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Oshawa Times (1958-), 29 Jul 1965, p. 3

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9 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdey, July 29, 1965 § Post Office [= ost Uttice B | Sc an hour while the building was Oakland, Calif., aboard the are searched, By SAIGON (AP) -- Paratroop-jtroops transport Gen. Le Roy; OTTAWA (CP) -- Ottawa's eee 500 Deadly Tons Poured On Cong Ticket Fix Ottawa mail sorters and let- OTT. teh xi L. Eltinge. Their brigade com-|main post office building was AWA ICP) ed gg -- mander, Col. James Timothy of|evacuated Wednesday w! po-' New Orleans, La., said his menjlice searched it in response tojating on "work-to-rule" slow- would deploy initially around|an anonymous bomb threat. j|down. Cam Ranh Bay to provide se-| They found nothing in the curity for 2,500 U.S. army en-|building to support the tele-| CITY USES CROSSWALES a U.S.|gineers who are building a portiphone tip that a bomb had) REGINA (CP) -- Police here said giant B-52 jetiand an airstrip of one of South|been placed inside. have issued onl ayy i - age! jaywalking U.S. Strategic|Viet Nam's finest natural har-| City police co - operated with|ticket under city's bylaw bors. RCMP in making a thoroughiduring the last three years. could expose a racket involving the fixing of city traffic tickets. The informer is said to have demanded $7,000 for his infor- mation, are: Mrs. Helen of bombs on susp Cong positions 35 miles south- east of Saigon. After the B-52 raid--the sixth Nam by the several thousand paratroopers Rodolphe Landriault, 32, a trucker; and his mother, Mrs. Louise Landriault, 63, All but Mrs, Harrison ap- peared in court Wednesday and were remanded to Aug. 4 with- of the 173rd Airborne Brigade began combing the hilly area. By late today one Viet Cong had been killed, another cap- tured, and there were no U.S. casualties, the spokesman re- DELIGHTFULLY DIFFERENT out plea. Mrs. Harrison's law- yer, Dan Chilcott, said his client was confined to bed. Mayor Don Reid said Wed- nesday hints of a racket first came to the attention of the city during one of his "open house sessions" last March. Each month the mayor opens his of- fice to the public and it was on one of these occasions, Mr, Reid said, that an unidentified man told the mayor he had in- formation but wanted to be paid for it. ported, and JUST FOR YOU The paratroopers who landed : at Cam Ranh Bay were greeted by the man who commanded their division when it dropped into Herasety | -- i the Second Worl ar invasion lof France, Ambassador Max- Blac sA Future jwell D. Taylor. | eaves FRIDAY For You in. DR. SAM SHEPPARD RELAXES, AWAITING POSSIBLE LIFE IMPRISONMENT Dr. Sam Sheppard, for- German-born divorcee he pard now is awaiting a U.S. mer Cleveland osteopath met by mail spent several Supreme Court ruling on his ) who was convicted in 1954 hours at the motel awaiting much - publicized case. The / of the murder of his first a fresh arrest order. It Sheppards returned to the wife, Marilyn, relaxes with never came and the couple motel Tuesday while on a his second wife, Ariane, at sped off to Chicago, where visit in Columbus to confer the same Columbus motel they were married, Shep- with local attorneys. (AP) Russians Promised Help | where the couple spent the first few hours after Shep- pard's release from prison a little over a'year ago. Dr, Sam, released by a federal judge who ruled he had not received a fair trial, and the Braemor Homes feature exacting craftsmanship, modern building tech- niques plus closely supervised quality control at every stage in order to ossure you a. lifetime of equity and trouble-free ownership. These beau- tiful homes are delightfully located in north-west Oshawa in a community where your convenience 'is our busi- ness, Drop out today and discuss your It was one of Taylor's last official acts in Viet Nam. He er- utos \leaves Saigon Friday, to be re- |placed by Henry Cabot Lodge. 'Among the arrivals was Tay- SOLICITOR APPROACHED City Solicitor Donald Ham- bling said he, too, was ap- proached in March by a man who claimed he could prove the city was losing "thousands and thousands of dollars." ~ The man demanded payment for the information before he would give any details, It was not until city council last week passed legislation authorizing it to pay rewards that the city could get the information. Police department spokesmen say they believe only traffic summonses were involved in the alleged ticket-fixing. Police believe an outside con- tact dealt with a source in the police department through an intermediary. "Mr, Hambling told reporters it must be established that the city had Jost at least $7,000 be- fore a reward of that amount could be paid. ; Labor Search Fruitful One' PARIS (Reuters) -- Cana- dian Immigration Minister J. R, Nicholson said Wednesday he is "more than pleased" with the results of his current European tour, aimed at boosting the country's immigration cam- to relieve a shortage of s labor. He told a press conference that discussions in Greece and Italy--Canada's second largest supplier of immigrants--have gone well. Other governments with) whom he discussed means of +simplifying the administrative side of immigration and proved sympathetic, but unwilling to encourage immigration in itself, he said. The minister said that in France, where he had meetings with Foreign Affairs Minister Couve de Murville, Labor Min- ister Gilbert Grandval and in- terior minister Roger Frey, he pointed out the advantages of French immigration to Quebec. Nicholson, who was to leave Wednesday for a three-day stay in London followed by a visit to Lisbon, said the government hoped to boost last year's to- tal of 120,000 immigrants by By JOHN BEST MOSCOW (CP) --A_ visiting Canadian parliamentary dele- gation won a promise from high Soviet officials Wednesday that they will see what can be done to help Russians wishing to join relatives now living in Canada. The pledge was made at & 2%-hour meeting between the touring parliamentarians and a group of executives and _legis- lators headed by Jan Peyve, chairman of the Council of Na- tionalities of the Supreme. So- viet, The meeting took place after the Canadian delegation had re- turned to Moscow from a six- day journey to Tiflis in Georgia, Sochi on the Black Sea, Kiev and Leningrad. The problem of divided fam- ilies has long been a source of friction in relations between Canada and Russia. Hundreds of former Soviet citizens now living in Canada are seeking to have their kinfolk, still living in the Soviet Union, join them. However, Soviet officials have would-be emigrants to go al- though the process has speeded up slightly in recent months. The subject was brought up at Wednesday's meeting by Lib- eral Senator David Croll of On- tario; Kenneth More, Conserva- tive MP for Regina City, and Jack Roxburgh, Liberal MP for Norfolk. Peyve and the other Soviet officials promised to look into the matter and do what they could to expedite the reunifica- tion process, conference sources said, Roxburgh actually got a promise that a particular Soviet citizen will be permitted to join his family in Roxburgh's On- tario constituency. The meeting covered a wide range of subjects from trade to paintings. Commons Speaker Alan Mac- naughton, co-chairman of the delegation, with Croll, put in a request for a Russian art ex- hibition to visit Ottawa for the opening of a new arts centre there in 1968. been allowing only a trickle of Creditiste Leader Real Caou- OTTAWA (CP) -- Opposi- tion Leader Diefenbaker de- manded Wednesday that the federal government make pub- lic the report of the pay re- search bureau on postal sal- aries, He told reporters that he made a formal request for the civil service bureau's report after Revenue Minister Benson called him a liar and was told it is confidential. This reply, he said, "makes a subterfuge' of Mr. Benson's and Prime Minister Pearson's statements that Mr. Diefen- baker was wrong in saying the pay research bureau recom- mended striking postal workers get an increase of $660 a year. The Progressive Conservative leader said his demand for pub- lication of the report "will be Diefenbaker Raps Benson, Wants Pay-Report Public the postal workers' situation weeks ago." Mr. Diefenbaker called for a system of collective bargaining for civil servants, with matters unresolved at the bargaining table to be submitted to a three-man panel headed by a Supreme Court of Canada judge for binding arbitration. The negotiations with the postal representatives had been left to 'novices, three _ junior (ministers), one of whom has an unblemished record of bum- bling." Mr. Benson, Postmaster-Gen- eral Tremblay and_ Solicitor- General Pennell compose the cabinet postal strike committee. "IT just can't understand a government which casually dou- In Joining Canadian Kin ette called for enthusiastic So- viet participation in. Expo '67, the Montreal world's fair. T. C. Party leader, called for ex- panded student exchanges, STARR IN UKRAINE Two of the delegation were to Moscow Wednesday. Michael Starr, Conservative leader in the Commens, stayed in the Ukraine to look up some rela- tives. His parents came from the Ukraine, Senator John Hnatyshyn, Saskatoon Conservative, also stayed behind in the Ukraine, He was born in what: now is part of the Ukraine, then known as Bukovina, part of the Austro- Hungarian empire. Earlier, Croll made a_ side- trip to a village near Mogilev, in Byelorussia, where he was orn. jtions have started between the Douglas, New Democrati |W not with the group that camelturing firms. Talks Begi TORONTO (CP) -- Consulta Ontario government and the Ca- nadian auto industry to discuss! ays of making safer cars. Transport Minister Irwin Has-| kett met Tuesday with directors) of -the-Motor- Vehicle Manufac- turers' Association and presi- dents of major auto manufac-| James Dykes, general mana-| ger of the. association, said) Wednesday that meetings be- tween the association and the government are "nothing par-| ticularly new," | "There is nothing we can say about the meeting right at tial \lor's son Thomas, an_intelli- jgence officer with the brigade. The landing came less. than "\94 hours after President John- pal announced U.S. forces in Viet Nam would be increased from 75,000 to 125,000 men, But la U.S. spokesman said transfer of the. 101st Brigade was part of a six-battalion increase in U.S. forces that had been plan- ned some weeks ago. The paratroopers came from MANY DRINK FLUORIDES About 4,151,000 Canadians in 243 communities drink artifi- cially fluoridated water and future in Braemor Gardens, 226,000 people drink water with natural fluorides. moment," he said. "A state-) ment will be made later as the' model-year draws closer." An auto industry spokesman said the manufacturers are) adopting a voluntary program of keeping the government in-| formed about safety develop-| ments. | MONEY TO INVEST? Earn the highest rate -- per ennum for 5. years (and up to 10 years) CALL... DIXON'S FOR OIL FURNACES FUEL OIL AND HEATING SERVICE SERVING THE PUBLIC OVER 50 YEARS 313 ALBERT ST. OSHAWA 723-4663 sa See cece --S-4 --d-2 --5-2 --5-- braemor gardens Stevenson Rd, at Annapolis bles the salary of the head of |™ CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST GUARANTEED INVESTMENT CERTIFICATES are Guerenteed -- os to Principal and Interest Flexible --- may be used os Collateral for loans Redeemable -- upon death Authorized -- os Trustee Act Investments R 142100 PS --~ 55550 53 <>) i vos about 30 per cent. ; Much of his trip has been taken up with seeing Canada's European immigration officers and watching them at work. TWO-CENT BET WINS $211,646 LONDON (AP)--Life sud- denly became a bed of roses Wednesday for Albert Rice, a $44-a-week clerk who is crazy about roses but hasn't got a garden. He won $211,646 on a two- cent bet in a soccer pool. Rice, 51, has dreamed for years of growing roses, But . he and his wife live in a second-floor apartment in Catford, a crowded suburb near London Docks, where he works. "Now it will be lace in the -country, and shall _ as many roses as I ike," he said. There's no soccer in Brit- ain at the moment, but bet- ters still fill out the pools coupons and forecast the games in Australia. CBC, passes out tax benefits with maximum help to those in the same tax brackets as cab- inet ministers, lavishly raises salaries of senior civil servants, increases aid to fereign coun- tries by tens of millions and yet treats with almost disdain the reasonable and just requests of those in the lower brackets." repeated," apparently when Parliament reassembles, "The government can end this strike by showing a reason- able attitude to the reasonable requests r ble men. "Instead of that, Canada is suffering from an_ ineffective and stumbling government which should have faced up to ¢ ' x S§S95:8 98202 ¢ Head Office: 19 Simcoe Se. N. Oshawa FOUNTAINHEAD Tel. 723-5221 SAVING HOURS: Mon.-Thurs. 906 Fridey 9te? 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CAmAsA WINDSOR WV CANADIAN ihaky Pro mercer ore poste de USTED AS "ALBERTA WINDSOR" Coast Journal _ Now Bankrupt VANCOUVER (CP). -- Mort-| gage foreclosure action has} been launched in British' Colum- bia Supreme Court here saameat! the Vancouver Times Publish- | ing Co. which started The Times last September as the city's third daily newspaper. R. Borden dea Wolfe Invest-jf. ments Ltd. and J. F. de Wolfe, in a writ filed with the court, are seeking enforcement of foreclosure of a $380,000 mort- gage made June 22, 1964. The writ said the publishing firm defaulted on payment of mortgage principal and interest) which fell due June 1. | J ALSERTA OISTHCC ERS, cemires. We carry an excellent fine of . . . SLEEPING BAGS PROM ALOERTA COME CARAOaE PROUGEST Gaiters Guaronteed Waterproof under normal care Canada Outdoor Supply Co. 1437 King Street East Phone 728-1555 Ya Mile East of Townline ( is made exclusively from Western rye grains~the world's finest. A product of Alberta Distillers Limited.

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