f ic @ "a OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdey, Mey 13, 1965 Steelworkers Serve Notice Of Harder Bargaining Line TORONTO (CP). -- William "Mahoney, Canadian director of the United Steelworkers of 'America (CLC), served notice 'today of a drive for a big boost in workers' retirement pay and 'maintenance of income for per- ~gons displaced from work. He also promised a tougher line in the next round of bar- gaining with the major steel companies in his report to the annual policy conference of the 110,000 - member USWA, Can- ada's biggest union. . "Their unwillingness to face new horizons and to break new social ground is cre- ating an atmosphere which can only result in an explosion if they don't alter their policies," he said in reference to Algoma Steel and Steel Company of Canada, which signed new con- tracts last winter after a long fight. These, expire next summer. The agreement with the third of the big three -- Dominion Steel and Coal Corporation--ex- pires July 31. Mr. Mahoney said Dosco was among the first to "grab the steel price in- creases" started by Stelco after the contract signing and ex- pressed the hope it will show the same "alacrity" in provid- ing the wage levels of the new Stelco contract. SETS A GOAL For future negotiations gener- ally, Mr, Mahoney put pensions near the head of the list and said the conference--which will share the general pattern of the bell - whether union's dealings for the next year -- will be asked to. set the goal of a re- tirement income of 75 per cent of a worker's best final earnings after 30 years of service, This would consist of a com- bination of. industrial pension and the Canada pension, The 75-per-cent standard was also used by the union chief as a figure to be sought for guar- anteed earnings in the event of unemployment, sickness or ac- cident. The effective periods HERE and THERE Thirteen horticulture stu- dents and two professors from the Ontario Vocation Centre in Ottawa were to visit the Rundle Garden Centre Limited today and take a guided tour of the city. A. W. Rundle repre- sents the Ontario Nursery Trades Association on the advisory committee of ove. Approval of a $26,483 grant to the Metropolitan Toronto and Region Con- servation Authority for ac- quisition of additional land for the Glen Major conser- vation area has been an- nounced by the Hon. Mat- thew B. Dymond, MPP for Ontario. The Authority pro- poses to acquire some 295 acres in Uxbridge township to be developed as part of the Glen Major conserva- tion area, All member municipalities are desig- nated as benefitting and will be levied the Authority's share of the cost. Cecil J. Carter, Prince George, B.C., will be the guest speaker at the 22nd Annual Ladies' Night Ban- quet of the Oshawa and Dis- trict Christian Business Men's Committee. A Mis- sionary with the Shanty- men's Christian Associa- tion of North America, Mr. Carter will speak to over 300 members and guests of CBMC at the Harmony Road United Church Hail on May 15 at 6.30 p.m. Oshawa Fire Department has a quiet time yesterday with only one grass. fire and a small blaze in a tool shed at 1054 Mohawk dr., to deal with. City ambu- lance answered four rou- tine house calls, The Newcastle Village Council has given author- ity for a campaign to raise funds to install artificial ice in the village arena. Several rare bluebirds are reported nesting near a farm house in the Ennis- killen area. It is the first time in many years that bluebirds have been seen in the area. Norman J. Scott, former owner and operator of the Brookdale - Kingsway Nurs- ery at Bowmanville, has been appointed to the board of governors of the Univer- sity of Guelph. Three Bowmanville girls -- Cindy Kowal, Linda Fer- rill and Patsy Blake -- won prizes in the Kawartha Lakes Twirling Competi- tion at Peterborough last weekend. Cindy placed first in the intermediate 10-year- old class. Linda' won top place in the eight-year-old intermediate class and Patsy was first in the class for advanced performers. The Rotary Club of Bow- manville will hold a com- munity fireworks display on the evening of May 24 in the high school grounds, Alex McGregor, Jim Marr, Everett Hoar and. Stuart James, all charter mem- bers, were honored this week when the Bowman- ville Lions Club marked its 30th birthday. On behalf of Walter Rundle, Howard Gibson and Bud Oke, a new past president's plaque was presented to the club. Presi- dent Laurence Goddard pre- sented a new Canadian flag. |funds by the membership of un- The Ontario Labor Rela- tions Board has certified District 50, United Mine Workers of America, to rep- | resent all employees of Staley (Canada) Limited at Ajax, except office staff and other designated exceptions. Oshawa's newly introduced 'Smoker's Dial' has been re- | ceiving a regular 34 calls | an hour since it was intro- | duced last Sunday. Smokers | trying to kick the habit, have been making use of the service on a round the clock basis. The number to dial -- for those who begin to feel a little frayed at the edges -- is 728-2221. Callers hear a 60-second recorded message of tips for non- | smoking. | ! The Ontario highways de- partment has awarded a $77,832.70 for work on High- ways 115, 35, 2 and 401 in the vicinity of Newcastle to Law Construction Limited and P. F, Law Construction Limited of Rexdale. The contract covers grading, granular base, hot mix pav- ing and resurfacing of: From 0.5 miles. south of Highway 2 northerly 2.5 miles including Highway 2 interchange; frost heave treatments of Highway 2 north of Highway 35 inter- section; intersection im- provement at the 3rd Con- cession; intersection im- provements at the Highways 401, 115, and Highways 115 and 35, and Highway 401 and Mill street south of New- castle. Darlington Township Council had notified the Central Ontario Conserva- tion Authority that it is council's intention to main- tain roads giving access to the proposed Enniskillen Conservation Area to at least the existing standard. OR ALL YOUR DRUG NEED Phone 723-2245 FREE-CITY-WIDE-DELIVERY JURY AND LOVELL OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE FARMERS MARKET OPEN EVERY FRIDAY FRUIT -- VEGETABLES FLOWERS -- PLANTS & FRESH EGGS iby Jan. 1, STORER would run from one to five years, depending on length of service. Mr. Mahoney said these mat- ters required '"'priority atten- tion' along with wages, a field where he said it is urgent to eliminate geographical differen- tials among provinces and be- 'tween Canada and the United States, Dealing with this year's wage increases, Mr. Mahoney said they were not inflationary and criticized Algoma and Stelco for initiating, and the federal gov- ernment for not investigating, WATER-WASTER BUGGED PHILIP LONDON (AP) -- Brit- ain's biggest makers of bathroom equipment dis- agreed with Prince Philip today after he complained that the country's toilets waste water. Visiting London's design centre earlier this week, the Queen's husband stopped at a display of bathroom hard- ware. "This is the biggest waste of water in the country," said Philip. "You flush away two gallons." A spokesman for Twy- ford's Lid., replied today: "Anything below the two gallons . . . would be con- sidered by most health au- thorities to be unhygienic." the consequent steel price in- creases, They involved "blatant profit - taking and consumer - gouging." In the face of 'flagrant abuses of corporate power to the detriment of the consumer," he said, the time has come for Canada to tax "excessive" cor- poration profits at a much higher rate. WANTS STRIKE FUND He also suggested the Cana- jdian branch of the union beef jup its strike war chest -- or "welfare fund"--which now is on a voluntary contribution ba- sis and holds less than $250,000, not enough to finance a major| |strike for long. | He suggested either a special dues increase for Canadian |steelworkers, or having the in- ternational board of the union in the United States set up for Canada alone a strike fund which would be kept at a min- {imum figure. The question of Canadian au- tonomy in relation to the USWA's U.S. leadership is ex- pected to come sharply before the approximately 350 delegates jat the two-day conference. A resolution from big Local 1005 at Hamilton calls for more Ca- |nadian control of policies and ions 'in this country. The Stelco local, with a mem- bership of 10,500, proposes that 1967, all Canadian Labor Congress affiliates would have to adopt the principle of "autonomous Canadian leader- ship, control of dues and ad- ministration of all sections of their union membership in Can- ada."" There would be no ob- jection to being an autonomous section of an international un- ion. SAYS HAS CONTRACT GREENVILLE, N.C. (AP) -- Bill Cline, little All - America tailback on the East Carolina College football team last fall, said Monday he has signed a bonus contract with the Ottawa Rough Riders of the Canadian Football League. Terms were not revealed. Cline, a senior from Valdese, N.C., expects to play either as a defensive back or offensive quarterback. | TRIED AGAIN | Milton S. Hershey, the candy king, failed in business three times before he began manufac- turing caramel, and made $1,000,000. jcomprehensive medical care in- | surance plan. Franklin Hit 20 Years Ago WASHINGTON (AP)--Twenty years agc this month, Ameri- cans learned of one of their most grievous losses of the Sec- ond World War. A terribly battered and burned ircraft carrier, the U.S.S. Franklin, arrived in New York harbor under her own power May 17, 1945, after a roundabout cruise from the Pa- cific, With the return to home port, the navy disclosed that the Franklin, a huge Essex-class carrier, had been hit by Japa- nese bombs 60 miles off Japan the preceding March 19, and had been turned into an explod- ing ammunition dump. | In eight hours of hell, 724 men were lost. In addition 265 were wounded. Medicare Will: Extend Itself TORONTO (CP) -- Ontario's medical care plan, introduced Tuesday in the legislature, will be extended gradually to in- clude optical, dental and sim- ilar services, Health Minister Matthew Dymond told a group of visiting Brantford clergymen Wednesday. The clergy men from the} Brantford presbytery of the United Church of Canada vis- ited Queen's Park to urge es- tablishment of a compulsory, They complained that cover- age for most Ontario residents through private firms, as sug- gested in Dr. Dymond's bill, would raise costs too high for the average person. Dr. Dymond said in introduc- ing the plan, which provides subsidized coverage for about 1,800,000 persons, that it will cost the province more than $70,000,000 in the first year. TEACH MORAL LAWS VICTORIA (CP) -- The Vic- toria Trustees' Association has planned a course in applied morality for primary schools. Children will be told why pre- cepts are right or wrong. Selma Negroes Lose Jobs For Seeking Vote Rights SELMA, Ala. (AP) -- Civil rights leaders say scores of Ne- groes have lost their jobs in Selma because they took part in right-to-vote demonstrations. But employment records don't show it. In fact, says the state employment service, jobs are going begging in almost every classification. "Suppose 200 Negrées have been fired as they claim," says Monroe Quinney, manager of the employment service office. "There are enough other jobs available to take care of a sub-) stantial number of them," | But, he added, "the number of applicants is decreasing and we can't fill the jobs," Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. has charged that white em- ployers have laid off some 200 Negro workers because of their| civil rights activity. He also said that many of them are without food and clothing. A federal community relations service spokesman, Fred Miller, says he has the names of the 180 Negroes who say they were fired because of the street dem- onstrations which became al- most a daily occurrence in the first weeks of the right-to-vote struggle. Miller says most of the com- plaints he has received come from maids, cooks and other domestic help. Quinney says his office has requests from white housewives anxious to hire do-| mestics. | It may be, of course, ex- plained the employment service manager, that jobless Negroes are looking for work through other channels instead of regis- tering with his office: He added that a housewife who has fired her maid or cook may have hired another Negro to take her place. Quinney added that some mer-) chants have had to let em- ployees go because Negroes are boycotting white stores and busi- ness has fallen off. In April, 1964, Quinney said, the employment. service re- ceived 253 new applications isters of Treaty Organization headed home a day early today after averting an open split over United States action in Viet Nam and the Dominican Re- public. In a communique issued Wed- nesday night at the end of their annual spring meeting, the 15 NATO allies agreed that 'grave threats have arisen to interna- tional security and peace" in Viet Nam, the Dominican Re- public, Malaysia and some Af- irican nations. | In the same paragraph they "reaffirmed the right of all peoples to live in peace under governments of their own free choice." The statement represented a compromise between U.S. de- sire for endorsement of its poli- cies in Viet Nam and 'the Dom- from men and women looking for work. Last month, the figure dropped to 186. WEATHER FORECAST | Sunny But Cool, Warmer TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts, issued by the weather office atjiness tonight, becoming over-\jowed to' settle their own fu- jeast with 'showers late tonight tyre, 5:30 a.m.: Synopsis: It will be consider- ably milder above Lake Super-|Vals Friday afternoon. Windsii,. United States was ready to ior tonight as cloud and show-|light today southeast 15 Friday. enter peace talks on Viet Nam ers move in with a weak storm| currently emerging from the) Prairies but the influence of the cold high pressure cell on eastern Ontario could lead to ground frost Friday morning. In lower lakes regions it will] be a sunny day today with) slightly below normal temper- atures in the lower 60s whic will be about 10 degrees cooler than Wednesday. Some cloud- iness is anticipated Friday as high pressure influences weaken but with a warming) trend under way by that time) it should be a fine spring day. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Southern Lake Huron, Windsor, London: Sunny but cooler to-| day. Sunny with a few cloudy periods .and warmer Friday.| Northerly winds near 15 be- coming light this evening. Northern Lake Huron, Niag-| ara, Southern Georgian Bay, 'Western Lake Ontario, Toronto, Hamilton: Sunny but cooler to- day. Variable cloudiness and warmer Friday. Northerly ~ winds near 15 becoming light) this evening. Eastern Lake Ontario, Hali- burton, Killaloe; Mostly 'sunny today. Clear and cool with ground frost likely tonight. Var- iable cloudiness and warmer Friday with a likely. Northerly winds near 51 becoming light tonight. Northern Georgian Bay, Tim- agami, Southern White River, few showers} Friday cool today. Increasing cloud- and early Friday, Sunny inter- Northern White River: Sunny clouding over this afternoon. Cloudy and milder with show- ers tonight. Variable. cloudiness and cool Friday.. Winds light becoming southeast 15 tonight and northerly 15 on Friday, Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, high Friday: Windsor 45 7 St. Thomas 42 London 40 Kitchener 40 Mount Forest..... 38 Wingham 38 Hamilton 42 St. Catharines. 42 Toronto 45 Peterborough ..... 38 Trenton 38 Kingston 35 Killaloe .... 30 Muskoka .. 35 North Bay. 35 Sudbury .. toes Earlton ' Sault Ste. Marie... Kapuskasing . White River 65 65 68 60 60 algoma, Cochrane, Sudbury, North Bay: Mostly sunny and Interest paid quarterly SAVING MONEY IN MAY IS EASY... at CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST & SAVINGS CORPORATION 19 Simcoe Street North, Oshewe «++ and when you open your new account bring this Gift Card and receive your FREE GIFT. Better Hurry... GIFT OFFER expires May 30th, 1965. 4'/2% on Savings Accounts 4°%o on Chequing Accounts Up to 534% on Guaranteed Certificates Longer Hours: Monday to Thursday 9to 6 Friday 9 to 6 Saturday 9 to § with its quality and its ja menace inican Republic and French dis- approval of those policies. U.S. State Secretary Dean Rusk flew to London Wednesday to put the American case before! the allied ministers at a closed- door session. | Rusk insisted on the passage i eee ee tae ce tes ae ie, ei NATO Ministers Quit Early, Avert Open Split Over US. LONDON (AP)--Foreign min-jers did express fear that esca-might lead to war with China the North Atlantic|lation of the Viet Nam conflictlor Russia. 21 DAY EXCURSIONS BY AIR TO BRITAIN ano EUROPE ROUND TRIP RATES FROM TORONTO: GLASGOW $311.00; BELFAST $317.00; DUBLIN $317.00; LONDON $339.00; AMSTERDAM $387. 00; PARIS $387.00; FRANKFURT $428.00 DUS- SELDORF $428,00; MILAN $455.00. "BOR DEPARTURES IN: MAY, JUNE, JULY, AUG., SEPT, Call HOWAR AJAX SHOPPING PLAZA BUREAU LTD. TRAVEL PHONE 942 6690 defining the Viet Nam war as) to world peace.) French Foreign Minister Maur-| ice Couve de Murville demanded) inclusion of the second passage to reflect President de Gaulle's view that all peoples, including the Vietnamese, should be al-| Rusk told the ministers that jwith the Communist nations, but jnoted that neither North Viet |Nam nor China had shown any inclination for such talks, SHOULD GET OUT Couve de Murville made clear France does not want a Com- munist victory in Viet Nam. But he repeated France's contention| that unconditional peace negoti-| ations should start at once and that U.S. forces must eventu- ally get out of Viet Nam. 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