Rect ANOS IEMOO erBD Ay CV OR Gar eS HR er we OF 20 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wedneedey, Auguet 7, 1963 BIRTHS Segregation Practices SUBECK -- Gerald and Elieen ere! to announce the arrival of @ son tbs. 13 ozs. on Tuesdal 1963, at Oshawa General ter for John, Brian and Patti Ann, MAYER -- Kurt and Phyilis (nee Pow- orn), aro eee! 5 ee ocala vivel of ir son, Kurt Douglas, 7 Ibs, 4, 1963, Oshawa Thanks Y, August 6, Hospital. A. bro: er Persist Despite Laws Demands for equal em- ployment opportunities lie at the root of many of the racial demonstrations in northern U.S, communities. In the following story, a Ca- nadian Press reporter tells of the Negro drive to widen those opportunities. By JIM PEACOCK is s0 negligible you would say it was nil." A recent Civil Rights Com- mission survey, for instance, showed there were only 300 li- censed negro plumbers and eectricians in the entire U.S.--' fewer than in the legal and medical professions. Hildebrand and Schaefer con- tend the building trades unions NEW YORK (CP) -- Civil rights demonstrators have staged sit-ins and estabiished "reserve the best jobs for white men." Pete Brennan, president of CAIRNS, Ellen (Nelile) Qntered into rest in the Oshewe Genera! jand, of Osh tby, In her @4th year. Resting at the mstrong Funeral Home, Oshawa with morial service in the chapel on Thurs- , August 8, at 2 p.m. Interment Osh- ® Union Cemetery. JOHNSTON, David $ Avi David Johnston In his 46th year. Beloved togband of Nora Riley and loving father ef 'Donna and Bruce, dear son of Mary ond the late John Johnston. Brother of Mrs. Charlies Tinney (Della) of Mon- telth; Mrs. James Blackthorne § (Ger- trude), Miss Margaret Johnston, Mrs. Richard Kitto (Ruth), Mrs. Douglas Car- te: (Muriel), all of Oshawa; Mrs. Frank Yoyska (Mary) Toronto; Mrs. William Anderson (Pat) of Maple Grove; Jack, Elwood Robert all of Oshawa. Mr. Johnston Is resting at the Gerrow Funeral Chapel, 390 King Street West for service ty the Chapel on Wednesday, August 7, @ 2 p.m, Interment Mount Lawn Ceme- tery. PIXLEY, Asa At his home, S17 Maple Avenue, Pem- broke, Ont., on Tuesday, August 6, 1963, Asa Pixley, beloved husband of Emma Pixley and father of Dean Robert of Oshawe and (Marion) Mrs. R. Peterson of Addison and Jerald of Pembroke. Algo surviving are six grandchildren. Resting st Malcolm - Deavitt Funeral Home, 141 Renfrew Street, Pembroke. Service Thursday, August 8, at 2 p.m. Interment Calvin United Cemetery. LOCKE'S FLORISTS Funeral orrangement and floral requirements for all occasions. OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE 24 HOUR PHONE SERVICE 728-6555 IN MEMORIAM MEMORIALS MARBLE and GRANITE Designing, Carving, Lettering Installatior., Repairs Open Evenings Until 9 Oshawa Monument Co. 1435 King Street Eost 728- 3111 RIMAR MEMORIALS Dignified and Distinctive MONUMENT FLAT MARKERS in Designs For Any Need 152 Simcoe St. $. Oshawa 723-1002 728-6627 Office Evenings 'CARD OF THANKS RSON -- Sincere thanks and ap- preciation are extended to the surgical anc medical staff of the Oshawa Clinic, the nursing staff of Ward 3F of the Osh- ewe General Hospital, and to my friends 'and organizations who 0 kindly remem- dered me during my recent hospitalize- flan. --€. Pearson Pricing Stronger In Moderate Trade TORONTO (CP) Prices were stronger during moder- ately light trading on the stock' market Tuesday. Interprovincial Pipe Line led industrial gainers, up 1% to 53%, and Abitibi advanced %. CPR rose and Algoma Steel %. Royal Bank dipped 5% and Dominion Foundries and Steel and Bank of Montreal 4. International Nickel jumped 1% in senior base metals and 'alconbridge. declined %. Among active speculative ines, Wiltsey climbed 6% to 22 cents and Lake Dufault jamped $1.60 to $8.15. On index industrials rose 2.27 to 620.52; golds dipped .05 to 90.74; base metals declined 02 to 202.81 and western oils rose .11 to 113.87. Volume was 2,764,000 shares compared with 2,062,000 Friday, Eight Persons Face Charges In Smuggling NEW YORK (AP) -- Federal authorities have charged eight persons with smuggling huge amounts of Swiss watch move- ments into the United States from Canada, Mexico and else- where in the last seven years. The U.S. attorney's office here gaid the movements were smug- gied in such volume--an esti- mated 30,000 a month--that the U.S. government was deprived of $1,000,000 a year in. import duties. The eight, all U.S. residents, were arrested Monday night and Tuesday. The defendants included a mother of six children, Bella Rosenfeld, 34, of New Square, N.Y., wife of a school teacher. She was accused of counterfeit- ing the symbols which Swiss manufacturers place on watch parts for the export trade. 10 YEARS IN ACTING Former world middleweight pexing champion Rocky Grazi-| three ano is celebrating his 10th an- giversary as an actor this year. picket lines in New York and other northern communities in recent months, some of them erupting violently into the head- lines, They have marched outside a diner in the Bronx, a New York City borough. They have pick eted a hospital under construc- tion in Brooklyn, also a New York borough and one with heavy Negro populauon., They have sat in at city hali and New York state offices nere. And they have repeated these scenes in many other cities .of the northern United States, gerne their battle for equal ights is not aimed at the laws < tadoant , . ; . "*lions inadvertently gave some en Feemploymient ray aoe into the situation wich utes now on the books in nearly|". -- every northern and' western State, Key to each of these demon- strations lies in demands or the Building Trades Counc'! in New York City, said many of the accusations are made by professional troublemakers who cry discrimination if they don't see a lot of Negroes on a job. MEMBERS SPONSOR He said, however, that some unions have rules requiring that a new member or apprentice have two sponsors who are members of the union. "It's to keep it an exclusive club, but not necessarily be- cause of olor alone," said Brennan, A switchboard operator for one of the building trades un "You've got men n_ these trades whose grandfathers were in it, whose fathers were in it and ho intend to have their equal access for the Negro to available jobs in industries and sons in it. They want to ensure for their own--can you call that discrimination?" | It follows that without Negro members to act aS sponsors, no Negro seeking entry is likely to get the support he needs. Lack- ing such support, he can't enter apprenticeship programs and can't acquire the skills the un- ions ay re necessary for membership. Value of the demonstrations may be questioned by some, but the civil rights groups can point to successes. ESTABLISH PANEL Since the direct-action tactics were employed, the building trade that at present are al. most exclusively white. Civil rights leaders, who say the situation is similar from community to community in the North, gave some of the back- ground to the New York dem- onstrations in separate inter- views. Picketing at the Bronx drive- in diner is sponsored by the) Congress of Racial Equality, a northern-based civil rights or- tended Shawnigan Lake private school on Vancouver Island and who now is a field worker for C.O.R.E., was among thie pick-} eters at the diner. Trades Council here has estab- EMPLOY FEW NEGROES lished a panel to investigate "The White Castle chain} discrimination and to on (which operates the Bronx|training to Negroes. diner and many others like it}; A major dairy in the area was in the New York and New Jer-|the target of protests similar sey areas surrounding Newj\to those directed at the Bronx York City) employs 500 people,"'|diner. "As a _ result," said Schaefer said. "'They have a job|Schaefer, "the dairy now is turnover of 30 persons a month.|jaggressively recruiting Negro Yet they employ only a handfu!l|employees." of Negroes. They have only four; Ciyil rights leaders agree, in Negroes among 127 employees|nart at least, with Brennan's in their diners in the Bronx. To|statement that "the key to he me that is racial discrimination|whole problem is more employ- and that is what we intend to/ment for everyone, not displac: 4 ling a white man with a Negro.' wy . | But they insist direct action We don't ask that they re-|i. hecessary because statisiles Place whites with Negroes. But how that under any economic rows Negroes must be given |ituation in the country as a ni Pgs at those 30 jobs| sole, the unemployment rate which change every month. Jamong h non-white population jconstantly is more than twice Most of the jobs involved are serv' y i gervice asks common to anyithat among the white popula shake diner and they do not re-\°": : quire special skills. An expanding ecoomy will The Brooklyn hospital project help the Negro as it will the demonstrations fall into a dif-\White, but eve this, coupled ferent category--the jobs in|With greater training and edu- volved in the dispute do require{Ction, will not solve the Ne- special skills and they are' in|St0¢s' problems as long as em- trades that Rev. Richard A |Ployers give him the run-around Hildebrand of the National As-|Decause his skin is black, sociation for the Advancement) of Colored People says pay as well as many of the profes- sions. The Teal target of the Brook- lyn picketers is the building trades unions, accused of ex- ciuding Negroes from union membership and from access to apprenticeship - training pro- grams. i absence from the field. WANT EQUAL ACCESS The policy-making Metro ex- The city hall and Brooklynjecutive committee decided in demonstrators want the admin-|principle on the action Tuesday istrators of public funds to in-jafter a two-hour meeting with sist that recipients of contracts] the hospital council of Metropol- give Negroes access to these|itan Toronto. trades -- in which union mem-) The council and Metro author- bership is one of the require-jities will seek an immediate ments for obtaining a job. meeting with Health Minister "These trades pay very weil,"|Dymond and the Ontario Hospi- said Hildebrand, "better than/|tal Services Commission to draw many professions, and the num-|up a basis for the resumption of ber of Negroes in these un'ons|Metro grants. Metro To Resume Hospital Grants TORONTO (CP) -- Metropoli- jtan Toronto will resume grants \for new public hospital construc- tion and expansion of existing ones Jan. 1, ending a five-year ee ee EE Ne Reason Sought For Increase In Kangaroos By HAROLD TILLEY Canadian Press Correspondent MELBOURNE (CP) --Aus- tralians whose impulses incline to massacre at the thought or mention of kangaroos may yet be educated to acceptance of peaceful coexistence. Research is showing that man is mostly to blame for the great inrease in kangaroo pop- ulation--an increase so marked as to pose a menace to sections of the sheep and cattle indus- tries, With the emu, the kangaroo figures on the Australian coat- of-arms, Yet comparatively lit- tle is known of its feeding and breeding habits away from cap- tivity and it' is only recently that anyone has bothered much to conduct research. Australia will have to "go it alone" in this for, although some other countries have mar- supials, the whole of the world population of kangaroos, apart from a handful in zoos, is in Australia. Outstanding new conclusions by investigators are: 1, If man had not so greedily overgrazed his cattle pastures, there would not be enough) kangaroos to cause serious trouble. | 2. Kangaroos so far investi- gated have a built-in family. planning system which is influ- enced by man as well as by nature. The kangaroo recently under investigation is a grey animal inhabiting central Australia, There are many varieties. OVERLOAD PASTURES By putting more cattle on natural and improved pastures than they would economically carry, ranchers induced their cattle to graze the long grasses too short, resulting in a "green shoot." . | Cattle did not need the 'green shoot but it was just what na- ture ordered for kangaroos. Before man grazed these cat- tle areas, short green grass fe kangaoos was limited to strips along creek beds. Nowadays| they get green grass Over con- siderably greater spans of coun- try and for longer periods. Over-grazing keeps the tall stuff down to the point where it puts up green shoots almost continuously. Alan Newsome of the North- division reported recently that research over 4,000 square miles of county in central Aus- tralia showed that kangaroos did not eat grass sought by cat- tle Sag Se Set aia a To ai) Olivier's In Early LONDON (CP)--Britain's Na- tional Theatre company spent its first 50 years as a paper daydream and may spend the next 50 reaching perfection. That was the view of the com- pany's first director, Sir Lau- rence Olivier, who gave a press conference Tuesday in a con- struction shack on London's south bank. Olivier's theatre is still in the designing stage and won't be completed for four or five years Meanwhile, the government-sup- ported company will mount its productions, beginning next Oc- tober, in the theatre that once housed '3¢ famed Old Vic com- any. The wide variety of plays, as old as Sophocles and as light as Noel Coward, planned for the next two years indicate that Ol- ivier and his associates have word "national." O'TOOLE STARRING Highlights of the 1963-64 sea- son will be Hamlet | starring Peter O'Toole, with Sir Michael Redgrave. Diana Wynyard and Adrift 80 Hours London Man Towed In given a broad definition to the} Max Adrian, and Othello with| Theatre Stages Olivier himself playing the title role, Also listed on the playbill are Samuel Beckett's Play, George Farquhar's restoration drama The Recruiting Officer and Har- old Brighouse Hobson's Choice. Oliver said he wants to cre- ate "the finest company in the world" but added that it may not reach perfection "for an- other 40 or 50 years." "There is nothing so beauti- ful or so good in the theatre as an ensemble of expert players. We wish to give a spectrum of world drama," : In addition to their basic sal- ary, actors at the threatre will be paid a bonus for each per- formance, This should bring their income close to the salary levels of London's west end the- atres. Jury Charges Negligence To 3 Firms TORONTO (CP)--Three com- panies involved in a construction project were accused of gross |negligence Tuesday night by a |coroner's jury. | The jury recommended that jernment action in the death of a 45-year-old pedestrian, crushed iby a one-ton slab of concrete 1 Net Sales High Low a.m, Ch'ge CAE 200 $10%4 10% 10%---- € Chem w 100 380 380 380 +18 ¢ Hydro 275 $16Ve 16Va C imp Bk C 404 $61% 61¥2 ¢ Brew 160 $10Ve 100 c Chem 125 99% 9% c 210 se 8 cP. 151 $30% 30% Con Bidg 98% 8% Con Bidg pr Con M S$ Con. Paper Con Gas n Coron w Dist Seag TORONTO 11 A.M, STOCKS By The Canadian Press Toronto Stock Exchange--Aug, 7 (Quotations in cents unless marked $, 2z--Odd lot, xd----Ex-dividend, xr--Ex- rights, xw--Ex-warrants, Net change. Is from previous board-lot closing sale.) 1 Net INDUSTRIALS te een ow Stock Ind Gas R Stock Alta Dis w Alta Gas Alta Nat Alg Cen Algoma Alumini Alumini 4% Alum 2p xd Anthes A Arg CP opr Arg 250pr Bank Mont Bank NS Beli Phone BA Oil BC Forest BC Pow Cabol Cal Pow Can Cem CD Sug xd Can Perm 880 255 50 $) + 250 Va 15Ve 15Va 175 $174 17% Wat Ve 109 $20 2 20 100 $38 (3838 275 $55¥e 55Va 55% 210 $314 314 4+ 109 380 380 380 30$178 178 178 +3 10S $46Va 46Ve dba Ve 225 $6% 6¥% 6% 250 $16Ve 16¥e 16Ve 200 $12 «12:«W2 35 $58 58 OSB zo si9 1 6 $55Va 55Ve 55a 160 160 160 $44 4 $64 64 64 2 $6 6 6 66 $41% 41% 41% + Ve 14 4 Sve SVL 6 6 cSL Can Wire B OBITUARY MRS, ELLEN (Nellie) CAIRNS Following a short illness the death occurred Tuesday, Aug. 6, at the Oshawa General Hospital of Mrs, Ellen (Nellie) Cairns, Mrs. Cairns, who was in her 84th year, lived with her son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs, Victor Ireland, 152 Agnes street. Born Aug. 22, 1879 in York- shire, England, the deceased had lived in Canada for 81/ years and in Oshawa for 33] $5Va $6 $18% 18% 18% $33 83 83% 40 «6330 --s $52 51% 52 + 320 320 320 35 335 335 0 $16a 16¥a 16% $174 17% We $7% 7% 7% $23 (233 240 240 240 $12 12 $13% 13% 13% 280 280 280 +5 $7% 7% Thm+ Vv 210 210 210 +5 039 8 @ +M $6% 6% ba % 36% + Ve Wia- Ve 50a Inland Gas Inland G pr nter PL xd Int Stl P Lakeland Laura Sec Levy LebCo A NB PR Magna El M Leaf Mill Mass-F 7 MEPC Met Stores Mid-West Moore Morse 8 Noranda NO NGas Oni Loan Today's Stock Marke! 9 100 300 100 35500 18 16 1000 1000 C Regcourt 500. 10 10 100 112. 112 24500 22 2 58 wo "1 ve 8% 65 «85 wo 137 8% 8% 900 % $56 }000 1500 5500 325 3000 50710 400 1000 500 800 6500 720 2000 2500 Kirk Min L Dufauit La Luz Latin Am Lencourt Lorado Louvict Macassa Marchant Maritime Martin 85 140 7 w $12%4 124 12% ry w+ ie ern Territory animal industry|h PORT STANLEY, Ont. (CP) | falling from the construction| Donald Gillies, 40, of London, site, Ont., was towed into the harbor; The jury ruled that Pigott here Tuesday night after drift-\Construction Company, Ritchie ing on Lake Erie in his 18-fo0t|Cut Stone Company and Acme pleasure boat for 80 hours with-/Crane Rental violated the Co- out food or water. jstruction Safety Act. "It was rough from the word) Gerald A. Baldwin of Toronto go," said Mr, Gillies, whose|was killed and an eight-year-old boat ran out of gasoline 10)boy and a woman were injured miles out of Erieau, about 50|July 3 when the concrete fell miles west of here, Sunday aft-|58 fect from the top of a new ernoon. parking garage. A brisk wind and rough wa-| Earlier testimony said four ter made his oars useless and| Safety regulations were violated he began to drift eastward, at the site. Coroner Elie Cass He sighted two. fishing tugs|Dlamed Pigott for not enforcing Sunday, another Monday and safety regulations, Ritchie for two Tuesday, but was unable to|the design of the slab and not attract their. attention despite|serving terms of jts work per- standing on top of . the boat| Mit, the manufacturer of a host- cabin and waving a white sheet. |!"S fastener for not providing A battery-powered flashing|information about the device, red signal operated continous; nd the crane operator for fail- each night also failed to attract he to insist on safety regula- 1ons. elp, Mr. Gillies' father, D. G. Gil- lies of Rodney, Ont., believed) RELIVE BATTLE his son had drowned after an) Canadian troops fighting the| Erieau fishing boat picked upjdefence of Hong Kong in the a life jacket similar to those|Second World War will be shown on. the missing boat years, Predeceased by her husband, William Andrew Cairns, Mar. 25, 1946, she is survived by a son, Victor Ireland of Osh- awa; a brother, Robert of Osh- awa; two grandchildren, George Ireland of Oshawa and John Ireland of Whitby and six great- grandchildren, The memorial service will be held at the Armstrong Funeral Home at 2 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 8, -followed by interment in Oshawa Union Cemetery. Rev. H, A. Mellow, minister of Northminster U nit ed Church, will conduct the services. GETS NEW PART Anne Bancroft, winner of. the 1963 Academy Award as best actress, will star in the movie The Pumpkin Eater filming in London, SEVER TIES BELGRADE (AP)--The Yugo- slav government has decided to close its consulate general office in Johannesburg, South Africa, and to open embassy offices in Porto Novo, Republic of Da- homey, at Kampala, Uganda and at San'a, Yemen, the gov- From experience in central Australia, Newsome discounts theories that kangaroos travel! great distances to reach areas| where rain has fallen, He thinks} the limit is 30 miles. | Enough -has_ been learned| from research progress to show| that instead of kangaroos caus-/ ing destruction of pastures they) are merely the result of it--at) least in cattle country. Treasury To Probe) Wheat Gluten Sale' WASHINGTON (AP) -- The U.S. treasury department an-| nounced Tuesday that it will in-| vestigate. to determine whether| vital wheat gluten is being sold) at less than fair value in the) United States by the Ogilvie Flour Mills Co. Ltd. of Canada The treasury said Ogilvie last) year sold to U.S. firms $432,000 worth of glutten, a wheat prod-) uct used to add protein and) other nutrients to bread. | Under the Anti - Dumping) Act, the tariff commission has authority to adjust duties on! any import which is sold at less| than fair value and provided) there is a determination that) U.S. firms are being injured. | STARS WITH BURT Jeanne Moreau, one of| France's"* new wave" actresses, | will star opposite Burt Lan-| caster in the Paris-made movie) The. Train. j ¥ Fear for the safety of these European © journalists has been expressed following the finding of an unidentified body in Nahanni Valley north- west of Fort Smith. They have been unheard from in "Head- less Valley" since June 2. TELA CENTRE OF MYSTERY i (iti'(®s From left are Fritz Wiesman, Manfred. Wutrich and Wolf- gang Mahmocke. tuesdayjon CBC-TV's Canada at War morning. Aug. 10. ernment reports. Ont Steel Page-Hers Revelstoke Rothman Royal Bank Se'kirk A Shaw Ind Shell Ol! Shully's Southam St Radio Steel Can Tamblyn Tancord Thd CG Inv WCoast vt W Pacific Weston B West A wis Woodwd A Alminex Bantt Cent Del ¢ Dragon Dome Pete Duvan Home A HB ONS Medal Northcal Permo Petrol Place Provo Gas W. Decalta 100 5 Ye 16% 445 445 $30Ve 30 $94 9% $20Ve 20% 20%e-- Ve $18% 182 18a -- 270 270 $7% 7% 61% 3 20% 1% ta) 9% ™ 6a ™ 73% 5 5 16% 445 30 9% 270 1% 61% a) 2: "4 15% $18Ya 18Ve 18a 24) 24) 128 «(125 760 760 % 9 $14.04 8 8 8 310% 10% 10% 314% Ve 14% 355 *4 4 6 "0 155 Wé 355 3s "0 5 " 184 6 3 36 "" 184 né el 4 +1 "a + $00 700 3500 300 1500 7000 Mattgm! McKen Min Corp Mt Wright Nama Cr Newconex New Hosco N Kelore Newlund Nor-Acme Norlex Normetal N_ Bordu North Can Northgate Opemiska Orchan Ormsby Pamour Paramaq Patino pot -v + + ow 1000 +10 -% 0 -% 2 3 8 uv 6 ER 86 nn 2 " -! 1 2 Windfall Yukeno 2 58 t n Sales High Low a.m. Ch'ge : te 650 650 100 we +3 eve Ve e+ ae oe al +10 + Lae 27 2 OT mh 44 14h he & a. 6 8 9 os --8 ' ~ 2 63) (St $18% 18% 18%---- 4 64 «(44 154 15% 15" 45 365 365 -! -1 2 +8 +3 + V9 19 6 5a 15a? 0 630 --S RS ENE | 21a 21Ve 214-1 3 REESE | a ---" - n 8 «+2 5 205 205 $13% 13% 13% nn np VW 3 Sales to 11 a.m.; 851,000. +s So + + +5 = --4 + ell + __ aan YOU CAN HAVE THE OSHAWA TIMES Mailed to You... Wherever You VACATION RATES THE OSHAWA TIMES WILL BE MAILED TO YOUR VACATION ADDRESS AT THE REGULAR CARRIER RATE OF 45° PER WEEK JUST CALL 723-3474 THE CIRCULATION DEPT. OR COMPLETE THE ATTACHED FORM Are It Will Be Just Like A Letter From Home... When The Oshawa Times Arrives Each Day... 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