6 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, September 14, 1967 eosin eer N.S. PREMIER TERMED HATCHET MAN Tsing il By ANN HELLMUTH HALIFAX (CP) -- George Isaac Smith, the new Progres- sive Conservative premier of Nova Scotia, is a forceful, wily tactician whose debating pow- ers and political ability once earned him the nickname "the hatchet man" from political foes and friends. The 58-year-old premier admits he enjoys nothing more than a good political battle and can never remember a time when he wasn't interested in politics. "IT guess I was just born with an interest," he says. 'And the Progressive Conservative party has always been my political home." A small man with dark bushy eyebrows and friendly smile, his political career corresponds nice mene closely with that of his great friend and predecessor as prov- incial premier, Robert Lorne Stanfield, who Saturday was elected national leader of the PC party. It was in 1946 that Mr. Smith, Mr. Stanfield and the late George Nowlan, together with a small group of Conservatives, banded to form a nucleus aimed at rejuvenating the ail- ing Conservative party in Nova Scotia. EXCITING DAYS "They were exciting days," Mr. Smith recalls. "Things aren't so exciting now but that is inevitable. When you have responsibilities naturally you have to be more prudent." Instrumental in persuading Mr. Stanfield to run for presi- dency of the Progressive Con- eT mT rn i Yochtaman -- Politi Advances Rhodesian Case Of UAW INDSOR, Ont. By JOSEPH MacSWEEN sia's David Butler may not be| Britain had to take it up." up there with the leaders in the world Flying Dutchman sailing|of uncertainty and a beginning championships, but he claims/of investment. What happened/Europeans are prepared to) Minister Martin to investigate a | doubt the Africans are as yet a "Mr. Smith offered us an wed pian way from being able to! nas run a modern state in which)Drury and External mann em cian | 11, 1965, Smith "threw down the;said he had often fought for} Geo MONTREAL (CP) -- Rhode-| gauntlet in such a way that! African rights. But there is nol or the United Auto Workers|workers were working on at the | Union Wednesday night said he| time the defence order was/> srarrinc to be doing fine in the diplo-|was an end of investment an¢/ live." matic field. the beginning of uncertainty." "T'ye won a form of recogni- tion for Rhodesia," joked the|swept from the Rhodesian yachtsman-politician the last white opposition in thelelection in which Smith Rhodesian parliament. received a mandate for his Canada, and all other coun-|/now-famed UDI. Since then the) cans for rule. "It's not a matter of sending a few people to college," he| i, added. "'Only when a child 1s brought up in a civilized atmos- phere is he likely to stick to it." Sanctions had siderable hardship, particularly in some sections of the econ- notably tobacco, where production and sales have been tries, have withheld dipl tic/only parli tary opposition recognition of breakaway|has come from one independent Rhodesia but Mr. Butler is rec-]/ member and some 12 Negro ognized as Rhodesia's repre-|members elected on a second- sentative at the 20-country sail-|ary roll. ing championships being held; Mr. Butler said Canadians at the Royal St. Lawrence|should realize that his opposi- Yachting Club. tion to Mr. Smith did not mean Though Butler, 40, enjoyed a|he favored early African rule in chuckle over this oddity, there/the country where 220,000 was nothing amusing about his|whites dominate 4,000,000 picture of the Rhodesian situa-| Negroes. tion and he still feels that rebel| "They should realize that Premier Ian Smith blundered|despite disagreements we cer- badly. tainly feel our way of life is "Rhodesia is marking time,"| being very seriously misrepre- he said of the African country's] sented in a large part of the economy, in an interview) Western world." Wednesday night. The leader of the former By his unilateral declaration| Rhodesian party, destroyed by of independence of Britain Nov.|the Smith's Rhodesian Front, Condominium Housing Africa and omy, Butler and his followers were) NEED PREPARATION He said this had been amply who led/house in a May 1965 general|demonstrated in other parts of generations would| be ded to pre the Afri-|by the Canadian government meer Le Eterare: £0 tre May 5 with the Kaiser Jeep slashed. But Smith had survived and) "it is true that people in time| of crisis draw together. Even if) we disagree with what has been done, most if us are going {07 get on with it... . You have to) make life work from day to! day." "The government says they're going very well, but! they're not," said Mr. Butler. "The battle of sanctions is a battle of foreign exchange. The question is can Rhodesia earn enough from exports to pay for the things we need." ns io _ servative Association in 1947, he shuns any. suggestion that he was the strong man behind the decision. "I was one of several people who played a part," he said Tuesday. "I knew Bob Stan- field, liked and admired him. We lived in the same town-- Truro--and knew each other well." Mr. Smith, a native of Stewi- acke, N.S., and Mr. Stanfield's enter the Commons as Opposi- tion leader. "I just made it, but only just," Mr. Smith said. "Origi- nally I wanted to make the law my career, but after Mr. Stan- field became leader of the prov- incial party, it was suggested I should run for the legislature." In opposition from 1949 to 1956, Mr, Smith was his party's leading debater, earning a rep- NORTH BAY (CP) -- An executive of the Ontario North- land Railway said Wednesday a work stoppage by some 160 trai and eingi was a wildcat strike. E. A. Frith, general manager of the provincially - owned rail- way, said in an interview that there was a dispute between management and the railway's utation as a cutting, formidab running mate in the two-r ber Colchester riding since 1949, won his first nomination to contest the seat "by the skin of my teeth." The other contestant for the nomination was Cyril Kennedy, now Conservative member of Parliament for _ Colchesier- Hants, who Tuesday offered to give up his seat so Mr. Stan- field can contest the riding and When the Conservative party came to power in 1946 and Mr. Stanfield formed a government, Mr. Smith became highways minister. He held several cabinet posts including that of provincial sec- retary before becoming finance and economics minister in 1962, a portfolio he retains as pre- mier, nC tS Burt Asks Investigation Windsor Crisis (CP)--|called into its Toledo plant the rge Burt, Canadian director| domestic production its Windsor asked | plant here. 4 UAW complaint that Kaiser Jeep of Toledo, Ohio, is with- |holding parts needed to com- |plete a Canadian defence order. He said the order was placed| Plant to eight from 52." Mr. Burt said production was to have begun on the defence order on Aug. 15, with the first units being available for deliv- ery on Nov. 1. Instead, he said, 44 Windsor workers have been laid off since August and have almost depleted their benefits. Mr. Burt, in a statement, said at "not only is the parent company refusing to release parts to its Windsor plant to complete the order, but it has Industry Minister|received, and which they would Affairs | otherwise still be working on. "The effect of these weird decisions by the United States management of Kaiser Jeep has been to reduce the hourly- rated work force at the Windsor con- Dress Optional | BRANCH 43 Royal Canadian Legion CENTENNIAL BALL " * THE BILL BACKWELL COMBO SATURDAY ... SEPTEMBER 23rd Dancing 9 p.m, te 12 Call: 723-4511 Special Prizes 3.00 per couple Ticket Only Bar Facilities r ing trades. The employees, who began booking sick and booking rest Wednesday, are members of the Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen, the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, and the Brotherhood of Engi and Northern Rail Slow-Down Termed Wildcat Strike Firemen. They are disputing|Pulp and paper out of Northern long lay-overs at various divi- sional points along the rail- way's approximately 250-mile- long route between North Bay and Moosonee. A railway spokesman said salary is not an issue. Freight services are tied up but two regularly - scheduled passenger trains were expected to operate Wednesday night and by the union. He said he wiil TAKERS TAKEN meet today with the heads of CLERKENWELL, England the other unions involved. They|(CP) -- The crowd at the local may try to arrange a meeting| station for the Arsenal-Liver- with management. pool soccer match was huge, so British railways put four tick- The ONR havis minerals and et-takers on the train. But when the doors opened for the soccer Ontario. The railway emp!oys special, the crowd jammed about 1,800. Other workers are aboard and many fans were left reporting to their jobs as usual.|.+ 'the station--including the four ticket-takers. IZZA Phone 723-0243 or 728-0192 PI's SCOTS IN WIN ABERDEEN, land (CP) --Aberdeen of Scotland Wednes- day night defeated Reykjavik of Iceland 10-0 in the first leg of a European Cup of Cup winners championship--and the Icelan- ders went home with hardly a h of going into the next another was scheduled to leave! for Kapuskasing today, the spokesman added. Bot Bowes, head of the Narth Bay local of the Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen, described the Ikout as not authorized OR RO Children Under 12 Admitted Free NOW PLAYING Admission: Adults $1.50 t WINNER OF IN PANAVISION" AND METROCOLOR Geraldine Chaplin ACADEMY AWARDS! METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER DAVID LEAN'S FILM ce sons pasternans {DOCTOR ZHIVAGO (74 Julie Christie --- Tom Courtney Alee Guinness -- Rolph Richardson with OMAR SHARIF as ZHIVAGO Box Office Opens 7:00 -- Show Sterts 8:00 ADULT ENTERTAINMENT eee thik eer aot Pure tr earner ts eer ert Parte ee ee ee ee os Leliehislotslstishslietistchstclsisistatctelelstatet tet ttat.t t.2.t.8o8 round. r DK ATTRACTIONS LIMITED presents direct from the U.S.S.R. THE WORLD RENOWNED 41 Gerrard September 15, PRICES: $3.50 PHONE RESERVATI RUSSIAN PIATNITSKY CHORUS and DANCE ENSEMBLE RYERSON THEATRE St. East 16 and 17 and $4.00 Tickets Available -- Ryerson Box Office -- Ukrainska Knyhe -- 962 Bloor St. W.; Troyka Ltd. -- 799 College St. IONS: 364-3751 DOWNSTAIR to the Discs FROM MARTY'S 9 P.M. to | FULLY LICENSED LOUNGE CLUB DISCOTHEQUE MEMBERSHIP $1.00 GEORGIA For The Over 21 set YOUR HOST MAX COTTRELL : DANCE And For Those That Like It Live. "The Sceptres" Every Friday Night ADMISSION 1.00 S$ AT THE MOTOR HOTEL of MARTY RECORD BAR 1 AM. Lauded By Experts' Panel OTTAWA (CP) -- A panel of housing experts predicted Wednesday Ontario's new legis- MONTH FOR LIFE lation permitting individual From Age 65 ownership of housing units in multi + unit structures will pro- vide less - expensive homes. The panel was discussing the Condominium Act, 1967, at the 15th annual conference of the Ontario Association of Housing Authorities. The act came into force Sept. 1. H. Allan Leal, chairman of the Ontario Law Reform Com- mission, said that under the act each unit is individually owned and common elements in the structures--lobbies, lanes, appliances--are jointly owned. Each owner is responsible for maintenance of his own unit and all owners share responsi- bility for maintenance of com- mon areas. CONVERT ROW UNITS Here ts @ plan te provide for Alex Rubin, president of| your femily if you should die, Rubin Corp., Toronto, said his) fo ian # | firm administered several row| °% '°F your retirement years | housing units and planned to| you survive... | convert some to the condomi- nium - type of ownership. He estimated that a single family home with a similar floor area to a condominium unit would cost about $24,000 compared with $17,000 for the linked home. Patrick Kelly, vice - presi- dent of Campeau Construction, Ottawa, said he wondered what legal relief there will be to own- ers of such units if the arrange- ment goes awry. He hoped there would be some '"'summary method" of] ; setting disputes, short of pro- tracted litigation. A. D. Wilson, executive direc- tor of Central Mortgage and Housing Corp., said condomi- nium housing is acceptable for National Housing Act loans and some have been made. ROGER WOLFE UNIT MANAGER 723-2883 725-4563 By completing the enquiry form below, you cen obtein deteils suitable to your personal situ- ~ SUN Broadcaster Plans Take-Over QUEBEC (CP) -- An appilca-| tion by a Toronto broadcaster to take over Hamilton radio station CHIQ was taken under advisement Wednesday by the Board of Broadcast Governors. Rogers Broadcasting Ltd., which operates CHFI and CHFI-FM in Toronto, said it plans some changes for the Hamilton station if its proposal is accepted. | Purchase price for the station was not revealed. There was no opposition to the proposal. The BBG will make a recom- mendation on the application later. Oshewe Shopping Centre 1 1 NAME ..cccccccccomneccescmmes 66 0 | | lt ADDRESS ..ncsecesescesescooen ishawea : Dancing Saturdays J OCCUPATION. s+esessevensessee COUPLES ONLY f : JERRY REIDT It Exact Dote of Birth ........ ives ORCHESTRA ee oe 1 *% FRIDAY ~ | Sounds of the | NOW Generation 4 The Big Eun Dance THE BRITISH MODBEATS Admission 1.50 Dancing 9 p.m. to 12:30 page DANCING THIS WEEK 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. TO THE SOUNDS OF The Diaracons Appearing Nightly at the GEORGIAN Moior Hotel CHAMPLAIN AVE. AT THORNTON RD. 723-4693 The double"0" means L | FE he has a license to kill when he chooses ASSURANCE COMPANY +«. where he chooses of CANADA «+. Whom he chooses! Recommended as ADULT ENTERTAINMENT JAMES Agent 007!) s ..and "TWICE" is the only way to live! SHOWING AT 1:00 3:15 5:20 7:30 Adult Entertainment JULIE ANDREWS: MAX VON SHOW TIMES 'WEEKDAYS: 6:30 - 9:15 SAT: 3:30 - 6:15 - 9:00 NOW PLAYING "SPECTACULAR!" --N.Y. WORLD JOURNAL TRIBUNE "MAGNIFICENT!" ta THE GBoRGE ROY WHLL-WaLTER umuscn PRODUCTION of"HAWATI" ncsust an UNITED ARTISTS TION PRESENTS SYDOW-RICHARD HARRIS THE HIPPIES AND DIGGERS ARE HERE! WITH THE WAY-OUT EXCITEMENT © "MYSTERY... THU ISLAND starring GUY a MADISON: vif Ex / TODAY oy MARK RICHARD TOD JAMES MACARTHUR SUSANOLVER ve JDEPINE. Added Thriller 39 KING ST OSHAWA For further information Please Call 725-5833 whien you've got it made... fobert webber- nana arner-devid drape ira alech eager aig hn lander mactendick Garin ansohot ajo caley-»yereen in panavision'wimetrocolor @ TOMORROW Regeat es BODO DE i eo 4 Lost Times Today ALL-COLOR SHOW "Naked Runner" "Triple Cross" (Adult) 942-1250 2nd ATTRACTION Slowly they stripped Sam Laker down until there was nothing but animal left... TECHNICOLOR': TECHNISCOPE': From WARNER BROS, INDOOR- ALL COLOR SHOW STARTING TOMORROW ouTDOOR THEATRE BOX OFFICE OP SHOW STARTS AT DUSK SE YOUNG' 55" ENS at 7 ti tc BEFORE Imp Dra A number of the cost of driv ing during Mon the Oshawa Ma; Joseph Klimek Ave,, a father. rguilty to a char driving and wa 15 days in the was his second the offence this FINED $300 ' A fine of $30 80 days was "Andrew Yawors Bloor St., E., wl wicted of having trol of a moto: impaired. The charge ha lowing an. Aug. Cloverdale Stre Yaworski's car ed cars receiv $1,425 damage. A breathalize: Yaworski had of beer or 16 t alcohol in his time of the tes GUILTY PLEA William Polal Myers St., plea 'charge of bein charge of a mo A. breathalize1 11 pints of be system at the ti Polak admitted : problem and lengthy licence Magistrate D fined him $250 ; days and susper for one year. SAME FINE The same fin costs or 25 dé against Waclaw of Taunton Roa Oshawa, when h ty to a charge o ing. Police evic » they had diffict Toporowski over arrest. Magistrate D sometimes wonc lic realizes the police must tak bringing such halt." MINOR CONSU Ronald D. Wi 141 Simcoe St. § ty to a charge sumption of al: fined $50 and cc When he learr had admitted co five pints of be Dodds said "You ly close in all p impaired drivin; 4 ! suPPLYING Supplying rum year-old girls charge of supp minors being la ald Scott, 35, of Whitby. He was fined $100 and ¢ and was given | REMANDED Linda Ash, 18 Rd., pleaded gu of transportatio and fraudulently She was convict ed in custody u sentencing. NON-PAYMENT Hank Schoonb guilty to a chai ment of wages | ed. He was git pay back the si ing to a man w baled hay for h awa airport. INTOXICATED A windsor la French, 31, plea charge of being a bus at the Os! nal, He was fine or. 10 days. CHARGED DISN Vivian Black, Ave., pleaded r charge of stealir cigarettes from Shopping Centre learned the wor under consideral time over an im tion, Magistrate | to dismiss the there was a re as to whether th mitted the offen PLEADS GUILT Pleading guilt of public intoxi in a fine of $50 Alway there ready 5D Pa or more NIAGARAF COMPANY 286 KING $' 723-3