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Oshawa Times (1958-), 12 Jul 1965, p. 2

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walls. A goldn - colored 1,500- pound Kodiak bear lies dead in its cage in Toronto's Riverdale Zoo after it was shot by a man with a sur- plus Italian army rifle. Sat- urday afternoon visitors to the zoo, including children, watched in, horror as a man pulled the ~ifle from a paper bag and fired a number of shots into the bear. The ani- mal collapsed in agonizing pain. Police surrounded the park and arrested a 33-year- old man at gunpoint. (CP Wirephoto) Alberta Area Loss Is Heavy The EDMONTON (CP)--A _ storm| North caused by a low pressure dome| of cold air pushed into Alberta|House west of Red Deer was during the, weekend creating|reported 18 inches above nor- heavy, widespread damage. _| mal. : Hail and rain fell in Calgary! A brief but savage hailstorm leaving suburban roads covered lashed southwest Saskatchewan and a railroad underpass Saturday as the storm move flooded. Heavy rains also felljeastward. Striking over a seven at the Stampede grounds cover-|mile stretch, grain crops were ing the Indian village with sev-|wiped out. from the A lberta eral inches of water. boundary to about 10 miles At Red Deer, heavy rainsjeast of Maple Creek, Sask. halted farming operations but| Thorold Man no major hail damage was re] Fatally Hurt | ported. But Lethbridge reported | CALGARY (CP)--Harold G. |Martin, 25, of Thorold, Ont., heavy hail with damage, ac- cording to the Lethbridge Her- jwas killed Friday in a head-on collision on the Trans-Canada ald, running as high as $5,000,- 000. |Highway about 135 miles east of here. Cut Planned | Robert E. Martin, 31, of Wel- On Immigration LONDON (Reuters) -- The|!and, and Burton E. Leader, 29, Labor government is currently|Of London, Ont. were reported | Saskatchewan} River at Rocky Mountain, telling Commonwealth coun-} tries that less than 10,000 im- in critical condition in hospital. They were passengers in Mar- migrants a year will be allowed! into Britain under a new policy agreed by the cabinet, well- informed sources said Sunday. Widow, 60, Tied Most of the estimated 1,000,- ated. By Thieves 900 Commonwealth immigrants already in Britain are from| OAKVILLE (CP)--A 60-year- India, Pakistan and the West|old widow told police she was Indies. tied in bed and threatened with The sources said the govern-|bodily harm when thieves broke ment's decision to restrict the|into her home Sunday and stole level of this immigration, with-|more than $5,000 in jewelry, out halting it, was being circu-|furs and money. lated to Commonwealth 'govern-| Mrs. Jane Pike said she was ments in advance of a formaljbound and gagged by a man statement to'Parliament, ex-)who threatened to cut off her pected toward the end of this|finger if she did not remove month. ther wedding ring. HERE and THERE the. Radio and Trans- the Re- and cription Fund of cording Industry. Members of Oshawa's First Church of Christ Scien- tist, have received informa- tion of the redevelopment of church headquarters at Bos- ton, Mass. A 15 acre "church centre' will © be constructed in the Back Bay section of the city. Congratulations are being extended to Albert F. Cox of 13 Elgin st. e., who cele- brates his birthday today. Elmgrove ave., between Park rd., and Montrave ave., was 'closed today for road widening and recon- struction. The road will be closed for about one month. Col. R. S. McLaughlin will turn the sod Wednesday af- ternoon for the new recrea- tion building at the Oshawa Young Women's Christian Association at Adelaide House. The ceremony will begin at 3 p.m. Plans for the ensuing year will be discussed when the Rotary C' b of Oshawa holds a club council meeting to- night at the home of Wil- liam Bennett west of Colum- bus Albert Cox of 13 Elgin st., a Ford automobile dealer in Oshawa from 1926 to 1937, celebrates his 88th birthday today. He was one of the city's best piano tuners. Mr. Cox will celebrate his birth- day with his daughter; Mrs. Florence Smith, and three sons, Frank, Clarence and Art and their families, all of Oshawa. Mr. Cox was born in Bowmanville and has lived in Oshawa most of his life. He is a charter mem- ber of the Oshawa Kiwanis Club. A Father and Son horse- shoe pitching tourney will be held Saturday, July 24, at Storie Park, Mill st. The contest, open to members of a neighborhood park asso- ciation and their sons, is sponsored by the Oshawa Recreation Centre. Th youngsters must have been born after Jan. 1, 1952 David Havery and Ralph Peters will be featured solo- ists at 8.30 p.m. at the sec- ond concert of a series held at the McLaughlin Band- shell. Bernard Tierney will again be the conductor of a 13-strong orchestra. Mr. - 400 AT SCENE IN TORONTO 1500-Pound Killed TORONTO (CP)--A Toronto man has been charged with killing an animal in custody Kodiak | Inside Zoo they were afraid that children|the horrified eyes of many of attracted by the sound of shots|the 400 visitors in the zoo area. would be injured. However, the' Known affectionately by such d shooting after the ,ames as Goldie, Billy and and with p ing a weap dangerous to the public peace following the shooting Saturday of a 1,500-pound Kodiak bear in the Riverdale zoo here. Charged is Tefik Kadri Hy- solli, 33, of Toronto. A zoo employee said a man fired several shots into the bear cage with a rifle pushed through wire mesh. The bullets ricocheted from the bars and Police arrived at the zoo wearing bullet proof vests and carrying tear gas. They said man stopp of blood. ee pool cody. the six-year-old bear was Detective Thomas Maguire,jone. of two Kodiaks purchased who arrested a man on a foot-jfrom the Seattle zoo six years bridge mear the zoo a shortjago, His mate died two years time later, quoted the man as|ago when she swallowed a rub- saying: "I've been talking tojver ball thrown into the cage that bear and he plans to take|by a visitor. over the world." The bear's body, hoisted by At least 12 bullets fired tom eck and tackle, was taken to an Italian-made rifle, the same/a cold storage vault. Rudolph type as one used to assassinate/L. Peterson of the Royal On- U.S. president John Kennedy,|tario Museum said the animal's ripped into the bear. |Skelton will be added to the The animal collapsed before| 's collection. Visit To Sout WINNIPEG (CP)--Opposition Leader Diefenbaker said Sun- day he plans to go to Southeast Asia shortly on a trip that will 'itake him to South Viet Nam. "I want to see at first hand the situation in Southeast Asia," he said. "It's worsening day by day and week by week." The Progressive Conservative ers during a brief train stop in Winnipeg. Without giving details of his likely itinerary, he said he plans to make his trip '"'imme- diately prior to' the scheduled resumption of. Commons sit- tings Sept. 27. Mr. Diefenbaker said the United Nations is powerless un- der present circumstances to take effective action in the Viet Nam war. "If the matter came before the Security Council the veto |would apply," he said, Then, referring to conflict Slated For Diefenbaker leader was speaking to report-| h Viet Nam = over financing of UN peace- keeping forces, Mr. Diefenbaker added: "The matter cannot come be- fore the assembly . . . for the reason that the question has not been determined whether the default for two years or more means the removal of |those nations that are in de- |fault."" Mr. Diefenbaker said that the : Soviet Union and its "Commu- nist puppets" are in default-- along with France -- and the United States stand is that they have lost their votes under the UN's Article 19. "That being so," he "the UN assembly cannot take| any action regarding the situ-| ation in Southeast Asia until| the question of loss of member-| ship is determined." MR. DIEFENBAKER said,|~ U.S. Congress Ay Mr. Diefenbaker is heading Aid Urged for a Saskatchewan holiday; WASHINGTON (CP) -- Pres- which will be spent at Waskesiu|jdent Johnson is asking Con- in Prince Albert National Park./ press today to authorize a $227,- KENNEWICK, Wash. (AP)-- Rising from the desert is a huge nuclear power plant that will start prodicing electricity for the northwestern United States this fall. Its builders, the Washington Public Power Supply System, jeall it the world's largest nu- {clear power plant. | By early next year, say the builders, the plant will produce 800,000 kilowatts of electricity. The electricity will be tied into the Bonneville Power Ad- ministration's sub - station at Vantage, Wash., by a 23-mile, } } Ideology Split Seen AtNDP Meet TORONTO (CP) -- Executive elections reflected a split in ideological opinion among the 91 delegates at the annual con- vention of the New Democratic Youth Sunday. | The election for president, |won with a two-vote victory by |Terry Morley, 22, of Toronto, was immediately challenged by jmembers of the "left caucus." They were supporting a slate of candidates calling for a "radical socialist program' jand claimed the "right-wing" members of the party had stacked the vote. Re-election in the evening jconfirmed Mr. Morley, a stu- jdent at Dalhousie University in Halifax and organizer for the United Steelworkers of America (CLC), as president. The "left. caucus" took three of the remaining seven execu- itive posts. |ARE ELECTED | Elected were: Colin Gabel- |mann, 21, of Osoyoos, B.C., as |B C. vice-president; Dave Adams, 23, of Arcola, Sask., | Prairies vice - president; John |Cowan, 22, of Toronto, Ontario vice-president, and Marcel La- londe; 23, of Montreal, Quebec vice-president, Members at large are: Bill Lenihan, 21, Calgary, Jim |Harding, 24, Saskatoon, and Gerald MacDonald, 24, Water- jloo, Ont. | The two-day convention, which ended Sunday, passed resolutions which ran the gamut from affirming the right of all peoples to self-determination to jsuggesting that birth control jand sexual hygiene be made a part of high school and elemen- tary school curricula. The convention called for a new alliance between the 'twin nationalisms" of English and |French Canada and said rela-| tions between the two must be renegotiated in a new confed- | eration. Havery, a baritone, will sing numbers ranging from. light opera to ballands, Mr. Peters will be featured in piano and organ solos. The six concerts in the series are sponsored by General Motors of Canada Limited b NEED A NEW FURNACE? Neo Down Payment--First Payment December--Call PERRY Day or Night . . . 723-3443 Full information on duties and p.m.) Phone 655-4511. Wanted Immediately The Township of East Whitby DOG CONTROL OFFICER from the Township Office, Columbus, Ontario, (9 a.m. to 5 Y other motters, can be obtained M. W., GOLDIE, Clerk. emia Washington State "A" Plant To Be Largest In The World ~ |066,69 St. John River hydro jproject in Maine near the Maine - Quebec - New Bruns- wick border but the long-dis- jcussed Passamoquoddy tidal power project is off again. am = xpi anamianten Hine: | nancing the project are blamed rfid #® '. t he 'horthwest-(iu: a further postponement of ics ati he |the complex plan on which work It is large erugh to cover se ee oe Page erg nie ag 7 ena to hide | omies in construction and im- a 10-storey building. provements in generator de- HAS TWO UNITS signs can make economically The two. generating units feasible the project to harness . : . "ithe Bay of Fundy's: high tides stretch 100 yards. They are 80|of¢ the Maine-New Brunswick heavy it takes bulk concrete to! border. support them. The president released Satur- a ' ic oping Gay the details of a_ report play ve nied ag 2% bund. | made by Interior Secretary = |wart Udall. Johnson was at his sidewalk five feet wide and four |'Texas ranch, TORONTO (CP) -- About 3,300 Smiths in Metropolitan | Toronto's telephone directory were invited to a picnic Sa- turday. But fewer than a dozen showed up. "Some promotional schemes lay eggs," said Thomas Thompson, Metro's parks commissioner. The parks department had 3,300 SMITHS IN TORONTO IGNORE "FAMILY'S" PICNIC hoped the Smiths would help it promote the Toronto Is- lands as picnic spots. The "family picnic" was to have been held on one of the is- lands. But Mr. Thompson wasn't dismayed. "If we can get enough Browns, McGregors, Thomp- sons or Simpsons, we'll have a day for them, too." ~ Albanian Aide Says Soviets. Sell Out To The Americans HELSINKI (Reuters) -- Thejpeace-loving countries," he leader of the Chinese-backed Albanian delegation at the World Peace Council today ac- cused Soviet leaders of selling out to American "imperialism" and co-operating with the Unit- ed States in a bid for world domination. Nesti Karaguni told a coun- cil committee discussing dis- Ser saidy "Thus the Moscow treaty has. increased the danger to world peace, We think it is necessary. to condemn this Moscow treaty in the interest of general and complete liquidation of thermo- nuclear armament." The congress of 1,300 dele- gates, including 14 from Can- ae American - |party '|Leningrad Saturday, Higher interest rates for fi-|-- armament: "The main task is|ada, has been the forum for 2 Top Russian Speeches Ignore War In Viet Nam By GEORGE SYVERTSEN He insisted that the Soviet MOSCOW (AP)--The Soviet|Union is "administering a reso- Union's two top pleaders virtu-|lute rebuff to the provocateurs ally ignored the war in Viet|and imperialist aggressive cir- Nam in major weekendjcles and avoiding at the same speeches, arousing speculation|time the example of those ,who that the Kremlin may be about|take up a belligerent tone." to take a new tack toward the} The new signs of Soviet-Chi- Southeast Asian conflict. nese discord over Viet Nam The cessation of attacks on|aroused speculation here about involvement in the|the possibility of a new initia- war came after months of blast-|tive from the Kremlin leaders. ng shee very. MEET HARRIMAN? Leonid Brezhnev, It was suggested that the secretary, . . more moderate line, if contin- ued, might enhance the possi- bility of meaningful private contacts between Soviet leaders and U.S, Ambassador-at-large Averell Harriman, who is scheduled to arrive today for a five-day visit. American. embassy officials said Harriman's visit is strictly private. With what British officials felt was almost a note of regret, the Russians followed their allies' Communist speaking in made no specific reference to Viet Nam. His only mention of the United States was. an almost ritualistic slap at "'imperialists and above all, the imperialists of the U.S.A."' and their '"'armed provocations" and "'acts of ag- gression." His most acid remarks were jaimed at the Chinese Jeaders in | Peking. . . . The Communists, if} they really are Communists," he said, "do not have the right to waste time and energy on mutual attacks." Premier Alexei Kosygin,} speaking in Volgograd Sunday, |followed suit with even milder} With what appeared to be words on international tensions|equal reluctance, they finally jand nostalgic recollections of|gave up efforts this month to |U.8.-Soviet co-operation in the|bring together a conference on Second World War. Cambodian neutrality, a meet- His reference to the Chinese|ing at which Viet Nam might was just as hard as Brezhnev's,|have been discussed. He rebuffed Chinese demands} In another move of possible for more Soviet involvement in|significance, Moscow radio Viet Nam, saying: 'Our coun-|broadcast quotes Sunday from a try is ready for any contingen-|speech by British Foreign Sec- cies, but an adventuristic, ill-|retary Michael Stewart calling considered policy is alien to/for a new approach to conven- Sg ing a Viet Nam conference. | | monwealth peace mission on Viet Nam. | 1 | ATTENTION FARMERS ! «+. Why Pay More SAVE scermeress, GASOLINE - DIESEL & MOTOR OILS Farm Tanks Available DX OIL CALL TODAY i | lead last month in turning down i i Prime Minister Wilson's Com-|¥% jinches thick from New York |City to Baltimore. | There are miles of pipe, some) inine feet in diameter, som elxijowatts | A request will be made to!= Congress to build a dam on the upper St. John river at a point called Dickey, producing 760,000 of energy. There A AERA i i ARR jonly five-eighths of an inch. The|would be a small regulating /pipe will carry more than 500,-\dam farther downstream pro- 000 gallons of water a minute.|ducing 34,000 kilowatts of power. | WEATHER FORECAST Forecast For Tuesday TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts! Forecast Temperatures issued by the weather office at|)Low tonight, high Tuesday: 5:30 a.m.: Windsor Synopsis: Mostly clear: skies St. Thomas. and 75- to 80-degree temper-|London a+ x atures are forecast for the|\ouynt Forest.... greater part of the province| Wingham jtoday. Showers and htunder-|Hamilton .. showers will gradually spread) Catharin eastward above the upper lakes! peterborough a today and tonight. However,|Kinocton ....sess0s fair weather is expected to per-|Trenton sist through Tuesday around Killaloe ceoeeee bee the lower lakes although there) Muskoka ... ' is a small probability of show-|North Bay.. ers developing late in the day. Sudbury aS Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie,|Earlton Lake Huron, Niagara, Lake On-|Sauii Ste. Marie... tario, Southern Georgian Bay,| Kapuskasing Haliburton, Killaloe, Windsor,|White River. London, Toronto, Hamilton:|Moosonee .. Clear today. Sunny with-a few|Timmins ..... des cloudy intervals Tuesday. Not as cool tonight. Winds light. | Northern Georgian Bay, Al-| goma, Sault Ste. Marie, South- ern White River, Timagami, Cochrane, North Bay, Sudbury: Sunny and warmer today. Mostly cloudy with a few show- ers or thundershowers Tues- day. Winds light today, south- east 15 Tuesday. Northern White River: In- creasing cloudiness today, fol- lowed by showers tonight and Tuesday. Warmer. Winds light, becoming southeasterly 15 to- night. sees FOR ALL YOUR DRUG STORE NEEDS Phone 723-2245 FREE-CITY-WIDE-DELIVERY _ JURY AND LOVELL THE ULTIMAT * PRESTIGE E IN LUXURY LIVING!! A FEW 1 AND 2 BEDROOM SUITES AVAILABLE DISTINCTION BEYOND COMPARE | | | * ak By Appointment Only UNDERGROUND {| PARKING 723-1712 or 728-2911 * és GEORGIAN mansions 124 PARK ROAD NORTH: OSHAWA Sunny, Cloudy Intervals | 668-3341 GOING AWAY FOR A VACATION? Here are « few hints to make it a more enjoyable one. First get a check-up from your physician and any needed preventive "shots". Next take with your medi- cines you regularly use, plus one for indigestion, diar- thea, constipation and « good healing antiseptic. We can help you select good products. Stop in and get from us your favourite brands of toilet articles. We have them and you may not be able to get them in distant places. YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you need e medicine. Pick up your prescription if shopping nearby, or. we will deliver promptly without extra charge. A great many people entrust us with their prescriptions. May we compound yours? EASTVIEW PHARMACY 573 King Street East Oshawa PHONE 725-3594 Fast -- Free -- Motorized Delivery P. B, Francis, Phm.B, --- J. R. Steffen, B.Sc. Phm.B. 4 Tues. and Wed. Specials ! LEAN BRAISING 29: LEAN nr Stewing BEEF BEEF 3»- RINDLESS 3 ay RIBS of BEEF 59: |BACON the final probibition of the use of nuclear armaments and the liquidation of stocks of such armaments. "The Soviet leaders have for- saken this aim knowingly. They have done everything possible to prevent the spread of arms. "The prohibition of the spread of nuclear arms keeps up a monopoly ahd U.S. stockpiles set up to acquire world dom- ination." Referring to the "atomic um- brella" theory, Karaguni said it is a proposal by which 'the' United States and the Soviet Union are entitled to protect themselves by nuclear arma- ments, while other states will be 'completely disarmed. "This is clear proof of the real aims of the Soviet leaders,|. to co - operate with United States leaders in division of world domination." CRITICIZES TREATY He said the Moscow treaty of| 1963 for a partial nuclear test) ban enable] the Americans to) jcontribute to the atomic arma-| ment of West Germany. "This is in reality an attempt] jto disarm the socialist and other! bickering between Soviet an Chinese factions since it here Saturday. , The non-governmental World Peace Council was formed in 1950 by supporters of nuclear disarmament. 1 The five-day congress here is being attended by representa- tives of about 100 countries. 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