THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, October 14, 1966 A GLANCE AROUND THE GLOBE 'MacEachen Defends 'Pension Boost Plan 'AWA (CP)--Heghth Min- r MacEachen Com- 'Thursday govern- t is sticking to its plan for age lon increases "without other forms prmitin' ser Mr. en le She concept of a guaranteed income for old age pen- eryone at creased to $105 Honor Vanier QUEBEC (CP) -- Governor- General Georges Vanier has ac- cepted an invitation to become honorary police chief of Vanier, a Quebec suburb named in' his Will Lodge Protest NICOSIA (Reuters) -- The United Nations Emergency Force commander, Finnish Gen. Armas-Eino Martola, said ers after an alleged attack on two Canadian soldiers by four armed Turkish-Cypriots. The two pasta were on routine patrol Thursday in the Kyrenia Mountains -- an ares disputed by Turkish- and Greek- Cypricts--whee they were at tacked, a UN spokesman said. The Canadians were disarmed ALLAN-MacnachEN program this sure-a prosperous future. Speaking to a meeting of the year should en- said after a struggle, physically as- saulted, and kept prisoner for 18 an as Lataen thaie | weapons were returned and they iwere released, the spokesman today he will a strong pro- test 'with te Cypriot leads}. | |assumption that steadily rising © \the recent policies of the central 4 \and tight-credit. conditions have OTTAWA (CP) -- Canada should not have to endure in- flation in times of high employ- ment, Governor Louis Rasmin- sky'of the Bank of Canada said Thursday. In history these conditions have always gone hand in hand, it that shouldn't be necessary, told the Senate - Commons evmmittee on ving costs. He believed policies and pro- grams can be found for "'learn- ing to live with prosperity. "We have tc work hard at it. "We have to be willing to break new ground in various types of-policy. It's too easy an prices are the price we have to pay to achieve full employ- nt." ; 'o Rasminsky snent more than three hours under question- ing as he laid out reasons for bank and toured the complex Harisons a2 se ware a) banking and economics. He said. high interest rates moderate tic increase in con- Raminsky Urges Change In Policy from the 'government -- higher taxes or reduced government spending, or both. Finance. Minister Sharp has said he intends to introduce higher taxes in a baby: budget this fall, at least to cover new programs to which the federal government is committed. was asked 'being made "The first-quarfer GNP was clearly unsustainable," he said. "It amounted to an annual growth rate of 16 per cent, and it i¢ quite obvious there is no room in the economy to con- tinue at that rate. So a shift a lower rate of increase in second quarter was more sus- tainahla "The present period of expan- sion has been going on for 54 years, and the longer it goes on the more one has to keep his TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts eee | by the weather office at 5:30 B.m.: » Synopsis: A monstrods storm is moving northeast out of Nebraska. Warm, moisture- laden air is being propelled northward from the Valley the lower j by strengthening s winds, and the cold air will be firmly entrenched over the entire prov- inne hy Sunday morning. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, southern Lake Huron, N: Windsor, London, : Variable cloudiness windy and Colder Spell Will Follow Mild, Showery Weather Southerly winds 15 to 25 today, windso southwest winds 25 to 40 Satur- day. Northern Lake Huron, south- ern G Bay, Lake On- tario, Haliburton, Killaloe, Tor- turning cooler . Southeast winds 15 to heoaming east northeast on See 40 Saturday. : Cochrane: I cloudi- ing east to northeast 25 to 40 today, rah. and wet snow Satur day. Cool. 'East winds wear 25 becoming northeast 25 to 40 to- Sai Bee today easterly 15 Satur- ff i Saturday I vcccessenes 62." St. Thomas .eeocess 60 London .....c0ecees 58 Kitchener .... orest steerecoses OF soees,' 55 seeeeeeees | saeeremnes Bay sescessss 52 eussessgzssezee2 When Buying er Selling REAL ESTATE Reg. Aker --~ President Bill McFeeters ~-- Vice Pres. | SUnUTICLO-ARER ee arvensis Good HONG KONG (Reuters) -- China's provinces are reporting sumer prices, They would have to continue at high levels, but |théy could do little more to curb inflation. fingers crossed, But I don't think the evidence is conclusive at all that the kind of recession some are predicting is on the warmer today and Saturday. A few showers and on Satur- day scattered thundershowers. 723-2265 nn honor, it was announced Thurs-|Industrial Contractors Associa- day. Vanier, a city of 10,000/tion of Canada, Mr. Martinson formerly known as Quebec}said Canadian capital expendi- st, changed its name last/ture this year showed a rise of Saturday. H Northern White River: Rain ay. Still Going Strong DUBLIN (AP) -- President Eamon de Valera 8 birthday at his des' Th pong f Ire- nes ' . Brit- though suf- Takes Second Post BAGHDAD (Reuters) -- The t hai i- po Nasser Al-Hani, cuibaste: dor in Washington, to take up an additional post as the first Iraqi ambassador to Canada. MOSCOW (Reuters)--Russian wspapers Friday ignored the pin prttacnins of Nikita riverside home near Moscow. He plays no role in public life. Population Grows | : CANBERRA (Reuters)--Aus- tralia's population grew by 1,036,505 to 11,544,691, compris- ing 5,812,302 males and 5,732,389 females in the five years be- Was Underground PARIS pale gee Thuliez, companion of British nurse 85, B Edith Cavell in the First World] he War and anti-Nazi underground worker in the Second World War, died Thursday. Captured along with Miss Cavell by the Germans in 1915. Miss Thuliez was sentenced to death on spy charges but her sentence was commuted to imprison- ment. Miss Cavell was executed. w Lt a Boom Will Last VANCOUVEI® (CP)~An On- tario construction executive said Thursday Canada's pros- perity should continue to boom for some time. A. C. Martinson of Sarnia, president of Catalytic Construc- tion of Canada Lid., said a $15,- 000,000,000 capital investment HERE AND THERE BENEFIT DANCE A benefit dance for Mr. and Mrs. Fred Mackay, who lost their possessions in a fire on Ritson Road two weeks ago, will be held Saturday at 9 p.m. in the North Oshawa Com- munity Centre. ADDRESS CHANGED .. In a 'Before the Magistrate's' éolumn this week The Times said Ira Calvin Pitcher, 20, aed $50. and costs or t0-days for minor consumption, lived at 69 Elgin St. E. A call from new residents at that address in- dicates. Pitcher lived there at one time, but how does not. RIE PARK Closing date of Storie Park has been set for Saturday, Oct. 15 with a park-closing celebra- tion for the children beginning at 12.30 pm. At a regular monthly meeting, plans for the children's Christmas party and a ball-banquet were discussed. CHIEF SPEAKS Guest speaker at the first St. Andrew's Society meeting this fall will be Chief of Police, Walter Johnson. Chief Johnson will be introduced by Whitby's chief, George Rankine, a mem- ber of the society. The St. \An- drew's ball will be held Nov. 25, at St, Gregory's auditérium, TAKING COURSE Rev, Clair L. Hickson, for- merly of St. Joseph's Roman Catholic Church, Bowmanville, is studying higher mathematics Jed the! troops f |recently as 1955 when he was 49 about 17 per cent over last year. | US. Takeover BALTIMORE, Md. major share of military action in Viet Nam, reserving Vietna- mese forces for pacification and rehabilitation. Military action should be left to the Americans because they are "superbly trained and equipped for it," said the former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and recent U.S. ambassador to Viet Nam. "They are not trained or equipped for pacification or re- habilitation.. That should be done by Vietnamese, for Viet- namese."' "On the military front, we are doing quite well--better than we have ever done be- ." Taylor said. good harvests after battling drought and other natural cala- way." Further action must come * | agency said today. In central China, Honan prov- harvest of wheat was followed by an ex- harvest, it claimed. Cotton output went up (AP) -- Friday spent|Gen. Maxwell Taylor said k.jThursday that United States should take over the mities, the New China ince's good summer cellent over - all "by a wide margin," oil seeds and tobacco were up 50 per cent and tussah silk cocoons by about 100 per cent, the agency said, May Repeal Rule OTTAWA (CP)--Today may be the last "fish day' for Can- ada's 9,000,000-plus Roman Ca- tholics. The Canadian Catholic Confer- ence, which groups 76 archbish- ops and bishops, is considering the repeal of the historic rule against eating meat on Fridays. A decision is expected to be announced at a press conference set for 6 p.m. today at the con- clusion of the bishops' week-long annual meeting. Two Go Free BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) -- Two men, one a French businessman and the other a former member news The family's Siamese cats were included in a fire drill at the home of Mrs. A. M. Carlson during a city-wide home fire drill organized by the fire department as part of Fire Prevention Week Mrs. Carlson, in win- dow, holds one cat while her daughter Paula, 14, and Rodney, 12, 'zith another cat, scoot down a rope. Fire department officials asked all Vancouver residents to search out and use a fire exit that might be used in an emergency. (CP Wirephoto) TORONTO (CP)--David Mc- Goran, 38, a Toronto real estate agent, Thursday was convicted in county court of attempting to obstruct justice by trying to influence a juror, - He will be sentenced Oct. 28. John. Everett Wilson, 45, af Toronto, a juror during a 1952 extortion case against three Toronto men and a_ Buffalo man, testified that MeGoran tried to bribe him with an offer to pay off his mortgage if he would hald out for a not guilty verdict, Mr. Wilson said he bought his house early in 1965 from Mc- Lawyer Beats Parking Ticket Goran and that the latter held a secomd mortgage for $5,400, He said he was elected for jury duty Novy. 21, 1965, for the trial of Paul, Eugene and Al- bert Volpe and Pasquale Natar- elli, who were charged with at- tempting to extort $17,500 of Man, 38, Faces Sentence On Jury - Tampering Count $100,000 free shares of Ganda Silver Mines Ltd. from steck promoter Richard Roy Angle. Mr, Wilson testified that he received a telephone-call Nov, 23 from MeGoran. He met him in an office the following day and, after some "general dis- cussion" about Mr. Wilson be- ing on jury.duty, McGoran told him that he knew the Volpe brothers. c MENTIONED 'FAVOR' "He went on to explain he owed the Volpe brothers a favor," he said. 5 Mr. Wilson testified that Mc- Goran said part of nis mort- gage could be paid off. "Finally he suggested the whole mortgage could be paid off, Inthe same breath he said Auto Safety Laws Urged TORONTO (CP)--After® run- ning up legal costs of about $300 in appeals. to both the Ontario Supreme Court and the Ontario Court of Appeal, a Toronto law- yer Thursday won reversal of a conviction for illegal parking that had cost him $4, Laurence Moses, 31, received a parking ticket in May, went to court and pleaded not guilty, He argued that there was no evidence that the no-parking sign he had been parked next to was authorized by. law. The magistrate did not accept him $4 for illegal parking. Mr. Moses a the con- viction to the Ontario Supreme Court using the same argument ~--that there was no evidence of a bylaw authorizing the no- parking sign. The conviction was upheld. ' the Volpes could afford it. He tried to impress on me I would be doing nothing wrong to hold of an RAF precision flying team) TORONTO (CP)--Ken Mac- '| were free today after a federal/Donald of Montreal, chairman | |court jury found them innocent|of the Canadian Highway Safety H\of charges that they conspired| Council, | |tage bombers to Portugal. Montmaria, urged auto dealers to export Second World War-vin-|Thursday to press for legisla- jtion to make safety checks on The men, Count Henri deinew and used cars compulsory out for a verdict of not guilty." 'Mr. Wilson said he notified the police. The Volpe trial later was declared a mistrial, At a subsequent trial, the four men Ship Re - Float Mr. Moses' argument and fined]: : ore realizing the full of savings os well, THESE ARE COMFORT: that feeling CONVENIENCE: day 'Saturda best rate of interest ment NEED A NEW FURNACE? Ne Down Peyment--First Peyment Decembe: PERRY | Day or Night... 723-3443 4 19 SIMCOE The 5th "'C" Of Saving | COMMON SENSE: meoning that now is a good time to be setting aside money just in case. At present, conditions generally are unsettled, to say 'the least and people who have. money on deposit at 412% (Like OUR saving depositors) benefit of the first 4 C's that comes from knowing thet you heve cosh available when you need it. Longer saving hours dotly and all Y. ¥ CONFIDENCE: Knowing that you are receiving the paid more often. CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST: dealing with o COM. MUNITY Trust Company, local savings invest- Central Ontario Trust & Savings Corporation ST. N. OSHAWA, 723-5221 abalSuioMas- were acquitted. Work Underway lecanded Sohn ke Hawke now of GEORGI ZHUKOV Praises Stalin MOSCOW (Reuters) -- Mar- shal Georgi Zhukov, one of Russia's most popular wartime heroes, paid tribute to Josef Sta- lin's "colossal work" in cof manding Soviet forces during the Second World War in mem- oirs published here today. Zhukov, put into disgrace by former premier Khrushchev, wrote that "with his demand- ing cruelty he achieved, one can say, the almost impossible." The comment came in a sec- tion of the marshal's memoirs printed today in a Moscow newspaper, Leninskoye Znamya. Champion Dies SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP) Former heavyweight wrestler Sandor Szabo, 60, died Thurs- day of an apparent heart at- tack in his home. Szabo claimed the world heavyweight cham- pionship five different times, as years old. Bank - run Ends SAN FRANCISCO (AP) --"A run on a savings and Jom asso- ciation branch in Chinatown in which' $3,500,000 was withdrawn in two days is over, association officials say, and the tide has begun to flow the other way. Two days of rumor-fed with- drawals from the Chinatown branch of the San Francisco Fort Lauderdale, Fla., were ac- quitted Thursday, night in U.S. District Court. Strike End | Basis Made for settlement of a contract dis- pute between the Union Gas Co. and Local 9-769, Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers Union was reached Thursday. Negotiations followed a strike threat from employees in Wind- sor, Belle River, Leamington, Amherstberg and Essex who earlier voted to strike for higher salaries. A union spokesman said set- 58-year-old impor. before delivery. Speaking to the Federation of Automobile Dealers Associa- tions, he said it would be better to initiate, rather than wait for, the new law. At present there is no Canad- jan legislation requiring pre- sale safety checks, he said. Mr. MacDonald predicted traffic deaths and injuries will fincrease in coming vears. "Highway conditions today are like a disease, and not enough TORONTO (CP) -- A basisjis being done to cure the dis-jone of her holds was damaged ease." 'Ambush Injures Israeli Soldiers TEL AVIV (Reuters)--A band of armed men ambushed an Is- raeli military vehicle near the COURTRIGHT, , Ont.. (CP)-- (Operations to re-float aed aged 5,000 - ton German freigh- ter Emsstein, beached 'one mile south of here since a collision with another ocean - going ship Oct. 1 began Thursday. The re-floating work Is ex- pected to take nearly three weeks and the ship will then be repairs. The Emsstein received a 100- foot gash in the port side and by fire. The German freighter Olym- pic Pearl, which was involved in the collision with the Emms- stein, received a 40-foot rip in the bow above the water line towed to dry-dock in Sarnia for}: CALL OR SEB tlement was reached during a/Jordanian border in the Mount conciliation meeting headed by|Hebron region early today and W. J. McGuire of the Ontario|slightly wounded three of the department off labor. Details of|six soldiers aboard, an Israeli DIXON'S F OIL FURNACES the agreement were not an- nounced, The union is seeking new pay scales ranging from $68.47 to $112.75 . weekly. WILLIAMS DIVORCED MIAMI, Fla. (AP)--Ted Wil- liams's wife, Lee, Thursday won a divorce and $50,000 on grounds of mental cruelty. Mrs. Williams charged that her hus- band, Hall of Fame ballplayer and $100,000-a-year star of the Boston. Red Sox until he retired in 1960, made life unbearabie for her with constant obscene criticism. Mrs, Williams, 41, a top fashion model before her 1961 marriage to Williams, will receive $15,000 now and the re- mainder of the $50,000 settle- i in monthly payments of 50. Federal Savings and Lean As- sociation came to a halt Thurs- day afternoon, they said. By the close of business some $40,000 was back on deposit. Much of it, said an association officer, "'was brought back up- stairs from safe deposit boxes in the basement." A, E. JOHNSON, 0.D. OPTOMETRIST 14% King St. East 723-2721 at Queen's University, Kings- ton, in preparation for teaching at St. Peter's High School, Peterborough. | Oshawa Diving Club Skin and Scuba Diving AT THE BOYS' CLUB For Information ALEX MacDonald 725-9704 BILL MITCHELL 623-7285 DON SMITH Ge@ORGIAN 124 THE ULTIMATE IN LUXURY LIVING! *= Central Location v Adult Building Prestige Address Distinction Beyond Compare Underground and Level Parking By Appointment Only 723-1712 928-2911 mansions ae PARK ROAD NORTH/ OSHAWA | | spokesman said. Army sources blamed the at- tack on the Syrian-sponsored El-Fatah (The Conquest) secret organization. Israel] lodged a complaint with the Jordan-Is- rael mixed armistice commis- sion, the spokesman said. SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS 24-HOUR SERVICE 313 ALBERT ST. 723-4663 are you going to make up sour mind te have that new Oil. Furnace installed for pure, luxurious, economical heating next Winter? Lander-Stark's own staff of fully certified heating technicians will do the job for you , . . quickly, cleanly, com- petently . . . just as word, Why not call Call now! "aa ama ask for a free survey and estimate. Re- member, a new furnace is not only a real comfort in your home, it will smart and up-to-date; improve its value Auates 43 KING ST. WEST 725-3587 A ibiiciiicteinaemaRa soon as you say the 725-3581 now, and ep it % aK, OSHAWA 9, Tth th Ne fifty crowd | ale! Canadas fastest growing ale\