Oshawa Times (1958-), 6 Jan 1967, p. 3

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, Jenuory 6, 1967 A GLANCE AROUND THE GLOBE Review Of Education Promised By Minister LONDON, Ont. (CPJ--A re- view of all post-secondary edu- cation in Ontario is expected to be launched soon, Education Minister William Davis indi- cated in an interview Thurs- day. The aim would be co-ordina- tion of higher learning across the province to avoid unneces- sary duplications or gaps. The Spinks commission last week proposed a 'university of Ontario" to co-ordinate post- secondary education, but this has not met with the approval of Ontario's university presi- dents. They want a master plan that will not affect the auton- omy of the individual univers- ity. Any review of post-secondary education would not bé.an al- ternative to the Spinks' recom- mendation, the education min- ister said. "It's not a question of an al- ternative. The main energies of the Spinks commission were on graduate work and other as- pects of university development perhaps should be considered." Old Graduate Dies MONTREAL (CP) -- Funeral services will be held today for Dr. E. M. Morgan, president of]. the Medical College of Canada! between 1933 and 1936, who died Wednesday. He was 99. Dr. Morgan was the oldest living graduate of Queen's Uni- versity, Kingston, Ont., where he was graduated in 1890. He was among the first doc- tors in Canada to use x-ray equipment in private practice and served as a consultant in x-rays to the Homeopathic Hos- pital, now known as the Queen Elizabeth. Floods Hit East KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) Two persons were drowned and more than 10,000 other evacu- ated in north and eastern Ma- laysia due to monsoon floods. A state of emergency was de- clared in two northeastern states. Dies At 107 PARIS (Reuters) -- Madame | Francoise Bouchard, the French capital's oldest inhabi- tant at 107, died Thursday. Test Pilots Die PARIS (Reuters) -- Gerard Verette and Jacques Gomy, two of France's top test pilots, died near here Thursday when the prototype light aircraft they were flying crashed into a field. GLEN FORD . +» Star in uniform Off To War Actor Glenn Ford, a com- mander in the U.S. Naval Reserve, talked with news- men at Los Angles Inter- national Airport Thursday night as he left for Viet- nam and a month's' tour of active duty. Ford said he chose to serve his act- ive duty obligation in Viet- nam. He will report to the Third Marine Amphibious Force. JOHN L. DEVILAND « » » turns up again Back From Dead A man arrested as John Longer Life Plan BRANTFORD (CP) -- Artin (Harry) Kirkonian, who lost most of his family when the Turks massacred the Armeni- ans in the First World War, cel- ebrated his 101st birthday this week. The centennial planning branch of the Ontario tourism department says he's 102 but Mr: Kirkonian says it doesn't make much difference -- he plans to live a long time yet. 'My father Gregori was 117 when he was killed by a Turk- ish sabre in 1917," he said Thursday. L. Deviland, left, entered jail at Inglewood, Calif., with his attorney, John F. Dunne, Jr., shortly before police said they had posi- tively identified him as George Frederick Knoop, a Las Vegas, Nev., ma- chinist who was declared legally dead after disap- pearing while scuba diving in Lake Mead, Nev., near- ly three years ago. Offi- cers said Knoop's wife Jan- ice collected an undisclos- ed amount of insurance re- married, and moved to Ce- dar Falls, La. -jagainst Harper afid Row to | ker, an ardent admirer of Mac- |donald, immediately blasted the Trial Date Set NEW YORK (AP)--Trial of Mrs. John F. Kennedy's suit block publication of the book, The Death of a President, has been set for Jan. 18. Observers close to the dispute still expect, however, that it will be settled out of court. - Justice Saul S. Streit of the New York state supreme court set the date Thursday after Au- thor William Manchester and publisher Harper and Row filed separate but similar answers to Mrs. Kennedy's suit. Streit had said last week he would hear the case against Manchester Jan. 16. After conferring with their lawyers, Streit said discussions aimed at reaching a settlement were continuing, then added: 'In the event negotiations are not completed, the parties will go to trial." Mrs, Kennedy seeks a perma- jnent injunction against the pub- lication of the book unless the jauthor and publisher agree to |delete some material she deems Day Proclaimed OTTAWA (CP) -- The federal cabinet has proclaimed Wednes- day, Jan. 11, as a day to com- memorate Sir John A. Macdon- ald, Canada's first prime minis- ter. TWEETIE, TOOTIE SUIT SETTLED CHARLOTTE; N.C. (AP)-- "Tweet is a bird sound," the lawyer for the plaintiff told Superior Court Judge Fred Hasty Thursday. "Even in the cartoons, the bird named Tweetie-Pie is always being chased by the mean old put- tie-cat."" "Toot is a train sound," said the opposing lawyer. "Surely, if I say 'toot' I doubt that anyone in this room thinks I said 'tweet.' " The plaintiff, Tweetsie Rail- road at Blowing Rock, was seeking an injunction to forbid a new, rival miniature rail- road at Chimney Rock to use the name Tootsie Railroad. Tweetsie Railroad has been a tourist summer attraction in the North Carolina mountains for years. Its owners said they spent $69,000 in advertising it last year. They didn't want another little railroad to come along with a similar-sounding name and cash in on, the ad- vertising. Tootsie Railroad was organ- ized last March to operate at Chimney Rock, a tourist re- sort further south along the Blue Ridge Mountains. Its owners said the name Tootsie was picked from more than 9,000 names submitted in a contest. Judge Hasty, never losing his judicial frame of mind, granted the injunction and told the Tootsie 'folks to look for another name. Critics Rap It will not be a public holiday! and will be marked this year! jonly, the proclamation said. | Opposition Leader Diefenba- cabinet announcement as '"'a' half-hearted gesture on the part! of the government." Volcano Erupts SAN SALVADOR (Reuters)-- The 7,000 - foot Chaparrastique volcano in eastern El Salvador belched tons of ash on villages near its base Thursday. There were no reports of 'casualties. Puppy Was Left CINCINNATI (AP)--Rollie L. Hall, 30, was sentenced to five days in jail and fined $50 Thurs- day for leaving a puppy in his apartment without food and wa- | HERE and THERE. U.S. UNIVERSITY David Macleod, Oshawa, is one of 1,480 foreign students from 99 countries and six con- tinents who are studying at the University of Wisconsin in Ma- dison this year. Canada is third with most students at the Uni- versity, a total of 160. LETTERS PATENT The granting of letters pat- ent of incorporation to four Osh- awa district firms has been an- nounced in the Ontario Gaz- ette. The firms are Cook's Trai- ler Sales Limited, East Whit- by Township; Kayron Salons 'Limited, Oilco Maintenance Company Limited and Royce Construction of Oshawa Limit- ed, all with head offices in Oshawa. QONVENTION DELEGATES Among the 500 delegates at- tending the annual assembly of the Ontario Secondary School Teachers' Federation in Toron- to were: N. Brunne, Uxbridge; R. Lott, Port Perry; E. J. Chard, Whitby; N. Gollert, Aj- ax; P. S. Dhillon, Whitby; W. McDougall and Robert Shef- field, Oshawa; J. Wilson and Pearl Rogers, Pickering. SOIL ASSOCIATION Walter Gallagher, of Laure] and Harvey Wright, of Lind- say, were the speakers at the annual meeting of the Durham County Soil and Crop Improve- .-- at Orono an. HOLSTEIN CLUB Dr. E. B. Burnside of the animal science department, University of Guelph, will be the speaker at the annual meet- ing of the Durham County Hol- stein Club, Jan. 12, at Bow- manville. Dr. Burnside is a former assistant -agricultural representative in Durham Coun- HOSPITAL REPORT Oshawa Genera! Hospital re- lows: 320 admissions with 10 newborn males and 18 females. Two hundrer and twenty six people were discharged with 12 of the newborn males and 10 of the newborn females being discharged. Major surgery was performed on 73 patients and minor surgery on 90. Seventy- five people visited the eye, ear nose and throat department and 322 treatments and examina- tions were administered. Casts were placed on 33 patients while 620 received physiotherapy treatments. There were 479 visits and 95 patients in oc- cupational therapy. CONVENTION DELEGATES Three members of the On- tario Council Milk Producers Association attended the annual meeting of the Ontario Milk Marketing Board at the Royal York Hotel, Toronto, on Tues- day and Wednesday of this week. They were Roy Ormiston, Brooklin, president of the as- sociation; Ronald Werry , RR1, Oshawa and Neil Smith, Rag- lan, both directors of the as- sociation. CHILLY MORNING Residents of the Rablan area reported the temperature there early this morning was two degrees above zero. It was con- siderably colder north of 'The Ridges". LABOR ELECTION The Oshawa and District La- bor Council will hold its an- nual election of officers at the United Steelworkers of Ameri- ca Hall, 115 Albert St., on Jan. 10. The ODL represents all Oshawa and district trade un- ions and has a total member- Ship in excess of 18,000. ye, oe eee PEACE, BAILIFF Harold Devirre Rowley, Whit- by, has been appointed a jus- tice of the peace-for the prov- ince. The appointment of Leo- nard Maher, Oshawa, as a bail- iff for Ontario County has port to the people for the week ending Dec. 31, 1966, is as {ol- been revoked. ter for three days. He said he locked up the dog because he didn't know what to do with it| when he and his family left! town, Troops Move Out CAMP GAGETOWN, N.B. (CP)--The first group of more than 400 soldiers from the Ist Regiment, Royal Canadian Horse Artillery, today will be- gin moving to Germany for a three-year posting with NATO. The men will replace the 2nd Regiment which is to return to Camp Gagetown. The Ist Regi- ment is under the command of Lieutenant-Colonel D. B. Crow of Guelph. Body Identified MOOSONEE, Ont. (CP)--Po- lice Thursday identified a muti- lated body found along the Northland Railway at Moose River Crossing as that of Floyd Gilpin, 20, an Indian from Ru- pert House, Que. Police said the youth died about Dec. 24 when he fell between the cars of a train on which he was riding. Showplace Closes? TORONTO (CP) --Officials of the Toronto board of educa- tion will recommend soon that Main Street public school, an 18-month-old pilot project for immigrant students, be closed. The recommendation, if ac- cepted by the trustees, will end what has been called a show- place of this kind of teaching in North America, The school lim- its classes to 12 students a teacher. | |5l-year-old woman who made; TV Substitute? PASSAU, Bavaria (AFP)--A her 12-year-old daughter do! strip-tease acts on the kitchen table before appreciative youths, Thursday told-a judge: "What do you-expect... there's not even television in our village." The mother was given a three-month suspended jail term. Epidemic Check QUEBEC (CP) -- Dr. Roger Foley, director of epidemiology in the department of health, said Thursday that measles and scarlet fever have reached epi- demic proportions in the prov- ince. He said visits by health inspectors to schools after they reopen next week will be stepped up in order to check Sa early symptoms of scarlet ever, Library Gets Gift MONTREAL (CP) -- Michael Garber, president of the Cana- dian Jewish Congress, an- nounced Thursday a collection of Judaica will be presented to the National Library in Ottawa by the congress as a gift in ob- servance of the centenary of Canadian Confederation. The collection will include about 7,- 000 volumes covering all fields of Jewish scholarship, including Rabbinic literature, Jewish phi- losophy, Jewish history, Yid- dish classics and Hebrew liter- Chaplin Film LONDON (AP) Charlie Chaplin's first movie in a dec- le, A Countess from Honz Kong, was hit hard by British! critics today. They called it slow, outdated, Square, and a bore. Several critics said that the movie showed Chaplin had not kept up with changes in his media and that it suggested he should rest on his laurels. The movie stars Sophie Loren, as the countess, and Marlon Brando. Chaplin, 77, was undaunted by the drubbing handed out 'by early critical reviews of the movie. At the world premiere at London's Carlton «cinema Thursday night, he described the reviews as "very provin- cial." "I'm not worried. I still think it's a great film and I think the audiences will agree with me rather than the critics." After the premiere, he went on to a supper party at the Sa- voy Hotel, given in his honor by Jules Stein, head of Univer- LAGOS. (AP)--The chief' of Nigeria's central government \said Thursday night that the |breakup of Africa's most popu- jlous nation has been-averted by {the agreement he reached in | Ghana with the country's four regional governors. "Nigeria will definitely re- }main united," Lt.-Col. Yakubu | Gowon, chairman of the federal 'military council, said in Accra at the conclusion of the two-day constitutional conference. Lt. - Col. C. Odumegwu jOjukwu, the Eastern region governor who had threatened to take his area out of the federa- very big success." He said he| was speaking for the other| three regional chiefs. | However, a communique out- lining the agreement reached by Gowon, the four governors and other members of the ruling council, made no men- tion of the major issue dividing the east from the rest of the country: Whether Nigeria will be a four-region confederation with a weak central govern- ment, demanded by Ojukwu, br whether it will continue as a/ federation with a strong central' government, | TORONTO (CP) -- A Toronto youth, Ronald Walli, testified Thursday that he, Wayne Ford and a third youth caroused at the cottage of Ford's mother, Minnie, the weekend she disap- peared in 1963. Describing himself as Ford's best friend, Walli gave evidence at Ford's preliminary hearing on-a capital murder charge laid after a body the Crown alleges was Mrs. Ford's was found near her Lake Couchiching cot- tage last October. Walli, 20, said he, Ford and Larry Metcalfe drove from Tor- onto to the Ford cottage near Orillia during the Victoria Day Weekend At Ford Cottage Described At Murder Probe The Crown attorney's office said Thursday it will not take action against radio station CFRB Toronto for a newscast it) carried of testimony given at! the opening of the preliminary| hearing Tuesday. Magistrate Norman Gianelli| had ordered Tuesday that wit-| nesses who had not yet testi-| fied be kept out of court and| not be allowed to communicate! with witnesses who had given| evidence. Defence counsel G. W. Brigden said CFRB's de- tailed coverage violated the rul- ing and the magistrate ordered Crown attorney Lloyd Graburn weekend. to investigate. | MASERU (Reuters)--Sources close to King Moshoeshoe II said today the king considers his present status in Lesotho "intolerable" and is anxious to go abroad as soon as possible. The sources said he indicated he would like to go to Toronto to continue studies in political science. The king, 29, signed a docu- ment Thursday pledging to be- have as a constitutional mon- arch and to abdicate automat- ically if he violates the terms of the agreement. Magazines _ Irk Pastor TORONTO (CP) -- A Boston clergyman said Thursday night sal Pictures, which is distribut-' the "God is dead" philosophy. is ing the movie. Along with 600 guests, including Princess Alex- andra, who danced with Brando, the white-haired Chaplin en- joyed .himself until the early hours. A Early editions of London's the party--but Chaplin didn't even look at the reviews. If he had, he would have seen that most followed the line set by the Times, which heads its review: "A disappointing film from Chaplin." Saigon To Hike Defence Costs SAIGON (Reuters) -- South Vietnam will spend some 42,- 500,000,000 piastres (about $370,000,000) on defence in 1967 --20 per cent more than last year, budget, figures published today show. Defence expenditure takes up 56 per cent of the total 75,000,- 000,000 piastre (about $635,000,- 000) budget for the current fi- nancial year beginning Jan. 1. The 1966 budget was esti- mated at 55,000,000,000 piastre ($481,600,000), with 35,000,000,0 ($35,200,000) earmarked for de- fence. The 1967 figures were pub- lished today by the official Viet- nam Press. The budget decree has yet to be signed into law. Exports Show Major Jump OTTAWA (CP)--Canada's ex- ports climbed 24.8 per cent in September to $875,446,000 from $701,008,000 in the same month Statistics reported today. The nine-month export total for 1966 was $7,297,697,000, 20.5 per cent better than the cumu- lative total of $6,058,203,000 for the January-September period of 1965. Import figures, available only for the first eight months of 1966, show inbound trade 14.4 per cent higher at $6,342,000,000. United States purchases were 22 per cent higher in September than a year earlier at $500,485,- 000. The United Kingdom bought goods worth $94,919,000, an in- crease of 8.7 per cent. Japan's purchases were about one-third higher at $36,448,000 and trade to China more than doubled at $26,636,000. Sales were also up to West Germany, Italy, France, The Netherlands, Norway, Belgium and Luxem- bourg, and Cuba. : Sales of wheat were doubl the September, 1965 level at $119,050,000 and the influence of the Canada - U.S. auto pact showed in sales of passenger automobiles and chassis, which totalled $13,768,000 in Septem- ature. of ber, 1965, and $34,421,000 a year later. newspapers were brought in to). spawning pornography in women's magazines. Rev. Harold Ockenga told a Youth for Christ convention evangelists will have to "think big" to cope with the new phi- losophy. Mr. Ockenga, an aide to evan- gelist Billy Graham, said even high - fashion m i have African King Sees 'Toronto RAs Likely Place For Studies His signature on the docu- ment was considered to be a complete capitulation by the king, who sought sweeping exec- utive power, to the government of Prime Minister Leabua Jon- athan. He was still held in his palace here under "protective cus- tody"' today. He was placed un- der house arrest by the govern- ment 10 days ago following riots in which eight persons were killed. SOUGHT CONTROL The king sought control of the three-month-old country's de- fence, internal security and ex- ternal affairs, all of which were denied him by the constitution granted by Britain to its former colony of Basutoland. He signed his capitulation Thursday after holding out for two days. Observers said the arrest of the leaders of both} opposition parties, which sup-! ported him against the govern- ment, apparently forced his hand. The party leaders were charged with incitement to pub- lic violence. The sources said the king asked the government to facili- tate his departure for overseas to continue his education. He left Oxford University in 1960 to assume his throne without become more pornographic than some of the nude-filled men's magazines. He said a recent issue of Vogue magazine had pictures of a nude woman and a whole cast of Paris showgirls clad in G-strings. Mr. Ockenga said the philos- ophy takes mysticism out of re- ligion and states that man is no longer accountable to God but only to conscience. This new morality was having a practical application in in- creased crime, fornication, drug addiction, adultery and divorce. "If you declare there is no God then there are no absolutes, eternal laws and everything is relative," he said. "If you do not love God then you do not love your neighbor. You can guess then what's going to hap- pen." Dance Troupe Wins Ovation FORT WILLIAM (CP) -- Les Feux-Follets raised the curtain on the centennial program of Festival Canada here Thursday right and the Montreal folk troupe drew a standing ovation from the capacity audience. The. 65 - member ensemble traced the history of Canada through dance and song from the time of the Plains Indians to the 1967 discotheque. It was of 1965, the Dominion Bureau Of 'the premiere performance of the centennial production di- rected by Michael Cartier. Watching the first of the per- formances which will be staged in 65 cities in all provinces was Secretary of State Judy La- Marsh and other federal, pro- vincial and municipal officials. Miss LaMarsh told the audi- ence that if Canadians are to build a stronger nation, they must learn more of the various cultural traditions that make up Canada. 7,000,000 by 198! in Metro --Partner wanted to help ace quire 100 ecre farm | --in King Township with front- ege on 400 end Jane Street. --Tremendous future grewth potential, --Reply in confidence te Box -- . D1331. | OSHAWA TIMES ing his course of study. Drug Trade Defended -- MONTREAL (CP)--Dr. Hans! Giese, vice-president of Hoechst Pharmaceuticals of Canada| 'Ltd., said Thursday Canadian) | politicians and consumers are} nursing an unjustified suspicion of the drug industry. Dr. Giese, taking part in a seminar session at a conference| University, said: "Canada should live up to the fact that it is a developed coun- try and Canadians should act more maturely." Prof. C. G. Gifford of Mc- Gill's school of social work, an- other member of the panel, said that despite Dr. Giese's talk several issues have not yet been Lanswered satisfactorily 'for me and many other naive' Cana- dians." RAISES QUESTIONS Prof. Gifford raised questions concerhing detail men and the centre," Montsame said. cost of marketing drugs, the|-- 'Agreement Bars Breakup Of Regions By Nigerians tion, termed the conference '"'aj Gowon, seeking to preserve| the federation, has proposed dividing the country into as many as 14 states to minimize tribal and sectional rivalries. Nigeria has been threatened with dissolution for many months by tribal rivalries and warfare. Thousands of eastern Nigerians who had migrated to the underdeveloped, backward northern part of the country were massacred last October. Gowon -had been trying to hold the constitutional confer- ence for three months, but Ojukwu refused to come to Lagos, saying his safety could mot be assured outside his own region. Gowon is particularly anxious to keep Eastern Nigeria in the federation because of rich oil deposits there. The lead- ers finally agreed to meet in the Ghanaian capital. The communique, issued after the leaders' return to Lagos, said they agreed on_ these points: Resumption "'as soon as possible" of talks on a new con- stitution for the country; the army to be put under "'proper" administration and control, and a meeting of military leaders inside Nigeria at "a place to be decided later." Quake Rocks 'Central Asia MOSCOW (AP) --A powerful earthquake rocked central Mon- golia Thursday, but the Mongol- ian news agency Montsame said there were no deaths. The quake hit hardest in a sparsely popu- lated area of cattle and wheat farms. Montsame said the quake had a force of nine on a 12-point scale and the epicentre was near the Hangyan Mountains around the junction of the Eglin and Selenge rivers. The Mongolian academy of sciences said the first and strongest shock was registered at 8:14 a.m. (7:14 p.m. EST Wednesday). "Small fissures have ap- peared in the area of the epi- "No human life was lost." Tremors of five to six strength were reported in Ulan Bator, and in the Soviet city of Irk- utsk, but no damage was re- the Mongolian capital, ported in either city. Test Forecast. For Rhodesia SALISBURY (Reuters) -- Sir Roy Welensky, who once led the now-defunct Rhodesian federa- tion, says the key to Rhodesia's future lies with her big south- ern neighbor, South Africa. Welensky, now retired from politics, says that Rhodesia's success in combating manda- tory sanctions against its vital exports will be the real test during 1967 of whether its in- dependence battle has been won or lost. "The big question," Welensky said Thursday in an interview, "is, if mandatory sanctions suc- ceed, will South Africa be pre- pared to underwrite the Rhode- sian economy? "Frankiy, I don't know that she will, for that would only bring her into more open con- flict with her enemies in the United Nations,"' he said. "But you can be sure South Africa will always be willing, as in the past, to provide a channel for imports into Rho- }desia. She has a vested inter- of the drug industry at McGilll est in seeing that boycotts do not succeed." HAD HOPES As prime. minister of the ill- fated federation, Welensky had grand hopes of welding its two black nations, Nyasaland and Northern Rhodesia, and white- ruled Southern Rhodesia into a viable multi-racial unit. It was the great disappoint- ment of his life that the fed- eration broke up, Nyasaland becoming Malawi, and. North- ern Rhodesia becoming Zam- bia. WEATHER FORECAST - TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts issued at 5:30 a.m. : Synopsis: A major winter storm is emerging from the central United States early this morning and is expected to move northeastward across the Great Lakes tonight and early Saturday. Snow is expected to begin in southwestern Ontario this afternoon, spreading to northern and eastern parts of the province late today. Present indications suggest anywhere from two to five inches of snow lin southern Ontario in the next 24 hours 'and heavier falls in €entral and~Northern Ontario. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, western Lake Ontario, Lake Huron, southern Georgian Bay, Windsor, London,: Hamilton, Toronto; Snow ending Satirday morning or afternoon. Little change in temperatures today. Milder Saturday. Windsa south- easterly 15 to 30, shifting to south then southwest Saturday. Eastern Lake Ontario, Hali- burton, Killaloe: Cloudy. Snow beginning tonight and continu- ing Saturday. Milder Saturday. Winds easterly 15 to 30. Northern Georgian Bay, Ti- magami, Cochrane, Algoma, White River, North Bay, Sud- bury, Sault Ste. Marie: Cloudy. Change To Mild Follows Major Winter Snowfall Snow beginning tonight and continuing Saturday. Colder Saturday. Winds easterly 15 to 0. ' Ottawa: Clear and cold today. Increasing cloudiness tonight with snow beginning Saturday morning and continuing during the day. Risk of some freezing rain Jate Saturday. Not so cold Saturday. Winds light, shifting to southeasterly 20 Saturday. Forecast temperatures Low overnight, high Saturday Windsor ...++++++ 25 37 St. Thomas . 25 37 London ..... 25 35 Kitchener ... 25 35 Mount Forest . 22 32 Wingham ....++.. 22 32 Hamilton ...++005 25 37 St. Catharines .... 25 37 Toronto ...... seoe. 30 37 Peterborough .... 18 32 Kingston .... 22 35 Trenton . 22 35 Killaloe . - 18 32 32 25 25 20 Sault Ste. Marie. 15 25 |Kapuskasing .... -5 15 White River ..... 5 20 Moosonee . 5 15 Timmins ... ee | 20 Ontario Braces Snow Blankets By THE CANADIAN. PRESS Canada's weather picture was white today as a howling storm continued to dump snow on southwestern Saskatchewan and Ontario braced for a new bliz- zard tonight. Six inches of snow fell in the Swift Current area of Saskat- chewan Thursday and visibility fell to zero several times during the day as winds gusted to 45 miles an hour. Ontario recorded almost no snow Thursday, but the weather office in Toronto predicts skies will become cloudy this after- noon as a storm moves into the province from Kansas. Snow will start after dark in the southern regions. - For Blizzard Prairie Areas at Saskatchewan Crossing Point, about 130 miles west of Rocky Mountain House. The girls became stranded after a rock punctured the gas tank of their car while they were returning home from vis- iting a friend in Rocky Moun- tain House during the New Year's weekend. They said they had eaten nothing since Sunday. The weather office says the storm in Saskatchewan will abate overnight as it moves eastward through North Da- kota. MARITIMES HIT In the Maritimes, meanwhile, residents were bombarded with everything from snow to rain to freezing drizzle Thursday after The storm plaguing parts of Saskatchewan hit southern Al- berta earlier and left 10 inches of snow in Calgary by early morning. Rural roads were blocked and schools closed in several communities. The snowfall followed a line 'jacross the centre of Alberta from Hinton, 175 miles west of Edmonton, and some scheduled airline flights to and from Cal- gary were cancelled. GIRLS FOUND In Red Deer, two teen-age girls found Wednesday after- noon after four days without food on an isolated stretch of highway in western Alberta, were reported today in good condition, The girls, Roseann: Gaume, 18, and Phyllis Young, 17, were found by a federal park warden di out from a storm which delivered up to 10 inches of snow in some areas. At least two deaths were at- tributed to the blizzard which eased early Thursday. Good Names To Remember When Buying or Selling REAL ESTATE Reg. Aker -- President Bill McFeeters -- Vice Pres. SCHOFIELD-AKER LTD. 723-2265 i) | of collection. | CITY OF OSHAWA CHRISTMAS TREE PICKUP In order to facilitate the disposal of Christmas Trees discarded after the Holiday Season in the || City of Oshawa, the Department of Public Works has arranged a special collection during the week JANUARY Sth to 13th INCLUSIVE Christmas Trees should be put out during the above-mentioned week only and at the same time in the same place as the garbage for the regular No Christmas Trees will be collected at times other than as described above. Dealers' leftover stock of trees will not be taken. F. E. Crome, P. Eng., Commissioner of Works. rate of profit which is higher than in other industries, gen- eric and brand names, and price justification. ! He also raised the question of the possible need for a Crown company in the field of drugs. Prof. J. C. Weldon of McGill's department of economics, said the industry's method of impart- ing information is "curious." "Surely there is something very odd about an industry where those who impart impor- tant information, the detail HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR . SERVICE . 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS men, have a conflict of inter- est." | CITY OF PURCHASING REQUIRES INVOICE AND EXPEDITING CLERK (MALE) SALARY RANGE -- $4,783.00 to $5,437.00 per year (for @ 36% hour working week). Under the supervision of the Purchasing Agent, to receive and prepare invoices for submission pore and submit commitment ond carry out expediting function on all outstanding purchase orders, Should have full high school including commercial, Some ac- | counts payoble experience' and Attroctive welfare benefits will Apply IN WRITING ONLY, giving full details of age, educa- tion, experience, etc., not later H 1967, to: OSHAWA DEPARTMENT to Treasury for payment; pre- reports to Treasury; maintain optitude for figurés desirable. be provided. than 5:00 p.m., Jonuary 13th, The Personnel Officer, City Hell, Oshawa. PART TIME _ X-RAY TECHNICIANS Must Be Registered And Experienced ~\ (By FILM PROCESSOR RECENTLY INSTALLED APPLY TO: MR. B. HOLDEN ADMINISTRATOR MEMORIAL HOSPITAL, BOWMANVILLE, ONTARIO. Phone 623-3331 SAIG Force MiG-21 day, r kills fc air for The about estima' the la fastest Asia. 1,500 r US. planes with M force today from 'V Pi CHI conduc today slayer was a 'Rabi selecte oonduc day ai northy Rab Ruby tional der of nedy. "Ty Qu Ch TOR ture of On of ju paym¢ troduc this y "Mr. conve tario that 1 to fin and p Ont area new scale, We Tc ~ Wit ler C laid-o tion Thurs tate discip Al of th cusse last § were with to oF area. suspe misse Che the | frain ther range union men Chryi

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