Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 3 Jul 1967, p. 15

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SHAWA TIMES, 14 July 3, 1967 RIDGE 3. JAY BECKER ord-Holder in Masters' | Championship Play) \MOUS HANDS paler, outh vulnerable, arQs WAS o13 HAS642 on iit Joni Re ne lead -- king of dia- things happen in ts. For example, look il played in the na- ed'-pair championship held the West hand, : (fortunately for me) hown. North bid six after he learned ackwood that his side g one ace. He natu- ed that South's no- included the ace or iamonds. When this to materialize, South 1,400. i was played at 150 at quite a few of same contract was th the same disastr- Other strange results d at other tables. ite a number of de- yed the hand at three nd made thirteen 1 West led his fourth nd! table, where North kwood and learned ve diamond response had only one ace, he ve hearts, a conven- bid showing that the m was bad and cau- th to desist from @ e first time the sult iamed and, strictly it was a_nartificial nothing to do with South could think of anding place and he a result, this pair ito the best possible eir only losers being ds. r table, where West notrump, North artner to six. When od, North decided yuble was almost iJ on the A-K of dia- ly, he ran to seven g to make the grand st failed to leada ast, faced with a dif- , led a heart, but went down one. e did better than the ho went down 1,400. voncedes t Ship t Be Hit TON (AP) -- The e department con- American bombers hit a Soviet ship 'by as they attacked arbor oil installa- 1ent followed an an- from Moscow that protest" had been such an incident. statement said: in attack on the troleum storage fa- sd in the dock area two U.S. aircraft srotect the bombing ground air defence air 'defence site y 500 yards from of the ship which tate was damaged. pilots are under in- avoid Soviet ship- possible that certain nce directed at the site fell on the ship. ers have been amine flight paths strike photography possible informa- incident." ; was the second nth. e delivered to the y in Moscow, the said an anti-per- damaged the So- nt ship Mikhail sday while it was aiphong harbor. ! WIDESPREAD SR (CP) -- Pollu- hed such a global Antarctic penguins snowy owls carry their bodies, Wil- f the B.C. health ays. you tell me more Mrs. A. ou one thing more in't true. folner: My father d a heart attack. wice a week his Could this be con- H. S. ing an anti-coagu- thinner) drug, it ose bleeds if the high for him. Or rugs, such bleed- if his blood pres- . Otherwise, the heart attack ave THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, July 3, 1967 15 5 OB (i sO 'SAAS ERAS HH PA SB ee me UAW's Due July 10 By A, F. MAHAN DETROIT (AP) -- Walter P. Reuther will lay on the bargain- ing table July 10 what he de- scribes as "the most ambitious and longest list of demands ever drawn up" by his United Auto Workers Union. Reuther has told the 1,400,000 UAW. members in the U.S. and Canada: "We are going to make history in 1967." If he does it without a tong and costly strike, many would view it as a miracle. In addition to his main de- mands, he insists the auto-mak- ers must agree in U.S. bargain- ing to bring pay of Canadian workers up to that of their American counterparts. The av- erage Canadian auto plant wage) now is about 30 cents hourly) less. Reporters who have talked privately with both sides in re- cent weeks figure the odds are 60 to 40 there will be a strike. The auto-makers have bristled) at some demands "on a matter} of principle, not money," and have put them down as issues on which they would rather take a strike than give in. HINTS AT STRIKE Reuther told one union gather- ing to "save your shoe leather, you may be needing it in Sep- tember."" The implication was the leather might be needed for picket-line marching after Sept. 5, when current three-year con- tracts run out with the auto- motive Big Three--General Mo- tors, Ford and Chrysler. "It's not going to be easy go- ing at the bargaining table this year," Reuther also has said. "'We had a more favorable cli- mate in 1964." The U.S. industry was in the midst of a four-year boom in 1964 which carried it to record Plans 000 in 1966, when a slump de- veloped in April and continued to May this year. Since May, sales have been comparable with those of last year, but dealer inventories June 15 totalled 1,300,000--a 46- day supply at current selling M PR ES OE: OB WAS WE OS OR Ce aS HL AE OS HE GS EE BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT a sure for a federal income tax ime tion information service, said FOREIGN AFFAIRS ANALYSIS' = __ Economic Slump In Israel |i crs te." at Automobile production began By JACK LEFLER proposed by President Johnson., With the U.S. economy begin- to taper off this week prior to NEW YORK (AP) -- Pres-| But Leon H. Keyserling, for-| ning to show signs of more life,| scheduled model - change close- mer chairman of the economic some government analysts now downs next month. Output was By KIEN SMITH Canadian Press Business Editor Canada's manufacturing in- dustry still will be protected by a relatively high tariff wall after the broad reductions re- sulting from the Kennedy Round of trade talks come into force. rates, sharp profit drops in this year's last year's. | Government - ordered safety features have added to costs. Higher wages would do the same. Reuther opens 1967 bargaining Figures from the U.S. bureau of labor statistics show the av- erage straight-time rate of pay within the motor vehicle and equipment industry was $3.39 hourly in April. Since then UAW members have received a two- cent hourly cost-of-living boost. Under a guaranteed annual income, Reuther says a worker 'must know at the beginning of 'a year what his income for the offs notwithstanding. Some executives within the auto industry say a guaranteed annual income, without restric- loaf, increase absenteeis mand be, so far as they are con- sales of more than 9,000,000 cars in 1965, But sales fell about 500,- Stevie B. Good Wins Feature TORONTO .(CP) -- Stevie B. Good, a bay gelding, Saturday/exactor in the fourth race. won the Dominion Day stakes) ----------- cerned, an: issue on which to withstand a strike. fin six races to $28,525. Last |year, he earned $43,210 and won four stakes races. | The daily double of Caledon {Colonel and Reap the Win paid $13.60. Communicate and Park Heights con-bined for a $26.90 at Woodbine racetrack before! PROTECTING THE BEACH 20,301 fans. Ridden by Richard Grubb, | BOURNEMOUTH, Eng land All of the Big Three reported|{he changes to be implemented first quarter, compared with|but after that Canadian import- It will take until 1972 for all by the 53 participating nations, ers of foreign manufactures will pay a levy of 17% to 20 per cent. That is five percentage points lower than at present. In contrast, the tariffs to be imposed on exported Canadian NS. Pl ant Aids" eminent Disabled Folks By ANN HELUMUTH LIVERPOOL, N.S. (CP)--A new $100,000 plant here is pro- next 12 months will be, any lay-|Viding ernployment for some 40 cal disabilities. Some suffer as disabled persons. The p¥ant, opened last year, is the headquarters of K and W 'enterprises which specialises in tions, would be an incentive to|book-binding and repair work.) had been a potter. He decided to |The firra has developed from a jpilot project started in 1962, 'aimed at providing work for disabled persons. "But we are in business to make a profit,' says Secretary- Treasurer Charles Kelsey. 'We are daing very well and are optimistic about the future.'" The firm's main contracts are jwith Maritime universities and \the Nava Scotia and New Bruns- wick @ducation departments. It was in a military hospital during the Second World War |that Mr. Kelsey met his partner | George Whalley. Stevie B. Good completed the|(CP)--The municipal council in)\wERE PIONEERS 1¥%-mile course in one minute|this Hampshire resort town and 50 seconds. The Bert Puc- plans to spend more than $150,- cini-trained gelding paid $11.70,/009 on a series of 300 - foot|experiments in $4.20 and $3.30. breakwaters along the water's|carrie] out by the veterans af-|decided to start a pilot project The victory was worth $15,900|edge to protect the beach from/fairs department and the medi-|and the and boosted Stevie B. Good's! erosion. | Both, were disabled and had taken part in the first advanced rehabilitation {cal pnofession. o ° visers, urged prompt action| Legislation on it is expected to e ce | 1ve Vy 1g n and ad and suggested that the boost)reach Congress during July. \gain in increase grew this week. jadvisers, called the proposal|say they expect the gross na-jestimated at 171,100 passenger William McChesney Martin| "ill - timed and unwise". tional product -- total of all|cars, off 2.2 per cent from 175,- e © | ¢ iT' ff WV all I Oo R ema n Jr, chairman of the Federal| Johnson recommended to Con-|800ds and services -- to ad-/039 the previous week and 3.3 1 1 Reserve Board, and Gardner|gress last January a six per|vance by about $10,000,000,000\per cent from 177,022 a year Ackley, chairman of the presi-|cent surcharge on U.S. corpor-|during the second quarter of earlier. dent's Council of Economic Ad-|ate and personal income taxes. |this year. This would compare with a the first quarter of should be higher than originally; "J gm firmly convinced that! $4,400,000,000. SEN Gee Bat oa ferras ona "| we must have adequate, effect-| The council of Economie Ad- mo The existing discount, how-|"dramatic and sustained in- . 3 ever, in effect would give Cana-|crease in export trade can be tion in the Montreal and West|ive -- and above all -- prompt) visers last January projected dian exporters an extra advan-|expected if Canadian business-| Coast markets from Europe and|tax action that would whittle | the GNP for this year at $787,- tage of about eight per cent,!men exploit the opportunities." |Japan, but the government ob-| down the prospective deficit for| 000,000,000. while adding a similar burden! ES ) viously hopes that Canada's | the coming fiscal year to one of| 'The labor department re- on importers. COULD CAUSE CHANGE highly efficient industry will be| manageable proportions,"" Mar-| ported another sharp rise in the In 1966 Canada's trade in pro-| The agreenient could be a able to compensate for any do-/lin said. cost of living in May. Its con- ducts that will benefit from U.S,|Maijor turning point in chang-!mestic losses by increased ex- Ackley told Congress an in-| cjmer price index climbed totalled $1,920,000,-| ing Canada's economy from one_ ports. a based on natural resources to 5 a It probably will take at least, one of the world's leading ine TEXTILES MAY BE HIT two or three years before some 4ustrialized nations. Some observers predict Can- clear indications of the effects| Jt likely won't be a case of.ada's textile and show indus-| But Keyserling said a tax rise -- of the Kennedy Round--called |etting richer on export sales|tries glso could face sharply in- would "further restrain an that in recognition of initiative for all companies, or possibly creased pressures. economy which now needs a toward freer world trade taken industries, however. Elsewhere on the business|program for balanced accelera- by the late U.S. president--on The iron and steel industry scene, the Dominion Bureau of|tion of the rate of growth'. the Canadian economy are|Was predicting even before de- | Statistics reported that Canada's va aoe come tax boost was needed to three - tenths of one per cent avert renewed inflation. 'to 115.6, which was 2.7 per cent higher than a year ago. F. W. Dodge Co., a construc- tariff cuts 0. 5 Ss 'RESTRAIN ECONOMY' AREA OF ALGERIA "The area of Algeria is 19,519/ square miles. | at General Motors July 10. The! manufactures going to the ma-| known. tails of the agreement were! gross national product was run- GARY NESBITT following day he goes to Ford jor markets of the United States| So far government statements ade public in Ottawa that any|ning at an annual rate of $60,- NOW 1S THE TIME and next to Chrysler. or countries of the Europeanion the prospects. for Canadian|'eductions in Canadian tariffs} 152,000,000 in the first quarter er TO CALL Representative HASN'T STATED DEMANDS ©°™Mon Market will average|business have naturally concen-|would seriously affect its do-|That is 1.7 per cent higher than U 'é uh % r a" _jless than 10 per cent. trated on the optimistic side. mestic competitive position, the previous quarter. Take advantage of it! 24 hour ser- Reuther has said he wants a Jn doing business with the} 'No country in the. world. Duties are removed on pig In the first quarter of 1966, the tb vice; and radio dispatched trucks SUN LIFE guaranteed annual income, but\q)s Canadian manufacturers|has more to gain from the Ken- iron and iron or steel ingots, annual rate was $56,392,000,000 '@) always' ready to serve you. he hasn't said how much of a)stand to have an even bigger|nedy Round than Canada," said and cut to 1244 per cent from, Because of price increases, Fuel Oi! Budget Plan Available A re one; he wants a substantial) advantage because of the dis-|Finance Minister Sharp, who 15 n bars, rods, sheet and strip. however, only slightly more than OVER 40 YEARS EXPERIENCE! ssurance ompany wage increase, but he hasn't| count on the Canadian dollar, al-| was trade minister when the ne- The levy on pipe and tubes--ex- one-third of the 1.7-per-cent gain of Canada said how much; he wants in- though that could change before| gotiations got under way three pected to be an important mar- reported for the first quarter of M LA HLI creased pensions, but he hasn't)the tariff changes are fully ef-|years azo. ket during the next few years) this year represents a real gain Cc Oshawa Shopping said how much, and he also) fective. Trade Minister Winters said a because of an anticipated pipe- in total output of goods and Centre wants increased nelleay and -- ---- sie : line growth--is cut to 1714 per! services. COAL & 723 3481 110 cation pay, but he hasn't sai cent from 20. Indications of an easing of the ba : how much. Officials say this will prob- pressure on prices was noted, SUPPLIES King St. W. Phone 725-4563 } | | | Although both owners are par jtially paralysed not all their jemployees show outward physi- jthe result of heart conditions, arthritis, or some other disab- jling disease. | Before the war Mr. Get a new guitstream water heater Whalley train as a draughtsman and study handicrafts and later be came an instructor in one of the veterans' hospitals. Later he worked as an instruc- tor in a pre-vocational school for non - veteran handicapped people which had been started by Mr. Kelsey. After being discharged from hospital in 1946 Mr. Kelsey, who before the war had been in gen eral insurance, became inter ested in the welfare of the handi- capped. He took special training in placement work and counselling and served with the Canadian Paraplegic Association in Que- bec and the Maritimes. | After talks with the Nova Sco- jtia education department it was first workshop was lopened here in 1962. Ne all want to put our working time to | the most productive use. And one of the ways in which we at Bell can probably { help you~ whatever your business -- is with an efficient intercom system, inte- grated with your telephone, j y Bell Canada by saving time €xp067 See "CANADA 67" --a thrilling Walt Disney film In CIRCLE-VISION 360° at the Telephone Pavilion, Get lots and It can be tailored to your ex capital investment. There's ne charge for repair and maintenance. It just saves you time and money. Sounds inter- esting? Give us a call! y lots anc lots of hotwater sd for only -- 4 Oaday.Call js Consumers Gas 128-7363 | act needs. It can grow with your business. It needs no ver an added & WAAAY MAMA.

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