2 THE COBHAWA TIMBE, Tuasdey, Baptember 26, 1967 A GLANCE AROUND THE GLOBE Saskatchewan Li Promise Diefenbaker Job PRINCE ALBERT (CP) --{165 hopefuls filed official nomi- nation papers Monday for Sas- 11 general Premier Ross 'Thatcher said Monday night if his Liberal government is re-elected in the Oct. 11 Saskatchewan general election, it would find a job in the province for John Diefenba- ker, former national leader of Progressive Conservative Party. Premier Thatcher told a public meeting in Mr. Diefenba- ker's home city "If Mr. Diefen- baker is not absorbed with some federal duty, we shall invite him some time in the future to serve the people of Saskatchewan in one capacity or another, as he has done so often in the past." Withdrawal Date CAIRO (AP) -- Withdrawal of Egyptian troops from Yemen will be completed by Dec. 15, says the semi - official Egyptian newspaper Al Ahram. It says Gen. Abdul Kader Has- san, commander of Egyptian forces in Yemen, left for the republican capital of San's Monday, after discussing final arrangements here for the with- drawal. The Egyptians support- ed republican forces in the civil war with royalists. Nominations REGINA (CP) -- The Liberal party, in power for 314 years, and the CCF party they deposed, were the only parties with full slates of candidates as katchewan's Oct. election. set in 1960. party will contest 41 of the 5 seats at stake. The Socia dates in the field. Launch Capsizes DACCA, East Pakistan (AP) river 'launch capsized remote area of Faridpur dis trict. Unconfirmed reports had pu the death toll at 250. Some survivors say the boa' reported to be still untraced. Romney Runs will announce formally nex' for the 1968 Republican presi dential nomination. . The Associated Press slum areas. The total was two more than for the 1964 election and all well short of the record of 225 The Progressive Conservative Credit party has just six candi- -- No official figures are avail- able yet on the number of cas- ualties caused Friday when a in a was carrying about 200 people. Nearly half that total are DETROIT (AP) -- Governor George Romney of Michigan month that he is a candidate has learned that Romney will throw his hat in the national political ring shortly after returning to Michigan at the end of his cur- rent countrywide tour of Negro berals Signs Agreement MOSCOW (Reuters)--France Monday joined nations agreeing not to use nuclear weapons in outer space when it signed the international treaty here. The treaty was first signed Jan. 27 9 this year by the United States, 1 Russia and Britain. Minister Resigns GEORGETOWN (Reuters)-- Finance Minister Peter d'Aguiar, leader of the United Force party, resigned Monday night from the coalition cabinet of Premier Forces Burnham of Guyana. But d'Aguiar's _ party .| will stay on as junior partner in the government with Burn- t}ham's People's National Con- gress, it was announced, Appointed Justice OTTAWA (CP) -- Louis - Phi- lippe Pigeon, 62, hasbeen appointed a justice of the Supreme Court of Canada, the justice department announced Monday. The Quebec City law- tlyer will fill a vacancy on the nine-man court left by the -|retirement of the former chief justice Robert Taschereau, and the move upward of Mr. Justice J. R. Cartwright as his replace- ment in the post of chief jus- tice. t Pope Paul 70 Today VATICAN CITY (CP)--Pope Paul was spending a quiet 70th birthday today, doing light work as he recovered from the illness which struck him three weeks ago. Visits from relatives and close friends and cabled greet- ings from statesmen and church leaders were the only departures from the Pope's daily routine. The Pope's birthday is not normally an occasion for cere- monies, whatever the state of his health, The Pope has carried out light duties since his kidney and bladder inflammation. He was spending his time partly working and partly in bed in his apartment in the Vatican. Observers expected him to be well enough to address the opening session of the first synod of bishops here Friday. Recent appearances to bless crowds in St. Peter's Square from his Vatican window showed he was getting stronger. s Pope Paul has been spiritual leader of the world's 500,000,000 Roman Catholics for four years, LB] Charged Hiding Truth WASHINGTON (AP)--Repub- lican critics launched fresh charges today that President Johnson is not telling the Amer- ican people the truth about the Vietnam war. Senator Clifford P. Case Aids Foundation TORONTO (CP) -- Central (Rep. NJ.) said Johnson appeared to be "indulging the proponents of a military solu- ROBARTS SCOLDS TRUDEAU 'Canadian Unity Becomes By THE CANADIAN PRESS Premier John Robarts called for a strong, united Canada Monday on an election cam- paign swing through south- western Ontario, scolding feder- al Justice Minister Trudeau for hinting the premier may be ready to do a "demotion" job on the nation. "T would think the minister of justice would know better than that," the premier said at a Windsor rally of 250 persons. National unity and the posi- ion of Ontario within Canada was a major issue in the cur- rent campaign for the Oct. 17 provincial election. Campaigning in the same area, Donald MacDonald, lead- er of the New Democratic Party, pledged support at a Brantford news conference for 8,500 investors of the bankrupt Prudential Finance Co., who have asked Ontario's three party leaders to help them get an immediate advance of 15 cents on each invested dollar. They lost about $20,000,000 when the company collapsed last year. At Fort William, Liberal Leader Robert Nixon unveiled a platform for development of Northern Ontario which would include setting up a_ special cabinet department, industry incentives and a _ $100,000,000 capital works program. MEETS CHILDREN The premier's remarks, on a day of campaigning among hundreds of flag-waving, cheer- ing school children in Ridge- town, Blenheim, Tilbury, Belle HERE and THERE GUEST SPEAKER The Honorable William Davis, minister of education, will speak at the commencement exercises for the Ontario Ladies' College, Monday, Oct. 23 at 8 p.m. INCREASE OF 45 Ajax and Pickering General Hospital statistics for the month of August show the total num- ber of in-patients admitted, (ac- tive), increased by 45 for the same period a year ago. Up to August 1967, 2,739 patients were admitted, as compared to the 2,694 people for the same time in 1966. Forty-five babies were born during August; 1,030 patients were treated in emer- gency; 62 minor operations; 44 major operations and 42 ear, nose and throat operations were given at the hospital. OMB HEARING An Ontario Municipal Board hearing will be held Thursday, Dec. 28 at 10 a.m. at the Coun- cil Chambers of the Town of Bowmanville for support or OP-/ton 'at 9:20 a.m. It will return|Arabia's two rival nationalist| to Toronto at 8:45 p.m. The/organizations called a ceasefire trains will be drawn by Cana-|Monday in their civil war and Sa" of a proposed by-law 67-28) authorizing a special charge for the town's sewer TO RAISE FUNDS The United Council of Vet- erans' Associations will hold a special fund-raising dance in the club rooms of the Unit 42, the Canadian Corps Association, on Bond St. next Saturday night at 8:30 p.m, The Council rep- resents Branch 43, the Royal Canadian Legion, Unit 42, the Canadian Corps Association, the Oshawa Polish Vterans Asso- ciation and the Royal Canadian Naval Veterans Association, Oshawa branch. STEAM ENGINE BUFFS Many city and district rail- way steam engine buffs will at- tend two excursions sponsored by the Upper Canada Railway Society this weekend. The first will be to Haliburton Sept. 30 to view the scenic autumn colors. The train will leave Toronto at 8:30 a.m., returning at 8:40 p.m, The second will be Oct. 1 to Fort Erie. The steam en- gine will leave Toronto at 8:15 a.m, EDT and arrive at Hamil- Mortgage and Housing Corp. will contribute $9,900 to the Ontario Research Foundation for a study aimed at developing self - contained sewage, gar- bage and water treatment facil- ities for large office and apart- ment buildings, a foundation spokesman said Monday. The study, started several years ago, is to determine if buildings could function without normal water and sewage services. Riot Sentence CHATHAM (CP)--William Blake, 27, of Wallaceburg was sentenced Monday to six after Defence Secretary be an effective means of stop- ping the infiltration of supplies into the South. Senator Charles H. Percy (Rep. Ill.) said the public is not being told that bombing near China will bring that country into the war. He repeated pre- vious charges that the president has been "constantly wrong" about "where we stand, what we can accomplish and what the war will cost." Case expressed his views in a tion in Vietnam for political reasons" by ordering air attacks on North Vietnam ports McNamara said this would not River and Windsor, were prompted by Mr. 'Trudeau's statement this month at the Liberal thinkers conference in Montmorency, Que. Mr. Trudeau told the confer- ence that he hoped Premier Robarts' Conference of Tomor- row conference, set for Toronto Nov. 26-29, "would nit be a demolition job on the federal government." "Tonight, I give you this pledge," the premier said. "As long as I am leader of the gov- ernment of Ontario, political partisanship and party advan- tage will never be permitted <o impede Canada's progress." prepared Senate speech, Percy in an interview. Case, a Senate foreign rela- tions committee member who has urged that the bombing be limited to vital military targets, said the administration's han- dling of the war has produced "a crisis of confidence." "The people's anxiety, and that of Congress, too, springs perhaps in greatest part from a growing conviction that the administration is not telling them the truth.' months in jail for taking part in a riot in Wallaceburg July 22. He was fined $300 or an addi- tional three months for assault- ing a provincial police consta- ble, W. R. Brownlee, during the melee. Three-month concurrent jail terms were imposed on him for obstructing another police- man and for carrying an offen- sive weapon. Announce Ceasefire CAIRO (Reuters) -- South Shipping Picks Up MONREAL (CP) More t Canadian visit of French Presi- dent Charles de Gaulle at the strategic northern out- post of Con Thien today took the brunt of the heaviest sus- Vietnam since the French defeat at Dien Bien Phu. The marines hurled back 10 shells for each one fired at them. said the government should pay Prudential investors the 15 them get too old and die." notes which were in fact use- less. ADDRESSES 400 ment of a department of natu- cents now and recover the money from the bankrupt firm's trustees. "It might be elementary humanity that they be paid now before some of He said an NDP government would pay the investors up to is Coasicenives thre tasl Gk neighboring International company a "facade of respecta- bility" by allowing it to issue Mr. Nixon told a three - rid- ing rally of 400 that his plat- form would include establish- ral resources which headquar- ters in Northern Ontario, His' Election Platform Plank In Brantford, Mr. MacDonald;resources minister would fly to Toronto for cabinet meetings and legislature sessions. "The direction of the develop- ment of Northern Ontario must once and for all be put in the hands of those who know what it's all about," he said amid a hearty applause. The 39 - year - old politician began his day at Fort Frances Falls, Minn., where he prom- ised action of a' new bridge linking the border towns. He spent most of the day on a flying tour of Thunder Bay rid- ing. Today, Mr. Nixon tours sev- eral ridings in western Ontario, particularly Owen Sound, while the other two leaders continue a swing through southwestern Ontario. NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP) --Eric M. Kierans, Quebec Lib- eral Federation president, Mon- day described the call for a separate Quebec by former wei- fare minister Rene Levesque as a "moment of truth" in Cane- dian political history. Mr. Kierans, minister of revenue in the Lesage govern- ment, said Mr. Levesque's separatiste proposal would be discarded by the provincial Lib- erals. He said it would force political leaders in Quebec and across Canada to stand up and be counted on this issue. He told the Canadian Club of the Niagara Frontier that Can- ada would remain a_ single nation despite the separatist movement. Mr. Kierans pointed to the Canada Seen As One Nation In Spite Of Separatism isummer as the rebirth of a "dying separatiste cause." He accused Premier Johnson of using the de Gaulle visit for political advantage at the expense of the federal govern- ment. Mr. Kierans predicted that the Quebec Liberal party would hang the ruling union National party with a separatiste tag and sweep the province in the next election. Earlier, Mr. Kierans told the Canadian Club in Hamilton that English Canada should keep its nerve in the face of the current unrest in Quebec. "The reasons that will keep WEATHER FORECAST TORONTO (CP) -- Official forecast issued at 5:30 a.m. today. Synopsis: Warm southerly winds are flowing into the prov- ince ahead of a storm centre north of Lake Superior, This same warm current of air is expected to result in pleasant 70-degree temperatures throughout southern Ontario later today. Cold weather behind the Northern Ontario storm is pushing rapidly south- ward and should reach the lower lakes tonight or early Wednesday. Cloudy weather and scattered showers are fore- cast for the south tonight and Wednesday. Toronto, Hamilton, London, Windsor, Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Niagara, Lake Ontario, southern Geor- gian Bay, Haliburton regions: Mostly sunny windy and warm today. Increasing cloudiness this evening. Scattered showers and chance of a thundershower tonight. Wednesday mainly cloudy and cooler with scat- tered showers. Winds south- westerly 20 to 30 today and northwest to northerly near 20 Wednesday. Sudbury, North Bay, northern Georgian Bay, Algoma, Tima- gami, White River, Cochrane regions: Mainly cloudy with scattered showers today and Wednesday. Scattered showers or snowflurries tonight. Warm this morning and turning much cooler this afternoon, Contin- uing cool tonight and Wednes- day. Winds southwest this after- noon and to northerly 20 Wednesday. Western James Bay region: Overcast with rain south and snow or rain central and north today tapering off to occasional showers or melting snowflurries this afternogn. Cloudy with ional sh s or snowflur- us together are not military. To separate now would be an economic disaster for both Quebec and the rest of last Canada." U.S. Marines Of Sustained SAIGON (AP)--U.S. marines ained Communist firepower in More than 1,000 shells fell \shipping activity was expected today as additional numbers of ing the strike against the Cana- Wishart Won't dian Lake Carriers' Association were reported heading back to along the Great Lakes system|Monday on Con Thien, a scarred sailors who had gone home dur-|demilitarized zone and the key fortress 244 miles south of the Take Brunt Cong Attack North Vietnamese started a battle of attrition. US. bombers and jets dropped 150 tons of explosives on gunpits but the North Viet- namese fire continued. It was their loss at Dien Bien Phu that convinced the French in 1954 to get out of Indochina. The U.S. destroyer Mansfield was hit by shore guns, One sailor was killed and two more wounded. to the marine def astride Communist invasion routes to the South, The marines reported their ships. agreed to meet in this Egyptian capital Oct. 3 to discuss forma- tion of a government to take dian National's last operating steam locomotive, No. 6218, a northern type 4-8-4. system. The hearing will also meet in connection with the Shipping activity resumed partially Monday after 5,400 sailors agreed to return to work Take Action matter of section 379 of The Municipal Act, (R.S.0.) 1960, ¢. 249) as amended. CASH AWARD Edward James Helcoe, 646 Champlain Ave., Oshawa, -has received a $100 cash award from King's College, London. Edward's final average at Cen- tral Collegiate was 66.6 per cent, MANAGING DIRECTOR Herbert J. Cook, honorary colonel of the Ontario Regiment and a native of Oshawa who joined the Woolworth Company in 1913, has been appointed to the position of managing direc- tor of the Canadian company and serves on the board of di- rectors of the parent company. FAIR CONDITION A 78-year-old Orono man re- mains in fair condition in the intensive care section of Osh- awa General Hospital. Joseph Ernest Nicholson, Mill Street, INQUEST AT WHITBY An inquest will be held Thurs- day at 9.00 a.m. at the On- tario Provincial Police Build- ing in Whitby to investigate the death of 20 year old Monique Lavalee of London, Ontario. Mrs. Lavalee was killed on July 23 when the car in which she was riding rolled over on the Macdonald - Cartier Free- way, west of Liverpool Road. The inquest will be conducted by P. Coath and Dr. 'Tomlinson will be the presiding coroner. CORONER HERE Dr. Ross Cotnam, provincial coroner, will be guest speaker at 6:30 p.m., tonight, at the an- nual meeting of the Registered Nurses' Association, which will be held at the Oshawa Goit Course. Dr. Cotnam will speak on "Nurses in the Courtroom", TAKE-OVER CONSIDERED over when Britain quits the fed- eration Jan. 9. Leaders of the Front for the Liberation of Occupied South Yemen and the National Liberation Front meeting here. t Signs Removed TORONTO (CP) -- Scarbor-|t ough sent out its first motorized forces Monday to do combat in the war of election signs in the east-end borough. A works crew under supervision of inspector Gib Moore used a truck to cart away signs for the Oct. 17 proy- incial election campaign. A bor- ough bylaw, passed in 1958, pro- hibits the posting of any elec- tion signs or posters, The crews property along the major streets. General Arthur Wishart said Monday he will not take action against University of Toronto students distributing birth con- announced the ceasefire after a|trol information in defiance of Adminis trative Council endorsed a birth control educa- ion program run by a group of d senior co-eds. contraceptive anyone asking for it, and refer- ring inquiries to the Planned Parenthood Association and to operating. Code forbids the selling or dis- posing of any instructions are removing them from public] 'intended or represented as a method of preventing concep- tion." TORONTO (CP) -- Attorney - he Criminal Code. Last week, the Students They have been distributing information to Toronto doctors who are co - Selection 150 of the Criminal immediately pending a formal vote on a new contract offer, which was tentatively agreed upon Friday by the Seafarers' International Union and repre- sentatives of 32 shipping com- panies, lors were expected to have reported for duty by Wednes- two dead and 202 wounded, and said they believed enemy losses are running high. Sixty-three Americans have been killed around Con Thien in the three weeks since the About 75 per cent of the sai- John. Ovens. 0. D. OPTOMETRIST PHONE 723-4811 jay. | | 8 BOND ST. £., OSHAWA | CALL OR SEE DIXON'S FOR OIL FURNACES SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS 24-HOUR SERVICE 313 ALBERT ST, 723-4663 "Doorway To A Man's World" ae SUGGESTS .... GO AHEAD Orono, was first admitted fol- lowing a two-car crash at the intersection of . Taunton Road and Orono Road last Thursday. The driver of the other car, Allan Forster of Downsview, was treated and released from hospital shortly after the Thurs- day night accident. Rockower of Canada Ltd. announced Monday that Osha- wa Wholesale Ltd. is consider- THE LOWDOWN ON LONDON ing a take-over of the company. Rockower operates a chain of men's and boys' apparel departments in department stores. Oshawa Wholesale is a wholesale food supplier. 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SOUTH 728-7974 DOWNTOWN OSHAWA Cambridg "raditionally fine clothes. PURE VIRGIN WOOL 4 ries tonight and Wednesday, Turning colder southeast sec- tion this afternoon. SERVICE BAGS MEN | EDMONTON (CP)--The Alberta Forest Service uses lightweight disposable paper sleeping bags for its firefighters and is finding them successful. Made of a_crepe-paper-type material, the bags have about 15 layers of soft tissue paper insulation. Forestry officials say they are about as warm and soft as any $25 bag, are weatherproof and strong enough for several week's use. ae of all, they cost just $2.50 each. Increasing Cloudiness, Some Showers Tonight Montreal and Ottawa regions; Mainly sunny becoming cloudy this evening. Showers beginning tonight. Wednesday cloudy with showers. Much warmer then turning cooler Wednesday after. noon. Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, high Wednesday Windsor ....++eeee 48 60 St. Thomas .-+e0.. 48 60 London .++esrcceee 48 60 Kitchener ..-s000.. 48 60 Mount Forest ..... 45 55 Wingham ....+.006 45 55 Hamilton ...++.s06 48 62 St. Catharines . 48 62 Toronto .... 55 62 Peterborough «.++. 50 Kingston ...cosere 50 62 Trenton ceccsesece 55 62 Killaloe ..sccscccee 50 58 Muskoka «+essesss 45 55 North Bay «s+cess 38 50 Sudbury ..... « 48 50 Earlton ..scccssees 35 45 Sault Ste. Marie .. 40 50 Kapuskasing ..... 32 45 White River ....-. 32 45 Moosonee ...- 32 40 Timmins ..+++000- 32 45 Subscribers @ BLUE CROSS @ P.S.I. @ GREEN SHIELD NEED NOT PAY CASH! You Give Us The Doctors Prescription We do the rest, FREE City-Wide Delivery MITCHELL'S DRUGS 9 Simcoe N. 723-3431 Wiss EN DOWNS NO Pay isaac a EL eS Oy oe M 3 WN, SN Y PA oJ eS Gr SY PAYMENTS <0] O PAYi\ IME When "easy" payments become impossible 111 SIMCOE ST. 5, OSHAWA PHONE 725-6531 Go back to THE ASSOCIATES one possible payment with an Associates consolidation loan 'Too-often, dhose "eswy" consolidation Associates manager about a debt leon, tnd wea fon tenet toder. ASSOGIATES FINANCE COMPANY LIMERED FOR FREE MAP OF EXPO '67 CALL AT ASSOCIATE OFFICE EMERGE! Hou Put By GERARI OTTAWA (CP) bid by opposition emergency deba was averted in Monday when P: sembled afte recess, They put the ; the defensive im a series of issues ed to the cost of Foremost was they brought ba soaring rents ani costs, coupled w mortgage money, A Conservativ have regular bus: for a housing del out of order by § Lamoureux. He suggest House leaders a early debate on this wasn't dor change his mind out another re emergency debate STANFIELD IN | Listening from galleries was Ro 53, the new Conse who must win a before he can tak baker's old place the Opposition. Mr. Stanfield Divorce With ¢ RAPID CITY, routine divor ended in a bla Monday leaving ti case and her lav the judge wound band was held v today. Attendants at t County courth shooting broke ¢ Bivins, a tour ji owner in his late by the judge th have to pay his v $3,000 in alimony. Dead are Mrs. } her lawyer, Willi a father of four. Circuit Judge ker, 48, was taken satisfactory condi wound in the thig! SET ALIMONY Attendants saic the alimony and footer weighing n pounds, advanced and said: 'You' Industri Blasts U; SUDBURY (CP) trialist said Mon Ontario craft recently shown-a lawful labor contr been a disgrace t responsible trade F. R. Jones, a dent of Ecstall Timmins, was sp opening of two - ¢ on safety jointly the provincial go the Labor Safet Ontario. "The sad part tion is not the irt of the individual really understand bilities, it is the « he gets from hig els." The. conferenc theme safety in economy, is the being held this y is set for London Mr. Jones cri for "apparently Jawless acts on picket lines," and eliminate use 0 injunctions to acts. Management's was to "'seek out of each man on t! teach him not 01 the job but to | meaning of his ci common goal wil ment." He called on 1 "recognize the ir ty and inherent employee " Sumi All | With the plus the mail deli $ Op SAT