Oshawa Times (1958-), 22 Aug 1967, p. 3

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or Dr, eletion n said otball w I'm pong. ito the i Bar- in a | after en fol- n. He of an death swept ears."* er in jiscus- y, and sume pened | en ing id to have eadquarters me 650,000 ed in Big the United | Of labor age hourly industry is rs on rest. livery -L'S 3-3431 gon, Ogden, Utah, miles day night. come--any announced an agreement Davenport C, B., Britain's largest packaged beer companies, to market draught quickly. TODAY'S TOPIC MISS KAREN FOSTER Six Whitby residents were asked their opinion on the condition of Whitby's parks, and whether development of the existing parks or creation of new ones is nécessary. Here is what they said: Miss Karen Foster, 95 Eliz- abeth St,: 'I think there are enough parks, but they need developing. I would favor another swimming pool for Whitby and more events for 'vvnnnrrnann nner PETER SPRATT CHRISTOPHER GREAVES children being held in the parks." Peter Spratt, 338 Lydeview Dr., 'I think we need to have the parks developed a little, but we have enough now. I think a swimming pool would be a good thing." Christopher Greaves, 8 Heber Down Cres.: "D'Hillier Park should be developed. I think the town should buy all KURT JORDAN the land possible on both sides of the park with an eye to future development." Kurt Jordan, 909 Henry St.: "We don't need any more parks, and I don't think they are lacking in facilities. There is not that much con- gestion in the parks." H. Johnston, 1001 Athol St.: "We could do with more swimming pools and an out- i ararereuetterreeeeeygneeg H, JOHNSTON Whitby's Parks Cc. £, HUMPHRIES door artificial ice rink for the winter period as the weather here is never cold enough to, have much skating." Cc. E. Humphries, Rossland Road West: "I think we've come to the stage where we should be concerned about day-to-day programs for the children rather than spending | vast sums of money on small development." Hiker's Cigarette Blamed __New Format For 20,000-Acre B.C. Blaze Proposed VANCOUVER (CP)--Forest| servire officials said Monday ajswept across the southern inte- cigarette discarded by a hikerjrior, fanning both old and new} Winds up to 40 miles an hour was fanned into a 20,000-acre/ fires until many became too hot) forest fire near Shuswap Lake, 'to fight. 200 miles northeast of here. The fire, which started during) Ray Williston said he is consid-|tie Alberta border the weekend, was burning out! ering putting a recreational for-| Vancouver Island est closure on the southern half}! at| fighting fires Monday and more years until his retirement ear- lier this year, said the conven- of control late Monday. At least two other fires were of As a result, Forest Minister the Kamloops district blamed on careless campers in| 12:01 am. Wednesday. the Kamloops area as sen. 150 ver. Vast Forest Land Areas Plagued By Major Fires BOISE, Idaho (AP) --. Vast] E0765 fire situation continued to wor- entire Both were out of control,|Fras-r Canyon between Lytton most miles northeast of Vancou-|and 'northeast of Vancouver, and the The closure would affect the Okanagan Valley, the Falls Creek, 100 miles About 70 other smaller fires fore:t land areas of Idaho, Ore-;were burning in. north Idaho, Montana and British while southern Idaho firefight- Columbia were aflame today asjers attempted to choke off the) firefighters sought to overcome|largest of 80 blazes. Hardest hit manpower shortages, hot, dry} weather, and a threat of light- ning storms in the Northwest. were Payette and Samon National forests. More than 250 new fires have hit Idaho since) More than 400 new fires were) Sunday night. | reported Monday in the region. Washington state officials said)men faced blazes racing over) the forest fire threat there was/ 25,009 acres. The largest was al the worst in history. 14,000-acre fire on bureau of| more than 1,000 In Oregon, Spokesmen for the U.S. forest|land management property of the fires are impossible. "We don't have enough men to cover all the fires," Richard f | Stauber, forest service informa-|/President of an International) tion officer said. 'We've been|Woodworkers of America local, | ta), trying to fight the big ones and/Said the union is investigating|inyolyed government then on to the others as we complaints of : methods, hours and other condi-| United States. No fatalities have been tions in the section where &| 'The 13-year-old Calgary girl's protest in the midtown coffee-| |6,000-acre blaze is raging ON) ctory started last January when house district. doctors discovered she had About 150 new fires had been Ewing's disease, described as a were arrested Monday evening which a, several hundred hippies | threaded through bumper - to - bumper traffic and stood in the 4 street. As in Sunday's disturbance, when 48 persons were arrested, the hippies' efforts to' back up demands for closing Yorkville's main street to traf- fic were watched by a crowd; can" reported. FIRE OUT OF CONTROL A major blaze southwest ofjreported in the small north Idaho commu-|blazes have broken out at an\destroys w: nity of Peck mushroomed out of! average of 15 a day since June. | control, More than four square|Hardest hit has been Glacier and|)National Park where 5,000 week, grass had been blackened Mon-|acres have been blackened: by months" to live at Easter, but her father refused to give up of tinder-dry-trees labor problems. service regional office in|south of Burns. said exact esti- mates on the number and size of Cynadian timberland on fire, CALGARY (CP)--Chelley British Columbia faced possible|Lynn Stanway lost her fight Walter Allen | with bone cancer Monday. She! '| died shortly before noon at Cal- gary's Foothills General Hospi-|of Yorkville denizens continued) that/ demonstrations officials Torontonians de b ated hippie| and hospitals in Canada and the charges of police brutality in| quelling Sunday evening's mass | Wi'n more than 13,000 acres) meals, hiring | Vancouver Island. Montana, where} {two biazes. UK. To Get Draught Beer In Seven - pint Can Style LONDON. (CP)--It regular at a local thousands of Britons it will be a milestone in the brewing indus- try. has with one of British Oxygen Co. beer in seven-pint | cans equipped with miniature beer taps. The spigots are specially made to keep the beer from going flat after the can is opened and to deliver a rich topping of foam that many pub regulars consider their due. In the past, Britain's draught drinkers, many of whom would} rather draught than switch to bottle) beer, had to contend with|spigot, must also shell out 10) canned draught which would gojcents for a new tube of carbon flat if it was not consumed!dioxide each time they get ale 'new can. | fight for a pint of had to! $2.15 a can and will slightly undercut pub prices of 35 cents) a pint. But there is a fly in tue brew, The spigot, which can changed from can to can, w cost $3.75 and some competitors | feel this will prove a deterrent} 'for beer buyers. A spokesman for British Oxy- $3,000 gen said Monday the company expenses from donations by pri- pub would tell you that--and to has solved the problem with its vate individuals and help from new tap. It will dispense beer the Alberta, Saskatchewan and from a can while keeping the federal remainder fresh for weeks by|the trip but there was no way discharging a protective shield'of getting her to New York in a of carbon dioxide. Special cans to take the new \mitted : critical condition. ill) ---- sel area bounded by the and the United States border It would prohibit travel, camping, berry picking and pic- Sixth one be conducted without nicking in Southern B.C. More than 3,100 men were being hired. Assistant District Forester L B. Bb. Boulton fires in were the area caused by South Thompson, the North Thompson Was involved in all five national human Progressive Conservative con UNITED CHURCH UNION DUE © ra THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesdey, August 22, 1967 3 FOR DISCUSSION AT MEET 1967 Anglicans Start General Synod By DAVID DAVIDSON OTTAWA (CP)--The Angli- can Church of Canada begins forma! sessions of its general synod today and union with the United Church of Canada and the Anglican canon on mar- riage and divorce approved two years ago at Vancouver are expected to be major subjects of debate. Also high on the agenda are a report on re-organization of the church's administrative struc- States and the Caribbean so that common problems of the churches can better be dealt with Must Rev, Howard H. Clark, Archbishop of Rupert's Land and primate of All Canada, who is president of the 10-day synod, is to make an opening address this afternoon. Prime Minister Pearson, Most Rev. M. J. Lemieux, Roman Catholic Archbishop of Ottawa, and Rt. Rev, E. S. Archbishop Clark met with The approximately %00-mem- reporters Monday and said he ber synod comprises active and favors union with the United retired bishops from the church's 28 dioceses as well as lay and clerical delegates. Most of the Synod's sessions will be at Saint Paul Univer- sity, a Roman Catholle institu- tion formed in 1965, It contains the theology and canon law fac- ulties formerly under the Uni- versity of Ottawa. The Angli- cans had hoped to meet at Church but that it should not be entered into prematurely. He said he opposes capital punishment and favors the breakdown principle for divorce. He wanted to study the question of abortion further before taking a position. The primate said the world is becoming increasingly skeptical of the church which had fallen Biafran ture and a proposal that the Canadian church form a council with the church in the United n rebels [Resistance Of The Laity Rebels Gain Seen Key Church Problem LAGOS, Nigeria (CP)--Biaf- in a fierce drive m from Eastern Nigeria have thrust 150 miles west of their TORONTO priests and laity Reed, Anglican Bishop of Otta- wa, are to bring greetings to the synod this afternoon. (CP)--Bishops,;a_ mistaken must share! obedience, have become accus responsibility for a "desperate tomed to being told what to do, |gap" between the paper confir-|and border to capture the strategic) mation of renewal in the/ leadership of their bishops. town of Ore, only 100 miles/Roman Catholic Church effect- from Lagos, the federal capital, | eq at the second Vatican coun- said) ¢ij and the reality of its prac- reports from the area today. ready to talk peace if the Nige-| TORONTO (CP)--A man who Tian federal government is) all levels, howev ready to grant Biafra its inde-|Rey. Remi J. De. Roo, Bishop| radio) of Victoria, He had seen. its pe ndence, the Biafran ventions urged Monday that the @"nounced. to central Votes. " ; i ' i Kelso Roberts, a member of feuding with the federal govern- of laity and religious sisters. were the Ontario legislature for 24 ment led by Maj.-Gen. Yakubu tion in Toronto Sept. Kamloops, up to this time. However, he said, every Ojukwu declared the oil-rich| American bishops, in the work from any "fiddling" with delegates'/Eastern region independent onjof the clergy and in the of the congress, an American tice at the diocesan and parish Lt.-Col. C. Odumegwu Ojuk-|level, a British Columbia bishop jwu, the rebel leader, said he is! said Monday. There has been progress at er, said Most G signs in the libraries of North lems because understanding seek only to follow One of the goals of the Con gress on the Theology of the |Renewal, which Bishop De Roo} is attending, is to find ways of stimulating a more popular interest in theology, he said Bishop De Roo, with Rev. regory Baum of Toronto, is'an adviser to the 200 correspond- ents reporting the congress. At one of 10 working sessions May 30 after. months of bitter/ responses of a growing number/rabbi told some of the 2,000 Gowon, oil dissolution of 5-9 has took control of Nigeria's Mid- tions," said Monday been 'excellently looked after'? west region, the nation's other|result of a passive resistance} = the|an eager bishop meets when ne Ghere wit producer, threatening Africa's carelesssness.. There is a ban effort should be madé to assure PoPulous state. Priests are having their own d hh " ry " | 4 At least 1,000 men were said "Problem of identity that| PBR th cas on ali open fires in the district./that the election be "completely Other blazes were out of con- jtrol 'n the Paxton Valley south or the name of Metropolitan jof Chase and on the Mad River Toronto could be "dragged circumspect'"' and the North Thompson area. about very badly." Both cover 1,000 acres A fire in the Boundary area near the U.S and was sweeping down Montana: late Monday. The industrial closure of the west coast of Vancouver Island and the Bella Coola area was lifted Monday after a 24-inch rainfall during the weekend. and efforts to fight them were being |impeded by extremely hot weather. Lake border jumped its guard to the south into Death Claims Calgary Girl ending a_ struggle "rampant. cancer" ucing bone marrow. Chelley Lynn was given a month, perhaps " hope. Treatment she received in Canada did not improve the girl's condition, so the possibili- ty of transferring her to New | York's Park Medical Clinic was» DX -- DX -- DX -- DX jinvestigated. Chelley's parents received travelling. and medical governments towards hurry. Chelley finally left May 7 spigot, had to be ordered by aboard an RCAF tran 30 rt Davenport. and the company Plane and returned to Calgary says it will produce a new brew after six weeks of treatment at in a seven-pint container. The bitter will cost about . the Park Medical Clinic. specialists | The New York aid they thought she had built {up enough strength to resist the disease. On July 14 Chelley was read- to Foothills hospital in hite blood cell-prod- two "The position of the president (Dalton Camp) is a particularly west delicate one at this time, and it troops at will take the greatest skill on! week the part of that officer appear--as well as tral." "impartial" to have fought at Ore, 20 miles Where there has been delay) delegates that the task of Chris- on the part of bishops, part can} Recently, pro-Biafran rebels, be laid to "a problem of tenera-| Always but most! broaches change, he said. preoccupies them, jsaid at a press mostly it is the the bishop inside Nigeria's Western region. Until the clergy find their true relationship to the hierarchy, it LED TROOPS region led Ore. ago that will be difficult for the bishops One source reported that|in attempts to get them to start} i to | of the national PC association Brig. Victor Banjo of the Mid- living, thinking and practising Biafrans but indicated sympa- of the laity, he said. Mr. Roberts told an informal thy with Biafra. news gathering at Queen's Park it would be improper if Mr in the party, Diefenbaker, the present lead- jer, came out in support of a je \candidate. | Demonstrators Resume Again TORONTO Mond Eight chanting demonstrators their estimated at 3,000 to 5,000. (CP)--Hundreds ay as| $lecowomrze! [8 SISAVE $$ '| px = OIL Phone 668-3341 $ Customers, after buying the, CANADIAN HEARING AID CONSULTANTS 10 Bond St. E. 725-2771 'one of the finest Canadian whiskies this country has ever tasted' -- by Gilbey's -- DX -- DX -- DX-- DX' 5-Year ° } Guaranteed Investment Certificates NOW EARN 612% per ennum for five years by investing in Guoranteed Investment Certificates which are Guaranteed--aos to Principal and Interest. Flexible--may be used es Col- lateral for loans. Redeemable--by Executore in the event of death. Authorized--os Trustee Act In- vestments, CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST & SAVINGS CORPORATION 19 Simcoe St. N., Oshawe 723-5221 23 King St. W., Bowmanville 623-2527 OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS and SATURDAYS Banjo belongs to the Yoruba} tribe, Camp or.any other person highjria's Western region, while the| including John|Ibo tribe controls Biafra. which dominates Banjo's apparent alliance! jwith the Ibos indicated a split _|among the Yorubas since janother Yoruba leader, Chief, haacdonges Awolowo, last week| urged his followers to defend! |the West against the Ibos. "How many people will let their bishops be the new bish- jops of the Vatican council?" he Nige-\ asked the Biafran|the renewed life of the church. Banjo -said a the Midwest|PINPOINTS DIFFICULTY to|would be independent of both) The greatest difficulty, how-, -500 be--neu- the federal government and the,ever, is the passive resistance | fan conference. | behind in meeting modern prob- concerned with first things been mont it "hasn't been of|tian renewal should first be the renewal of man. "Renewal of man is the issue the|not renewal of the church,"' Annou Carleton University but it had booked ns for several said Rabbi Abraham Heschel of the Jewish Theological Seminary of Amirica in New Yorfk. LEWIS || OPTICAL | Established for over 30 years 10% King Street West 725-0444 TOT nce New Healing Substance... Shrinks Pile s, Checks Itch Exclusive healing substance proven to shrink hemorrhoids... and A renowned research institute has found a unique healing substance with the ability to shrink hemor- thoids painlessly. It relieves itch- ing and discomfort in minutes and speeds up healing of the injured, inflamed tissues. 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Satisfaction guaranteed or your | or more | | Too many Catholic people, in| BUY DIRECT TONE-CRAFT KING PARK PLAZA ng ad a A wi T | NIAGARA FINANCE COMPANY LIMITED 286 King St. W. 723-3487 i CASH NATIONAL TRUST COMPANY TIME DEPOSIT AT 4% % DUE JULY 26, 1967 ASSETS TOTAL .... LIABILITIES ACCOUNTS PAYABLE AND ACCRUALS: Due to the City of Oshawa Sundry SURPLUS RECEIPTS Pledges and cash donations; Pledges Cash donations EXPENDITURE: Parade Canvassers' Advertising Administrative: Salaries and Printing, Sundry Contribution SURPLUS Interest on investments stationery and postage Telephone, light and water Travel allowance employee benefits ... to the City of Oshowa .... NOTE TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Due to the nature of the revenue, income has been reflected on the bosis of cash received. The estimated reolizable value of pledges receivable ot June 30, 1967 is about $15,000, JUNE 30, 1967 which will not be reflected in the fund until collected. To the Directors of Oshawa Civic Auditorium Centennial Project We have examined the balance sheet of Oshawa Civie Auditorium Centennial Project as at June 30, 1967 and the statement of receipts and expenditure for the period from May 16, 1966 (date of campaign commencement) to June 30, 1967. Our examination included @ general review of the accounting procedures and such tests of the accounting records and other supporting evidence os we considered appropriate in the circumstances; os to cash donations, it was not practicable for us to extend our examination beyond the Funds' accounting for recorded receipts. In our opinion the accompanying statements present fairly the cash position of the Fund os at June 30, 1967 and the results of eash transactions for the period ended on that date. July 14, 1967 Deloitte, Plender, Haskins and Sells OSHAWA CIVIC AUDITORIUM CENTENNIAL PROJECT BALANCE SHEET AS AT JUNE 30, 1967 STATEMENT OF RECEIPTS AND EXPENDITURE FOR THE PERIOD MAY 16, 1966 (Dote of Campaign Commencement) TO JUNE 30, 1967 OSHAWA HOME SHOW | ft jays at d em- job to- iployed mn, as- esumed wing a ner re- {00 of have alendar 3,000 rk. mobile is ex- 1 point n er dance, tins at rarious > pre- s that ty will mem- to run will be as not nll be t,"" he lection --_ rt it is three- centre' l be a climate mall, build- office, at the- 1d food of the tt the on ree © $ 276 150,387 SEPTEMBER 15 - 16 - 17 $136,000 347 "136,347 14,316 $216,642 59,817 $276,459 dinner 10,444 18,947 __250,000 268,947 14,316 $283,263 Auditors LUCKY Jury & Lovell Ltd. Prices in effect till Aug. 26th 7 SALE ALBERTO VO5 BAN SPRAY RESDAN '* DIPPITY-DO AGAROL °" COLGATE DENTAL CR LAVORIS '* MODESS ""* WILKINSON BLADES *' JURY HAIRSPRAY ** DEODORANT ** CORICIDIAN "'D" ** EXCEDRIN TABLETS GILLETTE FOAMY > ; ey AMERAS - COSMETICS Denes OSHAWA--WHITBY--BOWMANVILLE Reg. 2.98 47 1.17 1.67 1.17 97° 1.17 Reg. 1.50 Reg. 1.25 8-02, Reg. 1.59 Reg. ris 97 33 97° 97° 97° 2 1, 87° EAM Reg. 75c vache LOVEL PRESCRIPTION CHEMISTS

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