Oshawa Times (1958-), 8 Nov 1967, p. 1

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Home Newspaver Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. VOL. 26--NO. 259 10¢ Single Coy 55e Per Week Home Delivered She Oshawa Times OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1967 Authorized 03 Second Closs Mail P Ottawa afid for payment of - Weather Report Sunny with a few cloudy periods, not quite so cold Thursday. Low tonight, 30; hjgh tomorrow, 48. , ost Office Department Postage in Cash THIRTY-FOUR PAGES FAITH, KEY TO LIFE WHITBY (Staff) -- One hun- The ] famils that wa : dred and three years ago Tues ® to gprbtgg ee prager eet i day one of Canada's pioneer settled first on a farm in neat mothers was born and today by Clarke Township she attributes the remarkability | Later. thes ' ; of outliving 11 brothers and sis- le aa eee Ae aged ee ters as an act of God re ace ribet gait ieee Mrs. Frances Jackson was largel tite +} te Beroe mM hk born in Ontario three years be cas Beek at enue, Bu RMbIEON tassios ss : 5a, st and the soil under their feet fore Canada's confederation -- od ! Mrs, Jackson has been an 11- : Frances married at' the age year resident of the Fairview of 23 at.Coe Hill. She and he Lodge home for the aged here first husband, Henry Foster . since an emergency. gall- farmed and kept a post office |bladder operation at the age of for a few years 92. Henry died in-1914 and three Appropriately, she says the years later she married Johr secret of her long life has G. Jackson -- operator of a amounted to putting her faith furniture store in Cobourg 'in. the Lord to stay on earth Later, she-was to live in-Kenda as long as He thought right'. and still later Port Hope. | Staff members and residents Mrs. Jackson, who spent a of the lodge held a party for number of years at a Prince Build her yesterday and she was: Albert nursing home __ before ] ein ace aes ere con coming to Whitby, has three C Itts MRS. F ICE '*KSON |children: Mrs. W. F. Kelsey OD are: Mrs. Jackson is working. on re FRANCES TRUBSON (Isabel), Whitby; Roy H. Fos : : |her 104th birthday now with » + « 103-Years-Old Iter, Markham. and J. Russell these words in mind | , |Foster, Peterborough "I'm old and I know it. Who Richard and Isabella Bullied, a grandchildren and nine great would have thought I would homesteading couple in Ontario! grandchildng@add to the list CLEVELAND ELECTS FIRST NEGRO MAYOR have lived to be this old." that came to Canada from) Her 'hobbies have. been gar | She was born Frances Devonshire, Eng., some time dening, playing the accordion, DEMOCRAT CARL Cleveland against Republi- wife Shirley, as they greeted Negro elected mayor of a | Lucinda Bullied to Mr. and Mrs.'before 1859, reading and writing poetry. STOKES, 40-year-old law- can Seth Taft and presented supporters after the victory. major U.S. city yer, won an uphill battle in this happy picture, with his Stokes became the _ first a (AP Wirephoto) rsnapakaciesiai i <2 Two US. Unempl shawa Man Lives As Recluse !wo U.5. Unemployment Rises , Cities Elect Sharp With Body Of Father In House sisocaagellpaesieebeobctpr | Ne roes | OTTAWA (CP) -- Unemploy-|a sample survey of 35,000 house- i | g \mnent showed 'an unusually|holds conducted during the By oe | \large increase" between Sep-|week ended Oct. 14. . es | * I _. Cleve.itember and October, jumping to After adjustments to discou Juana An 87-year-old Oshawa man bilge anchabrig hana eae | 54.000 at mid-October from seasonal factors, the national) has been lying dead in his bed- 8 descendant of a slave, has be.|2/9,000 the previous month andijunemployment rate was 4.7 p ' Sats 195,000 a year earlier, a joint/cent in October compared wi -room at 384 Ritson Rd. S.; for © over a year while his 62-year- old son lived the life of a re- , Cluse in the same home. Douglas Henderson' Bryce told city police he didn't have any money to bury his father and wanted to keep the father with him as long as he could. The body of James Bryce, a former General Motors em- ployee, was discovered by city police late Tuesday afternoon following information received by a representative of the de- partment of health and welfare, old age pension division. NEIGHBORS A next door neighbor, Mrs. Michael. Wojcik told The Times today she had not seen the father for nearly two years and that at that time he was very sick and unable to walk. Mrs. Wojcik said her husband had told the son to take his father to hospital for treatment on | feet. Mrs, Wojcik said the elder) man since the fall of last year|w son and wanted to stay home.| someone was living at the house | question. She said the younger Bryce had) was an inside light which was| stmas gifts y machines atics, Auto- ses. These orm precise II machines trical parts. and having food del the home every two days, She said the Bryces had|this summer. lived at the house since it was built nearly 50 years ago. | SUSPICIOUS A rear yard neighbor, Nick Kowalchuk, said no one in the|tive told police neighborhood thought that the|cheques for Mr. Bryce old man had died. 'We alljbeen cashed for some iygred tO\he and other neighbors had cut Sct. Kenn {Santa Cla' that since) his waist. had not an old age home," said Mr.|Bryce's home and investigate. Kowalchuk. | At the home, he met the son| the son tol Mr. Kowalchuk said todas! that he had not seen the old a er | here the father was buried,|to the bedroom held tightly shut the u Bryce was worried about his|and that the only indication that|the son told him not to ' 1 This prompted the represen- been behaving normally put-jtyrned on every evening be-|tative to go to police. Minutes} ting garbage out every week|tween 9 and 11 p.m. He said) later Det. Sgt. John Powell, Det. three|the grass at the Bryce home Ken Ostler arrived at the home 'scribed as The government representa-| hair and a white beard down to time, he IN BEDROOM thought he had been taken to|found it necessary to go to Mr.) When Det. Sgt. Powell asked|ne lthe son where his father was, | who told him that his father|was in the back bedroom. | The detectives found the door} lcome the first Negro elected| mayor of a major U.S. city, but Republicns claimed a_ pattern) of victory and an omen for 1968) | in Tuesday's elections in other} lei vibe AAA ae |per cent in September and 2.6 ties and states. jee A The Republicans captured the|Per cent in October last year. governship in Kentucky andj) {took over the state legislature in| |New Jersey where a Democrat, |"au of Statistics j ; |Richard Hughes, is governor. employment, which usually in-/ Atlantic region pore t,|creases between September and/and 4.4 in Quebec. Another Negro Democra October, dropped by 42,000. federal report said today. The October unemployed re- | 3.7 in October of 1966. total labor force, up from 2.8/cent. ® The unadjusted rate varie jregionally from a high of 5.1 pe a drop of 18,000, partly due to|3.5 per cent and was exceeded layoffs in the auto industry re-|by the Quebec and Atlantic fig- atic 7 sulting from the Ford strike injures, a ae ce United States. The report noted that about Negro-white balance in the Comparing October with the half the drop in total employ- eublic schools was a key ques- same month last year, the labor;ment between September and HRS in Boston aehare Secretary | force was up 172,000 but em-|October was among persons of State Kevin H. White was |Ployment rose by only 113,000,;under 25, reflecting the reopen lelected mayor in a non-partisan adding another 59,000 to the|ing of university courses. eee sf 70 Democrats ranks of unemployed. om decline of 32.000 in farm jruti-off between two 1 Manufacturing johs were)jobs, to 603,000 at mid-October, |rejected at the Boston polls. In Gary as in Cleveland, the HOME ON RITSON ROAD SOUT a! a vie down 66,000 on the year and the|was about normal for the pe- | ' a " construction industry dropped riod. election returns evidence "that 59.000. There were increases.) The rise in unemployment upsurge in Republica n ask that| with string and sealed with rags| strength which began in 1966 is ws : a bias y i ". ' . : ¥ ing dali Fea Hla ie SORE OR: | The job picture in brief, with cou ee ee ate tecrinie tench (ORES NO TREND 'estimates in thousands: tober. p : ; _ Democratic Chairman John M| Oct. Sept. Oct.| Of the total out of work, however, in the trade, agricul- was mainly among men 25 and ture and service sectors. er, Temporary layoffs ac- 190,- Det. Sgt. Powell said: "You sages cae . " 108 ' eth Young, and Det./never smelled. anything like it Bailey said he discerned no 1967 1967 1966 000 had been seeking jobs for { 'lin your whole life. Tt was just; Tend at all. Labor Force 7,691 7,730.7,519|four months. or less. Another d met th hom they de- indescribable." Democrats reclaimed the' jmployed 7437 7.511 7,324, 35,000 had been unemployed for jand met the son whom they de- mayor's office in Baltimore,| Unemployed 254 219 195 four to six months and 29.000 for The officers had to remain outside until two cans of em- balmer's deodorant could be ob- ltained g@nd. sprayed about the room, They then found the |body of James Bryce lying on wspapers on -his bed ; Coroner J. A. Patterson was Iled to the scene' where he officially and held Philadelphia's city hall) These estimates are based despite internal discord and a|-------- pep ieaiatie sha aN SEES On 'the. Republican balance| M ailmen Dety Union, Strike Seen Spreading sheet, the Kentucky victory of | tional leaders in Ottawa to Te- looking "just like} Be 4 | i #| seven months or more us' with long white ewiaias satis | of an upset,.put Republicans in} charge in 26 of the 50 U.S. gov-| ernor's offices. The states in the} Republican column now repre-| moved. to. the; Sent 304 electoral votes, 34 more d them that his father|C /pronounced Bryce dead. By THE CANADIAN PRESS was dead. When ke asked EXTRA Russian Diploma |the embas ble, said the demonstrators| were war criminals and Ger-/flag. man fascists. MANY TEEN-AGERS But reports found most placard-carrying group ounger than middle age. embas' There were many and a number of tots. The demonstrators were main- ly from the. Ukraine and the wr Baltic states; but a scattering of ke others identified themselves as) former citizens of Hungary, land, Rumania and Czechoslo- vakia. They shouted "shame" andj "finks" at arriving guests, and chanted "Down with Russia," "Freedom now," and 'We'd gre tather be dead than red,"' OTTAWA (CP) -- Anti-Com- munist demonstrators thronged the gates of the Russian embas- sy Tuesday night tossing eggs, stones, paint and insults. Diplomats, politicians and their wives were jeered and booed by the crowd of about 350 as they arrived for a two-hour reception marking the 50th anni- versary of the Bolshevik revolu- tion. One woman was struck by an egg and other guests narrowly missed. : A bottle of red paint hit the embassy steps and splattered the entrance. Three windows were broken by flying objects, Police arrested five persons and charged them with creating a disturbance. Russian Ambassador Ivan F. Police of the|the' right PHONE 725-7373 teen-agers |sentati on ordered h the block Inside, LY Hostile Horde Insults symbolic black coffin and a red POLICE PERPLEXED struggled to bejagainst their duty to protect the ive of the external affairs department formally requested stronger police action to prevent nore windows from being. bro- External Affairs Minister Po-|Martin represen : lister Pearson at the affair. He the embassy grounds, nhed his sleeve and said: "rl} show you some of your They hurled their leaflets on gallantry.' Louie B. Nunn, rated something turn to work | The body was re morgue at the Oshawa General than the number needed to elect Postal employees in St. Cath [Hospital "where Dr. "Roland a-president in 1968. oe arines,. Hamilton and Welland) "We are not going back to {Clark was to perform a post * today defied a direct union work, We are going to stay out mortem today. lorder to return to work and re-juntil this man hag won his DEATH DATE | New gents | mained off the job to continue a|case." |dispute that began Tuesday. The man in question is Robert Douglas Bryce told police his} father died on Oct. 29, 1966 and . There were indications the Embury, secretary of the St. t a copy of the Oshawa Times of Dissolve Clots wildeat strike in the Niagara|Catharines local. He was sus- Oct 22 found under the body !Peninsula might spread. King- pended Monday for allegedly is pc 1 ' holding up mail delivery to help (Reuters) -- Rus-|ston postal workers said . they hers found|supported the strikers, and in ble of|Toronto the executive of Local 1 d cho-jof the Letter Carriers Union of the|Canada warned its members to thelbe prepared to support the strikers, "The fire is there if we want, Embury, to stoke it," said the local's|------- samp pecareengg Prey Pert At Earlton ton, Stoney Creek, Hamilton,) ;veteran with the police depart-|damaging red blood cells, it]Grimsby, Welland and St. Cath- ment described it as the first|said. Clinical tests. will begin!arines--470_ workers remained TORONTO (CP) -- The tem perature fell to one degree below zero at Earlton in North leads police to believe that this} MOSCOW was-the correct date of the/sian medical research death. \two new enzymes capa | The son was taken to the On-\dissolving blood clots an \tario Hospital at Whitby Jast lesterol, believed to be 'night by police. jecause of arteriosclerosis, City detectives described the|Russian news agency Tass re- house as being that of a recluse|ported today. with not heat, almost no light-| One-- of the enzymes | ing, and with boxes, bottles, and|formed by a species of mould dirt all over the house. fungus and dissolved blood clots} Det. Sgt. Powell, a 22-year|in three to five minutes without| another postman with a heavy load. Mailmen are not carry more than 35 pounds and sy lawn and burned a bers out in sympathy for Mr to balancé free assembly of was At one point a repre- time in his career that hel!soon, Tass said off the job. The only services feouldn't eat his next meal. The other enzyme, which dis-|available were the purchase of} Prior to his retirement, Mr.|solved cholesterol, was evolved|stamps and deposit of mail.| ryce was employed for ajfrom micro-organisms with the|Some persons expecting impor-| number of years by GM. He was|help of ultra-high sound_waves.|tant an active member of the Osh-| Cholesterol is believed to bejsearch for them among awa Lawn Bowling Club until/responsible for the formation of|sorted mail in post offices. 'recent years. fatty cysts on the inside of veins Gail Dean, president of the St Mr. Bryce was predeceasedjand arteries which lead to arte- by his wife, the former Ellen|riosclerosis, a kind of hardening | Pickup, Sept. 18, 1962. of the arteries. ted Prime Min- is driver once around before heading into un-| period of cold weather contin ued over the province The Earlton temperature Ambassador Shpedko, day night that his members|record for the date's overnigh would d@fy an order by their na-|low of 17 set in-1939. | , the national contract, loca se 4.1 per cent in September and Two presented 3.3 per cent of thejyears ago this rate was 2.4 per A report by the manpower de-|cent in British Columbia to a partment and the Dominion Bu-|low of 1.5 per. cent on the Prair- ics said non-farmlies, It was 4.1 per cent for the 2.6 in Ontario It was the first time in years nted for 22,000 jobless in Oc-} allowed to union officials called their mem- letters were allowed tojern Ontario Tuesday night as a) Catharines local, warned Tues- lowest in the province, broke a} 24,000 JUMP GUN ON STRIKE DEADLINE _ Marathon Negotiations; Walkouts At Eight Plants -PROIT >) fore tt } DETROIT (AE -- More 47 ge resulting fro fu 24,000 Chrysler Corp. workers in o work by 600 truc the U.S imped the gun or ere on 1 t strike deadline today ; see spade down nearly a quarter of p tanle' Bs to No. 3 auto-maker's operation been made : : session that started at 10 The walkouts at ei plants da ame as bargainers fo the ' ties ¢ Jegotiators are trving to fit company and the United Auto (cy ote Ge Le : I 1 1 ler a ecord nree-vea Workers union passed the 24-! contra i i on nec { rd \ ¢ hour mark in a marathon at- Co eks si ys i Moto z veeks ago after a 4f tempt to write a new three-year day. strike ras ontract before the deadline : midnight. tonight The only major demand the The mushrooming stoppages Union did not win at Ford, quel raised the possibility more of P28 for Canadian and American Chrysler's 103,000 UAW mem. "Orsers est obstacle bers would go out during the '® 8 at day even if quick agreement ""!Ysler. was reached and that Chrysler P. Reuther, UAW nt, has indicated that on the wage parity demand, which he says is a must from Chry i: a n Chrysler Once agreement is reached on this year, the union might con- to have disparity elimi- ed over a three-year period, The Canadian worker aver- ages about 40 cents an hour less than his US.counterpart, vhose average hourly straight, \time wage was $3.41 before the Ford contract. would suffer substantial produc tion loss. agreements must be written for nz 131 bargaining units at Chr ler's 17 plants in 12'states, More than 190 of these remain to be settled, WALKED OFF A mid-morning check by com- pany officials showed workers| FORD PICKS UP jout at plants in Delaware, Mis-| Ford is j i a sin , Mis just now gett souri and Michigan. Some 18,000\into production htonnig foal | workers actually walked off the\agreements, such as those at |iob, Pal Soother 6.000 3 the|Chrysler,' had not been settled Jefferson assembly plant in De-|when the national t \troit idle because of a paris|\s(gnbi ---- Psychiatrist Discounts CAS Instability Charge PRESTON, Ont. (CP) -- Mrs.{has no character disorders that | Arthur. Timbrell is a mentally}would 'place her within the |fit mother of above average in-/frame of psychopathic or socio- | telligence and showed no evi-|pathic personality types."" r|dence of psychopathic behavior,| Mrs. Timbrell, the mother of a judicial inquiry was told Tues-/nine, was described earlier in y. the inquiry by Ruth Conley, The inquiry, ordered by Pre- Waterloo g ao Children's. Aid jmier John Robarts to investi-| Society psychiatric care worker, gate the placing of two foster/as exhibiting psychopathic: be- sisters in the Timbrell home|havior. t and their forcible seizure Sept.| In nt er th a eae. Pog Pudies Employment in the construc-| that B.C.'s jobless rate has|o¢ : d 8 society report, made hile Louise Day Hicks' white tion industry was down 33,000/topped the regional breakdown.|7, Chalrdte pais a aed ote the Grane under serra ; : matt anufacturing jobs showed|In September the B.C. rate was} .7 co Ww e Judge Harry Waisberg, Mrs. |backlash-tinged for mayor was Ae ak Mpa fees wate ' rare nicq|George Scott, a psychiatrist|Conley said Mrs. Timbreil dem- | partment, examined Mrs. Tim-|siveness with the solicitor-general's de-jonstrated an unhealthy posses- toward children and brell, wanted them only to. fulfil her Dr. Scott said Mrs, Timbrelljown selfish needs, ANNO NEWS HIGHLIGHTS No Cancer, Pope's Doctors Say VATICAN CITY (AP) -- Pope Paul's doctors announced today that laboratory tests had confirmed that the Pope's prostate gland, removed by surgery Nov. 4, was not can- | cerous The announcement was the first official word that the enlargement of the Pope's prostate, which put him to bed two months ago with an inflamed urinary tract, was | not due to a malignancy. However, earlier bulletins after his opyration had indicated as much. Nine Cars Derailed Near Chatham RIDGETOWN, Ont. York Central Railroad freight t were damaged today in a derailment 30 miles east of Chatham. No injuries were reported. Damage to the freight cars has been estimated at, $25,000. Philip Hits Urban Superiority TORGNTO (CP) Prince Philip said today that--city dwellers' who. believe they are superior to farmers just do not kpow the facts. Farming in highly developed, countries has advanced as far or farther than other industries, he said in opening the first meeting in Canada of the Royal Agricultural Society of the Commonwealth, t (CP) -- Nine cars of an 8l-car New rain bound for Buffalo, N.Y. .. In THE TIMES Today .. Snow Clearing--P. 17 Bonspiel at Whitby--P. 14 Apartment Zoning--P. 5 | 18 Ann Landers Ajax' News--5 City News--17 Classified --28, 29, 30 Comics--32 Editorial ; 30 . Sports--14, 1 - ' Television--32 : wicks { Theatres--26 "First day's always the iene worst, Bob!" bring at 9 20

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