viny! finish in 'wired chassis e-range speaker, y 5 private listening. 95 PHONE 725-7373 GLEANER ipright on steps for id for convenience, in toe switch. Ds- ominum-plate wiih nozzle, bare ficor m an i) PHONE 725-1 573 until 9 pam), MAYOR ERNEST MARKS and W. M. Crossin, Adver- tising and Merchandising Manager of Canadian Inter- urban Properties Limited, examine a model of the new Simpsons - Sears store to be built in the Osh- awa Shopping Centre. The a rn 1 ei: vote of confidence in the future of Oshawa,' by Mayor Marks. --Oshawa Times Photo decision of Simpsons-Sears Limited to build a $2,000,- 000 retail complex in Osh- awa was described as "a Limited SHOPPING CENTRE EXPANSION THREE HUNDRED NEW JOBS City Welcomes New Store A $2,000,000 Limited department store in the Oshawa Shopping Centre will open to the public in Septem- ber, 1968. Heralded by Mayor Ernest Marks as-a "vote of confidence in the future of Oshawa," the new store is expected to pro- vide nore than 300 jobs for local residents. Construction will also start next month in Whitby Township on a $1,000,000 commercial de- velopment including a Woolco department store, Steinberg supermarket, 800-seat theatre and 22 service stores. mated: completion date for the Thickson Road - Highway 2 pro- ject is the summer of 1968. awa and district will be very happy with the type of store we are going to open for them in| the Oshawa Shopping Centre," said J. C. Barrow, chairman of} the board of Simpson - Sears Limited. Mr. Barrow described the new store as "an entirely new concept in retail shopping for thousands of families" The. two-storey retail com- plex, to contain more than 125,- 000 feet of floor space, will be located on the King Street side Simpsons-Sears . ,... ARCHITECT'S DRAWING OF NORTH SIDE OF STORE - +. As Seen From King St. W. - Esti- * jof the shopping centre, north of} |Zellers and Fairweathers, Com-} the area of the Oshawa Shop-| ping Centre to n.ore than 600,- The centre has 53 stores and parking facilities for 3,300 cars.| Canadian Interurban Proper- ties Limited, owners and man- sons-Sears store is phase one! Tenders went out the $2,000,000 complex, today for) will : . : 1 I which, | addition "We think the people of Osh-|pletion of the store will raise!with fixtures and initial inven-| service, tory, is expected to cost more | department, have 55 departments. In|field to the east of the shopping to a home decorator | centre. custom-made drapery) 4 simpsons-Sears spokesman optical depart-) than $5,000,000, Construction on} ment, restaurant and insurance|S2!d that the company would September, with the 000 square feet of floor space.|the site is expected to begin in| office, the company will pro-|4lso require 25,000 square feet building) vide regular delivery service of exterior warehouse space in being completed approximately to the entire area surrounding' the city. He said the company September 1, 1968. Simpsons-Sears |Oshawa, as well as s Limite d.,| proper. agers of the shopping centre,| which has operated a catalogue} Servicing and announced that the new Simp-|sales store in the city since|appliances 1922, has planned a large var-|ment sold by of a three-stage expansion pro-|iety of services for the public | will : the city has so far been unable to lo- cate suitable space in existing repairs to alljcity warehouses, but enquiries and power equip-/are still' being made. The Simpsons-Sears|spokesman said the company be done at the Oshawa! would prefer to rent warehouse gram that will take place in the in its new store store space, and that a permanent centre. Company officials de- Designed to provide one-stop A new parking lot, with ajlocation might be purchased clined to comment their plans. Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. 10¢ Single C SSe Per Week Some Delivered VOL. 26--NO. 165 further on shopping facilities for a market) 1,000-car capacity, is to be con-|"quite some time" in the fu- of 250,000 people, the complex|structed on what is now a large |ture. OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, JULY 18, 1967 She Oshawa Gimes Weather Report Scattered showers and thun- dershowers expected tonight. Low tonight, 58; high Wed- nesday, 78, Authorized os Second Class Mail Post Office Departm: Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cosh wi EIG HTEEN PAGES ' Looter Shot! In Riot-Torn New Jersey NEWARK, N.J. (AP)--Raciallafter being spotted standing in calm in riot - plagued Newark|front of a wrecked store in the was broken early today when al Negru ghetto. | Negro looter was shot to death in a gun duel-with police and a patrolman was wounded in another nearby incident. Earlier a taxicab passenger died of injuries suffered in a Jersey City firebombing. The fatalities resulting from Negro rioting in New Jersey now stands at 27. ' As Newark was trying to re- cover from five days and nights of wild tumult that accounted for 25 of the dead, a racial armistice. was being tested in nearby Plainfield where 12 Ne- gro prisoners were released to- day in their own recognizance. Elsewhere in New Jersey, restless troublen.akers provided an uneasy Monday night for the|firebomb was D t communities of Elizabeth, Pat-|the vehicle. He died Monday erson, New Brunswick and Jer- Night of burns, sey City. The alleged looter was iden-jing in Jersey City led to the tified as Raymond Gilmer, 20,jarrest of 34 Negro youths dur- of Newark, who fled in a car ing the night. | After a high - speed c during which shots' were ¢ changed, Gilmer leaped from his car and ran down an alley and fired at four pursuing po- licemen. They returned the fire! © and Gilmer was shot in the head. Police said they found a pistol, A short time later, patrolman | John Romano was wounded in| : an exchange of gunfire with sev-! eral. Negro occupants of a car | which tried to run him down. The Jersey City victim was Freddie Lee Jones, 24, a Negro. Police said he was riding in a cab last Saturday night when a thrown against Looting and window smash- MILTON, Fla. (AP)--Convicts have testified that three cell- mates deliberately set the pri- son fire that burned 37 prison- ers to death. Among those who died were died in Florida's worst fire. In the three accused of setting the/1953, 35 persons died in a nurs- blaze As the formal inquest into the) sre convicts testified that it Sunday night fire at state prison road camp 12 at Jay, Fla., County courthouse, lay outside the old county jail awaiting positive identification. 22 bodies, sacked in olive drab body bags| Fatal Fire Deliberately Set | Convicts Testify At Inquest , had been in the locked and barred barracks at camp 12. Of the 51, eight were in the county jail unharmed, six were in hos- pitals with burns and 37 had ing home blaze at Largo. was about six minutes after the J "' \fire started before guard A. 0.) © started Monday in Santa Rosa} qvett unlocked the barred "cage door" and a solid wooden' ; door to let them flee. Lovett took the stand and | knife and a pair of} binoculars on his body, 13 Ae BUBBLES ENTERTAI NS CRIPPLED CHILDREN : jclashes ' jin the last 24 hours, and mor- - |South . |gun bunker on the river hank PROSPECTS FADE FOR WITHDRAWAL UN Resolution Obstructed By Arab Stand On Israel UNITED NATIONS (AP) -- lution could be negotiated be- Prospects faded today for adop-/fore the 122-nation assembly tion by the UN General Assem-|meets again Thursday. bly of a resolution calling for} General Assembly President Israeli troops to withdraw from/Abdul Rahman Pazhwak of Arab territory seized in the! Afghanistan Monday night ad- Helicopters : Attack, Sink 122 Sampans or war. a journed the special emergency hae i : ; Syrian Ambassador George|session until Thursday. When , SAIGON (AP) -- The U.S.|gunship team reported it sank) J. 'Tomeh told the assembly's|Pazhwak called the recess he command today reported 122)51 sampans and destroyed 11! special session on the Mid , Fears ake i : iti ; dle|said there was "prospect now, Viet Cong sampans sunk in two fortified positions in day-long East Monday night that all the| however slight, of reaching an helicopter attacks, at least 183) operations 30 miles west of Sai-! Arab states maintain their re-|agreement." x peeing ial aig ge in/gon Monday. |fusal to recognize the state of} As the vanguard of the 33- across Sou vetnam Viet Cong gunners fired about|Israel. Sine : man UN observer team began 200 mortar and rocket rounds Pcie Foreign Minister Abba surveillance of the Suez Canal Fa *e|into five South Vietnamese and|Eban replied this "strengthens|ceasefire line between. Israeli can Po atirjesriniag ok Ameri*| 4 merican posts between mid-|My government's resolve not to! and Egyptian forces, an Is- The seat pa a6 flight night and dawn today in an arc |tespond to any request or inter- | raeli-Egyptian dispute over Is- of helicopters surprised ' eau: about 25 miles northwest of Sai-|est from these states until or} rael's intention to put patrol voy of sampans on the Truong|£0": Simultaneously, the Viet unless gh ng explicit recog-|boats on the canal threatened ¥ ont e : mC sts--at|nition of Israel's statehood, sov- x: Giang River 350 miles north. | Cone hit one of the posts--at srael's statehood, sov-|the operation. jtar and rocket attacks on five ; Mic 1 Phuoc Hiep--with a 500-man/ereignty and territorial rights."| Egypt warned that it would ey Sed higa.ree eagle al infantry attack. The Latin-American group of open fire on any boats the Is- helicopters silenced a 23 nations meanwhile adopted'raelis launched. Military spokesmen said one a pe ' ; ete . " . lel ache) ee: PE hat co a ~|a Passive attitude toward its) Two Israeli with rockets, then destroyed 71|American was killed and 15| negotiations with the Soviet Un-jtured by the of oF ae ue fighi engin val ge tee henry ini for a resolution on Israelijpeared on Cairo television and basal? oe leader of the flignt Th ° viet ah fe ae Pee ear gaia withdrawal that could get the|said Israel launched rubber ul eRe : ane One: ae dead In|two-thirds vote necessary for|boats on the canal last Friday A similar strike two weeks|the infantry attack on the post approval to establish the presence of it ago resulted in the sinking of|at Phuoc Hiep, which was de-| ee ; fairs eanani ede ites Ge OO ue ; : Sec ded hv a baltel f South! These developments dimmedjflag on the waterway, which Heine Ls Wey HONG \Vistaneats Agar ation OF Soul the slight hopes some diplo-| Egypt has barred it from since DOME hs ATM OEMCODISE PERO RS HOURS: _ |mats had that a successful reso-|the 1948 Palestine war. navy men cap. Egyptians ap- Federal Law Ends Strike ---- saci Trains Move Across U.S. | NEWS HIGHLIGHTS nese ee Canada Lifts Embargo On U.S. Mail WASHINGTON (AP) -- Theitry after the president acted. | first U.S.-wide rail strike in 20|Pickets began' withdrawing a OTTAWA (CP) -- An embargo on mail travelling be- years ended and trains began |short time later and many of tween Canada and the United States was lifted effective moving today after a two-day|the commuter trains in big} 10 a.m. EDT following the end of the U.S. rail strike. The cide if criminal negligence or homicide was involved in the,and he ran to toss the keys! over a high barbed-wire fence} On the table before County /|to guard Richard E. Cobb, who Judge Mahlon McCall were ood bgt them to unlock the prison prison files of all 51 men who tragedy. The coroner's inquest will de-| testified that a smashing, shout- ling disturbance broke out first arsenal. Here he entertains Jamie Loveless, 10, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Loveless, 117 Har- money Rd. S., and Anne Kosub, Rotary's Tammy, 7, Bubbles the clown is always a popular person at the Oshawa Rotary Club's annual picnic for crippled children at Camp Samac. daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Gregory Kosub, 530 Dunkirk St. --Oshawa Times Photo LIKES TRACTOR 75 HOURS ALONE Tot Toddles Off -- Survives In Bush FORT ST. JOHN, B.C. (CP) A little boy who likes tractors but didn't wait half an hour to see one of the big machines, is recuperating in hospital here today after 75 hours missing in the bush, near Hudson's Hope, B.C, A Three-year-old Kenneth Van- derleest, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Vanderleest of Dravton Valley, Alta., was found Mon- day after an intensive four-day manhunt. He had promised his father Friday he would stay by their jeep, mired in mud on a little. used road 14 miles north of Hudson's Hope while his father and another man went to get one of the big machines to haul out the jeep. When Mr. Vanderleest re- turned half an hour later, the chunky little boy had dis- appeared. When he was found Monday three miles from where he was last seen, Kenneth was playing with a board in the bush. He stood up 50 feet from searcher Red Falk and cried, "Mommy." y Hungry, scratched and insect- bitten, he said he wanted milk. Kenneth had spent three nights in the bush while up to 800 searchers using helicopters, aircraft, motorcycles; horses and tracking dogs combed 100 square miles, some of it while searching shoulder-to-shoulder. Temperatures had dipped to the mid-30s. Kenneth was re- ported in good condition in hos- pital Monday night, suffering mostly from dehydration. Mr. Vanderleest' had just taken a job on a farm 16 miles 4 northeast of Hudson's Hope when the boy disappeared. His mother, Cecile, had flown in from Drayton Valley, 75 miles southwest of Edmonton early on the weckend. She stayed near search headquarters in Hud- son's Hope while her son was missing. Assistant searchmaster Bill Findlay, resident manager for B.C. Hydro, said in an inter- view the boy was familiar with big tractors and enjoyed watch- ing them, and had said he would wait by the jeep to see the machine, tieup was broken by a federal back-to-work law. The new law, signed by Presi- dent Johnson Monday night jafter hasty enactment by Con- gress, requires compulsory set- {tlement if necessary to end a long dispute over wages. | The end of the strike, Johnson \said, 'will permit vitally needed arms and supplies to be sent to our fighting forces in Viet- nam without interruption.' | A union leader called it "the strike - breaking act of 1967." The word to stop the strike spread rapidly across the coun- Italian Ship Rescues Whites LAGOS (Reuters)--The '5,000- ton Italian ship Isonza sailed from Lagos today for Port Har- court in secessionist eastern Ni- geria to vacuate 845 foreigners, including 500 Britons, trapped by Nigeria's civil war. The international rescue oper- ation was mounted when swift diplomatic moves here obtained federal government permission Monday night, metropolitan areas resumed op- erations. A few traffic snarls remained} jbut for the most part officials | |reported vital materials needed jin Vietnam were back on the rails. Passenger trains halted jby the strike took up their journeys where they left off Sunday, | Observers Keep Watch of United Nations ceasefire ob- the tense Suez Canal after agreement between the UN and} Egypt- cleared a ments. | Four Swedish and French ob- servers were on duty on the east bank, held by Israeli forces which overran the Sinai Penin- servers today kept watch along| - last-minute | hitch in supervision arrange-| = war, f sula in last month's Middle East | 2 Canadian embargo on all mail but letters descended Mon- day, a few hours before the brief strike was halted by spe- cial U.S. legislation. Severn Division Opens Thursday PETERBOROUGH (CP) -- The Severn division of the Trent Canal system between Lake Couchiching and Geor- gian Bay will open to navigation Thursday, officials an- nounced today, All locks from Lock 1 at Trenton to Lock 45 at Port Severn will be in operation. This is the last section to open after more than 100 miles of the canal system: were closed due to recent heavy rain. But officials warned users of houseboats and small craft to navigate with cau- tion,'since the flow in the Severn River is still above cYnugnuttttmnd ts Along Suez | CAIRO (Reuters)--A handful} -- normal, .. In THE TIMES Today . f una Jim Higgs Sparks Green Gaels Win--P. 6 Deloys End, Township Mall Work Starts Soon--P. 9 65-Foot Boat Assembled At Port Whitby--P, 5 Ann Landers--10 Ajax News--5 City News--9 Classified --14, Comics--17 Editorial--4 Financial--13 Obituaries--16 Pickering News--5 Sports--6, 7 Television--17 Theotres--12 Weather--2 Whitby News--5 Women's--10, 11 15,16