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The Oshawa Times, 30 Sep 1961, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturdey, September 30, 1961 GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN 500 AT DURHAM LIBERAL POW-WOW Political winds are starting to blow with gusto in Durham Riding if that meeting in Community Hall, Newcastle, Thursday is any indication. More than 500 showed up to see Russell Honey nomi- nated Liberal candidate for the riding in the next Fed-| eral election. This is a big political turnout by any Durham or| Ontario County standards. It| i ; RUSSELL HONEY There are still many rumors, but no official facts, as to who will represent the New Democratic Party and the Liberals in Ontario riding in the next Federal election. STILL NOTHI The tug-of-war to keep the National Proprietary Corp. Ltd. (and the dream of Intermart) alive con- tinues, but behind closed doors. Another chapter in the NPC story was unfolded Thursday night at an off-the-record meeting between City Council (three aldermen were unable to attend) Commission. Dr. Allan C. Wilson, president of NPC, did not and the Oshawa attend. 10 sta deal? many times before i ors of the day Harbor Mayor Christine Thomas said later that she had \tement to release on the NPC Intermart situation, but that Council would meet in committee next Wed- nesday to discuss the matter further Did any new "developments" crop up in the NPC She did not say, but reiterated what she has said to the # is still big despite the pre-| speaker) | sence (as guest | of Paul Martin, Liberal MP for Essex East, and one of] the truly great political orat- Mr. Honey was defeated WEATHER FORECAST (4 1 anid NN in tO EN Cafe HATTERAS Mino ® | TOMORROW. SUDDEN URGE by Dr. R. P. Vivian in his first bid for the seat in 1958 Late On INTERMART Forecasts issued by the Tor-| Synopsis: {northern and pa {Ontario early Saturday. {disturbance will move slowly leastward during the day, spreading showers to all pants| of the province by tonight. Much| lince Sunday. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Lake Huron, southern Georgian |Bay regions, Windsor, London: effect that she would warmer todav with scattered Cool Prospect onto weather office at 5 a.m.:|with occasional rain today. Sun- Cloudy skies and day cloudy and colder with] scattered showers moved into|Scattered rts of Central|southeast 15 to 25, today, north- This| west 20 to 30 tonight and Sun- jouy occasional cloudy and colder with rain or colder air will follow, bringing/wet snow. Winds southeast 15 to sharp falls in temperatures to|? Northern Ontario tonight and to!day the southern parts of the prov-| Marine forecasts valid untill 11 a.m. Sunday southeast 15 knots increasing to : 130 by Sunday morning | increasing cloudiness anditoday. Cloudy with showers or| thunderstorms tonight and Sun-| {showers or thunderstorms de-|gay | TO KILL MUMS | LONDON (AP) -- Alfred C. | Edwards, 59, was sentenced | Friday to pay £1 a week for | the next nine years -- 473 | weeks--for the slaying of 698 { chryvsanthemums The prosecution in Green wich court said Edwards had been a loyal and efficient borough worker for 25 years until one night of madness among the "mums The flowers were growing in a borough greenhouse used as a source of floral supnly for Greenwich Parks. Ed- wards, former foreman at the greenhouse, had recently been promoted to a better-paying iob and was succeeded by his assistant, Harry Rose. "On the night in question," said the prosecutor, "Mr. Ed- wards stole 19 pounds of so- dinm chlorate--a week-killer --from a municipal supnly depot. With this under his arm, he cycled to the flower | nursery. He then poured the Sunday White Riv er region: Cloudy snowflurries. Winds Cochrane region: Cloudy with rain today. Sunday 5 today, northerly 20 to 30 Sun- Lake Ontario: Winds south to] Sunny | TORONTO (CP)--The Gospel Witness, published by the Bap- tist Church, has accused the Baptist Federation of Canada of 'collaboration with Commun- ists." The accusation came in the current issue of the Witness, in connection with the visit to Can- ada by three Russian Baptist ininisters. The three are Dr. Jacob Zhid- kov, president of the All Union Evangelical Christian Baptist Council in Moscow and vice- president of the World Baptist Alliance; his son, Rev. Michael Zhidkov, and Rev. Elia Ivanov. The Gospel Witness says the International Council of Christ- ian Churches protested the pres- ence of Dr. Zhidkov at the World Baptist Alliance when it met last. year in Rio de Janeiro. "In the light of present day peaceful co-existence and wel- come with open arms these rep- resentatives of the Communist regime which is godless and un- Christian, we see further justi- fication for the stand taken and the far - reaching consequences lof the effects of unbelief and {modernism "Now we have these agents {present in Canada and spon- Student Reports 'On Chile Journey KINGSTON (CP)--A Univer- sity of Saskatchewan law stu- dent who spent one month in Chile helping rebuild an earth- |quake-wrecked town said Fri- {day there is more communism in South America than anyone likes to believe. Mike Philips, 22, presented a report of his trip to his sponsor, the National Federation of Ca- nadian University Students, The faderation is holding its con- gress at Queen's University Baptists Battle Over Russ Visit activity, when Baptist leaders] fall for the Communist line of sored by the Baptist Federation of Canada," the Witness said. DEPLORES ARTICLE Dr. Emlyn Davies, minister of Yorkminster Ba ptist Church and president of the Baptist Convention of Ontario and Que- hee, deplored the article in the Witness. He said Dr. Zhidkov has been able to continue his work as a Baptist minister only with great courage and fidelity, "The charges made against him are groundless and un- worthy, but typical of the Me- Carthys of Protestantism," he said, adding that "most of the accusations are part of a smear campaign and unworthy of a Christian minister." Hated Cutting 'Lovely Body' HAMILTON (CP)--A love let- ter alleged to have been writ- ten by Dr. John R. LaCroix of Hamilton, read in court Friday, said it was with a 'strange feeling of sacrilege" that he op- erated on "the beautiful body" of the married woman whose affections he is charged with alienating. | The 49-year-old Hamilton doc- tor is being sued by Otto Lan.| ger, 39, for alienation of affec-| tions and criminal conversation, over an affair the doctor is al- leged to have had with Helen| Langer, 33. | The letter was one of 81 in-| troduced in court and alleged to have been written by Dr. Ld- Croix to Mrs. Langer while she was visiting her parents in Aus- iria. The letters covered a pe- ricd from early 1959 to early 1960. The suit claims Mrs. Langer went to Dr. LaCroix for surg- ery in 1956, 1957 and 1958 and on Hamilton Bay To Stink Soon HAMILTON (CP)--The busi- ness agent of striking Local 700, International Union of Operat- ing Engineers (Ind.), said Fri- day 30,000,000 gallons of raw sewage is being dumped into Hamilton Bay every day as a result of his local's strike. F. A. Read said the strike had closed down a sewage plant here and said it is a detriment to the health of Hamilton resi- dents and others who draw wa- ter supplies from nearby Lake! Ontario. | "Unless we freeze over in a| week," Mr, Read warned, "this city is going to stink." Earlier Mayor Lloyd Jackson | urged Hamilton residents and industry to conserve water, The strike--involving 135 engineers in city 'hall, general hospitals, waterworks and sewage plants has cut Hamilton's output of water to 135,000,000 from 155. 000,000 gallons daily, f Local 700 members walked] out Thursday when the city re-| fused their demand for a 80- cent-an-hour increase. The city offered to accept the majority | report of a conciliation board which recommended a six- to] seven-cent-an-hour increase re-| troactive to the end of January. Supervisory personnel have taken over operation of the sery- ices. Trouble Seen For City Hall TORONTO (CP) -- Frede G, Gardiner, Metropolitan onto chairman, said I'riday the | | refuse Toronto permission Ontario Municipal Beard may |} tof 1 FALL PLANTING ME SEE OUR NEW SELECTION OF ASSORTED EN Every Vari Top Size Quality PREPARED HYACINTHS FOR INDOOR PLANTING Now In Stock! In a Full Selection i | ot Colors. build its new $25,000,000 city hall. { After Mayor Nathan Phillips] issued a statement calling for| amalgamation of the metro area] and immediate appointment of a successor to Mr. Gardiner, who retires Dec. 31, the metre continue to do all in her power to get new industry here regardless of the effort required, or the discourage- ments encountered. She described the Thursday meeting with the Com- mission (attended by one newspaperman) as "a happy one, productive of good results in the way of a better inderstanding of mutual problems." There was still nothing new for NPC or Intermart veloping by afternoon. Sunday| mainly cloudy with showers and [turning cooler. Winds southerly 20 today, shifting to northwest | Lake Erie. Winds south to| chemical into the chrysanthe- |southeast 20 to 25 knots becom-| mum watering sunnlv. Within ling southwesterly 30 tonight a few hours, every bloom was 'Sanday | shifting te northwest early Sun- dead hi ; ~ . |day. Increasing cloudiness with] Suspicion fell on Edwards . Niagara, Lake Ontario Hall | showers or thunderstorms this| becarse of the helief that he buston, regions. Ramin Tor |afternoon and tonight be jealous of Rose's create cloutnes owards], Lake Huron and Georgian) Socctacular success with levening. Cloudy with scattered| ay: Winds south to southeast| Said her return from hospital in- Mr. Phillips and Jacques Du-|sisted on 'separate bedrooms. |fresne of Laval University were| A jury of three men and lsent ,.to Concepcion, Chile, as|three women heard Mr. Lan- part of an 'international work ger's lawyer, Sydney Paikin, camp last March and April. |read the letters in court. "We were continually har-| One letter dated July 17, 1959, assed by Communist students|described how the writer often from the South American coun-|walked naked in his garden un- here. chairman said: "The OMB has] just refused permission for the| building of five metro schools--| three in the city and two in the| suburbs. If we can't finance schools how can we finance a fancy new city hall?" i Mr, Gardiner said total amal- gamation would be "financially disastrous for Toronto." | Sill £0 i (6 CELINA STREET 123-2312 "Garden Supplies Since 1909" might publication on the arresting officer 20 knots increasing to 30 by eve-| showers or thunderstorms to-| 'Me admitted the crime and tries and Cuba," Mr. Phillipsider the trees thinking of Mrs, : AIR HISTORY WILL BE MADE MONDAY It is pleasant to note that aeronautical history, in- sofar as Oshawa is concerned, will be made here Mon- day morning. The take-off of a DC-3 from Oshawa airport for Vindsor (via Toronto and Sarnia) will mark an auspic- ious event -- the start of the first commercial air service for this city. The service was obtained only through the efforts of several public-spirited citizens, but it seems important to emphasize another side of this event. Nordair is inaugurating the Oshawa service on the recommendation of the Air Transport Board, also on a strictly "Use It Or Lose It" basis, which seems reason- able, no doubt because of the City's close proximity to Malton. Nordair appears ready to give the service every possible chance to succeed, will eventually inaugurate a return-flight-daily service to such points as Windsor and Montreal if the traffic warrants it. The thing for the city and district residents to do to assure the continuance of this hard-won service is to use it as often as possible There will be the customary array of local digni- taries on hand Monday for the inaugural take-off cere=- monies. HOW TO GET RID OF "RADIO" DUST Lt.-Col. F. Stephen Wotton; Ontario County's emerg- sncy measures co-ordinator, was busy one day this week at a City Hall lecture on the subject of "Civil Defence Training For Civic Employees" when the following verbal exchange took place. Civie employee: "How do you get rid of radio-active dust in a basement shelter following an atomic attack?" Colonel Wotton: "Use a vacuum cleaner, but throw the bag away because the bag will hold a concentration of dust and the danger of radiation would increase." URGE TAX CREDITS GRANT FOR GROUPS Gordon Riehl of the Oshawa C of C will attend the 332nd. annual meeting of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce in Halifax, N.S. next week to propose the following policy declaration That the Government of Canada be requested to amend the Income Tax Act to specifically allow foreign tax credits to participants, in a employee profit sharing olan, for taxes deducted from foreign income received oy such a plan Approximately sould benefit from this declaration, amended 2000 salaried employees of GM if the Act was CORPS PLANS DRUMHEAD SERVICE Oshawa Unit 42 of the Canadian Corps Association, nc.) has come a long way since 1946. That's when it first opened its doors. Today the Unit has an attractive three-storey club- youse on Richmond street east, plus a membership of nore than 650 (one of the largest in Ontario). The unit will play the host role here Saturday, Jctober 7, at a special event ~-- a mass drumhead parade ind service. Some of the top Corps units in Ontario will par- icipate -- including the Toronto Negro War Veterans Jroup, the Toronto Civic Veterans' Color Guard and a rack color guard from London, Ont. Stanley Harpham will also be present. He has seen Dominion president of the Corps for the past seven rears, has done as much as any man to improve the ot of Canadian veterans, especially with his appearances or many years before such tribunals as the Standing Jommittee on War Veterans' Affairs, Ottawa. CIN MEMBERS AT SALSBURG MEETING Dr. Claude Vipond is scheduled to take over his ew post in Penang under the Colombo Plan November He had a one-day indoctrination course in Ottawa his week; then he left by air with his family for Lon- lon. He will sail later from Naples, Italy, for his new ost . . . Oshawa is well represented currently in Sals- surg, Germany, at the annual convention of the World "ouncil of Service Clubs which three members of the {insmen Club are attending -- George and Tom Russell nd "Monty" Cranfield, Kinsmen belong to thig interna- ional group. {night and Sunday. Warmer to- day, turning cooler late Sundav. | {Winds south 15, increasing to 20/€rs or thunderstorms earlv Sunday and shifting to] {northwest Sunday afternoon or levening | Northern Georgian Bay, Al {zoma, Timagami regions, North {Bay, Sudbury Sault Ste. Marie: {Mainly cloudy tonight and Sun- {day morning, turning colder {with scattered showers or snow- {flurries Sunday afternoon and evening. Winds south 15 to 25, shifting to northwest Sunday 'White Slavery | Ring Suspected | CLEVELAND (AP) -- Eileen| {Curry, 37, of Cleveland was {charged Friday with conspiring to send two teen-age girls to {Toronto for prostitution and im- {moral practices. She appeared before US. Commissioner H. A. Horn and {waived a preliminarv hearing. {She was held under $5,000 bond for arraignment in U.S. district] {court next week | Edward E. Hargett, FBI ag-| {ent in charge here, issued the warrant. He said Miss Curry made arrangements to send two girls, 18 and 19, to Toronto Sept. | {23 Hargett said the girls bought airline tickets to Toronto but were ordered to return to the U.S. bv immigration authorities when the plane stopped in Lon- don, Ont. Earlier the FBI and Cleveland | police said they were investigat- ing a possible international] white slavery ring using Cleve-! land as a source of girls Miss Curry, who used an al- ias of Eileen Reddon, Hargett said, was held for investigation Thursday after police were led to her by the teen-agers. The girls were arrested Wed-| nesday night after detectives) recognized them as missing per-/ sons Bank Shortage 'Over Million SANTOS (AP) A Royal {Bank of Canada employee al- legedly involved in a bank short- age of more than $1,000,000 has |disappeared, Brazilian police re- ported Friday. Police said Peter Smith Wat- ning and shifting to northwest declared 'it was one of those |early Sunday Cloudy with show: | JWInASOr +. vuevrs 58 St. Thomas London Kitchener . Wingham .. Hamilton St Toronto : {Peterborough ... § | Trenton Killaloe ... Muskoka ... North Bay S Earlton .. Kapuskasing . White River ..... : Moosonee ... S. S. Marie . sudden impulses. I had no animosity against Rose. T just wanted to kill chrysanthe- mums.' " Forecast Temperatures Low tonight and high Sunday 60 Farmer Acquitted . . A | Alienation Suit TORONTO (CP) -- Selby Forbes, 52-vear-old Lion's Head. {Ont., farmer, smiled and held his wife's hand as an Ontario| {Supreme Court assize jury Fri-| day dismissed a suit against {nim for alienation of affection |and criminal conversation. | Forbes and Mrs. Magratet {Lorraine White, 45, of Walton {Hills, Ohio, were sued by Mrs. {White's husband Duncan, 46, who accused them of commit. ting adultery Catharines udbury . | | Eighty-one letters alleged to Court hearing Friday as evi- | have been written by a Ham- dence by the woman's hus- | ilton surgeon to Mrs. Helen band in suing the doctor, Dr. | Langer, 33, (above) were John LaCroix, 49. { brought before a Supreme --CP Wirephoto said |Langer. INTERPRETING THE NEWS By HAROLD MORRISON Canadian Press Staff Writer The collapse of Arab unity that Gamal Abdel Nasser tried to build through the United Arab Republic may lead to a dangerous power vacuum in the Middle East. While the West often looked with suspicion or dislike at the Egyptian leader, they credited him at least with bringing a measure of stability to the shaky Arab world. Stability was associated with peace and strength against com- munist infiltration into the Mid- dle East. Even with large-scale military and economic aid to Nasser, the Kremlin made little headway in the Arab world. Nasser accepted aid from East and West and sometimes played one against the other AIMED FOR POWER f All his moves seem to have been designed to add to his own stature and to make himself the strong man of the Arab League. Not all of his Arab col- leagues backed him, but his power was widely feared and respected Now Nasser is being forced by right-wing insurgents in Da-| mascus to admit that his re- public uniting Egypt and Syria was only a house of cards. Nasser has pointed to the U.A.A. as the foundation of an Arabian structure of unitv. { {With the Syrian rebellion, he has lost his selling point. | MOVES CAUTIOUSLY But Nasser has shrewdly avoided an immediate military showdown with the insurgents. ! Although his forces in Syria probably were sufficient to crush the rebellion, he pulled' them back, avoiding bloodshed | that would have hardened the rift. | For the moment, Syria ap- pears to have gained her inde- pendence. But Nasser may be bidding his time, allowing tem- pers to cool. His socialistic policies seem to have been more popular with son, 31, formerly of Brechin, Scotland, has been missing since Sept. 21. They said Wat- son slipped away from police vigilance placed on his home. Watson had been held four days by police earlier this month on request of Royal Bank | officials after one of their in-| spectors found a shortage of) 352,000,000 cruzeiros (about $1,- 175,000) on the books of the bank's branch here. In Montreal, a spokesman for| the bank's head office confirmed | Watson's whereabouts are not| known and added that two bank | investigators still are looking| into the disappearance of the| money, | The officials were sent to San-| tos after the money was re- ported missing. They have not | reported any conclusions so far, | Cliff Mills 48-Hour VAUXHALL SUPER VICTOR THE CLIFF MILLS MOTORS LTD. Special 1958 ONLY... *799 1 725-8651 Revolt Causes Dangerous Gap | SAVE CN the Syrian peasants than with! the wealthier classes. It is pos-| |sible that in any free Syrian| {election a pro-Nasser influence |could re-emerge. A 4 > IT'S FACT! ¢ Yes, Nu-Way has | over 50 rolls of car- pet on display. No matter what type of carpet you want, you | will be able to see it i at... i Nu-Way ¢ Rug Co. ¢ 174 MARY ST, » € p ¢ MEATS at BUEHLER'S Specials ! On Sale Mon. & Tues. MEATY CHUCK ROAST MEATY BLADE STEAKS TENDER RIB STEAKS SHOULDER PORK CHOPS o. 39° «49° » 69* 2 «100 Country Sausage 4 .. 1.00 ® The Finest Fuel Oil ® Prompt Metered Delivery Service! ® 24-Hour Service! RY 0. PERRY Phone: 123-3443 NIGHTS--723-7944 o Lowest Prices! 285 BLO |the bank spokesman said. ! £ 230 KING ST. WEST §

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