Oshawa Times (1958-), 21 Oct 1967, p. 2

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

2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturday, October 21, 1967 A GLANCE AROUND THE GLOBE Newfoundland's PCs Gain One More Seat GANDER, Nfld, (CP)--'"The Liberals are now down to 38 from 39 seats out of 42 and the Tories are up to four from three out of 42." That terse statement -- Pre- mier Joseph Smallwood's only comment Friday night after a Progressive Conservative by- election victory that broke an ll-year-old Liberal hold on Gan- der--summed everything up, even if it didn't add anything new. Harold Collins, 42-year-old councillor and Canadian Nation- al Telecommunications superin- tendent here, defeated Liberal Jack Robertson by 2,853 votes to 2,041. Mr. Robertson, a 55-year- old hotel operator, has been mayor of this town since 1958. It was the first time the PCs had taken the riding since it was created in 1956, although Mr. Collins missed by only 200 votes in his first of three at- tempts in 1962. Municipal Af- fairs Minister Beaton Abbott re- tained the seat that time for the Liberals. | JOSEPH SMALLWOOD + « Terse Comment Bishop Elected Vancouver (CP)Canon John éd bishop of the Yukon by the glican provincial synod of B.C. Canon Frame, 37, an incumbent of the Mission to Lakes district, diocese of Caledonia, was born jin Toronto. He succeeds re- jcently - retired Bishop H. H. |Marsh. Layoff Necessary? CALGARY (CP)--Canadian Pacific Railway union leaders jsaid Friday they are satisfied jthat a layoff of 414 men at the |CPR's heavy repair shops here, scheduled for Monday, is neces- jsary. The railway announced | Monday it would lay off the em- ployees at the Ogden shops, for a four-week period because of a aa in revenue freight traf- | fie. Printing Error TORONTO (CP)--A private Timothy Frame of Burns Lake,| Vietnam, B.C., Thursday night was élect-, Said. Dies In Crash MORRISBURG, Ont. (CP)-- Ernest Montgomery, 49, of near- by Burwick was killed Thursday broadcaster suggested Friday a| Youth Sentenced printing error might have led to} OWEN SOUND (CP)--Victor|reference to a $100,000 fine for| Philip Wyman, 16, of Ottawajcertain violations under pro-| | Father Of Eight U.S. Planes Sink Boats e carcow anus x PQIUY In bombers pounced on six torpedo boats near the North Viet-| namese coast today and pilots MERIDIAN, Miss. (AP)--Two. reported sinking four of them. white men convicted of conspira- The six patrol boats, one of the cy in the 1964 slaying of three largest groups of torpedo boats civil rights workers remained in U.S. flyers have spotted, were|jail today while five others attacked one mile east of the|found guilty were free awaiting ;mouth of the Thanh Hoa river, |sentencing. in the central part of North) U.S. District Judge Harold a U.S. spokesman/Cox ordered the two jailed for \'making some very loose talk" In South Vietnam, U.S. and/about his instructions to the executive committee of the An-/South Vietnamese troops report-jury after it reported itself jed killing nearly 300 Viet Cong|deadlocked. jin hard fighting Friday in the! Held without bail were Deputy {northern provinces. Sheriff Cecil R. Price of Neshe- | In the largest of these actions, ba County and Alton Wayne 400 South Vietnamese infantry-|Roberts, a one-time nightcl Judge Keeps J 1 l : Sharpe, 24, manager of a pulp- wood sup2ply company in Phila- delphia, Miss. For thos convicted, the maxi- mum sentence would be 10 jyears and a $5,000 fine, under an 1870 statute making it a fe- lony to deprive a person of his. civil rights. The federal charge grew out of the slayings of Michael Schwerner, 24, Andrew Good- man, 20, both white New York- ers, and James Chaney, 22, a Meridian Negro, near Philadelp- hia, Miss. All 18 defendants in the con- |men, supported by armor,|bouncer who now sells mobile \artillery and air strikes, report-|homes. 4 ed 197 Viet Cong killed in 20) The judge said: 'I understand hours of fighting. there was some very loose talk Government losses were put|in thé halls. If you think you |at 18 killed and 107 wounded. |can intimidat | The battle was fought in a/are mistaken." | Coastal of South Vietnam's northern-'the hall in the courthouse, |most province. The all-white jury of seven Farther south along the coast,,;women and five men returned troops of the U.S. 1st Air Caval-|guilty verdicts Friday against ty Division reported killing 75jseven of the 18 defendants. Communists in a seriés of small/Those convicted also included actions in Quang Nam province./Sam H. Bowers Jr., described Marine jets and artillery ¢on-|a8 imperial! wizard of the White [tinued to take gun positions|Knights of the Ku Klux Klan. near the demilitarized zone. } The convictions marked the | first time any jury in Mississip- | [pi had returned a guilty verdict jin a major civil rights case since after slavery was abol- ished. this court. you! spiracy case were identified in testimony as members of the White Knights of the Ku Klux Klan. The FBI contended a Klan plot led to the slayings. The trial ended after 91 hours jof testimony and arguments, wasteland nine miles} He said dynamite had been|a,ing which the defence and jeast of Quang Tri City, capital/mentioned in a conversation inthe government presented 114 witnesses. The state of Mississippi never brought charges in the case, and officials of the state Friday blamed the U.S. justice depart- ment for this. District Attorney William H. Johnson Jr. of Decatur, who pledged to press the case in state court if sufficient evidence bécomes available, said the jus- tice department refused to let FBI agents who took part in the massive investigation come be- in a two-car collision near this community 20 miles southwest/¥ears less a day in reformatory| i : | When hé appeared on 48 charges|Canadian Association of Broad- tor McKiver, 42, of ag egpk| that included breaking and en-|castérs and head of radio sta-|Ont., a father of eight, was tering, theft, public mischief,|tion CKLW, Windsor, Ont., told|Killed Thursday when he was of Cornwall. Plans Revealed Friday was sentenced to two| posed broadcasting legislation. C. A. Ritchie, president of the TORONTO (CP )--The bor-| C4? theft and dangerous drivifig.|a néws conference he believed | ough of North York's plans for| communications tower 1,000 feet| Victim in Peterborough. high wére revealed Friday. No! estimate of the cost was given) as council announced discus-| sions on the project are about to|y, begin with federal and provin- del cial officials. Silver Medal OTTAWA (CP)--Lt.-Gen. E, M. Burns, head of Canada's egation at the 18-country Ge- jneva disarmament conference wr the nuclear non - pro- liferation treaty, will receive a HERE and THERE special silver medal from the ROTARY GUEST |United Nations Association in Mr. Sam H. Jerrett, director|/Canada, the organization an- of the British Pottery Manufac-|"0unced Friday. turers' Federation, will be guest|_ The medal was to have been speaker at Monday's Oshawa|Presented by Prime Minister Rotary Club luncheon. Mr. Jer-| Pearson next week, but the cer- restt was asked to guest by|®™Mony had been postponed be- Charles World, district manager|°@US€ the Geneva negotiations | He also was given one year con-|this to be the case. : pee a civic centre that would strad-|CUrtent for robbery with vio-| Such offences would be laid) The accident occurred when dle Yonge Street and include. a ence in the beating of a polio/under the Summary Convictions|Mr. McKiver's car, stopped at a Act and heard in magistrate's | court. He thought the size of the fine, unjustified and suggested it Should compare in size with| other fines levied under the act| for comparable offences. The legislation was given first! reading Tuésday in the Com;| mons and outlined government} proposals for overhauling broadcasting legislation in Can- ada and establishment of a new regulatory body. F atally Injured Eight defendants were acquit- CORNWALL, Ont. (CP)--Vic-ited, among them Sheriff Law- tencé A. Rainey of Neshoba County. The jury, which deliberated |thtown from his cat and hit by|moré than 14 hours, reported a la' truck. deadlock in the cases of three others, including Ethel G. (Hop) ---- Democratic nominee j for sheriff of Neshoba County ter- ' pe gate * ee ee te where the civil rights workers rear by a truck loaded with|Were killed on a backwoods telephone poles. gravel road June 21, 1964. The victim was thrown from|, Judge Cox declared a mistrial his car by the impact. Police|for Barnette, 47; Edgar Ray said the truck's rear wheels|Killen, 42, a part-time Baptist) passed over the man's head. Minister, and Jerry McGrew) Four of Mr. McKiver's chil- dren, passengers in the car, and TEETHING PAIN' the drivers of two other cars in- Miltions of mothers rely on Baby ORAJEL| liquid, Put af in's gone, Easy to use. | volved, were taken to hospital) jiqu where they were treated for minor injuries and released. DRUG STORES foré the staté grand jury. BUILD IN... WEATHER FORECAST Weather To TORONTO (CP)--Official| forecasts issued at 5.30 a.m. today. Synopsis: Unsettled weather prevails across Northern Ontar- io as a slow moving weather disturbance moves through ac- companied by light snow and showers. Across the rest of On- tario skies are variable. The prospect for Sunday are mostly| sunny and warmer. 'Toronto, Hamilton, London,'| Windsor, Lake St. Clair, Lake} Erie, Niagara, Lake Ontario, southern Lake Huron regions: Variable cloudiness and cooler today. Mainly sunny and a little warmer Sunday. Winds westerly 15 to 25 today and light on Sun- day, Northern Lake Huron, Hali- burton, southern Georgian Bay regions: Mostly cloudy, windy and cooler today. A few showers or snow flurries this morning. Sunny with a few cloudy periods and a little warmer Sunday. Winds westerly 15 to 25 today Mainly Sunny On Sunday Be Warmer snow today. Sunny with a few cloudy period and warmer Sun- day. Winds northwesterly 15 to 25 becoming light tonight. Ottawa and Montreal regions: Cloudy but with sunny periods today. A few scattered light showers this afternoon. Clearing tonight. Sunday mainly sunny and continuing cool. Winds light except westerly 15 gusty to 25 this afternoon and early evening. Forecast temperatures Low overnight, high Sunday Windsor ....+.+++.. 30 55 St. Thomas . 25 55 London ... 25 55 Kitchener 25 55 Mt. Forest .. ooo 25 50 Wingham ... oe 2S 50 Hamilton .......0.. 30 55 St. Catharines ..... 35 55 TOFONtO ....-+se000. 35 55 Peterborough ...... 25 50 Kingston ....e0c0. 30 50 Muskoka ........5. 25 50 and light Sunday. Sudbury, North Bay, northern Georgian Bay, Algoma regions: Mostly cloudy, windy and cool with occasional showers or snow flurries today. Sunny with a few cloudy periods and warmer Sun- day. Winds westerly 15 to 25 be- coming light tonight. Timagami, White River, Cochrane, western James Bay regions: Cloudy with occasional Electromode FLAMELESS ELECTRIC HEAT Electric Heating Contractors 56 PRINCE ST. OSHAWA Phone 728-4611 the leaders in Electric Heating 29 Celina Street, Oshawa. | JOINS SOCIETY j John E. Quantrill of 684 Grier- son St., Oshawa, has joined bed Alpha Tau Iota, General Motors Institutes Honor Society. To be} considered, a student must maintain an average of 90 per cent for five semesters and be in the top ten per cent of his class. 2 | East Central Consumers Gas,|@Te continuing. | | FINE RECORD Roybrook Model Lass, pure-| bred Holstein cow in the herd off, F. Roy Ormiston, Brooklin, re-| cently completed a fine record of performance production test.| As a seven-year-old, in 305 days of twice-a-day milking, she pro- duced 24,753 Ibs. milk contain- ing 1,001 lbs. fat, average test| 4.04 per cent butterfat. Con-| tinued testing for 365 days showed Model Lass' production at 27,845 lbs. milk, containing) 1,121 lbs. fat at an average test) of 4.03 per cent. In recognition) of these records, the Holstein- Criesian Association of Canada) awarded Mode! Lass a superior production certificate. the G.M. Master Salesmen's ® MURDOCH $4 <u. © MMAIRTRY ioc ort carsran b vee e TURNEY him at Ontario Motor Sales Insurance Limited ALL LINES OF INSURANCE Limited, 140 Bond St. Ww), 37 King East Oshowe Oshawa 728-5137 BILL HAYNES Ontario Motor Sales is pleased to announce the appointment of Mr. Bill Haynes to their new cor sales staff. Bill has a long experience in car sales. He is a member of sere Open Sunday 12 a.m. to 6 p.m. 8 King St E. JURY & LOVELL LIMITED 723-2245 4 \ © OF quat WESTERN ELECTRIC RESIDENTIAL, COMMERCIAL Certified Lighting Consultant | WESTERN ELECTRIC | 725-0842 . electric lets you WIRING QUALIFIED Electric Heating Contractor TRULL'S RD, SOUTH WAN Experienced furniture OSHAWA RECREATION DEPARTMENT PUBLIC SWIMMING PROGRAMME DAY TIME PROGRAMME Monday 11-12 AM, Children and Adults Tuesday 7-9 P.M Children and Adults | 9-11 P.M. Adults | 2-3 P.M. Adults Thursdo 11-12 AM Children and Adults : 7-9 P.M. Children and Adults Friday 6-8 P.M. Children and Adults 2-5 P.M. Children and Adults Soturdoy 7-9 P.M Children and Adu!ts 9-10:30 P.M, Adults Sunday 2-5 P.M. Children and Adults FEES: Children. 15e -- Students-25¢ -- Adults -75e | DX -- DX -- DX-- DX -- DX -- DX BE WISE: . . . $ $ ECONOMIZE ! SAVESS: FUEL |. $ $ WITH Phone 668 -3341 xX -- DX -- DX -- $ $ $ $ $ To selected applicants, will be given. Excellent vancement in current All employees have th to: | STORE MANAGERS sonnel required in Ontario for training in store management by Canada's leading progressive furniture and appliance chain. and life insurance, pension and hospitaliz- ation plans. Reply in writing, giving details Senior Area Controller GREAT UNIVERSAL STORES Address: 211 Yonge St., Toronto TED and appliance per- specialized training opportunity for ad- expansion program. e benefit of health LEBANON LODG for our la Sunday, October 2 G. H. Sudderd Secretory - EMERGENT MEETING All Masons are requested to attend a Masonic Service W. R. CHAPMAN McINTOSH-ANDERSON FUNERAL HOME MASONIC CLOTHING When the activity E AF & AM 139 It's that easy with It's just one more brings you all the te Brother 2nd, 7:30 O'clock Gornet Tubb Master heating oe match | ~ temperature to tempo allthrough "your home. is high the temperature can be low. And vice versa. electric heating, Room-by-room or zone temperature controls put comfort at your fingertips. way electric heating comforts of home. Live Better Elecarically OSHAWA PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION 100 SIMCOE ST. S. -- PHONE 723-4623 '0D. '2000 or more NIAGARA FINANCE COMPANY LIMITED 286 KING STREET W. 723-3487 ATTENTION! FALL GARDENERS! WE HAVE ON HAND EVERYTHING YOU NEED FOR YOUR FALL PLANTING Bulbs, Shrubs, Evergreens, Trees, etc. SEE US TODAY ! RUNDLE GARDEN 1015 KING EAST 725-6551 eo 4 F. J, FINLAY, Chief! Ex- ecutive, Boy Scouts of Can- ada said at Ottawa Friday the movement has faced a declining growth rate in re- cent years. He spoke at a news conference unveiling a new scout program. (CP Wirephoto) River Said DEAF ? «& vouve never Worn a Hearing Aid. Or if the One You are wearing isn't satisfactory we invite you to come in! Our services and facilities are pee to offer the assistance and elp you are looking for. SERVICES: eids @ Home er office As Low As $50 To assure your complete low pri @ Accessories end batteries for all hearing © Complete line of Zenith Hearing Aids Complete Hearing Help completely : : GILBERT L, SCOTT satisfaction you get all this from rice. e Zenith's powerful model 50-R : e Zenith quality earphone, cord and stock earmold e After purchase assistance, guidance and instruction Zum HEARING AIDS 11 ONTARIO ST. GILBERT L. SCOTT Certified Hearing Aid Audiologist at IMPERIAL OPTICAL co. LTD. OSHAWA 728-6239 EVERY TUESDAY + ALCO Lakeshore Public SIMCOE SOUTH a The interested public Women regain their s HOLICS ANONYMOUS Information Committee OPEN FORUM MEETING Sunday, October 22nd at 8:15 P.M. United Church Auditorium nd BAGOT ST., OSHAWA ALF McG. and SHIRLEY B, of Ottawa Guest Members of A.A. will address this meeting. who wish to learn HOW and WHY A.A. has helped over 350,000 Men and obriety, are invited to attend. 3750 SPONSORS. Tuesday, Oct. 24th at the Tam O'Shanter Golf Club West on 401, Road 2 mile just past Sheppard North on Kennedy JACKPOT ® Early Bird Games 7:30 P.M @ Regular Games 8:00 P.M. North York Knights of Columbus Like Sewer | At Niagara F: c By JACK GRAY ' Canadian Press Staff Writer The smelly Niagara River, k still famed for its beauty and its honeymooners, may become known as the biggest--and the most poisonous--septic tank in North America. The filth, including cyanide, in the international waters of fhat was once one of the best fishing areas on the Great de Lakes has prompted Senator Robert Kennedy of New York to a ask for a Canadian-United States conference on the situa- the lon. "The river is fast becoming a " sewer," he said. d The Niagara was the worst pri case turned up in a survey of/da air and water pollution in Ontar-|tio io by The Canadian Press, by The survey was backed upjerz Friday by allegations--which| the Ontario government said it|me would investigate--that two] the farmers were suffering from|Cri fluorosis brought on by fumes|Iny from a Dunnville area fertilizer) Dr plant. And on Wednesday Alderman Tony O'Donohue of Toronto cu pointed to an air pollution prob- lem become more or less acute over Ontario's booming indus-|*" | trial cities. ord He told board of control that ie air samples in downtown Toron- to showed pollution "considera-|#!7¢ bly above the level assumed dangerous by the U.S. Public|##ds Health Service." M BLAMES NOXIOUS GAS He blamed sulphur dioxide, |tiyve which city officials said is\ties spewed from chimneys over To-|mov ronto the extent of more than| TI 100,000 tons a year. But the black Niagara situa-jan tion overshadowed every other! Stee area in the province. The 34-mile Niagara, flowing from polluted Lake Erie, isjing | fouled above and below the falls by industrial and human waste, much of it untreated, from Ni- agara frontier centres. Then it pours into Lake Ontar- io to become the drinking water for suc cities as Hamilton and Toronto. Joseph A. Montgomery, indus- trial manager. of the Niagara Falls, Ont., Chamber of Com- merce, said 1,200,000 pounds of solids daily, including 1,000 pounds of cyanide and 75,000 pounds of oil and grease, are dumped into the river from Buf- falo and Lackawanna, N.Y., in- dustries. - oxrune CHANGE TO STAR In accordance with a resolu City Council, Daylight Savir the City of Oshawa at 12:01 ober 29th, 1967. Sunday, October 29th, will be aes - You Will Be a THE ANNUAL | of the ONTARIO COUN CANADIAN CANCE will be held c THURSDAY, OCTOBEE at 8:15 p.m. Hotel Piccadilly Room, King Street Mimeographed copies of Reports of Con asi Election of Officers for THE GUEST SPEAKER WILL BE MR. MAURICE J. ¢ Executive Director of Ontario Division | All who are interested in the work of C invited . . . Refreshments will be served. =e

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy