Oshawa Times (1958-), 9 Jun 1967, p. 15

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

romine exist naturally In the ell, that there is usually more etine, and when there is not, he wild growth of cancer be- ins. THRIVING Lillooet, B.C., boasted 1,000 itizens and two bi - weekly ewspapers in 1865. -- Shhh See ae IZZA _ Phone 723-024) or 728-0192 EPI'S Cama 'TODAY FEATURE TIMES 1:40 - 4:10 6:40 - 9:20 IN MESSER and JUBILEE . LANCASTER ae ASi 2 DAYS MUSICMAKERS FEATURING INGING SENSATION RUSSEL -- Singer, M.C. ELSON -- Master of Organ 1Y KENT -- Exotie Dancer i NN S ATTRACTION DIRECT ly Hills Motor Hotel in Toronto THE FABULOUS AGEMEN with ILLA THOMAS TALENTED SINGER Also K PANTER--Exotie Dancer RE LENT! NCING NIGHTLY 4 to 6 P.M. :30 and 5-9 p.m. TO 8:30 P.M. ONOURED . for Sunday Dinners js ---- Parties INDOOR- OUTDOOR THEATRE eat Southwest! A FRANC 2, 1S AT 7:30 AT DUSK Rev. John Logan - Vencta (left), of Ottawa is robed in office after he was elected moderator of the 93rd Gen- NEW PRESBYTERIAN MODERATOR eral Assembly of the Pres- byterian Church in Canada in Ottawa Wednesday night. Performing the ceremony are Rey. William Duffy of Ottawa and Rey. Louis Fow- ler of Toronto. Dr. Logan- Vencta, 68, a native of Scot- land holds the Order of the British Empire. He is past Route Objection Overcome In Pipe Line Negotiations OTTAWA (CP) -- Another ob- jection fell Thursday to Trans- Canada Pipe Lines' favored Canadian route for a new west- to-east gas line to feed Ontario and Quebec markets. Northern and Central, one of, the big three Ontario gas dis- tributors, "reluctantly" with- drew its objection at a national energy board hearing. It did so because of the possibility of a gas shortage. Up to this time, Northern and Central had opposed the $330,- 600,000 proposal partially to twin Trans-Canada's existing route through Northern Ontario. The distributor, along with the other big transS-Canada distrib- uting firms, had wanted a route that would open new markets along the north shore of Lake Superior instead of the twinning project. Another of the big three, Con- sumers Gas, similarly reversed itself at Wednesday's board hearing. The third in the tri- umvirate, Union Gas, took a new noncommital stance, in the face of a gas rationing prospect next winter if new facilities were not built. ASKED NEW LOOP The distributors had earlier favored the idea of twinning the existing line from Winnipeg to the northwestern Ontario centre of Nipigon. But from that point the distributors had wanted the line to swing south to serve Sault Ste. Marie, Espanola and other points before rejoining the existing route at Sundridge, Ont. Despite the change in stance, Trans-Canada won an adjourn- ment of the hearing to Monday to revise part of its application for the contingency twinning project. It-would proceed if the U.S. Federal Power Commission refuses permission for a Winni- peg-to-Ontario line south of the Great Lakes. The change, not a major fac- tor in the project, involves sub- stitution of a 164-mile new-route loop west of Nipigon for some twinning. Northern and Central also withdrew a tentative proposal for Trans-Canada to increase the compression on its existing line east of Nipigon to meet needs. The proposal was termed uneconomical. Trans-Canada still faces op- position from the Ontario-Min- nesota Pulp and Paper Co. on the twinning of its Winnipeg- Nipigon section. The paper company asked the application be refused. WANTS NEW LINE Rather than twinning the sec- Ontario border. The line would cut across the Lake of the Woods region, pass- ing through the Rainy River re- gion of northwestern Ontario. From there it would move east} planned addition of a kraft mill supplying markets in Fort/at Fort Frances and a new pa- feet of: natural to natural gas. the existing line north of the} Falls. Lakehead. | P. B. C. Pepper, the Toronto Ontario - Minnesota officials|lawyer representing Ontario- testified the firm is prepared to|Minnesota, said the 465-mile enter into a 25-year contract to| Fort Frances loop is a public buy natural gas for its mills at jnecessity that will tap potential |Fort Frances and across the| markets, U.S. border at International} Twinning the existing line, Falls. The mills now depend|which runs north of Kenora, largely on coal power. |does nothing for northwestern Trans-Canada favors a 160-|Ontario and that is its 'fatal mile 12-inch lateral line from | defect." its main 30-inch line terminat-| The Ontario government law- ing at Fort Frances. Informants|yer said his province cannot said privately that Ontario-Min-| alter its' original objection to nesota wants a big main-line|the over-all twinning project. It loop to ensure future needs and | still supports the route along the provide economic gas for its|north shore of Lake Superior on mill. |the grounds it opens new mar- Officials of Ontario Min-|kets. Expo Propaganda Backfires ada to install an entirely new|nesota, a Canadian subsidiary | pine line, swinging south from the|of Boise-Cascade, made it clear) chilled Dwight D. Eisenhower's existing one near the Manitoba-|the firm is willing to contract! feelings of friendship fot Gen. | right now for 1.9 billion cubic} Douglas MacArthur, Fisen- gas for 1969.|hower writes in his latest vol-| Mill boilers would be converted) ume of memoirs. Demand would grow with the. shifted the blame to his subord- jinaiee for a project that 'hor- Frances and Atikokan, rejoining per machine at International Manuel Quezon. | | | Ease: Stories I Tell to Friends, '|RETRIEVE CAMERA the Ottawa president of I Council of Churches, and is moderator of and of synod presbytery | 'Arrest, Danger, Censorship Frustrate Correspondents NEW YORK (AP) -- Corres-|leading a camera crew in the,say "Associated Press," where- pondents trying Be py dod _ oe ong age ag Jerusalem | upon the line was cut. war in the Middle East by|when he was hit by machine-| \, , bi ay ' words and pictures have en-|gun fire. He died later in hos-| Ne Times Tom Brady countered censorship, communi-| pital there. |was ordered out of Syria Tues- cations blackouts -- interna-) American correspondents in|4ay and proceeded to Beirut. tional or otherwise -- and dan-| Cairo, several of them virtually] CENSOR FILM ger of both sides of the war./ under house arrest in two hotels| ~ 7 ira, SHOLOerAPha: haw. Three have died covering the| and thwarted in their efforts tO scar vaportad "terifie" conkers war, several were injured, some! get to the action, were ordered| «5, "Sn Terael They quid a have heen expelled from Egypt, /expelled Tuesday after Egypt punts transmission line was at least one was arrested, others broke diplomatic relations with att dain: bacanen thie lavselis have been frustrated when, ig-/the United. States. found it too difficult to censor noring danger, they tried to get) 4 dispatch from Garven F.!the pictures transmitted by that gar pring a naw Hudgins, Associated Press chief] route. % ; ee "\of bureau at Cairo, said he and 1 eh gp ced ge MARA'! ihe other Americans were or- with their home offices for Wl cigs hat Saasca bhoee '0 reported he was arrested by periods. te eta ** | Jordanian authorities Wednes- Ben Oyserman, an Israeli, life magazine's Thomas|day after trying to record the cameraman on a free-lance as-|(Tommy) Thompson reported] sounds of an Israeli air attack signment for the CBC, died in|from: Cairo he had sent film|from the roof of his hotel in the Gaza Strip when he left his|'@ken by a French photographer} Amman car to move a rock in the road.|Yia_ an "Italian courier' to It was mined. Rome. But Wednesday the mag- several hours, and the authori- One of the dead, Life maga-|2zine's Rome bureau was still' ties apparently suspected he had zine photographer Paul Schut-| Waiting for the film. been con-municating with the zer, was photographing a battle, In Jerusalem, Time magazine' Israeli planes. from an Israeli -vehicle when | correspondent Marlin Levin re-| A Columbia Broadcasting Sys- Egyptian gunfire struck the ve-| ported he was "'pinned down" atjtem spokesman said_ reports hicle and set it afire. home with his home telephone! from CBS men indicated censor- American Broadcasting Co, {correspondent Louis Rukeyser He said he was questioned for) in IMES, Priday, June 9, 1967 15 | THE OSHAWA T ship was "quite extreme" on the Arab side, but in Israel related mainly to figures on the dead and injured. ABC said a producer sending film from Israel cabled the usual advance memo on the shipment to the 'network's traf- fic desk in New York. "It read: "Departing unspe- \cified flight stop unspecified destination stop unspecified time stop. security?" | School Trustees | Want Arbitration | TORONTO (CP)--The execu- tive of the Ontario Separate| School Truestees' Association! said Thursday it has agreed on compulsory arbitration as the jcure to teacher salary disputes. | The executive held an en.er- gency meeting last week to dis- lcuss the difficulty school boards |= . . « How's that for) | (450th Anniversary For Lutheranism MONTREAL | (CP) -- Luth- erans plan to mark 450 years lof Lutheranism as well as Can- ada's centennial this year. Among the projects outlined before the sixth convention of the Eastern Canada Synod Wednesday was a Canada-wide |Lutheran youth conference |scheduled for August at Water- loo, Ont., with an expected at- tendance of about 1,500. The 450th anniversary is dated from Martin Luther's nailing of his 95 propositions to |the door of a church in Witten- burg, Germany, in 1517. NANCY GETS THE JOB Nancy Sinatra has been signed to sing the title-song of You Only Live Twice, the next James Bond thriller. Ontario are having with teacher wage negotiations. The executive wants a com- | jpulsory arbitration system to go into effect early enough to ea-| sure a decision before May 31,) Need An Oil Furnace? CALL PERRY 723-3443 BAY OR NIGHT the traditional resignation date} for teachers. | out of order. A Life spokesman said Schut-| ARREST TIMES MAN zer's camera was retrieved but) Dana Adams Schmidt, New it had been burned and it was|York Times correspondent in still not known whether his last Jordan, was arrested at mid- pictures would be usable. day Wednesday in Amman and Producer Ted Yates of the had not reappeared five hours (CP Wirephoto) Eisenhower's N Explains MacArthur Feud NEW YORK (AP)--A "'mis- |understanding" in the Philip- Islands _ permanently MacArthur, he indicates, rified' Philippines President Eisenhower relates the inci- dent in his fourth book, At published today. the late 1930s, Eisen-| hower was MacArthur's senior aide in Manila, organizing the Filipino defence forces. As a morale - builder, he writes, MacArthur suggested bringing units of the new army from all parts of the islands for a par- ade in Manila. The defence budget was ex- tremely tight and, when Que- zon heard of the project, he dis- approved it. Eisenhower writes: "Now the matter had come to the ears of the president who was horrified to think we were ready for a costly national pa- rade in the capital. Because Gen. MacArthur denied he had given us an order-which was National Broadcasting Co. was later, : 4 ag The charges against Schmidt ew Books were not specified but one source said he was accused of operating a radio transmitter. The Associated Press London bureau reported Wednesday morning that communications periority over his fellow offi-|ffom Cairo were becoming in- cers and of a high place in|Creasingly difficult, American history that he de-| British, French and Rome veloped in the American public P0St offices reported that au- to announce the appo' Smith, as manager of a like appraisal of his merits. | thorities in Cairo were refusing gage, Appraisal, His was truly a case where|'0 take any press calls. self - confidence breeds self-| From Beirut, an AP corres- Field, success."' | Pondent reported telephone com- Eisenhower also tells of his|™unications from there to days at West Point, the U.s,|Europe and other Arab cities military academy, describing) Were becoming more difficult, his pranks and the causes of|With calls subject to long de- his demerits--including the inci-|lays and censorship tightening. dent when he appeared before| London and Paris bureaus, an upper classman in full uni-| getting through to the Cairo ex- form except for his trousers, | change, were told there was no| Eisenhower discloses that he|answer at the AP office in had misgivings about partition-|Cairo. A Paris operator re-| Phone 725-484 Phone 723-3533 Lloyd G. Lee, F.R.I. Vice-President wishes Mr. Smith is well qualified to serve your needs in the Residential, Commercial, Mort- Rental 303 Hillside Ave., Oshawa H. KEITH REALTOR LTD. APPOINTMENT ANNOUNCEMENT intment of Frank M.- their Oshawa Office, and Industrial 1. Oise ..- Residence FRANK M. SMITH ing post - war Germany into|ported hearing someone in Cairo|f, zones of occupation that left! - Berlin deep inside the Sovie t} zone. He says he urged the adop- tion Of a plan whereby Ger- many would have been admin- istered by the United States, Britain and Russia from some central point, without separate zones of occupation, When he presented this to President) Roosevelt in 1944, he says,| "the president made light of my | fears." | || FAMILY PLANNING BOOM | SINGAPORE (AP) -- The Grand Opening of the... certainly news to us--there was Family Planning Board in this V--BAR-S Arabian Pavilion Open, Busy island city - state of nearly 2,000,000 people--mostly of Chi- nese origin--reports 2,500 new clients register each month. nothing to do except stop the proceedings. This misunder- standing caused considerable MONTREAL (CP)--Elements)pavilion «ince hostilities ex- -- ipa never --_ unsympathetic to the Arab/pioded in the Middle East ear- : n the same warm and | cause in the Middle East have|y. >" this week ast eat"! cordial terms. been spreading "unfounded" re-| ier this week, : Eisenhower draws an interest- ports that the United Arab Re-| But Mr. Sawvi soundediing portrait of MacArthur in public's pavilion at Expo €7/pinaced ee ghee 9 pa-|the book. ; may .close but this propa-|Vilon is having a @ fair. ' Ni ' ganda" has boomeranged, a pa-| At the Israeli pavilion one of- "a eon 'aun vilion official said Thursday/ficial reported an attendance} , rewarding man 19 work fae 9 night. jincrease of "more than 30 per| the former president says. Mac-| Meantime, spokesmen for the cent" since the war between Is- Arthur's memory ak ry sheng | Israeli pavilion say the Middle real and several Arab countries enal" and Con ang bie ta East war has increased attend-| began Monday. chose to discus his iawibtoe ance and elicited statements of} : pipiias aes ¥ toda ee a ae fair} CANADA LED WAY hada an ineaiy ance | grounds' centre. ease Canada had the first hospital/poured out in a torrent of cate coagy i blige coe in North America, founded in| words." | ee oe wepuy clrector 0'/1639 at Quebec by three nuns| "'At all times, he seemed go| the U.A.R. pavilion, said in an} ; 4 interview that the unfounded re-|°! St. Augustine. |certain of his professional su-| ports of a closing caused many = people to head in a rush for that s Enjoy the Best in... centre. They feared it would COUNTRY and WESTERN at the close before they could see it QUEEN'S HOTEL or could revisit it. 67 Simcoe St. N. -- Oshawa DOORS REMAIN OPEN FEATURING THIS WEEK: He seemed convinced, how- "THE BLUE TONES" | dian foreign policy. There have been pro-Israeli) tion, the firm wants Trans-Can- demonstrations at the U.AR.| _ Grand O1' Opry GRANDPA JONES and Ramona --Plus the Canada Fiddle Pl * GILLES ROY Canadian Step-da SUNDAY, RED Adults 2.00 HAPPY WANDERERS and their CENTENNIAL SHOW Featuring * GRAHAM TOWNSEND 1962-3-5 * WANDA and BARRY BROWN TINY AND MANY MORE BARN ADVANCE TICKETS--WILSON and LEE, RED BARN LTD. ever, that his government had no plans for closing the pavil- | 4) The Counts | a xx Kk kK * GEORGE MEEK INTERNATIONAL PRODUCTIONS Presents et the Whitby Arena (Home Of The Big, Big Crowds) FRI. JUNE 16th 4 P.M. to 12 P.M, 8 LID HOURS OF NON STOP ENTERTAINMENT Featuring: Live end In Person Direct From Hollywood, Calli Singing Their No. 1 Hit Record Shake A Toil Feater, Plus I'm Your Puppet. And Many, Many More . «° James & Bobby PURIFY (Show & Dance) »- PLUS SIX BIG CANADIAN BANDS 1) Stitch In Tyme 2) Shawn & Jay Johnson and The Majestics 3) E. G. Smith and the Power 5) The Soul Searchers with Dianne Brooks & Erie Mercury ion. A neighboring Arab exhibi- : ss & SUNDAY tion, that of Kuwait, closed its -- at the -- doors to the fair-going public OSHAWA 5-POINTS ARENA last week in protest against an alleged anti-Arab bias in Cana- Located at Ritson Road North and Taunton Road commer laying Champion ncing Champion Morning Classes, Western Pleasure, English Plea- sure and Open Trail Classes. Starting at 11:30 a.m. Sharp. e Western Games Starting 2 P.M. | FREE ADMISSION -- REFRESHMENTS Everyone Welcome -- Sunday, June 11th JUNE 18 P.M. Children 1.00 BOWMANVILLE x * 6) Jack Hardin and the Silhouettes. FOUR BIG MC's CHUM'S Bob Macadory & Brion Skinner CKFH'S Big 'G' Walters CKLB'S John Donnaughbie va Advance Tickets 2.00 At The Door 3.00 TICKET AGENTS SHAWA MARTY'S RECORD CENTRE Disc SHOP ARENA BOX OFFICE SHORTY'S CIGAR AJAX CENTRE SMOKE SHOP BRYSON'S SMOKE SHOP xk * aaa aR manus samb i STOCK RANCH SUN. JUNE llth @ 160 ACRES OF LAND @ INDOOR ARENA @ 70 HORSES OF ALL TYPES e BEAUTIFUL TRAIL RIDES © RIDING INSTRUCTIONS e LOTS OF FREE PARKING WESTERN and ENGLISH STYLE RIDING FREE!! @ Free Rides for the Kids (accompanied with an adult) Located on Hancock Rd. _ . in Courtice -- 1 MILE NORTH OF HWY. NO, 2 V-BAR-S @ Free Refreshments -- Potato Chips - Coke - Do- ge ceriia 8 Lem the end of » x - the road, = re Fe} Zz = m i=] HIGHWAY 2 EAST idl '4 ie (, ' NICHOLS MOTORS PH. 728-7768

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy