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Oshawa Times (1958-), 18 Aug 1965, p. 2

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Wednesday, Auguet 18, 1963 2, THE OSHAWA TIMES, PLANE CRASH TRAGEDY Fle usually makes less than Policeman's 60-hour . week compared with two-thirds the salary this 'elty| ald nn interview" eve wo- ie 0 8a) an v mi counterpart' and works up to aithat the Ontario government ts trying to improve the situation i Mile Mila Ta Fle es Hace bt, aden a some knowledge of. law, fs a+ Yast improvement over the ai - dermanic police committee," ; tye Constable Bevan said. Don't Neglect Slipping FALSE TEETH the other's 40 hours. In some Quebec municipalities, he dou- bles as the local fireman. Worst of all, officials say, a by.@ recent revision of the Po- lice Act, setting out require- ments for police commissions in all communities of 15,000 or more, No Ceremonies, No Celebration Lot Is Not H 0 small-town policeman is still) ie commission must com-| _ 00 felse teeth drop, allp oF CHICAGO (AP)--O |that a bomb had loded appy ue eon Pageant Manon: prise 8 county court jae, he Bon' be annarea 7 ne was althat a bomb had exploded) ,, ' | 4 ' 1 maid-of-honor at a wedding. An-|aboard the jet just minutes EDMONTON (CP) -- The lot against certain persons, If he ee te eee tee on Your pistes, Keeps false, other was looking forward to|away from its scheduled land-|of the small-town policeman is) cries he can lees hin. job one other person, usually a ma- more Armiy set. Gives confident i his birthday celebration Satur-|ing at O'Hare International Air-/@n unhappy one, say Ontario Sd é " (gistrate or crown counsel. Oh oe ae day. They are mourned today,|port on a-non-stop flight from|and Quebec Police Association, Constable Ronald Bevan,| "This kind of commission,| ing. Get 7 at along with the other 28 victims|New York, officials, |president of the Ontario Feder-|which includes people with| °°! 1 ; of a jetliner crash in Lake Michigan Monday, Civil Aeronautics Board in- vestigators today sifted through bits and pieces of the United Air Lines three-engine Boeing 727---a type of plane that had never before. crashed, U.S. Coast Guard, navy and private boats continued to Several witnesses said they saw a flash of light and heard , 723-3633 an explosion in the lake about 4 < search for bodies. Six have been recovered. Four of them have been identified, The FBI, the C.A.B; and company officials have declined to speculate on the possibility uled arrival at 10:27 p.m, when! it crashed. The air was calm) and visibility good, Ambassador ADVENTURER-NEWSMAN MANRY KISSES ENGLAND Manry Coveted U.K. Visit PARIS (Reuters) ~ Andre Francois - Poncet, formerly France's ambassador to West Germany, today urged France to step back into line with its Allies and Jamented the recent United States. In an article on the front |page of the influential Par is Got There The Hard Way _ 3: iiipsittt sar; it: k belle's white! Poncet said: oot ag Ba dice. penmedl "We are bound to the United and she flew the Stars and|States, that is to say to the Stripes proudly. strongest power in the world, After the welcome, Manry|by the common possession of went to his hotel and climbed|Previous moral and sentimen- into the tub--"the best place|tal capital symbolized by the I've ever seen," he said, Later|names of Lafayette, Pershing rnalist was getting his land/think anything I did was all that|he had dinner for the first time|@"d_ Eisenhower, ra back a few hours after|important."' in 2% months with his family, vba i hirovpoe Pasay completing his 3,200-mile solo|BETTER THAN PRESIDENT |who had flown here to wel- oy he we ge ai ehy voyege in the smallest sailboat) Said Vail; "Right now you're|come him, _ ship? as melted away... - known to have. made the east-|probably better known in Ohio} Harbor officials ward Atlantic crossing non-|than President Johnson"'. picked up the Tinkerbelle and|/c@", . atop. Manry arrived Tuesday night/tucked her away in a RAF ma-| detest a ; bidil eail After a hero's welcome from|in the setting sun, greeted by|rine base so souveni. hunters| In ta wi reh t ey ae e's! the townspeople of Falmouth|an armada of small boats and/would not pick her apart, | Preal ent ie ar rr reign ont and his family, Manry was re-|an uproar of cheers, church) A reolution has been intro- foreign Paley, ayaiten" -- laxing in his hotel room when|bells and ship sirens. He had/duced in the U.S, Congress -to said the Franco - Ger eh he got a telephone call from his|left Falmouth, Mass., June 1.|place the tiny boat in the Smith-| friendship treaty was . ee boss, Thomas Vail, publisher! He first embraced his wife,/sonian Institution alongside|and noble move but had mu and editor of the Cleveland,|Virginia, 46, his son, Douglas,|Charles A. Lindbergh's Spirit of carried out '0 rat pone Ohio, Plain Dealer. l11, and his 14-year-old daugh-|St. Louis. that at the present time ~ Manry hung on {o the ban-|ter, Robin. Then he knelt and! Manry told reporters of spine-/man public feeling is turne nister as he came down to the/kissed the soil of England, ichilling adventures during his| away from us. : : iled phone. : |-Manry was sun-tanned andjlong solitary voyage and weird| Francois-Poncet also assaile |hallucinations from medicine he|France's moves against the ' took to fight off fatigue. jCommon Market -- "the first SORRY LADS, BUT '33 PENNY sien sossne "I've always wanted to be in England," he told Vail, "and I came here the hard way, but I wish it would stop moving around," Vail congratulaled Manry and the sailor replied: "Well, thank you very much. I do not By THOMAS A. REEDY | FALMOUTH (AP) -- "I do wish England would stop mov- ing around so much," said Rob- ert Manry Tuesday night after 78 days crossing the Atlantic in his 13%-foot Tinkerbelle, The 47 - year - old American that meanwhile The people, the average Amer- {phase of the organization of a Line Back Up With Allies' chill in relations with the|tive means of dissuasion and) A. C.A.B. spokesman said: *, ., It is much too early in, ithe investigation to try to as-| Boneless Shoulder Asks France POT ROAST the time the plane plunged into bit as being against America.) . . » What positive benefit do we get from. our indulgence toward a state for which we split our- selves off from our partners?"! "In our view, the most effec- the surest guarantee of lasting! peace in every way lies in un- derstanding between the West-| }ern democracies, in the Atlantic |Alliance, deepend and reinvig-| lorated, as expressed in NATO,}| "That France could be re-| | garded, on the contrary, as an} linstrument of dislocation of the} Some 3,000 pounds of wreck-| age has been recovered so far,| Fill Your Freezer NOW |! Hind In the water north of Chicago. LEG 0' LAMB R LOIN LAMB CHOPS 89: |Free World, is what distresses| us at present and worries us) |for the future." Rabid Bat The plane was five to six) Quarters minutes away from its sched-/ SHOULDER LAMB ican, who used to like us, today| Beef Bites Boy SMITHS FALLS, Ont, (CP)-- David Durant, seven-year-old) son of Mr, and Mrs, Gerald Durant of Brantford, is being treated with anti-rabies shots here after being bitten by a rabid bat Sunday. The boy was bitten while playing in a sandbox at the home of his grandfather, A. J. Whitehead. His grandfather killed the bat and sent it to a provincial laboratory, which re- CUT AND WRAPPED FREE a) POLISH - SAUSAGE 09: STEW OUTS 69: Ib 3 Ibs. 1,00 VEAL ROASTS LEG RUMP or SIRLOIN SEASONED BEEF SEASONED JITNEY BURGERS SKINLESS | WIENERS 5 Ib. Box oR ; {Europe capable, through its|norted Tuesday \that it was " Big Sng thought my! ynity and cohesion, of acquir- a ebid. seni PATTIES UST ISN'T IN CIRCULATION iors "nt tone soe xe ar ue was po an with. sal 2d the respect of others.' tions Tuesday and was to get 5 |b. Box LONDON (CP)--The Royal ment potential." More than |monster -- and when Douglas QUESTIONS WORTH 10 more from Dr, T, 0. Ash- : Mint has sad news today for 144,000,000 pennies were |went into. the cabin, this mon- France's foreign policy, he : British penny-watchers, North American numismatists and needle - weary wives in the British Isles. - The mint's 95th annual re- port deflates a. belief widely held for thfeé decades that a 1933 penny could turn up in somebody's loose change and fetch the finder about $36,000 from the nearest coin dealer. Only six pennies were minted in 1933, the report says. Two are in the mint's museum, one in the British Museum and the other three are embedded in cornerstones of London University and churches in Leeds and Middle- ton, Yorkshire. Coin collectors in North America are being duped, the report suggests, by a craze for "fatuous hoarding of pen- nies in bulk" in speculation that they might become valu- able some day. One Yorkshire dealer has shipped 200,000 pennies to U.S. dealers during the last three years at $30 per thousand, more than twice their face value CITES EXAMPLE The mint report cites an ex- ample of one U.S. coin dealer advertising 1964 English pen- - nies as having '"'good invest- minted in 1964, The bad news for British wives comes with the esti- mate that even more of the cumbersome, heavy pennies will be minted this year to wreak havoc with trouser pockets, requiring more mending and patching. John Hastings James, comp- troller and deputy master of the mint, admits that these "unhandy pieces"--about the size of a Canadian 50-cent- coin--have driven his tailor to provide especially rein- forced pockets in his trousers, However, John Hastings holds out no hope of tackling the British pocket problem at its source by reducing the size and weight of the coinage. The English penny has been ster would this monster. "Eventually I plucked up the was no one there and broke the: hallucination." Manry feared he might fall asleep at night and be run down by Atlantic shipping. "My routine was to sail 12 or 13 hours overnight, then I would take off the sail, lash the helm and lie to the sea anchor'--a canvas cone that trails astern and holds the bow into the wind, riding the waves with the least danger. Six times he was washed overboard. A lifeline saved him five times and the other time he caught the rigging as the that part of the currency, in roughly its present size, for 1,200 -years, Unless or until | Britain adopts decimal coin- | age, as proposed by the gov- ernment, the penny menace is likely to remain. A final note for frustrated collectors having trouble get- ting pennies for the years | 1928, 1924, 1925, 1941, 1942, | 1943, 1952 and 1954 to 1960 in- | clusive No pennies were minted in | those years. | | Canadian External Aid Combats Mosquito-Problem In Caribbean, By KEN CLARK OTTAWA (CP)--The long arm of Canadian external aid reaching out to the mosquito problem on a three-island Brit ish colony in the Caribbean A Canadian scientist is to be sent to the Cayman Islands soon to conduct a two -year study along with a British en-jern end of Grand Cayman--the| tymologist already on the scene. The British administrator of the island group 180 miles south of Cuba asked the Canadian government for help last year. Under the external aid pro- some areas without the help of| week to an axe. The difficult access is|makes ground spraying a prob- $12,000,000 federal lem, The long : The May-October rainy season is also the mosquito season. Hotels in the beach-lined west- island principal tourist boat sailed past him, _Manry bought the Tinkerbelle SIX years ago and rebuilt her. He sailed her on Lake Erie jand learned to novigate through! short, sharp waves with break- ing tops, "Lake Erie was a good school," he said. $12 Million To Farmers Drought-Hit TORONTO (CP) -- ions Applica- are being mailed this 20,000 Ontario farmers may benefit from the + provincial so they is 21 miles|program of drought relief, the provincial agriculture ment has announced The farmers will receive jcoupons allowing them to buy janimal feed at reduced prices this fall and winter. The cou- depart- area--combat/ pons will allow a $30 reduction the mosquitoes with machines|@ ton on feed grain, $24 on ear that produce an insecticide fog. Anxious to expand the tourist corn and $15 on hay The number of coupons a |farmer gets will depend on how| Hamilton industry, the islands' adminis-|many animals he keeps eas St, Catharines.... throw him over-| board. I got so I was scared to! go into the cabin for fear of| courage to jump in there. There) ,. went on, was said to have en-| CAR PRICE ROCKETS jhanced its prestige--"but what} NEW DELHI (AP)--The In- is the worth of the new sym'|dian government's state trad- pathies we flatter ourselves|ing corporation auctioned a 1963 2.39 D< cach 2.39 with having been able to win?" |air - conditioned Chevrolet con-| | Communist China, he said,|vertible for 111,000 rupees ($23,- does not like us for ourselyes/310) SALMON STEAKS 79: ANY ONE ITEM "WEATHER FORECAST "Rain And Thunderstorms FRESH MINCED BEEF PEAMEAL | Today: Cooler Tomorrow * | BACON TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts;Peterborough .... | 57 issued at 5:30 a.m, EDT: -- [Kingston ....0000. 60 "5 Synopsis: Cooler weather s Trenton. ceeccvseee 62 75 er OUR EL TNE FAGR lexpected to reach the lower]. bee So llakes by this evening, setting|Killaloe ...++.++4. 52 75 off scattered thunderstorms.|Muskoka .......+. 52 75 {Mainly sunny weather is eX-/North Bay........ 50 72 jpected in-all regions-on Thurs) sudbury 50 72 |day. \Earlton ... : 70 | Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie,/Sauit Ste. Marie.. 50 70 [Niagare. Lake, Ontario, south-/Kapuskasing ..... 45 70 ern Georgian Bay, Haliburton,/White River. 40 70 Killaloe, Windsor, London, Tor-|Moosonee 40 68 onto, Hamilton; Variable 'Scat-|Timmins ......... 45 70 tered' showers and thunder: - ae | 4 Ibs. PORK HOCKS 3 Ibs. VEAL PATTIES Ci. 4 lbs. SAUSAGE Country Style 12 KING ST. E. 723-3633 STORE HOURS: en Friday till 9 P.M. turday till 6 P.M. Rw storms this afternoon and even- clearing and turning cooler ght and Thursday. Winds becoming northerly 15 this eve- ning. jing, oni Northern Georgian Bay, Ti- magami, Algoma, Sault Ste. Marie, North Bay, Sudbury: \Clearing partly this afternoon and turning cooler. Clear with a few cloudy periods and cooler tonight and Thursday, Winds jnortherly 10 to 15, | White River, Cochrane: Be- 'coming clear with a few cloudy periods this afternoon, tonighi and Thursday. Winds light. Forecast Temperatures |Low tonight, high Thursday: GOLD OVERLAY DAMASK PRINT }Windsor .......... 62 78 iSt. Thomas,...... 60 78 ' fain << 60 78 In decorator eplors of ninefrost gold, eggshell gold or Kitchener a 8 white geld. Ready-to-hang with pinch pleats and |Mount Forest..... 57 ' 75 step-on Wingham .. 57 75 60 72 60 OS eg. a e oe 63 75 ones AUGUST SALE OF LINED DRAPES FINE QUALITY ACETATE WITH WOVEN SELF PATTERN Ready ih ntaien with pa ad pace one oan ; ot, en gia Reg. Sale ram, which assists under-| Sivchane countries. a three-|!em beaten at the roots. man Canadian scientific team) Mr. Peterson said the Grand| made a two-week preliminary | Cayman interior terrain is made} on-the-spot survey last Febru-| more difficult by tides that raise pag. Tos ypu rhe Rage gaya for and lower the water level in the The aim is to find a way of S¥amps. It resembles a huge| eliminating or controlling the) sponge, which makes control by mosquito population, which tour-| drainage difficult i i ary . . " | brought results Monday. alent in noced. by biting) ON¢ Possible approach is to| Glengarry, Grenville, Hastings,| "The University of 'Toronto midges, a speck-sized insect collect adult male mosquitoes, vanark, Leeds, Lennox and announced that a screen D. G. Peterson, crop protec-/Sterilize them and return them tion research co-ordinator for|to the breeding grounds to mate.| Stormont as well as the dis- the federal agriculture depart-| sterilization ment, told an interviewer the) - main problem lies on Grand Cayman, the biggest of the is- lands. LONDON (AP) -- Ghana has BREED IN SWAMP ordered 500,000 Bibles from the Mr, Peterson, who was on the/British and Foreign Bible Soci- preliminary survey, said thejety--half in English and the mosquitoes and midges breed/rest in four local languages.| freely in the Grand Cayman in-|The population of Ghana. is ORDER MANY BIBLES terior, which is mostly man-about 7,000,000. Dr. Norman grove swamp. Cockburn, secretary of the} The intermeshed branches BFBS. called the order "'fan- and roots of the mangrove trees|tastic'. and said it brought on gmake it impossible te move ini"a healthy headache',' trator wants.the mosquito prob- oa winter and how severe the Toronto prevents offspring. | jreduced by $3,000,000. | this month many areas still | winter deed for their animals, | rought has been where he lives. : f Farmers are being asked to| return the signed applications| to their county representatives) by Sept. 1 and must include! sworn affidavits the informa- tion js correct. The program applies in the counties of Carleton, Dundas,| PROF 'N' PAPER PIPE OUT PIPE TORONTO (CP)--The sly digs of an architecture pro- 'fessor. and the constant jibes Of a student daily Addington, Prescott, Prince Edward, Renfrew, Russell and| eae ae commonenye 0. vor | roof of the new zoology tricts of Muskoka, Parry Sound, | Romans to Bite Several Bre: Nipissing and Sudbury. "ero Pirie Arthur had The drought program an- told a university convoca- nounced July 21 was expected tion he did not like the roof to cost $15,000,000 to be. shared equally by the province and Ot- tawa. But the figure has been pipes of the U, of T. zoo- logy building. The student newspaper, The Varsity, compared the building to England's Dart- moor prison but added that "the Dartmoor architects at least had the good taste to tuck the roof pipes out of | sight."' | The agriculture department said that despite heavy rains nee@ more. The rain came too late to help the first hav crap and many farmers are short of 43" wide x90" 22.98 pr. 15.88 pr. 96" wide x 90" 44.98 pr. 3.1.88 pr. 144" wide x 90" 69.98 pr. 47.88 pr. 72 wide x63" 24.98 pr. 11.88 pr. 96" wide x 63° 32.98 pr. 24.88 pr. Sh 43 widexoo" 21.50 pr. 14.88 pr. 96" wide x90" 39.98 pr. 29.98 pr. I 144" wide x 90" 59.98 pr. 44.88 pr. 72" wide x62" 26.98 pr. 18.88 pr. 96" wide x 63" 29.98 pr. 21.68 pr. Oshewa Centre opping arcing

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