Durham Region Newspapers banner

Oshawa Times (1958-), 6 Nov 1967, p. 1

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

ia idise cs of lux- th of fur, te one is 'elegance -<ATON'S. Jorwegian tural grey us fabrics, ol tweeds. -and 6P. to 60 jers) eductions in ported wools wool tweeds; in of season- 12¥2 to 20% 30 T. 444 a 5 a e ' t i > , + 5 i a Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont ario and Durham Countics, She Oshawa Times Weather Report . Cloudy today and Tuesday with some snéwflurries. Con- tinuing cold. Low tonight 25, High tomorrow 40, VOL. 26--NO. 257 " i 8 10c Single Copy sty var at ee aan OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1967 Authorized 93 Second Class Mail Post Office D TW : : Seer ana Class Mall Fest Office Dapatiment E PA 3ES 3 \ rT NOTHER VIETNAM TARGET COMES OFF PENTA N'T-BO. | SAIGON (CP)--Another _ tar. 1 : - huong, E & aE: Price $ get came off the Pentagon's pogo ghettos : a an bombs hit buildings are the Haiphong docks and rail U.S. command said _ neither day, air force Thunderchiefs US : ' out-of-bounds list today as U.S, 2 traffic, including olanes of an % gf bay ie sites in the terminal and the power plant in plane was hit. again raided the Pue Yen MiG "G 1 at cg epartes Te eee Sons eeerec: ae Air Force planes bombed North the three-nation Totstrational price ierthaa pad northeast of Lao Cai, on the border of China. The spokesman said Gia base northwest of Hanoi and re: tled V faa ie eo hate ee a oe Vietnam's biggest military stor- Control Commission, land. : 'The Gia pan ae . BRIEF SKIRMISH Thuong is considered one of the ported damaging at least tyo Ninh Sur fae oe eet ee held sou for three days. But age area--a little more than Indian: Canadian and Polish the R roam base, across sills ore largest military storage areas MiG-17s on the ground : i ial fiek a hag gag A iret ten ae Ecosse te ean ee 2 sm _ yas iprke jing the heart of American F-105 Thunderchief in North Vietnam, with 72 stor- In the South Viet ( ong guer oe manier of Ge US Dian, al airport serving Hanoi--a U.S. ICC, set up by the 1954 Geneva US. lanes, nee wn eripgi ei oe di ted MiG-17 and age buildings, 11 support build- rillas invaded five Montagnard South Vietnamese were killed, said the Viet Cong lost 918 dead military He bh haga gate pire Nudd nd tifhid cheater at Ea ee ee se om eT ee gh Boy aret. inet and eight administration villages in the central highlands 38 were wounded or missing, hy body count and he was cere ec gon's -105 he rief clas g ¥ arly ay <i 5 e target was at Gia rangements in Indochina. TORE Tints Atnone the GrhEr Shh tee of ius alin hat ny " ik nie ea peg ~~ ae ee d 245 and three American advisers tain the number killed was } ; , § Sun- he mountain tribes people, a were wounded twice' the : i that a i : : i ea ' a : wit f . CITY HALL BUILDING JOB BEHIND SCHEDULE We Pe 7 : 269 2833 ae ee a Fe oll > | Tragedy Hits Philippin Derailment gedy Hits Philippines ) Inter-Is] 1 eath Toll -- er-Islan ip Sink By ASSOCIATED PRESS »v the typhoon in 21 cent id's ) 21 ce il and!She pecting | Reaches 51 Disaster (struck often and northern provinces our eae -- hard during the weekend and) Damage estimates ran T more than 350 persons were re- Wards of $5,000,000 ve nag et LONDON (CP)--The death ported dead or missing in a ty REMOV Nt fee h ad (3 Ame ae on alae toll in the derailment of an ex- phoon, floods, a train wreck and 4, h AL CONTINUES i ee press train rose to 51 todas hree plane crashes from the ue 1ber a Jetline crashed side epapearier ie: simply rising to 88 the number of per-|Philippines to Britain near Haslemere, England. as it lonned life vests Wa stepped sag pee in travel disasters in| In the Philippines: About 300 fe hs eg i final apprach U eS re * one fatali- the London area within 24 were believed dead or missing). roe" ore into a 100-foot|'¥ was Mrs, Tam, wife hours as casualty conate sane ae oak tree, gouged windows out of of 2 South Mviemam ise officer All 37 passengers and crew Manilas after typhoon Emma 2 farmhous e and came to rest Sarde Tan Son were killed Saturday night when rampaged across the island and uy buckled fragments halfway|Nhut airbaeme a Spanish Iberia Airlines Cara-|sank inter-island passenger up a 900-foot hillside. | A ir ga ge ia carrying ja pilo! an six passengers A pale autumn sun lights the work going ahead on the city hall addition. Work is still 10 days behind schedule and five days of rain in the last two weeks have prevented any inroad being made into the back- log. At the moment, men are putting in the first of nine 300 cubic yard areas of concrete flooring for the first floor. Cecil Williams, clerk of works, says he hopes to have all nine sec- doubled to 70 men. Visitors tions in by month's end, and staff in the present working with a labor force building have a bird's éye that has recently been view of the progress. --Oshawa Times Photo Three Areas Hold Vote By CANADIAN PRESS Voters today began casting ballots in three federal consti-| tuencies across Canada in by-| elections to fill commons seats} vacated earlier this year. A somewhat apathetic cam- paign has been conducted in the Alberta riding of Jasper-Edison, disappearing under redistribu- tion in the next general election, while cries of bribery have gone up in Nova Scotia's Colchester --Hants constituency. | In Newfoundland's Bonavista --Twillingate riding the Progressive Conservatives have led an all-out campaign to take the traditionally Liberal seat for) the first time since the province joined Confederation in 1949. Newly-elected Progressive} Conservative Leader Robert! Stanfield, former Nova Scotia premier, after campaigning for} only two days in Colchester--| Hants, is seeking a federal seat for the first time in his political] career. | Both of his opponents, inde- pendent Liberal Robert Kirk of| Truro, N.S.,and Elwood Smith} of Sudbury, Sat., a New Demo- cratic Party member running as an independent, have said N.Y. PATROLMAN | BAGS MONKEY NEW YORK (AP)--Pa- trolman Patrick O©'Connor, fresh from his capture of the goat of Wall Street, bagged a monkey in Chelsea Sunday. | Only last Friday the six- foot-five, 260-pound police- man caught a stray goat in front of the New York Stock Exchange, after a chase down the East River Drive. Sunday, he was one of six police officers who respond- ed to a telephoned report of a monkey on the fourth floor terrace of an apart- ment in the Chelsea district of Manhattan. o'Connor followed the | NOV. 15 DATE SET is against Chrysler Canada Ltd. on ship backing Nov. 15 following a 97 per cent) union vote in favor of a walkout. WINDSOR (CP)--The United Auto Workers Union in Canada 444 of the UAW cast ballots here/new poised for strike acation Wolf Killed By City Car 'Near General Hospital ispokesman said monkey down to the ground, over a seven-foot fence and into an apartment in the next building. He clapped the ape into a cloth sack. What started out to be a bird hunting trip in the bush furned out to be a wolf - kill in the treets of Oshawa early this morning for two -city men. Doug Lavoie, 25 Mill St. and Ken Crevier, 77 Montrave St. Palas were travelling down Connaught Street at approximately 5:15 U.S. Cities Elect Mayors WASHINGTON (CP-AP) : Scores of U.S. cities will elect mayors Tuesday in a little gen- eral election and governorships Wey lieve: ben offered bribes.|are at stake in Kentucky and DIES AT 89 Maximnos Cardinal Saigh, 89, Patriarch of Antioch and all the Orient, Alexan- dria and Jerusalem, died today of cancer. His death reduced the College of Car- dinals of the Roman Catho- lic Church to 115 members. (AP. Wirephoto) | Mississippi. | In addition, there are thou- ands of office seekers at the own, county and state level in many parts of the United 'States, But the main attention is fo- jcused on elections for mayor in iGary, Ind.,' Cleveland and Bos- jton where the race issue pre- dominates. today whether voters in Gary even will go to the polls as scheduled. If the steel city does vote, state police and national guardsmen are ready to move jin because of apprehensions of racial disorder. | Richard G. Hatcher, Negro Democratic nominee, charged in a suit filed last Tuesday that 5,000 names of Negroes had been removed from the voting jrolls and 4,000 phoney names of \whites inserted. Two Found Dead Chatham Cabin CHATHAM, Ont. (CP)--Two Chatham men were found dead and decomposing Saturday in} \the former tourist cabin one had! 'used as a residence. Staynor McPherson, 70, and Laverne Robert McKinley, 41, were found by Mr. McPherson's sister, Mrs. Susan Ellistrom who had come to deliver her |brother's mail. ing st a.m, when they spotted a 40- pound bush wolf trotting down the sidewalk awa General Hospital in front of the Osh- "It was moving fairly slow," "said Mr. Lavoie, '"'and was stra- the we sidewalk to its actions from the reet. From thought it might be rabid." wolf, chasing it down Connaught! ty from their kill. | A federal court may decide ire | The two men sped after the é 97 PC Give Green Light IF or Walkout At Chrysler Meanwhile, negotiations on a/ple returning to London Sunday! nd highways three-vear contract contin-/night after a weekend with their np ask : n y | | A Philippine national police|/there was rotten management| The war of letters between passengers|in the CBC. About 3,000 members of Local, giving solid member-|ue here The old contract ex- 'Gf and when the pires Nov. 15, one week after the go-ahead," a:expiry contract. in the United States. The voting Sunday repre- sented less than one-third of the Chrysler employees in Windsor, jwhere 9,500 of the Canadian total of 13,000 are employed. Sunday gives tions director for the UAW in ' Jono Gt ' will begin Tuesday on both sides and on fo Jarvis St. The wolf of the border, where wage par- turned right on. Jarvis before jt, 6 Is © ity for Canadian and U.S. union);; site mci : i : killing drugs into the injured! across the Philippines. The Phil-|ity and did on-thesspot emergency|inpine News Service reported * ___joperations, amputating limbs to\19g others dead or missing in the broadcasting file at home fo,ment, she wrote. Charles'free some of those trapped. One | five pr all car g to the the small a sani 0 '@ members: is regarded as two men hit it: The impact major issue in bargaining. broke the wolf's hind leg, anc Local 444 president velle jet crashed into a 990-foot hill nine minutes before it was h In England: Fifty-one dead ACTRESS DIES Among those killed was Brit \crashed at Port Moresby, New Guinea. All the passengers were scheduled to land at Heathrow and 111 injured when an express ish actress June Thorburn, 36.\believed to be Euro Ss 2 , a 2 Europeans. Airport on a flight from Ma- laga. | Sunday night rescuers pulled 33 bodies from the crumbled wreck of a Hasting-London Die-| jsel express train which hurtled off the tracks near Hither Green, a London suburb. Eight- een of the 111 injured died later\ic Airlines Convair 880 tilted on) jin hospitals. There were no immediate re- rts of Canadians among the dead and injured. It was the worst British rai accident since 1957, when persons were killed and 175 in-|today when it crashed while|war of letters. in a two-train collision|taking off from Goroka Airport} A spokesman for the prime|ness in the House today. Opposi- jured two miles from the scene of the latest tragedy. RETURNING FROM VISITS Most passengers on the crowd- led 12-car train were young peo- families on the south coast. Four cars on the train ca-/ careered off the tracks coming into London Sunday night. Another 37 died in the crash on Saturday of a Spanish train jairliner arriving in London from |Malaga, Spain. In Hong Korg: Only one per | son died as a huge Cathay Paci | War Of Letters Eases For Judy LaMarsh, Ouimet takeoff and slid into Hong Kong aboard escaped unhurt from the|Secretary Judy LAMarsh nor aboard The other 126 person: yon Ne fuselage. 1} In New Guinea: All seven pe in the New Guinea highlands. In Italy: At least 11 persons died in highway crashes during sure to be fired at him durin today's Commons session. "a s|_ OTTAWA (CP)--Neither |e 8 himself for questions Second reading -- approval in \eBe president Alphonse Ouimet r-|took up their pens in anger over} 90|<ons aboard a light plane died|the weekend to continue their principle of the new broadcast- jing act is the first item of busi- minister also denied that Mr./tion MPs are expected to ke Pearson rushed off early from ajup their demands Miss 4 Toronto engagement because ofjMarsh name names in her rot- ~ |hard rains that pushed rivers lest new development in the lat-/ten management charge and |Venice and the Po River Delta over their banks to flood roads official said 212 were missing and feared of the Chrysler Corp. reered over onto their sides.!qrowned after the sinking of the/said he left Toronto Saturday est broadcasting row which|thus clear the name of hundreds broke out after Miss LaMarsh|/of other CBC officials they say said in a television appearance/are tarred by her statement. |Mr. Ouilmet and Miss LaMarsh Mr. Pearson's spokesman was touched off by the CBC president who demanded that coming to a stop in a sprawl Of/399-ton ship Mindoro in roughjevening instead Ss > in| ini P Ba e of Sunday injthe minister turn over to the splintered wood and metal. The remaining seven Carsiyn by typhoon Emma two days] weekend at his in the train leaned crazily off the rails. Under the glare of arc lights, doctors: and nurses crawled be metal as firemen cut paths to torches. ago But the Manila Daily Mirror quoted a congressman as saying 100 of the 230 passengers had Jerry Hartford, public rela-\,eath tons of creaking, buckled) ouryived The vessel sank at the height Canada, said "big tabl talks')... hie 7 eit trapped victims with acetylene of f3mma's fury. Her howling winds, up to 125 miles an hour, tangled! entra! Philippine seas churnedjorder to spend more of the/CBC the facts on which she 4 Sussex street|/based her statement. residence | In an ahgry reply, Miss La- Meanwhile, Miss a Marsh/|Marsh .repeated her Commons' and Mr. Ouimet: were reported| statement she was not making a giving their writing hands a rest/blanket condemnation of all and spending a quiet Sunday at/CBC officials. She also rebuked their homes. Neither was con-|Mr. QOuimet for '"'the implica- sidering walking off his or her|tion" she was responsible to job, sources said to reply to him or the CBC for her state- Medical teams injected pain- cut a destruction|speculation this was a possibil-|ments Her responsibilities were to overjthe prime minister and Parlia- swath of Mr. Pearson was going ovinces, and the Red the two men backed their car , Sifads | over it again to finish it off., 2708S said the parity demands|man died as surgeons ampuU-|Crogs listed 16 dead in two other| neers Mr. Lavoie said he made sure|©eX: 0n'y to 'get out. of the tated his leg. areas! - : ig the animal was dead by cutting) COMPANY what the market will The train's crash-time speed) The Red Cross said at least 7 its throat and then threw the bear was estimated by passengers 10 96.900 families or close to 140,- NEWS HIGHLIGHTS carcass into the car trunk,and| At present, Canadian auto be between 70 and 80 miles an 999 persons were left homeless continued on their hunting tfip. woes receive sy fe cents hour. fakes Told oF agile ; : et ; The two men are taking the! hourly less than their / merican| One witness u P * 7 sia ; carcass to the department of counterparts. grinding noise followed by .a Little Miss Expo Prince Philip Flies To Canada lands and forest office today If a strike is called in Canada dull thud and flashes and sparks a . | LONDON (CP) -- Prince Philip flew to Canada today Here the head will probably be on Noy. 15, union members wil}|in the sky.' 3 Has Christening | to attend the Royal Agricultural Society Commonwealth 'removed and sent to Toronto receive between $20 and $30 ere i : conference in Toronto and open the 1967 Royal Winter for a rabies check. The two weekly, depending on marital . MON TREAL « P)--iittle| Fair. Philip, travelling in. an Andover of the Queen's |men are also in line for a boun- status for the duration of the Six Inches Miss Expo, the only baby born} Flight, is scheduled to arrive in Toronto at 5 p.m. Tues- strike, Mr. Hartford said. pet ee geo he hb Sark day. A Buckingham Palace spokesman said it could be ae 8 | nie lace ana Aus irittened assumed that the Brine e, a sk Ned pilot, will take over the | S F ll NGatherice Helene in an apart-| controle for part of tie two-day trip. | now a S ment at Habitat 67. ag Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jo id s . TORONTO. .(CP)--More than seph KR. Lavergne, she was Aid Due For Foreign Projects lsix inches of snow were deposit- named Helene after Expo's St | WINDSOR, Ont. (CP) -- A_ $5,000,000 contribution to ed in some Southern Ontario|Helen's Island where she was! private Canadian organizations working on foreign aid areas during the weekend +born Oct. 28, one day before the), ojects is planned by the federal. government, next year, With snow still falling today, |fair closed | external Affairs Minister Martin. revealed today. He said Mount Forest, 70 miles north-| Mrs. Lavergne was taken to) 4)°, find to be drawn from the 1968-69 ex ernal aid budget west of here, reported seven)an Expo clinie after she experi will 'be designed to stimulate the activities of non-govern- jinches, enced labor pains during a visit cacnina aw dé TaHine obuhtriee : se | The snow belt extnded to to the fair. mnt agencies in developing untries, |Kitehener and London in the Crowded into an apartment at jwest and Peterborough and Habitat--an experimental hous 4 |Kiggston in the east. ing project at Expo--for the . Buffalo and other points on christening Sunday were about '\the southern fringes ' Lakes 40 persons--relatives, city offi oe In THE TIMES Today Aig Erie and Ontario also recorded cial s, policemen, reporters, Z Z x \heavy weekend falls. 'churchmen and spectators. aay Greduation Exercises--P. 9 See ae cca Reg = AEE: Pic-Ax Play--P. 5 'Snowsqualls Dump Two Feet | Saati | ae Ls Along Shores Of Great Lakes -- Along Shores reat Lakes CHICAGO (AP) -- Heavy|York. The storm dumped 23 snowsqualls dumped up to twolinches of snowa@at. Conneaut, \feet of snow Sunday night and|Ohio, atid 21 inches at Mayville. learly today along the southern N.Y jand eastern shores of the Great Snow fell in a narrow band |Lakes, along Lake Erie, and police re-| } The season's first major)ported little snow on the ground | lsnowstorm sent temperatures|20 miles south of the shoreline | |plunging and brought traffic to/Highways were slippery. and a crawl. covered with snow. The Ohio : aE eae a baat fet | The area hardcst hit was the|state police reported that traffic "CBC President? | dunno! DOUG LAVOIE, (LEFT), KEN CREVIER DISPLAY BUSH WOLF 'eastern shore of Lake Erie inion Interstate 90 was being held) -- What's it pay? a ..~ 40-Pound Carcass Examined By Two Men [ncestienst Ohio and Pennsylva-|to 15 miles an hour by falling | _ nia and extreme western New jand blowing snow,

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy