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Oshawa Times (1958-), 25 Oct 1965, p. 2

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Jim Harbic, 15-year-old grade 10 student in Otta- wa, works on his political column for the Yukon's twice - weekly Whitehorse POLITICAL COLUMNIST -- HIGH SCHOOL SIZE star. Watching is his sister Patricia, 17, who some- times helps him with his spelling. Harbic started his column two years ago after jes or TV and hopes some day to- become a political columnist for a big paper, offering his services to the paper when he discovered they had no Ottawa corre- spondent. He prefers books on political history to moyv- (CP Photo) HERE and THERE 4 Get Total 0f 30 Years Pickering Township Coun- ceil has increased the hourly rate of its road foremen from $2.23 to $2.62 effective Oct. 1, 1965. Damage totalled $2,800 in three accidents investigated by the Whitby Police Department during the weekend. No one was injured. Mrs. Kelly De Gray, 625 Carnegie ave., was regional chairman of the Ontario Coun- ty South Catholic Women's League at the league's an- nual election of officers re- cently. Other executive mem- bers elected were: Rev. John B. Myers, director; Mrs. Kay Ireland, secretary; Mrs, Max Coleman, treasurer; conven- ers: Mrs, John Poltz, educa- tion; Mrs. J. Melynchuck, spiritual; Mrs, V. Shannon, social action; Mrs. F. Spell- en, social welfare; Mrs. L. J. Weeks, radio; television and films; Mrs. J. McKeever, im- migration; Mrs. Joan Ed- wards, guides; Mrs. -E. J. Spraggs, communication, Murray B. Burgess, RR 1, Bowmanville, is in serious condition, with head injuries, in the Toronto General Hos- pital, as the result of a two- car collision on the Manvers rd., north of Bowmanville Friday night. A car driven by Mr, Burgess was involved in a collision with a car driven by Ronald D. Clement, RR 2, Newcastle, The current issue of The Ontario Gazette states letters patent of incorporation have been granted to Game Enter- prises Limited, of Uxbridge. Owen G. Hendren, techni- eal director - counseling, at R. S. McLaughlin Collegiate and Vocational Institute will be among 25 high school edu- cators from Ontario and seven U.S. states attending the 15th General Motors Conference for Secondary School Coun- selors, Nov. 2-5. Purpose of the conference is to acquaint educators with General Motors personne! _ policies, employment practices and training programs for high schoo! and college graduates. A frame and brick cottage being built at Squire's Beach, Pickering Township, was burn- ed to the ground Thursday Townhip and Ajax Fire Brig- ades responded to the alarm. The cottage was valued at more than $5,000. H. M. Yourex, owner of the Sunnybrae Nursing Home, RR 2. Oshawa, attended the Am- erican Nursing Home conven- tion in Chicago recently, He is a member of the Ontario Nursing Home Association About 95 people represent- ing 26 trailers of the Oshawa Travel Trailer Club were on hand for the club's traditional Thanksgiving rendezvous at Lake St. Peter, It was the club's last outdoor meeting of the season. Among members at the weekend meeting were Phyllis and Betty Johnstone, Janice Graham, Ken Ostler, Edward Blakely, Gerry Shan graw, Rae Rundle, Lloyd Allingham, William Kent, Wil- ql gED A NEW : FURNACE? He Bown Payment--Piret Peyment \ PERRY Dey or Night... 723-3443 liam and Florence Kent, Glen- na Bakker, Phreda Ostler, Helen Rundle, Jelle Bakker, and Martin Ostler, It announced that would be held here Saturday, Nov, 13, to organize an 'On- tario Travel Trailer Associa- tion, It was also announced that the club's first indoor meeting of the winter season would be held Saturday, Nov. 20, at Woodview Com- numity Centre. Former Oshawa resident W. Earle McLaughlin, chairman and president of the Royal Bank of Canada, will be chairman of a banquet in Toronto Nov. 9 at which Renault St.-Laurent, Quebec City, will make a presenta- tion to Ontario Premier John Robarts, Ray Wolfe, presi- dent of IGA will present an award to Quebec's Premier John Lesage and a third award will go to the Honorable Maitland Steinkopf, Winnipeg and the presentation will be made by Karl Scott, president of Ford of Canada, Th. award recipients, all political lead- ers, will give brief addresses at the banquet to be attended by over 300 high school stu- dents from Ontario and Que- bec who visited each other's homes last summer in an ex- change program. The banquet will markthe 18th anniversary of thse Canadian Council of Christians and Jews, The Ontario Regiment As- sociation will hold its annual dinner-dance Oct, 30 at the Knights. of Columbus Hall, 184 Rand st. w, Guest sneaker at the affair, which starts at 6 p.m., will be Lt. Col. R. B. Smith, Oshawa. A motor cyclist, Wayne E, Elliott, of Darlington, was taken to Oshawa General Hos- | pital with cuts and bruises yesterday after his machine went out of control and crash- ed on Bond st. w. An Ajax man, Lloyd Wash- burn, of 16 Burcher st., re- ceived lacerations in a three- car crash on Ritson rd. s. yesterday evening. The driv- | ers of the other two vehicles were Erust Hacullak, of Lip- ton st, and Joseph Welsh, of\same coroner's inquest, Satur- Arthur st. injured, HARRY ASHTON, who will contest the office of reeve in the Pickering Township elec- tion, resigned for all his civic offices this week and not from the office of bylaw enforce- ment officer alone. Council passed a resolution to engage a new enforcement officer. Both escaped un- Residents of Oshawa-Bow- manville - Whithy and area return to Standard time next weekend -- not tonight. Clocks will be turned: back one hour at 12.01 a.m. Sunday, Oct. 31 a meeting | 3 In "Golden Gun" Deaths QUEBEC (CP)--Four men, \Banque Canadienne Nationale \three of whom were implicated|of more than $10,000 and to re-| lin Quebec's 'golden gun' kill-|ceiving a stolen car. | lings, were sentenced Saturday) Quirion was sentenced to five to a total of 30 years in the|years and will serve them con- |penitentiary by Judge Gerard/cyrrently with a previous five- Simard, : year sentence received for ar- A fifth man, also implicated|son, conspiracy and receiving. clk coc. ond] GDRRNRRRimentanaata atameeeaane econ | | in the killings, |Gagnon, a 33-year-old Montreal! | accountant, will be sentenced) lby Judge Achille Pettigrew! aper ays Nov, 26, Pleading guilty to separate charges of arson, conspiracy to | commit arson, fraud and re- eady ceiving a stolen car were Ovila| Boulet, 52, Andre Lamothe, 4l,| - J,-Eugene Berube, 47, and Fern- To A d C A and Quirion, 43. | 1 Moise Darabaner, a 43-year-| old Quebec City businessman,, NEW YORK (AP. -- The New pleaded not guilty to charges of] York Herald Tribune says it has conspiracy to set fire to L'Hotel|learned that under orders from Beau Rivage in suburban Neu-| President Johnson, the business ville and to a charge of arson.|of intelligence collection He will appear at a peellaslenty itn Latin America--and perhaps hearing Oct, 29. the rest of the world as well-- : \is going to be "augmented" b BURIED BODIES ; y Boulet, sentenced to 10 wie eo Bureau after pleading guilty to charges) Normally, a story from Wash- el ggepet gy vor hid Fg ington adds, the field of foreign Bu the bales aibere i agren, saber yg -- oa ogg, ane whe Central Intelligence Agency. 0 "-- a Med. cat , } But sources in Washington, w cee of Redempteur Fau: the story says, confirm that pave Gand Paul Brie, 44, all Johnson has directed the FBI » 3, : leg jinto at least eight key Latin aoe -- yh amecegare on American cities where it | At a coroner's not operated since th Boulet had been found crim-|the lade Word War. ead of linally responsible for the deaths| The Herald Tribune story aiso| lof the three men who weFe!savg in part: ' |killed with a gold-plated .32-/ 'The FBI would act--and in| lealibre Smith and Wesson' pis*\some cases is already acting--| \tol jto give the president "an ran the the Boulet pleaded guilty to a to-|pendent new source of intelli- tal of 47 acts of arson and|gence data' on matters relat-| /conspiracy to commit arson. jing to U.S. security, Lamothe, a Quebec City jum-| , The CIA will continue to op- ber dealer, was also sentenced|erate more or less as it has in lto 10 years after pleading guilty| the past in most countries to 10 acts of arson and 10 acts|Sources said, and the FBI of conspiracy to commit arson, | agents, bird gooey work in a Lamothe was earlier held|{@" Jess cloak-and-dagger way, criminally responsible for the will concentrate almost totally ldeaths of Bilodeau, Faucher, |" gathering intelligence. Brie and Paul Chandonnet, 38, » except under the | ch achenate rarest circumstances, will not jof Sherbrooke, os |be authorized to carry out Gagnon was found criminally covert operations -- invasions, lresponsible for the deaths of iin | istates during the weekend as re them in Klan robes--met in an open field Saturday night, a Klan leader urged a demon- day to counteract anti - Viet Tex., the principal speaker at |S, Maple of Georgia told the crowd, 'God was the first seg-| \the burial in sunny weather ata) had| Crosses Blaze In South Ku Klux Klan Active Dragon in the state, Robert Scoggin of Spartanburg, criti- cized the national administra- Hon~and--racial integration, ANNOUNCES RALLIES Scoggin announced five suc- cessive rallies will be staged in South Cerolina, beginning Fri- day night, About 225 klan mem- bers were in robes, At Washington, Ga, the grand dragon of the Georgia Klan, Calvin Craig, spoke at a rally after a Negro civil rights march failed tu. materialize in |Lincolnton, scene of racial ten- sions 19 miles away. Craig, who will appear as a witness later this week in a congressional hearing on the activities of the Klan, said he will attempt ot stage a rally in Lincolnton next Saturday. | Meanwhile,"Negroes in Lin- colnton said they will try to or- ganize a mass meeting in the east Georgia community today but one civil rights leader said Negroes are scared of reprisals from white persons. "These people are scared to énce, "Lincoln County is the worst country I've been in,"' A march in Lincolnton last Friday was scattered when a group of White Hien atiacked Negroes with their fists, After an attempted march Saturday, five Negroes were injured when their car overturned on @ curve, The Negroes said they had been chased by two white youths in another car, Full school integration is a major target of civil rights leaders in Washington and Lin- colnton, In Paris, France, Dr, Martin Luther King Jr,, president of the SCLC, called for a march "by the thousands on the court- houses of the South to obtain justice,"' -- said there had been a "mockery of justice' in some southern states. He said he was cutting short his European tour to organize demonstrations, He gave his reason as the acquil- tal of a young Ku Klux Klans- man tried for the nightrider killing of a white civil rights By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Crosses blazed in southern Ku Kilix Kian wrenrvers preached. segregation and pro- mised to continue the resur- gence of the hooded white sup- macist order. | In Madisonville, Tex., where about 1,300 persons -- half of stration in Austin next Satur: Nam protests, Royce McPhail of Crockett, the rally, where a 25-foot cross was burned, said the state's Klan members would stage the demonstration in support of U.S, policy in Viet Nam. A Klan rally in Tampa, Fia,, Saturday night was marked by the burning of a 50-foot cross as about 250 men in robes and 1,000 other spectators gathered. A speaker identified as Rev, A regationist to walk this earth," |death," said Rev. Charles|worker in Alabama last spring.jof Monitor En gy | Co, Lid,,|Pakistan, Ceylon, Rhodesia, Ni- A 35-foot cross blazed at Mar-|Brown of Americus, Ga,, a|/The Klansman, Collie Leroy|Montreal; Charles H. Peters,|geria, Hong Kong, Malta and ; jon, S.C., as 2,000 persons|staff member of the Southern | Wilkins Jr., was acquitted in|president and publisher of the'the West Indies islands. 4 turned out, The Klan's grand'Christian Leadership Confer-|Hayneville, Ala., last Friday, nner ec er A Y Dead Toll WEATHER FORECAST Rises To 3 | Warmer Today; Turning LONDON (CP) -- 'The death Cooler By Tonight toll resulting from a fire aboard the Canadian destroyer Nipigon has risen to three, : me . : 5 G s, pitt,|, TORONTO (UP) -- Forecast Tuesday, Warmer today turning PF Senne ce DS oe issued by the weather office at|cooler again tonight. Winds Vere burns in hospital near here|-30 a.m.: southwest 15 to 20 today light Saturday while a funeral serv:| Synopsis: There will be -- and northwest 15 to 20 \ uesday, ice was being held for one of fresh outbreak of cold air Tues-|T : his shipmates, day Timagami, Cochrane, North Pitt's wife, flown to England) Bay, Sudbury: Cloudy with a few sunny periods today and Tuesday, Scattered showers this by the navy last Thursday, was) at the Royal Air Force Special afternoon changing to snowflur- ries tonight. Warmer today, Treatment Centre for Burns at Toronto, et age Sunny with Halton, northwest of London,|# few cloudy periods rag and when her husband died, |Tuesday, Warmer today turm-|timning cooler again tonight. AB Curtis §, Joyce, 20, of Hal-|ing cooler tonight. Winds south: Winds southwest 15 to 25 today iftax, who was among four needa | oe Pt tates 4 northwest 15 to 25 Tuesday. : fast sseeisy wo eas pored to 20 Tuesdsx, Algoma, Sault Ste, Marie; Sund "pees "mauch better,"|, Northern Lake Huron, Georg-|Sunny with a few cloudy periods oun 1 Ino in staying at thel!an Bay, Haliburton, Killaloe: |today and Tuesday. Warmer to- His wife also is slaying day, turning colder again to- night, Winds northwest this aft- ernoon. Lake St. Clair, Lake Enrie,| southern Lake Huron, Niagara, Lake Ontario, Windsor, London, tie \Cloudy with a few sunny pe- My P agg damaged the|Tiods today and Tuesday. A few inside of the mess deck while|ight showers or snowflurries pg eg er SURF BOARD SET RESPECTS BAPTIST'S SIZZLING SERMONS killed AB Patrick Allan Perrier,' 20, of Val d'Or, Que. He was buried at sea as the Nipigon made for a oe ck E, Reade, 21, 0 ey a aha died shortly} _ MIAMI BEACH, Fla, (AP) ; and you will have wonderful after he and the two other in-| oe, nae ithe, 8, a te | power." j e ere flown by} tire aptist minister, has ee tales last Tues-| one of the liveliest congrega- | A grinning youth slips an day, was buried with full _mili-| tions anywhere. empty beer bottle into the tary honors Saturday. Reade} Each Sunday he delivers a preacher's little black satchel ' | sizzling permon to the ont. resting at his feet, board sct on this resort city's ' . South Beach. The youngsters "That's all right, boy," the call him Holy Joe. preacher says, "life is made Standing ankle deep in the | for fun, but it's also deathly serious." was single. ! About 40 of Reade's ship- warm sand, he speaks of "lusts of the flesh,"' 'pitfalls mates took part in the service as bearers and firing party at of trial marriage," and "'obe- | dience to parents." He gets enthusiastic reac- tion from: his sun-bronzed con- military cemetery south of| London. A service for Pitt ts expected to be held early this week at the same cemetery. | A board of inquiry into the |Nipigon: fire was held in Ply-| ¢ mouth Friday. An officer| gregation of 150 to 200 young: aboard the destroyer said that sters, "Cool, dad," exults one jif the navy decided to release) ithe findings they would be !s- sued in Ottawa, 'LAND COST $500 | BRINGS $125,000 | BRANTFORD (CP) More than 106 years ago Scottish settler David Brown paid about $500 and a yoke of two-year-old steers to a Mohawk Indian for 80 acres of land He made.a better deal than he probably imagined in 184], His granddaughter, Mrs. C. F. K. Woodyatt, sold the property to this city Satur- day for $125,000. mophead with a wide grin, "Keep it up. You got a tiger by the tail," Guitars strum, bikinis slink by, and one lanky, 16-year- | old throws his skinny arms | skyward and cries, "hallelu- | jah... hallelujah!" The minister keeps smiling, and preaching, and suddenly bends down and with a flour- ish draws a cross in the sand, OFFERS THEM 'POWER' | "You want power?" he shouts. 'Tie yourself to that Sawsy Canadian Port N 4 WINERY LIMITE RRR SARE | | larmed infiltration, secret sup-| port of opposition to regimes | and other projects--as does the \CTA, | It is known, despite adminis- \tration protests to the contrary, ithat Johnson was sorely dis- mayed by the work of the CIA during the Dominican crisis. ¢ et PE HOUSE WOLD: 0008 AND PERSONAL PROPERTY § neti 2% Chandonnet and Bilodeau at the day he pleaded guilty to setting five fires Berube, restaurateur, pleaded guilty to charges of having conspired with Darab- laner to set fire to L'Hotel Reau Rivage, He also admitted to jhaving set the fire. Berube re leeived a five-year sentence, Lamothe and Boulet, who met behind bars in Montreal's St Vincent de Paul penitentiary in 1952, admitted to having set) fires throughout Quebec be- tween 1957 and 1963. Quirion pleaded guilty to charges of defrauding the St (Prosper, Que., branch of La will be at 8 YA Gu 5 Years to 10 FREE Oshawe Generel! Hoe each Monday for New aranteed Investment 1 Year to 4 Years 5'/2% key Ticket, DRAW Deposi en Simcoe St. Certificates Years BOWMANVILLE --- 23 K Certificate Purchasers. OPEN SATURDAY : I MMergoret Howpitel Insurances of All Classes LIMITED All whe ore Interested bn the work of the Goncer Sosioy cre ff 1 att antes Trust & Savings Corpn, ea eee ane = OA "> * 723-3251 AWA -- 19 Simcoe St. M. -- 723.5221 om rv ety ; Refreshments will be served. ONT. - 723-3318 ing St. W. --~ 623-2537 THE ANNUAL MEETING | of the Ontario County Unit Canadian Cancer Society Thursday, October 28, 1965 Adelaide Mouse - Y.W.C.A. Mimeographed copies of Reports of Committees will be presented, Election of Officers for 1965-66 THE GUEST SPEAKER WILL BE DR. JOHN M. Heod of the Department of Haematology at the Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Consultant in Poediatries et Princess ® 8 q x " NOW GET THREE POLICIES IN ONE . «AND SAVE MONEY! A modern personal package policy from the ROYAL/LONDON & LANCASHIRE Insurance Companies can save you 10%. held on pm, It's a flexible package idea! Your cot- tage, boats, jewellery and furs can be added s --and you save even more, Oshawa ANY TIME I8 A GOOD TIME TO REVIEW your insurance program. Why not call us to talk it over with you, either Now or before your present insurance expires. Bob Stroud M. DARTE newspaper executives form the Canadian delegation to the quin- quennial conference of the Com- monwealth Press Union in the Ottawa Journal, | ifeet® 13 Newspaper Executives To Visit The West Indies OTTAWA (CP) -- Thirteen|Montreal Gazette; Michael Da- vies, general manager of the Kingston Whig-Standard; K. R. Thomson, president of Thomson Newspapers Lid., Tor- West Indies Nov, 22-Dec. 13. _|jonto; Gillis Purcell, general Leader of the delegation is Timana ger of ie Canadiana. Norman Smith, editor of the|Press, Toronto; J, A. Daly, president of Southam Business Publications Lid., Toronto; W. B, C. Burgoyne, president and publisher of the St. Catharines Standard; J. C, Preston, gen- eral manager of the Brantford Expositor; L. D. Whitehead, president and publisher of the Brandon Sun; and Clifton Sif- ton of Toronto, chairman of the board of the Regina Leader- Post, The largest delegation will be Bi from the United Kingdom, It in- cludes Hon, Gavin Astor of The Times of London, the confer- ence chairman, Lord Thomson of Fleet, the Canadian - born publisher; and John Burgess, chairman of Reuters, the world- wide British news agency. Other Commonwealth coun- tries represented include Aus- tralia, New Zealand, India, Delegates gather in Bermuda and disperse at Trinidad after visits to The Bahamas, Ja- maica, Antigua and Barbados, At business sessions in Ja- maica and Trinidad, delegates representing a dozen countries of the Commonwealth will dis- cuss mutual problems of their industry -- training of journal- ists, automation, meeting the competition of broadcast- ing, press communications, freedom of the press and other legal matters. Besides Mr, Smith, Canadian delegates are L. W, Bewick, ex- ecutive vice-president and gen- eneral manager of the Saint John Telegraph - Journal, Paul Desrulsseaux, president of Sher- brooke La Tribune; H. EB, Me- Cormick, chairman of the board Traffic Mishaps Cause 57 Deaths On Weekend By THE CANADIAN PRESS , The Ontario dead: Traffic mishaps accounted for; 57 deaths across Canada during SUNDAY the weekend and six fire deaths,| Judith Young, 8, Toronto, after a truck in which she was three drownings, a hunting fa- tality and three unclassified|"ding hit a bridge near Orwell, 1 deaths brought the accidental; 120 Demers, 20, Chatham, i death toll to at least 70, when his car struck « bridge in In a Canadian Press survey|Chatham. from 6 p.m, Friday to midnight| George Freeman Murray, 19, Sunday, local times, Quebec|Delhi, when the car in which he registered 23 deaths and On.|Was -- -- a a a tario 19. There w over "f here wore 31, road)" iniem 0. Duke, 71, Windsor, fatalities in Quebec, one drown- ing and a miscellaneous death.|When thrown from his car after a collision with another, Ontario had 17 traffic and two SATURDAY fire deaths. New Brunswick, Nova Scotia} Nell Keith Dafoe, 18, Bell and Prince Edward Island each|vyilie, in a pg fire * bo ing trip near Maribank. recorded one road death and Nova Scotia had one hunting) Beatrix Hebditch, 40, Dryden, in a two-car crash, fatality. | There were two unclassified) David Amos Di deaths in Newfoundland but no|/Guelph and sewset "thm Nicklasson, 20, Guelph, when traffic fatalities. Four fire deaths were re-|their car collided with a truck ported in British Columbia/near Fergus, jalong with two drownings and} Michael! Cunningham, 14, 'four traffic deaths. when struck by a'car near Oril- | Three persons died: on Mani-/lia. jtoba highways, four on Saskat-| Arthur Procher, 17, Toronto, chewan's and five on highways|when his motorbike was struck in Alberta. by a car, The survey does not include} Leonora Ashton, 36, Campbell- industrial or natural deaths,/ford, when her car rolled over known suicides or slayings, north of Peterborough. EMERGENT MEETING TEMPLE LODGE 649 All Masons ere requested to attend a Masonic Service for our late Worshipful brother STEPHEN PEEBLES TONIGHT 9 P.M, Melntosh-Anderson Funeral Home Masonic Clothing Wor. Brother Arthur E. Bethe, Brother Owen D, Friend, W.M, Sec. 1900 CANADA SAVINGS | BONDS An investment that won't let you down. Available at any branch of SAT TORONTO-DOMINION PUT Where people make the difference G. B. MILES, Manager ... King and Simcoe 'W. R. SINGLETON, Manager .. King St. East, Oshewe l. E. ERWIN, Manager .... 455 Simeoe South, Oshawa H, J. EATON, Manager, ... Northway Plaze, 1128 Simcoe St. N. and Byng Ave., Oshawa

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