Durham Region Newspapers banner

The Oshawa Times, 17 Aug 1960, p. 2

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

2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, August 17, 1960 | INTERPRETING THE NEWS GOOD EVENING Lumumba Turns By JACK GEARIN MUST ENFORCE ZONING BY-LAWS Alderman Gordon Atter headway in his gidly enforced There was a sti dav when Harry Ayling, Wax Co. of Canada, was violating the city Mr. Ayling's firm recently petitioned City Council in protest against the firm -- they complained that and the noise of among other paint fume trucks at night thing eonvenience catised them great in- The firm promi its business to a new location this the months and within six probably accounts for small fine At any rate, ti 1e conviction was a hopeful sign for Mi Attersley speaks out or who prote it alleged zoning who frequently behalf of dele- t to Coun=- by- gatior cil abo infraction a step in the right said Mr. Atters we have that zoning directior ley, "Now ment that oul argl rigid respect also give some fight to have finishe at 438 Richmond street east. A this conviction, it ed and enforced ray of hope to others exposed to the ley appear zoning ndication of proprietor of fined 's zoning bylaws paints motor car | group of nearb) and agidents sed to move GORDON ATTERSLEY strengthens must be bylaw Thi more hould same conviction in residential areas.' Attersley said that his memory, of charge. He asec that had never Attersley a delegation from fully prote brought the was a the oad areas succe that would have status from residential SOME 0 hawa Ja writer for their recent follows Dear S Ac a participating fit'ing that some mention ent work ce did In relation program was n \ with a station was also a tour g Centre and t and Niagara enijoved the Many reaux on saw Tabloid the gppearance was planned by am sure the visitors went home mpression of Ontario and Oshawa JC's I have heard that ble publicity that the JC's be of Oshawa for the favors proper people IN THE KING'S SERVICE the Ayling in recent times, for this partic added been leading ted a Planning KIND WORDS FOR THE cees draw pra the Oshawa Jun to the inte welcome and p: to such Falls illumination) John Hyslop and Denis television last of the this Yours respectfull MARY convictior that there were man "brought to light spokesman last sp Forest Rosslanc Joard ruling and 3 Gler area closer to commercial JAYCEES e this week fron tudent excl tucle be made of the ex ior Chamber of Con rpravincial ore tha { next 'week 1ppe of General Motors, the proposed places (where the Qu Lamou show, The the local Jaycees, | with a favorable thanks to vear there was un JC's. 1 thin t congratulated by the only fine effort, LOU LOCKWOOD MANY YEARS Overheard in Magistrate's Court Magistrate Frank S before 1 pass sentence ? Accused: Just this for many and I Ebbs [ was years would be as lenient as possible OSHAWA COUPLE HELPS FOSTER PARENTS PLAN a bli Russell D financially Mr. and Mrs. Drive, Oshawa, old Korean boy Parents' Plan, Inc contribute $15 monthly have Jim Sam Parent 77.000 children on Plan ha a personal helping more South More It is now Italy and Hong Kong. groups ren ove Miss Gloria C 1y it 1s a secrefarian, independent vides children who are orph titute need. wise mide de with the support they would of Montreal toward the Korea, Fi than in Canada and the U.S. seas through this plan during the past 23 Matthews non-profit relief aned Have vou anvt t in the services of grateful if Majesty. be most Your | Christie, of 30 "adopted" a Woong through They have Switzer 1X~-year Foste child ehabilitated more than basis since its founding in 17,000 voung ance, Belgium, Viet Nam 600,000 individuals and helped needy child- than ters in have years. of the non- executive director non-propaganda, organization which pro= distressed, or other care, education and meral LOOK GRANDMOTHER, YOU'RE FLYING! Dr. W. M f Shaw family of Prince Edward Island Mrs. Thomas took her first airplane ride on a soort spin from the grandmother of Morris members Armories by to participate In ted the tere Starr next Federal minister of Penitentiary Dope-Peddler WINNIPEG (CP) An un known former prisoner at Stony Mountain Penitentiary, 14 miles north of Winnipeg, has been blamed for supplying goofballs to the instigators of a Sunday after- noon riot Warden Charles Des Rosiers said Tuesday that visual observ- ation of the men after the riot indicated all were under the in- fluence of drugs. The men were observed to stagger and the pu- pils of their eyes were dilated, he said. The warden sald a recently- discharged convict is believed to have left barbiturates on the 1,000-acre prison farm under a prearranged plan. A prison worker probably smuggled them nside the walls. concealing the tiny pills from the guards who, of Oshawa from a visit to his father, «Pr. W, ( appointed official physician to the Benns, 94, of when she was a Goodwood Airport Reed, city of the Ontario Regiment bus on Saturday, the Warrior's should contact Dan Matthews | . labor, two weeks in Oshawa and dstrict. has returned with his Premier Walter Sands ha Hillsdale Claremont, Shaw been Manor. recently passenger She is the florist Fifty Association will leave Aug. 25, for the CNE Day Parade. Those in- Hon. Michael expects to spend the new declares that his ge {lost confidence in labor eber 14-cent the report ation reject it Barbara Moore hedded down here for after covering another walker left promised to unofficial upport for at | ve Heat Back On By DAVID ROWNTREE Canadian Press Staff Writer Just when the Congo problem was simmering down, increasing the chances for a slight measure of stability after 1'2 months of ndependence and chaos, Pre mier Lumumba turned up the heat again The mercurial Congolese leader wernment has Dag Ham- marskjold, the United Nations secretary-general What irks Lumumba that Hammarskjold engaged in dis cussions with the premier of Ka- ta province, Moise Tshombe, the v going over the head of the central administration at Leopoldville, Lumumba also considers that Hammarskjold refused - to give the Congo republic the military help it needs and which it asked the UN to provide Hammarskjold"s position | that his discu ons with Tshombe, a political rival Lumumba who wants the import. ance of his own provincial gov- ernment increased at the expense of the republic vere, simply to arrange for the deployment of UN troops in Katanga and to re move Belgian forces from the area DELICATE SESSION LIKELY The Security Counci] session which Hammarskjold has sum- moned for today or Thursday is likely to be the most delicate of all that body's deliberations on the Congo question Russia has been increasingly violent in its criticism of Ham- marskjold's conduct The question has been raised whether the Soviet Union is seek- ing to force the secreatry-general out of office before his present term expires in 1963. Trygve Lie, the first secreatry-general, found himself placed in an impossible position with the Russians and! resigned in 1952 However, some observers sug: gest that Russia would be reluc- tant to antagonize Western, Afri. can, Asian and Latin American countries where Hammarskjold is held in high esteem In recent weeks, the Soviet Union's bark has been much worse than its bite. Throughout the earlier Congo debates, the Russians and Poles took a pug- nacious line but in the end voted with the majority Correspondents in the Congo have noted a certain incredulity| among the Congolese that some| African troops, from Morocco and Tunisia for example, are not Negroes. It is thought this might be the source of rumors, repeated) by Lumumba, that Belgian of- ficials and soldiers are staying in the Congo *'disguised"' as UN troops Plainly, Lumumba really wants the UN to help him overcome what he regards as a rebellion in Katanga province. The rea- on he is so infuriated by Ham- marskijold is that the secretary- general refused because he had no authority to get into a local scrap Cabinet Faces Rail Problem By ROBERT RICE Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP) The federal cabinet will soon be in a multi million-dollar quandary over how fo resolve a railway-union wage battle without shoving freight rates higher This will be the ticklish dil emma facing the government this fall if the major railways and 15 unions bargaining for 120,000 non- operating rail workers follow the raditional pattern of past con ract hassles A conciliation pute will be prohabls hoard report on made public Wednesday the terms of a terms that to include a hourly wage boost. But is only a recommend both sides ean he di It will set out ettlement circles expect Either or If it proposes any Big Shoes Blister sort of wage | grant hold down freight rates until the raise, the railways are almost certain to turn it down. They have argued all through the long- brewing dispute that started last November that they haven't got the money to pay higher wages They also contend their workers are as well paid as [ comparable outside industry, an|woman of argument rejected by the unions The original demand was for a {wo-part wage increase seven per cent plus --which works out cents an hour. To meet a bigger wage bill 14-cent hourly settlement would cost the railways about $34,700 000 a year--the railways would either have to seek higher freight rates or cut their costs even tighter OTTAWA PROBLEM This is where the government, will be faced with a problem. The government slapped a freeze on freight rate increases last year when it put a royal commission to work on railway problems and had Parliament a $35,000,000 subsidy to to about | commission reported Barbara MORRISBURG, Ont. (CP Dr limping badly the night 40 miles Tuesday In her 350-mile trek to l'oronto The 56 veal old marathon Montreal Sunday with he intention of reaching Toronto Aug. 24, opening day of the Canadian National Exhibition When she passed through Corn wall, about 25 miles east of here he stopped at a hospital to get ter on her fool treated. She size too aims her shoes are one large Leading the pack of six other valkers covering the route in an race with the British getarian is rep Peter Worthington ) miles ahead of her and suffering foot trouble Scattered along the road are re porter Roslyn Robb, a self-styled amateur mountain climber, re porter Dot O'Neil, painter Kevin Griffin and landscape artist Earle Carr and his brother Ever- ett, all from Toronto No Trace Toronto about Of Lion OAKVILLE (CP A hunt for an animal thought to be a cougar was called off Tuesday night without any sign of the beast About 20 volunteers combed an area three miles northeast of this town midway between Toronto and Hamilton The animal has been seen briefly by at least three persons, said Al McNab, manager of the Oakville Humane Society who di- rected the hunt. Farmer Norman Pelerson said it passed through his farm and travelled in long bounds Mr. McNab said from the size of tracks left, the animal could be a cougar or American moun- "|tain lion. The animals are native Tires Will | Cost More TORONTO (CP) Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company of Canada Limited announced Tues day a 2';-per-cent price increase In passenger car tires. The company said the increase resulted from an earnings slump caused by severe competition in the industry. Other major com- panies followed with ammounce- ments of similar increases . For the consumer it will mean | 50 cents more for fourth line tires) and $1 increase on first-line tires. | search each prisoner as he comes from the fields, a pr son pok es man said. About 150 prisoners| are allowed to work on the farm. to British Columbia, Alberta, and New Brunswick but unknown in Ontario. Mr. McNab said it is possible one wandered into this area. He warned residents to carry rifles at night and keep children out of woods and fields. BILSKY'S IL. 120 WILSON RD. S. WILL BE CLOSED ON THURS. 18th AUG, FROM 8 AM. TO 1 P.M, DUE TO FAMILY. arms. The royal commission, headed by M. A. MacPherson, is still at work and will likely be so next spring Observers suggest the govern ment may decide to bail the rail- ways out of their wage problem with a further subsidy until the royal commission report is avail able with a long-term solution "Buy A-Bombs" Says Muchmor ays TON (CP) Church leader called on the Can- adian government fo buy nuclear weapons with the 70 per cent of the defence get now spent on conventional those in|attractive 12% cents an hour the 25 after fronted with his pretty conference non-operating unions A United meeling of the national negotiat- ing committee for y 100 Tuesday night mittee bud- * CANADIANS AT UN SESSION Harold Green, chairman of the Canadian delegation to the U.N., and fellow members of delegation listen to speech by Henry Cabot Lodge, U.S. Am- bassador to the U.N., during meeting of U.N. Disarmament Commission at United Nations, N.Y., today. From bottom to Boy Posed As Woman VICTORIA (CP) A 14-year-old Edmonton boy who police said successfully masqueraded as an well proportioned 22 lo cash a number of alleged bogus cheques is be- ing held here Victoria juvenile officers said boy dressed as a woman stealing a suitcase full of female apparel at Kamloops in a July He disappeared from detention in Edmonton July 20 Police said the boy ime in Vancouver number of hotel spent som cashing a cheques as he con clerks and others made-up face and voluptuous figure The real owner of the suitcase hy coincidence was registering at the same hotel and saw her cases being handled by a strange "woman." She called police Rail Union Wage Talks TORONTO (CP Starting Aug. 30 the major policy com- mittees of the non-operating rail way unions will meet to consider conciliation board report ex- pected Aug. 24 in the railway wage and contract dispute Frank H. Hall joint negotiating chairman of the and general committees of the 15 called the The com- and Montreal conference meet Aug. 31 member will 1 | top, are: Green: Wallace B Nesbitt, Parliamentary Secre- tary* to Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs; C. S. A. Rit chie, Canadian Ambassador to U.N., and Gen, E. L. M. Burns, Green is Canada's Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs (AP Wirepholo) DRIVE TO peau Valley TONIGHT GOOD FOOD Business Men's Lunch 12 - 2 Daily Air Conditioned DINING ROOM HOTEL LANCASTER NU-WAY RUG CLEANERS * Dyeing and Repairing e Binding and Fringing * Mothproofing Wall: to wall carpets cleaned in your home RA 8-4681 174 MARY STREET nl Mutchmor, secre- tary of the church's board of evangelism and social service, said there are "people in the army still thinking of forming fours and eyes right." "We are keeping up old de stroyers and have planes in the sky that are not as fast as jet liners," he told the national con- ference of 'the church's Young People's Union. Mr. Mutchmore said he sus pects the United States refused tor recognize Red China because China stopped her at the Yalu River in Korea He suggested the United States try giving Russia "a little more credit for sincerity' in its peace proposals Mr. Mutchmor said Canada hould 'improve its relations with Itussia and Red China. And Pan. dit Nehru of India should be at the next summii eonference, he declared He said Canada should develop tronger defence ties with the United States, work foward a program of co-operation, compe tition and co-existence with com. munism, support a program of aid to underdeveloped countrie and back United Nations emer gency forces with men and money. Rev. J. R GOOD RECIPE VANCOUVER (CP)--Dr. Oliver Darwin, retired Methodist min- ister, says porridge for the stom- ach and scriptures for the mind helped him reach his 100th birth- day. G.A. STORE DEATH IN THE TO SEE, HEAR, and TRY THE HAMMOND CHORD ORGAN You play lessons! We will ton without prove you can play a tune in 30 minutes! LAST 4 DAYS THE HAMMOND CHORD ORGAN See the various models of HAMMOND ORGANS NOW ON DISPLAY Mr in the CORVAIR ROOM of the GENOSHA HOTEL Aug. 17th to Aug. 20th from 2 p.m. to 10 p.m. Lawery Barnes of the Heintzman Com- pany, will prove to you how simple it is te play the Hammond Chord Organ. HAMMOND ORGAN STUDIO 3 GIGANTIC JAMBOREE 2 of SUPER Foon, » Joe 7 VALUES 4 Come one and all -- COME SHOP ond SAVE -- during SPROULE'S colossel COUNTRY FAIR! It's the season's most gigantic jamboree of super food values + + . featuring GIANT-SIZE BUYS in every department end displey . . . on every shelf and counter! So, hurry . , hurry . . . HURRY on over to SPROULE"S sensational COUNTRY FAIR . ond SAVE to beat-the-band on scores of BIG TOP SPECIALS! Don't delay , , . do it, today! Suggestions AND Special Values FOR WEEKEND OF Aug. 17th to 20th Sproules' Beef is red brand beef, Canada's finest grade to assure quality-flavor and tenderness. LEAN -- GROUND FROM " SPECIAL BONUS OFFER Regular 69¢ Value Plastic Variety of Patterns and Colors Table Covers ONLY 39¢ WITH $5.00 ORDER 16-0Z. JAR SAVE 4¢ -- NEW KING SIZE Quaker Mulffets SAVE 6c -- SALADA TERA BAGS GENTLE LIQUID FELS DETERGENT RED AND WHITE EVAPORATED MILK TALL TIN FOR NC ONLY WITH THE PURCHASE OF RED AND WHITE INSTANT COFFEE 5-0Z. JAR AT REGULAR PRICE Minced Beef y LB. 43 SHORT RIB ROAST COTTAGE ROLLS ". PEANUT BUTTER nvm. Ee ne 73° ME 3 6. uw 49° SWIFT'S -- SWEET CURED -- CRYOVAC HOMOGENIZED PER PKG. 69° 24.07. TIN AYLMER PICKLES AND RELISHES Sweet Mustard Pickle Corn Relish, Sweet Mixed 4 12-0Z. JAR 1.00 YOUR CHOICE 49 3c OFF JAVEX 23° DRAGON BRAND FROZEN CHINESE FOOD 14-0Z, PKG. CHICKEN CHOP SUEY CHICKEN: FRIED RICE 12.01. PKG. PRESERVING SUPPLIES -- BERNARDIN Mason Caps & Lids ,.. 39¢ Pickling Spice 2 25¢ Fy 21° 8-0Z. PKG. Pickling Salt Certo Pectin pene SY° SRIMP £3 ROLLS FLY TOX SAVE 5c -- LIBSYS INSECTICIDE FANCY PEAS BOMBS 4 0 69¢ Regular Size 89¢ LARGE 1.39 SIZE FRUITS AND VEGETABLES Duchess APPLES BASKET CHOICE SELECTED BANANAS 10° ORANGES awe 9° NOW AVAILABLE FOR PICKLING -- SWEET RED PEPPERS, FRESH DILL : PICKLING ONIONS, ETC. 30x. Cello 32.02, We are big enough to serve you--Small enough to appreciate you SPROULE FOR FOODS THAT QUALIEY. AT PRIGES T EE ----

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy