Oshawa Times (1958-), 4 Jan 1966, p. 8

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"@ THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, Jonuary 4, 1966 _ Cold, Wind, Snow.. An' That's Winter By THE CANADIAN PRESS So what else do you expect for weather in Canada this time of year except snow, cold snow, winds and more snow? It's win- ter. Snow, wind or cold is what you've been getting recently. The same is in store today. It depends on where you live in the country. Vancouver residents, prom- ised a respite from storms that piled snow as much as two feet deep during the weekend, were hit by a third storm Monday afternoon. The weatherman said he ex- pected about six inches before the storm tapered off into flur- ries early today. Southern British Colum- bia bundled up Monday night | for the coldest night of the winter. Predicted low for Van- vith freezi a ve Fossing | Soood Monday. t temperatures expected At Abbotsford, 40 miles east of Vancouver, the overnight low was expected to be 10, with a high of 28 for today. HAVE BLACKOUT On Vancouver Island, heavy | snow was blamed for a two- hour power failure that dark- | ened Nanaimo, a city of 14,000, at the height of the Monday eve- ning rush hour. The area has had 45 inches of snow in the) last nine days. Traffic reports showed no serious tieups in spite of slip-| pery roads, Buses were jammed | and some schools remained) | snow moved to Prince Edward | the provinces are preparing for ja six-to-12-inch fall. | shivered in the coaches after, the cold cut off heat fed by, steam lines. \ The cold also wa' the cause!" of at least two deaths from ex- posure, one in Manitoba and the other in Saskatchewan, Air Canada officials said flights were back on schedule in Regina and Edmonton. HIT BY SNOW In Manitoba, the weather of- fice reported snow and winds of 15 to 20 miles an hour. Tem- |peratures were expected to |range from zero overnight to 20 below today. On the East Coast, snow, rain and sleet made driving «ondi- |tions treacherous in Nova Sco- tia Monday. Rain packed three ¢ inches of snow that fell earlier and more precipitation is ex- jpected today. Fredericton and Saint John, N.B., airports weve 4 The storm that brought the| Peter Bungay, 26, an Army veteran, with sign supporting the American stand in Viet Nam he re- moved from Central Square Island and Newfoundland and In Ontario, strong winds top-| IT AIN'T NECESSARILY SO... of Keene, N.H., after the City Council received com- plaints that the sign on pub- lic property did not express the opinion of all the people pled trees and cut off power in some centres Monday. Temper-} sures ip tonnes mare.e" Cuban Sugar The Hard, Fast Methods while southern regions should be basking in 30-and-40-degree | wat ven oom» IM 'TrOUble; Of LBJ: He Does. It Now blacked out that city for 30 min- utes Monday and affected other parts of the area for 14% hours. | | | By ARCH MacKENZIE |. Fc Align eta erata maeaite oe cote utenpaa -abeand aati a a Aas a . . . Bat i ROUND THE GLOBE IN A GLANCE OAKVILLE (CP)--Lawbreak- ers should help finance new court facilities, and prospective bridegrooms should be refused marriage licences unless they have $500 in the bank, Magis- trate Kenneth Langdon said Monday. The magistrate gave his views at the official opening. of Oakville's new $800,000 town hall and court building. An extra $2 should be tacked on fines under $25, and $5 to $10 added to fines over $25 to help provide new court facil- ities, he said. The additions to fines would provide at least $30,000 a year toward the cost of such facilities in Halton County, he said. Prospective bridegrooms should have $500 in savings be- fore getting a marriage licence, and if they were under 25, should have to take a course on marriage, he suggested. PINNED UNDER CAR WINDSOR, Ont. (CP) -- Har- old Dean, 67, of Windsor, died % in hospital Monday night after and 8 feet long, carries the tively subpart sag ae sags he was pinned beneath his cer bine tnotto i Wiee Fe democracy in Viet Nam." \by a locomotive. Police said Die" <a proclaimed: "we --AP Wirephoto |Dean, who suffered extensive a os Perr ae eres -____.|iriternal injuries, was driving across a level crossing Monday afternoon when a slow-moving engine of a freight train clipped his car. As -he attempted to leave the vehicle, it toppled on him, SAYS THERE'S LOSS TORONTO (CP)--The price Brazilian Traction, Light and Power Co. accepted from the in the city. The sign, red, the citizens of Keene ac- white and blue, 4 feet high jtion the previous day with|Johnson regime . have grown| WASHINGTON (CP) -- Cana-| Prime Minister Pearson about) used to such hurried prepara-| closed in B.C. 'A truck had struck a main| On the Prairies, afternoon|Power line during a snowstorm. | temperatures Monday ranged) Crops Down |dians on the last day of 1965;Viet Nam, or it might not. |tions which contrast with more j}received a special demonstra- Winds gusting to 32 miles an| HAVANA (Reuters) -- Less | tion of the unique style. Presi- from 19 to 15 below zero in cen- hour in Toronto toppled a dead CMe, a decrease in sugar con-| gent Johnson now has made a tent and excessive time wastage permanent feature of his job. tral and southern Saskatchewan |tree on to a car and sent the | and 20 to 30 below in Alberta. driver to hospital in serious} through breakdowns are bedev- The weather office said Mon-|Condition. But the city has no jilling Cuba's 1966 sugar pros- | ts day night there is no sign of a | SPOW. a ye i break in the cold for several| Montreal and other Quebec nd lage pnb wr gptge 24 days. Southern Alberta can ex-|centres were getting back to! of his plan to boost Free to pect snow today and overnight normal after snow and freezing of Cuba's princi at eae ot Monday temperatures were to|rain buffeted that province: foreign odie ae 000,000 tons drop to 30 and 40 below. Today's forecast for Montreal] py 1970, ran into trouble almost High winds drifted snow|was for clearing and colder | pefore last season's harvest was across Prairie railway tracks| weather, with the outlook for' ended. and caused delays. Passengers | Quebec City milder. { Agricultural authorities doubt |whether the 1966 yield will ex- jceed the 1965 total of 6,000,000 Same Immigration Policy (sie. sites | reduced his sights and the coun- a try's leaders are appealing to As Before With Marchand 32°: 223 3.2% | from less cane by eliminating | habitual wastage and transport By GERARD McNEIL |. The act has been a thorn in| OTTAWA (CP) -- Indications| the side of successive ministers) are that a developing Canadian) since it came into effect in| policy of selective immigration) June, 1953. will continue under, Jean Mar-| Initially it gave wide powers chand. to department officers to reject Intense studies of the labor|immigrants for various reasons | market have suggested that|}--cultural back ground, eco-| many skilled immigrants are| nomic factors, ability to adjust. | needed fast if the economy is; But the Supreme Court to be kept in high gear. | Canada ruled in 1956 that the The Immigration Act itself) cabinet exceeded its legal au- has been the subject of minute) thority in delegating such pow-| scrutiny in the last year by/ers to civil servants. The solu-| officials working on a policy| tion was to define in new regu- statement.- |lations the classes of persons The white paper, in its final! who could be admitted. stages when Mr. Marchand be-| This provided for admission came immigration minister last} of immigrants on their own month, would be presented to| merits and admission of a Parliament as a prelude to} broad range of relatives "'spon- delays. Excessive rain delayed spring sowing. Subsequent drought re- tarded the growth and cut su- gar content. COULDN'T START EARLY This caused a partial reversai of the policy of starting the har- vest a month earlier, to circum- vent a chronic agricultural la-| |bor shortage by extending the 000. to 1,000,000: ground troops} cutting season. Originally, 20 or more of the country's 152 mills were sched- uled to begin grinding during December. The plans had to be modified drastically when the| negotiate," Liddell Hart said at) "'face-saving"' truce is an alter-| cane sugar content proved too low. Three mills began operating in December, all in eastern Or- It is a style which at its most | grandiose, florid and inscrutable' |has sent presidential peace | emissaries from capital to capi- ital to explain that the United) States sincerely wants to end {the war in Viet Nam and sin- \cerely wants North Viet Nam} to get that message. | In Canada's case, it was an apparent snap decision last Fri- |day from the president's Texas ranch home ts clear his desk of a revised Canadian-U.S. civil jair agreement before 1966 be- an. It may have had something to do with Johnson's conversa- | SAN FRANCISCO (AP)--The eminent British military strate- gist and historian, Capt. B. H. Liddell Hart, said Monday 500,- | would be needed for a U.S. | victory in Viet Nam. | "The more iroops you send there, the mere likely your {opponent will be to want to a press conference. 'I don't | foresee any intervention by the Chinese." Liddell Hart is currently a e ss leisurely schedules of the past. DIPLOMATIC SCRAMBLE Speed in the Johnson regime Anyway, Ottawa sources had| tends to be of the essence. | said some days'earlier that the) as when Arthur Goldberg, | lengthy civil air negotiations) 5° ambassador to the United begun in April, .1964, had) Nations, is reported to have cut | Brazilian government for its telephone utility is $19,000,000 below the listed book value, J. Grant Glassco, president of the firm, said Monday. The sale of the utility for $96,000,000 (U.S.) was announced two weeks ago. reached agreement in principle! short a West Indies holiday by| WINS CONTRACT and that still is the case. pulling pants over swim trunks) BRANTFORD (CP) -- V Last * Friday. was a federal ie Vi } (CP) 1m | veer ncaa he Canadian| (°, aunch his Vietnamese peace/Mason Construction Ltd. of a nee. tie Poy tt rounds. |Toronto' has been awarded a hi pga cea tt oc ie os Or. when Prime Minister Wil-|$1,665,000 contract to build al asis reflecting the Chris mMas-| son of Britain, who presumably |new city hall and magistrate's holiday 'lull. 'Nevertheless, word] oot a pretty thorough Viet Nam|pbuilding here, Dorothee Sauras, had 'taken the law into her own hands" in writ- ing about the employee, Georges Larochelle. ROWE PRESIDES PORT COLBORNE, Ont. (CP) -- Lieutenant - Governor Earl Rowe Monday inaugur- ated the first council of On- tario's newest city. He swore in Mayor Coleman Bagu, 38. STARTS ACTION : WINNIPEG (CP)--A damage action has been launched by the father of Karen De Fosse, a five-year-old girl killed Nov. 16 HE CARTS OFF A GOOD THING TORONTO (CP) -- William Bilow of suburban Scarbor- ough has found a pray of get- ting rid of shopping carts that others keep leaving on his front lawn. He has formed a company-- Metro Shopping Cart Control Service--and rounds up about 3,000 carts a week. Not all are found on his property. So successful has the com- pany been that Mr. Bilow quit a job with a transport company to supervise four trucks and six full-time em- ployees. The carts are re- |. 25 to 50 cents a cart. | Last summer Mr. Bilow, | who lives near a supermarket, became annoyed by the carts left on his lawn. "I kept getting madder and madder and finally, when I was really hot, I went to see the manager of the supermar- ket and told him to keep his carts off my property. "He said he wished he knew how he could do it. When he said hundreds of other super- market managers had the same problem, I got the idea." Now Mr. Bilow likes people to leave carts on his lawn. turned to stores for a fee of | came from Texas Friday morn-|priefing here two weeks ago|-- jing that the president wanted) from the president, had to cut! IS FIRST VICTIM to have a joint Texas-Ottawa) short his own Christmas holiday) TORONTO (CP)--Angela| announcement before noon ON) to receive a Johnson envoy say-|Schiavone, 27, of Toronto was the air agreement. ing the president wants peace. [ine first 1966 traffic fatality Diplomatic scrambling finally; Or even when the president LIKE THE HEIGHTS Groom Sho uld Have $500 Or Not Wed: Magistrate when she was caught up in the slashing blades of a snowblower, COUNCIL FLEES WINNIPEG (CP) -- A tele- phoned bomb threat disrupted a meeting of Winnipeg's city coun- cil Monday night as_ police cleared the council chamber and checked the building. No bomb was found and the aldermen were allowed to return to the chamber after it and most of city hall was searched by de- tectives and uniformed police of- ficers. STUDENTS DRIVEN OUT _ WARSPITE, Alta. (CP) -- More than 100 students, about half of them without outdoor clothing, were driven into 30+ below weather Monday when fire swept through their eight: room school here. Martin toniuk, school principal, said the children were taken from the school without injury. NEW ISLAND APPEARS REYKJAVIK (AP) -- Volk canic eruptions heralded the birth Monday of a new island off Iceland's south coast. A pilot reported the island was more than 300 feet by 150 feet in area. He said there were two craters, one spouting red hot lava more than 650 feet into. the air and the other erupting voleani¢e ashes. PICNIC JUG Model 5511 Rog. Price $7.98 The Brazilian city of Sao recorded in Metropolitan Tor-|Paulo has more than 1,000 | managed to produce a mutual! by report here tried--and failed|onto. Mrs. Schiavone was|buildings more than 10 stories /1 p.m. EST timing. Canadian|--to have a Washington jewelry|struck by a car Monday on }and other diplomats under the! store reopen during Christmas|E glinton Avenue West, the) | because he had forgotten some Same street and date on which} | foreign dignitaries. |Raymond Lowe, 61, of Toronto 500,000 To A Million Meni s:rnove or zevons Johnson so far is tending to get an "A" for effort for his Needed To Win Viet: Hart :ci"ictsio2".san% way he conducts these affairs. Says columnist Arthur Krock the New York Times: "The president is congenitally disposed to dramatize the set- |tings in which his decisions big lor little are made public. In these performances, there has also often been a heavy odor of flavor of ham. actively participating in jungle} of warfare, a military victory is| possible and with 1,000,000, it) | would be probable. He said bombing the Viet Cong guerrillas and North Viet |Nam will not end the war, "For one thing, you kill the) wrong people," he said. | |. Liddell Hart suggested that a | native to military victory. "One | should always give one's oppo-} a Pad at nent a way out." |moving 'misunderstandings' of Liddell. Hart. now. "0, has| the administration's aims jbecame Metro's |victim in 1965. | OPP MAN RETIRES TORONTO (CP) -- Provincial Police Commissioner E, H. Silk has announced the retirement of Ward Hewitt Kennedy, assistant commissioner staff services and ja member of the OPP for 34 lyears, Mr. Kennedy joined the jforce in 1931, serving in Brock- ville, Ottawa and Cornwall. ARE REMANDED EDMONTON (CP)--Two Van- |Alberta Supreme Court Monday. first traffic} } "But only an inveterate critic|couver men charged with pos-| | could find either fault with his|session of stolen mutilated' dispatch to three continents of|money were remanded for trial] missionaries, charged with re-|Jan. 31 when they appeared in| in|Joseph Percival ,37, a former) sweeping changes in the act. | sored' by other immigrants. He said in a recent interview| But sponsored immigration be-|iente province, where the orig- the present 13 - year - old act) came a problem. inal. plans. called for 17 mills to gives "dangerous discretion" to} One Portuguese worker ad- go into action and where, last an immigration minister and| mitted on the basis of his own|year, seven were in operation needs to be re-drafted. | skills sponsored 23 others, five|in December. Emphasis was given to selec-; cf them related only. by mar-| Because of the low sugar out- tive immigration under former|riage and few of them edu-) put, a rice - for - sugar bartei minister John R. Nicholson in| cated: agreement between China and the last year. | Economists fear the flow of|/Cuba has collapsed, it was an- The department is setting up| sponsored immigrants is build-| nounced Sunday. Pare : P ' 45/ Southeast Asia, and to solicit) Vancouver police constable, and visiting professor of history at) written several volumes of mil-| ' Fi ue engin" rt : |the University of California at/itary history. He is known as| international assistance in his pe es MeDodgatl, si, are Davis. Last week he~ was! an early proponent both of tank anor 10 mivee ne a mame gee I of petites Sy al knighted by the Queen. warfare and of guerrilla war- for. warn: Niet Nant I] hal bad p Aorypoay Naeseediayel | He said with 500,000 troops! fare. Syndicated columnist Joseph|\°Sedly stolen from a Vancouver | sid, saab Alsop, who usually likes just| Warehouse early last year. | |about everything Johnson does! GRANTS DAMAGES MONTREAL (CP) -- Judge) | wae ™ 1 : DE 2! 6 P Dx a ade | cxcept the way he does it, crit- l he I adulous UU. peality ry 'pres Jacques' Bousquei graated dam-| ania calls. the--presi- icizés what ie dent's moral style which results because he is not "forthright,|28°S of $100 Monday to a city) jemployee on grounds that an ar- high. MEL KRUGER SUN LIFE Assurance Company of Canada a $500,000 European service) ing up a pool of unemployable Meantime, it is hoped the su- either with his country, or with |ticle in a union publication was|| HOME: BUSINESS: and is opening offices in the| persons. A limitation on spon- Far East. It has been carrying) sored immigration, which now out labor market studies in co-, amounts 'to half the flow to operation with provincial labor| Canada, is expected to be a gar content will increase sub- stantially in the coming weeks. Any attempt to produce more sugar from less cane requires, 'Surpassed By 'Gutsiness' HOLLYWOOD (AP) -- "That, Bellamy, and she is spirited ? | girl's got more guts than a lot among other things, that the/ of men I know," said actor Rob- 'cane be moved to the mill/er; Ryan. "Why, she's been ; Within 48 hours of being cut. If) barefoot for three months, work- lit remains on the ground longer, ing in 120 degree weather in losses are incurred. Authorities| neath Valley and 10 degrees in believe they may be able to ap-| Coyote Pass, Nev. Not only did jproach the 1966 target if they) she never complain; she didn't {can make full use of all cane} pyen whimper. now standing. | ihe : But this presupposes adequate| Ryan was directing his praise transport from the networks and|toward Claudia Cardinale, who properly serviceable mills to|has been demonstrating on The avoid delays, breakdowns and) professionals that a European consequent bottlenecks. |glamor queen can be as tough Although some progress has| as any movié he-man, She is up Eying Government Sales, Steelmakers Hold Prices By STERLING F. GREEN WASHINGTON (AP)--Under notice that the U.S. govern- ment won't do business with President Johnson was not the price-boosters, the bulk of) risking his remarkably durable the steelmakers showed wari-|popularity with business lead- ;son administration and its key Supporters in Congress. This raised speculation whether been made compared with last} ier, Jack Palance. Bellamy hires four professional fighting men, Burt Lancaster, Lee Mar- vin, Ryan and Woody Strode, to rescue her. | Aside from the climatic ex- tremes, Claudia found herself faced with a new challenge on the locations. "I had to ride a horse,"' she | reported. "T have never ridden |a horse before. And on the first | day I was not only supposed to | ride, but gallop. How I did it, away by a Mexican bandit-sold-|' his associates or even, one SsuSs-| pects, with his nearest and dear-| est." Alsop says no one can judge the true purpose of the presi-| dential peace offensive and' asks: "Was his aim to prove once} again that he had left no stone| unturned for peace and thus to! prepare for another increase in| the U.S. effort in Viet Nam and| a difficult wartime budget? Ori was his aim to start the kind of negotiations that must al-| most certainly lead to a very) thinly concealed retreat and) | I still do not know." surrender? , . . No one can tell; | that is part of the trouble." | ness today about joining the Bethlehem Steel Corp. in its structural steel price 'ncrease. A matching $5-a-ton increase | by Inland Steel Corp. took) effect today, four days after Bethlehem's announcement. A small producer, Colorado Fuel and Iron Corp., posted a $3 in- crease. | But this was hardly a price parade, Other companies said they were "studying"' the ques- tion, and the giant United States Steel Corp. said that "'it may be some time" before it decides what to do. In an attempt to dissuade the doubtful firms -- and thus per- haps to force price. rollbacks by Bethlehem and Inland--mil- itary and civilian officials is- sued orders calling, in effect, for a government boycott of the higher-priced steel. DRIVE INDICATED There was every. indication of a concerted drive by the John- |day that military contracts for ers. But Johnson himself was'j}eayes much to be desired. silent. And the most sensitive the stock market, reflected neither hysteria nor loss of con- ones, Many mill repairs, too fidence. have yet to be completed and After Defence Secretary Rob- ond faite ert S. McNamara ordered Mon- future structural steel delivery be shifted to firms which have not boosted prices, steel shares declined a bit--but this was in a market which already was moving irregularly down. When Inland Steel announced its price rise, Chairman Gard- ner Ackley of the president's council of economic advisers described this move as _ un- 500,000 workers, teras sugar mill and refinery, which also went into operation in December, little more than one - third of the repairs and year were completed. Party leaders and the press the same criticism he made of Bethlehem's. Ackley added: "Foreign steel producers are the ofily people ! who will take much pleasure ini this announcement." Administration officials . have had | other with the harvest. Girl, 16, Gone against a bunch of them in the} libellous. The judge found that the author of the article, Mrs. 723-7900 725-4563 | | 725-4377 electric STONELINED _ Water Heater GREATEST SCIENTIFIC ADVANCE la the history of: water heaters, Colee man's revolutionary Vit-Rock Water Heater -- with its stonelined tank a. absolutely will not corrode or rust. %& 15 year Guarantee, % Fully Automatic . . . 100% safety controlled, | qe Canada's ONLY BONDED H Water Heater, LOW MONTHLY TERMS A. ¢. STA COURTICE, ONT. HEATING With a !season, the transport system | ind huai There has been considerable de- ; ; | index of business psychology, |jay in repairing old cane trans-| the Italian star of the rigorous| port routes and building new| location. 'I love the desert. My! ge 8 In important Antonio Gui- improvements scheduled for the | deliver almost daily calls for better organization and ad- ditional effort on the part of the who will be warranted and inflationary --|connected in one way or an- denied emphatically any inten- Maybe Kidnap Richard Brooks film. "Oh, it wasn't so bad," said | home was in Tunis, right on the edge of the Sahara, so I am ac- much new equipment has not| customed to the heart and the | sand," | Miss Cardinale is playing a | Mexican marquesa in The Pro- | fessionals. | "But not a very rich mar- | quesa, as you can see," she commented, displaying her cos- tume, It was a skimpy length of sackcloth that scarcely covered |the celebrated Cardinale form. She wears little else throughout the film. SPIRITED AWAY The plot portrays her as the wife of a rich rancher, Ralph SALES & SERVICE | Pedestrians & Motorists | Pedestrian Crosswalks | In Operation In The Following Locations: -- SIMCOE ST, NORTH. ..at ROBERT STREET ADELAIDE AVE. WEST... .at GOLF STREET BOND ST. EAST at DIVISION STREET KING ST. EAST at DIVISION STREET WILSON RD. SOUTH at TAYLOR AVE. RITSON RD. NORTH at WILLIAM ST. EAST IN BEAUTIFUL braemor Your Blueprint For Happier Living Begins It's the thrill of a lifetime to find the home that's just right for you. , . One that means years of comfort, conveni- ence and security. The right home in the right location is so important to your children. The better home with enough room to grow in -- . gardens Stevenson Road North at Annapolis. tion to impose price controls. And the new orders which went ROCKLAND, Ont. (CP)--Po-! lice are seeking a 16-year-old) out to purchasing officers were! Rockland girl last seen Sunday said to'be no more than strong} when she got into an old-model directives to buy where the|car with three men. government gets the best price.| A police spokesman said | } This could be a_ powerful/there's a possibility Alice Ward fered in a car accident in| weapon, however, for the gov-| was abducted. A neighbor saw Guelph Dec. 23. ernment directly or indirectly] the five-foot-four, 170-pound gir! Ancaly Tedesco, 23; of Guelph rconsumes ane-faneth. «#t nat " Ottawa driver of the car, is in hospital)/the U.S of structutal|Valley community shortly after with multiple injuries. | midnight Saturday. and glow in -- opens up a new world of Battle For Life Ends In Defeat KITCHENER (CP)--Aldo V. Bortolon, 23, of Guelph died in hospital Monday of injuries suf- PEDESTRIANS -- Point your way to safety when using the Crosswalks. ' MOTORISTS -- Use care and courtesy when approaching a Crosswalk. @ SAFETY IS EVERYBODY'S BUSINESS @ Ald. J. G. Brady Trafic Committee City Council. VOLKSWAGEN WERNER'S SERVICE CENTRE MANCHESTER end Highway No. 12 985-7162 happier, more comfortable family living. Come and visit braemor gardens now... RE tegen eee there's a home here for your family. ahnnyt output, } steel, framing. a,

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