Oshawa Times (1958-), 12 Sep 1966, p. 25

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

igh JO PF 2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, September 12, 1966 A GLANCE AROUND THE GLOBE Pearson Makes Plea To Zambian Aides LONDON (CP)--Prime Minis- ter Pearson made a last-minute appeal to Zambia's delegation today not to make any hasty decision on its threatened waik- out from the Commorwealth prime ministers' conference. Zambia's Foreign Minister Si- mon Kapwepwe met with the Canadian leader in Pearson's hotel suite just before the show- down session in which Prime Minister Wilson was to give Britain's reply to African de- mands for a forceful policy on ' Pearson urged Kapwepwe to weigh Wilson's statement care- fully before making the critical decision on whether to stay or g0. Kapwepwe himself gave no advance sign of what the deci- sion will be. "We'll have to wait and hear what Mr. Wilson has to say-- then we will decide," he said. Edition Suspended DETROIT (AP)--The Detroit Free Press suspended Sunday night publication of today's morning editions because of what management termed a dispute with union printers over the firing of two composing room employees. John B. Olson, general mana- ger of the newspaper, issued a statement saying the dispute with members of Local 18, De- troit Typographical Union, "arose over discharge of two composing room employees for fighting on the (newspaper's) premises."' The fight, between two female employees, was reported to have occurred Saturday night. Union spokesmen. were not immediately available for com- ment. New Miss America ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) --Jane Anne Jayroe of Okla- homa turned in her baton and basketball Sunday to begin her reign as Miss America of 1967. The 19 - year - old brunette beauty will have to suspend her musical studies at Oklahoma City University and curtail her basketball playing to travel around the United States as Miss America. The five-foot-six, 116 - pound to-ed was crowned Saturday night. before. 20,000 persons at . Convention Haii. Jay-Jay, as her friends call her, comes from four genera- tions of music teachers and hopes. t6 conduct an orchestra. During her reign as Miss America, Jay - Jay, who suc- ceeds Debr Bryant of Kan- sas, éarn an estimated $75,- 000 in fees as well.as a PREMIER PEARSON New Paper NEW YORK (AP) -- A new newspaper makes its debut in New York today with publica- tion of the World Journal Trib- une, 140 days late. The first edition, held up by a strike and other labor difficult- ies, will have an initial press run of 900,000. The afternoon and Sunday newspaper is a merger of the morning Herald Tribune, after- noon Journal American, and evening World Telegram and Sun. Its staff is made up of former employees of the three publications and it will include columnists, features and com- ics of all three. Beer, Liquor Tax Yields Increase OTTAWA (CP)--Federal and | provincial taxes on beer and liquor in 1964-65 yielded $591,- 000,000, an increase of $36,000,- 000 or 6.5 per cent over the pre- vious fiscal year. Only in the Yukon and in Quebec -- where liquor board workers went on strike for two months--were revenues lower, the Dominion Bureau of Statis- tics reported today. The value of sales of alcoholic beverages, not including final markups by licencees, totalled $1,129,000,000, an increase of five per cent. Exports of alcoholic bever- ages increased 19 per cent in value and volume over the pre- vious year. First Curator TORONTO (CP) -- Dr. Claude Bisseli, president of the Univer- sity of Toronto, today an- nounced the appointment of Dr. personal $10,000 scholarship. Henry King of Londan, England, Four Escape Saginaw Jail SAGINAW, Mich. (AP)--Au-| thorities captured one man and) hunted through two counties to-| day for four others who escaped from jail Sunday by overpow-|were slugged with a brace| In raids Sunday against the ering two guards, stabbing one|sawed off from a steel bunk|demilitarized zone, Canberras of them. | The fugitives, described as "extremely dangerous," were) believed by authorities to be) armed. Saginaw County Sheriff] Robert Loubert urged residents | of Saginaw and Bay counties, | in east-central lower Michigan, to lock their doors. | Loubert, a detective and a sergeant apprehended one of the escapees, Stewart Waugh, 20, of Saginaw, without a fight Sunday night in Saginaw. HERE AND THERE LAWN BOWLING Members of the Whitby, Osh- awa and Bowmanville Bowling Clubs combined to win the Cornell Trophy in the men's doubles tournament Saturday at Highland Creek. The winning team was composed of Bob Gallagher, Oshawa; Dick Adams, Whitby and Clarence Oke, Bowmanville. THREE MISHAPS The Whitby detachment of the Ontario Provincial Police investigated three accidents in- volving minor personal injuries during the weekend. AT COLLEGE Hugh Getty Laurence, son of Mr. and Mrs. Perry §. Lau- rence, 418 Fairview ODr., Whitby, is one of the 318 fresh- men enrolled at Amherst Col- lege, Amherst, Mass. He is a graduate of Henry Street High School, Whitby. Lawn | Authorities said the five| jumped two guards who had come to serve them breakfast in the county jail. The guards bed. One guard was stabbed on! the hand with a home - made| knife, officers said. The four at large were iden- tified as: --Frank Wander, 25, of Bridgeport, awaiting trial on | a murder charge in the death | Of his stepfather who was shot in--the--back---and-robbed_in April, --Terry Mehlder, 18, of Sagi- | maw, awaiting trial for break- |. ing and entering. --Charles Chisholm, 35, of Brown City, held on charges of breaking and entering, car- | Trying a concealed weapon } and walking away from a | prison camp near Jackson. --Ira R. Patton, 34, of Sagi- naw, awaiting trial for break- ing and entering. Sheriff's men said the search first was concentrated around Bay City where a motorist re- ported taking four men in his |car from Saginaw. At one point, a Saginaw po- liceman fired a shot at a man saw darting into a swampy area near the Saginaw River. A mounted posse searched the swamp but found nobody. NEED A NEW FURNACE? Ne ag dg dor sot So Payment PERRY Day or Night .. . 723-3443 AI SSeade BRAND NEW FALL ARRIVALS 463 RITSON RD. &. A ae? Se" ae ee I SARGEANT'S RENTALS Sale! Sale ! Iilliliiiz Full Length Formals AND BRIDESMAIDS GOWNS *19.95 725-3338 THUUAUUUALLAAOAALUAAA Fil F ; graduates of Quo Vadis Nurs- '\ing School, all women between as first curator of the Royal Ontario Museum's McLaughlin Planetarium. ; The ROM's new planetarium is to be completed next year. The $2,000,000 centre is a gift of Col. R. Samuel McLaughlin, chairman of the board of Gen- eral Motors of Canada Ltd. Diplomas Given TORONTO (CP) --The first 30 and 50, received their diplo- mas Saturday from Health Min- ister Dymond. Quo Vadis was established two years ago to train mature women to be registered nurses. Some of the students started training years ago and gave it up for marriage. Others were former nurses needing re-train- ing to re-enter the profession. In the class of 1966 there are 23 mothers, five grandmothers, two nuns and three single women. Watch Weather BRANTFORD (CP) -- South- ern Ontario tobacco growers Sunday started keeping a wary eye on weather conditions as a sudden weather change to lower daytime temperatures was ac- companied by a drop Saturday night into the 40s. Three more weeks of good weather are needed to harvest the bulk of the crop and a sur- vey of the area showed 40 per cent of the crop remained to be harvested. George Demeyere, chairmm of the Flue - Cured Tobacco Growers' Marketing Board, said Sunday the usual date for com- pletion of the harvest is around Sept. 15. U.S. Planes Rap North SAIGON (AP) -- U.S. planes pounded North Viet Nam with the heaviest raids of the war Sunday, the U.S. command an-; nounced. | B-52 bombers struck today at) North Vietnamese troops in the demilitarized zone in follow-up raids to tactical strikes made Sunday by air force Canberras and Phantom bombers. A U.S. spokesman said Amer- ican pilots flew a record 171 missions against the North, hit- ting at bridges, fuel depots and transportation facilities in the Hanoi and Haiphong areas and the southern panhandle. During the forays, carrier based navy planes reported hitting three North Vietnamese torpedo boats in the Tonkin Gulf 26 miles northeast of Haiphong. Ground action in South Viet Nam continued in a lull and United States and Vietnamese military. spokesmen reported no major enemy contacts. The 171 air missions over the North was well over the previ- ous high of 156 raids of Aug. 26. and Phantoms reported touch- ing off 55 secondary explosions and eight secondary fires. | This indicated strikes on |North Vietnamese ammunition 'and fuel dumps in the buffer |zone between North and South | Viet Nam. | TOURISTS NEED A BREAK | MEXICO CITY (AP) -- Gov- ernment officials are waging an uphill battle to bring down the prices of drinks. Tourism offic- ers held a meeting of restaur- ant and cabaret owners and urged them to lower bar tabs to $1 a drink, but the owners in- |sist that it takes 15 pesos ($1.20) a rendale official soon after her the British Astronomical Asso- P' ciation. disappeared Sunday: night from the Warrendale centre for emo- tionally disturbed children and were later found in the custeady of former centre staff mem- rs. ' A department of health offi- cial said one girl was located at the home of a former War- disappearance at 9 p.m. He said the other girls were safe and no decision had been made to return them to the home. Ivo Verbeeck, assistant to former Warrendale director John Brown, said the two girls were taken to a camp at nearby Oak Ridges which was estab- lished by Mr. Brown for emo- tionally disturbed children. Mr. Verbeeck said a private citizen saw the two children and called the Oak Ridges camp for assistance. He said the Warrendale centre would be notified of the children's where- abouts. WILL INVESTIGATE A government official said the incident will be investigated and reports sent to the attor- ney-general's department. The Sunday disappearances shattered a relatively peaceful weekend at Warrendale after last week's upheaval following the provincial government's takeover of the centre. In the aftermath of the gov- ernment's move, charges and denials of abduction were hurled back and forth, experts in health and welfare services exchanged bitter words and the future of 57 children at the cen- tre was left in doubt. What is now Warrendale was a privately-operated orphanage called St. Faith's Lodge in Eto- bicoke Township. Its 30-man board turned it into a centre for the emotionally disturbed in 1952, and in 1953 hired a welfare worker named John Brown as its director. Mr. Brown had bold new ideas about the treatment of the emotionally - disturbed Three Girls Located -- Fled Warrendale Home | TORONTO (CP)--Three girls Warrendale, but not sufficiently so to win full acceptance by all experts in that field. Mr. Brown also had forthright opinions on the need of public support for Warrendale, many of whose children were wards of the children's aid societies, He didn't ask for aid from the manded it, on grounds that Since Warrendaie met tne cri- teria of the Children's Institu- tions Act, it had a right to ask for more money. ANIMOSITY REPORTED There were recurring reports of animosities between Mr. Brown, other workers in mental health fields and the provincial department of health. Many of them became focussed in criti- cisms of the government by leg- islature members of the New Democratic Party. But not until a month ago did the animosities develop into an open breach. Tt was then that Mr. Brown foliowea severe NDP criticism of the department of health with an announcement that he would be a NDP candidate in the next provincial election. A few days later the board of directors of Warrendale an- nounced that Mr. Brown had been dismissed. He said his dis- missal was directly tied to his political announcement. Last week, the 40-member staff of Warrendale announced it was resigning effective last Friday. On Thursday, the gov- ernment announced it was tak- ing over Warrendale at the re- quest of the board of directors. A team under Dr. J. D. Atche- son, head of the Thistletown school of disturbed children, wes taking over. Its members were volunteers from various children's aid societies and heat and welfare agencies. Thursday night, some of the children at Warrendale ran away, uid at least 12 reached a camp, operated by Mr. Brown, where some other chil- dren had already been moved by their parents or guardians. Threugh the night, more chil- young. They were successful at officials said a station wagon on a supervised walk and 'took them to the Brown camp. Brown said the children had been running away, and were picked up for their own protec- n. provincial government--he de-/|tio Toronto and provincial police| were called in, but said later there would be no investigation into the allegations of abduc- tions. By Saturday morning, all the children had been accounted for. Thirty-three remained at Warrendale. Five had been sent to the Children's Psychiatric Research Institute at London, Ont. Nineteen had been placed oificially in Brown's camp. But the battle of words con- tinued. Deputy Health Minister Dr. K. C. Charron in a state- ment Saturday accused the for- mer staff of returning to War- rendale, upsetting the children and impeding the smooth trans- fer of authority. CHALLENGES MOVE Mr. Brown challenged the validity of the government take- over. He said the board of di- rectors had no right to ask for it, and he didn't know of any legislation under which the gov- -- could accept the cen- re. The battle went right down the line to workers on both sides, former staff members charging a change in treatment methods was harmful to the children, new staff members saying the children had been in- doctrinated for a long period of time against accepting any change. In the end, the Warrendale upheaval may have its final re- percussions in the legislature. Stephen Lewis, NDP member for Scarborough, in a letter to Health Minister Dymond Satur- day, charged the government with "systematically eliminat- ing successful techniques in working with children." ' Death Toll Reaches 56 At least 56 persons were killed driven by a former member of|accidentally in Canada during|® the staff had picked up some|the weekend, 43 in traffic, five| Montreal of the children while they were| drowned, two died in fires and six in unclassified incidents. A Canadian Press Survey from 6 p.m. Friday to junday, local times, showed tario leading the provinces with 21. fatalities. ee ere ee eee eee wet) ees % "Al FUGOl 10 UICU 1 Viasat, UNS an men bee denenlaw nad oa SEEEELEMOESEIUS ANNOUNCING Mr. Earle Allen Hos recently completed suc- cessfully a six months course by the Ontario Association of Real Estate Boards in his en- deavour to extend to you a greater service for your real estate requirements. CALL EARLE ALLEN et 725-7782 728-7328 Keith Peters REALTY LIMITED REALTOR 103 KING ST EAST chainsaw. Nova Scotia had three traffic deaths, ail in one fatality-free. The survey does not include natural or industrial deaths, suicides. in' one drowning and one involving a'¢ All ex-service personnel and their dependents ere ' invited to take advantage of « FREE LEGION SERVICE W. R. BUCK Assistant Secretary, Service Bureau, Toronte LEGION HALL, BRANCH NO. 43 Wednesday, Sept. 14th From 2 p.m. to Completion of Business , To give skilled advice on Veteran's Benefits. Any- one with questions on War Disability Pension, War Veteran's Allowance (Burnt Out Pension) .. . Treatment or Hospital Care is urged to call or write to MR. C. A. BRISEBOIS, Business Manager of Reyal Canadian Legion, Branch 43, 90 Centre Street, Oshawa, who will arrange on appointment. --<------ dren were affected. Warrendal WEATHER FORECAST "Sunny And TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts issued by the weather office at 5:30 a.m.: Synopsis: Bright sunshine to- day will see the thermometer reaching the 70 to 75 mark this afternoon and in the extreme southwestern Ontario inte the low 80s. Warm air surging into upper lakes districts brought milder overnight temperatures but ex- tensive cloud and scattered showers will not allow tempera- tures to compete with those in southern sections of the prov- ince today. Lake St. Clair, Windsor: Sunny and warm today. Vari- able cloudiness with chance of a few showers Tuesday. Winds light. Southern Lake Huron, Lake Erie, London: Sunny and ness Tuesday. Winds light. Northern Lake Huron, Niag- ara, southern Georgian Bay, Lake Ontario, Haliburton, Kil- laloe, Toronto, Hamilton: Sunny with seasonable temperatures today. Sunny with a few cloudy intervals Tudsday. Winds light. Northern Georgian Bay, Al- goma, Sault Ste. Marie, south- ern White River, Timagami, North Bay, Sudbury: Variable cloudiness today and Tuesday. A few showers today. A little warmer. Winds light today southerly 10 to 20 Tuesday. Cochrane: Cloudy with show- ers today. Variable cloudiness Tuesday. Showers likely late in the day. A little warmer Tues- day. Winds light today south- erly 20 Tuesday. Northern White River: Mostly cloudy today. Variable cloudi- jto return a profit. ness with scattered showers or TROUD' -Tuesday and Wednesday Specials- i | LEAN AND TENDER CLUB STEAKS 69 SKINLESS Wieners 49 LEAN MINCED BEEF 39 FRESH CUT SHANK Boneless BEEF Ee ae ad on! alr a ae' At oe aoe ae ee Ae eee Forecast For Tuesday warmer today. Variable cloudi-|* Frew Clouds thundershowers tonight and TTuesday. Warmer Tuesday. Winds southerly 15 te of, Ottawa region: Mainly sunny today and Tuesday. A little warmer Tuesday. Winds light. Forecast temperatures Low overnight, high Tues Windsor St. Thomas .....s.. 50 London ...seeeeee5 50 Kitchener ......... 50 Mount Forest ..... 47 Wingham 47 Hamilton - 50 50 - 55 day 77 Sault Ste. Marie... Kapuskasing White River .. Moosonee ... presen present, co of savings as well. THESE ARE; COMFORT: that feeling day Saturday, best rate of interest ment growth, Timmins . 19 SIMCOE 7 23 XK BOWMANV! The 5th "C" Of Saving COMMON SENSE: meaning that now is a good time to be setting aside money just in case. At t, conditions generally are unsettled, to say the least and people who have money on deposit at 442% (Like OUR saving depositors) ore realizing the full benefit of the first 4 C's that comes from knowing that you have cash available when you need it. CONVENIENCE: Longer saving hours daily and all CONFIDENCE: Knowing thot you are receiving the paid more often. CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST: dealing with a COM- MUNITY Trust Company, local savings invest- Central Ontario Trust & Savings Corporation ST. N. OSHAWA, 23-5221 ING 8ST. W. LLE 623-5221 wee fot §1NN THE BANK OF NOVA SCOTIA tau ata SFL auyu gui ewe J "@d with six-year Scotiabank Savings Certificates Buy as little as $10 worth or as much as you like--cashable any time. uick! © Do you know _ the name of your insurance company? Don't be strprised if you find it's the "Royal"... After all, it's the largest general insurance group in Canada. Chances are you didn't know thatl You see, the Royal does not have salesmen. It deals through independent agents, like us, We are neighbours to you; we're impartial--- the best kind of insurance men to know your needs. It's an arrange- ment that works well for you. GRIFFIN REAL ESTATE LTD. INSURANCE DEPARTMENT John Kosteniuk Handling All Classes of Insurance AUTO - FIRE - BONDS - BURGLARY - CASUALTY OSHAWA 723-4666 ROYAL INSURANCE Grour AJAX 942-3310 NOW RENTING THIS EXCITING NEW RESIDENCE, LOCATED IN OSHAWA"S FINEST RE- SIDENTIAL AREA IS DESIGNED: FOR QUIET COMFORT, AND GRACIOUS LIVING. WE CORDIALLY INVITE YOU TO VISIT US, AND TO RESERVE NOW FOR EARLY OCCUPANCY. ROSSLYNN ARMS APARTMENTS 743 STEVENSON ROAD NORTH PHONE 728 -9724

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy