Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 17 May 1967, p. 37

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pO NI ag ESP rTigy with British Imperial- suards smother the walls British office and the ring home of Charge es Donald Hopson with Chinese character aid: "We strongly pro- ainst British imperialist yutrages, you British im- | bastards." E AGGRESSION ffensive against the office began at dusk night after the Chinese ministry issued a state- ecusing the British au- in Hong Kong of "'bar- fascist suppression" of workers in recent unrest ritish colony. 30 a.m. today crowds assed in the open gate- the compound, although de no attempts to enter, More Skirmishes Forecast On Gordon's Viet Stand OTTAWA (CP)--Look for a rther round of parliamentary kirmishing soon over Walter Fordon's conflict with govern- ent policy on the Vietnam ar, says Opposition Leader Diefenbaker, He hinted that the Progres- ive Conservatives may renew e attack early next week. Prime Minister Pearson has as called a cabinet meeting for pday to deal primarily with binet solidarity. Informants id the Gordon-Vietnam issue as not discussed at length at. uesday's meeting of the cab- et as External Affairs Minis- r Martin was out of town. He will be back in Ottawa for to- day's meeting. Mr. Diefenbaker charged that Prime Minister Pearson's ex- planations to the Commons Tuesday were "a gross carica- ture of the rule regarding cab- inet solidarity." "It means nothing but a re- treat from reality. In Britain, the minister would have been out or the government would have been out," POINT AT ISSUE The point at issue is whether Mr. Gordon, a cabinet minister as president of the Privy Coun- cil, can publicly disagree with government policy and remain in the cabinet without destroy- ing the principle of the cab- inet's collective responsibility to Parliament. It may be brought to a head next Tuesday and Wednesday such a step but decided against .. In his speech, Mr. Gordon said the United States is en- meshed in a bloody civil war in Vietnam without moral or stra- tegic justification. CONFLICTS WITH POLICY | This attack on the U.S. was) in direct conflict with policy statements by Mr. Pearson and Mr. Martin that Canada should refrain from attaching blame or voicing support for any of the when the government prop the first motion of this session for Commons study of the 1967- 68 spending program. Observers were _ surprised Tuesday that there were rela- tively few questions on Mr. Gor- don's speech last weekend and that the opposition parties did not move a motion on Vietnam policy in the throne speech de- bate. Informants said at least one opposition group considered parties d in the Vietnam conflict. Mr. Diefenbaker asked Mr. Pearson in the Commons Tues- day whether he approves Mr. Gordon's views. The prime min- ister replied that Mr. Diefen- baker was 'confusing views and policies." Later, the Opposition leader |said Mr. Pearson's attitude "'is 'a complete negation of all the |principles of responsible gov- ernment." attacked by a dog. Arctic Owl Finds Home, Plus Food And Romance VICTORIA Miller is a heart. (CP) -- Michaell taxidermist with a} provincial museum employee providing food and shelter for an Arctic snowy owl, he is also playing Cupid for the bird. He found the starving owl, which has since been named Ookpik, after the bird had been Mr. Miller suspects Ookpik flew south because Arctic lem- mings and other northern mam- mals which provided him with food were diseased and dying. Ookpik railied under his care and his spirits were buoyed re- productive. owls to work with him but he doesn't intend to stuff them. He Foreign "evasions" of the im- alent of 2,000,000,000 pounds of} Considerable U.S. farm: dis- |wants to train them in the ways port quota system are hurting /United States dairy farmers and has/interfering with the price sup- port program, he testified to the of a falcon. been limited. cently when Mr. Miller trapped} him a mate. | So far, the forced marriage Not only is the 23-year-old/has been working out, Mr. Mil-| WASHINGTON (CP) -- Agri-|. Freeman, THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, Moy 17, 1967 37, backed by dairy- Foreign "Evasion' Seen On Import Quota Plan chasing the equivalent of 3,600,» ler says, but he won't knowjculture Secretary Orville Free-jstate congressmen and farm/000,000 pounds of milk under its until summer whether it.will be'man asked the U.S. tariff com-|groups, asked for a ban on im-|price-support program. Without Lately he has been taking the) : {mercial urged speed. However, his success "They just sit on the back of|commission. ada as well. dairy products. a chair and watch me," he! 'Chief suppliers are Australia,'then transshipped. said. 'This isn't much exercise New Zealand and Europe, But} Freeman also urged that a so I have been getting them to|there are implications for Can- type of cheese called Colby be fly after a lure." BEVERYDAY 6 DAYS A WEEK ARIO | y ined | icken 3% th, | . 99 a 4S] Choice ay I4 Ox, aw [= $] Discount Prices A STEINBERG'S READY-TO-EAT COOKED HAM-- is the very best meat value you can buy! This Steinberg's Ready-to-Eat Cooked Ham is completely skinned and all the surface fat has been sharply trimmed off. After all, you can't eat this skin and fat so we don't believe you should have to pay for it. And note that this ENTIRE Ham hes been skinned and defatted... not just part of the ham. And you won't find this Steinberg Cooked Ham wih a long shank either. This is the part of the ham that has a high bone content . so off it comes before we put this ham in the meet counter. There's one other feature that makes this Steinberg Ham different too. When you buy either the butt or short shank portion you get the full cut... the premium centre section hasn't been removed. >" Ready-to-Eat SMOKED , COOKED } ALSO AVAILABLE--LOWER PRICED HAM | @ | SMOKED COOKED Long Shank Not Skinned Not De-fatted Shank Portion i Steinberg's Fresh Baked Goodies HAMS , " STEINBERG a HELP THE INDIAN, ESKIMO ASSOCIATION OF CANADA... Buy a TEA CENTENNIAL *POLKA "Label af 45 R.P.M. $ 00 Plus Tax Sold Exclusively At Steinherg's Honey Glazed Shbe~' Doz. Donuts 39° Steinberg's Fresh Raisin or Plain Tea Biscuits am sf t @ Lincheon Meat "> 43¢ Steinberg's Fresh Raisin Pie de Camation Evaporated Milk ys 33° _@ " it . ED. Smith Blueberry or ¢ 19 Oz, Pie Filling °°" Z Ts O3¢ 160,000,000 | pounds this year, or the equiv-) | milk, | Canada last year supplied |more than 30,000,000 pounds of jsuch mixes, used primarily for| jice cream, But it was mixed in jbond from foreign butterfat and brought into the quota system and added to the quota allotted now to cheddar cheeses from other countries. SQUEEZE PLAY POSSIBLE This could lead to a squeeze on the Canadian cheddar quote of about 612,000 pounds a year, most of it the Canadian spe- cialty, aged cheddar. In the first four months of had| year, the U.S. government had had to spend $169,000,000 pur- |mission Monday to tighten im-|ports of commercial mixes of|tighter quotas, "we estimate the port quotas on assorted com-/butterfat and sugar which he department will buy 6,000,000,- Hejsaid could total 690 pounds at a cost of more than $300,000,000 this year." content, manifested recently in the dairy sector by programs to dump milk, was cited in tes- timony by Republican Congress- man John Byrnes of Wisconsin, He called the U.S. dairy pro- gram "'stupid" and recalled that just a year ago President John- son, in an effort to halt rising consumer prices, relaxed im- port quotas for Canadian and other cheddar cheese. The relaxation was for the year ending June 30, 1966, The president also asked the tariff commission to study a more prolonged expansion of the quotas. Sif The report was never made public after farm criticism' ap- peared in last year's congres- sional election, Institutional | NEW YORK (AP)--Chairman, Investors Draw McChesney Rebuke there is an obvious risk that |William McChesney Martin of|speculative in-and-out trading of the U.S. Federal Reserve Board) has called disquieting the spec-| ulative stock trading of some institutional investors. He said Tuesday it contains '"'poisonous qualities' reminiscent of the! 1920s, | Martin said the New York Stock Exchange must make certain that "'this new cult of short-run market performance} does not once again result in a) tarnishing of stock exchange) wares," He referred to the depression of the 1930s which was preceded by the boom of the 1920s. Martin made his remarks in a talk prepared for a luncheon in connection with the 175th an- niversary celebration of the New York Stock Exchange. The comments by the former New York Stock Exchange pres- ident were similar to those he made in a New York talk June 1, 1965. He said then there were "disquieting similarities' be- tween the prosperity at the time and the boom which preceded this type may virtually corner the market in individual stocks. "And... activity of this kind tends to create undesirable volatile price fluctuations, I find this trend disquieting. "However laudable the intent may be, it seems to me that practices of this nature contain poisonous qualities reminiscent in some respects of the old pool operations of the 1920s,"' . The U.S. Securities and Ex- change Commission, in a report last December on the $38,200,- 000,000 mutual fund industry, said it is studying the effec on stock prices of rapid large-bloe trading by institutional inves- tors. It said {t also is looking into the influence which these' in« vestors, including mutual funds, might have on companies in which they become dominant |stockholders, China Mob Enters the depression of the 1930s. SEES SERIOUS RISK Martin said Tuesday that some institutional investors--he mentioned mutual and pension Diplomat's House PEKING (Reuters)--A large \crowd of Chinese demonstrators broke into a British diplomat's house in Shanghai today and funds--are creating a new prob-|wrecked everything in it, a lem posing a potentially serious |British spokesman said here to- risk to the future of stock mar-jnight. kets. Diplomat Peter Hewitt, his Increasingly, Martin said,| wife and three children were un- managers of mutual funds and portfolio and pension funds are measuring their success in terms of relatively short-term gains. "Given the large buying power of these institutions, Retail Books In Brisk Sales TORONTO (CP) -- Canada's centennial ig helping retail booksellers to a record year, the annual convention of the Ca- nadian Booksellers Association was told Monday. Mary Schorer, owner of a Winnipeg book store, said she sold 75 copies of a book on Can- adian birds at $20 a copy and 25 copies of a $25 book of pho- tographs of Canada in about a month. She said there was great ac- tivity in art books and Canadian material in Winnipeg and cen- tennial interest was high. Steinberg Aluminum Foil ~ 1a"x25° J $] Steinberg's Fresh Shortcake Florida's Finest Sweet Eating Red Cutting WATERMELONS -| Large Size Small Size Ae 38 Kellogg's Instant Breakfast " | Asstd Flavours 8 Oz. 69¢ Sunlight 63¢Special 24 Oz. Liquid Detergent ™ \ Age J 57 Web @ PLASTIC ARMS Folding Chair Aluminum @ EXTRA LARGE FRAME ® HEAVY GAUGE ALUMINUM & ATTRACTIVE COLOURS $397 5x15 Web Chaise Lounge Aluminum 1997 Patio Serving Trays 1nd 8996 Bar-B-Cue Grill Mont atm §=$3.77 Oregon Conoda Fancy iain Peas 10-69: Canade No. 1 Grade Produce of Mexico Sweet Salmon-- Flesh Canialoupes 3 We reserve the right to limit quantities. No dealers please. All prices in this ad effective May 17 to 20, 1967, JUMBO Size 89° Horido's Finest Sweet Juicy ORANGES For Good Size BarB-Coe Grill 2r0my $8.47 o OSHAWA STORE ONLY | HAWTHORN 3 TEFEN 10" Skillet Boke & Roost $5.49 $2.99 Margaret Hall of Fredericton said business in her store was brisk, especially in Canadian items. E. B. McCorkell, a CBC di- rector and manager of the Uni- versity of Saskatchewan book store, estimated Canadian book sales have reached between $400,000,000 and $500,000,000 a hurt. The incident occurred as anti- British demonstrations mounted in intensity in China over incl- dents in Hong Kong. Britain has what is called an office of the counsellor ig Shanghai, China's biggest city with 10,000,000 inhabitants. The office is attached to the British charge d'affaires mission in Pe- king. It was believed to hav been the first time Chinese broke into a foreign diplomat's house in the recent series of demon- strations against foreign diplo- matic missions. Wilson Dummies | Burned By Mob PEKING (Reuters) -- Straw dummies representing British Prime Minister Wilson were strangled and burned outside the British diplomatic mission here during day-long demonstra- tions today. Thousands of Red Guards and workers took part in the demon- strations shouting anti - British slogans: After a straw effigy of Wilson was burned, two Red Guards hoisted another dummy wearing a top hat with a Union Jack on it, and ceremonially strangled it for several minutes in full view of the mission windows. ALUMINUM OSHAWA FREE PARKING Aluminum Awnings Combination Storm /Sereen Windows--Doors Prime Windows C.M.H.C, Accepted 7 2 One Sliding Glase Patio Doors Shelters for PRI --Bus Stops Parking Lots --Gas Pump Islands Jelousies Aluminum Sliding Reglazing and WINDOWS New Building or Re- modelling Your GLAZED, HARDWARE FITTED GLASS FOR PICTURE WINDOW FOR YOUR Old ALUMINUM ME AND STORM-SCREEN IN WOOD FRAME DELIVERED. AS A UNIT SEALED -- INSULATING JALOUSIE WINDOWS C.M.H.C and ELECTRIC HEAT ACCEPTED Rescreening of Inserts for Aluminum Door snd Windows. i SHOWROOM & FACTORY 95 ATHOL ST. EAST--OSHAWA Baked Enamel PHON E 728-1 633 Finishes Optionet

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