ROUND THE GLOBE IN A GLANCE Board Finds Firm Guilty Firing For Union- Activity HAMILTON (CP)--The On- tario Labor Relations Board Thursday found a_ Hamilton company guilty of firing four employees for engaging in un- fon activities. National Steel Car Corp. Ltd. was ordered to reinstate the four workers and to pay them compensation for loss of wages as a result of the discharges. Action against the company was taken by the United Steel- workers of America (CLC), which for the past eight months' has been trying to organize the 1,500 Nasco employees into the union, The Steelworkers had charged the company with unfair labor practices, contrary to provi- sions in the Labor Relations Act. The four workers involved were: Sidney Henchcliffe, em- ployed for 52 years, Gordon F. Grove, James Gaupreau, and Robert Major. Poor attendance, absenteeism, and wage garnishees. DROPOUTS DROP LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- The dropout rate in Ontario's Indian schools is rapidly declining, a conference of teachers working in Indian schools in western On- tario was told Thursday. H. B. Rodine, superintendent of schools for the Ontario region of the federal Indian affairs branch, said Indian parents are taking an increased interest in the education of their children, FAMILY EVICTED BRANTFORD (CP)--A mother and her eight children, ranging in age from two to 15 years, were evicted Thursday from their Brantford home be- cause it was unfit for human Rhabitation. Seven of the chil- dren of Mrs. Vivian Kusch have been made wards of the county Children's Aid Society until ac- commodati can be found for The board ordered comp tion in amounts ranging from $201.32 to $545.08 for the four employees. Reasons given by the com- pany for the discharges were: 'Prince Ondago' Windsor Winner WINDSOR, Ont. (CP) --A mine -year-old gelding from Leamington, Ont., came through with an $83.50 payoff Thursday night at Windsor Raceway and completed a rec- ord daily double of $200.40. Prince Ondago covered the mile pace in 2:11 in the second race. Tourbillion started the daily double with a win in the first. A $73 quinella was paid in the seventh with Ray Adios and Apache Gun finishing first and second respectively. A ninth - race exacta paid $74.40 for the first- and second- place finishes of Beulah Petite and Pat Yates. CAMPBELL VILLE, Ont. (CP)--Bill Wellwood drove two consecutive winners at Mohawk Raceway Thursday night, one of them in the $1,100 feature pace. Wysnor and Black Creek, both bred and raised in Strat- ford, and trained by Wellwood came through in the seventh and eighth races. Ron Feagan won his 186th race in the ninth-race nightcap to put the 23-year-old Goderich native in a tie for leading driver with Gilles Lachance of Mi 'ontreal. The daily double paid $64.30 Captain Dillon and Fanny ibol combining in the first and second races respectively. L.A. Blades Shade Cleveland Barons LOS ANGELES (CP) -- Los Angeles Blades scored twice in the first period and. stayed safely ahead to defeat Cleve- land Barons 2-1 in an interlock- ing Western-American Hockey League game Thursday night. Leo Labine opened scoring while Blades held a man ad- vantage, Tom McCarthy replied for Cleveland, then Marc Boil- eau, took Howie Young's pass for a breakaway goal while his own Blades were shorthanded. Los Angeles moved into a fifth place tie in the WHL with Vancouver. EUROPEANS ENTER CALGARY (CP)--Seventeen fan Tueannnn cleiawe oil) inte tep European - skiers. will join North American competitors in an international slalom compe- tition at Banff and Quebec City mext February, it was an- mounced Thursday. Organizers said entries are expected from Austria, France, Germany, Italy, Norway, Sweden, Poland and Switzerland as well as Can- ada and the U.S. the family. Mrs. Kusch, a di- vorcee, and her 15-year-old son have moved in with friends here. FUTURE UNCERTAIN TORONTO (CP)--The fledg- ling Company of Young Cana- dians faces an' uncertain future because the federal government isn't involving the public in it, says a former staff member of the group's organizing secre- tariat. Joan Newman, who re- signed last month to work for the Student Union for Peace Ac- tion, said in an interview Thurs- day that lack of public involve- ment in the company's develop- ment could lead to disinterest among the young persons it is being set up to attract. PREDICTS GNP MONTREAL (CP) -- W. A. Beckett, former economics pro- fessor at the University of Tor- onto, told the Marketing Associ- ation of Canada Thursday he predicts Canada's gross na- tional product will top $51,000,- 000,000 by the end of this year. OUT TO SEEK INCREASE SEEK INCREASE OTTAWA (CP)--The 9,000- member Professional Institute of the Fublic Service of Canada is seeking a three-stage pay boost of eight per cent or more from the federal government. Leslie Barnes, institute execu- tive director, said in an inter- view Thursday his organization By RONALD LEBEL OTTAWA (CP) -- Monday's election will affect the compo- sition of the Senate indirectly. The 11 current vacancies in the 102 - seat upper House, spread across six provinces, likely will be filled in the weeks following the election by who- ever is prime minister. In the éVent of a Liberal vic- tory, the vacancies would give Prime Minister Pearson some elbow room to "elevate" cer- tain ministers in the cabinet shuffle that usually follows a government's re-election. The election could change the Senate's make - up in another way. An informant close to the up- per House said many of the 32 senators over 75 who have until June 1 to decide whether to re- tire are waiting to see the vot- ing results Monday night. The 27 Liberal senators in the over-75 group are reported to be under gentle prodding to take advantage of the new $8,- 000 annual pension and make Senate Will Feel Changes No Matter Who's In Power room for some of their younger party colleagues. NO RUSH TO RETIRE Works Minister Moliraith nre- dicted in the Commons in April that many senators would re- tire, but there has been no rush so far to abandon the $15,000-a- year life appointments. Only five senators have re- tired since the Senate retire- ment bill became law June 2. The act will force future sena- tors to retire at 75 but present members over 75 were given a year to choose between retire- ment and staying on for life. There are five Conservatives over 75 and two more will turn 75 by the end of 1965. They are Conservative Leader Alfred J. Brooks (New Brunswick) and Senator Arthur Pearson (Sas- katchewan). The Conservatives naturally are in no hurry to retire if it means making way for Liberal appointees. The only Conserva- tive to retire so far was Hon. John A. gir page 78, of Ed- t 1 ae Inquest Into has asked the government for a four-per-cent increase retroac- tive to Jan. 1 this year, another four per cent retroactive to July 1 and 'further adjustments" to specific job classifications, also effective July 1. MORE TORONTO (CP)--Mr. Justice Leo Landreville criticized a bank official Thursday for in- terfering in the affairs of a wealthy client who "was be- coming a spendthrift in his old age." The remark came during tes- timony by banker John J. Dunn at the Ontario Supreme Court hearing of a $150,000 suit lodged by Ethel Margaret English and her husband Myles, a retired soldier, of Nanaimo, B.C. They are suing the executors of the estate of the late Lester Everett Weaver, a Hespeler, Ont., knitting mill manager who was retired when he died in 1960 at the age of 87. Mrs. English, his housekeeper from 1951 to 1960, was left a $7,500 bequest in his will. The plaintiffs claim $100,000 in damages and the return of about $50,000 in securities from the executors: Judge Everett Lane Weaver, his brother Wil- liam Erskine Weaver, an in- vestment dealer, and the Royal Trust Co. The Weavers are sons of the late Mr. Weaver. NOTES WITHDRAWALS Mr. Dunn, savings depart- ment manager of a Bank of Montreal branch here, testified he had noted large withdrawals from the late Mr. Weaver's account in 1954, "It just didn't look right," he said, so he drew the matter to the attention of Judge Weaver. "What struck you as being unusual was that Mr. Weaver was becoming a spendthrift in his old age? Why didn't you ask him about it?" the judge asked. a "If I had spoken to Mr. Weaver, I knew he would have taken it as an insult," Mr. Dunn replied. "He wouldn't be insulted," the judge replied. "'He'd have said 'mind you're own busi- ness'. And he would have been right to do so." . Mr. Dunn said Mr. Weaver left a $484,000 estate. Except RED CROSS IS ALWAYS THERE | WITH YOUR HELP People with a keen sense of taste and value buy Corby's «+. and they wouldn't dream of buying any other Canadian whisky. Corby's Special Selected Canadian FFRUE] CANADIAN WHISKY H. Corby Distifiery Limited Corbyvitie, Can. Bank-Employee Criticized For Meddling In Spending for the bequest to Mrs. English, the estate was divided between the two sons. In e2zrlier testimony, Mrs. English said the late Mr. Weaver gave her gifts of cash, cheques and securities to sup- plement her income and to pro- vide for her retirement. She said that in February, 1959, she returned the securities, then worth about $40,000 and a $5,860 cheque, to Edward Pringle of Royal Trust, the firm that man- aged Mr, Weaver's assets. In a summation of the case, R. J. Rolls, counsel for Mrs. English, charged Mr. Pringle and the trust company with "shockins" breach of trust to their client. He said Mr. Pringle frightened Mrs. English "out of her wits . . . by threats of in- come tax" in getting her to re- turn the securities to the trust company, Mr. Pringle, the lawyer said, told Mrs. English that the se- curities Mr. Weaver had given her created serious income tax problems for her late employer, He asked her to return the se+ curities to salve her conscience, Mr. Rolls said. "Force, duress and coercion was exercised on a very old lady," the lawyer said, J. C. MecTague, lawyer for the defendants, said the pre- sumption has not been dis- charged that Mrs. English ob- tained the gifts by exercising undue influence. Lift-Tragedy COOKSVILLE, Ont,;(CP)--An inquest was ordered. Thursday into the death last Sunday of Arthur Lancaster, 40, of Tor- onto, killed when a cable car he and two companions were riding collapsed at the Credit Valley Golf Club here. The cable car dropped 120 feet into the valley which it spans on the golf course. A date for the inquest pill be set when the two other golfers, both injured in the fall, are re- leased from hospital. Labor department investiga- tors have finished re-assem- bling the shattered elevator cage. They will operate it again in an effort to determine the cause of the accident. or job re--training because of The new deluxe fight- weight chain saw with professionalized power. B50 siete a PIONEER PROVEN CHAIN SAW PIONEER Proven CHAIN SAWS Available at the following stores: This year Pioneer line of chain saws offers a model for every need. From occa- Sional use around the cottage to big timber logging opera- tions you'll find what you want with Pioneer. Economically priced, the compact chain saw proven by professionals. improved! Best big power chain saw for logging and landing jobs, ea HOSKIN GENERAL STORE BLACKSTOCK Phone 986-4971 MORTON'S FARM SUPPLY LTD. BOWMANVILLE, R.R. 2 Phone 623-2279 PEEL HARDWARE LTD. PORT PERRY Phone 985-2431 RUNDLE GARDEN MOST ARE LIBERALS Present standings in the red chamber are Liberals 57, Con- servatives 31, independents 2 and independent-Liberal 1. The vacancies are distributed as follows: Newfoundland 1, Prince Edward Island 1, New Brunswick 1, Quebec 2, Alberta 3 and British Columbia ,2 and Ontario 1. One provision in the Senate Retirement Act encour- ages older senators to retire. It calls for an annual pension of | Rest And Warmth After Tug Ordeal SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont. (CP)--Four men rested Thurs- day at their_homes after an all. night ordeal in their partly- submerged tugboat on the storm-tossed St. Marys River. The four are Ed Nelson, 38, captain of the 80-foot tug Mise- ford, engineer Grant Harrison, 63, and crew members William "gel and Stanley Ritchie, The tug was towing a barge when both craft were blown on a shoal about 11 p.m. Wednes- day. Both grounded and the tug keeled over in about 10 feet of water. Winds of 70 miles an hour and 20-foot waves were re- ported in the area. The four were picked up at 7 a.m. Thursday by a motor launch from the Canadian ice- breaker Alexander Henry after an earlier rescue attempt failed. White, Four men on the barge, Bud Mike Borashinski, Ed Robinson and Ralph Neveau, all of Sault Ste. Marie, were in no danger. They were taken off by a helicopter from the ice- THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, November 5, 1965 7 breaker after the rescue of the tugboat crew. REACH WHEFTHNEr After the tugboat struck, the crew members struggled to reach the wheelhouse, the only' part of the tug not filled wi water. : Grant Harrison said he was in the engine room phen the tug struck. He stayed there un-' til the water reached his waist. to the high side of the for about two hours. He was lashed reached the wheelhouse. been washed overboard. They later found him in the wash- room. The U.S. Coast Guard sent out a helicopter when they re- ceived the distress call from the barge but it was forced to turn back because of high winds. The U.S. Coast Guard cutter Naugatuck arrived in the area about two hours after the grounding but heavy swells forced it to stand off about 200 yards. THINK... Of Free Education VOTE Monday for $2,666 for the wife of a who dies after retirement. ° If a senator dies in office, his widow receives nothing. Sena- tors electing to serve out their appointments will be required to contribute $720 each year to} the government. | NEW DEMOCRAT | x TORONTO (CP)--Charles P. Thompson, self-styled Christian adviser to the Nazi party, was sentenced Thursday months in jail on a charge of hours before finding Thompson guilty of setting police on a pers after he claimed he was abducted by an anti-Nazi group Stanley Ritchie said he clung|!#st June 19. 'Thompson bb winds and water until he/four months in custody he could not raise $500 bail, said The men said they thought at|the sentence would have been a first that William Biron hadjyear. that he had been taken forcibly to a west-end house and qr 8 Months For Nazis' 'Vicar' to eight The jury deliberated two Cut this cushioning Foot Plaster = fight size and shape for fast relief for non-existent kidnap- Judge W. F. B, Rogers, noting already has been because Thompson earlier testified| ATTENTION BUSINESSMEN... 1! We serve a special businessmen's lunch, including main course, soup, bread, butter, vegetables and desert, for 80¢ and up. Tea or coffee 5c extra, TRY US TODAY! We also specialize in delicious e LIGHT LUNCHES end taste tempting © CHINESE FOODS ARTE RESTAURANT AND Upstairs 14% KING ST. EB. 728-4666 -- 725-0075 driving really is. 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