12 CONTACT LENSES CONSULTATION by APPQINTMENT Payment pian thal period. PHONE 723-4191 F. R. BLACK 0.D. 136 SIMCOE ST. NORTH udes one month | demesne aN ct TORONTO (CP) -- A two-man! delegation from Owen Sound) /Thursday asked Ontario Re- jthe newly proposed $500,000,000 nuclear vower plant be estab-| lished between Meaford and jOwen Sound, It was the first delegation to meet with Mr, Macaulay since he announced Wednesday that! work on the provincial will start this fall, No site has been selected Bill Forsyth, former mayor jof Owen Sound, and Burke jWalsh,; the two men who 'ormed the delegation, told Mr Macauley construction of the nuciear plant would mean a jpayroll of about $8,000,000 a \year for six years The minister said he could not give the delegation a defi- nite answer, He said the site jchosen will have to suit partic- jular plant requirements--plenty of water and good bedrock con- ditions The Ontario department of economic development, Ontario |Hydro and Atomic Energy of | Canada Limited are expected to) piay a part in reaching the final decision of location INTERPRETING THE NEWS Nuclear Plant ' plant) SON . SY Queen Elizabeth and the Wales, to the town hall. The Queen wears a coat and a of Edinburgh smile Royal couple later attended dress of pale turquoise silk broadly as they are driven the Royal National Eisteddfod with matching turban hat. from the station at Llandudno, of Wales in Llandudno, The --(CP. Wirephoto) NDP Confrence Holds Victory For Quebec REGINA (CP) -- The New!whether the convention's ef-jparently was a victory, They Democratic Party has provided|forts mean a leftward move for went away satisfied that the its interim answer to Quebec's|{he party, At times delegates party is committed to guaran- aspirations and spelled out in|Complained that some proposed|tee French-Canadians the right voluminous detail the political,|™easures imported -- socialist|to be educated in their own lan- social. and eco omic. ideas|'hinking into a program which) guage and to be able to use it in around which the new political/!@d_ been intended to group|courts and legislatures any- party was launched two years farmer, labor and the liberally-;where in Canada, ago. : minded on the mildly Socialist! The party also is committed i _|base of the CCF party. to a review of the Canadian con- as pe Proc op bo Fane QUEBEC MAKES GAINS stitution, party "whieh concluded Friday For Quebec members, it ap-| Several changes were made wrote into a single document in the party's constitution to the principles and objectives Specify the autonomous status which were only sketched at its of provincial affiliates, particu- ? larly Quebec. 1961 founding convention The statement Discussion still goes on as to Blaze In Gas Well a ioe and objectives carried forward FORT ST. JOHN, B.C. (CP)\an old CCF principle--produc- Red Adair, famed oil well fire-|tion for use and not for profit-- fighter, tamed a killer-blaze 65 and appeared to make no radi- | Red Adair Quells of principles U.K. S. African ' Policy Teeters | By DOUG MARSHALL | Canadian Press Staff Writer Is a helicopter an offensive or balancing act with South Af- rica, Sir Patrick Dean, Britain's United Nations representative, says Britain finds South Africa's) When 'unmasked firemen and apartheid "repugnant." Yet he) workers, abstained from .voling on a embargo on the republic. This equivocal attitude, which Chemical liberal circles in England find/ing constant embarrassment,' is on four considerations a jbased with South Africa's racial--poli- cies First, there the strategic geographical. position of Simonstown naval base, a vital link in the Commonwealth de- fence program and one of the keys to British power in the Indian Ocean Second, . there sibility to. the protectorates of is is the respon- three -British Bechuanaland, | vant 1 row q ; | plant, Swaziland and Basutoland--the|® Srowing body of opinion in latter two. virtual islands of} British justice 'in. an ocean of harsh racial. discrimination which is South Afrea TIED BY HISTORY Then there is the long histor can connection between Britons and English-speaking South Af ricans and finally the of the British investment the republic it this opponents sive in last argument that of apartheid, or ra ial' separation, find difficult to} ix | cancer the) miles northeast of here Friday./cal- departures from the found- | Adair, 47, of Houston, Tex.,)ing convention, brought a fire feeding on 250,-| Heavy emphasis. was 000 cubic feet of natural gas a social and economic planning cay under control. Thirty min-| aimed at equate economic jutes after he extinguished the growth, fairer income distribu- jflames with mud and water he'tion, social security and employ- ivapped the well, ment, : Natural gas began leaking On: foreign policy, the party swallow. If there is so much from the well Wednesday andire-affirmed its anti - nuclear British money in South Africa| Without warning ignited. The|stand and apparently accepted that it involves the economic ¢xplosion killed Tony Guay, 16,|the arguments of National given record of 624,-'ond chlorine gas jeak in east- a defensive weapon?. That is the/health of the mother country,/of Dawson Creek, B.C.. and se-|Leader T. C. Douglas that Can- ern Pennsylvania in two weeks,/essence of Britain's diplomatic|they say, it's time to amputate rously injured four other men.'ada could do more inside NATO the Adair was summoned from an/to further general disarmament oi! well fire in Mexico to assist and a non-aggression pact than it could outside NATO. Mr. Douglas was returned as leader unopposed and a Saskat- chewan farmer and former MP, Vi R ht Merv a . Kinders- ley, was elected president, suc- Sa Oug ceeding "lichae! Oliver of Mont- JERUSALEM (CP-AP)--Tor- real . ; orto lawyer Samuel Resnick.) Thus it argues that helicop- wanted in Toronto on a warran' -lers and other types of aircraft)charging him with theft of $8,- rather than run risk of} In justifying the arms ship- in extinguishng the inferno iments, which provide a year's ~ a eae 3 work for about 25,000 British the British .govern- ment 'distinguishes between in- vaders and those that could be! jused to quell an internal upris-! Permanent Israel OSHAWA'S ORIGINAL CARPET CENTRE et Nu-Woy, 'corpet end broad- loom hes been o specialty for 18 years . . . with thousands of yords on disploy to select from, PHONE 728-4681 NU-WAY RUG CO. LTD. 174 MARY ST. is clear that they could be tourist visa be changed to a per- equally useful in enforcing apar-: t was learned Fri- theid and that in many cases : : : the distinction cannot be real- istically made ACTION DEMANDED As the pressure from. the spokesman said independent African. states Resnick and his family were mounts and Britain finds her-0rginally admitted to Israel on self increasingly isolated in herj@ three-month- tourist visa South African policies, there is|which expired Thursday. Resnick was involved in con- London demandng some action troversy over the sale in Tor. to express Britain's verbal re- onto of Woodsworth 'House, for- pugnance in concrete terms mer CCF party headquarters For many, including Britain's Resnick acted for the Woods- opposition Labor leader, Harold worth Memorial Foundation, a Wilson, the time for words is charitable body. past A spokesman for the direc- Says tors of the foundation said that dian $140,000 of the group's funds The South African govern- have disappeared. ment should be refused any - --------- further access to the arsenal on/ which it has relied for the | manent Visa day The request, made Thursday. being studied by the Israeli nterior ministry, a department the Manchester Guar ultimate means of keeping itsel! in power." BAD BOY'S ADVT. General DUE TO A TYPOGRAPHICAL ERROR IN OSHAWA TIMES 23" TELEVISION should have read $22§8-00 OF YESTERDAY'S Today's drags are fast acting--often clear- * --_; ing up in hours infections that once foo c2ys, fz and sometimes weeks, to cure. - You feel better sooner...suffer less ciscom-* fort... get back to work faster--and shorter con- valescence means smaller medical expense Never before has so little medicine produced so much cure at so low Electric 3 AD King Se. Eest Just PHONE 728-4658-59 "WE SEND MEDICINE TO EUROPE" Compounding your physicians prescription is our profession. JURY & LOVELL LTD. FREE CITY-WIDE DELIVERY" Pest City Limits

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy