oe rere ee Pee owre "@ THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, February 11, 1963 GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN CAFIK AGAIN SEEKS NOMINATION : Norman Cafik, 34-year-old Pickering district resident, will "Cagain seek the Liberal nomination for Ontario riding in the "forthcoming Federal election, April 8. .. Mr, Cafik finished second to Labor Minister Michael Starr erdast June in the Federal election -- 23,002 votes to 15,923. : Miss Aileen Hall, New Democratic Party Candidate, was third with 14,365. Miss Hall announced Saturday that she will not run this year. Mr, Cafik's performance was impressive in that it represented his first bid for public office of any kind, which accolade must also go to Miss Hall, as Oshawa high school teacher (OCVI) with an MA degree from Edin- burgh University who was al- so a political unknown. Alex- ander Alton the Socred can- didate gof 474 votes. Mr. Cafik was an able speaker with a fluent grasp of : Federal and provincial af- NORMAN CAFIK fairs. He could also hold his "own out on the hustings when the going got rough and the hecklers attempted to take over. ' Mr. Cafik is young for a Federal candidate but he has some impressive credentials, especially as an ambitious young business executive. The image which he created in the 1962 campaign -- his first time out -- was acceptable to many, re helped to get the Liberal Party back in the running, so to speak, in Ontario riding, after the outward. signs clearly in- *2. "dicated that its fortunes were slipping. Mr. Caffik is not yet home free insorfar as the Party nom- ination is concerned -- there is still a possibility that John Lay, twice an unsuccessful candidate against Mr. Starr in the early ** 1950's and defeated by Mr. Cafik at the 1962 nomination meet- -» .ing, will toss his hat into the ring. ao Mr. Lay, a nephew of the late, W. L. MacKenzie King, perennial leader of the Party and Prime Minister for many years, has an influential following in the riding, but many Liberals may be reluctant to nominate a candidate who has iec'already been unsuccessful at the polls twice. Furthermore, if * Weekend Fire Toll Heavy By THE CANADIAN PRESS house in Brantford. Mrs. Made- Fires in houses, a barn,|lein Annis and the children, school, garage, and boat) aged two to 16, escaped without claimed the life of one person,|injury, A firemen received mi- injured six firemen, left at least) nor injuries. 10 persons homeless and caused| In Hamilton, a mother and extensive damage in Ontario|her three children escaped in- during the weekend. |jury when fire swept through A Toronto woman died in her|the third floor of their home. Freer Trade Seen By ALAN DONNELLY OTTAWA (CP)--The Libera! party's trade platform in the election campaign, as outilned by one of party Leader Pear- '|son's close advisers, can be summed up as 'freer trade to} win wider markets." The Liberals advocate gear ing Canada's trade policy closely to President Kennedy's| Liberal Plattorm {join the |Market. : The spokesman said Mr. | Pearson sees a Canada-US. ;common market as.a less likely |possibility than either of the other two ideas. And he empha- |Sized that Mr. Pearson did: not |say that any of the three should |be adopted, European Common rooming house after she appar- ently fell asleep smoking. In Hamilton and Brantford moth- ers led their children to safety in home fires. Near Chatham farm, automotive and marine equipment was destroyed. Dead is Mrs. Blanche Fleury, 43, killed Sunday in a downtown Toronto rooming house fire that caused damage. less than $200. An ashtray was found on the bed beside her body. A widow and her nine chil- dren were left homeless Satur- Mrs. Rose Barens said she dis-|# covered the fire when she car- ried a child upstairs to bed. Damage was estimated by school board officials at about $100,000 when fire destroyed four classrooms of the St, George Public School in Guelph. Smoke overcame five firemen who were pulled to safety through a basement window, Fires in the Chatham area|# took a heavy toll of damage. Chickens, soyabeans, oats and some frm equipment were lost in a fire in a bar on the farm of Edmond Granger. Forty-five head of cattle were saved. day when fire broke out in their A garage owned by Edward Educators. Urge ».\..3° of Bear Line, near |Chatham, was destroyed and G U with it a tractor, two pickup reater se |trucks and a large stock of|# jautomobile parts and accesso- | Ties. Of French | Extensive damage was caused | to the superstructure and pilot TORONTO (CP) -- French-| house of the tug Prudence in an language educationists of On-|¢XPlosion - punctuated fire at tario wound up a two-day meet-|Erieau, about 15 miles south. ing Saturday with the adoption|¢ast of Chatham. The tug, of a resolution calling for the|0wned by the Underwater Gas Roy Thomson, center, wear- ing fur collared coat, Cana- dian-born newspaper magnate, is shown in Moscow's Red Square Sunday during his visit THOMSON IN RED SQUARE to the Soviet capital. At left is British businessman Billy But- lin and hatless man at right is Thomson's son, Kenneth. Thomson took 170 British busi- tarlf-cutting powers. |, One was the idea of a now The-hoped-for goal is a multi-|/Commonwealth trade arrange- 4|nation Ba that would reduce|ment, which Mr, Pearson: de- tariff barriers not only on both scribed as "difficult" in the throughout the free world, "|| €sent Commonwealth 'and "World trading with a mini-| '™P if it e d the mum of obstruction between|U.S. from any new trade bene- aca and seen ge ig of fits. The second suggéestion--for nations is certainly what we} sociati ; need today," Mr. Pearson wala aesociation wn tue 6 in a recent speech at London,|-O™monwealth trade plan -- Ont, 'No country needs it more| Would also be difficult, he sad, than Canada." |because of U.S. trade ties with cable use of French as the language| Development Company, was un-| of instruction in Ontario high|dergoing winter repairs. schools where a majority of stu-| "the meeting, of L'association| Stag] Profit Margin Worst Since 1945 de |'Enseignement Francais de| CLEVELAND (AP)--If a tab-| arate school teachers. Present Ontario legislation) specifies English as the lan-| guage of instruction in high schools, except for the teaching of French -itself and for Latin when taught in predominantly Freneh institutions. Feed Latin America Plan Progress Probed RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) --|Progress program which the,of Argentina's foreign exchange|® For years food production has|United States is backing. Y not kept pace with the growth) What» then, of land reform?|of meat and agricultural prod- l'Ontario, grouped some 375 sep-| ulation of the profit-sales ratio A of population in Latin America|Is it getting anywhere? is still earned through exports ucts. Almost the same quotations) other countries. . can be found in speeches by Conservative government mem- bers. Are Conservative and Lib- eral policies the same? SAME BUT DIFFERENT The same--but with a differ- ence, is the reply of one Liberal spokesman. The Liberals, he said, would work more vigorously to get nessmen on a trip to Moscow |meaningful international tariff by plane from London. In {cuts in the mutlilateral negotia- background is St. Basil's Ca- tions due next year, based on thedral, {the promise of freer trade held --(AP Wirephoto by out by the U.S. Trade Expan- from London) sion Act. papi cK Another difference was the Liberal advocacy of government help to tide over Canadian in- dustries adversely affected by cuts in Canadian tariffs, plus measures to give a helpful push to industries able to take ad- vantage of new export openings. The spokesman said the Lib- erals are not advocating Cana- dian membership in any trade roup. Some confusion on this point was created through reports of one part of Mr. Pearson's Lon- don speech. News stories em- What it all boils down to, said the spokesman, is the fact that any new trade initiative must involve many countries, with taniff deals made on a multi- lateral basis. Economic or trade union with the U.S has been opposed jin speeches by other prominent Liberals, including Walter Gor- don and Paul Martin. Mr. Pear- son argued s much in the London speech, when he said that if Canada isn't willing to pay the necessary economic and political price of maintainings its identity, "we'll be lost in the greater North American mass of the United States." The Liberal view is that in- dustrial development in Canada could best be achieved, not by higher tariff protection, but. by ac tion of industrial sti- mulants at home and wider ex- port markets won in interna- tional tariffs negotiations, Canadian Firms' ' study committee report/for 18 steel companies holds urged the association, thichifor the industry, the 1962 profit represents a total of 3,200 teach-|margin will be the worst since ers, to petition provincial au-|1945, Steel magazine says. thorities for French-language} It also would be the wosrt high school textbooks and/for a peacetime year since 1938, French - language examination|the metal-working weekly adds. papers for Grades 12 and 13.| The tabulation shows profit of Members said the lack of/the 18 firms dropped to 4.27 per French in Ontario's secondary|cent of sales last year from 5.46 education was an obstacle to|per cent in 1961, The fourth- students who wanted to attend|quarter margin slumped to 4.33) French - language universities.|per cent from 7.02 per cent in There were about 90,000 French-|the: corresponding 1961 period speaking students attending "largely because most compa- some 600 Ontario schools. jnies chose to show the effects f the depreciation reform in SEEK EXTENSION 2 " Delegates also adopted a res-|ine met Wariee, eel mhacdh olution urging the CBC to ex-|, Sales of the 18 countries tend its French-language net:|duting the period were off 8.6 work into southern Ontario, |Per, cent, while profits plunged Gerard Houle of Welland sug-|48-6 Per cent," the journal ob- gested that the one-year normal) S@TVes- school course for French-speak-| Citing a steady but unspec- --and the worst is yet to come.| Reports fro m Associated| Brazil! -- Only a fraction of There are 200,000,000 mouths tO/ press bureaus show progress in|Brazil's 3,288,050 square miles 'feed now. In 20 years the num-|<nots, but in general little ac-|has ever felt the plow. As many ber is expected to be 360,000,-\-omplished so far. jas 58 plans for land reform 000. | ' A have been presented in 12 years, The answer? Authorities -- yg ge Rie OY little has been done, Presi- agree. that land reform, split-| aro ped out of the world market|dent Joao Goulart has said: Hog up bis, eatsics were neces-|for™ this. commodity. Brazil,|. "Brazil needs agrarian re- sary '"e putting all available) nich has replaced Argentina form, and we must guide it to prey ® ine bree - aay 4/as Latin America's biggest agri-|a realistic, objective and demo- phasized a reference by Mr. Pearson to a "continental com- mon market" between Canada and the United States. This would involve eventual com- plete free trade between the two, plus a common tariff on goods from other countries. DIDN'T URGE IDEA Mr. Pearson didn't advocate this. It was simply listed as one of three hypothetical ap-| Total for the first two months proaches -- expressed in the/of the year is $132,819,912 com- form of rhetorical questions--in|pared with $123,677,287 in the the event Britain was unable to|corresponding period last year. COMING EVENTS BINGO Eastview Park Tuesday two ST, GREGORY'S o'clock. Euchre Wednesday 8.15 o'clock. CP TA. ~~ KINSMEN BINGO | BRIDGE. and EUCHRE "Mr. Cafik is to improve his showing of 1962, it is important "°-that inter-Party factions be united, regardless of how small "some of the latter groups may be. ee The decision of Miss Aileen Hall to drop out of the NDP's =*"homination race represents a tough setback for the Party. She Rad a strong appeal for many inside and out the Party and it is not easy to come up with strong candidates at the last minutes, especially in a short campaign such as this will be. Dividend Totals TORONTO (CP) -- Dividend payments by Canadian compa- nies in February totalled $45,- 706,733, little changed from $45,- 994,424 in February last year, says a compilation by J. R. RESOLUTION STRESSES "THE ETHICS OF GOVERNMENT Timmins and Company. When Robert Stroud - Liberal candidate in the forthcoming Provincial election in Oshawa Riding, whenever that may be -- attended the 45th annual Convention of the Ontario-Quebec- Maritimes District Kiwanis International in Halifax, N.S., last September as District Governor he promised the following resolution, which was accepted: "Whereas we in Canada provide excellent facilities for education in academic subjects, the arts, physicial develop- ment and other fields. "And whereas every citizen should be alert to the duties of citizens, representatives and officials alike in our democratic form of government; "And whereas no sufficient provision is made to educate our citizens in the essential ethical standards which should be see anes «eweserewnaan = KINSMEN BINGO TUESDAY, 8 O'CLOCK FREE ADMISSION EXTRA BUSES anne avaee ( cultural producer, urgently |cratic solution." If it does not keystone of the Alliance for! needs better land utilization. [come in this manner, it. could I Maxien, with. a a er-cent|Come with violence. Eight per lpain-in agricultural ocakas in|Cent of the landowners hold 75 Staples Heads 195 years, has made notable pro-|Pe cent of cultivated land. gress. Venezuela is making|More than 60 per cent of Bra- sae . some progress. But land reform | 7's ae ag people oS Maritime Union is a tremendous problem for ria en precarious -- from jnearly all countries of Latin ng. America. Peru Some Indian farm In Canada i : workers make only a penny a ag hn p sung eo page ----s develop-} opulation density is not yet;men as taken plac i | ee eo a --_ high in Latin America. The|Francisco Pizarro 2 Spada. Gon : jof Port Colborne has been|United Nations food and agri-|quered the count: in . 1475.) ing teachers be extended to two,|tacular demand for steel, the|° ing Cac fet ; tae saa fines, '| or even four, years to raise the|Publication says consumption elected to head the fledgling Ca- 'culture organization estimates|Most of the arable land is held i |nadian Maritime Union during that only about five per cent/by a few wealthy owners who --, standards of the teach- reso Scoueline ace critical fight for life in the/of the land has been brought | oppose reform rs. jus '| i . } ivati ; i ' Seraphin Marion, author andj4lly low inventories. Pveny Tee ene eaaeee ate more than 18 per cent forlcctie ~-, 4 moderate agrarian "Now therefore be it resolved "(1) that we reaffirm our belief in and adherence to the highest standards of trusteeship in the administration of pub- 7 "lie affairs, (2) that we call upon our educational authorities to im- *plement and maintain in our schools courses in the ethics of "government and citizenship, = (3 that our clubs organize and make available in their =communities programs and forums on the ethics of govern- =ment and of citizenship." =. Mr. Stroud was a member o f the Oshawa Board of Edu- cation for two years, including one year as chairman in 1962. He resigned last December. acne ALDERMAN PILKEY CONVALESCING Alderman Clifford Pilkey is convalescing with an eye injury which may necessitate his absence from City Council "meetings this week . . . . The Saints -- that unhibited group of eccentric musicians whose public appearances are far too few -- again stole the show last Thursday at the annual Past Presidents Night of the Oshawa Kinsmen Club, with which they are affiliated. The Saints only know about three musical "numbers well, but they perform with a gusto and animated spirit that would do credit to such Dixieland groups as The Beale Street Barons of New Orleans fame. Their roster in- cluded: Bob Taylor, piano; Monty Cranfield, banjo; '"Fliv" Cox, banjo; George Russell, Gut Bucket, Bruce Gerrow, saxaphone; Gordon Garrison, clarinette. The Saints were first organized in 1954. aevaeennan esse ees santacanan JOHN HARRIS WRITES FROM MALAYA Oshawa Lawyer John E. Harris sends along a post card from Penang, Malaya, dated last February 2. Mr. Harris and his wife were to visit Dr. Claude Vipond, and Mrs. Vi- pond, later in the day and to visit a rubber plantation with them. Mr. Harris writes: The increase and development 'of synthetic rubber is proving a problem here. The local papers are filled with the friction between Mayala and Indo- _.nesia over Burma. Before coming here we had a visit with "representatives of the American Baptist Mission in Burma.... Oshawa Little Theatre will present Cristopher Fry's The Lady's Not for Burning in the McLaughlin Library Theatre starting February 13... . James Fleming of 91 Harmony road south recently won first prize for his pencil drawing of an old barn and a car in the Annual Competition of Art Instruction Schools, Minneapolis, Minnesota. He won the prize in competition with hundreds of entries from every state, and from Canada. xe observed in the administration of governmental matters, | fellow of the Royal Society of with more than 10 per cent for jreform plan is part of a major Thurs., Feb. 14, 8 p.m. Canada, told the closing ban-|duction this week will be quet Saturday that French Can-|slightly higher than the 1,900,- ada's greatest contribution 'to}000 ingot tons it estimates the | the country as a whole was injindustry poured last week. It lits efforts toward winning au- noted operations have increased |tonomy for Canada as a mem-|to 62 per cent of unofficial ca- pond of the Commonwealth. 'pacity. | WEATHER FORECAST Cloudy, Colder During Tonight Forecasts issued by the Tor-| Forecast Temperatures onto weather office at 4:30 a.m.|Low tonight, high Tuesday Synopsis: A weak disturbance Windsor $000e0e 15 is causing light snowfalls over St. Thomas. the lower Great Lakes region.|London. .. \Skies are clear in central re:|Kitchener gions, where temperatures haye|Witgham .....+.0. idropped: below zero. The/ Hamilton weather is cloudy and milder St. Catharines..... jwith occasional light snow in Toronto Northern Ontario. It promises Peterborough ..., to be mainly. cloudy with near-|!Tenton .. lnormal temperatures over On- Killaloe . tario Tuesday. hag ey Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, \ouh. Bay.. jsouthern Lake Huron, Niagara panio, . Lake Ontario Windsor, London, White River | Hamilton: Cloudy with light Moosone. isnow today, becoming partly Timmins. |cloudy with a few flurries dur- Mount Forest 7 jing the afternoon. Clear and| pete : \eolder tonight. Partly cloudy Observed Temperatures jwith a few snowflurries and Low overnight, high Sunday jmuch the same _ temperature een eve 10 |Tuesday. Winds light, becoming R pe aa jnorthwest 15 this afternoon. Wikies Northern Lake Huron, Hali-\Lakehead 20" burton, Georgian Bay, Algoma,|Sault Ste. Marie.. Timagami North Bay, Sudbury:| White River...... Sunny with cloudy intervals to-|Nowh Bane : day, Mainly cloudy with a few|Sudbury ... snowflurries tonight and Tues-| Windsor day, not much change in tem-| London 25 20 20 20 25 25 5 20 5 15 15 és ee) aSSavtene |one lion and speared it to death perature, Winds light today, |\Cuar2 The magazine said steel pro-) Mr. Staples, 29-year - old erated by Upper Lakes Shipping the world as a whole. Farm ef- wheelsman aboard a laker op-/ficiency is low. jeconomic ans social overhauling 4, ; |within the framework of the Al- From Associated Press bu-|jiance for Progress. Commun- Limited, gained the presidency|reaus came these details on the|icts and socialists have attacked Sunday in a closely contested|big problem: election against Michael Shee-| jhan, 51, who. headed the CMU|dent Arturo Frondizi presented jan agrarian reform bill in 1958) since its inception in 1961. , . |it as "'too soft'? and demanded Argentina -- Deposed presi-\outright expropriation, A gov- ernment study shows four per cent of the landowners control The election was held at the|authorizing ex propriation of|53 per cent of Chile's arable first convention of the new un-|land with payment for it. The}janq. ion, set up by the Canadian La-|bill never got out of committee.| bor Congress to wrest control! Colombia--Land reform faces The 1961-62 wheat crop was) Jackpot Nos. 58 and.53 EARLY BIRD GAMES KINSMEN COMMUNITY CENTRE 109 COLBORNE ST. W. ~_ WOODVIEW COMMUNITY CENTRE BINGO Nos. 53-57 TONIGHT--8 P.M. RED BARN of Great Lakes labor from the|15 per cent less than that of |Political opposition, peasant independent Seafarers' Interna-| 1954-55. Nonetheless, 95 per cent} tional Union of Canada. Mr. Sheehan, a former SIU official who broke with Hal C.| Banks, SIU president, several| years ago, was elected to the newly. created post of CMU vice-president. | James Todd, a former sailor | who once tried to lead a revolt against Mr. Banks in the SIU,| was re-elected secretary-treas-| | urer, | 20 | 'The election of officers wound| The three newly-elected offi: jup a two-day convention of the jnew union, attended by 14 del- jegates elected by referendum | ballot. mission of inquiry set up by Labor Minister Starr to investi-| jgate labor strife and shipping | disruptions on the Great Lakes. | The 1,050,000-member CLC ex. pelled the SIU in 1960 on raiding |charges. Since then the con- | gress has accused the SIU's | leadership of corruption, gang- | Sterism, violence and dictatorial jcontrol of its 15,000 member- | ship, |apathy and suffers from lack of | The CMU and the SIU have) come under close scrutiny in| recent months by a federal com-| |trained personnel to administer jit. The law authorizes exprop- by the money and might of the|riation of private land not fully CLC, gained a foothold i nthe! exploited. SIU's once-powerful lake do-| Venezuela -- Agrarian reform main by winning bargaining|here» although far from com- rights last April for some 400 | plete, is one of the best in Latin seamen Lakes Shipping of Toronto. ran n The CMU convention was held eligible 350,000 since President in the CLC board room and was|Romulo Betancourt took office closed to the press jin 1959 with the slogan '"'land : \for him who works it." One ; |sign of success was a nine-per- cials--plus Ray Hackley of Tor-|cent agricultural produces in- onto and Michael Breen of Port|crease in 1962 Colborne--will make up the na-| ----__ "4 employed. by Upper|/America. Land titles have been} granted 53,000 campesinos of an -- EXTRA BUSES St. Gregory's Aud. Prizes -- Lunch Admission 75¢ Free Admission Free BINGO DNIPRO HALL RADIO PARK Monday Euchres TO BE CANCELLED _UNTIL F THER NOTICE BINGO St. Gertrude's Auditorium TO-NIGHT tional executive board, top pol-} icy-making body of the union. | SHORGAS The convention decided to) maintain close relations with| HEATING & APPLIANCES the CLC, and at the same time, | delegates opened the door for ; Industrial and Commercial EYE -- EXAMINATIONS PHONE 723-4191 by appointment F. R. BLACK, O.D. 136 SIMCOE ST. NORTH future affiliation with a larger union. The established, reliable Gas Dealer in your area. 31 CELINA ST. (Corner of Athol) The 500-member GMU, backed 728-9441 | AT 8 P.M. 690 KING ST. E. AT FAREWELL FREE ADMISSION Snowball Jackpot $180-56 Nos. $20 Consolation Reg. Jackpot 58 Nos. $100 $20 Consolation Good Prizes 681 Edith Street (off Bloor E.) TONIGHT--7:30 P.M. 20 Regular Games-- Jackpot 51---$160. $20 CON. PRIZE-- SHARE-THE-WEALTH (No Children Under 16 Yeors) RUMMAGE SALE New and Used Clothing, Household Articles, etc. Upholstery Pieces To be held Tuesday, Feb. 12 at 10 a.m. COMMUNITY CENTRE 144 King St. E. By Piyah Chapter of Hadassah GLECOFF WOOLWORTHS northwest 15 Tuesday. | Cochrane, White River, west-| | SUPERMARKET Special for Mon: - Tues. - Wed. FEB. 11 ROSE BRAND JAM STRAWBERRY & "CHOCK Man-Eating Lion (oie. soa tuuet « issesnaia Sought By Hunters |": Three other lions attacked ern James Bay: Mainly cloudy| with a few snowflurries and not} a group of policemen in the NAIROBI, Kenya (Reuters)--|area, but were frightened off) Kenya gatne department hunt-| with rifle fire. ers have been called in to help | gessmnme | west 15 to 25. |------ much change in temperature to- day and Tuesday.' Winds north-| Super Bakery Specials BAKED FRESH DAILY IN OUR OWN KITCHEN !! COFFEE track a group of man-eating lions which have so far killed) and partly eaten five Negroes) in the northern province of this British colony, Police said tribesmen chas THERE IS A BETTER DEAL for YOU in AUTO INSURANCE well over ed i eet their cor insurance with us in 1962. Why not investigate and Delicious Fres IS THE TIME To have that carpet or chest- | HEAT WITH OIL ertield cleaned professionally in | ' } DIXON Ss Oshawa's Original Carpet } Cleaning Centre . where OIL fully guaranteed satisfaction is assured. 313 ALBERT ST. Lemon Meringue Pie h Fruit Jumbo Family Size BANANA CREAM ROLL Special This Week QB'Me | Special this Week Bde CLUBHOUSE--ICE BOX JAR Peanut Buiter IN OUR CLOTHING DEPT, OF NUTS" TOILET TISSUE 4 , 12, 13 24-02. JARS RASPBERRY 49° 87* 37° FULL 1-LB. TIN Reg. 97c Special ROLL PACK 16-OZ. JARS 2 Breakfast BACON """""».69* FUEL OIL... LL " PERRY DAY OR NIGHT 723-3443 save money. SCHOFIELD-AKER LIMITED 360 King West PRR RR ESSER ERE SEE REESE CR eee eee es { 723-2265 Phone 728-4681 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER RUG CO. LTD. NU-WAY | 50 YEARS 174 MARY ST. SPECIAL PRICES ALL THIS WEEK !! PHONE BAKERY ORDERS -- 725-3421 MEN'S BRIEFS *"* 2 «$1 Shop and Save at Glecoff's Supermarket OPEN EVERY NIG HT 'TIL 10:00 P.M.