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The Oshawa Times, 7 Jul 1960, p. 3

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"| province. There will be some aft- WEATHER FORECAST Sun To Shine All Day Friday expected to have scattered thun- |dershowers today and Friday. ) a.m. EDT: | Regional forecasts valid until|got off his bicycle, to get a I sis: Ontario i& SHNAY this| midnight Friday: closer look, the doe ran off but mornin with the exception of a| Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Lake ihe uk stayed behind a mo- few scattered thundershowers in|Ontario, Niagara, Georgian Bay, | ment, . : the northwestern part of the Haliburton regions, Windsor, Lon.| When asked by his mother if the don, Toronto, Hamilton: Sunny|buck had horns Lou answered: with afternoon cloudiness today.|"Oh yes! They were sticking d warmer Friday. Wind|right up in the air and his tail | was so fluffy and pretty." Lou has been excited about deer since he went hunting with Carrier Sees Buck and Doe Twelve-year-old Lou Vaillan- court, 488 Nipigon street, was de- livering papers on his route this morning when he looked up at the corner of Milan and Stevenson and saw two deer, a buck ard a doe, looking back at him. When he TORONTO (CP)--Forecasts is- sued by the weather office at 11 ernoon cloudiness in Ontario today but Friday will b sunny. Northwestern Ontario is] 8 xland Lioke. White. River | regions, Sudbury, North Bay: {Sunny today and Friday. Winds|his father last winter. ¢| light. Warmer. Ee am | Timmins-Kapuskasing region: [Clear with a few cloudy periods southern e|Sunny an 22 Warehousemen Truckers Return SALVAGED PLANE UNLOADED AT OSHAWA AIFPORT A big C-46 transport plane | off from a lake. The pilot es- spawned a much smaller | caped unharmed. Mechanics of Beaver aircraft at the Oshawa | the Field Aviation Company Airport Wednesday. The beaver | are shown unloading the fuse- erashed and sank in Newfound- | lage. Some of the parts of the land recently as it was taking | plane were recovered from the CAPSULE NEWS Four Prelates lake in such small pieces that | $40.000, The transport, which | they were shipped in wooden | had flown the wreckage here boxes. 'An official of Field Avi- ation said that it would cost | trom Gander, Newfoundland, is | | owned by World-Wide Airways, | about $25,000 to repair the | Montreal plane which originally cost | Oshawa Times Photo Reject Letter MADRID © (Reuters Four | forced landing at Khartoum Air- Roman Catholic prelates Wednes-| port Saturday. The report had day rejected and deplored a let-| been circulated by Cairo's Mid ter sent them in the names of|dle East News Agency 339 basque priests protesting 5 ome Ss the lack of political lib- lod STRICKEN erty in Spain. The prelates said "nglan they could not accept such a let- . ter "because of its evident false- ness and because of its political character." NAME RESEARCH HEAD OTTAWA (CP)--Dr. Donald H. Laughland, 43, a native of Collingwood, has been a pointed director of administration of the agriculture dep: r tment"s re- search branch, it was announced) (Reut- to hospital with suspected food poisoning. The children began collapsing three hours after eat ing a school lunch. A hospital spokesman said the poisoning did not appear dangerous. SETS FLYING RECORD MINNEAPOLIS (AP) Max Conrad brought his plane down Wednesday. Acting director since August, 1959, he succeeds S.° B. Williams, recently named direc- tor-general of the department's administration branch, TRAIN INJURES BOY TORONTO (CP) Claude Campo, 10, lost his right leg be-| low the knee Wednesday after| being run over by a freight car while playing with other children in a CPR yard near his home. Police said several youngsters were riding a freight train when the boy jumped from a box car, bumped into a switch upright and rolled under the moving car. The partly-severed leg was ampu- tate: in hospital. QUEEN TO VISIT ITALY LONDON (CP) -- Buckingham Palace announced Wednesday the Queen and Prince Philip will visit Italy next spring will be announced later. STORY DENIED KHARTOUM, Sudan (AP) The transport ministry Wednes- day dénied a report that an American U-2 plane made a The exact] date and program of the visit] ~|booming in Metropolitan Toronto Wednesday night after just over 60 hours of flying that brought him a light-plane marathon rec- ord of 6,920 miles. Conrad, 57, flyin; covered a closed course between Minneapolis, Chicago and Des Moines, Iowa, to break the 3,083- mile world record set by Jire Kunc of Czechoslovakia last: year. FIND BODY LONG 'POINT (CP)--The body |of Charles Beattie, 78, of Hamil ton, missing from his daughter's cottage here since last Saturday, wi recovered Wednesday after |a helicopter spotted it in a | marsh Coroner Dr. C. J, Carna- |han of Langdon, vacationing in the area, said there was no evi- dence of foul play although the area around the dead man was trampled. No cause of death was immediately given. "OPULATE PROJECTS TORONTO (CP)--Babies are public housing projects. Forty- one were born last month in the |Lawrence Heights housing de- velopment. In Regent Park COMING EVENTS Oshawa Chapter Sweet Adelines STRAWBERRY TEA #ls to be held at the C.R.A., Thursday, July 7th from 7:30 to 9:30 Tickets 50c NOVEL BINGO THURSDAY EVENING, 8 P.M at ST. GEORGE'S HALL Albert and Jackson Sts.) Games $6, $12, $20 May be doubled or triplec $160 JACKPOT INCLUDED SL Door Prize. $15 HARMAN PARK BINGO, FRIDAY NIGHT ST. JOHN'S HALL Corner Bloor and Simcoe 20 $6 and $10 Share the Wealth S ~-- $40 Jackpots gomes, Bingo at the Avalon Thursday, July 7, 8 p.m. ; Eastview Park Neighborhood Assoc. 20 Reg. Games at $6 and $10 Six Jackpots at $40 Also Share the Wealth S-uth, 400 were born during the last year. But the metro housing authority says it won't go as far a. did the National Association of Housing Redevelopment Offi- cers ir. the United States, which a Piper Comanche,|} | | # | [4 Dr. Barbara Moore, 56-year- | old British hiker, escorted through Times Square, New York Wednesday, by Vincent J. O'Shea, city Deputy Com- missioner of Commerce, and a host of policemen. Dr. Moore, who entered the city late in the afternoon, set out from San Francisco 85 days ago. For a time back to New Jersey to walk the last six miles to the Hol | land Tunnel. She rode that six | CITY AND DISTRICT TWO AMBULANCE CALLS |by Robson and Hughes, The ambulances of the Oshawa [ronto, with a score of 0 plus Fire Department answered two The only Oshawa entry in the routine ambulance calls during prizes included J. Anderson and the past 24 hours Whiteley, who were second zh for two wins with a score TOURNAMENT SUCCESS f 54 plus 2 | Sixty-eight entries, five of them | from Oshawa, took part in the STREETS CLOSED | men's doubles tournament for the! The following streets will be] Liftlock Trophy at the Peter- closed for construction today and| borough Lawn Bowling Club on during the weekend; Oakes is of To- 92 av-| considered establishing birth con- trol centres in public housing pro- jects ACTRESS GETS DIVORCE | PORTLAND, Me. (AP)---Bette Davis's 10-year marriage to actor| | Gat Merrill ended in divorce | Wednesday because, she said, {Merrill is a man who "really must be on his own and not in any way tied down to a family." | They quarrelled often and it was | impossible to convince him to change his way of living, the 52- vear-old actress testified. She was awarded full custody of three| children. SEEK BOOST IN GRANT TORONTO (CP)--Metropolitan | Toronto board of ¢ontrol will ask | Premier Frost to' raise the On- |tarin government highways grant) |to the city to 50 per cent from {3 1.3 per cent. Under the High- {ways Improvement Act, cities ar1 towns separated from county administration receive 3 13 | per-cent subsidy, while h Ton mu-| {nicipalities get 50 per cent. | WOULD STUDY CO-OPS OTTAWA (CP)--The Co-opera- tiv~ Union of Canada Wednesday {launched a drive to raise money [to hire a full-time research of- |ficer to look into co-operatives. |1t is asking 1,000 people in the | co-operative movement to put up $10 apiece and seeking funds from local, marketing and whole- sale co-ops. ATTENTION ORANGEMEN AND LADIES All LTB. LO ALSO JUVEN Are Requested to Attend Memorial Service 9 AM. SAT. FORM UP AT 8:30 AM. (to Colborne {from Tecumseh to Russet OBITUARIES (nue; King street west {Gibbons to Stevenson road; Wil-| son road south from Olive ave-| SISTER M. CECILY nue from Verdun road to Wilson | Sister M. Cecily McNeil-Allen road south Erie street from died Wednesday at St. Michael's|Simcoe street south to the CNR Hospital in Toronto after a brief|station; Chadburn street, closed illness at 'Olive avenue; Central Park Sister Cecily returned to Osh- boulevard south, closed at Olive awa last year to teach music at!avenue; Cadillac avenue south, St. Joseph's Convent after heing|closed at Olive avenue; Highland away for several years teaching|avenue, closed at Olive avenue in convents at Toronto and Bar-/La Salle avenue closed at Olive rie . avenue; Luke street, from Rich Requiem High Mass will be at mond east to Colborne street St. Joseph's Convent, 89 Welles- ley street west in Toronto on Fri- day, July 8 at 9.30 am. Inter ment at Mount Hope Cemetery Toronto. MRS. F. DRAPER Following a short illness the death occurred at the Oshawa General Hospital on Wednesday, July 6, of Mabel Alice Smith, he-| Bowmanville loved wife of the late Fred Dra-|classhonors per and the late Harold L. Heard The deceased, who lived at Walnut street, her 75th year. Mrs. Draper is survived by al daughter, Mrs. R. Carter (Mar- jorie) and a son, Cyril Heard, of Whitby. street vast, PASS PIANO TESTS John McGuirk and Kathryn McGuirk, of successful in recent piano exam- held recently by the Royal Conservatory of Music in John obtained first in Grade 4 and Kathryn passed with honors in : 518 Grade 1. They are the pupils of Whitby, was in Mrs. L. W. Parrott, Maple Grove, were inations EXTINGUISH SHIP BLAZE NAHA, Okinawa (Reuters) : Firemen Wednesday poured tL fusca) se ice will be hed water down the funnel of the To Home at 2 p.m. Saturday, July 9. #08-ton United States Marine Cor { Interment will be in Mount Lawn Poration ship Lone Star State to Cemetery. put out an engine-room blaze. .L.and L.O.B.A. ILES LODGES at the Cenotaph , JULY 9TH A 3 REGISTERED NURSES Required for Floor Duty and Bed Care Wing, Hillsdale Manor, Oshawa's Home for the Aged. Duties to commence August 15th, 1960. it Attractive salary and benefits. Applications .will be received until 5:00 p.m., July 12th, 1960. D. FLEMING PERSONNEL CITY HA OSHAWA, JONT, OFFICER " | Local and a few showers or iy Unemployment showers today and Friday. Policy Rapped Warmer. Winds light becoming west 15 both afternoons. Forceast Temperatures Low tonight, High Friday TORONTO (CP)--The Ontario| Yindsor x Council of the United. Brother-| Bh eomas wes hood of Carpenters and Joiners! of America (CLC) Wednesday| accused the Ontario government of adopting an inadequate ap-| proach to unemployment. BROCKVILLE (CP) -- Seven hours after pickets were set up, 92 striking truck drivers and wai chousemen went back to work at the Direct-Winters Transport Company depot here Wednesday. The employees, members of 938 of the ' Teamsters' Union (Ind.), struck to support demands for the rehiring of Jack MacDonald. Strikers said the SAB on June 15 he told the photog- THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, July 7, 1960 3 Photo Man And Officer In Dispute TORONTO (CP) -- Magistrate Donald Graham reserved. judg- ment Wednesday until July 14 on a charge of obstructing a police officer against Federal News- photo photographer Robert) Landsdale. The magistrate asked Crown| counsel Peter Rickaby to pro-| duce by that time the authority | on which a policeman given| power to remove a citizen from what the policeman considers a) dangerous situation, ) Constable Hugh John Finan said| Then Constable Finn took him across the street where Detective Sgt. Alvin Sproule arrested him. DRIVE TO geau Valley TONIGHT Relax in Comfort TALLY-HO ROOM AIR CONDITIONED Hotel Lancaster rapher to move away from aj burning factory because he feared the wall might fall. Constable Finn said Lansdale went to the middle of the streef| and said "I'm a press photog- rapher, I have a police pass and 1 don't have to move for you or anybody else." IT'S HERE PLANNED GROUP OR, INDIVIDUAL TOURS DONALD TRAVEL-SERVICE Whitby-Oshawa-Brooklin MO 8-3304 Kitchener .. Wingham ... Toronto ide Peterborough . ' | eT a ng A 39 - page brief to Premier| st. Catharines Frost said a survey of the union's| St. Catharines re hf | ami affiliated locals indicates that in Hamilton I Muskoka almost every case officers and Kill h members believe the government | sar) is not doing enough to relieve un- employment. It also says that cutting per- mits were issued to full - time| employees of the Abitibi or] Spruce Falls pulp and paper] companies, who in turn peddle | their: permits to others, | "Department of lands and for- ests officials should be aware of how issuance of permits to sup- ply cheap pulpwood is a serious contributing factor in the over- | all unemployment picture," the brief said. company acted unjustly in refus- ing to let MacDonald return to vork after a period of illness even though he had a doctor's certificate MacDonald has been rehired. A company spokesman said theres had been a misunderstanding on clause in the company-union| Kapuskasing . agreement stating that a man is| White River .. listed as quitting voluntarily if he| Moosonee is off duty three days without re- porting. sudbury North Bay Gov't Asks 'Arms Talk 'At UN Meet By JOSEPH MacSWEEN Canadian Press Staff Writer Canada is trying vigorously to| |avoid any prolonged gap in dis-| | armament talks despite the col-| POE lapse of East-West negotiations PE in Geneva and the intransigent| attitude of the Communist side. | This is apparent at United Na- | tions headquarters in New York| where diplomats say Canada is| one of the countries actively pro-| moting the idea of an early meet-| | ing of the UN disarmament com-| | mission against apathy and op-| | position by some countries. | The Canadian view all along-- | as expressed by External Af-| | fair Minister Howard Green and | |others--has been that the 10-| nation committee which found-| ered in Geneva was a negotiat-| |ing body which did not remove | | responsibility from the UN in Yo mmf | A DIFFERENCE HOUBIGANT says: Discover the Fun of Feeling Pretty with a Spray The easiest, most effective way to opply fragrance is to spray it on, so take your choice of beguiling Chantilly v Eau de Toilette in either of these delightful sproy bottles, Available for a limited time only. END OF HIKE, YES AND NO he was determined to go | | the surpassing problem and prin-| |elple of disarmament. l | With the breakup at Geneva,| | the Soviet Union and its satellites called for disarmament discus- "isions to be resumed after the 'IUN General Assembly meets Sept. 20. But Canada, the U.S. | and some other countries have] {been driving for an earlier ses-| sion of the UN disarmament | "| commission, which includes all [= members of the assembly. | FEARS REHASH There has been no surge of i A miles in a police car. But, in- A new picture tube would Chantilly, with Gift Atomizer make . .. MITCHELL'S 9 Wisi Stns For price, etc. consult our service department. MEAGHER'S 5 KING ST. WEST RA 3-3425 N. RA 3-3431 voking a prerogative |enthusiasm for the proposal. And | (women's), she decided later [UN Secretary General Dag Ham- Sha? la . iv miles |Marskjold said in an unusnally| she'd make up for the six miles [forthright statement he fears] with a walk. such a meeting would result| {merely in a 'rehash' of what has gone before In the Canadian view respon- sibility for disarmament rests with the UN and it was given up temporarily to the 10-nation com- mittee only on the understanding the negotiations would continue. The moment the Geneva talks exploded, disarmament came --AP Wirephoto | Polymer, Union Sign New Contract, SARNIA (CP) A wage in-| crease of about four per cent is| provided for in a new one-year oon Mie UN. Th bi ie Soran signed Wednesday by| too en 15 Ll olymer Corporation and Local b 3 ot 16-14, Oil, Chemical and Atomic ance for Hobs, It i hoved hat Workers Union (CLC) according | 2, commission = meets ond to & Union statement |give encouragement, guidance, . | suggestions or recommendations The contract was signed follow-|for some sort of a resumption ing ratification by the 1,800 union|in negotiations. members at meetings held Tues-| But no one is making overly- 8 night and Wednesday. Offi- optimistic predictions on the said details of the contract|chances of winning an early |commission get-together, / MEAT MARKET | : VEY "YA 46 SIMCOE ST. N_ ® OSHAWA FRESH CHICKEN LEGS or BREASTS. 56° 'PRESSWOOD SMOKED SHANKLESS 5-6 LB. AVG. PICNIC HAM . 39° LUCAS RINDLESY BACON ue ve. §G° HOME GROWN NO. 1 GRADE TOMATOES" ™ . 39° ONTARIO GROWN NO. 1. GRADE POTATOES ..... 49° FIRM AND RIPE NO. | BANANAS uw 10° THE 51* CANADIAN OPEN . GOLF CHAMPIONSHIP FOR THE SEAGRAM GOLD CUP and *27,000 prize money WEDNESDAY, JULY 6, THROUGH SATURDAY, JULY 9 AT THE ST. GEORGE'S GOLF AND COUNTRY CLUB, TORONTO DIRECTIONS: From Toronto, proceed West about seven miles on Bloor or St. Clair Sts.; turn right at Islington Ave. -- 2 miles to club-house. Approaching Toronto, turn off Highway 401 at Islington Ave., travel South about 24 miles. Watch for "CANADIAN OPEN" markers. JUNIORS Thursday to Saturday CHAMPIONSHIP PLAY Thursday July 7 Admission $3.00 Friday July 8 Admission $3.00 Saturday July 9 Admission $4.00 $1.00 daily TICKETS NOW ON SALE at all golf clubs and WEEKLY TICKET $10.00 leading sporting goods stores. Plan now to attend the Canadian Open under the auspices of the ROYAL CANADIAN GOLF ASSOCIATION

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