Oshawa Times (1958-), 13 Jun 1966, p. 2

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| THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, June 13, 1966 ROYAL Queen Elizabeth Il of Eng- land, mounted on Metropoli- tan Police horse *'Doctor', takes the salute as the guards march past Bucking ham Palace in London after Mob Violence Erupts SALUTE the Trooping the Color cere mony on Horse Guards par ade Saturday, Her Majes ty's official birthday, (AP Wirephoto via cable from London) On Chicago's North Side CHICAGO (AP) -- Violent} street fighting erupted in a pre-) dominantly Puerto Rican neigh-| borhood on Chicago's north side) Sunday night after a policeman} shot a Puerto Rican youth he said pulled a gun on him The surging, rock - throwing mobs numbered more than 1,000, police said The rioters tipped a police car on its side and burned it.) Windshields on many more were broken by rocks and| hurled pop bottles, Fire was started in another police car, but quickly extinguished, By midnight at least two dozen persons had been injured and more than 30 jailed Police were pelted with rocks hatting and dahrie ac thau tried! w to disperse the crowds in a 10-| square-block area, Sporadic gunfire could be) heard and looting was reported in several shops. STARTED IN ALLEY Patrolman Thomas Munyon, 95, the officer who shot the} youth, described the incident: | 'My partner and I went into} this alley to break up a fight . this guy started to pull al gun from under his shirt and 1 shot him. There were about 19 or 15 persons in the alley . 80 my partner and I put the wounded man into a car and got out of there." HERE AND THERE AUTO FIRE An auto, which caught fire on the Macdonald-Cartier Freeway east of Whitby, Sunday night, used a pile-up of traffic for ral miles at the height of the traffic flow. MASTER OF ARTS Peter F. Gilbert, a former Oshawa resident, received a master of arts degree in near eastern studies June 6 at the University of Toronto convo- cation, He graduated from the U of T in 1962 with a BA and from Knox College in 1965 with a BD. Mr. Gilbert will continue his studies next fal) towards a doctor of philosophy at the U, of T. FREAK RECEPTION Graham Malloy, 121 Simcoe St. S, Oshawa, turned on his TV. the other night but couldn't believe his eyes, Th station he'd tuned into -- on channel 5 was WKRG, Mobile, Alabama, 50 miles from New Orleans, Mr, Mal- loy watched Checkmate, Thhe Rifleman and a newscast, The reception was very good, he said WKRG's chief engineer said the freak reception was due to "'at- mospheric conditions" SHIRT LAUNDERING om AND <= DRY CLEANING Free Pick-wp end Delivery PICKWICK CLEANERS "Your Sanitene Dry Cleaner" The wounded man was identi- fied as Cruz Arcelis, 20 Munyon said he fired times and didn't know many shots hit Arcelis After the incident aroused) crowds poured into the streets. | A police dog bit 20-year-old Juan Melan, who was hoisted to the shoulders of friends, dis- played to the crowd and then taken to a nearby hospital. Rocks and bottles began to fall near policemen directing traffic away from the area. Spanish-speaking police, youth workers and Roman Catholic priests used bullhorns to plead with the crowds to leave, They) were ignored or shouted down, | A rock smashed a squad car eecraaming youths moved toward two empty| police cars, They smashed win-| dows and tore the hood off one, then-moved-to-the-other-chant ing The car was rocked back and forth, then turned on. its side, Almost immediately flames shot from the gas tank and the car was quickly enveloped in fire, Firemen, arriving to fight the flames, were pelted with stones as they wrestied with hoses among the crowds Police moved back Into the area and charged the crowds 4 woman and her three-year- old child were knocked down and bruised in the melee Police vans, loaded with offi cers armed pith drawn guns and heavy wooden nightsticks, ranged up and down dimly-lit side streets in an attempt to keep order as incidents erupted one by one, There seemed to be no leadership in the crowds. Shulman Book Hits At Bay St. Crowd TORONTO (CP)--Chief Coro- ner Morton Shulman of Metro- politan Toronto has written a book that attacks most of the investment world's sacred cows, Dr. Shulman, who made enough money on the market to establish himself for life, says ithe book may cause a sensation }on Bay St., Toronto's financial centre, four how indehicld. and | sion | NATO defence organization. But j | election of IN SPEECH AT WILLIAMSTOWN By DENNIS ORCHARD WILLIAMSTOWN, \(OD)His. attention never far \from labor strife at home, cepted honors speeches in Illinois and Massa- chusetts during the weekend. The prime minister was kept) constantly advised on Ottawa) talks in the Montreal Jongshore-| men's strike, He considered fly- ing back to Ottawa Saturday night and again Sunday morn- ing to lend a hand, In the end, he completed all engagements and returned as scheduled Sunday evening. He went straight from the Ottawa airport to a meeting with a, cabinet committee on the dis- pute, Mr, Pearson delivered a ispeech Saturday night in iSpringfield, Ul, eritical of |United §States' policy toward | NATO, He expressed sympathy with | the aspirations of French Presi dent de Gaulle to shrug off U.S domination of the alliance, FOLLOWED NATO MEET The address to the Federal Union Inc., followed within days the NATO foreign ministers' meeting in Brussels, where Can ada took a position against the US, Britain demand for re moval of the NATO. council | headquarters from Paris. | The prime minister said he | did not approve France's deci to withdraw from the he added: "France is not, has not been, land will not be satisfied with an Atlantic organization, or an At- lantic Alliance of independent states, dominated by America France, and not only France, feels that continental Europe is now strong. enough-in large part because of the generous as- sistance of the U.S to be given its rightful share In the control of the policies of the Alliance. 'While France is not alone in| this feeling, only de Gaulle has} translated it into policy and action," Canada long ago had asked with little effect, for a reassess ment of NATO to develop com mon, unifying political institu Voting Light In Italy ROME (AP)--Many svwelter- ing Italians preferred thé beaches to the polis Sunday as 168 cities and three provinces began two days of balloting to elect new governments, A heavier turnout was ex- pected today in response to ad- monitions from leaders of all the major parties that this is an maior Imnartance The Vatican exhorted Roman Catholics to support Premier Aldo Moro's centre-left coalition nthe test.of.strength with-the Communists With hot, sunny weather throughout the peninsula, only 68.1 per cent of the electorate voted Sunday in the key Rome election compared to 74.4 per cent on the first day of the 1964 municipal contest, In some mu- nicipalities the first-day figure fell as low as 55 per cent Results were expected late to night or early Tuesday. Nearly 5,000,000 voters, about one-sey tions providing Mass. eign and economic policies, Prime Minister Pearson ac) and made} collective for-| WANTS VOTAT. POSITION ern Gaulle, because he is demand- ling for France a position in the 'Atlantic Alliance equal to that of Great Britain and somewhat) closer. to that of the U.S., is to show a dangerous misunder- standing of the situation," The forward march of NATO must be Atlantic in character, not merely European or North American. It must provide for) more control by Kurope of Sts! direction and its character, "T realize that a united FWu- rope would, in its political, economic and military deci- sions, be more independent of Washington than is the case now. But what is wrong about this? "Finally, I believe that only the United States can give the) effective lead required for At-| lantic unity, Without her active) participation and support noth- ing can be done, at least on the broad front which is essential 'Without her leadership we will be driven back to a na tional or continental solution for the organization of security and for progress The Federal Union national organization that pro motes a federation of Atlantic countries, earlier Saturday gave Mr. Pearson its Atlantic Pio neer Award The presentation took place in New Salem, Ill, where Abra-' ham Lincoln lived during the 1830s and split rails, Lincoln rode the 20 miles from New Salem to Springfield for his education in law, Sunday, Mr. Pearson accepted and honorary doctor of laws de gree and delivered the com- an inter. , » To rail at general de} PM Is Sympathetic With French Stand mencement address to 258 grad. uates of Williams College in | Williamstown, Mass, He Wid them moni of ite sree worid's poiitieai i were born in the 10th century and need changes to work in the 20th, But when change is suggested someone always cries that 'to Ona lalter them would he to tamper with sacred traditions," Mr. Pearson said political in- stitutions if the democracies are inadequate to meet the challenge of scientific and tech- nical process, BUFFET IDEAS The pressures of this progress duffet ideas and organizations pervasively and often irresistt- bly "The political machinery in any democratic 'state is today as ill-equipped to deal with the problems of the new society as a horse and huggy would be to get me back to Ottawa for that seven o'clock cabinet meeting tonight "But we carry on, inbued with the belief that because our po litical institutions worked in the simpler and slower days of the 19th century, they ought to work the same. way today, i "It is only because of the hard work and ingenuity and pa tience of dedicated men that our political machinery, govern- mental and legislative, works as well as it does and accom- plishes all that it does," The degree's citation said that in "the lowly, exacting relent- less role as head of a modern state' Mr, Pearson has shown "tenacity and resourcefullness and idealistic realism... to see things as they are and as they can be," WEATHER FORECAST _ Thundershowers Tonight Little Cooler Tuesday TORONTO (CP)---Forecast is sued by the weather office at 5:30 a.m,; Synopsis: Unsettled weather will persist today and Tuesday through the upper Great Lakes, Slightly cooler temperatures and partly cloudy skies are fore- cast for Tuesday over the lower Great Lakes areas. St, Clair, Lake Erie Lake Huron, Lake Ontario, Niagara, Windsor, London, Hamilton, Toronto: Sunny with a few cloudy periods today and Tuesday. A few thunder show- ers likely this evening and to- night, Continuing warm today a little cooler Tuesday, Winds light, Georgian Bay, Haliburton, Killaloe, Timagami, North Bay, Sudbury: A few showers or thundershowers today and to- night, Tuesday mainly sunny and-alittle cooler, Winds light, Sault Ste, Marie, Cochrane, White River; Vari- able cloudiness with scattered showers and cooler today, Tues- day mostly cloudy with show- ers, Winds westerly 15. Ottawa region; Mainly sunny and warm today, Becoming cloudy tonight with some show- ers, Tuesday mainly cloudy with a chance of showers Winds southwesterly 15 Lake Algoma, Toronto Forecast Temperatures Lows tonight, Highs Tuesday 60 75 60 75 55 75 55 75 50 72 50 72 55 75 55 55 50 2 52 52 2 49 oR 45 45 42 35 Windsor St, Thomas .. London Kitchener . Mount Forest . Wingham Hamilton es St. Catharines .... Peterborough «++ « KINgsion eeseee Trenton Killaloe Muskoka North Bay seovee Sudbury Fariton Sault Ste, Marle.. Kapuskasing .. Moosonee Good Names To Remember When Buying er Selling REAL ESTATE Reg, Aker = President Bill McFeeters --~ Vice Pres, SCHOFIELD-AKER LTD, 723-2265 Freak-Rain Death Toll Reaches 36 By C, P. HO HONG KONG (Reuters)--Nor- mal activity in this weekend might hit again, teeming Condemned Negro Said Still Alive figure. Runyor was charged, with two other men, with mak- ing a gasoline attack on the | house of Luke Chigumbura Sept, 12, 1963 The court named Runyoa and the other accused as members of the illegal Zimbabwe Afri- SALISBURY (Reuters) -- A' cumstance that may have made ~ j y Negro named Lazarus, sen- him all the more poignant in the oe! iter a's tone tenced to death in Britain's eyes of many outsiders as 4\ nationalist movement the Zim- |breakaway colony of Rhodesia, symbol of the status of the pahwe African National junion. is still alive, a Methodist chap- Negro in Rhodesia. lain said Sunday. Queen Elizabeth, imprisonment Tan | Am pr eh: mite Since then, however, there The casualty toll mounted as had been no word of Lazarus') rescue workers, helped by Brit- ish troops, continued mopping up operations under an over- cast and drizzling sky. fate until the statement Sunday) - by Rev. Gary Strong, one of the prison chaplains, Prime Minister lan Smith has Latest police figures listed 36 insisted his white-minority Rho- dead, 12, presumed dead and 24|desian government remains missing, Unofficial put the toll higher, Dozens were injured, and more than 2,500 persons lost siders have been uncertain as estimates loyal to the Queen, although it) declared the country independ-| ent of Britain Nov, 11, But out) their homes or had to be evacu-|'9 Whether Smith would pay) ated to safer ground. The rainstorm, worst streams into rushing swept rocks against shanty huts and flimsy wooden houses on the hillside, BURIED ALIVE torrents, Many people were buried alive in landslides or house collapses, Others were swept to their death in swirling floodwate:s, Property damage was esti mated in millions of dollars as the rains turned city streets into mud flats, eut off telephone communications and paralysed in the colony's history, turned hill #* and boulders | !sh government, any attention to the Queen's commutation order, especially! he claimed the Queen had acied on the advice of the Brit- The Rhodesian regime said of} the Queen's action: "This is a political move designed to em- barrass the Rhodesian govern-) ment, and it is a pity that the British government should have shown its willingness to embroil Her Majesty the Queen in poli- tics." HAVE LITTLE INFORMATION Little is known about Lazarus, Court records have no informa- tion about his age, occupation exercising death British colony came to a virtual her royal prerogative of mercy standstill today amid warnines'commuted Lazarus' death sen 4¢nn0| that a freak death-dealing down-|tence te life pour which broke out dyring the! 22, gm for you. BI ; free, Because it is an s Runyowa was convicted of hav- The Queen also ordered the ing organized the atiack on Chie sentence commuted of gumbura's house because of @ '| Simon Runwoya, 40, a political political dispute with him, SL On you it looks good Mg FATHER'S DAY JUNE 19th gag j That's a Tacoma by Besides looking good, the Tacoma's fabric feels great too. Tacoma always stays neat and wrinkle- intimate blend of 65% Polyester and 35% cot- ton, it seldom needs iron- . ing. It's cool and com- Bi, fortable for year 'round wear, Let us show you the acoma shirt, in regular or tapered fit, It comes in five collar styles anda choice of White, French traffic, The British section of the rail way to Canton, China, was blocked in several places and trains could no longer rin to the border town of Lowu, and other names, if anya cir HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE nagging backache! Bhe used to he bothered by barkaches and tired feeling. When she learned that irritation of ¢ bindder and Urinary traet can result in backache and tired feeling, she tonk Dodd's Kidney Pills, ®mart 1. Dodd's Pilla stimulate the kidneys to help relieve | the enndition eavaing the backache and tired ferling, Soon she felt hetter rested better. If you are bothered hy | backache, Dodd's Kidney Pills may help n depend on Dodd's, so for a diabetic, Higher blood sugar levels lessen resistance to infection, Still @ diabetic can, like anyone else, develop deep root abcesses, or pyorrhea, both of which are infections, And, you don't have te heve « toothache to have @ root infection, or loose teeth be your physicion con diagnose infection, Heve dentol checkups et reguler intervals and be sure and tell your dentist, if you ere @ diabetic, so he can toke extra precautions if on extraction d, He can't tell by looking et you, W YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you need @ medicine, Pick up your prescription if shopping nearby, or we will deliver promptly without extra ¢h great many people entrust us with their prescriptions, May we compound yours? EASTVIEW PHARMACY 573 King Street East Oshawa PHONE 725-3594 Fost --- Free Motorized Delivery enth of the Italian electorate, were eligible. Besides Rome and Florence, other important cities in which new governing councils will be chosen are Genoa, Pisa, Bari, Foggia and Forll, Campaigning generally re- volved around national issues, | The Communists said Moro's co- alition of Christian Democrats, Socialists, Democratic Socialists and Republicans was incapable of running the country and called for a new majority in which they would be included, Having increased their polling percentage in every important post war election, the Com munists this time made a con certed effort to draw Catholic votes, This campaign was especially evident in Rome, where the Communists polled only 18,000 less votes than the Christian Democrats two years ago. REALTY COLOR WARDS No 4,5 4&6 No. 1,2 4&3 Hall. ON DUE DATES Civie Administration Bidg, Cor, Centre & Athol Sts CITY OF OSHAWA - TAXES DUE NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS 3rd INSTALMENT OF Realty AFTER INTERIM tax bills for the belence of the 1946 levy have been mailed and become due es follows: PRINT ON Black or Purple Brown or Purple IF ANY INSTALMENT IS PAST DUE ---- Pleose telephone the Tax Office 725-1153 for PENALTY AMOUNT te ADD when remitting by mail te City Hell, TAXES MAY BE PAID AT ANY CHARTERED BANK OR TRUST OFFICE IN OSHAWA for @ amell service charge OR at the City if you are @ property texpayer and have net received @ tax bill kindly contact the Tex Office immediately, (unless your mort- gogee or bank poys your taxes), PAY EARLY OR BY MAIL TO AVOID WAITING IN LINE-UPS TAX DUE OF INK BILLS LAST DAY TO AVOID PENALTY JUNE 10th JUNE 17th ¢. t. COX, Tox Collector limits of Bowm Ontario Bowmanville Area Customers For your convenience PLEASE NOTE CHANGE OF ADDRESS Customers wishing to contact Ontario Hydro's Bowman- ville Area office on or after Monday, June 13th are direct- ed to the new building on SCUGOG ROAD at the northern anville, Phone ? San Hydro 623-2561 e 623-2562 Zenith 2-2520 Manager W. R. Walters Blue, Sand, or Maize, Just : $5.50 for short sleeves ai and $7.00 for long. "FROM A MAN'S WORLD' a Simcoe Street South 728.7974 DOWNTOWN OSHAWA y 2314 JUST A FEW OF THE FINE LISTINGS OFFERED BY CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST REAL ESTATE DEPT. Asking $19,400 This fine modern bungalow has 4 bedrooms, room, built in even and stove, spacious let 75' x 200, steps away from St, Paul's Separate School near Gam rard Rad., south of Rossland, Act quickly, It eo @ beauty, lorge ree re $5,000 Down 3 bedrooms and professionally finished ree-rnom --=_ 28° x 12', Completely decorated and nicely landscaped, Only 9 months old near all schools in East Oshawa = only steps away from King St argue orange ANE URED ETS Central Location Large, very well built brick home, yeu may rent rooms for nearly enough to carry the mortgage, This good value with about $4,000 down, Make offer, Near Hospital and Downtown Ineome home provides $300 per manth and could easily he converted te 4 plex, Spacious 3 bedraam @reund finer apt. rents for $135 per month and upstairs rooms provide $175 per month FOR DETAILS -- CALL seevee, 668-4416 sseees 223-7996 728.3376 CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST RALPH SCHOFIELD Supervisor -- Real Estate Dept, Tom Houston Charles Chaytor RALPH SCHOFIELD 19 Simeoe N, Oshawa 723-5221

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