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Oshawa Times (1958-), 23 Sep 1963, p. 14

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14_ THE OSHAWA TIMES. Manday, September 23, 1963 PM Sees No Reasons Against Wheat Sale American policy of trying tojmit, you need a lot of prepara- clamp Agen Be boycott/tory work in the valley, and that work now is going on at the 18- For one thing, Pearson said,jnation conference in Geneva." On domestic affairs, he said knew nothing of reports that the $10 increase in old age pen- sions, to become effective next OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis-|month if Parliament approyes, ter Pearson said Saturday thatjmight be made retroactive to if satisfactory groundwork is|April when his government took e for an 18-nation summitjoffice. "I just read those newspaper would be quite happy to attendjreports on the plane flying up from New York, and I hadn't He made the statement to re-jhead about that 'idea before." ~ NEW YORK (AP) -- Prime Minister Pearson said Sunday he sees no reason why Canada shouldn't export wheat to the Soviet Union, as-she agreed to} do last week. Pearson, interviewed on the taped ABC television program, Issues and Answers, also said: ~ "As a Canadian I wouldn't want) York where he attended the ~as Castro is in charge of Cuba "we must have nothing whatever to do with him." Canada announced last Mon- day the sale of $500,000,000 worth of wheat and flour to the Soviet Union. Under the ar- rangement, $33,000,000 worth will be shipped directly to Cuba. Last month, Canada sold $360,- 000,000 worth of wheat to China. Pearson commented Sunday: ~ "There is no reason that I know "' that we shouldn't export food to Communist countries. Food isn't on any prohibited list." The prime minister said he doesn't "really see anything in- consistent" in Canada's making wheat shipments to Cuba, and _ Damage Hits $1000 Total Two rear-end collisions caused @ total of almost $1,000 damage Friday. At King street west, east of the Gibbons street intersection a ~ vehicle driven by PJames D. Patterson, 17, of 113 Allaa street, - Whitby was imvolvedin a colli- sion with a car driven by Gil- ~~ berte Gilbert, 36, of 253 Athol street. Mrs, Gilbert's car suffered $150 damage tothe rearend and an estimated $300 damage was done to.the front of the Paterson car. Constable B. J. Dionne in- vestigated. The scond accident occurred at the intersection of Harmony road and King street. A vehicle driven by Dorothy Iris Coulter, 38, 2nd. Conc., Bowmanville was involved in a collision with a ve- hicle driven by Roderick Reid, 22, of 248 Cordova road. The Coulter vehicle received an estimated $250 damage to the rear end and $250 was estimated to have been done to the front end of the Reidcar. Constable R.Cramp investigated. Gets 30 Days For \ Attempted Theft Maurcie Gogne, 27, of 2088A Champlain street, Montreal, en- tered a plea of guilty to a charge of attempted theft and was sentenced to 30 days in jail by Magistrate H. W. Jer- myn in Oshawa Magistrate's Court Friday. Detective Sergeant G. Mc- Cammond of the Oshawa Po- lice Department said he arrest- ed Gogne Sept. 12 while the accused was attempting to pry open the money box of. a tele- phone at 816 King street west. He sated that he found three screwdrivers in Gogne's pos- session at the time of the ar- rest. Maigstrate Jermyn said that "the Courts bend over back- wards to give people a chance," as he passed sentence. around the Caribbean island. food is not on the U.S. list of strategic materials banned from shipments to Cuba. meeting on disarmament, ('I for Canada." Board Asked To Decertity Granby Union GRANBY, Que. (CP) -- La lations at the radio station come under its jurisdiction: Grounds far the latest petition were similar to these-prseented to the Quebec board. The com- pany claims officers of the un- jon have committed illegal acts, that the employees' cessation of work was illegal and that there is no reason for the union's ex- since its members no Voix de I'Est Limit Granby company operating 'a daily newspaper, a printing plant and radio station CHEF, tas asked "ithe Canada Labor Board to decertify a union rep- resenting its 100 employees who {stopped working Aug. 27. The company announced last Tuesday it had asked the Que- bec Labor Relations Board to decertify the union, an affiliate of the Confederation of National Trade Unions. The request to the Canadian board was made Relations| longer are employees of the company. In a statement Sept. 8, Aime Laurion, president of La Vois de l'Est Limitee, announced the company had discharged the employees on grounds they were conducting an illegal strike, Gerard Picard, president of the Confederation of Printing and Publishing Employees (CNTU), in a statement reply- ing to Mr. Laurion contended the employees had been dis- missed for refusing to handile because employer-employee re- work normally done by employ- for centuries have controlled the tral government. tthe more conservative members of the 12 congregations here ees of Be Progres du Saguenay, a Chicoutimi, Que., weekly where a strike was called Aug. Curia 'Examines Plan To Reform VATICAN CITY (Reuters)--jresponsibility under the Pope for Pope Paul's decision to carryjecclesiastical discipline, public out radical reforms of the Ro-|worship and. the sacraments, man Curia were being studied|protection of faith and morals, Sunday by the curia--the cardi-|missionary affairs and other as- nals, prelates and clergy whoj|pects of Roman Catholic poli Roman Catholic Church's cen-ithan 2,990 bishops from all over . the world criticized over-cen- The pontiff's speech Saturday|tralization in church govern- is understood to have shaken|ment at the ecumenical coun- cil's first session last autumn. who until now have had greatjmost minor changes in public worship could be made without permission from Rome. REDUCE PRIVILEGES 13. . decentralize the administration the reforms the Roman Curia/day night in protest 9 ee byes be -- of gooeenwnt being served South ops can jay exe! fruit. The student: better themselves locally," a lye and reduce some of its privi-Jby Itallans--and make fis meme acges: Saturday bythe Pope in an_ad-iChristian dress to the cardinals, and tribu site fi th unals, offices and the papal cuihont & etal anitien oe ta ee They were _announced|~:r-. hetter aualified to handle - unity. problems. STAGE BOYCOTT . COPENHAGEN, Denmark prelates of the complete Ro- the congregations, : }hagen University hurled -- or- The: pontiff said' that underjanges across their canteen Tues- African ting South African goods be- Pope Paul made it clear that/cause of the country's racial Progressives among mOrein. intended to recruit the Ro-|Segregation policies. man/C@ria on a more interna- tional basis--many bishops say it now is too much dominated Don't Neglect Slipping They pointed out not even the The reforms will simplify and FALSE TEETH wien you ee = yt | FRANCES JONES as tor ane cenaten ing of paid LIBERAL First ane Sag p B anal porters on his arrival from New York where he attended th opening days of the United Na-' tions General Assembly session. The 18-nation summit meeting idea, proposed by Soviet For- eign Minister Andrei Gromyko, "might be very useful and should not be turned down out of hand," Mr. Pearson said. "But my experience has been that before you go to the sum- Will Serve.7 Days For Drunk Driving Gerald Arsenau, 44, of 276 Al- bert street, pleaded guilty Fri- day, in Oshawa Magistrate's Court, to a charge of drunk driving and was sentenced to seven days in jail by Magistrate H. W. Jermyn. Oshawa Police stated that they arrested Arsenau Sept. 18 at King street and Stevenson's road, in an intoxicated condi- tion, attempting to start his car. They said a part bottle of rye was found on the floor of the car. Constables C. E .Smith and Cc D. Bullock investigated. Magistrate Jermyn told Ar- senau if liquor is a problem it "seems to me you'd better get away from it'. An additional charge of hav- ing liquor was withdrawn at the request of the Crown. Is Jailed For Assault "Tf there are any worse as- saults than this I'd like to know where they are," stated Magis- trate H. W. Jermyn in Oshawa Magistrate's Court Friday as he sentenced Norman Edmonds, $2, of 97 Central Park boulevard north, to two years less a "| in the reformatory. Edmonds was arrested on a charge of assault July 14 after Frederick Preston, 66 King street west, laid the complaint. Edmonds pleaded not guilty. Preston testified that Ed- monds and another man beat him with pieces of a rifle stock after Edmonds had broken the rifle over his shoulder. He stat- ed that he was in the hospital for 13 days with a broken right shoulder and lacerations of the left ear, forehead and back of the head as a result of the beating. Edmonds admitted hitting Preston twice because he was| afraid Preston would shoot him but denied hitting Preston with the rifle. He stated that a wit- ness for the defence 'was ble to appear in court. Ed- A charge of p ig house- breaking tools was withdrawn at the request of the Crown. P Given Five Days - On Theft Charge Calvin J. Moore, 38% Simcoe * street north, pleaded guilty, in Oshawa Magistrate's Court, Fri- + day, to a charge of theft under * $50 and was it monds was without counsel. boulevard north, on a similar A bench warrant was issued lor Len Gauvin, 97 Central Park charge of assault. Magistrate Jermyn said that he had seen many cases of as- sault but "this was. the worst case yet'. DEATHS d to fiv ~ days in jail by Magistrate H. ~ W. Jermyn. Moore was arrested on Sept. 16 after Ronald Davis, assist- ant manager of S. S. Kresge «Company Limited, 15 Simcoe "etreet south, saw him take three ~Plastic page protectors from the store without paying. The «Plastic covers were valued at 19 cents each. The acused said that he was unemployed but 'didn't need the things". Crown Attorney Affleck stated that this particu- 3 lar store was a popular spot for . Shoplifters but was only part » of the "tremendous epidemic" of By THE CANADIAN PRESS Rome--Maria Ciampi, 86, a star of Italian musicals back in the 1920s Cobourg, Ont. -- Fred Dufton, 78, former president of the On- tario Rugby Football Union. Toronto--Dr. Harold G. Pritz- ker, 53, pathologist at Toronto's Mount Sinai Hospital and for- mer Oshawa General Hospital and Ontario County pathologist. Honey Harbour, Ont.--Robert Bridge, 67, retired vice-presi- dent of manufacturing for Ford Motor Company of Canada. Kingston--Rev. Ronald Vat- ' such offences in tne Oshawa « area recently cher, .64, United Church minis- ter. FRONT-END CHEVROLET NOW! THE GREATEST LINE-UP IN CHEVROLET TRUCK HISTORY! LOWER PRICED MADE IN CANADA @ DIESEL TRUCKS Chevrolet's space-saving E80 90" cab model and rug- ged U80 Tilt-Cab models are now made in Canada, with resultant savings for you. These new Chevrolet Diesels have a 14" heavy- duty clutch and a 6V-53 GM Diesel engine (195-gross hp) to give you full engine efficiency at all loads and speeds; more miles per gal- lon; extra low-speed torque for power on heavy-load starts and bong tough truck -- the Combining the sleek looks of a passenger car and the business ability of a light \ EL CAMINO PICKUP! El Camino! 7 4 HUSKY FORWARD CONTROL MODELS WITH MORE USABLE LOAD SPACE!!! Chevrolet has added 4 new Step Van King Models to its Forward Control line to give you the widest choice ever -- 11 models. with ALIGNMENT For ALL CARS on JOHN BEAN "Visualiner" SPECIAL 95 PHONE 728-6221 for eppointment Free Pick-Up and Delivery Service tm GENERAL TIRE OF OSHAWA 534 RITSON RD. S$. 728-6221 grades. tors appreciate. OPTIONAL 348 SPECIAL V8 FOR CHEVROLET @ 60 SERIES! New for 64: Chevrolet's extra-high-torque 348 Special V8 with economi- cal two-barrel carburetor. Available as an option on the Series 60, this power plant provides real pulling power combined with the economy that truck opera- Chevrolet has added anew ¢ 175" wheelbase chassis to broaden its line of T60 Tilt Cab models. This modern cab design engine accessibili 1 60 TILT CAB . TO GIVE YOU A WIDER CHOICE OF 4 @ WHEELBASES is very popular with its big CA dimensions on short wheelbases, outstanding ty, more effi- cient weight distribution. With its standard 6-cylinder engine and full-coil suspen- sion, El Camino is ready to go to work all day -- and still look as glamorous as body sizes ranging from 7 to 12 feet long. With new space-planned in- teriors, work-proved engines, transmis- = sions, and suspen- s sion, these new Chevies are out- standing for eco- nomical, profit-mak- ing multi-stop oper- ations! G.V.W. rat- ings up to 10,000 Ibs. Missa a passenger car Come i ne MADE IN CANADA poses WIDER CHOICE OF AXLE SIZES IN CHEVROLET @ 60, 80 AND M80 pr serd WITH SucmiAsen LOAD The new 18,500 Ib. and 23,000 Ib. rear axles for the Series 60 and 80 respectively and the new 34,000 Ib. Tan- dem Bogie for the Series M80 widen Chevrolet's range of extra-heavy-duty power 'train options. FIRST TIME EVER DIESEL POWER IN A @ CHEVROLET TANDEM ing 5-speed main trans- mission and optional 4-speed auxiliary transmission. Varia- ble-rate front sus- pen up to 11,000 Ib. axle- Capacity. Chevrolet offers three new Canadian- made Series W80 tandems with 6V-53 Diesel power and ex- tra-rugged drive line components, featur- CHEVROLET'S PROVEN RELIABILITY FEATURES ! Built-in with all these en- gineering improvements are Chevrolet's job-proved reliability features, includ- ing Variable-Rate Front Suspension, Independent Front Suspension on most tighter models, tough, work-tested engines, and extra-rugged chassis com- ponents. These are some of the reasons why the 1964 Chevrolet Trucks are designed to work harder, last longer and cost less! extra-heavy-duty sions are rated _j '64 CHEVROLET TRUCKS SEE YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED CHEVROLET TRUCK DEALER TOMORROW! \Be'sure to see Bonanza on the CBC-TY network each Sunday. Check your local listing for channel and time. "IN OSHAWA-WHITBY YOUR FRANCHISED OK DEALERS ARE: ONTARIO MOTOR SALES LID. 140 Bond St. West, Oshawa, Ont, Phone 725-6501 MORE TRUCK... MORE TRUCKS HARRY DOKALD LIMITED 300 Dundas St. East, Whitby, Ont. Phone 668-3304, 668-3305, 668-3306

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