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Oshawa Times (1958-), 5 Oct 1965, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMG, Tuesday, October 5; 1965 Lunar Soft-Land - Thursday Night MOSCOW (CP) -- An un- manned Soviet satellite headed today for the moon and possi- bly history's first soft lunar landing Thursday night. 'Lana 7 was launched Monday from a multi-stage rocket. Tass news agency said Luna's course was "close to the prescribed one" and that all systems aboard the spacecraft were functioning normally. The Russians made no an- nouncement on the specific pur- pose of the flight, their third moon shot this year. But it was believed to be another attempt to make a soft landing on the moon, to photograph its surface from close up, and to act as a dry run for a manned lunar landing. Luna 5 crashed into the moon May 12. Luna 6 missed the moon June 11. Tass said Luna 7 weighed 14 tons. It was first lifted into a parking orbit by an even big- ger rocket, then sent on its way moonwards. It was crammed with scien-; tific instruments which were| being turned on en route--both) automatically and by radio} commands from earth. | Tools to sample the moon's surface, examine it ,and tell Moscow what it's like also were presumed to be part of Luna 7's payload. Speculation about the lunar surface ranges from the belief that it is made up of jagged, barren rocks, to one that it is covered with powdery dust mdny yards deep, When Luna 5 hit the moon in May, an official Russian an- nouncement said the probe pro- duced information 'necessary for the further elaboration of a system for soft landing." j The U.S. did not manage to make even a "hard" moon shot until Ranger 9 struck the moon in March. Russia's first hit was with Luna 2 in 1959. Dead Sea Scrolls Viewed By 14,500 OTTAWA (CP)--Some 14,500 people have visited the Na- tional Museum to see the Dead Sea Scrolls in the first six days of their three-week exhibition here. Museum officials counted 5,580 visitors during the week- end, with some waiting in line two hours. HERE and THERE Speaker at the Oshawa Epilepsy Club meeting Oct. 7 will be Ald. Christine Thom- as. All are welcome at Christ Anglican Church, starting at 7.30 p.m. Kenneth Bell, Steve Rus- sell, two Dupont of Canada Ltd., employees each shot three pheasants near Hamp- ton Saturday afternoon. Three birds per hunter is the limit. Saturday was the opening of pheasant season. About 80 students from four. Oshawa secondary schools paid a visit to Queen's Uni- versity at Kingston on Satur- day. The trip, sponsored the Oshawa Branch of the Queen's Alumnae Association, includ- ed a tour of the campus and the intercollegiate football game in the afternoon. Banners of the Rotary Club in Walla Walla, Washington and Summerside, Prince Edward Island, were present- ed to the Rotary Club of Osh- awa at its MMonday meeting. E. Sewell, of Toron- to, president of the Coca-Cola Company, told the story of his company at the meeting of the Rotary Club of Oshawa on Monday. Louis Hughes, Grand Knight of Oshawa Council No. 2671 of the Knights of Colum- bus, announced today a Col- umbus Day address by Su- OW "Mm wor wey emeld Devitt, will be broadcast Oct. 12 at 8.45 p.m. on CKLB. Mr. McDevitt, head of the 1,000,- 000 - member fraternal bene- fit' society of Catholic men, will be heard over a wide- spread chain of radio sta- tions in all countries where the Knights of Columbus have Councils -- Canada, United States, Mexico, Puerto Rico and the Philippines. Theme of Dr. McDevitt's address will be "Christopher Columbus -- man of the ages". Miss Rachel Cooper, princi- pal of the Simcoe Hall Crip- pled Children's School, will be puest speaker at a meeting af the Soroptimist Club of Gshawa and District ta he held at the Genosha Hotel on October 14. The club will also host Misg Grace Hutch- ings, Member at Large for the Eastern Canada Region of the Soroptimist Clubs. The the The current issue of Ontario Gazette carries information that letters pa- tent of incorporation have been granted to' three Osh- awa district organizations. They are: The Ontario Coun- ty Rehabilitation Association, Oshawa; Petmar Investments Limited, Oshawa and Markon Farms Limited, Piokering Township. Head table guests at the regular monthly meeting last night of the Oshawa Cham- ber of Commerce at which Health Minister Dymond was guest speaker, included Rob- ert Stroud, Tobie Couture, : rt; Walker, MPP, Sam ay Mayor Lyman Gif- ford, Russell Humphreys, George Rodgers, Dr. ©. C. Stewart, Gordon Garrison, Michael Starr and Jack Mann. Neon Products of Canada Lid., asked council to amend the zoning bylaw to permit 'a' ground sign at Windsor Plaza on Windsor rd. 6, "Ground signs are not per- mitted in C3 zones but are permitted in C1 zones. The request was referred to planning board. Oshawa's radio station, CKLB, has won this year's Broadcast News (radio arm of Canadian Press Wire serv- ice) award for 'enterprise and thoughtfulness in radio reporting in Central Can- ada." The citation and plaque were accepted yesterday in St. Adele, Quebec, by Ross Gibson, "LB" news director, at the 15th annual convention of the Central Canada Broad- casters Association. The pro- gram which won the award for the station -was a two-hour panel discussion and question period on the controversial Creek Valley expressway pro- ject here. It was aired in early September and organ- ized and moderated by Mr. Gibson, The citation paid tribute to the program's or- ganization and "significant community organization." The Peterborough Rugger Club defeated Ajax Saturday in Ajax by 15 to 3 in an unimpressive game against weakened opponents. * The met proceeds of the auction and fall fair held re- cently in. aid of the Kedron United Church Building Fund were $1,600 and not $2,000 as reported in Monday's issue. The total realized from the auction was $1,022.80 and not $1,431 as previously reported. Hugh Allin, RR 2, New castle, seored top points in the boys' section of the Northumberland and Durham Plowing Match last weekend. Neil Allin, RR 1, Orono, placed second. Russia Land! Rebels Ali But Devastated, | ~Dr. Dymond Dr, M. B. Dymond, health minister of Ontario, said last) night hospitals in Russia "'fall) far short of our standards". | Addressing a meeting of the) 'Oshawa Chamber of Commerce,' he said Russian hospitals would be unacceptable here. 4 . "But such comparison is wrong," he said. 'While hospi- tal buildings and equipment do not measure up to our stand- ards, they may be quite satis- factory for the Russians. H "I could not escape feeling that those Russian doctors who had visited here, envied our fine hospitals and equipment and be- lieved they must strive to up- grade their. own." Dr. Dymond, who. visited the U.S.S.R. recently, said there are examples of hospital construc- tion and equipment equal to Canada right on the Russian -borders in Finland and West) Germany. He said he had préconceived a notion of Russia as a great By JOHN CANTWELL SINGAPORE (AP) -- Reports from Jakarta today seid organ- ized rebel resistance in Central ava appears tc have col- lapsed. The reports, sent through dip- lomatic channels, said's mall pockets of. rebel forces were still scattered throughout the central part of Indonesia's main island but these were be- lieved to be ill - armed and poorly led. The diplomatic reports said an American businessman, who was not identified, drove the length of Java in the last two days and found little fighting. The Ameirican encountered rebel forces but found them friendly. He reported that many people he had spoken to in Cen" tral Java were supporters of Lt.-Col. Untung, the leader of the attempt Jast week to over- throw President Sukarno. Radio Malaysia reported to- day that the army forces in contro! of Jakarta had begun a Of Contrasts Indonesia Regime Secure crackdown on Communists the capital, arresting 200/ per- sons, Without giving the Source of its report, it adde people at a rally in demanded that the Communist party be banned. Jakarta radio announced that Sukarno had called a meeting of his political and military high command Wednesday' at|4a his summer palace in Bogor, 40 miles south of the Indonesian capital, The meeting was ex- pected to shed some light on the murky political situation in Indonesia. : Earlier, the Malaysian gov- ernment radio reported that fighting between government forces and pro-Communist reb- els had broken out in sections of Central Java. The broadcast did not give the source of the information. The army high command was reported to have ordered the loyal Silinwangi Division into central Java to clear out the rebels, .> bustling nation of physically a "big" people, "perhaps because of their accomplishments in space research and-travel I ha WEATHER FORECAST expected everything to be high- ly mechanized and automated". "1 was disillusioned -- saw little of automation -- and found myself -wondering about the paradox of a nation whose sci- entists have put an object on the moon but whose business pusiness people still use the abacus -- where women sweep the streets with the most primi- tive type of broom." president of the Chamber France To Lose and Jack Mann, right, secre- | common in the south under tary-manager. 1968 Games? | MADRID (AP)--Avery Brun-|mostly sunny skies, |dage, president of the Interna-| Lake St. Chalr, eo nh \tional Olympic Committee,| Windsor: cong with s ve |warned Monday that the 1968)cloudiness in the afternoon a |Winter Olympics may be ta- pig - a little warmer, | Grenoble,| Winds ight. Franca, "it -- East German| Lake Huron, Southern Geor- |team is not allowed entry intojian Bay, Western Lake Ontario, TORONTO (CP) Official forecasts issued by the weather office at 5:30 a.m. | Synopsis: A marked modera- ltion in temperatures will be no- lticed in northern regions with |Wednesday afternoon readings up in the fifties. Mid fifth de- gree temperatures will also be trip to Russia with Russell Humphreys, president of the Oshawa Chamber of Com- merce, Looking on are Gor- don Garrison, left, a vice- ° Ontario Health Minister Dr. Matthew B. Dymond, right, a nearby Port Perry physician, is shown discuss- ing an account of his recent --Oshawa Times Photo POPES VISIT Defendant'25% In Wrong' son at the Waldorf Astoria Ho- For Accident. Court Rule the country. ) iN ia gE ar My ee tel and his visit to the UN, WHITBY (Staff) -- The de-|on the part of Galea, the plaint-| 4+ the end of a meeting of re-|little warmer. Winds light. Other events in the Pope's,fendant in a damage action,|iff. Judge Hall ruled that dam-| Sresentatives of the Interna-| Northern Georgian Bay, day were a two-hour motorcade| arising out of a rear-end colli-|age to the Galea vehicle WaS| tional Olympic Committee and|Eastern Lake Ontario, Halibur- into the city after his arrival;|sion, was found 75 per cent to|$700. Damage to the Sheriff jational Olympic associations, |ton, Killaloe, North Bay, a noon-hour visit to St. Pat-| blame in a county court action) car was $749.82. Judge Hall also) rick's, where 7,000 squeezed injbefore Judge A. C. Hall here! allowed $100 for inconvenience| wednesday with the East and|warmer. to receive his blessing; a re-| Monday. to the plaintiff and $300 for in-| woct German issue the thorny) Timagami, Cochrane: ception for UN delegates and! The collision occurred during| juries sustained by him to be! problem. with cloudy periods staff, and private -meetings!-- heavy rain on Oct. 2, 1964|shared on the 75-25 basis Of, Germany has sent united) warmer. Winds light. with Secretary General U|when a car, driven by Jo h.n| negligence. -\teams to the last three Olym-| Algoma, White River, Thant and assembly President] Sheriff, Taunton rd. e., Oshawa,| Judge' Hall found that the|pics, but East Germany wantsjern James Bay: Amintore Fanfani after his UN| struck a stalled car operated|Galea car had not pulled com-|to enter its' own team in thejcloudiness and warmer. speech; iby Spiro Galea. Both vehicles| pletely off the road and that\1968 Olympics at Grenoble in|southerly 15 to 20. A meeting with American|were headed in the same di-|Sheriff should. have expected|the winter and at Mexico. City Forecast Temperatures leaders of other religious faiths) rection. cars along the side of the road/in the summer. \Low tonight, high Wednesday: at Holy Family Roman Catho-| Negligence on the part of|in the heavy rain. He said Sher-| In general, East German/Windsor .-.. 35 58 lie church. near the UN build-| sheriff, the defendant was found|iff had been travelling at too|teams are refused travel visas|St. Thomas. ing; and a late-evening visit to|as 75 per cent and 25 per cent| great a speed under the condi-jby the NATO office in Berlin.|London ... the Vatican pavilion at the New! tions or had not kept a proper|That means they cannot vec -- F om York world's fair while he was) ; :,g\lookout. Judge Hall placed! pete in sports events in NATO|Moun 'orest. en route to the airport trom (Babe snether, ge Berens some of the blame on Galea, vomuteian. and France is ajWingham ..++++. Yankee Stadium. Ww ees ad to| Saying he should have been alert| NATO country, Hamilton ,.. ; titude at the opportunity . te cesuy The interdenominational 4 pp | enought to have pulled his car > 4S-'nlace his petition for peace be- slacks soup, was squeezed between a} meeting with President John-) Winds light, pect of the Pope's mission was|fore the world, as represented! off the road as far as possible, pointed up in the gathering atipy the United Nations. Judge Hall said Ritson rd., at Holy Family Church, adjoining} Nes dina bilek the point the accident occurr- the UN grounds. 1 ee one's vile: was well lighted and any- There, the Pope told abot ene iculariy oe ae Ven|one could have parked along) 300 Protestant, Orthodox, Cath-/1 0. Stadium before the ponti-| ne side of the road. : | olic and Jewish clergymen, as-|fical mas. They sold booklets, \j™ . | sociated with religious centres! ttong with purple ribbons de- i tions: | | picting Pope Paul, key chains) "The work of peace is not re-| of gold with a picture of-the stricted to one religious belief."|nants. HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S dealing with the United Na- Stuart Ayre placed first on the 4-H Sheep Club Show held | as part of the Achievement | Day at Orono Fair. James | Byers was second: with Lee | Skinner, Ted Skinner and | Graham Burgess placing in that order. Others in order of Standing were: John Allin, | John Larmer and Sharon Larmer. Oshawa Fire Department dealt with two minor fire calls yesterday. One was to Bassett's Jewellery store at the corner of King and Sim- coe where a radio had over- heated and caught fire. The damage. The second call was to 147 Athabasca, where a washing machine began to smoke. The trou- ble was traced to a rubbing fan belt. There was no dam- age. City ambulance dealt with nine regular house 'calls. blaze was doused with no (hice Philip Klutznick of] PT le REV. DAVID POHL Mayor Lyman Gifford and Ald. John Brady were. ab- sent from last night's- city council meeting. The mayor was representing the city at a Chamber of Commerce dinner meeting and Ald. Brady is still resting at home following a recent ill- ness City council fast night ap- proved a board of education financning request for a$60,- 419 general punpose room addition to the Adelaide Mc- Laughlin public schoo! Total cost of the project will be $65,044 and the financing is $23,044 out of 1965 current funds and the balance of $42,000 to be financed through the municipal works assistance program. - DR. JOHN M. PHILLIPS Announces The Associction In Dental Practice DR. DAVID C. SUGDEN P. ENG., D.D.S, 124 Simcoe-St. S. OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS Pope on the weight, and pen-| And he pledged "our collab-| During the offertory 12 child- eration" in the mutual efforts|ren from the United Nations to promote reconciliation|school--two from each of the across the contentious bordersjearth's six continents -- were) of ideologies, nations andiled to the Pope in solemn pro-| races. jcession, bearing the materials' nae a jof holy communion and also a} PLEDGE ACCORD |dove and an olive branch: The} Speaking for Protestant and|same children were the only Orthodox communions of the|persons to receive communion National Council' of Churehes, | during the mass Andrew FE. Cordier, dean of Co-\em oe -- ~ What Do You Really Believe? u schnol. of HEAR =e in «University's national relations, pledged) "our renewed and deepening) dedication" to "work together with one another." Similar as-| |surance came from the Jewish| Chicago,-a former UN official. \Ig? In this 'hour of trial for hu-| manity," he told the Pope,| "your meeting with representa-| |tives of the faith communities| jgives new promise for the fu- ture." j McLAUGHLIN LIBRARY | At the Vatican pavilion, at! \the world's fair, he stepped out/| ACRITERIO Subject: jon an upstairs baleony: and! jasked Wlessings on the as- sembled spectators below, "WHAT DO UNITARIANS BELIEVE" A.B.B.D, Tues,, Oct. 5, 8 p.m, | d at "Goodbye," he concluded, A! jhushed crowd murmured in jSspontaneous response, **good- bye." | _At the airport, the Pope! wren | nae NEW DEMOCRATIC PARTY ONTARIO RIDING Meet T.C. (Tommy) DOUGLAS, M.P. AT THE O'NEILL COLLEGIATE Wednesday, October 6th 8:00 P.M. REV. POHL PURE VIRGIN WOOL Miniature Hopsocks in Pure Virgin Wool... New variations on classic masculing themes by Keithmoor. Fresh emphasis on natural, lean lines adds fashion vitality to traditional, easy comfort . . . and the self-assured good taste that is a Keithmoor hallmark. Drop in and see what we mean. e "DOORWAY TO. A MAN'S WORLD' 2314 Simcoe St. $. Ph: 728-7974 | Sud- The Olympic Congress opens| bury: Mostly sunny and a little Sunny and) West-) Increasing Winds ; PH# HH HHA HHH Warming Trend Moves In Mostly Sunny Wednesday St. Catharines.... 30 TOFONtO ..ssreeeee Peterborough «... Kingston, . Trenton .. Killaloe Muskoka Ea@rltOn .osseseees Sault Ste. Marie,. Kapuskasing «+++ White River...» Moosonee TiMMINS ..-+00006 veeeeeee e | A diplomtic report from Singapore: said three key. lead- ers of the attempted revolt were in Central Java: Col. Su- . herman, commander of the Di. ponegoro Division; Air Vice» Marshal Omar Dhani, the pro- Commanist head of the air force, and Lt. - Col. Untung, leader of the coup last Thurs- y. : Radio Jakarta claimed that many men of the Diponegoro Division had surrendered to the government. forces, heeding ap- peals by the former division commander, Maj.-Gen. Sardini, to remain "loyal to the ideals of the. republic." The army's new chief, Maj.- Gen. Suharto, accused the air force of "mercilessly" killing the former army chief of staff --Lt..Gen. Achmad Yani, an anti - Communist -- and five other army generals, The mutilated bodies of the six generals were found in a common grave near an air force base just outside the cap" ital. They were buried with full military honors today in Jakar- ta's war heroes' cemetery. Toronto Company Gets Main Job TORONTO (CP)--In an ef- fort to find less costly ways of getting rid of snow on streets, metropolitan Toronto will try a mobile snow - melting machine this winter. Roads Commissioner George Grant said Monday the snow- melter will convert 75 tons of snow. hourly into water to be washed into the municipal sewer system, Mr. Grant said he expects the operating cost of the rented snow-melter to be substantially less than hauling snow to AN' STAY AWAY EAST BERLIN (Reuters) An East German junior soc- cer player was sent off the field Saturday for trying to arrange a date with the girl referee during the game, the East German news =e ADN reported Mon- ay. FROM THE REF. dumps, The machine will cost $17,010 for the winter. : Individuals or Groups for St. John -- Ambulance Junior and Senior First aid and Home Nursing Courses Phone 668-4666 - Evenings 725-4197 for today's BIGGER LOANS greater needs UPTO $5000 with new money needs, to repay. bills, consolidating in Canadians every yeai --where you borrow Living costs have grown. So have your family To help meet those greater needs, HFC now lends as much as $5000, with up to 60 months COMPARE OUR CHARGES Before you borrow--compare our charges with what you would pay elsewhere. When you need a larger loan--for paying stalment contracts, buy- ing a better car, handling an emergency, or for any other purpose--trust the company that's trusted by hundreds of thousands of r, For prompt service on any loan, large or small, phone or visit HFC with confidence. AMOUNT OF ioi.0i |117. 126.26 | 146.71 MONTHLY PAYMENT PLANS | 180.37 | -- Pere r eer eeececsvsesoe 'Above payments include principal and interest and are based on but do ite Deer veer esseeegessooe Ask about credit life insurance at low group rates FINANCE (next to the Ask about our evesing hours 2 OSHAWA OFFICES' Suite 208, Oshawa Shopping Ctr.--Ph. 725-1138 (northwest corner, over Fairweather's) 64 King Street East--Telephone 725-6526 Genosha Hotel) _ EVERYONE I$ INVITED TO ATTEND AJAX: 66 Horwood Avenue South... . +re++ Telephone 942-6920 (over The A Oshewa Ont. 728-8721 ee as Hours 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. DR. DAVID C. SUGDEN dvertiser) rms aa or

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