EAS ep nippy Sp Ey + eer we ee 6 a ge dy Bye f NEW CANADIAN WELDING SOCIETY CHAPTER MEETS The first meeting of the "new Oshawa Chapter of the "Canadian Welding Society, ~ "will be held Oct. 17 at East- + dale Collegiate and Voca- ' tional Institute. Chairman ~ of the new group, Ted * 'Wildgoose (seated) chats >with two other members of ' the chapter, Ernie Hilts and Ross Wetherup. The new chapter includes both local members of the Canadian Welding Society and also members of the Oshawa and district welding club. It is expected that the branch will develop into one of the stronger chapters of the CWL, representing the expanding industrial area of Oshawa and district. Mr. Wildgoose said the execu- tive has planned an inter- esting program of topics and speakers for the 1966- 67 season, designed to maintain and advance the knowledge and skill of weld- ers, technicians, super- visors and all those con- nected with the art and sci- ence of welding. --Oshawa Times Photo 'CNR Warns Commission 'May Curb Rail Progress OTTAWA (CP) -- The CNR 'warned Thursday there is dan- ger that the government's pro- posed new Canadian Transport Commission could impede yather than encourage the de- velopment of a rational trans- portation system. In a brief to the Commons transport committee; officers of the publicly-owned railway said legislation now before Parlia- ment appears to give the new agency extraordinary powers over carriers, It could produce a system of Douglas Point Atom Plant Should Give TORONTO (CP) -- Canada's first commercial - size nuclear Power plant, under construction at Douglas Point, Ont., should be in production by 1967, a symposium on atomic power was told Thursday. J. §. Foster, vice-president of Power projects at Atomic En- ergy of Canada Ltd., said if it @pens in 1967 it will then be 1% years behind schedule. But the final cost will be within five per cent of the ini- tial estimate of about $80,000,- The plant, about 40 miles south of Owen Sound on Lake Huron, was to be completed in 1965, six years from the start of design. Mr. Foster said the main rea- 60n for the delay was engineer- ing, protracted because of a néw design and inexperienced staff. In another section of the sym- posium, sponsored by Atomic Energy Canada Ltd., delegates were told that 12 nuclear reac- tors could heat the St. Law- rence River sufficiently to keep & b00-foot channel cren-oll win. ter. L. R. Haywood, AECL. vice- president of engineering, said the cost of the 3,000-megawatt Power In '67 000,000, about one-third of the capital investment in the St. Lawrence Seaway and associ- ated port and shipping facilities. J. L. Olsen, marketing man- ager for Canadian General Electric Company's atomic power department, said the world market for nuclear power is expected to be nearly 200,000 megawatts in the next 15 years. Present electrical capacity is about 6,000 megawatts. He said Canada's participa- tion in the new market will de- pend on how compeétitive Can- ada can be. ~ "This appears to be one of the few opportunities that' Canada has of competing with the ma- jor world powers in a_ highly technical field that requires a large capital commitment." President J. L. Gray of AECL said Canada's heavy-water re- actor design should be able to produce electrical power at a cost comparable to that pro- duced by U.S. designs. An analysis showed energy costs_of 2.37 mills per kilowatt hour from U.S. reactors, he ] designed, should under similar conditions supply energy at reactors would be about -$600,- about 2.4 mills per kilowatt hour ~ ' 36 Varieties of Beautiful Specimen . . SAVE -- SAVE -- SAVE By doing it yourself with our Van Belle ON HIGHWAY NO. 2 : WAP ENTRE EVERGREENS expert advice and top quality "EVERGREENS. "DROP IN OR CALL" Gardens "Yur Friendly Garden Centre" 5 MINUTES EAST OF OSHAWA 623-5757 isaid. A Douglas Point reactor of| ' similar size, although not yet), regulatory control that would strangle true competition be- tween transport fields. During questioning by the committee, CNR President Don- ald Gordon said there is no ob- jection to the basic idea of hav- ing the commission take over the work now handled by sep- arate regulatory agencies for rail, air and shipping. But he warned against having the commission operate "in certain lines,' including direct control over competitive rates. URGES SMALL STAFF Mr. Gordon said creation of a large costing staff by the Ca- nadian agency should be avoided. A small, competent group would be sufficient to check cost figures from the railways. The CNR also complained that the legislation's plan. to eliminate railway subsidies by 1975 is much too rapid. It pro- poses to gather all current sub- sidies into a $110,000,000 pay- ment in 1967, decreasing by $14,000,000 a year until it disap- By HUGH A. MULLIGAN Highway 13, South Viet Nam (AP) -- Little white marker 'falong the roadside read, "Sai- gon: 118 krlometres." Six Truck Convoy Braves \Viet Cong Attackers months ago, it might just as well have read "'to the north pole." Both destinations were equally inaccessible. But now, in one of the minor KITCHENER (CP) -- The Anglican Church's new Sunday school curriculum is "broad rather than deep and more cal- culated to please and confuse than to convert," Archdeacon Elford Abraham of Sarnia said Thursday. Speaking at the Anglican pro- vincial synod, Archdeacon Abraham said there is a con- spiracy of silence in tie church concerning the new curriculum. "Even the bishops have not given us the lead we need in this,"' he sala, Archdeacon Abraham tabled a motion requesting the na- tional council to appoint a com- mittee to study the biblical nd doctrinal' content of the new curriculum and make recom- mendations on how it can be strengthened. Rt. Rev. E. 8. Reed of Ottawa said the difficulty with the mo- tion is that it is asking the par- ent body to do something al- ready entrusted to a depart- ment of the church. Wax Treatment Irks Coroner TORONTO (CP)--Dr. Morton Shulman, chief coroner of Met- ropolitan Toronto, Thursday night condemned. a form of treatment called parapack in which hot wax is poured over the body. p He described the . treatment as "garbage and nonsense." Dr. Shulman spoke at an in- quest into the death of Mrs, Mary Polischuk of Toronto, who received the treatments from two masseurs. Mrs. Polischuk: died Sept. 9 of stomach cancer. The inquest was told that she had been treated for migrain headaches at a clinic operated by the mas- seurs, James Junor and his son John: Dr. Shulman said the mas- sages may not have harmed Mrs. Polischuk but by continu- ing treatments at the clinic she was kept from receiving proper care, Conspiracy Of Silence Charge Made Over Anglican Curriculum Rev. Roland ll of Toronto said he had not n able to make the new curriculum work in parish life, "It does not have enough content,' he said. ""We are using the United Church curriculum." | CITES MODERN ROLE" Canon Philip Jefferson of Toronto, author of a large part »\0f the new. course, said, the) curriculum recognized. the} gospel had something to say in| daily. life. Jaw i Trewin nact nrek.| ident of the Anglican Young| People's Association, asked the} Synod if more could be done to bring young people into the lifé of the church. "Once we graduate from Sun-| forgotten and we are pushed Mr. Irwin said a youth repre- sentative should sit on the par- ish council. '"'The parish council jin most churches has a repre- sentative from every organiza- tion except youth," he said. | "It is not enough to expect} youth to attend church for one} and one half hours on Sunday, they require an interest and to day school our importance is} into the congregation," he said.) miracles of the war, a curious) column of trucks---nearly 700 of them--was coughing and snort- ing along the rutted, shell-erat- ered road, Rubber worth $2,000,000 was rolling into Saigon along a bit- terly contested highway, where on', last week a motor scooter driver with a load of. lettuce could not have got to the next village without paying a 500-pi- astre ($4.50) tax to the Viet|to Hon Quan, in Binh Long prov- Cong, listening to a propaganda lecture and putting in at least half an hour of hard labor for the Cammunists. ' Villagers along Highway 13, known as Thunder Road, never had seen such a sight. The con- voy stretched across the rolling green jungle as far as the eye could see. rour Dattalions from the U:S. Ist Infantry Division were camped 'in: the jungle along the plantation airstrip , ready bring in another battalion if Viet Cong decited to-rentest. reopening of Highway: 1 te lifeline for 100,000: people ng in the three: provinces north of|- om to the Cambodian. bor- we j REPAIR DAMAGE : A battalion of army engineers took four days to ceed the blown - up bridges, re! the booby - trapped roadblocks and fill inthe huge craters along the thunder road, At last Operation Tulsa, the longest road convoy of the war since the Americans came, was ready to. roll, _ The convoy moved in two sec- tions. First north from Saigon ince on the border, bringing rice; cement, roofing metal, pe- troleum products and met i Then south with 2,500 tons .of rubber, all of it highly inflam mable, ready to go off at the pop of a sniper's bullet, but -all of it immensely important. be- cause rubber is South Viet Nam's main esport. ati The three plantations of the |Terre Kouge Uo. stil operaun in Binh Long province accoun for more than 50° cent of right-of-way. Thirty helicopters WelLGU Vik ane quan sc: seooeS South Viet Nam's production. north with»rice meant 'year the rubber would instead of rotting in Wware- houses. Last year so little rub- were planted for the first time in 30 years. : rolled, U.S. demolition team: swept the road for mines, SNIPERS MASS # Once the long line of trucks sporadic sniper fire crackled, but. no one: was. hit oe the trucks kept going about 35 miles an*hour. - : t grenades } dense jungles, but none of the rubber trucks caught fire, \ Planes showered squalid ham- lets with. thousands of leaflets, telling the people that, the: road had hean anenad un hy Ist In. bs ean re i |fantry and the 5th South Viet- namese Division and to turn in any Viet Cong in' their area. Rut the nravinee eraws only It's simple how quickly one may lose pounds of unsightly fat right in your own home. Make this home recipe yourself. It's easy, no trouble at all and costs little. Just go to your:drug store and.ask for four ounces of Naran Concentrate, Pour this. into a pint bottle and add enough apefruit juice to fill the bottle. Take two tablespoons full a day as needed and follow the Naran Plan. 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