THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, July 4, 1960 NEGRO CULTISTS Communist China STATE MONOPOLY y All radio and television in Dep- mark is operated by the. govern. ment, with no advertising, full costs being met by- licence fees ¥ for sels. CHARTERING A BUS? AGENTS FOR BURLEY AND GRAY COACH LINES DONALD TRAVEL SERVICE Whitby - Oshawa - Brooklin MO 8-3304 3 TT Park, Prison In Elliot Lake ELLIOT LAKE (CP) -- The provincial park. He said the gov Ontario government's decision to ernment hopes to promote new Sends Apologies KATMANDU, Nepal (Reuters) --Communist China has prom- ised to stay about six miles away from its border with Nepal, fol- lowing a shooting incident in the area, authoritative quarters said here Sunday night 01374 TN KO) geauValley TONIGHT GET THE BEST For Less At MODERN UPHOLSTERING 9262 SIMCOE ST. N. RA 8-6451 or RA 3-4131 OSHAWA ONLY 10% DOWN UP TO 2 YEARS TO PAY is NS brewing last yet cult members WHAT A . 5,000-ac vincial highway developments, including ; romise establish a 46,000-acre provincial y de ) 8 14] amalcd she They said the promise was ark in the district has been wel- a road to Chapleau, 30 milés wes . contained in Chinese Premier park in ih Ds of this min. of here KINGSTON. Jamaica (Reuters) clashing with police. Finally, po- terrorists ambushed them, killing Chou En-lai's letter of apology to comed by TO faces a "The government is convinced --One of the weirdest stories inllice raided Henry's headquarters two soldiers Premier B. P. Koirala for the pb commun i of reduced that the long-term picture for the history of the colorful Carib-|here in April, arresting him and, A big manhunt followed and shooting of a Nepalese and 'the slump o De Elliot Lake is good," he said. bean is unfolding here in an at-|15 followers under the treason five men--all American Negroes|capture of 16 others in the fron- urgnam oh: ont proposal to "Elliot Lake is first and fore- mosphere of bullets, blood, in-|law were arrested and charged. tier incident last Monday. : tabli erm $2 000.000 prison most a uranium mining centre, $ 8, , . " > A " sta s $ $2, i Si " trigue and marijuana. Police said the headquarters One of them was Reynold Henry,| Communist Chinese troops in B55" SA © Fo li Bion the greatest one in the world. We Americans are playing major was "like a trained army camp" son of the Rastafarian chief. the area are tying to suppless rome when it was announced are confident that Elliot Lake roles in a plot worthy of Graham|--complete with small arms, dy- Meanwhile, five men three a revolt against Chinese rule in by Mines Minister Maloney at a will again be the Elliot Lake we Greene. And Fidel Castro's name namje and crude swords, plus Negro Americans and two Tibet. ublic meeting Sinday. knew when the demand for ura- also has entered the picture. |men who had been assigned uni-}Jamaican Negroes -- were being| 22 punlie } Sa vernment mium was at its peak." The story involves the Rasta- forms and ranks sought in connection with the Iceland Gunboat would, trade the prison farm for| : . Ww farians, a small minority of a Goin deaths of three Rastafaria ad- 2 hos Hal school. for retarded | TELLS OF PLANS ; primitive, Jamaican Negro cult- ENTER CASTRO ers whose bodies were found Chases Trawler let as the minister replied The minister told the meeting,' ists. Police added the raiders found shortly after the ambush. i, en, os iy on attended by 1,000 residents, of The movement was set up|letters between Henry and Cuban ig = GRIMSBY, England (AP) --/that there wil' he wehool might Plans for a re-training program about two years ago by Rev, Premier Castro . . The British fishing: trawler Thur- y was rig oy schoo (for displaced miners, efforts to o . i ¥ ar ritis | i 3 also be bu 'e. 5 y ri stri >, Claudius Henry, 57, now in jail On June 21; a party of Br itish Chinese Consider ingia returned to port Saturday eis attract new industries to the area |here charged with treason and soldiers was investigating reports {and reported it had been chased Robert C. Hart, chairman of and a study of possible new uses felony as violence swirls around that a submarine had landed RCMP R id I It and fired on by an Icelandic|ihe Elliot Lake board of trustees, |for uranium. ye ia arms in the Red Hills area of alas INSUIT gunboat, : 1x whisgeq ¢ the town would prefer the| "The province is restricted in § . . ap The | 5 ive shells whizzed|schop + retarde: J p . . i 211i ake The cultists sport beards and Jamaica. Thy soldiers Bud Jound/ TORONTO (CP)--Chinese here aio) Jive hed LS oo hizzed |schodl for retarded children ber the aid it can give Elliot Lake long, matted hair. They believe an apparently deserted hideout ,,.,.q » campaign .Sunday to) wa. isi ole cause it wou employ MOTE hocause the problem is largely : : z rms d the hills and ampaigh Suna; it was cruising off the Icelandic jo oie and use more hometown 3 prov em | 3 > R arijuanz known and arms dump in wloar ants \ : people and use under federal jurisdiction, Mr the 'use of marijuana . clear the reputation of Chinese|coast 10 days ago, skipper Maur- " | s locally as "ganja ordained were going through it when five immigrants ice Call sad > commodities. Maloney said by the Bible , | Dr. Henry Lore, a Toronto The gunboat ordered the traw- po SURVEY SITE An Sppes! for lederal aid Was | "And as they smoke their ganja Farmers Report doctor, told more than 1,000 fel-|ler to stop. 3 A survey to select a site for Torrie lo ava au Wie by and crouch in the doorways of fick low Chinese that RCMP raids on| Call replied with a defiant too! (pe prison farm will be made 2 mor cava'cade 0 0 their squatters' shacks, the y i Chinese communities across the of his siren and fled. The Bun immediately, the minister told) WoL h. 2.100 vragiem. mise Rastafarians dream of going to Grass Tetany country May 24 were "the big- boat gave chase but gradually the meeting. He said the institu- X 4 a er Ethiopia. gest insult to the Chinese people ont ground, wit happened when tion will accommodate 200 Nor ers are hii d In Ie Cot a TORONTO (CP)--An '"alarm- in 'the history of Chinese immi-| , The incident happened when drisoners and employ up to 80° ap of tha TROUBLE BE ing" number of farmers report gration to Canada." the trawler was cruising inside Filiot Lake residents a year following the United States Trouble began outbreaks of grass tetany this amy oN the 12-mile strip of coastal wat- "Mr. Maloney announced _ also decisipn not to renew uranium- October when Henry returned year among their herds. the de. i '€ RCMP raids came after ers which Iceland claims as its Si purchasing contracts which ex- from Ethiopia and announced partment of agriculture said to officials uncovered evidence of a exclusive fishing preserve a plans te release Crown land for pire in March, 1963, with no apparent confirmation-- day i ring bringing Chinese to Canada limitation Britain does not recog: cottage development as an 08 > . ome No.l core legally nize tional tourist attraction to the mm that Ethiopia would welcome Ne D. C. Blood, scientist at the ' . ea - --- groes from Jamaica Ontario Veterinary College, g " 2 SINGER HUBBY The Rastafarians harvested Guelph, says the disease, some wh ' their ganja, packed their meagre times called grass staggers, is 4 GET IN TROUBLE possessions into a few battered caused i 3 Shortage of magnes- SC ONORSES 3 vather jum in the blood ; ; Siitoasey and gafhored 2 3 "Look for animals that stagger ROSARIO, Argentina (AP) oC ore 10 "awe rip gger, a : dy di oy 2 i oe are balky, fall down or bellow, a-Sluger Abbe Lome a0 a i Ho "says Mr. Blood. The disease can ; er wi dan when Henry told them, "The time | J prevented by the feeding of like dogs and had to move 1s not ripe two ounces of magnesium oxide to a second-class hotel. | Then beganito each animal every day : 1 i Abbe, appearing here with ; y : # ; 4 her band leader husband, . 3 Xavier Cugat, always travels with her two dogs. When she e eC edl e and Cugat applied for rooms | 1 I | | reserved at a main hotel | PS here, the manager said they could stay but the dogs would as ee 11 1J have to sleep in the garage. 4 Miss Lane's tears and Cu- PATRICK CHARLIE STAHLO INDIAN CPR Old-Timer Remembers Past YALE, B.( CP Patrick Charlie, a dignified Stahlo Indian with a character-lined face, was born in Yale in 1880, before the oe railway came : ae hs enh Living with his wife in a little) 4 ohter of Ned Stout white cottage, he represents one| ec , vo." i" hector who | of the links with the storied past he ro I a hee) of what now is a sleepy little Cotore ots the Talay hamlet nestled at the bottom of Eres a rite of pide the Fraser Canyon 75 milesipive ood given en her by northeast of Vancouver. father At the age of nine--"T must have been big for my age"--Pa- trick Charlie was working as a section hand for 95 cents a day as the Canadian Pacific Railway pushed its way through the can- yon to forge a cross-country link When he retired from the CPR he was given a pass. "I could go anywhere in Canada. But I don't use it. There's no place outside Yale that I want to go." ways cut 1911-12 through the canyon VICE-REGAI Another GIFT vho the inscription: "To "Miss Stout. Frome the eral and the Princess 1882." The Marqi cess Yale Zovernor Lorne of and the Princess Louise Mrs. Barry's\son postmaste Nl AE keeper and Ahur ve n the house born. The house 1880s Ed rate varden where he EXCITING PAST Like other old-timers, he 1s sa tisfied to live with memories of Mrs. Barry and Mrs more exciting days Clare are "old girls" of All One hundred years ago Yale|lows in the West, once a was the gateway to the fabled| school where many promin wealth of the Cariboo, the term-| British Columbia famil inus of navigation on the Fraser their daughters River, a Ic g little town with! The school. too scores of saloons and outfitting former students have houses and a new church ten the work of the Sister There is nothing left now of the, Community of All Hallows saloons commercial houges except a few stone foundations on| Front Street, but the little Church of St. John Divine, built in 1859 and the on the B.C.| mainland survived. Tt was restored recently wa es ri is gone ot nd anc he ldest has two railway booms--f vhen the CPR came through in tf 1880s and again| Canadiafl Nat There have been irs he Barry whe n- ANOTHER LIBERAL Queen Victoria's daughter built in t but if not forg the n party the °|close Governor-Gen B.( | QUEBEC (CP)--Premier An tonio Barrette is scheduled to re- turn to his government office to- day to prepare for a last cabinet meeting and the formalities of handing in his government's resignation There was considerable week about just wheh Lib- Leader Jean Lesage and his would take over the reins of government ng thei Jtine 22 the 16 - year the Na- oubt tory over administration of Union tionale Mr. Barrette made a statement Indian saying his government would not ved £4] resign until official returns made € it clear the Liberals had won the election Lesage Barrette Mr. that he had tentatively said later and a wori bojk entitled and Mr "Papa's Little paughte: * with agreed on July 5 for the Liberal Mary take-over and he would be ready to proceed on that date All official available for returns will not several weeks SEAT Mr. Barrette left on a fishing trip after making his widely-dis- cussed statement. But within a few days a recount in of voles 1/Gaspe-North riding gave the Lib- 16 Cla a Ha sen ot an additional standings to Nationale 43 eat, bringing Liberals 51; Union Independent one. Several . petitions for recounts made by Union Nationale sup- porters were dropped 'and it be- came apparent the government as not step down The probability is that sw Liberal administration going to wait to the will now be sworn in Wednesday or day. Mr. Lesage is believed to have already picked the men who will make up his cabinet. Their names will not be announced until thé swearing-in cer emony. OTHER PROBLEMS | One of the first tasks of the Liberal cabinet will be to ready itself for the federal provincial conference at Ottawa July 25. Mr. Lesage will likely make known then details of his policy on fed- eral-provincial issues While in Ottawa it possible that he will make first moves for the return of the Polish treasures, kept in Quebec since 1948, to Po- land | § The late Mr. Duplessis "ha¥ $7 placed them at the Provincial Museum and had vowed they | would not be returned to Poland i B.4 as long as the government there ME o%u was Comp unist. However Mr.| Duplessis' successors, the late Paul Sauve and Mr. Barrette, said they would arrange for their return Three Young Prisoners Still Free DORCHESTER, N.B. (CP) Three young prisoners who escaped through the floors off | their cells from the federal peni-| YBBS-PERSENBEUG, | tentiary here Sunday were still at! (AP Western photogr large today ers staged a no-pictures Police extended their search Nikita Khrushchev for Frank Alfred, Klare, 27 won it Toronto, Gordon Mathews raphers and Lewis Joseph Roy, 22, both here at Austria's second lar {of Saint John, N.B. throughout hvdro electric tation and Ive nig er ud SevV- fused to take pictures of the | The trio escaped by lifting y chunks of flagstone from the Thurs is oe Princesse Margaret, | her uniform as | of the British and No-Picture Strike On Sixty st againsi of day--and 25 The. photog sat d iet leader hat Soviet photographers Chief Ranger Conimonwealth Empresa, draws a few glances as she walks past a | the princess a rousing welcome Khrushchev Austria aph- rike Sun- own gest re So They were protesting re- PH rg? ww PRINCESS VISITS GIRL GUIDES' RALLY wearing | group of young Brownies at the | Berkshire Girl Guides' rally at the race track, Newbury, Eng- and. Nearly 3000 Guides gave on which marked the jubilee of the movement, gat's angry protests failed to move the manager so they switched to an hotel which provided the dogs with pleas- ant sleeping quarters, warm milk and hot food. DIFFERENCE A new picture tube would make . .. For price, etc. consult ARREST NAZI WASHINGTON (AP) charges. Fight- ing broke out while George Lin- |coln Rockwell, self-styled leader : [of the American Nazi party, was + | speaking here Sunday and 18 per- ' |sons, including Rockwell, were arrested on disorderly eonduct our service department. MEAGHER'S 5 KING ST. WEST RA 3-3425 her arrival at the rally who doesn't understand why on exclusive, --AP Wirephoto | attempt to o specified PAUL RISTOW Actually, the reverse so much time in which to sell sive' expires by a rival agent AN EXCLUSIVE LISTING Every once in a while, | meet someone who doesn't fully understand the meaning of an exclusive real estate listing, or Most people exclusive listing is an arrangement whereby one particular realtor has the sole right to ' But some people with houses or other property to sell sometimes feel that they might hove e better chance of making the sale more promptly if the listing is in the hands of several realtors at one time. is often true an exclusive listing on a piece of property realizes he hos just But, more important his while to spend o lot of time without an exclusive, he might put o-lot of only to find that in the meantime the property hos be So whenever you have property to sell, you'll be better off if, first of all, you pick a reliable realtor, and, secondly, any seller should give en agent of course, know that an sell the property in question for period, = CARL OLSEN For a realtor who has the property before this "'exclu- he knows it will be worth prospective buyers; work into the deal en sold ining up ceived preferential treatment ( the ce \ eons Co dropping into] 3 chew. went. by. the through a door info the exercise Western cameramen ( ha nted yard. They then made their way Khrushchev, Khrushchev" to across the yard and scaled a 15- attract his attention and held up foot wall, prison officials said a sign saying in Russian "photo- The RCMP believed the three graphers on strike were at large for six hours be-| Khrushchev heard fore they were notified. The thought he was escapees are. believed to be waved and then travelling in a light blue sedan iis: hand stolen in this town near the a Nova Scotia border Klare had served more than ume four years of a 10-year sentence men for armed robbery. Mathews had Photographers and said 'they served one year of a two-year could follow Khrushchev and sentence for obstructing a police 'ake pictures of him in the con officer, and Roy had served one trol room oi the power station, year of his seven-year sentence as Soviet photographers already for breaking, entering and theft. had bean allowed to do. you give him an "exclusive" for eo reasonable period -- say 60 days. That's the surest woy we know of getting prompt end pleasing results SOMETHING DIFFERENT In the way of interior design makes this home appealing te those desiring individuality in their home. Completely dential location yet convenient to all services. Three bedrooms, separate dining room. Let me show you tonight, Call Audrey McConkey at RA 5-6140 HARMONY HEIGHTS RE-SALE Two-year-old bungalow on Eastbourne Avenue throw away from the new public school on Harmony Road North and adjacent to St. Gertrude's separate school. N.H.A. mortgage carries for $93.00 monthly including taxe For further particulars, call Hilda Ristow at RA 8-5108 or RA 5-3605 evenings Rircraft Observer Continues TIMBER BAY,'B.C Mrs. Veronica Dowling lost her job when the Ground Observer Corps was recently disbanded in favor of radar. But she continues to do the same work because she isn't convinced the task can be handled completely, by science From her home on Cortes Is- land in the Gulf of Georgia she reported 17,777. aircraft over the years to the Vancouver RCAF filter centre Her office-living room has 40 scale models of aircraft and a library of posters and magazines on aerial matters Miss Dowling--she prefers miss although she is a widow and a grandmother--is also a farmer, fisherman, logger and black- smith. She insists a human ob- server can do"things that radar eannot x As chant- Yes). being sud- he the ing cheered denly dropped read the sign. A short security iy Fee] ah > ol BE ON THE. TEA TO SAVE A LIFE Through the facilities of the RED CROSS BLOOD DONOR SERVICE Blood is Free in Oshawa General Hospital ® More patients needed and rece hospitals last week than during any previou e This Blood was made available through Donations of our community-minded citizen e New donors the Bl lower as Austrian just a stone's came after the cP later WANT A FARM? 100 acres in a small village Eight-room home with three-piece bath or Good barn with some new Very productive clay loam <oil, tile dro behind born suitable for installing a pond $20,500 with $5,000 down. Ex mae For further information call Ray at RA 8-510" NORTH OSHAWA Six-room, t torey home on Simcoe St double garage. Close to schools, industriall term 8-6408 15 minutes drive from Oshawa. | heavy duty and water Spring-fed wiring. bowls. stream Listed at considered steel stanchior trout hange be wo- N good repair, reasonable Call Newt Hodgson at RA 8-5107 or evenings RA COUNTRY MINRED even-room, two-storey home level garden area and spaciou stone barbecue for summer outdoor Audrey McConkey at RA 5-6140 LOCATED IN SUNSET HEIGHTS north district, spaciou attractively decorated and you are ng for a fine home in a good. locat us about this one. Owner transferred. Call Roy Flintoff ot RA 5-6165 or RA 5.3454 evenings CALL RA 8-5107 After Hours Call: A 8-6408 Audrey McConkey RA RA 8-5108 Roy Flintoff RA RA 5.3605 Carl Olsen RA OL 5-4471 Keith MO RA 5.8152 Tp a . fis Uisfow and Olsen 19 ATHOL ST. WEST OSHAWA zoned Then acre of ed blood trans ons in ee th on Tuesday and Wednesday Only! Sensational Meat Features LEAN TENDER Ih. 49. CLUB STEAKS 29: SLICED LEAN 3 Ibs. s1 Breakfast BACON Ib. MINCED BEEF ih. 2 9. ituated one Complete with To inspect call week lawn the generous living examplg, she: recalls once Seeing a plané that ap- peared to be in trouble. Later the RCAF air-sea rescue service reported an airetraft missing. She was able to give directions that narrowed the search area. The pilot was found alive. Another time she heard a faint ery for help. It turned out to be a fisherman who had lost his boat in rough seas and was attempt- ing to swim ashore, He was res- cued However, she has had her dif- ficulties. She once reporied fo her eriors in Vancouver that she could not go out .to chéck the exact direction of a. passing air- eraft because cougars were roamigg nearby. an are urgently needed because i Bank than ever before e Anyone between the ages of Choice modern three-bedroom I 18 ond 65 with average good i € bunga- ] low well mo ned ealth can donate THE NEXT RED CROSS BLOOD CLINIC will be held . THURSDAY, JULY 7th 1:30~ 4:00 p.m. and 6:00-9:00 p.m. Newt Hodgson Ray Lathangue Hilde Ristow Don Hill at St. Gregory's Auditorium Don 1 aul 1stow Lunney THERE IS A SERIOUS SHORTAGE OF ALL NEGATIVE TYPE SKINLESS BLOOD. EMERGENCY . : WIENERS IT'S AN WE NEED ,ALL NEGATIVE TYPE BLOOD [UIE MRS. VERONICA DOWLING