Q THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesdey, Merch 7, 1967 A GLANCE AROUND THE GLOBE Auto Environment Change By Govt. DETROIT (AP)--Henry Ford TI said Monday Ford Motor Co. is operating "in a radically changed environment as a re- sult of new federal government regulations." Ford, board chairman of the second largest auto - making firm in the U.S., outlined his views in an annual report to the firm's 433,400 stockholders. Arjay Miller, Ford president, also signed it. Ford wrote: "In the past, our success depended primarily on our response to the test of the marketplace. In the future, we shall be severely tested by the need to respond at the same time to the requirements of the market and of the federal gov- ernment's safety and air pollu- tion regulations." Ford long has been among the most outspoken business- men on the subject of potential government interference or con- trol over business. He said his firm's first con- tacts with the safety standards|" as outlined by the new highway safety administration "make it clear that henceforth the design Rules, Says Ford Labor Study TORONTO (CP) Royal Commissioner Ivan C. Rand and commission counsel Mar- shall Pollock returned Monday from a month - Jong tour of Australia to study the country's system of labor arbitration. Describing the Australian sys- tem as complex, Mr. Pollock By THE CANADIAN PRESS Seven Canadian legistatures paid tribute Monday to the Gov- ernor-General Georges Vanier, who died in Ottawa Sunday. The three Prairie provinces-- Manitoba, Alberta and Saskat- chewan -- announced sessions would be suspended until after funeral services in Ottawa Wed- nesday. Legislatures in Nova Scotia and British Columbia observed one minute silence in honor of the Governor-General. The N.S Canada Legislatures Pay Tribute To Vanier house suspended its session un- \til today. | The Ontario legislature ad- journed Monday until Wednes- day afternoon while the Quebec legislature will sit a short time Wednesday before adjourning until March 14. DELAYS OPENING | The New Brunswick legisla- ture, scheduled :to open today, will not begin its session until March 14 because of Gen. Van- ier's death. said the commission has not yet attempted to evaluate it ience. The commission, which is in- quiring into labor disputes in| Ontario, will resume sittings! March 18 at Kingston. | Uranium Sales TORONTO (CP) --The out- look for sales of Canadian ura- Inium is excelent, Jean - Le- {Pepin, the federal resources and mines minister, said Mon- ; eis Cae |day. He told the 35th annual con- } vention of the Prospectors and Church Of England jor a Asssociation that usc LONDON (AP)-- The Church|of uranium is making a come-/ HENRY FORD II Board Chairman . | relate it to the Canadian senat-| Robarts Dampens Speculation TORONTO (CP) --Ontario Premier John Robarts came back to work Monday anc} promptly dampened speculatior| that the government will call a| spring provincial election. Mr. Robarts, taken to hospita' three weeks ago with internal] bleeding, told a news confer ence the legislature would have to sit for some time after the| Easter recess to finish its work | "I can't believe we woulc| finish before Easter," said Mr.| Robarts, who appeared healthy | of our products and many other|of England is planning to bring|back because of a surge in) and smiling, though somewha'| aspects of our business will be profoundly influenced by fed- eral safety regulations." |back candles and the sign of|nuclear power development. jthe cross to baptism services. Uranium was Canada's magic} The proposal, certain to meet|mineral in the late 1950s. Twe) Ford said in a speech last! iticism by Protestants who|mines in the Northwest Terri-) year that some Ford car lines might have to be shut down if the federal standards were too tough. Since the original stan- dards were published and mod- ified, Ford subordinates were in agreement that the company could live with the standards. Ford, referring to the new federal requirement that all 1968 model cars sold in the United States must be equipped with exhaust control systems said: "We know this could be only the first step towards stric- ter regulations." Format Of Stamp LONDON (AP)--The Queen decided today on the color and format of a stamp. She reached all the way. back to her great- great-grandmother for the de- sign. The Queen looked at designs for a new basic issue of British stamps and selected one that Queen Victoria might have been proud of. She chose olive brown sepia as the color of the four- penny stamp--one for an ordi-/@ Greek-Cypriot who once was nary letter. Her image on the|a night club hostess. stamp is a classic profile with crown. Queen Victoria's reign gave birth to the one penny black, now sought by every collector. The stamp was conservative, dull, and square. loppose any affinity with Roman|tories, six in Saskatchewan and| lCatholic practice, was an-|13 in Ontario produced $333,000,- nounced Monday by the\000 worth of the radioactive spiritual leader, the|mineral in 1959. |church's \Archbishop of Canterbury. | | HERE and THER PICKERING TEAM | Pickering Village is cheering for its Bantam 'C' hockey team which has moved into the pro- vincial quarter finals. The team moved into contention by de- feating Brooklin, West Rouge, Newcastle and Bobcaygeon. SALVATION ARMY - | The current issue of the Sal- vation Army's pulication, The War Cry-has pictures and a story on a recent concert in Oshawa featuring Lieut.-Colon- el Olaf Lundgren, the assistant field secretary for the eastern territory U.S.A. and the London Citadel Band (Bandmaster, B. Gregson). COURT CASE John Petrovsky, 16 of Osh- awa, who was in court last month for involvement in car theft is not Walter Vladimir Petrowsky, 16, of 798 Rowena St. in Oshawa. ; INCORPORATION | Letters patent of incorpora| tion have been granted to two Oshawa district firms. They are Nor-Gil Developments Ljmited,| Darlingtoi Township and Troy) Developments Limited, Oshawa. CREDIT UNION AWARD Autoworkers (Oshawa) Cre-| dit union Ltd. Won an award for the best decorated office in 2 province - wide contest re- cently. The International Cre- dit Union Day Award was pre-jern Hospital. Norman Long, 28, 3 League|and George Drury, 32, of To- Director, and was accepted by|ronto received kidneys from Russell/ McNeil at an annual|Charles Lynch of Oshawa -last|cipal legislation allowing out of meeting in Toronto attended by|January after Mr. Lynch was|court payment for violations of delegates representing more|fatally injured in a car acident.'the fire code. sented by L. Davey, than 800,000 Credit Un- ion members at the Royal York otel. thinner than usual. Speculation has been that Mr Robarts would call a spring | election because of a busy sum mer schedule of centennial ac-| tivities. | He said, however, that no dr cision has been made aboutt when an election might bc called. GIVEN 'CLEAN BILL' | Mr. Robarts' health conditior was diagnosed as a_- hiatus jhernia, a failure of the valve at the bottom of the gullet. Hr Pope VATICAN CITY (AP)--Pope| Paul changed the rules for) Roman Catholic Church music today, opening the way to use| of beat rhythms and jazz for) sacred services. | The new regulations, issued to implement parts of the Vati- can council's 1963 decree on liturgy public worship, are ex- pected to revolutionize the mu- sic of the 2,000-year-old church. They go into effect on Pente- cost Sunday, May 14. | The papa document calls for, more singing in services, per- mits translation of Latin hymns into modern languages, recom- mends the use of instruments a|native to individual countries) and cultures, and authorizes a period of wide experimentation to adapt modern musical forms and compositions to church use. USE DATED MODES Beat music and jazz were not| mentioned specifically. But there was no prohibition against them, and the document said new mu- sical modes should be "'held in honor, encouraged and used as the occasion demands." The regulations were pre- pared by the Vatican's .congre- gations of rites and a special liturgy commission named after the ecumenical council. The congregation of rites in a declaration Jan. 4. protested against masses "sometimes ac- companied by music of a totally profane and wordly character, not worthy of a sacred action." Paul Changes Music Rule In Roman Catholic Church said, however, he has been given a clean bill of health. "I've been given a few die- tary restrictions," he said. '! have to keep away from thing: like pizza." Mr. Robarts said he plans tc go ahead with his proposed Confederation of Tomorrow con- ference despite a suggestion b: Prime Minister Pearson tha' the federal government shoulc arrange the conference. Mr. Robarts said he won't send out invitations to the na- tional conference until the legis- lature has passed his resolution calling for approval of his a< tion in proposing it. The premier gave an indica- A tion that the government wil'), not proceed with legislatior banning trading stamps in the berta gove ' ver.| Synopsis: Wet unsettle djvery cold today and Wednesday. sial ari Moet Anus ce weather which has covered the|/Winds northerly 25 becoming troduced in the legislature, put /@astern states and touched|light by evening. | it isn't expected to get bboait southern Ontario during the last} Forecast temperatures the draft stage at the current|{W days continues today. A/Low overnight high Wednesday skasion. storm is moving northeastward|Windsor ........... 0 18 | through the area will reach the|st. Thomas . ae 18 acied ino law in 198, would Mamiime provinces LORI EMtILondon cvurocrne 1 repeal and replace the City -- afectng. Patetio. Coll iKitchener .. Boas 15 City-Wide Delivery Act, the Town and Village Act |Aicitatd intoPane Moreh Ren (Mount Forest ..... 1010 . om pray aad in ay-| Wi rer -10 0 - Pepa tee] pl As pea Sudbury area this morning. Eanline eee 8 MITCH ELL'S unicipal & ns Act. |Snowflurries, gusty northerly|st. Catharines 20 PROVE PURPOSE jwinds and rapidly falling tem-|Toronto ...... 20 RUGS ay, ving | peratures and clearing skies ac-| peterb, h. 10 * on peat aorta warkers ving Company the cold air. [Kingston v= 1s 9 Simeod N. 723-3631 . : Toronto, Hamilton, London,|Trenton . 15 in Saskatchewan will have to Of 5 - ) a ] El a ~-- the land and buildings on ' i pring Provincial Llection jr. zemesiy tor agricutura sng a bill ay. | secion of pality Act to require the owner! i ' iS chow: that bulldises ate for (aoe herly 25 this afternoon, be agricultural purposes. French in the province's schools|colder with snowflurries for up to an hour daily if au jlocal snowsqualls by mid-day.| A thorized by the school oe ee clear and very cold to-| board, was one of 10 given sec |night and Wednesday. Winds in-| ond reading. Sterling Lyon of Manitoba said/ overnight. | the government isn't consider: | ing prices of lodging in metropoli-|snow and blowing snow, clear- tan Winnipeg during the Pan-|ing and becoming much colder Killaloe . 20 5 [Muskoka soecccses 220 5 | GERVICE PRESCRIPTIONS > WEATHER REPORT Wet, Unsettled Weather, Snow Cold Air Expected Wednesday TORONTO (CP) Official| Algoma, Timagami, Cochrane, | forecasts issued at 5:30 a.m. to-|White River, day. |Bay regions: Mainly clear and In legislature business: Edmonton--A draft of the Al- Windsor, Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Niagara, Lake Ontario, southern Lake Huron, Halibur- ton regions: Variable cloudiness | with snowflurries and turning ' much colder this 2 A The bill alters the assessment | Clear and very cold sae ot the Rural Munici-| Wednesday. Winds increasing to are primarily for agricultural introduced Mon- IN THE DOGHOUSE over your coming light overnight. Northern Lake Huron, south- ern Georgian Bay regions: Var- in|i able cloudiness and much and edict A bill amending the School Sud ct, to permit instruction creasing to northerly 30 this) Winnipeg--Attorney - General|morning and becoming light|™ !f you're driving your family crazy grouching about tax problems and technical lan- guage, there's a quick, inexpensive way out. Take your tax to Block! Sudbury, North Bay, northern} the|Georgian Bay: Cloudy with COMPLETE RETURNS legislation to control merican Games July 22-Aug.|by/mid-day. Mainly clear and '0. province. He said he does not think that dealing with trading stamps a such would be the answer to the problem. He said it would be difficult to ban them and not deal with other forms of! discounts, had not condemned all beat mu- sic. It expressed hope that such music could develop into a form fitting to religious rites. Legislation has been passed|cold tonight and Wednesday. | You'll be back i in Quebec to protect visitors tc|Winds northerly 25 becoming| Pichon goog ed : Montreal's Expo 67. ilight tonight, I your nearest Block [Mpa office TODAY! Look for this label. Preperction of every tax return, @ ony errors thet cost you eny penalty or interest, pey the penalty or interest. Then look for that great V.O. taste. LTD. Canada's Largest Tax Service with Over 1500 Offices in North America 22 ONTARIO ST. Weekdays 9 a.m. - 9 p.m.--Sat.. 9-5. Ph. 723-7071 ame NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY pnianial cost Sot WORK WITH EXPERTS The church's 61 national and regional conferences of bishops were given the task of putting the new rules into operation. They were told to set up litur- gical commissions on both the national and diocesan levels, with musical experts outside the church to be consulted. The document praised the pipe organ as "'the traditional instrument" of the church in the Western world. But it encour- aged "instruments characteris- tic of a particular people' and said such instruments "may al admitted" if a country's bishops consent and if those in- struments are suitable or adapt- able for church use. nnn, Central Ontario Trust & Savings Corporation RETIREMENT SAVINGS PLAN Saves Income Tax end provides Retirement Income % Government Approved % Ne loading fees or charges % Payments made before Feb- This was generally considered a condemnation of the "jazz masses" with which some prie} sought to appeal youth, but the Vatican weekly, | L'Osservatore Della Domenica, | said March 1 that the church At a press conference in West-| Dies Of Burns |minster Abbey the archbishop. | | |Dr. Michael Ramsey, defending) LONDON, Ont. (CP)--Sydney) [the use of candles, called it "a|James Watson, 3/4-year-old son) very edifying and moving sym-|of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Charles) bolism." Watson, of London, died Dec. 24) from infection caused by exten- hd . sive third-degree burns, a pa- Marriage Dispute thologist testified Monday in NICOSIA (AP) --Theodore|magistrate's court. Gunther, son. of an American} Dr. John Fisher, regional pa-| jmining millionaire, said Mon- thologist with the attorney-gen-| Wie he: uiada 4a manne the eral's department, was testify-| ay ends heeded ing during a preliminary hear-| daughter of his family's chauf-|ing into charges of manslaugh- feur next month despite adver-|ter and failing to provide the! itisements in Cypriot newspapers login of life laid against) ; ' e parents. | |saying he will be disinherited if Th | : ; e boy was pronounced dead po Sh alee without parental at the Watson home almost 10) ge a thar tamil daniow days after he received ig td e Gunther family derives|a bath tub, Dr. J. Bev C. Ro n| its wg ig! copper son, coroner, said earlier. mines at Skouriotissa in north-| ; . Watson, 22, and his wife. western Cyprus. Mrs. Gunther is Dorothy, 24, have elected trial by judge and jury. If commit- Th irl Theod jan ted, they will appear during the daiey ins is ' Grea Cooriot es S Bhar ge gohan 3 : z -|Supreme Court. They have en-| She is Christina Frangescou, 25, fered no plea. 4 a stewardess for Cyprus Air- ways. Her father is the Gunth- bs ers' chauffeur when they are in| Strike Cyprus. __| WINDSOR, Ont. (CP) -- | Aas om jstrike by 10 employees, mem- |bers of Local 195 of the United Auto Workers. Union, entered its sixth month at the weekend. It is one of three continuing strikes by members of Loca 1195 in Windsor. The 10 men walked off their jobs at Dresser Electric Ltd., HOSPITAL REPORT |Sept. 25, 1966, and still are Forty - nine babies were born ocr J their aye peri at the Oshawa General Repl oe ance eee during the week ending Mar. 4.| | . . During this period 320 patients! Resignation were admitted and 329 discharg- TORONTO (CP) --Maxwell ed. There were 100 major, 120 Bruce, a director of the Bank minor and 70 eye, ear, nose andjof Western Canada, resigned as throat operations. Two hundred |director a veccreemat, of ' _|York Lambton Corp. Ltd. Feb. gh oo at ie the Toronto Stock Exchange . P said Monday. casts applied. The physiother-| Mr. Bruce, also a director of apy department gave 920 treat-|Wellington Bank International ments and made 647 visits; | Ltd. of Nassau, would not com- while the occupational therapy|/ment on sis resignation. department handled 177 cases, | Both York Lambton and Wel- lington Bank International are LITTLE CHANGE controlled by British Interna- Kenneth Parish, a seven-year tional Finance (Canada) Ltd. old Oshawa boy who received . head injuries when he ran into Council Refusal a car last October, is '"'still se- ~ . | ; DEA: bei tea LONDON, Ont. (CP)-- Coun- | Sat conan ia nay re wr cil refused Monday to endorse | ot chi A cranes' tn th Te 18/, resolution seeking tighter | fot much change in the con-!sneed regulations on trains dition of the boy. Kenneth, who i at Sle chieen Hoa ae gana Vee nt in Toronto, is the son af Mr.|chener city council provided sre Mrs. R. K. Parish of 206) that the municipalities could en- ribb St. jforce the speed rules. Se a Present legislation allows KIDNEY TRANSPLANT trains to travel through urban Two Toronto men, who were|areas in excess of 60 miles an the recipients of kidneys taken/hour, | from an Oshawa man involved) Council supported a Sudbury | HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR. SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER |, 50 YEARS | to modern) ruory 28, 1967 are deduct- ible for 1966 Income Tax purposes. *& Investment options -- Stocks Bonds -- Mortgages %& Official receipt for Tax pure poses, CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST & SAVINGS CORPORATION 19 Simcoe Street North 723-3221 23 King Street West, 623-2527 in a fatal, one-car crash, are|resolution calling for an On- reported in "'satisfactory condi-|tario Royal Commission inquir- tion" today in Toronto West-|ing into all phases of planning. one from Barrie to amend the Ontario Child Welfare Act and a Kingston resolution for a } | to 28. Excellen On the job trai plan, employee days with pay. Ee CREDIT MANAGER TRAIN Local retail firm requires an aggressive young man to manage credit office. Preferred age 20 should have Grade 13 and office experience. Apply in writing only to THE OSHAWA TIMES BOX M3167 t opportunity for advancement, ning provided. Excellent pension discounts, group insurance, holi- All replies strictly confidential. Civic Au Guest Speaker Progressive Conservative ORGANIZATIONAL _ MEETING To Elect New Directorate for FEDERAL RIDING of OSHAWA ditorium FRIDAY, MARCH 10 - 8 P.M. Wallace Nesbitt, M.P. Oxford @ EVERYONE WELCOME ® Come Out and Support "MIKE" whether plant or office. Just when they think they need a most. "We told you so" because it's natural to put things off. We all do it. But that sound you hear around town right. now is a lot of GM Office Workers kicking themselves for accep- ing Mr. E. H. Walker's say-so that his white collar people didn't need a union, ing drive. GM OFFICE WORKERS | SUDDENLY, When You Need A Union 4 You Haven't Got One No union is perfect. But UAW tries. It tries pretty effectively most of the time. Don't you really think it could have been a big help in this present situation ? We're sorry about the present GM office layoff and salary cuts. Nor are we say- ing that even a corporation as wealthy as GM should operate uneconomically (al- though a $2 billion profit year makes that stand a little difficult), We do believe, however, that we could have negotiated a contract for GM office workers like we have at Ford and Chrysler at Windsor; that way they would get 65 percent of their salaries in S.U.B. while on layoff and be protected That's often the way it is with unorganized workers, union least, they need it There's always tomorrow, and even General Motors says it's going to be better and that you have a place in it. So why not prepare now to make sure it's better? How about signing the coupon in this ad and sending it in? No one likes to hear or say That way we can mount an organizing campaign to It's only a year ago that build the kind of tomorrow OPEN : against salary cuts durin Gan on eeeye OMe WORRY HhL iis ot the collective that will be better than yes- 'anne said "No" to a UAW organiz- agreement. terday. and today. Yes, | would like a UAW T.O.P. Dept. organizer to contact me. Yes, | will help form a UAW T.O.P. organizing committee at the GM Oshawa Office GHD as 6:55 on os 9.5 59 4 sisi ciaie ek 6 bo 48 O06 bess bh oS Address. . Telephone ... (This advertisement sponsored by the Technical, Office and Professional Workers Dept. of the International Union, UAW. Webster Cornwall, co-ordinator, 26% King St. E., No. 9 Oshawa, Ontario.) Senet ee 4A eee ws. FLAG - DEC I Mo To By GERAR OTTAWA (CP gan moving thr Monday night -' the late Gove! Georges P. Var lay in state. Among the passed, a teen-a to his knees. be walnut casket | several minutes. Boy scouts, tl blue from wait outside, gave | salute of the m great Canadian mat, their chie The public ly' gan at 7:30 p.m. an hour, 1,300 p past the closed a red Maple Le It rests on a before the vice- the Red Chambs The processio' fly in silence. | nessmen, the old, whole fi past, TAKING SNAP! A Senate cons at one point to p from taking snz dren. The public pr resume at 11 a after diplomats an hour to pay Parking restri ment Hill were commodate the numbered 2,666 doors closed at Gen. Vanier, 7 Governor-Generz Possib Raisec OTTAWA (CP Governor - Gen raised the possit in the next act o Bank affair th cabinet blow-up Prime Ministe: ported preoccup' tails of official up to him to re: strength petwee ministers in th pute. A final gover is still required « soon the U.S.-ov becomes a Can firm. Despite a slow business followi death, the sm could come up : lar cabinet meet Walter Gordor In the disagreem to attend. The r rtfolio return day after < Caribbean vacat Mr. Gordon ¥ tional City Banl out of Mercantile His cabinet adve Minister Sharp, five-year arrans out with First duce its holdings A compromise In the making. {t will be a com of a compromise «ANNNUNTTUUUTANALTT Don't ice -- radio- own st ing te LANI Court peten: sures Psu uni