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Oshawa Times (1958-), 9 Nov 1961, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdey, November 9, 1961 yy Aw OY GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN } NOTES ON EXERCISE "TOCSIN--B" Oshawa will have at least four Civil Defence @ sirens operative, and possibly five, on November 13 WM when Exercise '"Tocsin--B" will be held in Canada. The sirens are located at: TORONTO (CP)--John Par- menter Robarts, youthful new / |premier of Ontario, gathers his + |eabinet today for its first ses- + |sion under his leadership. The meeting comes with less Robarts New Cabinet First Session Today and development with the for- mal estab lishment probably coming at the new session of the legislature. WAICHES PROGRAM Two ministers who gave Mr.) Robarts active support for the} leadership gained new cabinet! |positions. | Agriculture Minister William Pearson Afraid Canada May Be Unprepared PORT HAWKESBURY, N.S. (CP)--Opposition Leader Pear- son said Wednesday nuclear war might catch Canada off guard with no time to secure nu- clear weapons Speaking at a Liberal party |Goodfellow of Northumberland| pn The new portfolio will/be han. ! ominating convention here, Mr. The rear of the Arm- ories, The City Works Yard at Ritson road and Wentworth South of the Union Cemetery off No. 2 Highway. In the grounds of the Seventh - Day Adventist Church on King Street east (which may not be hooked up in time). The Dr. S. J. Phillips School at Rossland and Simcoe Street North. In addition, the Army plans to put in sirens at the Gertrude Colpus COL. WOTTON School on Wilson Road South and the Dr. C. F. Cannon School in the southwest section. Exercise "Tocsin--B" is a practice alert. It will be followed by a 90-minute radio program to explain to the public the type of information bulletins that would follow an actual alert. Col. F. S. Wotton, EMO director in this area, will conduct a letter-survey Novevmber 13 to determine the re-action of citizens in regards to the sirens -- only citi- zens residing some distance from a siren will be asked for opinions, as to audibility, ete. The survey will not include all householders. Locations for the sirens were selected by the Army after consideration of several factors such as noise level, number of nearby buildings, etc. EACH FAMILY NEEDS A PLAN Col, Wotton said listeners will be able to hear November 13 how the attack pattern affects their part of the County. "The exercise should help them to realize the effect- RJ Ay" AM FRANCISCO ae ~ COOL WITH | WEATHER FORECAST | Partly Cloudy _ In Most Areas Official forecasts issued by White River region: Cloudy {the Toronto weather office at|with a few clear periods today and Friday, chance of light snow, s: Light snow con-|late Friday. Wind: light. tinued overnight in central and Forecast Temperatures north-eastern sections of On-| Low tonight, High Friday. tario, but ended in northwest- Windsor ....++.++++ 27 47 ern parts of the province, Snow- St. Thomas .++++++. flurries should end in most|London ... jsections of Ontario this morn-/Kitchener . ing. Partly cloudy conditions Wingham . are forecast for Friday in most!Hamilton ....++++- areas. St. Catharines Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Nia- Toronto gara, Lake Ontario regions, Peterborough ... . | Windsor, Toronto, Hamilton: Trenton .. see {Mainly cloudy and cool today|Killaloe . : | |with a few snowflurries this)Muskoka . morning. Partly cioudy tonight: North. Bay and Friday. Winds westerly 10 Sudbury .. to 20 tunight, light to southwest/Earlton .. 15 Friday. ' |\Kapuskasing ..+.- Lake Huron, southern Georg- White River ...--.- ian Bay regions, London: Snow- Moosonee ..- |by Army authorities. |ered due to the injuries received] |close check of medical records than two weeks remaining be- fore the opening of the legisla- { |ture. Between now and Novy. 22, the ministers must accustom themselves to new posts and pre- pare legisiation for the third _|session of Ontario's 26th legisla-| ) ture. Mr. Robarts, 44-year-old law- '|yer from London, Ont., took the ',joaths of office Wednesday as 17th premier of the province jjafter Lieutenant - Governor J. Keiller Mackay had accepted the resignation of Leslie Frost, premier for the last 12 years, jand his administration. | The change of government; B MH |provides few changes of face eating Report around the long oaken table in| a the executive council room. | Denied By Arm |COMBINES TWO OTTAWA (Special) -- A re-|t0 cabinet rank for the first| | |port that a number of Canadian|time by Mr. Robarts, nine min-| troops who had served in the/isters got at least a_ partial) Congo have been discharged for| medical reasons as the result|ister was dropped. One new de- of beatings suffered from native|partment was created, combin-| Africans has been denied here|ing two previous portfolios, New Democratic The report suggested that a\eader Donald C. MacDonald) nuraber of Canadians who had/termed it a "game of musical returned to Cunada after service,chairs among the old cabinet in the troub'ed Congo had been|members," and said both labor a | discharged from the Army be-\and agriculture "have not fared) cause their medical classifica-|well from the very outset of the tion had been substantially low-|new administration." peda trian : bs Three men who provided Mr. in fighting with the Congolese|/Robarts with his toughest com- Hoops. Sane | petition for leadership of the On- Army authorities who made A\tario Progressive Conservative] here state that only two soldiers |Party ris' toa to hold key ca-| have been released from _the| eS ee ees | Army since they returned to| Treasurer James Allan, 66-| Canada from Congo duty. One|year-cld member from Haldi-| man had reached the normal|/mand-Norfolk, gave up the eco-| end of his tour of duty in the|nomics portfolio. It will be! |Army and the other was a|merged with the commerce and|management said it has agreed mental case whose difficulties|\development ministry into a died by Robert Macaulay, 40, who also retains the department of energy resources. Member for Toronte Riverdale and the youngest man in the cabinet, Mr. Macaulay will oversee what {the new premier called an '"'in- tensified program of commer- cial and industrial develop-| ment.' Attorney - General Kelso Ro- berts, 63-year-old member for Toronto St, Patrick, retains that portfolio and takes under his wing the province's Emergency Measures Organization, previ- ously a branch of the commerce department Mr. Macaulay was the only absentee Wednesday at the |swearing-in ceremony. He was} in New York on business and is | Two members were elevated|expected to be sworn in at a} private ceremony on his return. Those three men were the last of the seven candidates for Mr. Robarts at the party con- vention here two weeks ago. George Wardrope, another Party |leadership contender, was| shifted to the mines portfolio left vacant by the recent death of James Maloney. Member for Port Arthur, he previously was minister of reform institutions. Musicians Reach was appointed minister of high-| Pearson also criticized Canada's ways while Municipal Affairs) dependence on Communist mare Minister William Warrender of|kets for increased export trade. Haiiiton Centre becomes labor Mr. Pearson said the govern- minister. ment was spending millions on Former highways minister|the Bomarc-B missile sites at Fred Cass of Grenville-Dundas|North Bay and Mont Laurier, was moved to the municipal af-|Que., but would not declare its fairs department. Charles Da-|policy on nuclear warheads for ley, member for Lincoln and la-| them bor minister for the last 18| '""The time has come now for years, became minister without|the prime minister to tell us," portfolio. he declared. "It is insufferable Also given a ministry without|4%4 humiliating to Canada that portfoho was former commerce|'he government can't make up and development minister wil-|'heit minds on liam Nickle, who plans to re-|, Mt. Pearson said it appeared sign before the next election and! to be the government's policy to eume his Kingston law prac: ta gf@,a% emergency, and ice, ss E warfare, there might not be William Stewart of Middlesex-| time to secure the nuclear war- {North, formerly a minister with- vibe heads after war explodes. jout portfolio, is the new agricul-| -- ---- ture minister. |ARE ADDITIONS | Added to the cabinet were Ir Award For Saving ' * change of portfolio and one min-|the leadership to be beaten by| win Haskett, a patent attorney Paratrooper $ Life | ' y from Ottawa South who be-| |comes reform institutions minis- jter, and Charles MacNaughton, LONDON, Ont. (CP)--Lance- Corporal Kenneth Barrett of the 2nd Battalion, Royal Cana- |memter for Huron and former|dian Regiment, was presented jseed merchant who was named/Wednesday with the Queen's minister without portfolio. Commendation for Brave Con- | John Root, former minister duct for saving the life of a fel- |without portfolio, was left out of|!ow paratrooper, ; |the new cabinet but named to| 1.Cpl. Barrett, taking part in |the Ontario Water Resources|" exercise April 19, held the [Commission He is member for|Suspension lines of the para- Wellington-Dufferin. chute of Sgt. H. E. (Joe) Lanz- 2 rath when the parachute failed Wages Agreement ,, we bs, abn Toronto} Starr Outlines Symphony Orchestra and the ' i |Canadian Goal | Toronto Musicians' Association reached agreement Wednesday in their wage dispute, ST. THOMAS (CP)--Orderly In a statement, the orchestra\economic expansion and a max- imum level of employment are to pay its musicians a basic fee|the goals for Canadians to work jto open. He used his own para- chute to guide Lanzrath and himself to the ground. FOUR SEASONS / TRAVEL 4° CONFIRMS flurries this morning tapering)|S.S. Marie .. off by noon. Cloudy and cool the' Observed temperatures: jrest of the day. Partly cloudy Min, 1} tonight and Friday. Winds west- Dawson teen sdeves i helters if at all jetly 15 today, light to south- Victoria .... Col. Wotton urged all to build s went 15 Prides. maancnten possible. | Northern Georgian Bay, Tim- Regina "Having a shelter is showing, at least, that we be-jagami, Cochraue, Algoma re- Winnipeg. ... lieve there is a chance for survival," he said. "Parents (gions, Sault Ste. Marie, North Lakehead . oe for, Labor Minister Starr said) Wednesday night. | The Communist world has) problems of its own, he told a New Canadian Night meeting sponsored hy the St. Thomas Board of Trade. "Our own problem is to re-/ iveness of the planned preparation for their family. If they have no plan it would point out the need for one," he said. preceded his Congo service.|new department of economics | of $105 a week for a 23-week sea- i|Army spokesmen admit that son in 1961-62 and $110 a week |been sent overseas. pe: AVERAGES LAW The management said reluc- The Canadian United Nations jtance to increase wages was not changed every six months and,| start of the season but that the | : nate eel " mia. |! § at present, the third group of} TURIN, Italy (AP) -- Gio- |. 4) role vanni Vallauri has decided, jproblem has been and still is, - |this soldier should never have' for a 26 week season in 1962-63. . + : ti jcontingent in the Congo is} DOESN rc APPLY the cause of the delay in the so'diers is now doing service should discourage talk about 'Doomsday' bombs, etc., be- cause nothing will better serve the defeatist attitude in children than this. Children must always be assured that there is a chance for survival." Asked what plans a family could make for survival, outside of building a shelter, Col. Wotton said there was much that could be done in preparing food, water, cloth- ing,) first aid, etc. "THis is a big, new step and calls for imagination on the part of everyone," he said. "Much of what can be done is included in '11 steps to Survival', a book which should be read and treasured by all." | Bay, Sudbury: Mainly cloudy White River .. tonight and Friday, winds light..S.S. Marie ... Haliburton region: Light snow Kapuskasing this morning. Mainly cloudy and North Bay . rather cold the rest of the day. Sudbury . vee | Partly cloudy tonight and Fri-/ Muskoka . . q | day. Winds west to northwest 15) Windsor .. today, light tonight and Friday.|London . De Gaulle Wants | with some reason, that he is having a run of luck. On Oct. 21 Vallauri, a Turin chemist, took a chance on It- aly's weekiy state-run lottery, Enalotto, and won 3,500,000 lire ($5,600). | The next day he played It- aly's Totocalcio (football pool) and won §,000,000 lire ($12, | 800), | On Oct rin's auto show to see what he couid buy with his winnings. there. A total of 60 officers and 386 other ranks have seen Congo service and returned home. In addition, 80 Canadian airmen reported for Congo duty last month, ~ Doctors Against State Medicine HAMILTON (CP)--The presi-} dent-elect of the Ontario Med- 28 he went to Tu- | jin raising money to meet the costs. of operation. | ¢ 4 jsame time to continue to pro- The orchestra's first appear-|** lance this season will be in Tor.| ide a decent and orderly stand- jard of living." jonto's Massey Hall Nov. 15 when| main strong in order to defend | our free institutions and at the) TRAVE ARRANGEMENTS | 728-6201 | a performance of Berlioz' Dam-| nation of Faust will be pre-| jsented, conducted by Walter| | Susskind, OLD TIME LOOK HALIFAX (CP) Citizens jhere were shown during fire} prevention week how fires were WILL BE | BREWERS' RETAIL CLOSED He won a 500,000 lire ($800) |fought in the late 1800s. Fire- DISAGREES WITH RABBI FEINBERG Col. Wotton disagrees with a week-end statement by Rabbi Abraham Feinberg, Toronto, that there is no sign or talk of fallout shelters in Europe. "T find it difficult to accept this viewpoint in view of other information made available to myself," said Col. Wotton. ("In London people believe shelters are of no use," said the rabbi. "They know England would be erased before an Englishman could recite the Anglican creed." The rabbi said in Canada fear is being commercialized. If shelters are really needed, he said, the Government should build them. If not, we should stay away from them for they build up a war psychology," he added.) Commented the U.S, magazine "Newsweek" on Civil Defence this week: "The president's own eloquent statements about the duties of every man to provide for his family -- plus Krushchev's truculence over Berlin -- have vaporized, as effectively as the latest Soviet superbomb, the old foot-dragging indifference. In place of apathy, how- ever there now exists a wild fallout of confusion, con- cern, commercialism and misinformation. Telephone and mail inquiries to Washington agencies have increas- ed from 3000 in May to over 100,000 in October, But in the absence of any realistic CD blueprints or government policy, there is a great deal of talk and very little action. "The shelter steps so far initiated by the U.S. admin- istration are based on certain shaky premises which could be fatally wrong." EXACT NUMBER IS NOT KNOWN Despite Col. Wotton's words of warning, there is little evidence in Oshawa and district of a rush to build CD shelters, unless, of course, they are being built sur- reptitiously without permits. Col, Wotton said he felt that "many" shelters were being built. He based this observation on the number of inquiries at his office of late. He had no exact number on construction. The City Engineer's depart- ment said that between six and seven licences have been issued. Col. Wotton said that his "home-made" brick-and- mortar shelter would cost no more than $200 when completed. CD shelters are still not socially-acceptable to many 'who fear they would be ridiculed for building them -- an Oshawa Times photographer ran across such a situ- ation last week. The builder of the home-made shelter Pleaded that the photographer forget about any picture "in case people would laugh at me." The photographer did. 50 FARMERS HELP STRICKEN NEIGHBOR Orville C. Eagle of 73 Cadillac north, the former city councillor, send along a copy of The (November) Blenheim News-Tribune, with a heart-warming story therein of Thomas Hebblethwaite, a district farmer re- cently hospitalized with a heart attack. Fifty neighbor-farmers got together on a recent after- noon and harvested Hebblethwaite's 30 acres of corn. No neighbor would take credit for the extensive organiz- ation of the project. Each brought his own equipment. Five two-row pickers, one one-row, 20 wagons, four trucks and 16 tractors were counted. Arrangements in- cluded an agreement with a Blenheim seed company to process the corn next morning. Said the News-Tribune editorially: "In this day of 'scare' headlines and fighting be- tween nations, it is refreshing and comforting to see people helping, instead of fighting, their neighbors." | TOULON, France (Reuters)--,in the world, in the Mahgreb said the association "does not| \President de Gaulle Wednesday|(Arab north) and in the West./believe that the care of the in-| without further delay or pre-|We are ready to help it to come government authority or con-| | bd lical Association Wednesday de-| | Immediate Ss jclared himself and the' associa-| tion to be against state medicine. | night invited Algerian insurgent! "We believe this Algeria will) leaders to begin peace talks|need to co-operate with France. conditions. into existence and we are ready De Gaulle told a cheering|to help it live." crowd of more than 10,000 per-. De Gaulle said this would cost sons in this Mediterranean France a lot of money and in naval port that the end of con- return France wants guarantees flict "is in sight" in the North for European Algerians and for African territory. exploitation of natural gas and He arrived here fros the is- Oil in the Sahara. : land of Corsica where bp began He also warned that if the his current speaking four Tues--Moslems do not agree or if a day. majority rejects all ties with Earlier Wednesday a package France "then we should be of explosives was found in forced to reassemble the Euro- Ajaccio, Corsica, some 220 peans in certain regions. Then lyards from the Place. Foch, we would see what would hap- where de Gaulle spoke. pen." De Gaulle said that in Al- geria "the end is in sight, thanks to patience, good sense jand persistence." The indispen- sable conversations could open any day. "They are necessary so that under conditions of peace the Algerians can decide their own destiny by a process of self-de- termination. .. . "There will be an Algerian state, which will play its role Emancipation. For Adulterer ROME (AP)--Italy's Consti- tutional Court, the highest tri-| bunal, was called upon Wed-| nesday to decide whether it is fair to punish wives who com- mit adultery, but not husbands. The penal code provides that |'aa adulterous wife may be | punished with up to a year's Man From Uxbridge |rnis: , jimpr isonment. It does not Bails Out Of Jet \mention an adulterous husband. The nearest thing is a _provis- PORTAGE la PRAIRIE (CP)|ion for prison terms of up to A 22 - year - old student pilot/two years for husbands found ejected himself from an RCAF|Suilty of keeping a concubine in T-33 jet trainer Wednesday be-| their home or in a place giving fore it plunged to the ground rise to a public scandal, |near a southern Manitoba farm.| In recent years lawyers for | FO Bruce Yake, formerly of at least a dozen women charged |Uxbridge, baled out about 20) with adultery have contesied the minutes after taking off from|pena! code. Judges hearing the |the air force base here on a cases have suspended proceed- routine training mission. He suf-ings and asked the Constitu- jfered only "superficial" inju-tional Court to make a ruling. ries. 'The court reserved decision. | | | car on his entry ticket. Dr. Patrick Bruce - Lockhart| , The next day he played To- 000 Sire ($5,200). And, of course, rolled around again Monday. His winnings: 1,900,000 ($3,000). dividual patient is best handled by any form of central or total) trol." He added: "The vast major- ity of doctors everywhere be- lieve that the best medical care} is the result of personal service 900,000 lire ($25,400). {men from the naval dockyard! tocalcio again and won 2,000,- | Enalotto | lire | Total to date with Totocalcio | coming up again Sunday: 15,- | \demonstrated an 1894 pumper, | TALLY-HO ROOM AIR CONDITIONED A Good Place to Meet given on an individual contract} ---------------- HOTEL LANCASTER 9 ALL DAY SATURDAY NOVEMBER Iith basis to the individual patient." |p Miracle Cushion -- olds False Teeth Tight -- Eases Sore Gums Snug ® brand Denture Cushion: J is, = sational new plastic re-lining, keep web. bliest plates firmly in place. Ease sore gums, zive perfect comfort. Eat, laugh, talk -- lates "'stay put", ied i f avg Bh Pa Applied in minutes -- Distinctive Clothes for Men Ready-to-Wear and Made-to-Measure, or lower plates $1.50. 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