Oshawa Times (1958-), 27 Dec 1965, p. 7

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4 Es a COUNTERFEIT BILLS DISPLAYED Ray Seguin (left) and Squad examine $10 bills ques Cartier. The counter- Vince Rodrigue of the seized Friday in a raid in feit bills have a total face RCMP'S Anti - Counterfeit the Montreal suburb of Jac- value of $500,000. Economic Plan Speéded Survey Is Wider Now By JAMES NELSON study is to be much broader.|complex subject. Little data has OTTAWA (CP)--Eight months) A spokesman for the council/been compiled on its various ago the Economic Council of|says the study is well under|aspects in Canada from which cont erage it was hiring| way but there is still no target| to make meaningufl judgments. special help and taking other |date for its completion. Council) y steps to "speed up the project"|Chairman J. J. Deutsch ST abe ache coe = flelde of of studying the relationships of | Sis a hela nbss said the study will be completed | ; ivi -4;-.(econometrics have been sec- prices, cost,s productivity and/in 1966 but there is no indication) ji ded ts' the eéanell: tro a incomes to economic growth. | whether it will be early or late Bank of Canada and other gov-| The study was sought by the/in the year. Fag government last spring when| The difficulty is that the inter. | ernment Persea gd there were demands in Parlia-|relationship of prices, COStS,| cities have been invited t6 cob: ment for an investigation of|productivity, incomes and eco- - higher steel prices. But the|nomic growth is a massively Traffic Deaths In U.S. Set Weekend Record | of all the work. When the sev- CHICAGO (AP)--Traffic,five died Sunday on a snowy) ' ve t & deaths in the United States dur-|road near Buffalo, Minn. Seven | Pleted. mf be ge ately a ing the weekend set a record|persons were killed in a col-|shins studied by council staff. = a three-day Christmas holi-|lision west of Sublette, Kan.,) Then draft reports will be lay. | Sunday. t to the 25- ber At last count, 697 persons} The total dead far exceeded a discuesion aot ae were dead, surpassing the pre-|the 578 killed during the 1964 bafe vious high of 609 for a three-| Christmas weekend and the 428) : i i . day Christmas holiday. The Na-|fatalities during a recent n it Riare Pergo peer ae tional Safety Council had esti-|holiday weekend. That webk-| enterprises, labor unions, farm- tribute studies. The work of data processing alone is time-consuming in its preparation, even with high- high - speed processing equip- ment once the information is assembled. Officials aren't able to indi- cate yet what is likely to come mated there would be 560 to 660\end, from 6 p.m. Thursday, i ~~ oe ik a in | Dec. 9 to midnight Sunday, ie as el and regional e toll approached the all-|Dec. 12, was surveyed by The : F time holiday record of 706 fatal-| Associated Press to establish a| HANDLED DIF pb reno ities during the four-day Christ-| comparison. _| The problem of juggling the mas in 1956, and a safety coun- various demands and forces af- cil spokesman said it "'would) - ioe na _ promi take a miracle" for this record) y, to stand. | Accomplice growth has been handled dif- Rain, sleet, snow and freez-| ferently e ot pee Kingdom ing temperatures over much of | and the Unite ates. the U.S. added to the expected Role Seen The Labor government in hazards of long-distance travel, \Britain is pursuing an incomes minimum daylight and roads} OTTAWA (CP) --The Cana-| policy, by which it hopes to hold jammed with cars. |dian Campaign for Nuclear Dis-| upward pressures on incomes to The safety. council said 80,-|armament said Sunday Canada|levels warranted by increased 000,000 vehicles were on the| would be an "accomplice in ihe productivity..The Johnson _ad- road during the 78-hour period, | destruction of Viet Nam and its} ministration in Washington has which started at 6 p.m. Thurs-| people" if this country built F-5| made riuch during the last year day-and-ended at.midnight Sun-|iet fighters for the United | of setting guidelines and deter- day night. States Air Force. \ring "price" "increases bythe Several 'accidents accounted) The pacifist group, which| weight of public opinion and for dozens of deaths claims 2,000 members, said in| presidential persuasion. | Shortly after the start of the|a statement that Canada should| The economic council's study holiday period, a bus travelling | do nothing to help prolong "such|of Canadian affairs conceivably on icy pavement in Oregon|a brutal and senseless conflict." could result in recommenda- skidded out of control, crashed} The statement referred tojtions for an incomes policy, a and turned over. The accident) press reports last week that the guidelines policy or some other Thursday took 13 lives. F-5, ordered for the RCAF ear-| device. A ( The next day, five persons lier this year, was tested in the) Trying to find such a policy died when a car skidded out of|Vietnamese fighting and thatjor deyjce acceptable to all control on an ice-coated bridge \the U.S. might order 200 to 300) groups represented in the coun- in eastern Oklahoma. Another|planes'from Canadian plants. cil membership, however, may ------ ee | prove to be as difficult a8 pre- paring the original data and academic studies. CG ll on Wiih P Despite some warnings about possible strains, the Canadian economy is closing out the year with a potent push. Businessmen who 12 months ago were predicting a slowdown in the growth rate now admit they underestinfated the expan- sion then by at least 50 per cent. - A report last week by the Dominion Bureau of Statistics shows the third-quarter gross national product racing along at an annual rate of $52,056,000,000, 2.3 per cent higher than in the second quarter. For-the first nine months the GNP--value. of all goods and services produced in the coun- try--was 9.3 per cent higher than 1964, when the annual fig- ure stood at $47,003,000,000. e er LB = YY = sr Olae oienit Pu strength of the economy, now approaching its fifth year of growth, is the booming auto in- dustry. EXPECT EXPANSION | Some officials had expected about a 12-per-cent expansion on last year's record 671,000 cars and trucks produced. In- stead, assembly lines will close for New Year's. with about 850,- 000 units behind them. That's more than double those early forecasts. About one - third of the in- crease is attributed by the in- dustry to additional exports to the United States under the Canada-U.S. auto trade pact, but the rest comes from a still- eager domestic market. Elsewhere on the business scene, speculation about the pol- icies of the new finance minis- ter, Mitchell Sharp, was win- Paced by b ex and the s rongest consumer spending ever, the final 1965 total is expected to exceed last year by at least 9.5 per cent, compared with many predic- tions 12 months ago of six per cent. An indication of the surprising ning iderable attention. Bringing in revisions to the Bank Act is expected to get priority after Parliament con- venes Jan. 18. For the banks the big question is whether the gov- ernment will move to raise the six-per-cent ceiling on their in- jterest rates. From Reuters-AP SALISBURY (CP) -- Rhode- sia's three-day Christmas holi- day ended today amid growing anxiety the country's 220,000 whites about' what now lies ahead. There was general expecta- gasoline rationing. Prime Minister Ian Smith said Friday night gasoline rationing will have to be intro- duced in Rhodesia, but his breakaway white-minority gov- ernment has not yet decided on a date. Many believe the high stan- dard of living taken for granted would plunge as a result of Prime Minister Ian Smith's seizure of independence in Nov- ember. A lot of the luxuries will also disappear from the stores early in the new year. But some of the anxiety is off- set by the fact that Rhodesia is largely self - supporting in food and that local industry can supply most of the essen- tials of life. HARD TO ASSESS Observers found it difficult to assess just what effect the in- ternational economic and trade sanctions would have on the country, and how much they | could be absorbed. The government has imposed strict import and exchange con- trol restrictions but it was not disclosed how much money would be allowed for imports and which sectors of the econ- omy would suffer most. Besides its censorship of domestic newspapers, the gov- ernment has clamped down on the publication of any reports which could give any indication to the outside world of the measures being taken to over- come or circumvent, the trade sanctions. So far, only a few. small items have become scarce -- spools of-thread, gramophone needles and razor blades. Some stores have introduced "one per person" rationing on brassieres and other ladies foundation gar WINS SWIM RACE tion that this week would see) Growing Anxiety Seen For Rhodesian Whites ments, imported perfumes and cosmetics and color films. In neighboring Bechuanaland, British troops Sunday guarded the sabotage-threatened British radio station being built to beam uncensored broadcasts to Rhodesia. White residents of Francistown, only 10 miles from the Rhodesian border, have threatened sabotage against the station, now near- ing completion. PLEDGES CO-OPERATION The Soviet Union Saturday pledged to co-operate with Afri- can countries "in providing the utmost assistance to the people of Rhodesia." The pledge was made in a joint Soviet-Zambian communique issued after the departure of a delegation from Zambia which sought aid against the white-minority gov- ernment of Rhodesia. There are | | and Service Ae ee a oe - Walter Gordon's refusal to do so when he introduced revisions earlier this year brought a storm of- criticism from bank- ers and, faced with the econ- omy's growing demand for money and the resultant Squeeze on interest profits, they have stepped up their campaign for more flexibility in that field. INCREASE CONTROL? Another area of speculation is whether the government now will move toward greater fed- eral conirol of the so - called near banks following the col- lapse of Atlantic A cc ep tance Corp. and British Mortgage and Trust Co. 4 Some banking sources sug- gested a move last week by Premier Lesage of Quebec may force Ottawa to move slowly in that direction. Mr. Lesage set up a special provincial committee, to report before the end of next year, on provincially chartered institu- tions and ways "to protect pub- lic interest and favor the eco- nomic and industrial expansion of the province." Another DBS report shows Canada's steel industry is start- ing to reap the benefits of its multi - million - dollar expan- sion program. Production in the first 11 months of this year was 9,063,000 tons, exceeding 1964's record total for 12 months of 8,969,000 tons. Despite expansion and in- creased productivity which have added about 100,000 tons to the {monthly output, mills are run- 4 By THE CANADIAN PRESS At least 60 persons have died accidentally in Canada during the Christmas holiday weekend which ends at midnight tonight. A Canadian Press survey from the start of the weekend at 6 p.m, Friday, local times, gives this breakdown on the toll: 42 dead in traffic mishaps; 15 dead in fires; one drowning; two deaths in unclassified acci- dents. There were 76 deaths in an 84-hour Christmas period last in 1961. A two-day holiday in 1963 produced 31 fatalities while the record was 130 deaths in a five-day holiday in 1962. ning close to or even beyond rated plant capacity. -- RCA Victor Co. announced plans for a $25,000,000 color television tube plant at Mid- land, Ont., to help meet the anticipated boom in that mar- ket. Although Canadian networks aren't to start telecasting in color for another year, the proximity of much of Canada's population to U.S. stations has already created a shortage of color sets. Sales this year are estimated to be about 8,500 this year, with some expecting the market to double in 1966. The new RCA plant, to em- ploy 500 persons, will turn out 300,000 color tubes annually. Much will be exported to the U.S. year and 84 in a four-day period) pj THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, December 27, 1965 7 A [60 Die Accidentally _ On Christmas Weekend The Canadian Highway Safety Council had predicted 60. traffic deaths this year, three more than last year's total. There bere 86 in 1962 and 53 in 1961. Quebec and British Columbia led provincial tolls this year with 15 deaths each, while Prince Edward Island and New- foundland were fatality free. Quebec had 14 highway deaths and one asphyxiation. British Columbia recorded 12 traffic deaths, two persons killed by fire and one youth killed when a car he was repairing fell on im. : In Ontario, five persons died in a house fire at Berkeley and eight others were killed on the highways. Another person died in a Toronto fire. Alberta recorded two traffic deaths, Saskatchewan had four deaths on the highway and one by fire and Manitoba had three deaths by fire. Three persons also died in fires in the Yukon. New Brunswick had two traf- fic deaths. One person ' was drowned in Nova Scotia. The survey does not include natural or industrial deaths, known suicides or slayings. The. Ontario dead: SUNDAY George Randall, 81, a mute in- valid, when his mattress caught fire' in his Toronto home. John MacLaughlin, 64, his daughter, Mrs. John Raywood, 24, and her daughters, Katherine, 2, Sharon, eight months, and Mrs. Adam Bailey, | | NIGHT WIN A FREE on the TOWN pronase ag HUWalu aguaway, vy ae A anin hey Rmerlinan ia @ tive in Berksisy, 1¢ miles southeast of Owea Sound, Wilfrid Avar, 68, of Bridge. Clifton Burke, 55 and has aa vues Ve Blenheim, in a two-car collision at Eatonville intersection, about 25 miles east of Chatham. Gordon Faulkner, 49, and his daughter, Patricia, 18, of Napa nee when their car was hit by a CNR passenger train at a level crossing near Napanee. SATURDAY Mrs. Jean Folkhard, 86, of Vernon, in a head-on collision on Highway 31 about 10 miles south of Ottawa. FRIDAY William Feast, 34, formerly of London, now living at Mount Clemence, Mich., and George Muzamel, 26, of Strathroy, in a two-car collision near Strathroy, Al ~~ DENNIS ARSENEAU Fuel Oil Sales Free Burner Service about 4,000,000 Negro Rhode- FOR MEN BG64WILSON RDS Telephone 728-6007 Heir Styling Steff under direction of TERRY. $ KELLY DISNEY USED CARS LTD, Seance GUARANTEED USED CARS "We ere never satisfied until you are." 1200 DUNDAS 8ST, EAST When you turn21 you're no longer cov- ered by your parents' Hospital Insurance. To keep insured, you must take out indi- vidual membership within 30 days. Get your application form at a bank, a hospital, or from the Commis- sion. sians. There was no mention of So- viet military aid for Zambia. A news report had said the Zam- bians would ask for Russian troops to protect the Kariba dam. It straddles the border between Zambia and Rhodesia and the countries share electric power developed from it. Sir Humphrey Gibbs, British- appointed governor, told Rhode- sians Friday he still is the man legally in charge of Rhodesia. ® Szen Bowling -- Set, Evening end Sunday P.M. %& Automotic Leones & Snack Ber COUNTY BOWL 118 BYRON ST. N 668-2631 DELICIOUS COFFEE 144 Varieties of Donuts Wiister DONUT Reduced Prices For Groups, Clubs, Meetings, ete. 725-9063 OPPOSITE OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE Raiph W. Mabley Decorator COMPLETE INTERIOR DECORATING SERVICE FOR YOUR HOME 723-9033 In his Christmas message to Rhodesians, he said he hopes and prays 1966 will bring a solution to the crisis caused by Prime Minister Smith's seizure of independence for the central African colony from Britain Nov. 11. 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