THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturday, September %, 1781 REHEARSAL FOR AIR Four CF-100s of the RCAF demonstration squadron flash past the Winged Victory statue at the Canadian National Ex- | Wages And Ad venture hibition in a rehearsal for their planned air show. Bad visibility cancelled the show on Friday: and it was poor JODOIN'S MESSAGE ] Mr. Jodoin also said Cana- dians are becoming 'increas- OTTAWA (CP) -- President Claude Jodoin of the Canadian Labor Congress urged today that workers, farmers, profes- sional men and management work together to solve Canada's unemployment problem. In a Labor Day message he said there is a great need for better understanding and co- operation between the various sections of society. On Jobs Urged |.i-immac: = ingly and inescapably involved in world affairs." "There is need now, as never United Effort oer suds ss seve | critical situation we face." He reiterated the CLC's oppo- and to nuclear for) Canada. "At the same time we are re- alistic enough to realize that our| The CLC recognized, how- nation alone, or one group of | ever, that in fighting unemploy- nations alone, cannot be ex-| ment, as in so many other mat-|Pected to abandon these deva-| ters, there is need for mutual|stating weapons unless other co-operation between the vari- nations take the same action] ous elements of Canadian life. Simultaneously. ""Those who work in factories,| "We think we are also being! those who labor on farms, those|realistic when we say that this| weapons ment--to provide new leader- ship in combatting unemploy- ment. atid. i dh i 'Women In Lives Of Servicemen LONDON (CP)--Three women dominated the lives of most Al- lied servicemen fighting in Eu- rope during the Second World War--Lili Marlene, the girl they left behind and a paper doll called Jjanc. Confined to her comic-strip world in London's mass-circula- tion Daily Mirror, Jane was |often more loyal and rewarding than any fickle-minded real live girl. Nubile, nimble and enticingly| who hold management responsi-|is no time for Canada to aban-|single, she was the sweetheart "Organized labor has, through the years, established itself in our society. Today the role we have to play is more important than ever." He said the waste and suffer- bilities, those who follow the professions, and all Canadians share a citizenship in which we can take pride. "We can only fulfil our re- sponsibilities as Canadian citi- don her friends. Neutralism is/of a million men under arms an illusion. We must work to-|and a vivid symbol of the things gether with those who by tradi-|worth fighting for. {tion and association have been | Jane's greatest talent, whether {our friends, so that, through the playing bachelor-girl, detective United Nations, we can contri-|or lady spy, was to appear con- tinually in various stages of un- laws of taste and decency. Fresh and essentially innocent, she was an angel hovering above the hell of war. When the war ended, Jane's popuiarity faded. On Oct, 1959, she passed out of sight forever, virtually ignored by a generation that didn't need her any more. Rumor had it she was going to get married at last. Now, believing the time is ripe again, the Mirror has pro- duced the 19-year-old daughter of Jane. The spirit is there but the flesh has changed. Jane's daughter is just as gay and lively as her mother but lacks Jane's maturity. The girl, in fact, is a sort of paper baby- 5.1 SHOW zens if we work together to- ing resulting from unemploy- ward common aims." ment in the last year have been "stark evidence of our failure an bute to a world in which peace d understanding can prevail." 'dress without ever violating the'doll. Nevertheless, the newspapeg promises she will indulge in the {same sort of light-hearted ade | ventures that made her mother famous and bestow glimpses of garters and panties with equal generosity. Many feel that with a fine tra- {dition like that to fall back on {and the tensions of a new sort of war to relieve, the girl can't (help but go far. | ATHLETICS GET HELP | KANSAS CITY (AP) -- Kan- sas City Athletics Thursday an- nounced they are recalling out. fielder Frank Cipriani from | Shreveport of the Southern As- {sociation and purchasing the contracts of four other farm hands. Cipriani, 20, of Buffalo, N.Y., is batting .281. Dan Pfise ter of Shreveport and pitchers John Wyatt and Ken Sanders and infielder Charlie Shoe. maker of Portsmouth of the Sally League will report to Kan- sas City on completion of their current schedules. to meet the economic needs of| our people." NEED COURAGE "We are nearing now the time of year when jobs become increasingly scarce. There should be no hesitation in ap- plying courage and imagination to this, the most important of the problems we face in our do- mestic economy. We have at- tained knowledge and ability which can provide a better and fuller life for all. We must not allow abundance to become al social hazard" Mr. Jodoin said the CLC has advanced programs and sug- gestions and called on govern- ments at all levels--most par- ticularly the federal govern- Religious Changes By 'Mongolians By CLARE McDERMOTT ULAN BATOR (Reuters)--| Religion has become almost a private family affair in Com- munist Mcngolia, a country where, only a few decades ago, | nearly half the male population | were lama priests. f In Ulan Bator, capital of] Outer Mongolia, I paid a tour-| ist's visit to the great Gandan| again this morning, when it was undecided whether the spectacular display would go on or not. i 'Goods Satisfactory or M ' CLOSED MONDAY (LABOUR DAY) Lures Of Northwest EDMONTON (CP) High wages and the lure of adven- ture are drawing youthful job- seekers to Canada's northwest. University students spend their five-month summer vaca- tion working for construction firms in the Northwest Terri- tories and Yukon. Construction and transporia- tion seasons in the weather- ruled north happen to coincide with the university vacation period. An official of Northern Trans- portation Company Limited said 85 per cent of the stewards on the company's Arctic this summer, Others worked as deckhands on the ships and on the firm's riverboats. Construction projects dot the north and provide many jobs for students. The young men may ship, | Salaries in construction trades the radio room of his are lower on the average than moored 20 feet from a tanker aboard Arctic supply ships but|loaded with aviation fuel. they're still higher than those Salaries on the ocean-going at home because of the isolation ships, boosted by isolation pay, pay. may run as high as $600 Al Imrie, 19. of Edmonton, month plus room and board. spent his second consecutive Tops on riverboats is $500. summer in the Arctic this year.. Crown-owned Northern Trans-| fe cruised the Arctic Ocean as port and Yellowknife Transpor-| a steward and cook's helperitation Company of Edmonton |iwq or three lamaseries in Ulan| during the summer of 1960 and|operate barges, river boats and spent this summer on Northern|ships that supply the western| Transportation's dry dock at|territories and part of the Dis-| Tuktoyaktuk, the mouth of the tant Early Warning line strung| Mackenzie River. across the Canadian Arctic| Imrie was financing the third coast and the Arctic islands. year of a four-year engineering] A 4l4-month stint on the river J « supply course at the University of Al-|boats--many converted Missis-|the ships were university students berta. But this was his last year|sippi tugs--means a 1,500-mile|shrug {trip from Forth Smith, on the|said: '"The people can worship | in the Arctic. "The isolation hits so hard,' |Alberta-N.W.T. border, he said, "that eventually not|toyaktuk. even the high salary looks at-| During loading or unloading, tractive enough." the work is hard and the hours The lanky youth returned from long, but while travelling on the| to Tuk-| monastery, headquarters of the] Buddhist faith in Mongolia, and| chatted briefly with the chief| lama, Erdenpel Gavge, a wrin-| kled old man who told me that] Buddhism still plays an impor-| tant role in this Communist state. But when | went to the nearby temple museum, the director, a| former lama turned Commu-| nist, said there are today only] Bator and few in other places. There may still be, he added, a few hundred lamas in Mongolia. Asked how he reconciled these circumstances with pro- visions in thé constitution guar- anteeing freedom of religion in country, the director ged his shoulders and in their homes if they wish." PROPAGANDA USED Films and modern works of art support the theme that lamaism was responsible for find themselves roughing it in the north with a fund of stories|river, the young men find time | a tent at Cambridge Bay, 300 of near disasters and adventure. usually weighs heavily. Long miles north of the Arctic Circle, An ice-reconnaissance helicopter hours of leisure and isolation or working on an airport runway crashed on a barge during the are filled with talk, poker, fish- many of the ills which befell Mongolia after its period of] glory in the middle ages when| at Inuvik or Yellowknife. New French Liner Nears Seen In Farming Completion ST. NAZAIRE, (Reuters)-- Some 2,000 shipyard workers here are putting the [finishing touches to the world's longest and most luxurious passenger liner, the 66,000-ton France. By Oct. 23, the yard will hand the liner over to its owners, the Compagnie Generale Transat- lantique, better known as the French Line, for its sea trials. Early next year, the France, C will make a trip to the Canary Islands, followed by its maiden transatlantie veyage fo New York. Since the Normandie, the pride of the French Line and in the opinion of some experts, the most beautiful passenger liner of all time, was burned out in a fire in New York harbor early in the Second World War, France has been without a ma jestic liner which it could really call its own. FORMERLY GERMAN The present flagship of French Line, the 51,839-ton erte, is in fact the old Europa, which before th to the North German Lloy Line and has handed over t France as reparations in 1946 The new France will have everything its planners could think of, including what is claimed to be the biggest movie theatre afloat, with a seating d capacity for 650, the biggest bar afloat with a length of 65 feet, and more cabins than the com- bined capacity of such well known Parisian hotels as the Ritz, the Plaza, the George V, and the Crillon The kitchen and wine holds will be stocked with 26,000 bot- tles of champagne, more than 100,000 bottles of fine wines and liqueurs, in addition to the free vin ordinaire, or ordinary wine, more than a ton of caviar, suf- ficient to make 200,000 canapes, |Ghenghis Khan and Kublai {Khan extended the country's] power to the Danube and the | Indian Ocean. | {| '"Awakening," an all-Mongol- {ian film made in 1959, depicts {a lama medicine man as a vil- |1ain, beating his assistant, and | resorting to trickery and dis- | honesty to exercise control over e 1960 season and fire burned outling, or watching the scenery. More Electricity "DOROTHY NON" ('CHATELAINE') FLATWARE SPECIAL Much below usual price! VER special price! school or leisure sleeves, breast p colours of gold, g OTTAWA (CP) -- A steady trend to mechanized production is expected to double the use of4 electricity on Canadian farms by 1980. And the traditional barn may be fast disappearing. Tractors will be almost twice| as powerful as those in use to- day. There will be double the {number of combines and a host of new machines for special crop harvesting jobs. l That's the outlook for farming pictured in a special report by G. E. Downing, head of the department of science engineer- ing at the Ontario Agricultural College, Guelph. His study is one of a series| of background papers prepared for discussion at the Resources| p, farms, mainly due to increased | livestock farming. BIGGER TRACTORS Although purchase of tractors has reached the saturation point in many of the country's chief] agricultural areas, he predicts) a growing move towards more| powerful units. In 1926 the average farm tractor in Saskatchewan was about 23 horsepower. Today the average is 43 horsepower and that figure may double again by 1980. The greater power will bel used to draw heavier tillage] equipment and drive new and more efficient accessory units. Major machinery develop- ents will speed the heavest of Traditional Silverplate Pattern Time-honoured "Dorothy the people A painting displayed in the Ulan Bator central national mu- seum shows a lama cringing in a sick person's room on the ar-| rival of a sturdy, determined- looking nurse in a uniform | adorned with a red cross. ..| Although the Communist lead- | ers of Mongolia do not encour | age religion, they at least rec- ognize the place of Buddhism in the country and visitors find no evidence of anti-religious perse-| cution, Many people follow the path| indicated by the museum direc- pattern it by its more "Chatelaine") non" know name Ea all most-used pieces reinforc traditional design . . . offer at low, low prices through huge special purchase! Open EATON'S MALL LEV Ver- . (you might recent piece heavily silver-plated . . . at points of wear. A beautiful 64-pc. Service for 8 Includes 8 each: hollow handle knives, hollow handle butter spreaders, ferks, salad forks, soup spoons, teaspoons, coffee spoons; 3 tablespoons; 1 each: sugar spoon, butter knife, sugar tongs, cold meat fork, pickle fork. EATON Opportunity Day Special-- 67 25 En 1 Special, 37-pc. Service for 6 Includes 6 each: hollow handle knife; 3 tablespoons. .EATON spoons, teaspoons, salad forks; and | each: cold meat fork, pickle fork, sugar spoon, butter knife; tablespoons. EATON Opportunity Day : 39.75 Special, 37-pc. Special, each 2 ch ed se ed a PHON Cabinet extra. each Special, each . EATON'S DE OPPORTUNITY DAY TUESDAY at Store Hours: 9:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Open Friday Night until 9 Rl Boys' Long Sleeve Sport Shirts An excellent 'buy' at this Heavy duty cotton in eye-catching patterns and plain shades. Neat for wear, they have long ocket; are well-made with double-sewn seams. Predominant reen or brown; sizes 8 to 16 in the group. EATON Opportunity 39 2.4.15 MALL LEVEL, PT. 232 E 725.7373 64-pc. set Cabinet extra. 12 00 ses L} Stock Also Available At Special Prices. EL, DEPT. 515 PHONE 725-7373 tor and carry on their religion privately and as faithfully as| ever. Visits to the two big mon-| asteries in Ulan Bator give one| the impression of seeing mu-| End-of-season clearance! Cool White Eyelet Cotfon seums rather than places of for Tomorrow conference Montreal Oct. 23-28. inicuch special crops as tobacco, | Worship. (beans, cucumbers, tomatoes "NEMO" Mr. Downing sees a continua-| tion of the trend towards larger| IN THE DARK NORTH BAY, Ont. (CP)--City| council spent more than an hour the discussing a plan for construc-| "Farming building plans will Lib. tion of a new sewer line at a change a great deal from the local industrial plant. At the end| e war helonged Of the meeting they learned the the facilities under one roof." 'line had been completed two tract. bers of the crew each day, re- {quiring the use of 55,000 pieces lof silverware and 23,000 dishes. TWO POOLS The liner will have two swim- {ming pools, numerous lounges, two cabarets, eight bars, a soda | fountain, and 432 television sets. | Some of the liner's statistics: cost 314,000,000 new francs |(about $62,800,000); measure- ments: 1,035 feet long and 110 {feet wide; passenger accommo- |dation: 2,044 in two classes; and grapes, now mainly han- dled by manual labor. "The use of electricity will double with the more complete automation of farmstead chores," Mr. Downing says. traditional large barn with all o weeks earlier, under a city con- BETTER LAYOUT He sees the barn giving way fo separate units for the housing of livestock, storage of crops,| milking and other operations. The units will be arranged to make possible a smoother flow of the production process from field to outlet. Farm = production per em- ployee will increase rapidly with new automation but Mr. Down- ing says the increase will be nothing like that of the last 25 years when machinery prac- tically changed the whole agri-| cultural scene. | lcrew: 1,000; cruising speed: {approximately 30 knots: maxi {mum speed: 34 knots. | Except for a wooden chopping | block fc. meat in the kitchen, | Between 1926 and 1951 the net value of production per farm worker in Ontario shot up to $3,303 a year from $774. The increase in Saskatchewan was! and 440 tons of meat, the equiv-|the France is made entirely of [to $4,779 from $1,349. alent of a herd of 1,400 cattle. Some 9 meals will be served to passengers and mem- B fireproofed materials from the 'keel--a distance of 186 feet. Mr. Downing expecls a more | {top of its two funnels to its|modest increase in the next 20] |ycars. | |temple, alongside the new So-| |itors. NAMED MUSEUM One of them, the Choijin lama viet industrial and agricultural] exhibition, is described offi-| cially as the "temple museum" and is not now used for wor- ship. It contains treasures of Mongolian, Tibetan, Chi-| nese and other Buddhist art, including statues of the Buddha in gold, silver, ivory and wood, | paintings and figures of lamas; | and goblets and musical instru-| ments. | The great Gandan monastery, on a hill in the northwestern! part of Ulan Bator, still is a place of worship. In the main temple, about 20) lamas, dressed in similar robes, sat on prayer stools facing one another before a large statue of Buddha. They chanted steadily, punctuating their prayers with music played on an assortment] of ancient wind and percussion instruments My guide said that they pray like this from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.| Sunday with only a short lunch interval. They posed happily for| photographs for foreign vis-| Yainr voy Fa at Jar? y > There were few laymen wor-| shipping with them, although a score of people, mostly old men, sat smoking in the courtyard outside the temple. i Hi-Rise Girdles Buy now for those warm days still ahead . . . and for next Summer, at this low clearance price! Waist - slimming, semi-step-in style has boned front, split hip side panels. Eyelet embroidered cotton with fine nylon 'Leno' elastic, rayon satin 'Lastex' back. Adjustable waist, ® Straight hip, waist sizes 28 to 30, 31 and 32. ® Average hip, 27 to 29, 32 to 34, Exterior Pa home, cottage, gara @ Full hip, 28, 29, 30 and 33. tect and preserve 8.95 EATON'S UPPER LEVEL, DEPT. 609 PHONE 725.7373 EATON OPPORTUNITY DAY SPECIAL, each pearance. EATON'S LOWE i 1 x: . f Z / 4 3 SPEC MYeRioR LaTEX WHITE IAL C.LL. 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