AT LIBERAL CONVENTION Templeton Tops Ten TORONTO (CP) -- Charles) Templeton led 10. candidates for|Ottawa. Grace Lewis of Tor-jallow itself to unconsciously five Ontario Liberal party vice-| presidencies Saturday at the an- nual convention. of the party. | The victory put the. former! Ralph Gibson of Toronto was 9f-centre policies, evangelist and newspaper editor in line for the Ontario- Liberal! presidency now held by Gordon Blair of Ottawa, who was re- elected president by acclama-| tion this year but announced. he} jwill not seek office next year.| Hamilton and Jean Richard of onto, immediate past president | of the Ontario Women's Liberal | Association, won fifth spot. re-elented~ treasurer by accla- mation, HEAR GORDON . Andrew Thompson and Walter Gordon, former Liberal finance minister, spoke during the last Mr, Templeton entered poli-'day of the convention Saturday. ites in 1964, when he stood for Mr. Thompson told the dele- | United States as its neighbor, he of the economy. THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, Mey 9, 1966 § each Ontario election; reports from elected provincial mem- bers on the disposition of policy resolutions passed by the rank | md file, and $5 provincial mém- ership fees to increase part He said the party should not ream and numbers. -- Among the 700-odd persons adopt a waffling approach! who signed immediately were somewhere between a cautious |yy, Gordon and his successor conservative program and left-| writnhell Sharp, who paid their fees together. The meeting approved: policy said. --but:--should--nevertheless | resolutions calling for divorce strive to keep free and inde | reforms and for legal dissem- pendent by working to reverse | ination of birth control informa- the trend toward foreign control | tion and devices, Action toward uniformity of i educational standards across APPROVE CHANGES Canada and the establishment Canada is lucky to have the favored high school ical clubs and political tion courses as part of the secondary school curriculum. A resolution was passed call-| ing for a minimum wage of $1.50 an hour in Ontario, com- pared with the present $1.00 minimum, and providing for party study of the principle of a guaranteed annual wage. A resolution from the floor at | the end of the day condemned the Conservative government of the province in general terms. CALL TEAM DODGERS . | NEW YORK (AP)--The Con-| finental Football League filled | BINGO Columbus Club 133 Brock S. N, WHITBY EVERY TUES. NIGHT --~ Doors Open at 7 P.M. Bingo Starts ot B P.M. SHARP out its 10-team roster Saturday | Admission 50¢ Constitutional changes ap- of a federal office of education | in-\to co-operate with provincial cluded provisions for leadership | governments' were given party election in the provincial riding gates it might be the last time| : of Toronto Riverdale in Septem-|they would be together before proved at the convention by awarding a franchise to a! group of 10 New. York business-| men, who promptly named the! No Children Pleose lber. He lost the election and @ the next provincial election. He few days later lost the party|said the party must expect a jleadership to Andrew Thomp- | tough fight to overcome what he json, 5 called the "tentacles of influ- ' | He was appointed a vice-pres-\ence" of the province's Con- : conventions within two years of| support, and the convention also'club Brooklyn Dodgers. } HEADQUARTERS FOR BOWMANVILLE 0 | New Hydro Building } Nearing Completion BOWMANVILLE -- A_ new|serve the area's more than 7,300 _ all-electric headquarters build-|rural customers, said Mr, Wal- ing for Ontario Hydro's Bow- ters. manville rural operating area| The area covers a territory will be ready for occupancy by of some 600 square miles in the) central region and includes cus- ger of tomers in rural and suburban 4 sectors beyond Whitby, Oshawa, Port Perry, Bowmanville, Orono and Newcastle, The staff main- tains 665 miles of distribution the end of May. W. Rex_Walters, mana the operating area since its in- ception in 1951, said the new building will be an important 'owing number ote sled miele in the lines and about 290 miles of sub- steadily expanding town of Bow-| transmission and transmission manville lines The building is located on Scu- d., in the northwest sec- i tion of the town Construction |8M office for the are manager, began. last December and was | 8eneral office facilities, a room carried on throughout the win-|for the sale staff, a data pro- ter by Mel-Ron Construction of essing room, supervisory staff Whitby, general contractor. quarters, a conference room and A staff of 55 persons, includ-/@ lunch room as well as staff 'pees eager yashrooms {ng 15 office personnel and 40|¥4S trade and inspection staff nem-. For the trades group in the bers will move into the new remainder of the building there bulldin $s a large work area, a tool & lroom, general storeroom and ALL-ELECTRIC quarters. A large The new building, 114 feet foreman's Since 1951, the staff has been loading dock is located at the| located in a section of a large,|rar of the building to help to long and 62 feet wide, provides! Ragen | | PERATING AREA Church Group Views Wigs St. Andrew's Presb yterian| {Church Women Group No. 3 hosted a mid-morning coffee} party Wednesday in the church! hall, Refreshments were served while approximately 45 ladies in attendance were shown an} interesting display of wigs and| hair pieces The demonstration and com- |mentary was given by Mrs. E. |Hughes of the Beauty Clinic, Whitby, along with two of her assistants, Mrs. N, Dudley and Mrs. L, Bath and a model, Mrs. C, Wood, who demonstrated what a great asset the constant use of a hair piece is. Nursery was supplied | members of the group so that) mothers of little children could! relax and enjoy the demonstra- tion. Political Action | 'Urged By Expert | ident of the party last year to fill a vacancy. Other vice-presidents re-elec- ted were David Greenspan of | Toronto, Michael Moriarity of | Life Term For Lawyer PRETORIA (AP) --- Abraham Fischer, 58, former senior law- yer who led the defence of the big South African sabotage trial, was sentenced to life imprison- servative government. The Liberal leader sald. some politicians think the people are stupid, Ontario's tragedy, he said, is that the people are ahead of the government in \their thinking. Mr. Gordon challenged the delegates to adopt 'deliberately and forthrightly a left-of-centre set of policies clearly stated and agreed to." Ambulance Man Raps Province ment today for conspiring to| OAKVILLE (CP) -- Murray commit sabotage. He could have been given the |death sentence on the charge. Life imprisonment in South Africa means just that unless the government reduces the sen- tences, The lawyer was found guilty last Wednesday of nine of the 15 charges on which he was in- dicted, He also was fined 120 rand ($180) and received two by| other sentences of eight years ||egislation MacBeth, an Oakville ambu- lance operator and past presi- dent of the Ontario Ambulance Operators' Association, says many Ontario accident victims die unnecessarily because of in- expert attention by ambulance attendants. Mr. MacBeth said the assocl- ation has been telling this to the Ontario government for' tiiree years and has been pressing for establishing mini- out in How'ean you save fora"rainy day"' without going herain? . and nine months to run noncur-|mum standards for ambulance rently with the life term, lequipment and training of at- The most serious charge on|tendants which he was convicted was| "Somebody down there is conspiring with banned African | stalling and it's about time thes nationalist organizatiots to-com-!got off their fat other-end and mit sabotage aimec at bringing|did something," he said Sunday about an armed insurrection to|jn an interview. overthrow South Africa's white} Mr. MacBeth said there are spremacist government, |virtually no controls on ambu- lance services, There are sev- On Water Pollution WASN'T CRIMINAL WINDSOR, Ont. (CP)--A call] older building at 61 Temperance facilitaate the handling of mate) for militancy was made by a st. The modern, new all-electric office will offer more space and better facilities for the staff to TUCSON, Ariz. (AP)--"Up to the end he had a hopeful, opti- mistic attitude,"' This was how Dr. T. E. A. von Dedenroth recalled the outlook| of Robert Allen, who died Sun- day of a rare form of bone cancer. Allen, suffering from osteo genic sarcoma, underwent a transfer of cancerous tissue with Harry Griffith, 63, of Flourtown, Pa., about eight weeks ago at Roswell. Park Memorial Institute, Buffalo, N.Y. Allen never knew that Grif fith, a former minor league baseball player, died April 25. Allen, 29, was admitted to a hospital Friday, Von Dedenroth| said the cancer had spread too far through. Allen's pelvic area. The doctor said that Allen, who returned from Buffalo 12 days ago, had been under a hypnosis treatment which en- abled him to develop a positive Second Cancer Patient Dies After Tissue Trade | two cases, the procedure was of ials and supplies in transferring} University of Toronto pollution | them from trucks in and out} specialist Saturday as one way of the area headquarters. to arouse politicians to the ur-| meontorae - gency of the water pollution sit- j uation, | | Prof. George B, Langford, di-| | rector of the university's Great) Lakes Institute, said lack of ac-| tion to combat water pollution! {in Canada exists because poli-| pier wd lack leadership and un-| s erstanding. jthe two men had died in vain "Ottawa is doing a lot of plan-| "The deaths of Mr. Allen and ning and these plans should be |Mr. Griffith are regretted|in full flight within six years | here," a spokesman at the in-|on the Great Lakes,"' he told 175 stitute said. "Both men knew|delegates to a one-day clear-| that the method, at best, was|water conference from south-| highly experimental and un-| western Ontario and Michigan. | proven. Apparently, in these 'But all the plans I have seen are for great research pro-} jlittle value." grams. | The spokesman said the! 'These planners are overlook- knowledge gained from the ex-jing the great amount of re-| periments 'has been beneficial' | search dofie by the U.S, depart- to cancer research ;ment of health, education and) Specialists hoped the trans-| welfare. Development of meth-| fer of cancer tissue would pro-|ods and procedures for elimi- duce antibodies in the blood of|nating pollution should begin | both men and help stop the! while this research in Ottawa |Spread of cancer, 'is going on, All the research in "Apparently the surgery was|the world won't stop pollution! |performed too late There is alone iota." | | possibility that if they had got} Dr. A. T. Prince, director of to him sooner," something) the water research branch 'of might have been,worked out,"|the department of mines and| |von Dedenroth said | technical surveys, said any sug-| Allen, who lost a leg last fall| gestion that nothing js being| Porc see of cancer, was a former/done about pollution is not cor- star football player for the Uni- | rect, "I think adequate meas- |searched the country for him, outlook toward his disease. The| yorsity of Llinois. patient "thought that he hadi ~ this thing licked." | worsened last week, he "felt) he was merely recuperating | from the operation," von Deden- | WASN'T IN VAIN Doctors at the Roswell Park) LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- De- Institute said they did not think|fence officials in Ottdwa are jair training station in Centralia, }20 miles northwest of here, the }commanding officer at the base . Tour Bottling Plant Group Capt. G. F. Ockenden The boys of Grade 9, Indus- said a proposal which could re- trial Arts of Henry Street Iligh sult in closing the base, possi- Ingram, had a most informa. been forwarded to Ottawa from tive and enjoyable tour through |@"adian forces Traning Com. the bottling plant of Hambiy|/™and headquarters in Winnt- Here they saw at first hand) automation at work. Coca-Cola| Would mean a saving of about was being bottled: at the rate of /9!;000,000 a year, he said quite an impressive signt and|Setvice personnel and 275 civil one te boys will remember for |!2" employees at Centralia of some "time. |the proposed move "because of was to observe local products |/@ting." and their manufacture and|, /" nearby Exeter, likely to be some of the problems involved, {ard hit economically by clos- principles of auto-! matic machinery were noted|®"4 the Board of trade met in and discussed in classroom {ol-|J0int sessions and came up with A prize of a large camping cooler full of Coca-Cola donated| by Hambly Beverages will be) w. k: Miller is spending the awarded to the boy who writes|weekend on a fishing trip a the best essay concerning the | Bay of Quinte, he will accom- excellent job acting as tempo rary tasters for the firm by sampling the product Miss Ruth Mitchep, 509 New- man cres., is celebrating her - |birthday today. To celebrate. the occasion: she will be entertain- _jed to dinner and dancing from friends of Toronto Teachers' College, Even when Allen's condition roth recalled. jconsidering closing down the Henry H. Students said during the weekend. School, Whitby, under Mr. A bly as early as next fall, had Beverages, Oshawa, peg. two bottles a second. This was| He said he informed the 500 The main theme of the tour|"Umors which had been circu- Mechanical jing of the base, town council low-up of the tour. ie trip, Most of the boys did aninany Edwin Steenburg. ey FINISHES l4th MONTEREY, Calif Top Canadian driver Ludwig} Heimrath of Toronto, troubled . by a broken wheel rim on his ee McLaren Ford, finished oo Rio ~~, cone a el Sunday in the professional class|home after undergoing surgery race of the regional U.S | , road! at the Oshawa General Hospital racing championship at Laguna Seca, The was won by Sorry to learn that Mrs Charles Hayes of Rockville,|George Brown, 205 Athol st, un Md., driving a Nickey Chevro-|derwent surgery at the Oshawa! let. General Hospital \ (AP) race The closing of Centralia| 'ures will be taken,' Centralia Base Closing Would Save $1 Million a plan to send a delegation to! Ottawa to meet with Defence| Minister Hellyer. | In Ottawa, a defence depart-| ment spokesman sald 'no de- cisions have yet been made on| jany particular base. A careful | study will be given to plans sub- mitted to headquarters n due course by Training Command," The conference at Winnipeg | had discussed future training | plans for Canada's integrated forces and "there are indica- jtions that sonie bases will be) closed down eventually with the | jStreamlining of training." | Fewer bases were required un- ider integration | HONOR TEAM | WINNIPEG (CP) -- Members | jof Canada's national hockey | jteam will be honored at a din- | ner in Ottawa next Friday. The! team said all players and man: | agement who attended this} year's world hockey champion- | ships have been invited by} |Health Minister MacEachen. | |Prime Minister Pearson will at- tend One-Stop DECORATING SHOP Woalipeper end Murels Custom Draperies Broadioom C.1,L. Paints end Varnishes Benjamin MoorePaints DODD & SOUTER DECOR CENTRE LTD. 107 Byron St. $., Whitby i PHONE 668:3862 Defence counsel sald Fisch-| er"s motive was not criminal | and that he had not acted for| self-advancement. But the state} prosecutor charged that Fischer had 'dedicated nimself to the} overthrow of this state by all forms of violence." Justice W. Boshoff said in a three-hour opinion that Fischer) belong to South Africa's out- lawed Communist party and took part in its activities. Fischer had admitted being a! Communist, saying that par- | ticipation in the party's activi- ties offered the ony avenue for action against ,South Africa's apartheid policy of strict racial segregation, Fischer's defence in the 1963 abotage trial brought him! world prominence, Most of the defendants in that trial were non-white. opponents of apar- theid (racial separation) who were sentenced to life imprison-| ment | Fischer jumped bail during a} previous trial and was South! Africa's most wanted man for nearly a year. Heavily dis- guised, he remained in the Jo- hannesburg area while police eral cases where store owners who also run an ambulance use the same vehicle for grocery dé- livery, n one municipality, he said, the dogcatcher who operates an ambulance service uses the same vehicle for both jobs: He did not identify the municipal- ity APPOINTMENT This is Your Invitation to visit NURSERY Garden Centre Brocks St. N.| , WHITBY 668-6162 Mpadiiee ul ¢ Mursery Tet Quefity A Uverything for Your |} Gardening Needs. Open @ a.m. te % p.m. Seven doys « Week. FOX | i] yeors, \} as well os his more recent suc- ERNEST MUELLER Gordon Osborne Real Estate, announces the appointment. of Mr. Ernest Mueller os Soles Representative of his firm, Mr, Mueller is an experienced Real Estate Salesman having been associated with one of the successful reol estate offices In the district for the past two He comes to his new firm with a wide background of building experience and lot development cessful Real Estate sales exper- ience. NOTICE The Ontario County Health Unit - Is recommending Child Health Centres... as usual NO CHILD HEALTH CLINICS WILL BE HELD DURING THE MONTHS OF JULY AND AUGUST. WHI, BY "MASTER SPY" BROCK One Complete Program Only Each Evening -- Starting at 7:30 coon CARLO PONT] fp COLOR » naae pag ene RESTRICTED -- Begins 8:45, ALSO 2ND FEATURE ATTRACTION AT STARRING STEVE MORRAY wd 7:30 end JUNE THORNBURN Look into National! > You can make deposits in your National Trust Savings Account without leaving the house. National even pays for the postage. And your deposit is immediately acknowledged by return mail. What could be more convenient, more modern? You get free chequing privileges, too, on any reasonable number of cheques. And your account earns 4% interest, on the minimum half-yearly balance. Besides Savings Accounts, National Trust offers two other modern savings plans: High interest-earning Guaranteed Investment Certificates which ean be bought for periods of 1 to 5 years, and Natrusco, National's thriving Mutual Fund that lets you share in our country's bustling economy. All are backed by the Company's experience in managing more than one billion dollars under their administration or supervision. Save with safety... look into National. 32 Simeoe St. S. Oshawa end 14 offices in Greater Toronte National Trust SINCE 1898