1@ THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, November 2, 1964 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING (Continued from Page 17) 7 Children Baptized " 30--Automobiles Wanted $ ALL CASH $ For clean cars, or trucks we deal up or down, Liens paid NICOLS MOTORS LTD. 146 BROCK ST. NORTH Across from Royal Hotel WHITBY 668-3331 TAKESHORE Auto Wreckers went cars| for Highest prices paid. 200 Wentworth 725-1181, OSHAWA AUTO PARTS and Auto 5 Wreck. a 'San 725-208 or 723-4145. 31--Automobile Repair At Brooklin BROOKLIN (TC) -- The Sac- rament of Infant Baptism was observed Sunday morning, Oct. 18, at Brooklin United Church. The meditation entitled, "Is Baptism a Coming Out Party or a Sacrament?" was delivered by Rev. G. A. Mun The children welcomed as jun- ior members of the congregation were: Allan Ronald Bray, son of Mr. and Mrs, Ron. Bray; Tammy Lyn Burroughs, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs, Niel Bur- roughs; David Arthur Hunter, MUFFLER . . . BRAKES General Repairs to all makes. - 10 Bays to serve you. KENT'S WESTERN} TIRE SERVICE 145 KING W. 728-1607 son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hunter; Sandra May McIntyre, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David McIntyre; Deborah Diane Shep- stone, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Shepstone; Douglas Donald Wright, son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Wright; Stacey Ann Wright, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, William Wright. The senior choir sang the anthem, Tarry in the Garden -- BARGAINS Anti-freeze $2.29 All. Chev., Pontiac mufflers Installed $7.77 4-way Flosher kit .. Ignition Wire Ki To 1600 King E, -- 728-7781 (All other acc, 10% off with this coupon) carburetor and King Street West, 728-0817. Marshall, with soloists Mrs. D. Vallance and Ralph Milner. UCW MEET The October meeting of the Brooklin United Church Women was held in the Christian Educa- tion Centre of the church. Mrs. G. Mundy and Mrs. J. Batty, of the Lend-a-Hand Unit, led in worship with the theme, Thanksgiving. Mrs. Batty read a meditation on the author of and the writing of the hymn, PER ke service end front end canarias gin Bohs 226 Celina Street. Cail 723-4233. TRANSMISSION -- speciallots, _tranamis- sions ere our only business. 1038 Simcoe forth. Phone 728-7339. 35--Swap and Borter pei leat shearer BATHTUBS, $20; toliets, basins, sinks, laundry e furnace, fittings, piping. H. Chinn, Hillside Avenue. 35A--Lost and Found LOST -- Femeie Germen Shepherd, Diack and ten, Answers to the name of "Boots." Call 728-9569. . 36--Legal TOWN OF AJAX TENDERS the undersigned on Town of Tender Forms until 4 p.m., E.S.T., MONDAY, NO- VEMBER 9th, 1964, for ap- proximately 310 tons of Hot Mix, Hot Laid Asptilt, D.H. O. Specification H.L. 4, to be applied to certain areas in tt? "fg i : i ea S g : ~ i 3 | MISS MILDRED |. PRICE, 420 Euclid Street, WHITBY, Ontario, "Now Thank We All Our God." Mrs. M, Agar introduced Mrs. Doris Schuerman, regional director of the Association for Retarded Children. In her re- marks, Mrs. Schuerman ex- plained the meaning of "re- tubs,| tarded"' and brought to the at- tention of the women that three out of every 100 children born are retarded to some degree. There are approximately 540,000 retarded in Canada and}about 90 local retarded children's so- ceties have been formed in Ontario. Mrs. Schuerman gave the his- tory of the Oshawa school begin- ning with an enrolment of seven and the building of Glen- holme, in 1960, which now has an enrolment of 35. Another part of the associa- tion's work is the operation of the adult workshop. Their most recent endeavor has been the establishment of pre-school classes and the members are now looking forward to the time when a residence for the retard- ed children can be opened. In all the work for these handicapped people the 3R's of routine, repetition and relaxa- tion are stressed. UNIT MEETINGS The ABC Unit met at the home of Mrs, C. S. Thompson. Miss J. Kellar, Mrs, D. Val- lance and Mrs. D. Burleigh were in charge. The theme of the worship was "Thanksgiving. The mission study on Brazil was Degun. The Friendship Unit was wel- comed to the home of Mrs. A. Reynolds. Mrs. D. Roberts, Mrs. C. Pilkey and Mrs. S. Stewart were the committee. The penny race was won by Mrs. A. Stocks' team. The Faithful Workers' Unit met at the home of Mrs. G. Hunter. Thanksgiving was the theme of the worship chosen b ts. G. Hunter and Mrs. A. Colored slides of Eu- COMING EVENTS rope were shown by Mrs. N. Alves and Mrs. R. Hunter. BINGO St. Gertrude's Auditorium TO-NIGHT AT 8 P.M. 690 KING ST. E. AT FAREWELL FREE ADMISSION Snowball Jackpot $180 - 56 Nos. 20 Consolation Reg. Jackpot 59 Nos. $100 $20 Consolation. Good Prizes PARKING IN SCHOOL YARD DURING ROAD CONSTRUCTION Mrs. Fred Taber opened her home to. the members of the Reliable Unit. The committee in charge was Mrs. A. Parrinder and Mrs. Lee. The Lend-A-Hand Unit met at the home of Mrs., H. Grills. Mrs. G. Mundy led in the wor- ship and also in the study from the book, God and His Purpose. Mrs. J. Batty took the mission study on Trinidad. The Sunshine Unit met at the home of Mrs. A. Fraser. Mrs. R. Parker and Mrs. R. Holman led the worship qth a Thanksgiving theme. Mrs. Holman introduced the new study book, God and His Purpose; while Mrs. Parker introduced the new mission study.on Trinidad and Tobago. Eastview Park EUCHRE BOYS' CLUB (Main Floor) "Eulalie Ave. -MON., NOV. 2nd 8 P.M. 50c Refreshments ond Prizes The committee borrowed re- cordings of "Pan Band" music from Trinidad and a steel drum such as is used in these bands to illustrate a part of the study. Hiker Falls 2000 Ft., Lives GREENSVILLE, Ont. (CP)-- WOODVIEW COMMUNITY CENTRE BINGO Nos. 50 ond 54 TONIGHT -- 8 P.M. RED BARN EXTRA BUSES A young hiker clutched a clump of roots and screamed for help as he dangled over a' 200-foot precipe- Sunday, then pitched into space when his weight pulled the roots free. Colin Jones, 16, of Scarbor- ough, a Toronto suburb;~-was taken to hospital with a frac- tured skull: and ankle and fa- cial cuts. His condition was fair and police said it was a miracle he was not killed. "IKKINSMEN BINGO TUESDAY 8 O'CLOCK FREE ADMISSION - EXTRA BUSSES Jackpot Nos. 51 ond 51 EARLY BIRD GAMES KINSMEN COMMUNITY CENTRE 109 COLBORNE ST. W. RUMMAGE saie, UAW: Hail, Tuesday, Nov. 3. 1.30 p.m. Mary Street Home and School. KEDRON UNITED CHURCH WOMEN, Fall Bazaer and Tes, Saturday, Noven- ber 7, 2.30 p.m. 1 mile north Five Points. EARTH MOVED : More than 5,000,000 cubic yards of earth have been moved to create Roser lakes and la- goons at Florida's Cape Coral waterfront gardens Jones and seven other stu- dents from W. A. Porter High School in. Scarborough were on an unofficial field trip to Tew's Falls, near Dundas. As they hiked along the top of the rocky chasm below the falls, the side of the cliff crumbled, throwing Jones over the edge. He rolled down an 85-foot slope, then plunged another 135 feet down the sheer face of the cliff to the rocks below. Greensville firemen carried him nearly two miles by stretcher before getting him to lan ambulance at Dundas. He was the third person to fall over the escarpment in the last 'two months. One of the earlier victims died. Nearing Canadian Press Staff Writer Ten Canadian writers reveal Canada to the United States as a country in search of national purpose where events, notably in Quebec, are pressing the search to a climax. The November edition of At- lantic Monthly, published in Boston, is a special 'issue on Canada with articles by Cana- dians on topics from politics and trade to education and art. Included are representative work by eight contemporary Canadian poets, reproductions of Canadian painting and five political cartoons by Duncan Macpherson of the Toronto Star. Two contributors, one French-speaking, one English- speaking, conclude that what Canada needs most is a new constitution that makes the peo- ple of Canada, rather than the Crown, the fountainhead of po- litical power. This would have the effect of making Canada more. like a re- public than a_ constitutional monarchy. "We Canadians have so far failed to enter fully into our legacy, and this is our one great, overreaching problem as our centennial approaches," writes Dr.- John Conway, now professor of humanities at York University in Toronto after 16 years as a master at Harvard University. "We have failed to best sov- ereignty where it properly be-. longs--in the Canadian people," he writes in the lead article. NATION DIVIDED "Instead, we have allowed it to remain in the British Mon- archy, and in doing so we have divided our country and inhibi- ted our emotional and creative development as a people." The only way to celebrate properly the centenary of Con- federation in 1967, Dr, Conway says, is to hold a conference that would produce a truly Ca- nadian constitution. Dr.Conway's view is echoed in part by Marcel Faribault of Montreal, president of Le Trust General du Canada, who argues in an article on French Canada for a new constitution--as he did as a speaker at a Conser- vative party thinkers' confer- ence in September at Frederic- ton. Reporter Charged By Law Society OTTAWA (CP) -- Edward Murphy, Parliamentary. Press Gallery reporter for radio sta- tion CKNW New Westminster, B.C., was charged in city mag- istrate's court Friday. with im- personating a lawyer and re- manded one week for plea. The charge against Murphy, who did not appear in court, was laid following his jail-cell interview here with David Cow- lishaw of Vancouver, arrested for tossing a container of cow's blood on to the floor of the House of Commons Aug: 24. The Law Scoiety of Upper Canada, which is pressing the charge, says Murphy presented himself as a solicitor to gain entry to the jail to interview National Purpose Search Peak In be "less imperial" and provide for a true constitutional court, a reformed Senate and '"'the re- turn to the provinces of all their fundamental func' tions, stripped of the illusions of fed- eral fiscal predominance," Mr. Faribault writes. Under the present system, he says, "Canada has developed neither a philosophy of federal- ism nor indeed any philosophy at all, since a philosophy which is neither harmonious and inte- grated nor vocally expressed simply does not exist." LACK IDENTITY This lack of a philosophy, na- tional purpose or a Canadian identity is a theme emphasized in other articles in the Atlantic symposium. Brian Stock, a Canadian scho- lar at Cambridge University, bases the case for the expat- riate on the argument that Can- ada "has betrayed the very in- most nature of our selves by = Life Sentence On Gandhi Death By RUKMINI DEVI Canadian Press Correspondent BOMBAY (CP) -- Gopal Godse, one of four men con- victed 16 years ago of the mur- der of Mohandas andhi, now is free and proposes to enter politics after a period of rest. Godse is the younger brother of Nathuram Vinayak , Godse, the man who actually shot and killed Gandhi as the Indian na- tionalist. leader was on his way to a prayer meeting the even- ing of Jan. 30, 1948. Nathuram Godse was hanged for the murder while Gopal Godse was sentenced to life im- prisonment for abetting the crime. He was released re- cently after serving 14 years in prison, the equivalent of a life sentence. Godse, now 44, told reporters in Poona, his home~town 100 miles from here, that he pro- posed to work in an engineering workshop. started by his wife while making plans for an ac- tive political career. There is some concern in In- dian political circles over God- se's announcement that he will enter politics. WANTS HINDU RULE Both Gopal Godse and his brother were members of the Rashtriya Swayam Sewak Sangh, a militant right - wing Hindu organization which has as its prim objective the estab- lishment of Hindu rule over the India-Pakistan sub-continent Nathuram Godse told -- the court he shot and killed Gandhi because he had "appeased" the Moslems and was responsible for. the creation of Pakistan. It is generally believed that Gopal Godse will re-establish his connections with the Hindu organization, which is still ac- tive in some parts of northern, central and western India. His association with the group, it is felt, might provide it with the t of militant youthful leadership it has been looking for since the Gandhi assassination gent it into po- Cowlishaw. litical disgracé. Every Time At By JOHN BEST MOSCOW (CP)--For a really high-class gossip session you can't beat a Kremlin reception. The --setting --- St._.George's Hall, most magnificent of all the rooms in the Kremlin Grand Palace, an architectural ensem- ble with antecedents back to the 15th century. The people--Communist party and Soviet government elite, very often a famous visiting statesman, now and then Rus- sian space heroes, foreign am- bassadors. The fare -- hors .d'oeuvres, meats and fish, caviar. and bread, mineral water, cognac, white and red wine, coffee, ice cream. The guests tie into this tempt- ing layout while éxchanging gossip on the latest wrinkles in Soviet foreign policy or Krem- lin power struggles--who loses, who -wins, who's in, who's out. Huge crystal chandeliers glit- ter from.above, their beams dancing off a handsome floor of inlaid red and brown woods. On the marble walls, still in- taet, are engraved regimental insignia from czarist times and the names of thousands of czar- ist army. officers. Kremlin receptions follow a set pattern: arrival of some honored guest at the palace, and his slow progress up a long carpeted stairway leading to St. George's Hall; the playing of national anthems; presentation to the diplomatic corps; then the mass swoop on tables laden with goodies. TABLES FOR BARRIER The honored guest, his party, leaders of the Soviet Commu- nist party, top-level officials and diplomats: rub shoulders at one end of the hall, separated by table barricades from cor- respondents and lesser officials. Diplomats and reporters, who basically are in the same game on such occasions, sometimes converse across the tables di- viding them, swapping titbits of information. : The discussions are inter- rupted 'only by one or two short, formal speeches in which the guest of honor and his Soviet High-Class Gossip Session Kremlin 'Do' government hosts exchange pleasantries. These usually occur about halfway through the reception, which normally lasts about two hours--but may pack up.sooner or last longer depending on the occasion. Sometimes you get the. most revealing insights. For instance, the sight of a Soviet cabinet minister hobnobbing with | no- bodies near the back of the room, brings home with heavy impact the fact that the only people who count in this society are members of the party pre- sidium. Sometimes you see things that look portentous, The night following the announcement of Nikita Khrushchev's downfall there happened to be a recep- tion for Cuban President Os- valdo Dorticos. RUMORS FLY Foreign observers thought that the Soviet army brass stood farther away from the party elite that night than on previous occasions. This, i was said, tended to confirm reports that the mili- tary was due for a shakeup un- der the new regime and that Defence Minister Rodion Mali- novsky -- not present--had been sacked. In the days that followed, there was no confirm- ation of these rumors. Sometimes you see things that don't seem particularly significant at the time but come back with a flash when subse- quent events lend them special meaning, 7. The evening of Sept. 30, a re- ception was held for President Sukarno of. Indonesia. Vividly recalled now is the sight of Leonid Brezhnev and Alexei Kosygin iti animated conversa- tion between themselves and among others, tee Khrusichey was not present. He had left that morning for a Black Sea vacation. The next time he saw Moscow, two weeks later, was when he came back to be drummed out of the party hierarchy and govern- ment. The men who inherited Khrushchev's power; Brezh- denying us the spiritual resour- ces of a homeland, a patria." Canada, writes Mr. Stock, gave him health, money and education "bnt she failed to give me the one thing essen- tial: A sense of identity, with- out which everything else is useless." e Douglas V. LePan, author and diplomat, now principal of Un- iversity College in the Univer- sity of Toronto, also recognizes "something in the social atmos- 'phere that has eperated to blur sharp edges' in Canadian life. But he sees this lack more positively, partly a result of youth and the wilderness back- ground, a challenge to be met rather than a vacuum to be ab- horred. COVER BUSINESS, ART Other contributions to the special Canadian issue are ar- ticles on the Quebec revolution by Gerard Pelletier, editor of Montreal La Presse; on Cana- dian business by Robert M. \Fowler, Montreal lawyer and businessman; on Canadian di- plomacy -by John W. Holmes, president of the Canadian In- stitute of International Affairs; on art by Alan Jarvis, former director of the National Gallery in Ottawa; on nature by con- servationist Roderick Haig- Brown; and on education by Robertson Davies, master of Massey College at the Univer- sity of Toronto. Edward Weeks, editor of the Atlantic, says several factors prompted him to publish the speciat issue, among them an- nual fishing trips to Canada for the last 25 years, frequent meetings with Canadian writers and the ferment in Quebec. The clinching argument, he Says, was a comment by Liv- ingston T. Merchant, former U.S. ambassador to Canada, that "Canada is more impor- tant to the United States than Moncton Starts Water Project By JOHN MOSHER MONCTON, N.B. (CP)--Work is under way on a $5,600,000 project, scheduled for comple- tion by the end of 1965, to meet growing water requirements in the greater Moncton area for at least 50 years. The city, with a population of more than 43,900, uses an aver- age of 4,600,000 gallons daily from two reservoirs supplied by small creeks. About 15,000,000 gallons a day in a minimum dry year, and much more in rainier years, will be provided by the new development. The project includes a Turtle Creek dam 10 miles from the centre of Moncton and a 1,100- foot concrete - lined cylinder tunnel under the Petitcodiac River bounding Westmorland and Albert counties. Moncton, beside the- Petitcodiac, is in Westmorland and Turtle Creek in Albert. MINERS DIG TUNNEL A 36 - inch - diameter pipeline through the tunnel will taper to 24 inches after. crossing the river. Five former coal miners from Springhill, N.S., began ex- Maj. J. J. Louis Lessard, bilingual Edmonton-born mem- ber of the UN Cyprus peace force, helps break the lan- guage barrier between Gen. K. S. Thimayya of India and Greek-Cypriot Gen. George Grivas. The Indian UN com- mander's working language is English while Grivas speaks ON SPEAKING TERMS only Greek and French. Les- sard (right), shown discussing matters with Grivas, tran- slates for the two. --(CP Phote) eavation work for the tunnel. A concrete caisson 13 feet in diameter will go through 104 feet of overburden and solid rock on the south bank of the Petitcodiac. The north shaft on the Moncton side of the river will be about 138 feet deep. Engineer A.F. Brodie says the Turtle Creek watershed de- velopment could meet Monc- ton's needs for much longer than 50 years-gperhaps the next 100. He is resident engineer of James F. MacLaren Limited, consulting engineers for project. Work is expected to start By THE CANADIAN PRESS GIVES ADVICE The Ontario government's trade and industry branch has advised manufacturers feeling the pinch of British import re- strictions announced this week not to withdrawsfheir export ef- forts hastily. A circular to the firms introduced to the British the} market by trade missions said the import surcharges are a technical breach of the General soon on a compl tary un- derground reservoir at Garden Hill park in central Moncton. The 2,000,000 - gallon reservoir will provide water for fire-fight- ing and emergency use. After any other single country." this construction, the park will By JOSEPH MacSWEEN LONDON (CP)--Spring the name Wilson on a British bobby and he'll probably talk about Charles the train robber, not Harold the prime.minister. Harold, the new premier, has brought fame and glory to the Wilson name and made it a household word. But Charles, a shady citizen from 'way back, makes headlines of another kind. "You can be sure they're not related," said one detective with a grim smile. A police search for Charles Frederick Wilson, 34, a blue- eyed self - styled bookie, has spread over continents since he was sprung from a Birming- ham prison Aug. 12. It was a sensational and hu- miliating sequel to the even more sensational great train robbery of Aug. 6, 1963, when a gang grabbed more than £2,- 600,000 from a Glasgow-London train near Aylesbury, Bucking- hamshire. Wilson had served just under four months of a 30-year sen- tence for his part in the rob- bery when actomplices from outside the. prisoy, apparently using a master key, slugged a guard and took the gangster away. MILLIONS STOLEN The over-the-wall operation was conducted with commando- like precision reminiscent of the robbery itself, for which 11 men besides Wilson were sen- tenced. Some £2,300,000 of the loot has yet to be recovered and it is thought Wilson wasn't exactly short of cash after his escape. "We're tracking down every clue and every report," is the gist of comment by spokesmen for Birmingham police and Scotland Yard. But they indicate no definite knowledge of the whereabouts of Wilson, the "silent crim- inal." : Police Five Die In Hotel Blaze LEVIS, Que. (CP) -- Fire claimed at least five lives Sun- day when a blaze .1at started in' the kitchen of the Leblond Hotel levelled the ancieat four- storey brick building within four hours. Police said they would con- tinue sifing the ashes today for a possible sixth vittim Four of the dead were: men trapped in the fas*-spreading flames. The fifth, Mrs. Jeanne Dennis of Pintendre, Que., died in hospital of injuries suffered when she leaped from a third storey window beiore firemer arrived. Three of the male victims were identified as Raymond Le- blond, 38, Alphonse Forgues, 45, and Roland Gagne, 44, all of Le- vis, a city on the south shore of the St. Lawrence River op- posite Quebec City. Theogene Morin, Levis fire chief, said the blaze was the worst in his 38° years on the force in terms of tne death toll. Witnesses said there was an explosion in the hotel kitchen and wind whipped flames raced through the entire buiid- i which was at least 75 years old. spoke with typical Fire spread to a neighboring three-storey building and five families had to evacuate flats there. The adjacent building suf- ney and Kosygin, fered heavy damage.. When You Mention Wilson Robber In Mind Of Many British reserve, but it is clear that the Wilson case rankles, having set off a wave of public criticism of law - enforcement agencies and even of the judi- ciary. Chief Superintendent Gerald Baumber of the Birmingham crimina] investigation division and his men have checked thousands of tips from citizens andthe underworld. Inquiries have stretched to North and South America, North Africa and Europe, with Ireland being a favorite hunting ground. Bri- tain gave Canada a description of Wilson through Interpol, the worldwide police agency. DECRIED SENTENCE Amid the public outrage, there was a certain amount of sympathy for Wilson. Some folk considered it strange that Wil- son got 30 years when non-capi- tal murder and sex crimes carry lesser penalties. One vi- ear said from his pulpit that the Wilson sentence was "'bar- barous."" Baumber has conducted a study of the escape from Bir- mingham's Winsongreen Pri- son. His report has been given to the home office and 'the di- rector of public prosecutions for possible action. Theories conflict as to how Wilson was freed from his se- cond - storey cell, which was constantly fully lighted and checked by guards every 15 minutes. One surmise is that he used balloons tc simulate his body under a blanket and thus delay discovery. There is even a the- the prison twice -- the second time to remove the balloons. Married with three children, Wilson once boasted to his wife that no jail would hold him and was described by his trial judge as the most '"'taciturn" of the train robbers, having spoken less than a_ half-dozen words during his 57-day hearing. TIN BOX THEORY One underworld- informant said Wilson was taken from Birmingham. to London in a tin truck driven by four drivers in relay. Cars were parked at in- tervals ready to fake an acci- dent if the truck was chased. The Kings of Soho, bosses of the London underworld, were supposed to have staged the coup, prehaps fér 'payment and perhaps in the hope of getting their hands on the train-rob- bery loot. Vengeance would be hideous for anyone who squealed, convicts said, There were numerous false starts toward a Wilson capture. A stolen luxury yacht was tracked by the Royal Navy and the RAF--but -it carried only a couple of teen-age adventur- ers, not Wilson. No one yet has accepted the services of Jack Llewellyn, a 74-year-old water ory that his accomplices visited of NET EARNINGS | By THE CANADIAN PRESS Bathurst Power and Paper Co. Ltd., nine months ended Sept. 30: 1964, $2,000,000, $1.04 a share; 1963, $1,318,000, share earnings not comparable be- cause of financing. Texaco Canada Ltd, months ended. Sep . 30: nine 1964, $7,633,000, $2.32 a share; 1963, $7,193,000, $2.19. Canadian Aviation Electron- ics Ltd., six months ended Sept. 30: 1964, $837,329, 77 cents_a share; 1963, $683,477, 63 cents. Price Brothers and Co. Ltd., nine months ended Sept. 30: 1964, $8,063,000, $2.50 a share; 1963, $5,073,000, $1.56. Monarch Fine Foods Ltd., three months ended Sept. 19: 1964, $126,006, 12.3 cents a share; 1963, $113,076, 11.2 cents. Harvey's Foods Ltd., six months ended Sept. 30: 1964, $117,299; 1963, $33,252. Dome Mines. Ltd, nine months ended Sept. 30: 1964, $1,784,152, 92 cents a share; $1,670,082, 86 cents. EMCO Ltd, nine months ended Sept. 30: 1964, $761,000, $1.46 a share includes 26 cents in non - recurring earnings; 1963, $829,000, $1.31. Trans - Canada Pipe Lines Ltd., nine months ended Sept. 30: 1964, $9,502,000, $1.26 "a share; 1963, $5,917,000, $1.01. Dominion Foundries and Steel Ltd., nine months ended Sept. 30: 1964, $17,561,451, $1.14 a share; 1963, $15,241,901, $1. Robert Morse Corp. Ltd., nine months ended Sept. 30: 1964, $755,000; 1963, $510,000. Class To Clean Basement Of Church ASHBURN. (TC)--The_ Active Service Class met at the home Mrs. Murray Jones. The president, Mrs. Donald Jamie- son, presided. Mrs. Cecil Jones and. Mrs. Lioyd Wilson read the scripture. Roll call was answered by the members telling what they were thankful for. Mrs. Lioyd Wilson read a topic on Thanksgiving. An invitation had been sent to Ashburn qiass to visit in November. They have accepted. The basement floor is to be cleaned, two coats of wax ap- plied and the kitchen floor paint- box screwed on the back of aled. The Mount Zion choir sang at Brougham Anmiversary, and were entertained for lunch at the home of Mr. and Mrs, How- ard Plaxton. A number attended the Masog- ic banquet at Claremont. Mr. and Mrs. Grant Jones, of Brooklin, had Sunday tea with Mr. and Mrs. Don. Jamieson. Miss Mable Harbron, of Rich- mond Hill, called on Mrs, Wil- liam Harbron; Mr. and Mrs. Murray Jones entertained Mr. and Mrs, James Love and Kelly, of Toronto. Visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Jordan on Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Jim Mugford and daughter, Mr, and Mrs, Harold Van Sickle and daughter, of BUSINESS BRIEFS Agreement on Tariffs and Trade and stressed they must ibe temporary. FORM NEW FIRM A. A, Thornbrough, president of Massey-Ferguson Ltd., says a new company, Massey*Fer- guson Industries, has been formed to be responsible for all Massey - Ferguson manufactur- ing and marketing operations in Canada. All the Canadian oper- ating assets of Massey-Fer- guson Ltd. have been trans- ferred to: the new company. John G, Steiger, a Massey-Fer- guson Ltd. vice-president, has been named president of the new company. REPORTS EARNINGS The Minnesota and Ontario Paper Co. Saturday reported in Minneapolis third-quarter net earnings of $1,420,000 or 55 cents a share on net sales of $23,638,000. Earnings for the first three quarters of 1964 are $3,930,000 or $1.53 a share on sales of $69,355,000. APPROVE EXCHANGE Shareholders of Avco Corp. have approved the exchange of a minimum of 2,868,444 shares of Avco common stock for com- mon and convertible preferred shares of Delta Acceptance Corp., it was announced in Tor- onto. Home & School Hears Talk On Mathematics BROOKLIN (TC) The Brooklin Home and School Asso- ciation met in Meadowcrest School. Mrs. R: Humphreys in- troduced the guest speaker, P. F. Wiseman, inspector of Public Schools Ontario No. 2, who spoke on the topic, "The New Mathematics". Mr. Wiseman divided his talk in two parts -- Why are changes needed? and What are the changes? Under the first heading the speaker noted that we are in rapidly changing times and our mathematics curriculum needs, in some cases to be up-dated. There needs, too, to be a finified course from _ kindergarten through all grades to univer- sity. The principles of learning have a bearing on the New Ap- proach to Mathematics. These principles are: 1. We learn by doing. 2. We learn best the things we like to do. 3. Growth and learning are continuous. 4. Children are unique in their rate of learning. 5. Learning is more efficient when related to a purpose. One of the contributing factors to failure is that we push chil- dren into things that they are not ready to learn. Some of the pioneer studies on this New Approach to Math- ematics were undertaken by American Universities. Yale was one of the first. The Greater Cleveland Mathematics Pro- gram stressed understanding. In Syracuse, N.Y., the: Madison Project began a study with chil- dren in opportunity classes, This work led to creative thinking in mathematics. "The keynote of this New Approach to Mathematies,"' said Mr. Wiseman, '"'is the spiral cur- riculum, the Hypothesis of which is -- Any Subject can be taught, effectively, in some form to any child, at any stage of de- velopment." The topics are de- veloped and redeveloped in later grades. What are the changes -- This Ottawa, new approach différs from the diviner. who off i Toronto. Ww. ered to find the loud ty pulling. Gis ceeara fi desperado. William Green, Mrs. t : He said he could do it with|Brownlee and Jack Tanner, of|Mathematic principles. Some of a wooden ball, a fishing line Lindsay, had dinner receni e topics are appearing earlier, and one of Wilson's boots. with Mr. and Mrs, Gordof;Some topics which were deleted Wilson. in previous courses are now be- Mr. and Mrs. Burnett Jamie-|ing restored. Some topics are WANT FEDERATION son had Sunday tea with Mrs.|new. BRIDGE TOWN, Barbados|J. R. Leaman of Leaside. (CP-Reuters) -- A new West In- upon by seven of Britain's is-|Mr, and Mrs, Glen Manderson|make mathematics meaningful lands in-the Caribbean,' Dele-jand 'family. in a changing world. gates of the "Little Seven'| Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Wilson agreed at a meeting that ended|Wilson, of Lakefield. late Saturday night to resume} Mr. and Mrs. Allan Carson talks Dec. 7 for formation of an|and family visited with Mr. and| meeting will be Crown Attorney Mr. B. Walker's room. Multiple Deaths 'Score' Big Toll By THE CANADIAN PRESS Multiple-death accidents ac- counted. for nearly one-third of the total of 67 persons who died violently across Canada during the weekend. At least three other deaths were attributed to Hallowe'en activities. Two men and four children died near the Annapolis Valley town of Middleton, N.S., when their car plunged into a brook. « Five persons died in a hote}fire at Levis, Que., and eight per- « sons died in two separate car ' collisions in Quebec. A survey by The Canadian Press from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight Sunday. local times showed that 55 persons died in traffic accidents, six in fires, two by drowning, one in a hunt- ing mishap and three. in acci- dental shootings. Quebec led the provinces with 30 deaths, including 24 on the highways, five in the Levis fire and one in a hunting accident. Ontario reported 11 traffic deaths, including one young girl, making her Hallowe'en rounds, and two drownings. Nova Scotia had 10 road fa- talities and one accidental shoot. * ing while Newfoundland and New Brunswick each reported three traffic fatalities. New- foundland's total included girl hit by a car on Hallowe'en night. British Columbia had four deaths on the highway and Man- itoba had one death by fire and one accidental shooting attri- buted to a Hallowe'en prank. Saskatchewan reported one ac- cidental shooting. : Prince Edward Island and Al- berta were fatality-free. The survey does not include natural or industrial deaths, known suicides or slayings. The Ontario dead: SUNDAY William #Hi11,. 37, Toronto, drowned when he fell into eight feet of water while helping his wife into their boat on Toronto Island. Henry Vachon, 72, Timmins, Shortly after he was hit by 8 car on a Timmins street. James William Pollard, 24, Detroit, Mich., when the car in which he was riding left the road and overturned near Dela- ware. Melvin Ivany, in his late 20s, Bruce Mines, @nt., when his car went out of control and left the road near Bruc2 Mines. Robert Botwright, 30, North Bay, in a two-car collision on a North Bay- strest. Leslie John Ball, 14, Schom- berg, of injuries suffered Sat- urday when a milk truck struck his bicycle in Schomberg. Brian Ferguson, 32, Toronto, when his sports car crashed into a tree in Tororto. SATURDAY Walter George Taylor, 16, Toronto, when the car in which he was riding crashed into a bridge on the Queen Elizabeth Way near Port Credit. S. Bernendine Santen, 28, Peter- borough, when her car was struck from behind. Natalie Gaio, 8, Niagara-on- the Lake, Ont., when struck by a ear while walking with a group of children near her. ome. Michael Presse, 12, Cobalt, drowned when a homemade raft: overturned in Sasaginaga Lake on the outskirts of Cobalt. FRIDAY Eric Cardinal, 3, Rockland, when he fell from a_ tractor driven by his father and was run over by a wagon on the family farm, 20 miles east of Gordon Donald McRae, 15, Stittsville, shortly after he ran into the side of a train while: riding his bicycle at Stitfsville. Student Press Needs Aid EDMONTON (CP)--Canadian daily newspapers should lend greater assistance to university ; px newspapers, L Mr. Wiseman said, in this|of Ottawa said Saturday at the C Mr. and Mrs. Dick Ward.and|New Approach to Mathematics,| western regional conference of dies federation has been agreed|family had Sunday dinner with|educators are endeavoring to|Canadian University Press. John Macfarlane, Mr. Macfarlane, CUP presi- Pes ig dent, said such assistance could : 0 anks to Mr. Wiseman were|help build a stron grouping --- Barbados, Antigua;|and boys attended Grace Unit-|expressed by Mrs. D. Andrews cree which in turn would result Dominica, Monserrat, St. Kitts,jed Church, Peterborough, and/on behalf of the Association. The] ih St. Lucia -and St. Vincent--|cailled on Mr. and Mrs, Pau ljattendance plaque. was won by|nadian journalists. student a better grade of future Ca- He said finances and commu: The speaker at the Nov, 17|nications were the two major problems facing his organiza- independent new federation. 'Mrs, G, Féeites in Toronto. Bruce Affleck. tion. .