L 2 ORDERED TO LEAVE U.S. Miami and paved a toy They were, ordred to leave pistol at shoppers, get off a the United States by a mun- plane at Montreal Inter- icipal judge in Miami national Airport Sunday. (CP Wirephoto) Two Monteal sisters, Sus- anne Bisson, 18, (left) and Monique, 20, who danced on a rooftép in downtown 1 s Call Strike Officially TORONTO. (CP)--The inte-| pendent Teamsters' Union offi-| cially declared a strike Sunday) against the 55 Ontario trucking companies represented by the| Motor Transport Industrial Re-| lations Bureau. | The union's dispute with the trucking companies over a new wage and working agreement began Jan. 20. A walkout against a Toronto company followed, and the 54 other members later shut down) on orders from the bureau. | Taggart, president of Lo-| cal'879 in Hamilton and chains man of the union's joint bar-| gaining committee, said in a} Statement Sunday night a meet-| ing of the committee is to be! held today "which may or may) not be followed by further nego-| tiations with the employers' | group," | Mr, Taggart said the work} stoppage, previously called a} lockout by the union, was de-/ clared a strike to "end any con-| fusion that exists within the lo-} cal's membership and the labor movement... ." | |BOARDS MEET He said the decision. was jmade at a Toronto meeting of the executive boards of the five locals involved in the dispute. The union, representing more than 10,000 truck drivers, ware-| house workers and mechanics in the province, rejected a con- tract suggested by a° concilia- tion board which offered a 3%4- year agreement with pay ~in- creases up to 56 cents an hour. | Pay rates before the strike/ prere $2 an hour for city drivers} |while highway drivers were | paid on a. mileage basis. | The work week would have) been reduced to 43 hours from| 46, but the union has asked for) j}an eventual 40-hour week. Libel Laws Change Urged By Robinette HAMILTON (CP) -- Canadianjthe plaintiff should be able to This proposal has been Ibe] laws should be changed tojrecover only for damages hejadopted in British libel laws, allow newspapers to apologize publicly rather than pay certain damages, a Toronto lawyer said Saturday. J. J. Robinette, counsel for a,conference. number of newspapers, said his} proposal concerns any errone- ous statement published by a can prove he actually suffered/Mr. Robinette said 3 --such as the loss of his job--! Newspapers in Canada, Great A |Britai d the United States lMr. Robinette told the annual/Britain an _ State: | ; s'|are "frightened to death" of 1i- iCanadian managing editor Sal, he aad. The person should not be able| PAPERS CAREFUL to recover for damages for gen This, he explained later, is be- eral injury to his reputation, the cause the laws of libel are so | | In Wife's Death SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont. (CP)--W. Dalton Barber, well-) known industrial executive here, | was charged with capital mur- | |der Saturday in the Dec. 3 death| jof his wife Marjorie, 53. | | Barber, 55, staff assistant to/ jthe vice-president of operations | jat Algoma Stee] Corp. Ltd., was | jarrested at his home by police} and taken to district jail. | Mrs. Barber was found dead| lin a bedroom at the couple's) |home early Dec. 3 by Dr. Wil-| jliam Hutchinson, called to the 'Husband Held | | newspaper in good faith andjlawyer said. Newspapers NOW/ctrict that papers must be ex-|home by Barber. The doctor | without negligence. If the paper apologizes, then Record P.EL. T On Its Way To CHARLOTTETOWN (CP) --A record Prince Edward Island to- bacco crop now is on its way to buyers and manufacturers in Ontario. With high cash returns for the bumper harvest, island growers are quietly thinking ex- pansion. ican be sued without proof' Of|tremely careful. tany special damages. __._.| Mr. Robinette told the editors |that there are inconsistencies in llaws dealing with contempt of obacco Crop ici. Newspapers cannot report an s jaccused person's confession or tarlans ladmission given in evidence in |preliminary hearings, Mr. Rob- The aver: price paid Prince|inette said, but there is no sim- Edward Island growers in 1964jilar restriction at an inquest lwas 57 cents a pound. jwhere anything said before the | The province's tobacco belt is| coroner can be reported. located about 15 miles east of} '"'This is an area where par- here near Montague. New |liament has not been quite con- |greenhouses used to start to-|sistent." ; lbacco see dlings-and curing) The lawyer also cited laws on }found a car running in a garage jadjacent to the residence. | Barber was found semi-con scious in another room and was jtaken to hospital. Later Acting} Coroner Dr. F. P. Sparks at-| tributed Mrs. Barber's death to! carbon-monoxide poisoning. | BELL COMMENTS VANCOUVER (CP) -- News- paper publsher Max Bell says jhe does not believe he and oil Magnate Frank McMahon would have had any better luck in securing a National Hockey League hockey franchise for \sheds continue to crop up. With| publicity in cases affecting chil-/Vancouver than did a group Apdeaiture Minister Antrew the price and yield incentives|dren over 14 years of age and|headed by businessman. Cyrus B. MacRae is among those who established with last year's|under 16. igh timism of ' Ss calatihal leet grow-|crop, it is generally thought that Trials of these children in ers |Ontario interests who bought up| juvenile court were held without Mr. MacRae says the indus- try started commercially on a) 12-acre plot -10--years -ago--is| STARTS PLANTING \gin cultivation. | inal courts for jland in the fertile area will be-| publicity, but these cases would} jbe referred to ordinary crim-| preliminary | | lhearings where everything ex-| Robinette. These sections of the McLean. FEW BORN BY DANUBE | Romania has the world's low- est birth-rate, 15.7 per 1,000. solidly established. Its continued| The largest resident grower, |cept confessions or admissions|Criminal Code and the Juvenile expansion is assured but the|/Doug Rolson, planted 75 acres! could be reported. Delinquents Act need to be rate of expansion depends on)with tobacco on farms at Ocean) "This is nonsense," said Mr. \studied. several factors. |View and Greenfield. He bought] --_--_--------_ ae Among the current involve-\the Greenfield farm from the ment is the Rhodesian situation. | provincial government last year.| In the minister's appraisal,|The province had used it in ex-| United Kingdom interests are| perimental tobacco-growing for) likely to shelve old ideas of con- | six years. centrating on one country for a| Leonard Vaerewyck. and his source of tobacco and "'spread|son - in - law Mark Vanneste the business around." worked 40 acres at Grandview And this spread is bound tojamd at harvest last fall esti- he felt by tebacoe growers, in| Te timated « return of $96, Ini + s " the Salted Staten one. Ceonts. se say en the 'badls of 1964 PLAN EXPANSION prices paid by Ontario growers. Mr. MacRae says several) Mr. MacRae said some P.E.I. growers plan expansion in acre- |farmers grow tobacco as a side- age under tobacco in 1966. line but thinks there will be In 1965, more than 450 acres|more specialization and a ten- produced a record 450,000\dency to more full-time tobacco pounds of high-grade leaf bring-| farming. ing an average 61.7 cents al Farmers who experienced| pound. The average yield was|some loss through early fall close to 1,100 pounds an acre.|frosts are also expected to gam-| The volume compared with|ble with earlier spring planting 395,000 pounds with an esti-|Acreage hit by spring frost, mated 990 pounds an acre injthey reason, can always be re-| 1964 and 350,000 pounds and 780| planted with seedlings held in pounds an acre in 1963. reservé SINGLE VISION '47 COMPLETE WITH FRAME, LENSES AND CASE BIFOCALS S 7% 65 STYLES, NATIONAL BRANDED PROD glosses ot ONE LOW PRICE . @ Broken Frames Repaired e@ We fill oll PS! Oculist and aw t OPTICIANS OVER 3000 17 Bond St. East 2nd Floor @ Broadloom © Custom Mede Slip Covers HOWARD'S DRAPERIES 926 Simece 3. N. 725.3144 Branches in Many Principal Cine COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM Here ot King we ore proud to say thot we use nothing but MENT. Should you poy more ond often times get less volue for your money? The thinking person buys at King for first quality NO EXTRA CHARGE FOR TINTS OR SUNGLASSES © Oculist's Prescriptions Filled At Some Low Prices SHAPES AND UCTS, MATERIALS, or EQUIP- . . SEE KING. or Replaced While You Wait Optometrists Prescriptions et some 000 SATISFIED CUSTOMERS HOURS: 9 @.m, to 5 p.m. Daily Closed Wed. All Day Phone 728-1261 of Canada and US --Founded 1904 they talk a fella's language So much happens so quickly these days that a lot of things could sail right over a fella's head. But they don't. Thanks to the daily paper.-In this rapidly changing world, the daily newspaper keeps you up to date; and goes right on talking your language. Yes indeed, whether it's a new art form ora design for a rocket ship, you look to your daily paper to learn about it. In fact, some 53% of Canadians read their daily paper for just that reason: "as the best way to keep up their educa- tion", according to a survey validated by the Canadian Advertising Research Foundation. Of course, they read the paper for other reasons too. For homemaking hints. For sports and financial news. For information about local social events, For theatre and TY listings. And for ads, Yes ads. Daily newspaper advertising is news. News about products and services. So Canadians use their daily paper as a shopping guide (83 °%). They prefer newspaper ads to ads they, see and hear elsewhere. Because they find newspaper ads less irritating (92%) and more reliable (41%). When you talk to people through the daily newspaper, you're talking their language. And that's a mighty smart move. Especially if you're an advertiser, She Oshawa Time A MEMBER NEWSPAPER OF CANADIAN DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION R. A. Barford, General Manager 55 University Avenue, Toronto