Durham Region Newspapers banner

The Oshawa Times, 26 Jul 1961, p. 2

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

| on the same docket. | The result was that police and Z THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wadnesday, July 26, 196) CUBAN FREIGHTER SEIZED Emergency Plan Will Provide Feed, Water EDMONTON (CP)=An emer- gency operation to provide feed and water for livestock is under, way on the drought-hit central Prairies, but farmers in the ex- treme West are post g any call for aid under the govern- mel: organized plan, hoping re rain will revive hay crops. Carloads of feed were being moved into some drought areas and cattle were being driven to '|greener pastures. '| Giant pumps were replenish- i ling farm dugouts. Trucks and rail cars moved haying equip- ment to salvage stunted crops for feed. Most of Alberta was splashed by rain which moved in from the northwest Sunday and spread across the province by early Monday. Agriculture offi- © |cials said the rain could take ® (diction Foundation of British Fiage of 20. The youngest addict { | ver," he said. "The United King- some of the urgency out of a feed shortage in southern Al- berta, R. M. Putnam, deputy agri- culture minister, sald Tuesday no applications had been re- ceived from farmers for assist ance under the Dominion-provin- cial fodder and cattle movement Youngsters On Heroin Kick VICTORIA (CP) -- Vancou- ver younsters prove their adulthood not by smoking and drinking as their fathers did, but by taking heroin, Dr. Ro- bert Halliday of the Narcotic Ad- Columbia said Tuesday. Dr. Halliday, director of the foundation, told a service club there are about 200 drug ad- dicts in Vancouver under the he had met was 15 and had been on drugs for iwo years. "There are 1,500 to 2,000 drug addicts in the city of Vancow dom, with a population of 50,- 000,000 has 350 to 400." schemes announced early this month by Prime Minister Die- fenbaker. He said the rain would help "immeasurably." WILL AID GROWTH The provincial field crops commissioner A. M. Wilson, said the moisture would bring along second growth on grasslands and feed grain fields. Farmers in the drought - stricken south likely would avoid buying fod- der from outside until they saw how the second growth devel- oped. Saskatchewan farmers have not nesitated to apply for aid. Agriculture Minister I. C. Nol- let said Tuesday all government measures are in effect and be- ing used. Only scattered showers reached into Saskatchewan while the general rain bathed Alberat Monday. Water was be- ing pumped to dugouts on east- ern Saskatchewan farms, wher ever there was a nearby supply sufficient to feed one of five gi- ant provincial pumps, Mr. Nol let said. A special tariff agreement : with the railways provided for| : payment of freight on hay moved within an area extending east to the Lakehead and west to Creston, B.C., Mr. Nollet said. WILL PAY MOST In Manitoba, a federal-provin- cial plan provides for payment of 90 per cent of the cost of fod- der or cattle shipment, with the farmer paying the rest. A fodder bank plan, an- nounced last week by Prime Minister Diefenbaker, has been| instituted to encourage farmers to cut dried-up cereal crops for| ; & fodder. A $5-a-ton federal-pro- vincial subsidy will be paid on fodder cut and put into a mu- nicipally - supervised bank for sale to approved buyers at not more than $20 a ton. Fees for pumping services range from $80 for bringing wa- ter up to half a mile to $200 for a distance of 34 to four miles from water source to dug- out. i SLIGHT WARMING TREND ON THURSDAY Virus Halts | WEATHER FORECAST Production Warm Sunshine | ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (CP) Herman Willemse and Mary Kok--a Dutch couple who plan to marry--helped themselves to a $5700 wedding present Tues- day by finishing first and sixth respectively in the 25-mile At- lantic City swim. Willemse won the event for the second year in a row by keeping almost a mile of open space between himself and his nearest rival, blonde Greta An- dersen of California. Her sec- ond-place finish was the best ever by a woman in the swim's history. Next in the field of 13 came a pair of Canadians: 30-year-old Cliff Lumsdon of Toronto, who has won twice and tied for sec- Canadians Fi nish Of Vaccine | Again Thursday sunny today and Thursday morning. Forecasts issued by the Tor. WASHINGTON (AP)--Two of onto weather office at 5 a.m. ond last year, and 26-year-old John Lacoursiere of Montreal, who was also fourth in 1960. AND ARK IS FIFTH Hitler Royalties To Nazi Victims on x - | detriment of Canadian re- | finery workers. Below is a | photo of the vessel at anchor | off Montreal. ~--CP Wirephotos Bailiff Andre Landriau tacks notices of seizure on a cabin door of the Cuban freighter Bahia de Santiago de Cuba shortly after it arrived in Cuban Freighter In Legal Battle OTTAWA (CP)--Work will be- MONTREAL (CP)--A Cuban Westhill Export Lid, of Mont-| federal project to make a perm- Jreigiaar, Say some 2000 zeal. |anent settlement of the town of of sugar er |, Frobisher Bay, on Baffin Island 3 der seizure in Mont.| 'CAN PROTEST i hold, was under seizur The Cuban government will be in the Arctic. real harbor today but the sugar : a was expected given an opportunity to protest] Northern Affairs Minister Din- during the Thy be unloaded the seizure before a district] Sdale said Tuesday priority will : be given to a 20-bed hospital, a The 1,000-ton Bahia de San- i tiago de Cuba was seized shortly] The legal tangle does not af- 16-to0m schol and students ater docking Tuesday night|fect the ship's cargo, however.| FUATIPe NIC, An, PATIO pending the outcome of a legal] As bailiff's officer Andre Latin persons ul attle to determine her owner-|driau tacked the seizure forms| ., .. viz ship. on the door of the ship's cabin le a perma was a prelimin- ni , oll, pug was, grein ang members of te Bakery 257 Pomme Eamon. tion known as "action in posses- ternational Union (CLC) pick-| The works department will sion" by which a plaintiff seeks|eted the sugar cargo. undertake a new concept in 19 sstaplish his Siaim to Jwuet. The union claims Canadian in- LR By butting i Th A gig k : be. | Lerests are dumping refined| sono un to seven storeys high. e action was taken on De-igugar on the Canadian market|™ un 2 oo ove % half of the Navigation Company|a¢ "tar below Canadian prices The high buildings are possi- Golfo-Caba, SA, owner of the Capt " I A "' ble because the town site is on vessel befa®e it passed into Cun- aplaim Juan Alemany ap-\peqrock. The new units will be ba government hands. The | Peére more worried about the jihved by covered passageways company's head office was for-|'2'€ of his cargo than the seiz- merly in Havana but the prin-| 4 of Wo ship whi ch e cipal stockholder is now in New|Shrugged off with: "If it's the York City. police, what can you do? The ship is also charged, Montreal with 40,000 bags of refined sugar. A crew mem- ber looks on. Union members picketed the ship, claiming | Cuba is dumping sugar to the | Frobisher Bay Building Plans judge of the Admiralty Court. and heated from a central plant. | Californian Tom Park, a for-| mer Hamilton, Ont., resident who has won it three times, fin- ished back in fifth place this year--the worst he's ever done. As the second woman to fin-| ay. ; ish she won $500, and for sixth The new book was to have|place she got $200. Her fiancee's| been published Tuesday under|victory was worth $5,000. the title Hitler's Second Book| Willemse, a lean 27-year-old but has been delayed the Deut-|school teacher, plans to go to sche Verlags Anstalt publishing|Canada to compete in the swim firm of Stuttgart said. across Lake St. John to Aug. 5 The book contains discussion|{and later in meets at Trois-Ri- of a possible Anglo-German al-|yieres, Que., and the Canadian liance and high praise of Brit-|National Exhibition in Toronto. ain's political and economic re-| mis time here for the approx- alism, according to preliminary|; ately 25 miles was 11 hours, reports. 14 minutes and 45 seconds--not The book was found by Amer-| sq ctacular but good in light of ican forces at the end of they, aarly tough-going caused by Second World War but was def-lo.. over the Atlantic. initely established as Hitler's] ynee Andersen came home work only three years ago. than 20 minutes later in a time QU ARTERBACK iy 'oi A TAKES CHARGE holds more professional swih- ming records than any other wana. 11:36.35, | : ~ Lumsdon's time was 11:36.35, HALIFAX (CP) -- Ted 0 . Wickwire, a college quarter- Lacoursiere's 11:39.20 and back last year and a sec ond-year law student, was handed the ball in court uesiay and told to run with $52,000 Bail . In Drug Case Wickwire was sent by his law firm to ask for a rou- | tine remand in an assault WINDSOR (CP) -- Three case due to be heard before |Windsor - area persons arrested Magistrate R. E. Inglis. July 10 on narcotics charges The magistrate said no [have raised $52,000 bail. 3 and told Wickwire to pro- Nicholas Cicchini, 83, of Wind- ceed. sor, John Simon Sr., 58, of sub- "But your honor," he pro- |urban Belle River and Mrs. Rena Wilson, 43, of Windsor, appeared before Magistrate BONN, West Germany (Reut- ers)--Royalties on Hitler's se- qel to Mein Kampf, due to ap- pear in two or three days, will go to victims of Nazi persecu- tion, the publishers said Tues- Evidence Claimed along with the Cuban govern- ment in" a 'bréech of contract) 3 TG Pays $38,000 On Fraud Charge action alleging $161,000 dam-| MONT LAURIER, Que. (CP) For Heel Damage ages. The charge was laid by] Crown Prosecutor Guy Desjar- dins, opening the preliminary TORONTO (CP) -- Women's! hearing of fraud charges against stiletto - heeled shoes will cost the H. J. O'Connell Construction tested, "I'm only a second- year law student -- an ar- Fred Jaspersgn Tuesday. A to- tal of eight" charges "against ticled clerk." "Then it will be good ex- them were adjourned to Aug. 2 perience for you," said the magistrate. | Wickwire was handed a | law book and introduced to |" Cicchini posted $30,000 bail, Simon $15,000 and Mrs. Wilson| Third And Fourth Park's 11:49.10. They won $900 $600 and $400 respectively. A Canadian girl, spunky little Aloma Keen, 19, of Montreal, finished third in the women's di- vision more than an hour be- hind Miss Kok. She won $200. Armand Cloutier, 24, of Ar- vida, Que., the only other Ca- nadian entrant, was pulled from the water only a mile or so from the finish line. Besides Cloutier, the only one who failed to finish was Steve Wozniak of Buffalo, a 45-year- old veteran. He too was taken from the water suffering from exhaustion. Fights BCE, Produces Own Juice ABBOTSFORD, B.C, A service station operator in this Fraser Valley farming community is generating his own electricity after a row with the British Columbia Electric Company. Harry Flodin told the firm to cut off the power to his station on the Trans-Canada Highway and then he set up a 10-kilowatt diesel generator. Flodin said his battle started when B.C. Electric re- fused to service its trucks in the area at his station. "The company won't buy my products so I decided I would darned well stop buying theirs," he said. Flodin let his electricity bills lapse for three months until they totalled $157, then offered to pay with gasoline, oil and repairs to the com- pany's trucks. I told them to cut off the power." Fred Stirling, district man- ager for the BCE said: "We told him we had ments with other local firms and that we do not issue con- tracts in response to threats." Flodin said he burns station lights night and day for about $9 a week, the cost of diesel oil for his generator. He esti- mates BCE power would have cost him $200 a month. And if the generator hreaks down, Flodin has rigged up a bicycle device to operate his gasoline pumps. the five major United States firms that make Salk polio vac- | cine have halted production until {they can eliminate a monkey vi- {rus that turned up in some of EDT: Lakes Erie and Ontario: Synopsis: Clear skies are gen- Northwest winds 15 to 20 knots eral across Ontario this morn- becoming light variable today. ing. Sunny skies are forecasted|Partly cloudy. __ released for general use. : {or southern and northeastern] TORONTO Kl their output. |sections of the province today, a er) Observed This was disclosed Tuesday|while cloud and showers or| : by the U.S. public health serv-|thundershowers are expected Dawson .. ice, which stressed there was north of Lake Superior. The un-| Victoria sans (no evidence that the virus is|settled weather will move into| Edmonton dangerous to humans. {northeastern sections late today. Regina .. The service said the shutdown| Warmer temperatures are ex-| Winnipeg .......... in the two plants, which turn|pected in most sections Thurs-|Fort William ...... lout about 25 per cent of the day. | White River |U.S. vaccine supply, is not ex-| Lake Erie, Lake Huron re:|S.S. Marie ........ pected to create a general gions, Windsor, London: Mainly| Kapuskasing . shortage of the vaccine. sunny today and Thursday. North Bay ..... Vaccine in doctors' hands is|Chance of a few thundershowers| Sudbury .. not being withdrawn, but thellate Thursday. A little warmer service said all Salk vaccine re-| Thursday, winds light. leased during the last two Lake Ontario, Georgian Bay, months has been tested and|Niagara, H ali burton regions, only that free of the virus was Toronto, Hamilton: Mainly {sunny today and Thursday. Lit- Under restrictions of law, the tle change in temperature, winds Halifax ..... (cp) | The company refused "and | commit. | service did not name the firms. | But it was learned they are| |Merck, Sharp and Dohme's di- vision of Merck and Company AND Parke, Davis and Com- pany. A spokesman for Merck, Sharp and Dohme in Philadel phia confirmed that his firm has halted production of the] |vaccine, ° | The virus is a newly discov- |ered one that came from mon- |key tissue. Salk vaccine is made by growing the polio virus on| monkey kidney tissue. The health service said mon- key virus is known to multiply in man under certain conditions but there is no evidence that small amounts, introduced through the vaccine, produce |illness in man. Twelve Injured | In Bus Mishap | MONTREAL (CP) -- Twelve persons were injured Tuesday| when a Greyhound bus went out of control on a hill in west-cen-| tral Montreal and was' involved| lin a collision with three cars| and a city bus. Bus driver Daniel Joseph de | Luca, 33, of Paterson, N.J., said| {he was driving beneath a rail-| {way overpass when the brakes |failed. After hitting a giant drum of | [electric cable and a trafficlight| standard, the bus collided with) a car. The car in turn rammed) into a second car and the sec-| ond into a third. | The third car, the most heav- ily damaged, sideswiped a city bus. The injured included six of the 15 passengers on the New York-hound: bus. and. six oceu- pants of the three cars. None | winds light. light. Algoma, Timagami, Cochrane, regions, North Bay, Saulte Ste.| Low tonight, high Thursday: Marie, Sudbury: Mainly sunny Windsor ... 85 this. morning, becoming partly|s cloudy this afternoon with scat- tered showers or thundershow- ers late tonight and Thursday. A little warmer Thursday, winds light. White River region: Partly cloudy today and Thursday. A few showers or thundershowers late today and Thursday, Warm, Forecast Temperatures 85 Kitchener . Wingham . {Hamilton ......e000 60 | St. Cathaiines 60 Toronto «vevvvseses 60 Peterborough Trenton ..... Killaloe ...ee00 80 Marine forecasts valid until 11 a.m. Thursday: Lake Huron, Georgian Bay: Northwest winds 15 knots be-|Kapuskasing ...... 65 coming light variable. Mainly White River ....... 5§ {PROTECT MY ROSES WITH Niagara Brand POMO - GREEN... DUSTS and SPRAYS For use in the control of many plant insects end diseases. We carry a full selection for complete protec * tion. Gardenall, Mul- tispray, Ant end Grub Killer, and meny others. FOR ROSES ond other flowers oper mil ca 16 CELINA STREET 723-2312 "Garden Supplies Since 1909" of the injured bus passengers required hospital treatment. Urges Separation Of Traffic Courts son $38.0 BROCKVILLE (CP) -- The|carg ucti a one-man in- daa iri i county court| 1he commission Tuesday ap- system Tuesday suggested traf-| proved spending the money fic courts be set up separately over a 15 - month period. J. G.| from magistrate's courts. {Inglis, TTC general manager of Assistant De p ty Attorney: operations, said the rubber floor general Eee ok oils ped covering on a cork underlay has ings in Ontario communities, Deen pierced by heels. received a submission from the! The door - area sections of floor will be replaced with vinyl| Brockville Bar Association. A hearing is to be held in| g.0c tile on a plyword ol derlay | ithe Toronto Transit Cornwall today. Mr. Silk said he learned from| earlier hearings courts usually run into congestion because traf-| fic and criminal cases appear) Often, he said, magistrates| deal with criminal cases first and then go into traffic cases. Soviets | witnesses spent all day in court] waiting to be called. GENEVA PARK (CP)--Rus-| sia plays the war of words with! deadly seriousness, the Ontario conference on integration was told Tuesday. St. Lawrence River | Psychology Professor Ralph| Pollution Charged | Dent of the Ontario Agricultu- PRESCOTT (CP) -- Mayor ral College, Guelph, said that by Pat Kingston called on the|contrast many countries in the United States and Canadian gov-| Western world are mere rookies ernments Tuesday to halt pollu-/in communications warfare. tion of the St. Lawrence River. He said the Russians "delib- | He said the entire river was|erately take our words and by- polluted "te a degree" and that|pass our meanings" and offered dumping of raw sewage was a|this example from the Brussels practice on both American and!World Fair: Canadian sides of the river. Some Russians asked a Swiss Prescott's Kelly Beach has engineer to compare a Russian been closed to swimmers be-ismall car with an American cause of the pollution. Several{compact model. The engineer other bathing spots in the King-|placed the American car first, ston-Cornwall section of the St./the Russian second. TLawrence Seaway have also] The Russian press reported it been closed because of polluted|this way: watep, "In a competition belween al ] | Commis-| Company, said Tuesday he will {sion $38,000 to repair floors near produce evidence indicating the ways of 140 subway | Quebec roads department was| | billed for, Are Pros In Verbal Battle his three clients. They were convicted. Paris Displays She wit ewere LOOPY Fashion Jean Barthe of I'Abord a PARIS (AP) -- Griffe's Jet Plouffe and Georges Gouin of|Line and Goma's Loop the Loop Sherbrooke are accused of con. Were Tuesday's contributions to pi i i eason. spiring to defraud the Quber| 5, 2 fashion 5 _Y diagonal government in connection with princess outline with flared asphalt deliveries for roadwork skirts. The second gets its name in this area May 27-Nov. 20 last from loopy drapery, folded year 00 to 3,000 tons of | asphalt it#fiever received. The asphalt was worth about $15,000, he said. | | skirts, and wool loop trimmings. ~~ Both barely cover the kneecaps, {accentuate the bosom and indi. |cate the waistline in front, leav- ling the back slack but not baggy. With the second day's show- ings, the princess line emerges as the major trend. Skirts stay short, and the color brown leads the field, with purple tones and black close behind. |Red is well in the running, too. i Plaids are everywhere. So |are wool flannel coats with con- trasting flannel linings, welded Russian car and foreign cars, the Russian car stood second and the American car stood next to last." $7,000. They were arrested by RCMP officers following a three - month investigation by United States and Canadian un- dercover agents. It was reported at the time that heroin in 14 - pound lots, worth between $70,000 and $100,- 000, was seized. The three are jointly charged with conspiracy to "wraffick in drugs between April 19 and July 6, 1961. Mrs. Wilson is charged with posses- sion of drugs and a number of American express company money orders. Cicchini is also charged with trafficking in drugs and break- ing into the Kingsville Golf Club pro shop. $1,000 MISLAID BRANTFORD (CP) -- Em- ployees of a Brantford hard- ware store Saturday opened a briefcase which had been left in the store and found it contained more than $1,000 in cash. Police found the bag had been left by a woman employee of a local firm, who was taking the money home to make up a bank Prof. Dent said the Russians use their own meanings for such|together by the seams. deposit. She hadn't missed the money until police returned it. words as "negotiation," FOOD MARKET 54 SIMCOE ST. NORTH PORTERHOUSE ® HIGHEST QUALITY MEATS eo SIRLOIN, T-BONE ¢ STEAKS RED BRAND VE 49: 69 Ib Burns Shamrock 1-LB. CELL LEAN MEATY BLADE TENDER LEAN Devon Breakfast--Rindless BACON Ib "peace," and '"'disarmament." | "By negotiations, we mean! give and take; they mean ar-| gue to gain points, but not give| HOLIDAY NOTICE: up anything," he said. | "By disarmament, Khrush- chev may mean getting rid of} 100,000 troops, but developing three new missiles ' instead, which would be far more deadly than the troops." The conference, sponsored by| the Ontario Welfare Council, is for training in leadership of per- sons interested in relationships between the Canadian-born and newcomers to the country. ~ We will be closed fo FRIDAY, JULY 28 to METTE P 23 CELINA STREET r staff holidays from TUESDAY, AUGUST 8 LUMBING CO. LTD. 725-3279 'b 55: | wieners 49: Best EATING NEW ZEALAND 59 LAMB 29: 49 39: SHORT RIB SHORT CUT (Ist 4) BONELESS PLATE POT ROAST ECONOMY 6th & 7th PRIME RIB ¢ ® Legs wou Ib © Shoulder Chops ® Rib Chops © Shoulder Roasts BANANAS GOLDEN 2:33 BUTTER EGGS uz 33 MARGARINE CIGARETTES POPULAR 3.19 YELLOW Grade "A" Small Size --FEATURE-- BRANDS

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy