Oshawa Times (1958-), 26 Apr 1965, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, Apri! 26, 1965 2 : in St. @ a WIDOW WEDS EX-BODYGUARD DEPARTMENT ROCKED BY SCANDALS + : | 5 , Fumes Kill |2 Boys, Grandfather Die 1 nN 4Q0nBoat | In Car-Truck Collisi 1e ete a n boa | in Var-LTucK VLOLsion s TALBOTVILLE, Ont. (CP)-- his arrival at hospital t amia Two boys and their grandfather Thomas, ; were killed Saturday in a ray Driver of the truck, Karl : uegittruck collision on Highway 3,MacDonald, 61, of Dutton a 4 Fogg A ee rolt about three miles west of here, 'bruised a shoulder and was not friends were found dead aboard| Dead are Dale Bradley Win-|admitted to hospital. his luxury yacht here Saturday ys 5, ie gy ey sts A fia k gag maton of -- ge afternoon, , sons of Mr. and Mrs, Murray\tion, suffered injuries to his VANCOUVER' (CP) -- Thejannouncements by the chiefjon charges of retaining stolen|"coromn Dr. Douglas MacKin- Winter of St. Thomas, andjright arm and was reported in Vancouver police department,|that members of the force are|goods, part of the mutilated), " sald thaw died of carbon|chatles Winter, 69, of Iona Sta-|satisfactory condition in the St. shocked by scandals in the last/suspected as being involved in|currency taken from a Cana-| py onoxide poisoning tion, Thomas hospital, week, was told by its chief Sun-|theft of $1,250,000 in mutilateddian Pacific Railway ware: : | The boys died in the accident ee day that the public still has|currency in February and $13,-/house here in February, The dead are John J, Dunniang Mr, Winter shortly ey vl confidence in it and sympathy/000 from a bank in January, On Wednesday Const, Leon-J":, 40, of Warren, Mich,; JOYCE) neesniinesereontentencnsenriste | for moth made te, At the same time police have ard Hogue of the Vancouver eee Flowers' df; and his wit TEETH SET PROBLEM Chief Ralph Booth made the ey are taking|force, under investigation in) Fg | wie | , 'py. statement in his report in 1 pr por vediy . vneolved|the same robbery, shot himself, Sophie, 42, both of Hamtramck, LETUBRIDGE, yo Aye daily bulletin distributed to/noldups that date back as far|ls wife and six children, si 'ciation is trying to find some every member of the 700-man|a. Christmas Eve, 1962 when a. The chief has refused to con-| Richard Winters, 41, was cap-| force, suburban bank lost $106,000 to\fitm reports that a. constable|tain, He told police the 50-foot| Way to protect gas and hydro Mayor Bill Rathie, British smooth-operating crooks, junder investigation for some|motor yacht left Detroit Satur-\meter - readers from sharp-}: Columbia Attorney - Gen- time was suspended Saturday,|day about noon. He saw Mr.|toothed dogs, Gas sprays, an eral Bonner, newspaper editor--TWO CHARGED | In his report to the force, the/Dunn, his employer, and the sioctyio prod, and a repellent lo- ial writers and radio commen-, Last week two men -- one ajchief said he and other officers|three others alive and aboard i iP tators have expressed confid- former Vancouver policeman--jreceived many assurances ofjabout 2 p.m. jtion were suggested at a recent ence in the force in the face ofiappeared in court in Edmonton|support and public sympathy. Then he guided the vessel, meeting here, sages ae ee arama . ""linto Sarnia harbor a couple of stile hours later. He docked the) yacht, then went below to find! why the men had not come top- PLANNING A,,. shown in New York yester- Former showgirl Gregg Sherwood, 41, widow of mul- II, and her ex-bodybuard, Daniel Moran, 29, a former timillionaire Horace Dodge New York policeman, are -- US. Ste Would Boost Offer PITTSBURGH (AP) The|the pot: in their high-stakes| U.S. steel industry is reported|poker game with the union, -- ready today to raise its offer) The development came amid : ea(Signs of strong pressure from of a two-per-cent pay increase|in, Johnson administration, | for the United Steelworkers un-|which believes a strike would fon in exchange for a strike|be a disaster to the booming postponement. U.S, economy, ' ig.| There is no indication of just qt is the rst ye ie hors how much the industry is will- tors for 11 major steel firms | pone Saturday's 12:01 a.m. |strike deadline. Police Scuffle (THERE'S BIG GAP | } ' * per-cent offer, amounting to an With Separatists estimated five to seven cents, atist - led demonstration byjis a long way from union de-/ youths in downtown Montreal|hour. Saturday was broken up after; While steel talks were in re- a minor scuffle with police. cess here Sunday, Chief Fed-| busy Ste. Catharine Street and|kin was known to be working} police on the scene called injday and night to achieve a set- reinforcements when a_ major-|tlement, Police said one demonstrator|time for settlement of the con-| was arrested, No charges have|test for the union presidency be- been laid. No injuries were re-|tween David J. McDonald, the day after their marriage at St, Patrick's Cathedral. May Be Ol INGUSTEY © ee the option of using small nu- clear weapons against North) Viet Nam if it becomes neces-| isary, but there is no prospect) they will be used under present) circumstances, pected to challenge the out-| The U.S, government, it has) come, asking the labor depart-| been learned, feels it should use ment to investigate and ask the; whatever weapons are neces-) federal courts to order a new/Sary to achieve the objective of election. 'This process could|¢nding Communist aggression ; against South Viet Nam. take months and it is a major| U.S, officials decline to say} complicating factor in the dead-\ynder what conditions nuclear] locked steel talks. |weapons might be brought into! WEATHER FORECAST Continuing Cool Cloudy Tuesday TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts|cooler, Winds easterly 10 to 15, issued by the weather office at Cochrane, White River:| 5:30 a.m.: (Mainly sunny and a little cooler| Synopsis: A persistent press-|today. Cloudy and much cooler ure trough across the |with an occasional shower or lower lakes is expected to. maintain|snowflurry tonight and Tues-| dull skies and occasional light day. Winds east 10 to 15 be- rain or drizzle over most of|¢oming northeast 20 Tuesday. southern Ontario for the next day or so. A fresh outbreak of Forecast Temperatures | Small "N' ' Weapons jing to boost the ante to post- are reported ready to .sweeten The industry's previous two- some 250 slogan - chanting|}mands tottalling 17.9 cents an The youths paraded down/jeral Mediator William E. Sim-| ity of them: refused to disband.| Postponement would allow ported. incumbent, and Secretary- Three large plate-glass win. Treasurer I, W. Abel. dows in the building occupied by CJMS, a French - language|clared winner by union officials 'May 1 and McDonald is ex- radio station, were broken, Abel is expected to be de- HERE and THERE An old time fiddlers' con- test will be one of the high- lights of the Union Rod and Gun Club's Sportsmen's Show. The week-long show opens Monday, May 3 at the Oshawa Children's Arena. The fiddlers' contest, with a top prize of $30, second $20 and third $10, will be held Friday night. A judo display will be the highlight of the Wednesday program and a dance will be held Saturday night, On display during the week Will be sporting goods, boats, motors, trailers, fish- ing tackle and many dis- plays and hobbies. E. R. Lovekin, New- castle; Murray Walton Newcastle; Percy Lunn, Orono and Jack Bourke, Bowmanville, have been elected directors of the Great Pine Ridge Tourist Association Scouter Ernie Wharram, of Gravenhurst, has been named district commission- er for the Lakeland District of the Boy Scouts of Can- ada. Jim Bishop, coach of the Oshawa Green Gaels La- crosse Club, told the week- ly meeting of the West- mount Kiwanis Club, that this year more than 1,500 boys will be playing the game in this area this year. time high in March with a total of 21,722 books, The Children's department al- most equalled the adult total with 20,202. The book- mobile also chalked up a circulation of 2,568 books making a total of 44,582 for the month -- an increase of 7,817 over March, 1964, figures, Approximately 1,200 people used the facilities of the reference and youth rooms dufing the month and over 400 questions were answered at the reference desks. The following books wefe tops in the demand list: My Shadow Ran Fast, by Bill Sands; The Com- fortable Pew, Pierr Rer ton; The Ambassador, Mor- ris West; Sea Jade, P. A, Whitney; Hotel, Arthur Hailey; Life with Picasso, Francoise Gilot; The Mak- ing of the Prime Minister, A. H. R. West; Richelieu and the French Monarchy, C. V. Wedgwood; The Ken- nedy Years, the New York Times; and Why the Seas are Boiling Hot, Pierre Berton and others. G. A. Wandless, city plan- ning director and his as- sistant Bill Power are attending a. four-day plan- ning conference in Toronto this week, Members of city council and the planning board are also expected to arctic air has advanced south) 10w tonight, high Tuesday: lof Moosonee and it is expected| Windsor .... 40 to press southward toward Lake|St. Thomas 42 50 | Superior today. |London .. 42 | Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie,|Kitehener . 42 Southern Niagara, Windsor, Mount Forest . | London: Variable cloudiness| been am' + this afternoon, tonight and Hamilton .... Tuesday. A little milder today,|5t Catharines .... jturning gradually cooler to- T jnight, Winds light. -. ISenIBA ee Lake Huron, Northern Niag- Kitjaioe .,., ara, Western Lake OntarioMuccoka .. Toronto, Hamilton: Cloudy with) North Bay occasional light rain or drizzle] sudbury aoa and fog patches today. Mainly] trariton piled cloudy tonight and Tuesday. Sault Ste. M Continuing cool. Winds easterly Kapuskasin 10 to 16, White River Ay Georgian Bay, Haliburton,/Moosonee .s.ssree Killaloe, Eastern Lake Ontario,/Timmins .. North Bay, Sudbury: Overcast Kingston ., with rain today. Cloudy tonight. | Cloudy with a few showers Tuesday. Cooler, Winds east- erly 10 to 15 Timagami, Algoma: clearing this afternoon, Vari- able cloudiness tonight and Tuesday, Turning gradually Death Claims Fifth Victim GUELPH (CP)--Harry Berry, '79, of Brantford died today in hospital from injuries. suffered lin a highway accident here | Wednesday He was the fifth. person to die jas a result of the accident in- \volving a car and a gravel- truck, Also dead are his wife, a brother and two sisters-in- law, seenee Peterborough ) oobeee THE ULTIMATE IN A LIMITED NUMBER OF 1-2-3 BEDROOM SUITES AVAILABLE * UNDERGROUND PARKING * ADULT BUILDING G@ORGIAN Partial gious purposes, 124 PARK ROAD NORTH: OSHAWA Used - USS. use. There is no chance thatjtional, non-nuclear weapons that! even nuclear weapons of a tac-jcan be used effectively; tical battlefield nature would be| 2. The government is aware used against Viet Cong guerril-.that any decision to use nuclear las infesting South Viet Nam. |weapons might risk escalation But there is a strong belief/of the conflict to include parti- that full Chinese participation--|cipation of the Soviet Union and) especially with major groundjother major powers; forces--might force a decision) bathroom, been about to take a shower, fumes apparently the cabin, | 3, There is also the realiza-\es side to help with the landing, He found the bodies of the) two women on their bunks and| Mr. ¢ Flowers slumped in a hair, | Mr. Dunn was naked in the He had evidently! Dr. MacKinlay said exhaust leaked into 1 on use of the nuclear weapons, |tion by the government in con- STILL MUCH ON HAND jtemplating using such weapons In this connection, it is under-'that possible gains would have stood that: to be balanced against conceiv- 1, As the war now stands,|able losses. One fear is that use U.S, forces have far from ex-jof nuclear weapons in North hausted the stockpile of conven-|Viet Nam might create radio- 5 . active fallout drifting down to South Viet Nam, killing the in-) Biblical Texts orn and friendly there, | Hi | SEEN UNTHINKABLE | Glow Over City TOKYO (Reuters)--Walt W.| |Rostow today was reported to have told Japanese union mem-| ESSEN, West Germany/|bers the use of nuclear weapons) (Reuters) -- Biblical texts andjin Viet Nam by the United) short sermons glow in letters|States was "unthinkable." | against the sky over industrial) A spokesman for the Japan-| Essen as the Roman Catholic|ese Confederation of Labor, the church uses the latest advertis-/second largest Japanese union ing methods to preach to alorganization, said Rostow, U.S. mass audience, state department policy plan- The texts are flashed across ner, made the statement to con-, INCOME | TAX RETURNS Completed T, 1. Short Form '2 U.A.W. HALL Bond East Public Welcome Monday te Friday Hours: 9 am, to 6 the city from a moving electri-|federation representatives, cal signboard erected on top of! ~ ERS us a skyscraper in the heart of the city, It is believed to be the first time that such a sign- board has been used for rell- The signboard, dedicated by} the Bishop of Essen, Franz! Hengsbach, will carry religious messages twice daily, during| the morning and evening rush hours, At other times it will| carry important news flashes, and sports results, you could also benefit, IT MAY | BE DANGEROUS What is food for one person can be poison for an- other is an old axiom, Therefore, do not ever teke Gny preséription prescribed for @ friend whe thinks Modern prescription drugs ere so potent that they should not be token without @ physician's approval, GOOD FOOD BUSINESS MEN'S LUNCH 12 Noon to 2 P.M, DINNER 5:30 to 8 P.M. 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Look into National fis attend several" sessions of the joint conference of the American Society of Plan- ning Officials and the Com- munity Planning Association of Canada Mr. Bishop also said that the club should take full credit for reviving the game in Oshawa four years ago. "People like Harold Davidson and Bill Smith of your Boys' and Girls' Com- mittee should be = given crédit for their work in get ting minor lacrosse going in Oshawa," he said. McLaughlin Public Li- brary circulation in the adult department hit an all- EMERGENCY ~ NUMBERS Hospital 7283 - 2211 Police 725 - 1138 LEAN RIB MOFFAT BLADE onere STEAKS B8c Ib, | 3 Ibs. 1.00 VEAL PATTIES 3 lbs. 1.00 © FREEZER SPECIAL ® HINDQUARTERS Beef. 53. CUT AND WRAPPED FREE UEHLER'S 12 KING ST, EAST -- 723-3633 Deluxe Automatic Range with Self-Basting Rotisserie Moffat ranges are competitively priced and are recognized for their high quality in de- sign and manufacture, This renowned quality is not @ luxury or en expensive extra. 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