Oshawa Times (1958-), 6 Aug 1966, p. 2

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LOSE LAND FROM SEA PORT MORESBY, New Gul- nea (AP)--The Latlat people of |New Britain lost a legal battle jto continue farming 690 acres of land that rose from the sea) lyears ago. The supreme court | ruled the land belogs to Pa-| pua-New Guinea. It rose in al volcanic eruption in 1937, and the Latlats began farming it | two years Jater, ere FULLED nooLs Save time and buy potted roses. Start bet- ter, bloom freely, strong and healthier, all root pruned, easier to plant and they come in assorted varieties and colours, WEATHER FORECAST Chance Of Thunderstorm Little Change Expected TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts Toronto: A few clouds and Fiissued at 5:30 a.m, chance of a thundershower in '| Synopsis: Little change is an- the afternoon and evening. Not '\ticipated for Sunday. much change in temperatures. | Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie,| Light winds, ' Southern Lake Huron, Niagara,| Haliburton, Killaloe, Northern | Windsor, London, fiamiiivn.|Georgian Bay, Timagami,. Ai-| Sunny with 'a few cloudy pe-|goma, Sault Ste. Marie, nin riods and warm, Light winds. |River, North Bay, Sudbury: | Lake Ontario, Northern Lake| Variable cloudiness with a few Huron, Southern Georgian Bay,|scattered thunderstorms and : gee ees jnot much change in tempera- tures. Winds light except gusty in thunderstorms. Cochrane, Western James | Staff Strength Question Open Pi sae cower on OTTAWA (CP) -- Canada is)much change in temperatures, ; ; |Light winds. willing to discuss with India and)" Mainly sunny becom- | Poland steps to bolster the staff). , strength of the international|!"8 cioudy with some showers control commissions in -South-|!ate in the day. Temperatures | east Asia, an external affairs|near normal Light winds, | department spokesman said Fri- day, 2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturdey, August 6, 1966 A GLANCE AROUND THE GLOBE Pressure Mounts At UN For U Thant To Remain UNITED NATIONS (AP) --, Pressure fas mountea on vu Thant of Burma to serve a sec- ond five-year term as United Nations secretary-general, but he stood by his previous deci- sion to withhold any public an- nouncement of his plans until the end of this month. A delegation representing 12 African countries called on him Friday and asked that he make himself available for a second Buying or Selling! GUIDE REALTY LTD. @ LLOYD CORSON , President @ DICK YOUNG, Vice-Pres, @ LUCAS PEACOCK, Sec. Treas 16 SIMCOE 5ST, $., OSHAWA PHQRE 723-5281) ADMIRAL, FOURTH TO RETIRE, AS DEPUTY CHIEF IN OTTAWA OTTAWA (CP) ~~ Rear - Ad- _|miral Robert P. Welland, 48, depuly chief of operations at Canadian Forces Headquarters, goes on retirement leave Mon- day, the fourth premature de- |parture by an admiral in the jlast month, The defence department con- firmed Admiral Welland's de- parture Friday, There had been reports he was to retire, seven years ahead of normal retire- ment age, but the official con- firmation didn't come until Fri- day. Rear-Admiral William Landy- more, commander of Maritime Command, Michael G. Stirling, maritime commander Pacific, and Herbert G. Burchell, deputy For All Ycur Gardening Needs See Rundle Garden Centre Lid. EVERYTHING FOR THE GARDEN 1015 KING E, ROBERT P, WELLAND Forecast Temperatures 725-6353 Big Sale on All NURSERY STOCK 25% -- 50% DISCOUNT NOW AT Oshawa Garden Service 1259 Simcoe St. N. Phone 723-1161 OPEN 9 A.M. 'til DARK seeeeree F 728-6218 728-6218 ROSS E. MILLS 25 YEARS SELLING AND INSTALLING BROADLOOM, LINO, CORLON and TILE NEW ... NEW SEAMLESS EVER-GLOW NEVER WAX FLOORS Plastic Underlays To Level Concrete OSHAWA police helicopter, which found the children who had been lost in the Laurentians for 44 hours lands in Ste. Marguerite. COMING HOME, Sylvia Chagnon, 10, of Montreal and Roger Saillant, 9, of Mont Rolland in the Lauren- tian Mountains wave as the 10 Years Experience in ANTENNAS & TOWERS Master Systems For Apts, ete. HOME DISTRIBUTION SYSTEMS -- Workmenship Guaranteed Estimates et ne Obligetion CP. Wirephoto ROTORS (Auiometic. & Menual) TRIO Television 171 BOND £, 728-5143 Mister TOWERS : | ELECTION IN B.C.-- 728-6218 Premier W. A. C. Bennett announced Friday night that a provincial election would be held in British Columbia Sept. 12. The last election was in 1963 when Premier Bennett and_ his Social Credit party were elected for five year term. They recently cele- brated their I4th year in office. 80 Simcoe N. TOWERS ANY HEIGHT TO 100 FT. ATTRACTIVE ADDITION ONLY TWO CLAMPS ON THE HOME over from after several inquiry -waes 5 |48,500, -had-only Safety Honors GUELPH (CP)--This city has won the Canadian Automobile Association's highest pedestrian safety award, William A. Frank- lin, director of the Ontario Mo- tor League Waterloo County Au tomobile Club announced here Friday The CAA and the American Automobile Association each year appraise cities' safety pro motion programs and traffic fa tality records. Guelph also won the award in 1963 and 1964 Guelph, with a population of traffic fatality durin ges ian Salty History SAINT JOHN, N.B. (CP) dark oak gavel with a salty his \ tory was presented Friday to J Louis McKenna of Sussex, retir- ing president of the Canadian Weekly Newspapers Association The presidential gavel and matching anvil were: fashioned from a_ piece of oak plank re- covered from a British mer chant ship sunk between 1790 {and 1830 off Sandy Point, five miles. from Deer Island, N.B The wood, which turned black in the salty water, was provided by the New Brunswick Museum of Saint John to the Royal Trust term. chief of technical services, have A spokesman for Thant said also left the service over armed the secretary-general expressed forces unification policies, Ad- deep gratitude end promised te mira] Landymore was fired for take their support nto consder- public 'statements opposing' the ation. policies and the oiher two The spokesman added that sought early retirement. Thant would stand by his previ- Admiral Welland was not] y Lie oversight Wisk benaiy ous decision, however, to with- javailable for comment, How-|he joined the navy in 1936 and| Commenting on remarks by) 4. a hold any announcement until |ever, it was learned earlier he| gained a reputation as one of|U.S. State Secretary Rusk at a plage ad pevesoneese the end of August. : ; |had asked to be retired for per-|the force's best anti-submarine| press conference in Washington, ree OMAS oereeere In London, the British Parlia- sonal reasons. |specialists during the Second|the spokesman said the Cana- -- ' ment's UN group sponsored a A native of McCreary, Man.,| World War. dian government is anxious to Kite EHRE 49s eens motion urging Thant to serve have the demilitarized zone in| Mount Forest ...... another five years when his | H Viet Nam recognized and re- enn gg term expires in November. spected, and would support any | "4m! tee Smallwood Gains. Hier es ie scant Ex 'Pass orts' "As far as we are concerned, Toronto po Pp ' we would welcome any atopn | Evlercorenes reeee J CP) -- Jean- hd which would be taken within the Singston « Sant tangy, bad of the 1967 Another Pul Mill | bounds of practicality to ensure Trenton ... ' , is- the demilitarized zone was re-/ Killaloe ..+. ee oe Se spected by all parts to the con-| Muskoka 'ri- spe R 2 -|M ° Sean center ot te oe By DON McLEOD chip plant, Mr. Smallwood said, flict," the spokesman said North Bay sees ticipated 30,000,000 visits to the | ST, JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP)--|two 65,000 - ton ships will be Bg a te ap petal " fair are already paid for. |Premier Smallwood Friday an- puilt at a cost of $16,000,000 to N& Me. interna ne tal eect 5 "We know that the value of | jnounced a fourth pulp and paper... the chips to in mill drow commissions in numbers : is ee hd "ee pal eee S 'passports' in circulation is mill for Newfoundland ' : P P something that we would have alte Hives a more than $20,000,000 and that Mr. Smallwood said the $120, Labrador, to discuss here and with the he a ' our agents have sold more than 000,000 project would include a| He said the mill, at Stephen- other members of the commis- : _-- tee $10,000,000 to the public,", Mr. 4) $10.000,000 chip plant to be built Ville, is to be built by Cana-|Sions. Our real interest js. in immins i i eS ; | aveli Vurope's |Retting. the buffer zone recog Lussier said. lnear Happy Valley on Labra,|dian Javelin Lid, Europe's |8© a reanacted.? Passports is the term useQ by ldor's Lake Melville. Schneider - Creusot group and "ized and respected. ames ot ibe thir tor Sea He told a news conference, United Bates interests, sion tickets to the Montreal ex- } F ye ..' Prime contractor is ENSA of| M . k d geo ne peyote dion te "Stephen: | Paris. wholly . owned within the eans ac Ee he fair launched its first ad- ear its " |Schneider-Creusot. group, which vance admissions program Jan. | ville Mill, expected to be in pro-)h25 been allotted development! T S Child 12 and it ended July 31. The| -- hy 1969, am dan |costs of about $8,000,000 and 0 nave 1 second phase of the advance ad- sear Eee eee eat. the (821,000,000 in working capital. | TORONTO (CP)--Dr. Michael missions program was launched 40 " ; " Mr. Smallwood said govern-| p,. . 'e ite i i 7 United States' Harmon air force : |Braudo of Toronto's Hospital for Aug. 1 and will continue to Feb. oss ment guarantees had made the|cioy Children said Friday night 28, 1967. ae mill possible and a special leg-| anctars 'Ratna The province now has two] islature session bleh have A rig cua ecm el Weekl Election SS (NBO.) tbe called for ratification. He|gave the life of Lisa Parker, Y Member Dies raed iy oa ode would give details of the guar-| Lisa, who lived for most of SAINT JOHN, N.B. (CP)-- undian evelopment Co. aljantees before their tabling in per 16 months dependent on an John W. Sancton of Westmount, BLAIRMORE, Alt CP) dn ce ee, ea naa |e, nouns. electrical stimulator to provide Que. Friday was elected presi- illis eta Cg. |Nfld. Pulp and Paper Co, Lid.' He said ENSA would hold a) strong heartbeat, died Thurs- 'dent of the Canadian Weekly || William August Kovach, 57, So-jat Corner Brook. five - per - cent equity, leav-\qay in Measlial ; "Newspapers Association at the cial Credit member of the Al-|. Mr, Smallwood said in Apriling Javelin with about 70: per! Dr. Braudo said in an inter- isto of its annual meeting | berta legislature, was found * -- = gg be mee at}oent control, a 1% _ view a new radio-operated stim- ere. 'elds i heel 4,|Come-by-Chance at a cost o e paper mill will turn ou ; vat * Mr. Sancton, 46, publisher of Friday ayad. of oF heart attack) ¢57 000,000 through New York/1,000 tons a day for the first 19 er have greet ingyen 'the Westmount Examiner, suc near Lost Creek in the Crows-| interests, months and then 1,500 tons @/iems of infection Lisa sich ha ceeds J, Louis McKenna of Sus- nest area south of here. Mr.| In addition to the mill and|day for an unspecified period tered and might have saved her sex, N.B., publisher of the|" Kovach, who represented the; ------ . -- I Hife, 'en tery oe Ww : riding of Pincher Gione 'Thure: F . h But the doctor said the new eectere 206 oven meee ae nest since 1948, left alone Thurs- t H dl B k stimulator will not be on the den Leavens, Bolton Enterprise, day on a fishing trip, Police! relg an ers ac market for a year or more G. C, Graven, Ridgetown Do- were called when he failed to . minion, D. R. Dills, po Free | | return. P Press, and Lynn Lashbrook, | | M d S rey Mer Reclaim Won | On Job, For At Least 1] Days Mediator Sent ® Thomson Tour i | TORONTO (CP) yo Composer; MONTREAL (CP) Han-|with contract negotiations in- To Jungle Riot : ' . | Oskar Morawetz of Toronto last qiers of CNR express freight| volving their union, is scheduled i TORONTO (CP) -- Ontario j | week won thg Critics' Award at/have ended their wildcat strike|to bring in his conciliation re. JAKARTA (AP) _ Indo- Liberal Leader Andrew Thomp-; the 1966 Infernational Compos-| with a yote to resume work -- port, nesia's jungled, primitive West| son is scheduled to tour about ers' Competition in' Cava dei! a least for 11 days. Irian has been rocked by riots a dozen cities and towns in the | Trireni, Italy, it was announced!" phe gtrikers voted for an im-| PROTEST DELAYS and near-revolt serious enough eastern Ontario provincial here Friday, Canadian conduc-| mediate work resumption Fri- The wildcat strikers walked|to send Foreign Minister Adam ridings of Prince Edward-Len-| tor Ernesto Barbini made the|q,, night; ending a stoppage out in protest against alleged) Malik to the scene as a medi- nox, Hastings and Frontenac announcement on his return that had 'started Monday and delays in the handing down of'ator, reliable sources reported during the first three days of from the competitions, helped snarl freight traffic be-| the report. Friday. next week. | = tween Montreal and Toronto. A strike by. the union would He is scheduled to leave next He is expected to attend at Cheque Given The men had been reported not be legal until seven days Friday for the Indonesian half least nine party executive and filing back to their jobs through- after the report is made public. of the tuge island of New organizational meetings, take} OTTAWA (CP)--State Secre-| 9.4 Friday The CNR strike had spread to Guinea, an area formerly known part in a radio program, and| tary LaMarsh Friday handed a Originally 1,200 in number, other company freight handlers as West New Guinea and taken visit industrial plants and pro- $34,000 Centennial Commission) 499 of them participated in thelin Toronto, where more than| the Dutch in 1962 vincial institutions in the area.) cheque to the Canadian Associ- formal meeting Friday night. 1: months of fight The following week Mr. ; Thompson plans a similar tour through the Kitchener-Waterloo, Guelph, Brantford, Woodstock and Stratford areas. Olan Appears MONTREAL (CP) -- Samuel/ Olan, a Toronto theatrical pro-| promoter, pleaded not guilty} Friday to a charge of perjury brought against him following a complaint by a former stock- broker. Mr. Olan, 55,° appeared in court after the complaint was made by J. Ernest Savard of} Montreal A-preliminary scheduled by Judge Paul Hur- teau for Aug. 11 The complaint alleged thal Mr. Olan committed perjury in testimony before Mr. Justice Al- bert Leblanc of Quebec Superior Court July 11 Mr. Olan appeared in court on that date to contest a judg-| ment awarding $38,956 to Mr,} Savard and citing an agreement between the two men made in 1960 The judgment, obtained July 4, was quashed by Mr. Justice Leblanc following testimony by Mr. Olan that he had been un aware of the action against him Commune Study BRUSSELS: (AP)--A group of 20 leaders of the American Jew- ish Congress will leave this Bel- gian capital Aug. 1! for a three- week study mission of Jewish) communal life in six eastern European countries. Whitman Funeral Simple Splendor LAKE WORTH, Fia. (AP)-- Mass murderer Charles J. Whit- man and the first of his 15 vic- tims--his mother--were buried Friday in the simple splendor religious service that in- r's prayer for escape the judg thent of vengeance." , And Rev. Thomas Anglim, the family priest, said he trusts God would not hold Whitman respon- fible and that the people "will not judge his actions too barshly." Co., which had the gavel made by Joseph Salkeld of Goderich Ont., a woodworking hobbyist. 24-Hour Clock MONTREAL (CP)--The CNR announced Friday it will intro- duce time tables using the 24- hour clock system, starting Oc- tober 30 The move will do away with the present system of indicating a.m. and p.m. by light and dark type in the public time table. All train arrivals and de- partures will be listed in terms of the 24-hour clock but travel- lers may follow the simple rule of thumb of deducting 1200 from any time of 1300 hours and up For example, a train which leaves at 4:45., will be shown as departing at 16:45 hours The railway's telephone and ticket clerks will continue to give arrivals and departures in loca] times. ve ation for Retarded Children for ja centennial school athletic pro- gram, The project is aimed at stimulating teachers and those retarded who can be trained in improving the general physical performance of the students Best Weekly Award Made SAINT JOHN, N.B. (CP)-- Elliot Lake (Ont.) Standard to day was named Canada's best weekly newspaper in the 1,001- 2,000 circulation class. Awards in special competi- tions were made during the second day of the Canadian Weekly Newspapers Associa- tion's 47th annual meeting Squamish (B.( Times was They said they will stick to their CNR duties until Aug. 17, when a strike following the filing of a conciliation report on a long-standing dispute will be legally possible The strikers are members of the Canadian Brotherhood of Railway Transport and General Workers (CLC) On Aug. 10, Mr. Justice C.: A. Cameron of Ottawa, federal con- ciliator in a dispute connected No-Man's-Land Swaps Recalled PORTLAND, Ore. ( AP )-- Rev, Michael Edward Fleming, 74, retired Roman Catholic priest and a onetime Canadian soldier who swapped cigarettes half the 425 express workers ating Australia controls the other the CNR's downtown terminal) pair were off the job Friday. A wild-| 'The informants here gave this cat strike by them had started report Thursday. The people of West Irian be With the work resumption in, gan rioting because of a scarc Montreal, the CNR announced | ity of food which reduced people the lifting of all embargoes on|in some areas to a near-starva CNR freight shipments between! tion level Montreal and Toronto. The Maritime region, which [~ had also been affected, was back to normal too, the railway officials said Trial Ordered On Death In Cafe FORT McMURRAY, Alta. (CP)--Larry Henry Rollins, 30, of Fort McMurray has been ;committed to trial on a charge | of manslaughter in the death of B. B. Batus, 45, of Kingston NELLIS' HOME IMPROVEMENTS ond GENERAL REPAIRS @ Roofing @ Eavestroughing @ Remodelling EASILY MOVED "GFD' SPECIALLY DE- SIGNED FOR BEST COLOR, TY. from 9" COMPLETELY INSTALLED Phone 728-9525 and let MISTER TOWERS second in the class and the 100 and beer with Germans in one Mile Howse (B.C.) News Her- of the strange no-man's-land in ald was third terludes of the First World War, Other winners: will be buried Monday Best editorial page: Squa- He died Wednesday after mish Times; 2. Kamsack number of years of ill health. (Sask.) Times; 3. Chesterville, He came to Mt. Angel, Ore., (Ont.) Record, the Edson in 1922 to study for the priest- (Alta.) Leader and the Elliot hood and there met Rev. Ra- Lake Leader phael Bleumel of Mt. Angel Best front page: 1. Portage Abbey. In their reminiscing it Leader of Portage La Prairie, developed that both were in a Man.: 2. Beamsville (Ont.) Ex- party of Canadian and German press and the Elliot Lake Stand- Soldiers who left the trenches at ard: 3. Port Perry (Ont.) Star, Ypres and fraternized one day Rollins was charged with non capital murder when Batus died July 6 after a dispute in a cafe} here. The charge was reduced following testimony of a dozen) witnesses at a preliminary hear-! ing 'Thursday Witnesses said a single' blow. was struck. 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