Oshawa Times (1958-), 26 Apr 1967, p. 3

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AFTER AUTHOR ak in Alberta, 9,460 was named after ht Wilcox, author of of Canada. erate mm COSMOPOLITAN AIR THE OSHAWA TIMES, 3 Wednesday, April 26, 1967 24 HOURS TO OPENING Tempo Quickens At Expo By JACK TRACY MONTREAL (CP) -- The TODAY'S TOPIC Honorarium For Trustees? ATION IMUDA \WN GUEST HOUSE lice force, the carabinieri, opened their pavilions to the turned out in their plumed tri- more than 600 accredited news- JERMUDA ion phone 728-8801 OLS N. MRS. HARRISON tempo of Expo 67 quickened to- day and the 1,000 - acre exhibi- tion site took on a cosmopolitan air with the inaugural of Can- ada's world fair only 24 hours away. The forecast for rsday was for sunny and cool weather, like Tuesday's when bands pa- raded and television crews set up vantage points at Place des Nations where the formal open- ing will be staged. corns and swords. Bluejackets from four Cana- dian destroyers moored at the site added color to the scene. From Lance Bellows, Espo's advertising chief, came a pre- diction that the six - months show will have about 60,000,000 admissions compared with a forecast a year ago of 28,600,- 000. The general public wil! be ad- mitted Friday morning, the day Paper men and broadcasters. The West Germans displayed their achievements in science and the arts under a canopy of steel mesh and plastic covering of 110,000 square feet, the area of a city block. The Italians displayed one of their treasures, the bronze sta- tue, Athys, by Donatello. But they reserved a wing to show off 20th-century technology with : a car in the process of assem- V 5 e ; ILS ALEX TELLISKIVI MRS. CROSSMAN MRS. JENKINSON HAYWARD MURDOCH TED BOUTILLIER Blonde hostesses from the after the Thursday afternoon in- bly and a remote-controlled ro- ee : us opene: est German augural, which will be limited bot for handling radioactive ma- Trustees of the Oshawa much interest in school af- wouldn't mind if my husband their own money on a_ job, pavilion in their bright orange- a than 5,000 invited terials. board of education, have fairs as the next person." had to attend meetings'a few they should be reimbursed. and-grey costumes appeared un guests. The Australian preview came be entering voted in favor of receiving Alexander Telliskivi, 54 La- times a week." A. Hayward Prime Ministers get paid; the roadways, sometimes ac- on Anzac day which honors the an honorarium. The Times salle Ave.: "I think they Murdoch, 311 Orange Cres.:\ don't they? Pay should be companied by officers of the ALL IS READY Australians and New Zealand- all schools asked six persons if they felt should be paid. It's a job "They. should receive honora- comparable to the results German state police. By Tuesday night most of the ers who fought at Gallipoli in | lurin elected officers should re- like any other one and so riums. I don't think the pub- they get except that you can't Members of Italy's famed po- major participating nations had the First World War. oon @ 9 4 ceive an honorarium. Mrs. 'they should be paid. But they lic can expect officials to be do it that way. They should ROBERT JOHNSON P.M. Rae Corssman, 440 Gibbon should only get paid for the out-of-pocket even if they are meet their expenses plus a RR a gia acre ars a cece area areas saree mace cera EG Sopa . St.: "There are pros and work they do, no more, no doing it as a service to the little more at least." Mrs. < by a: few. provincial Offictsis Due to on error Robert John- dren' whose cons against trustee pay. I less." Mrs. Della Jenkinson, community. No one should be Carol Harrison, 300 Grenfell chiefly in Ontario. son's picture appeared ima Real ; do agree that by paying them . 460 Beverly St.: "If they stopped from running for St.: "It's hard to say. Maybe O I st ] I | Ke) I l S O ourn | The legislation was a means there would be more work- have children going to school election but it requires some we could get more from eet of combatting unemployment by | Estote Board's Advertisment ing people among the board's they should consider it an expense. If they should lose them if they were paid and © retraining workers for new 2 whose 6th ranks. And there definitely honor to serve on the board. money in the course of their we could definitely expect e e types of jobs in industry Incorrectly. should be more working men But if they're missing work work, they should be re- more before they start mak- "The bill states that persons on the board. On the other and pay by attending meet- inbursed, No one in public ing any suggestions amout eT ] In '@ | S leligible for living allowances R b rt J h ister for hand, it should be consider- ings, they should be paid. I office should have to serve at themseives and their 'own wel- |while they are training must 0 e 0 nson register ed a service to the city. I don't mind paying if we can a ont to themselves." Ted fare. I think it would Be |have been employed for three think it would be better if it be assured of good adminis- Boutilier, 15 Ritson Rd. S.: -wise for them to consider By DAVE McINTOSH | Commons in preparation for |Years or have been out of school . were done as a service but tration. But I still think the "'Any one doing a job should what is going on in the opraWA (CP) -- The Com-| PARLIAMENT royal assent ae a and the for one year. Keith Peters | be finally the working man has as work should be voluntary. I get paid and if they spend city. ;mons af exper ie gst immediate opening of a new. Several opposition MPs said Realty Ltd : : a week late tonight after se ing | session, there had been too little consul- ea tained im- PERSIE AES OROHE SS gan ea EET DRE TE vl nahin |a record for the longest session | AT * A " GLANCE Prime Minister Pearson has|tation with the provinces, espe- ts y ; . ard Street, lamas history--249 sitting By THE CANADIAN PRESS ee tl is ed 49 pieces cially with education officials, sce honk ' e 9 | ae SE ree | ye avon the government! Mr. Marchand said there have . es Extremel Y Serious Ste 1g pen e | at maldaight ' ihe Calepre | TUESDAY, April 25, 1967 wants to see passed during the been two federal-provincial con- 103 King St. E. nian armed fe ee ifie ae pill The Commons passed the |°entennial session. -- ferences on the subject. A third | 728-7328 t final approval 127 to 73 and| atmed forces unification bill | he haniuification bill, now in| would have only delayed the leg: ssibl , |80 eppreva 0 #3 anc) by a vote of 127 to 73 after |the hands of the Senate, will not |islation. | as possible e e & | several other measures were de- /be proclaimed Jaw i I H f S A R d ew anger |bated The longest previous ses- nore than three weeks of de- fall : re sain, fan ee ; ae oe is early as ays anol U eB 1r Ndi ,|Sion lasted 248 days in 1964-65.| '100 110Gy. | eement was (REVISE REGULATION | VANCOUVER (CP) --Chair-| Second reading--approval in reached to finish work of the |. This time will be required to| This dispatch was filed to jgets in a fiercer, longer attack|the main targets and that recon-|man. J: ue Ce oo ee heey erie session today, the record- |"ewrite regulations for a single :LLIOTT, The Associated Press by |and caused casualties among/naissance planes reported Hale ie snadlad: econbiey tices anew |caute jiderl asiesale Zh the, Preaking 249th sitting. pavicn and for policy decisions ¢ Schools allan wrier who has had |"Mayor Ting claimed 4 weer the raid, """"¥T™/dangerin the form of excessive provinces for afl accupatonal) go M™er*atv, don hare. (0 br made on such matey a : tralian writer who has ha anayor Lhing claim jaaer oe jfederal government spending. jtraining. There was no re-| Mull said his party w a ees ning Meir present close connections with the killed and 117 injured by the| This was incorrect. Street and Mr. Clyne told MacMillan's |corded vot tinue to fight against steps to |rank titles. | Communists in Vietnam, Ko- {first count. I visited the Czech |house lighting was normal with | r al dentine: that li og les ri mi bring the services into a sin- | Defence Minister Hellyer said | s r . : Pee h I visited|220Ual meeting that earlier in-| It now is planned to adjourn le: force th 3 i rea and Germany. It is pre-e |Vietnam Friendship Hos (= restrictions when flationary pressures have sub-|late tonight or early Thursday| 8°, force: e new bottle-green uniforms il sented in view of the fact |pital, the city's biggest, and | Haiphong a few hours after the| P : | 8 ; sday| "The Commons resumed sided and money has now be- come easier. But, he said: "A new danger has arisen |from a source that should be |setting an example of continued for the single service will not make their first trial appear- pecriedl in public until next |month, Voting in favor of the unifica- until May 4 after passage of the jtraining bill and three more items: changes in the Income Tax Act, extension of provi- sional Commons rules to the The AP has been unable so far to receive Hanoi's per- mission for its own corres- pondents to cover the news counted 73 wounded. Dr. Nguyen Ming Tam, the director, said 13 others died en route to the hos- pital or immediately after ad-approach of reconnaissance raid. The only blackouts that} night and the following night} were when alerts sounded the study of the government bill on adult retraining after com- pletion of the defence bill. Prime Minister Pearson re- I in North Vietnam. mittance, planes. strai 1 ' ceived a brief from young Lib- |tion pil , ou can AND! A large enamelware plant I petite aad ie ecetal ~ ag teal and a money sup- erals calling for a greatly in- New: hocua ae y a ; By WILFRED BURCHETT |CHILDREN KILLED visited was 100 - per - cent de-)" He said federal spending |" The adjournment without a| CTe28ed government role in |istes four Social Crstit iy just taste ee ee ae) silted der Pg ey stroyed. Food - processing and/iumped 11 per cent in the fiscal formal prorogation now would| S°cial, economic and cultural |and two independents the extra Last Thursday's. U.S. air raid Of. the. wounded-2 counted, 66 rice-husking plants were dam- year now ending and a further| give the Senate time to pass the| planning. Against were 69 Conservatives on Haiphong was officially de- scribed here as an "extremely serious new step in escalation." aged and much housing in the two of the city's six wards I visited also was burned out, in- jincrease of 13 per cent is fore- cast for 1967. Mr. Clyne, whose forest prod- were women: and _ children, mostly wounded by pellets from baseball - shaped fragmentation final bills sent to it from the! and four NDP members--H. W, ane Herridge, Kootenay West, Har- old Winch, Vancouver East, quality lue Brand EF AK ' given a hero's funeral in Red|yjew Tuesday: 2,500,000. bilingual defence his bill, a machinery, omanee. pinging Square today before more than Reliable peabaich estimates/ "We launched a campaign|Said a great deal of misinforma-| oun oc a olde T ers BOC EAR Maines, Bre 5,000 mourners. which have just come in indi-jthat said Montreal was North|tion about it had been given out ib cluding frames and cogwheels| Komarov's ashes were to be|cate that Expo og a pt or i to a city = i j i laced in the red brick Krem-|000,000 visitors who will make|concentrate ard on a few By BOB HORTON bridges, railways, trucks, boats,|which work on electric power|P 000, W ff " ; : , Minced ee a gk at aa lat Pe ies oe em a tansagl Tate IT ea Te Tague LOCAL IMPROVEMENT NOTICE ee ic i i ields. inutes to treadle oper- 0 se eabchoneae rT tactic is bomb, bomb, bomb--|plants and MiG a three mi at ent from the New York world ciel and U.S. planes are doing it) Air Force Secretary Harold|ation. The looms turn out ajtower struck 3 p.m., Russia's Orland idee vicitece id = sah pie As dg ae Nene eae Cag hag oko eigen ge hel tery ol i ey ae oy A ihe koa ved eo. ao making an average of 2.6 visits|pitality of Canada and Quebec 1. The Council of The Corporation of the City of Oshawa intends to eonstruct, as local Im- sat ¢ st the incredible rate of more oe Int Deceit he Dene At Hanol's mpinistry of light i Poaceae th eee. st per person. 3 province. provements, sanitary sewers in the following streets between the points mentioned and IDE than 3,000 pounds a minute/ings are a "constant and visible|industry I was told that in the|last respects to Komarov. Another Expo spokesman said intends to specially assess a part of the cost upon the land abutting directly on the work: around the clock. reminder to the people of North | northwest part of the country) Top Soviet leaders present in- xpo's rojected target of $22,- . _ESTIMATED COST _ CON In March, American planes|Vietnam that their leaders can-lindustry is being located at|cluded Premier Alexei Kosygin 560 000 a LavanGs knlese a Site For College pe liao unteashed sig cg ve avoid the cost of aggres- " a is Mpa ol agua Nikolai Pod- passports--Expo's name for ad- | Niainb of Straat Fan Te Total Foot _ <3 een Tee OF islatration cee ee een mission tickets--by April 28 had i Simcoe St. North 'Adelaide Ave, Alexandra St. $7/225.00 $ 6.69 69° war. Still, Pe age Pgeeurig re hydropower plants of 50, rg Komarov's weeping wife, Va-|been surpassed by more than Near Kitchener | Simcoe St. North: $83:0"N, of Connacht St 8" 4.018.00 11.35 siiaiiaaiitin This total is just short of the piel . 4 soph a the popu. (224 kilowatts of a 8 lentina, was supported by two!¢19.000,000 by the end of March. STRATFORD (CP) -- A con-| Aberdeen St. : ; 80,000 tons dropped in Europe|minimize, damage POPU-|smallindustry and upwares ollwomen as she walked behind Total sales amounted to $32,-\culting firm has recommended 2.. The estimated cost of the work is $11,243.00. The special assessment is to be paid im during the average month of the|lace. i 3,000 kilowatts for regional in-|the urn containing her hus-/997 449.15, that a college site be planned fifteen equal annual instalments and the annual rate per foot frontage is 30c. OKED peak of bombing in the Second} The mete Teen ee iy: dustry. band's ashes. The flower-be- The campaign to get as many|for the Galt - Kitchener-Guelph 3. Application will be made by the Corporation to The Ontario Municipal Board af its I f{ World War. _ {bombs force . a agon to decked urn rested on a platform persons as possible to come tO|/area northeast of Kitchener. approval of the undertaking of the said work and any owner may, within Pale digs os , s fvaid ge egy North and 'the ee i ee o ae a | . drawn by an armored car. Montreal for Expo had its early| peter B Mason, chairman of ofter the ied aoe lg of this notice, file with the City Clerk his objection to the sai of raids over the North a ' ; H D ] its li S. Pa eee k being undertaken. : : Coe widening of the approved target|that now the brakes are being] LAG@LIOL isp. ays St To M k oop Rowtaer or oe ee ou. baer no 4. The sold Board moy apetowe, of the suid work being undertaken, but afore doing so it may il tonnage seems applied. ' : A fa tain ,jarea 14, hires , int a ti d place when any objection to the work wi considered. 45° likely' to "Exceed the Socond|" OMclals, concerned thit W k d Pl ane amp 10 Mar. Us Gs heen lite er, ee Sas T,, yj Pept Se On oes len oly World War rate. "we're going to sink the whole rec. e C . year ago we weren' g too | Kitchener, also suggested a sat- L. R. BARRAND, Clerk, City ef Oshawa. a The 77,000 tons in March com-|place with the weight of bomb P Anniversary button. Our campaign was tool enite college be built in north- eee with 29,000 tons a month/tonnage," called for a cut, and) HONG KONG (Reuters)--The diverse, we were trying to telllein Perth or Huron counties, OKED Laake F ' 4 wreckage of an American air-| OTTAWA (CP)--A commem-|people too much." EAT The raid was the heaviest yet against the major city. Hai- phong Mayor Le Duc Thing told me planes came in two waves from U.S. 7th Fleet carriers only 30 miles offshore. Thirty-seven A-4Ds and A-3Js --the latter claimed to be a new navy plane--attacked 20 indus- trial targets and built-up areas in a 40-minute action between 10 and 11 a.m. A second wave at 3:15 p.m. hit the same tar- bombs, The mayor said at least 70 1,000- and 2,000-pounders. were dropped 50 "mother" canisters each of which discharges 300 pellet - filled fragmentation bombs, Twenty bullpup missiles and hundreds of rockets were fired, The destruction was consider- able. A Saigon communique cluding a big technical training school. IMPROVISE QUICKLY I didn't visit the power plants, but the destruction of the urban plants was unlikely to affect in- ucts company rings up annual sales around the world of al- most $500,000,000, also warned that Canada's long-term, eco- nomic prospects are not prom- ising. dustry decisively due to the sys- tem of dispersal and improvisa- tion. I watched a small engi- neering plant where power was articicially cut off. Within 12 Stated two power stations were peg minutes, lathes, planers, borers lishi machines had Bomb, Bomb, dropped against the Japanese at the height of wartime operations in the Pacific, and with 17,000 Bomb, Bomb, production for April, May, June and July is being trimmed to 80,000 tons monthly from 100,000 Rites For Hero In Red Square been "switched to emergency foot-treadle devices and produc- MOSCOW (AP) --Engineer- Col. Vladimir Komarovy, the So- viet it killed Monday tion continued through ch gear relationships. In Hanoi's exhibition textile tirely made of local timber, in- craft and the body of its pilot were shown. to Vietnamese and in the crash-landing of the new spaceship he was testing, was orative five-cent stamp mark- ing the 50th anniversary of The 15 Million Likely To Visi Biggest Selling Job Ever By DAVE MacDONALD MONTREAL latest estimates of att iy At least half of Expo's visit- (CP)--The mo-jors are expected to come from mentum of the biggest selling|the U.S. job ever undertaken in Canada is beginning to slow as the ad-|lows, that Mr. Average Ameri- vertising men for the Montreal|can world's fair gleefully check the/around 600,000 and probably Surveys show, said Mr. Bel- thinks Montreal e}cannot h the job of being Arnold Peters, Timiskaming, and Colin Cameron, Nanaimo- Cowichan-The Islands. The Senate, meanwhile, gave second reading to a government bill making it a criminal of- fence to possess of traffick in pig hallucination-producing drug The bill, calling for penalties of up to 10 years in prison for trafficking, was sent to the Sen- ate banking and commerce committee for examination to- day but will not get to the Com- numbers figures. Lance Bellows, Expo 67's ad- host to the expected millions. Metropolitan Montreal, in mons this session, DEFENDS BILI. Mr. Marchand, in a spirited, vertising chief, said in an inter-|fact, has a population of about ENCOURAGING SESSION Brainstorm sessions followed i i foreign reporters in Hanoi Tues-|Canadian Press will be issued|and market research showed t Choa edd ogg ---- 7: 168, oe erican planes |day night shortly after a United|Aug. 31, the post office depart-\that before United States visit- & Pimente -- nee configurations and|dropped 512,000 tons over Viet-|States air raid on the capital,/ment announced Tuesday. ors could be persuaded to come 4g dhiee 'posse are hitting virtually|nam --one-third of the entire|the North Vietnam news agency| The horizontal stamp, printed|to Expo 'they would have to iS. anything associated with Viet|U.S. outpouring of bombs dur-|Said today. in varying shades of blue on|be sold on Canada, Quebec prov- oer Cong operations. ing all of the Second World War| The report said the body was |white, features an outline of the|ince and Montreal." " A aiaaieaeasieiaee ia This includes roads, highways, in North Africa and Europe. Pilot Veers To Avoid Homes Plane Plunges Into Atlantic Thailand when shot down dur- that of Lieut. Robert Weskamp who was flying an F - 105 jet from the Takli Air Base in ing the attack. Another American airman was said to have been captured, but the agency did not give his name. A North Vietnamese official, Western Hemisphere. The Canadian Press, the co- operative news-gathering and news-distributing association of Canada's daily newspapers, grown to a $5,000,000-a-year op- eration serving 103 papers. was formed in 1917 and has} | Money To } Invest ! FOOD MARKET, 94 SIMCOE ST. NORTH -~ NANTUCKET, Mass. (AP)--|for about 4,000 feet and when|Col. Van Tan, told the on-the-] HEAT WITH OIL 5 & A flaming U.S. Air Force radar| it hit there was this huge a od tind veg tga hei : DIXON'S HIGHEST QUALITY MEATS RG icket plane with 16 men aboard] of fire and a big red fireball," ong Anh, on the outskirts o! plunged into the Atlantic Tues-)said Rene Orleans. "I'd never|Hanoi, that the American LEAN, tcNetKk -- BLADE BONE REMOVED U.S. NO. 1 SUNKIST iS day night after the pilot appar-|seen anything like it." Planes Tuesday dropped "doz- OIL ' er annum ently tried to avoid homes on| At the controls of the four-|ens of explosive and other cub Ph fi Nantucket Island. engined superconstellation when|steel pellet bombs, launched 313 ALBERT ST 'or five years ib c Only one survivor, Lieut. Jo-|it went down about a half-mile| missiles and rockets on a num- ° by investing in Guaranteed seph H. Guenet, 29-year-old/off shore was Col. James Lyle,|ber of densely-populated areas 24-HOUR SERVICE | Investment Certificates | navigator from. Montreal, was|47. in Hanoi. | ig which ore BONELESS LEAN. picked up by a helicopter. Gue-| Two bodies were recovered| More than 100 persons were 723-4663 Gueranteed--aos to Principal and SOLLae SEIT FRESH PORK c D C enema net, father of two children, wasjand a night-long search by air/killed or wounded and 100 _Interest. C 0 reported in satisfactory condi-|force and coast guard units was|homes destroyed, he said. SERVING OSHAWA OVER | Flexible---may be sed os Col- Pot Roast Shoulder Ib Z tion in hospital. intensified at dawn. 50 /EARS | Redeemable--by Executors_ in Officials at Otis Air Force| The crash was the third fatal LOTS OF OIL | the event of death, : Base, Falmouth, Mass., said plunge in less than two years Indonesia exported 92,601,194 Authorized- Trustee Act In- ES LEAN-- s aial they had reports ncn the ss Otis -- hile barrels of oil in 1966. Totalll free tstimetes, Reerenetie vestments. ROLES Bank FRESH PORK C. | crrave "a" oven reapy t crew members were) whic. y air defence missions de oil output was 169,619,600 4 ve lalists. A R By 57e Paice tetividenl life rafts for| between Newfoundland and Ber- hares o Rates Peper pepcalen ! CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUS] aa ull oast Ib F gresh Killed "Ib. i ding at sea, but|/muda. | ie rth Giek ware Ghee that many} The craft was gn Mises z ] & SAVINGS CORPORATION aan CHICKENS ived the explo-|minutes out of Otis and carrie a 627 RIBS as able. en er about 7,330 gallons of fuel. aay Travel | a0 treet ak, Cones POuN Loiit c f ing, an experi-| Eight minutes after takeoff, | PLUMBING 23 King St. W., Bowmenville wae devate pin said tha' a|Lyle had reported fire in his OUT oeasons travel |, & HEATING 7 623-2527 Centre CHOPS Ib last-minute manoeuvre kept the}No. 3 engine--the one close to ol gate spear ire CAND: | (ess Z mr | PRIME RIB plane from striking Nantucket/the fuselage on the right side. dation--Annex to EXPO grounds. | Mede Installed 9! OPEN IAL Island. Manning said he is con-| Orleans said the craft was en Te oe cia If Jp. Tanks FRIDAY LEAN TENDER FREEZER SPEC inced ilot " ight-|'"'steep descent position" towar: : ' : A STEAKS , ne Meseiately Wo get it aco the anpett when it suddenly] |] also inquire'ebout 'our Bus Tours i cerchan: funson" gai ta SATURDAYS rll RIB oe ll BEEF 98. : ter and avoid|swung into an almost 180-degree f Service Made Us, WRAPPED vid emer colony." turn and headed south over te:) Phone 576-3131 | Call 723-1191 Q pee aac "Tt skidded along- the water! island, | é «LP ot a) * oh b am ~~ mM mM - > et a * + e oe ae ah pu €4 ky oh

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