Speer yaapene ney nape pergieantonnt ioe ny = EG gg hg a Rg ra" ey 2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, January 12, 1965 No Political Bias Health, Welfare Departments For Sir Johns Day Even with the length of the speeches--a single four - hour speech was not unknown 100 years ago--it was a. celebration which Sir John himself might have enjoyed. The banquet of fillet of sole and prime ribs of beef was accompanied by white and red wines and champagne although 20th - century Cana- dian rather than the 19th- century imported variety. Toasts were drunk to the Queen, to Canada, and to Mac- donald, the latter diluted with the Skye Boat Song, played by pipers. Gifts of change purses, in the form of Scottish tams in the clan Donald tarten, were dis. tributed by ladies in crinolines and lace. CHARLOTTE HITS THE NEWS AGAIN KINGSTON, Ont. (CP)-- News photographers got support from former Ottawa mayor Charlotte Whitton at Monday's 150th birthday an- niversary celebrations for Sir John A. Macdonald. She snapped at what she termed '"'some bearded fool in a raccoon coat" who frol- icked before costumed citi- BEST CUSTOMERS LOS ANGELES (AP)--Mr. and Mrs. John Schaefer were wed in 1940 in New York. Things didn't work out. They were divorced in Los Angeles in 1948. Superior Judge George Dockweiler granted Mrs, Irene Schaefer the. decree on grounds of cruelty, Then things worked out. The Schaeffers remarried in 1951. For sentiment's sake, they chose Judge Dockweiler to perform the ceremony. But again things didn't work out. Mrs. Schaefer, 46, divorced Schaefer, 47, once more Mon- day charging cruelty. Who granted the decree? Judge Dockweiler. ; the two together. There is a cry- ing need for co-ordination." . Meanwhile, the Ontario branch of the Victorian Order of Nurses told the committee that a comprehensive nursin; and home-care program for el- derly persons would make a large number of hospital beds available. T. A. King, past president of the order, said many elderly persons could remain independ- ent in their own homes for long periods with some assistance. He said there is a continuing increase in the number red Te- quests fo service to 1 iy ill and aged patients in their homes. The order was willing to expand its services if funds were made available to include homemaking, occasional hot meals, recreation and public health counselling. said Macdonald's arch political foe, George Brown, had made a heroic and magnanimous con- cession in joining the pre-Con- federatien coalition. But Brown's purposes were sectional and at most. provin- cial in scope, while Macdonald's were national, Prof. Creighton said. The banquet was held in the LaSalle Hotel ballroom under a banner "You'll never die, John A."'--a remark made by a Tory supporter at one of Macdon- ald's last election rallies. It was the theme of the evening. USES QUOTATION But Mr. Arsenault picked up another quotation displayed in the banquet room and made it the theme of his speech on be- half of Premier Lesage of Que- bec: "We are a great country and become one of the greatest in the universe if we preserve it. We shall sink into insignificance and adversity if we suffer it to be broken," So long as the spirit of Mac- donald and his Quebec lieuten- ant, Sir George Etienne Cartier, is preserved, Quebec will not secede, Mr. Arsenault said. Switching back and forth be- tween French and English, he added: By JAMES NELSON KINGSTON (CP)--Is Canada ready to breakthrough its polit- ical sound barrier in non-parti- san praise of Sir John A. Mac- donald, its first prime minis- ter? George Mcllraith, president of the Privy Council, represent- Prime Minister Pearson at a banquet Monday night honor- ing Macdonald's 150th birthday anniversary, said it's time it was done. And Opposition Leader Dief- enbaker said the praises which the Liberal cabinet minister of today poured on the Conserva- tive leader of yesteryear would make it difficult for Macdonald to recognize himself. Kingston and its historical so- ciety which organized the birth- day celebration did themselves proud in honoring the city's most memorable resident--the j young Scot who moved here 4 and became an alderman at the 1 age of 28, In 1844 he became an MP and for 47 years he was the foremost figure in Canada. 4 Lieutenant - Governor Earl 4 Rowe of Ontario, Conservative Premier John Robarts of On- "" tario and Quebec Provincial Secretary Bona Arsenault, a Liberal, joined in praise of Macdonald as the true father of his country whose memory needs strengthening in today's trials. SHOW NO BIAS The crowd, drawn largely from Kingston and eastern On- tario communities, applauded the speakers generously and apparently without politincal bias. Professor Donald Creighton of the University of Toronto, author of a two-volume work on Macdonald, wound up the marathon speech-making near midnight with an assertion that ef Macdonald's strength of will and optimism carried Con- federation through its trials nearly 100 years ago. Touching on the historian's controversy over who made the greatest contribution to the Ca- di union, Prof. Creighton SUGGESTS COMMITTE: "There could be an interde- partmental committee between the two departments, bringing ONE JOHN HONORS ANOTHER Premier John Robarts of donald in Cataraqui ceme- day of Canada's first prime Ontario lays a wreath on the tery yesterday as Kingston minister. (CP Wirephoto) grave of Sir John A. Mac- celebrated the 150th birth- HIGHWAYS MINISTER GAGLARDI: Earthquake Caused Fatal Mountainslide way to a depth of up to 400 feet. They showed that Thomas Starchuk, 39, of Aldergrove, B.C,, was crushed when he was hurled from the cab of his hay truck andé that Bernie Lioyd Beck, 27, of Penticton, B.C., suffocated. The two still to be uncovered were believed to have climbed into the cab of a tank truck that was stalled by a preliminary <ssankala aan, OLS OER erue enioy HOPE, B.C. (CP)--Highways, Two small tremors were de- Minister P. A. G: says he|tected on their recording equip- "concludes" an earth quake|ment, one at 3:56 a.m. and the caused a gigantic slide thatjother at 6:58 a.m. PST. killed four persons near here] The slide rumbled through the Sa half-mile-wide valley 10 miles east of here between 4:45 a.m. and 6:30 a.m. Mr. Gaglardi estimated that 15,000,000 cubic yards of debris filled the valley. He said that is equivalent to about 30,000,000 to 40,000,000 tons of rock, earth and timber. Searchers were to climb back atop the slide today to continue digging for still missing Den- nis Arlitt, 23, and Mary Kal- makoff, 21, both of Penticton. Autopsies were: performed on two bodies dug from rubble near the east side of the 1%- mile-long slide that covered the southern trans-provincial high- sane ONE ts wood," he said in an interview. "There is absolutely no rea- Describing Cartier as a great son of French Canada, Mr. Ro- barts said the 150th anniversary Seismologists at the Domin- fon Astrophysical Observatory in Victoria are investigating the possibility that a small earth- quake triggered the slide. Little Change In Soviet Attitude After K's Exit By CARMAN CUMMING Canadian Press Staff Writer Three months after the ouster of Nikita Khrushchev, the West- ern world is still looking in vain for any radical change in the Soviet attijide toward the rest of the world. Even in its approach to China, Western diplomats at the UN "This reserve has 4,500 acres of very good farmland, but the only persons making any money from it are non-Indians who rent some of the land," she said. Mrs. Du Brul, who was speak- ing to the Teachers' Wives As- sociation, said that instead of the present federal support in the form of such payments as family allowances and pensions, she said, Indians should be given a capital loan from the government to form a co-opera- tive. further deterioration rather)Russians appear to have than as a move for rapproche-|avoided opportunities to embar-| ment. And they add that the at-|rass the West. tempt was notably unsuccessful.| In the eastern Mediterranean, __In essence, they say, the Sov-|they may even have taken a iet attitude towards all sectors|<tep ahead by improving rela- of the worki--the West, East/tions with Turkey, although this Europé, the Afro-Asian bloc--|qevelopment is still being| has remained unaltered. |weighed with caution at the! ply Avago ay ging te AVOID TOOURE |United Nations. A n no Most Western diplomats seem} es visi Sovi change in the Kremlin line. |more pleased at the continued| gcegttion te Ankara could They interpret any Soviet|East-West stability than' they| mean the Russians are pulling overtures to Peking that fol-|are disappointed at the lack Of!hack from their heavy support lowed the change of command|improvement. lof the Greek faction on Cyprus. as an attempt to prevent any| In two or three areas, the) <o.i6t Foreign Minister And- WEATHER FORECAST it Sere ere te Snow Flurries, Canada Pension Plan Said "Unstable" OTTAWA (CP) -- The Cana- dian Life Insurance Officers Association said today the Can- ada Pension Plan is inherently unstable, Shot Man Charged In Wife's Death WINDSOR, Ont. (CP)--Police said Monday that Howard Mul- der, 51, of Harrow, Ont., was charged in hospital Friday with capital murder in the Dec, 19 death of his wife, Juanita, 41. (Mulder is being treated in hospital here for gunshot {UN General Assembly Dec. when he said any settlement of the Cyprus dispute would have to take into account the, legiti-| mate rights of both the Greek and Turkish communities. In the Indonesia-Malaysia cri- sis, the West was clearly pleased age security and private pen- sion plans wold be straight- forward, integration of the Canada Pension Plan and many private plans would be complicated. s s Passing The Buck: Professor sity of Toronto medical profes- sor accused the Ontario health day. of passing the buck in the case of old people. professor in the school of hy- giene, told the provincial legis- ing he had heard a "leak" to the effect that the proposed pro- may give free medical care to everyone in Ontario who doesn't "Tf this is so, I'm going to be awfully happy for our old peo- that in 1961, 85 per cent of our old people didn't pay income x Dr. Schwenger said nursing tetson homes are one example of the inability of the health and wel- : gether Mr. her _ su ed that rhe | ye |Prepayment for vis: n 'There is an endless hassle, services on: the sams i. WASHINGTON (CP) -- Ajing they are a welfare problem would lead to improved and ex- weekend yisit between Primejand the welfare department tended care inthe home, Johnson at the LBJ Ranch injter. Texas was announced Monday department is "outrage- ously youth oriented' and that the prime minister Friday at r the White House. ease or aging branch" in the department. some details of the White House-planned get-together re- and their wives will visit in- formally without another offi- 4 . So far, no consideration has T bs As long as therevare men of/ Yong representing Sir John |been evident about adding the heir Jobs Back your.own Premier Robarts, this) " «He keeps getting in the |Ritchie, or anybody else Confederation will never be in| way of cameramen trying The Pearsons iil 'be re-|,. DUNNVILLE, Ont. (CP)--Ajists (CLC) local which the work- men in the other provinces. A] whitton said ' the United Electrical; Radio|ducted vot M : ! said. and the original schedule called 4 ucted vote last May. sovereign country which has a "If Sir John had been |for stopping in Washington to and Machine Workers of Amer- SIGNED CONTRACT and a distinctive international placed 'his foot in that part |some other government leaders, |ufacturing Limited ended Mon-ly, the machinists igned stature between French and) of the fool's anatomy espe: |The Pearsons would have re-|day a8 workers voted to ask the tive-year contract with the oo. Ab pany giving female employees, HAS NO GIFTS pose. The plans announced Monday|, About 100 women approached|i 14 mal ority Mr. Diefenbaker, in a speech repeated that informality re-|the plant Monday morning and age My Fy va mum of $1.06 an hour and male John and political quips of his no agenda. Pearson would ar-|to work. 1 own day, said he had no gifts co pn of omy een Trevor Roberts, company he ee ck cn $ no word when he leave,|manager, said more than' 500|in, only three years of the were no news leaks in_ his In B 1970 although presumably he would|persons are currently working c ssed . speech. But Sir John had spent y Th hy to atioat 40. sail Vatee Gechuad t Sean vn e ranch is abou! miles|close to capacity. He said the strike when "was "hopeful to." After all, he OTTAWA (CP) -- The Eco-lfrom Austin, Texas, and is alstrikers names and phone num-|the company wouldn't establish a iliam ladstone was 4 pressed doubt today that any spot for 3Shnson. The White|will be aa ' called if needed. power. as prime minister in|°V¢rnment - sponsored med-|House announcement said he| Union officials said that em- veel for women and $196 for reat Britain H ; : be in full swing by 1970. fore returning perhaps Sunda union ' Yjcontract althou: is); The advisory body, in its first|te Washington--to work on his|their feo gly prob ae 3 4 ig no allowance for a_ national health i ganization for the union, said ajas established sayfa pepe ie obguirviante "H elp Indians majority of the 500 workerslists' contract which has e ment expenditures on health slide. es ; group of dissidents led by Don| Mr. Russell said the union Mr. Gaglardi said 'my feel- Begins At Quebec services. With Reserves" Cox crossed a picket line and|will honor the original contract formal statement of policy b split the mountain and sent Pouey. OY resident of the former Inter-|negotiating position with the loose surface material down--|' KINGSTON (CP) -- Ontario's the federal govemment regard rations! Association of Machid-loompany." serves will always be dreary He believed that took the un-|ald begins at the border of Que- opments in publicly sponsored/until Indians are given capital derpinnings {rom half the moun-|bec. It is a four-lane stretch of|of his birth 'did not receive the|"ealth | insurance which were land profitably, author Ella tons of rock built up to a criti-|runs for almost 550 miles south-|are going to make amends," phy toad ee commis-|Cork Du Brul sald Monday. cai point quickly and the moun-|westerly to Windsor. | are i (en. ' "k point q 'y y | Ontario was particularly anx an A aieeided, to Ontario and now of Lake Orion, ore es: e in Canada--a duper highwaylacnsia said Mr Ropasts, that} re the council said, ich., said that an agricultural M u al th: f il " a 7 9 problems involved in designing e at henceforth will be known)'something should' be done to Reserve near Brantford could way, even if highway engineers | future generations of Canadians|*'° gh tee "eg as Pog become a million-dollar busi-| noRonTO (CP)---Chief Jus-|tawa by sending a second judge consider the name a little too|tnat the foundations of this be- nine loubts bing er sign : cener' edt tentmanis 0 Hart ere, unwie | of ours were laid by ailars would develop by 1070." pea _ that the penecmer, Sne = He told his audience, includ- * it e s e Ontari é The Macdonald-Cartier Free-|lFeench Canada." ans ie "{ Wiikest ot Ducane ent deides ' ; ; ied vrea - : ; * The Macdonald-Cartier Free-| Despite the extensive array of to. boar 5 Nene of untried |Minister Guy Fa a, that if Nolstis seuaay ole ate din,| Way--although open to traffic|private and public social wel- cases and deal with an expected all 22 judges set to work to try : J qf ' his address to the formal|in T t h ld lof Si ; 4Y\heing expanded to 12 lanes near|ayailable, it was important t In. n Toronto, each judge wo f Sir John A., architect of Ca- : ' ve reas to chug aed i sudlen Coetedaeaiion ct Can_|Toronto--is not yet completed to| consider remaining gaps -- for opening of the 1965 Supreme|have to dispose of 125 cases be- | : there is a "rather dark" back-| But, Chief Justi Mr. Robarts said he was ap-| Mr. Robarts said that when| Clearly, most interest in this log of untried cases at Toronto|any case of peal Gigueal toan pending to Macdonald's name|the few existing two - lane/field centred on: | oe In Toronto, he said, mag are|short period. Etienne Cartier--because he too|ask Premier Jean Lesage of} meeds are greatest. 2,153 non-jury: Supreme Court lwas a Father of Confederation| Quebec to meet with him at the) --Care for the poor whose re- Py Sor coun) ae ee the number of cases ready foriien beyond all _anticipati 6 had gone by almost unnoticed.|of the highway. --Safeguards against loss of trial 10 years ago. -A civil suit}«ppi. 7» Payon. g y ced. lo ghway Gatos Guslne peolbnged All 'This may be due to several reach trial. iliti i --More effective rehabilita- There are 660 jury cases cated sect coetig re tion services for both the b f tt : Court here, four times as many canned, as on the list in January, 1958, |@aton has sprung from the re- The council stated no prefer- th 130 'ried 5 eh as ee meg ee in Oe an to untried cases 0 ie . care scheme, public or private. peremptory lists. In January, ont coat ' a Foie pending. He said he hopes to RCMP MAN alleviate the situation in Ot- one nee as TORONTO (CP)--A_ Univer- and welfare department Mon- Dr. Cope Schwenger, assistant lature's select committee on ag- vincial medical care program earn enough to pay income tax. ple," he said. "'A study showed tax." F "Mi "9 fare departments to get to- or ike * |with the health depart bu e health department say-/.. hospital insurance programs Minister Pearson and President|saying they are a health mat- s sf Dr. Schwenger said the health as a replacement for a call by "there should be a chronic dis- On present planning -- and e mare wna] Otrikers Ask For cial in sight. : vision like Premier Lesage and and his family. Canadian ambassador, Charles danger; and there are such) to get news photos," Miss |turning from a Florida holiday|!9-week strike by members ofjers ousted in a government-con- flag symbolizing its sovereignty) ground, he would have |see the president Friday, plus|ic@ (Ind.) against Lanark Man-|" poor, being replaced by the English will survive." cially designed for that pur- |turned Saturday to Ottawa. [Company for their jobs back. P work mini- full 'of anecdotes about Sir No M edi Pl ares eiie hoy feature, 'There is|indicated they wanted to return| workers at, the plant 1-Fian to bring the banquet and there ar Gee a do so Saturday. at the plant which is operating onor "4 a period in opposition and he et eae eae on hgh nomic Council of Canada ex-|fayorite workin; 2 - holidaying|bers had been taken and minim: 84 when he was returned to wn |wage -- icare plan for the country would|hopes there this weekend--be-|ployees are we ae @| The workers who return to manufactures ° 3 e report to th Ontario Ss Tribute pe e government, made|Jan. 20 inauguration address. | Ross Russell, director of or-|will receive the ¢ Projections to 1970 of govern- supported the strike but a smail|1% years to run ing is there was a tremor that It said there has been no returned to work. Mr. Cox was|and attempt to establish a new i TORONTO (CP) -- Indian re- the first slide." tribute to Sir John A, Macdon- ng the Major, segtun evel: } : loans and helped to use their tain and pressure of millions of|concrete and pavement that|attention that it merited and we|""Visaged in the report last Need At Least 9 O1 5 ; Mrs. Du Brul, formerly of tain cracked from peak to foot.| It is the greatest thoroughfard|jous on the bifthday of Mac- Even if it were decided to co-operative on the Six Nations as the Macdonald-Cartier Free-|rurther symbolize for this and|"¢ Plementing an appropri: we 8 ee oe ee tice George Gale said Monday |th unwieldly for signs along its! ioved land of ours were laid by I f s needs at least two more judges way, formerly highway 401,| |MUST CONSIDER GAPS j Wishart of Ontario and Justice ner marking the 150th birthday along its full route and already|fare payments and services now increase in litigation. only actions ready to be héard - lj i ° sittings here, h aid ada's fitet prime minister, lits four-lane width: throughout.|example, in medical care. Court sittings here, he said|fore the backlog was overcome. and Ottawa. be tried within a t that of Cartier--Sir George|stretches are widened, he will) --Care for the aged whose =e : cases awaiting trial, 24% times reg Ss whose 160th birth date last Sept.|border for the formal opening] Sources are slimmest. eg He yaar gnc he Po wee could take nearly two years to) nayses, including developing fa- ready to be heard in Supreme physically and socially handi- He sald the increase in litt At Ottawa, there are more 3 ante tor aa Ges a wentionl tario. Another factor is the 1928, there were seven caseS/_ iq in, dustry "which stimulates (Continued from Page 1) Remaining Cold TORONTO (CP)--Forecast is- sued by the weather office at §:30 a.m.: Synopsis: The mild tempera- tures in the south will drop gradually during the day as colder air crosses the Great Lakes. Afternoon temperatures will range in the mid-and high %s today as compared to the present temperatures in the low 30s. Tonight's temperatures will be more seasonal, averaging near 15 degrees in the south. It will continue very cold in the north. Wednesday will see another in the current series of weak weather systems cross the Great Lakes accompanied by some light snow or snowflur- ries. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Southern Lake Huron, Windsor, London; Clearing by evening. Increasing cloudiness by tonight with occasional light snow or enowflurries late tonight and Wednesday morning. Winds de- creasing 1o 15 this afternoon and light tonight. ara, western Lake On- tario, Hamilton, Toronto: Clear- ing by evening. Increasing cloudy with occasional light) snow in the morning and early| afternoon. Winds light tonight. Northern Georgian Bay, southern Timagami, North Bay, /Sudbury: Clear with a few variable cloudiness and occa- sional snowflurries. Winds de- creasing to light by tonight. Algoma: Variable cloudiness with an occasional snowflurries today and Wednesday. A little colder. Winds decreasing to light by this evening. Cochrane, White River, north- ern Timagami: Clear with a few cloudy' periods tonight and Wednesday. Occasional senow- flurries late tonight and Wed- nesday morning. Winds becom- ing light tonight. Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, high Wednesday: Windsor ..cccsseee (15 28 . Thomas..ooee. Mount, Forest..... Wingham . Hamilton .. St. Catharines.... TOTONO .sssevoees Kingston ....ss006 \cloudy periods and cold: this) evening and tonight, Wednesday| | that Moscow rapped President Sukarno's knuckles for pulling out of the UN. But here again the Western view is that the Russians are more concerned about their own position in Southeast Asia than about the threat to Malaysia and the UN. Concerning the UN itself, the Russians appear to have pro- ceeded on exactly the same path on the peace-keeping issue that they might have taken with Khrushchev at the helm, That approach has been any- thing. but ¢o-operative, in the Western view. But there are many who think the Russians could easily have precipitated a much worse situation if they had wanted 'severely to harm the UN. WEST ON DEFENSIVE It is generally conceded at the UN that the Russians have manoeuvred brilliantly on this question to throw the West on the defensive. Even last fall, it is felt, the West would have had a difficult time rallying enough support to take away the Soviet assembly vote for non-paymer.: of peace- keeping dues. Instead of implementing the plan, said the association in a brief to the joint Senate-Com- |mons committee on the Can- ada Pension Plan, the govern- ment should extend the old age security program by lowering the qualifying age and increas- ing benefits. The association is formed by 102 Canadian, United States, British and other European companies who have in force 99 per cent of the life insurance business in Canada, The pen- sion plans administered by member companies cover about one-quarter of the Canadians in all private plans. A lengthy brief from the as- sociation fires one criticism after another at the pension plan the. government hopes to pass through Parliament later this year, Among the criticisms: --The plan would provide nothing for today's aged. Canadians not employed and those with low earnings would receive nothing. --Befiefits would rise with earnings and thus provide the most for those least in need. --It would provide the larg- est bonuses to those with the highest pensionable earnings. --The plan would push costs --The indexing benefits would be an admission that infla- tion may not be controllable. --The addition of the plan to the old age security program would result in nearly one- naii the population having little incentive to supplement their savings privately. '"This would be a large scale sur- render of individual initiative and responsibility." The brief said the proposed plan cannot be considered uni- versal when some 2,000,000 Canadians fail to qualify be- cause they are unemployed, earii, too little, are in "excepted unemployment," do not receive cash renumerations or are now aged, widowed or disabled. 'PROVIDE PROTECTION' "The fundamental aim of a compulsory social security measure should be to provide proietviion for persons who spe- cifically need help or everyone in a population group where need is widespread." It was "upside-down welfare" when a person earning $2,500 receives only half the benefit of a man earning $5,000. Per- sons now. retiring were also in greater need of benefits than those who will be retiring in 10 Constable Poissant said his Dec. 9 statement contained the information that he first heard of a bribe being offered Mr. Lamontagne about July 20. Mr. Mathews said Constable Poissant's Dec. 9 statement re- ferred in part to an Aug. 20 telephone conversation between Mr. Lamontagne and Mr, Denis then executive assistant to Im- migration Minister Tremblay. Mr. Mathews produced for counsel that part of Constable Poissant's statement dealing with the conversation. The con- stable's testimony today rounded out his appearance be- fore the inquiry. Old Courtroom No. 24 was hot and crowded for the resumed hearings. There were more spectators than when the hear- ings were being held in Ottawa. Simultaneous translation was provided as it was in-the capi- tal. One new counsel appeared at the hearing. He is Dollard Dan- sereau, lawyer for Mrs. Rivard, and for Eddie Lechasseur. Constable Poissant, the ninth witness in the hearings so far, listened in to the Aug. 20 con- versation. A second Mountie also monitored the telephone exchange, in which Mr. Lamon- tagne, testimony has_ shown, wounds to his face. Was shot the incident. Mrs. Mulder, mother of 13, through the heart while sitting in a chair in a shack nesr her home. Mulder and another man, Eddie Jean Williams, 41, were taken to hos- pital with gunshot wounds after Congo Leader Offers Answer CAIRO (AP) Congolese rebel leader Caston Soumialot offered Monday to bring an end to the Congo civil war-- provided Premier Moise Bomb Threat Closes Bridge ceived a telephone call at 1 been planted on the bridge. searched the span, p.m. when nothing was found. prank, OTTAWA (CP)--The Victoria Bridge near the House of Com- mons between Ottawa and Hull was closed for 45 minutes Mon- day night after Hull police re- p.m., telling them a bomb had Ottawa and Hull police. re- | routed traffic on both ends of NEED... H the bridge while railway police and the bridge was reopened at 11:45 Police believe the call was a Tshombe 'is excluded from the premiership and foreign mer- cenaries are withdrawn." He told a press conference here that if these conditions were agreed upon he would ne- HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S -- OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER : 50 YEARS gotiate a political solution of The Congo problem with the oe government in Leopold- ville. Soumialct, who has just com- pleted three days of talks here with United Arab Republic of- 1 pr rg did not elaborate on his offer. FUEL OIL? Call | PERRY Dey or Night 723-3443 | | Custom Ma FOR THE FINEST de DRAPES VISIT braemor gardens (Stevenson Rd. N. and Annapolis Ave.) cloudiness by Wednesday with occasional light snow or snow- flurries in the morning and afternoon. Winds light tonight. Eastern Lake. Ontario, Killa- joe, Haliburton: Mainly clear and cold tonight. Wednesday cloudy with occasional light snow beginning by midday. 'Winds light tonight. Northern Lake Huron, south- ern Georgian Bay; Wednesday | Peterborough .... Trenton ..... Killaloe ...ssesees Muskoka .sesssees North Bay. Sudbury Earlton ....scccee Sault Ste. Marie.. Kapuskasing .. White River. Moosonee ... TUOMING sesseeses years, tried to get Mr. Denis to admit to offering a bribe. forward from one generation to another. ". , The plan appears to be --Its structure .is compli-|based on the assumption that cated and would be bound to|the government has a greater become unstable. loblization to persons who hap- --Pressures to use the eo to be 65 or younger at the to fill gaps in the plan's cov-|outset of the plan than to per- erage would certainly de-|sons who are older, In fact, by velop, and if they succeeded}i$76 two of every three Cana- | the fund would have to beidiens then age 65 and tt Now, after repeated postpone- ments of the showdown, the chances of finding such support are probably nil. (he fact that no showdown jhas developed may mean that |the Russians are not interested in forcing a humiliating defeat on the U.S. that could alienate |American public and govern- |mental support for the UN. in the Latest Shades and Fabrics SEE M iy. DRY GOODS & DRAPERIES 74 CELINA STREET | PHONE 723-7827 | TRACKS EXPERTLY INSTALLED Community For Young Moderns and So-0-0-0 Convenient eeveeseee Need Mortgage Money? McGILL Day or Night - 728-4285 Real Estate Broker rescued by a tax increase. |would be getting no benefits While integration of the oldjfrom the plan, 6a Pints iments ania =s