Oshawa Times (1958-), 2 Aug 1966, p. 2

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ae ee eat ed 2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, August 2, 1966 A GLANCE AROUND THE GLOBE ge ee eee PMs' Toronto Meet "rr? _ Lis By DAVID DAVIDSON TORONTO (CP) -- Ontario Premier John Robarts says talks here among most of Can- ada"s premiers are "discus- sions, nothing more' but storm warnings emerging after Mon- day's sessions' indicate tough dealing with Ottawa over equal- ization payments to the prov- inces. The premiers were told by Premier Ross Thatcher. of Sas- katchewan thai his province will. @ Jose $35,000,006 in equalization grants under federal proposals he said he has seen but would not divulge to reporters. "Our government will never agree to such an arrangement," Mr. Thatcher said. "Equalization of tax grants will get considerable national attention before it's through," echoed Premier Duff Roblin of Manitoba in an interview. Mr, Robarts said there will be a further exchange of ideas on the federal proposals before any final agreement is reached. | He said Quebec would re-) ceive an additional $90,000,000) under the proposed system of) payments. | He stressed the new sys- tem provides for an increase CuS5Si0115 Mw ler Wily Canadians Win COPETOWN, Ont. (CP) -- Canada won the Eastern Can- ada versus New England Chal- lenge Scramble for motorcycles Monday for the first time in five years. The Canadian team amassed 4,984 points the American team's 3,724. Canadian riders came out on top of the first round of events Jstaged two weeks ago in Graf- ton, Vi., with a tota! of 1,406 points, Yvon DuHamel of Montreal was the star of the Canadian team Monday, winning all four heats of the 500cc class team races over a rugged course in this community near Hamilton. Riders on the Canadian 250 team 'included Ray Boasman, Ancaster and Dave Sehi, Water- PREMIER ROBARTS Two - Car Crash YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL) PARK, Wyo. (AP)--Two per-| sons were killed and three others injured in a two - car crash about two miles east. of | were down. On the 500 team were Bob Archer, Oshawa and Jerry Van der Eyken, Oakville. Byelections Called OTTAWA (CP) -- Byelections called Monday in two Newfoundland and one Quebec constituencies for Monday, Sept. of about $100,000,000 on the the Lamar ranger station Sun-| it will be the first test at the amounts due the provinces. On- tario' currently contributes about 64 per cent of the equal- ization fund, | However, a senior Quebec civil servant said in an inter-| view the new system would pro-| vide further $110,000,000 for the| provinces of which Quebec| would receive nearly $100,000,-| 000, The tax - sharing agreement expires next March 31, but royal commissions by both Ottawa and Ontario, which have not yet) any new policy. day. Killed were Katherine Lange, 23, of Tavistock, Ont., and Lu-) ciele Schlinger, 46, Billings, Mont. polls since the federal general election Nov. 8 last year. The byelections will be held in Burin-Burgeo and Grand- Falls-White Bay~ Labrador in Russia SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP) Boris. Spassky of Russi countryman Tigran Pet 3 sped through a perfunctory 22- move draw to keep Spassky in the lead in the 10th round of the Piatigorsky Cup interna- tional chess competition. 350 Students Harvest Crop LANGTON, Ont. (CP) -- A group of 350 Belgian students today begin a seven - week stint of tobacco harvesting. The students, chosen more than 500 applicanis, vol- unteered for the work to raise money for the Belgians in the World Movemenit--the counter- part of Canada's Company of Young Canadians. Most of them will work on farms owned by Belgian Cana- dians, where they will retain $1 a day of their $16-a-day wage. The rest will be used to pay for their air fare here, a seven- day holiday to the United States, and to further projects of the Belgians in the World Move- ment in Canada. The group arrived in Canada last weekend aboard two char- tered jetliners. They will be joined in the field by 60 Aus- trian and 150 French university students recruited to help with the harvest. It is the first time foreign studenis have been brought to Canada for a har- vest The students will work seven hours a day, seven days a week fram rom Taken to hospital were Al W.|Newfoundland and Nicolet-Ya-| ro) seven weeks, Schlinger, 50, and the Schling-| ers' son, Kurt, 9, and Ellard K,| Lange, about 40. The Langes were honeymoon-|MP for Burin-Burgeo, was ap-| ing in Yellowstone. The Schling- ers were employed at Cooke! City. maska in Quebec. They will fill vacancies cre- ated by three resignations. Chesley W. Carter, Liberal pointed the Senate last month. Clement Vincent, Progressive lo Lange, the most seriously in-;Conservative MP for Nicolet-/ e reported, doubtless will affect! jyreq, suffered multiple cuis on|Yamaska, resigned to run as a| Remali | |the face, a fracture of the left) Union Nationale candidate in Chess Play djround tournament with Leads who heads the 18-, 6% points, ond werld champion Pe- trosian played rapidly and agreed quickly to splitting the point. U.S, champion Bobby Fischer played well to defeat his long- time Ameriean rival, Samuel Reshevsky. Fischer played ag- gressively, shifted his attack from queen's side of the board to king's side, and Reshevsky resigned at the 38th move when threatened with a mate, Wolfgang Unzicker of Ger- many and Holland's Jan Don- ner drew in a quiet queen's gambit declined that lasted 31 moves. 'Games matching Bent Lar- sen of Denmark with Yugosla- via's Borislav Ivkov and Miguel Najdorf of Argentina with La- jos Portisch of Hungary were adjourned, Larsen fought Ivkov through 41 moves of attack and counter- attack, and the Dane was slightly ahead at adjournment, Spassky, 'tor-at-a suburban Anglican with a possible win through careful play. | Najdorf played # hyper-mod-| ern queen's Indian defence in| his adjourned game with Por- tisch, Standing: Pis.| 614) 1 5 4% 4% 4% 4% 4% 4 | 3 Spassky Larsen Reshevsky Portisch Najdort Donner Fischer Petrosian Unzicker Ivkov HOH N OME HK ww g we wwe RoHS ABWIMOBIDAIWS US. NATO Allies | nr Sea - going Mission Set TORONTO (CP) -- A former rector, a former high school English department head and their families plan an independ- ent venture in Christian mis- sion, They are 'leaving Canadian civilization for a while to form a Sea-going missivu io waives of the Bahamas out-islands, David Stiles, 40, former rec- church, is leading the. venture after discussing it for two years with his wife, Beverley. He purchased an 85-ton ship, re-christened her Agape (Greek for "brotherly love') and be- gan fitting. her out for the voy- a e, Ruth and Andrew Hossack said they wanted to join, so Andrew retired from the Eng- lish department al a suburban high schoor and became sec ond-in-command, Rounding out the group is Garth Hunt, 22, son of a col- lege principal, the three Stiles children--Cynthia, 15, Geoffrey, 13, and Philip, 7--~and the two Hossack children, Robert, 7, and three-month-old Timothy. Mr, and Mrs, Hossack will look after the children's school- ing. They are selecting a li- brary for the craft. Agape is 65 feet long, and has a 120 horsepower engine which can power her at eight knots. Mr. Stiles says the vessel's tanks will hold enough fuel for 4,000 miles. Agape"s crew plan to head south late in August, via the U.S. inland waterway. The project has no official connection with the Anglican Chureh, but Mr. Stiles says he will ask the Bahamas bishop where his help is needed. "We want to get our sleeves rolled NEW YORK (AP)--The Aus- tin sniper slayings, the latest In grisley series of American mass murders, may be the worst in U.S. history. A spokesman for the Federal Bureau of Investigation said it kept no records of such mat- ters, but recalled only one incl- dent that could rival the Texas slayings. That was when quiet, Bible- reading Howard Unruh method- ically killed 13 persons in 12 minutes on a Camden, N.J., street in 1949 using an auto- matic pistol, Unruh was judged menially unfit to stand trial and is in the Trenton, N.J., state hospital. A dungaree - wearing, 19 year-old killer accounted for 11 deaths in a two-state shooting spree in 1958. Charles Starkweather. killed three members of the family of a girl friend, then drove through Nebraska and Wyoming in 1958, erent Pi s Di lanist, Dies NEW YORK (AP) -- Pips Bud Powell, 41, who with Char- lie (Bird) Parker and Dizzy Gillespie brought jazz out of the swing era and into bebop, died Monday night, Hospital, "a city institution in Brooklyn. Powell had suffered several years from a combina- and tuberculosis. | up and work with people, if they want our help. innovator and composer. |ters)--The military governor of jeastern Nigeria rejected Nige- Death.came at Kings County|in # broadcast Monday night tion of malnutrition, alcoholism |'ing into tribal states, Powell's fluid style, in which|megwu Ojukwu, notes cascaded from his key-|broadcast from Enugu that only board as if blown through alnorthern Nigerian rebels who horn, influenced a generation of|mutinied Friday were consulted jazzmen, He was revered as an|before the formation of Lt.-Col, Slayings In ' May Be Worst In US. lJeaving eight bodies behind him. Starkweather was executed and his girl friend, Caro) Ann Fu- gate, sentencea 10 iife in pri- son, Last month, a man gain entrance to a nurses' reside in Chicago, and slowly knif or strangled eight of them. A tattooed drifter, Richard Speck, was arraigned Monday, charged with the killings. SEVEN SLAUGHTERED Another Chicago case that captured international attention was the 1929 St. Valentine's Day massacre in which seven mem- bers of. the George (Bugs) Mo. ran gang were lined up against a garage wall and machine- gunned by what was believed to be a rival underworld faction, 'The killers never were caught. Six robbery victims died at the hands of Connecticut's "mad dog" killers, Joseph Ta- hborsky and Arthur Culombe, in 1956. Taborsky died in the elee- trie chair and Culombe, who successfully appealed his first- Gegiee muraer-- conviction, {s serving a life term, The same year, engineer Wil- jliam Bauer fatally wounded six members of his -- their Parsippany - Troy Hills, N.J., home then turned a shotgun on himself. Other killings terrorized cities over long periods. In Boston, a man strangled 11 women Sores an 18 + yea fessed to at le series of seven ders, West, 22, and Robert 24, left seven persons dead in northeastern Ohio in 1948. Their victims included a farm family of three. West was killed in a shootout at a police roadblock and Daniels later was executed. "Bud" Powell, New Nigerian Government Rejected By Governor CONTONOU, Dahomey (Rew-/ ria's new military government and brought Nigeria face to face with the possibility of split- The governor, Col. C, Odu- said in the! Gakubu Gowon"s government in But his life was a story of Lagos, mental breakdowns com-| pounded by physical illness that| diminished his talents, leaving} at his death only a laboring, unsure echo of his former bril- liance Ojukwu called for "immedi-| ate negotiations to allow the| |people of Nigeria to determine the form of their future asso- } "The brutal and planned an- nihilation of officers of eastern Nigerian origin in the last few days has again cast doubts as to whether the people of Nige- ria, after these cruel and bloody atrocities, can ever sincerely live together as members of the same nation," Ojukwu said, nagging backache! nt ar Apart {the Quebec provincial election _ ciation, lin June. He now is Quebec agri- culture minister. |knee and bruises. | Satellite System ope ae He used to be bothered by backaches Powell, whose first name was) Enugu fs in the part of Ni-| aad hited dentine. When he learned .,, Earl, was born in New York in ; | that irritation of the bladder and sneak attack, de Gaulle will/ig94 to a musical family. He | Seria populated by the Ibo race, | urina Three Drown LISTOWEL, Ont. (CP) -- John Hightower, veteran but which appear to be much Muriel Fischer, 12, and her two sisters Betty Anne, 9, hole in Conestogo Lake, 15 miles east of here. The three girls, all non-swim- mers, were celebrating their} mother's birthday with their) parents Mr. and Mrs. Julious Fischer of Palmerston, Ont. The Fischers have six other children. Visa Refused | CHRISTCHURCH, N.Z. (Reu- ters) -- Derek Lawden, mathe- matician and authority on space rocket trajectories, has been re- fused a visa to visit the United States, he said today, The British-born professor of mathematics at Canterbury uni- versity here said no reason for withholding his visa was given. "I suppose it is because some! 1 and 7 t Grace, 8, drowned Sunday when Aouge hi they apparently fell into a deep mestic sion network grams of excellence not profit- jable for commercial networks. also would give a boost--both financial educational television. works, such as NBC, CBS and ABC, in effect would pay for operating network and part of educational television, WEATHER FORECAST NEW YORK (AP)--The Ford proposed for -- the Monday a sysiem of do- communications satel-| ites that it said could "make} the desert bloom for whole new areas of television." The proposal envisioned a na-| ional, non-commercial televi-| to provide pro-| The Ford Foundation's plan and in facilities--to The commercial U.S, net- the non-commercial | grams, Charles R. Granger, MP for Grand Falls-White Bay- Labrador, resigned effective immediately on his appointment Monday as minister of Labra- dor affairs in the Newfoundland cabinet. Soft Music BRAMPTON (CP) -- Radio station CHIC turned Monday to the soft sound of » woman's voice between records. Bruce McGuiness, station pro- duction manager, said he be-/g lieves CHIC is the first station in North America to use an all- girl, disc-jockey crew. The five- girl team works around the clock on recorded music pro- Americans object to my being associated with ideas and peo- ple that they do not approve," he said. 'My opposition to American intervention in Viet! Nam and my socialist princi-! ples are well known." : Clear Skies On The Way, To Last Thr TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts Three Killed issued at 5:30 a.m. ] BRAMPTON (CP) -- Three Synopsis: Clearing skies will|Trenton .. persons were killed and twojextend into central and south-|Killaloe dee ough Wed. 55 + 57 ++ 57 » 50 Peterborough ..... Kingston ..... seriously injured in a (wo-car|ern Ontario later today and last|Muskoka .. collision Saturday night on the) through Wednesday Brampton bypass Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie,| North Bay . Sudbury .. Dead are Morris Pennie, -55 of|Lake Huron, Niagara, Lake On-| Eariton ' London, Ont., Mrs. Loreen Ada|tario, Georgian Bay, Haliburton, | Sault Ste. Marie John, 50, of Toronto, and Ralph) Killaloe, Windsor, London, Tor-|Kapuskasing . A. Rachar, 54, of Brampton Injured were Barry Allan Wil-| son, 21, of Laurel, Ont., driver of one car, and Hazel Rae Thompson, 61, a passenger in the other vehicle. Buses On Strike BUFFAILA, N.Y. (AP)--About 199,000 passengers in the Buf- falo area were in their second) day without public bus transpor- tation today as prospects ap- peared dim for early settlement! of a strike against the Niagara Frontier Transit system Company and union officials planned to attend an emergency meeting today of the NFT com-| mittee of Buffalo's common} council A 90-minute negotiation ses-| sion between the two. sides broke off Monday without any progress reported. Federal me- diator Thomas Colosi said there} were no immediate plans for a! resumption of talks. HERE an LETTERS PATENT The current issue of The On- tario Gazette carries the in-| formation that letters patent of} incorporation have been grant- ed to three Oshawa district companies. They are Ernkon Limited, Pickering Township; Harwood Metal Manufacturing Co. Ltd., Ajax and Oshawa Garden. Service Limited, Oshawa STILL UNCONSCIOUS Wendy Harness, 9-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs Reid | Harness, of Orono, is still un-| conscious in the Sick Children's Hospital, Toronto. Wendy was} hit by a gravel truck June 21 while riding her bicycle home from school on Taunton Rd HIGH FOR TWO WINS An Oshawa rink composed of Gordon MacMillan Carswell and Sam MacMillen, lonto, Hamilton: Sunny and a little cooler, Winds north 15. Algoma, Sault Ste. Marie,| White River: Mostly fair, but not much change in tempera.) tures. Winds light to northerly} Timagami, Cochrane, North Bay, Sudbury: Mostly clear and| little change in temperatures.) Winds light to northerly 15 Western James Bay: Sunny skies with a few cloudy periods and continuing cool, Winds northerly 15 to light Ottawa: Mainly cool. Winds light sunny and Forecast temperatures Low tonight, high Wednesday WINGEOL os ss ceecees 57 St. Thomas ...,.... 55 LOBOOR cc eicccveses Kitchener Mount Forest ... Wingham Hamilton ....cci000 St. Catharines .,... Toronto d THERE all of Oshawa and Clarence Oke, of Bowmanville, were high for two wins in the men's rinks lawn bowling tournament Mon- day at Belleville. They lost their other game by two shots, The team members received tran-| sistor radios as prizes, The top prize in the tourney was won for the. third consecutive year by Dick: Edney and his King- ston. rink AT CONFERENCE Three Oshawa business men, Frank H. Shewring of Shew- ring Brothers Floor and Wall Coverings: Harold Balson, sales} manager of Oshawa Wood) Products Ltd. and Ross Mills) of Ross Mills Company Limited, are in Toronto, attending aj two-day conference and sales seminar condueted by Torginal of' Canada, the nation's Jargest Ewart manufacturers of se amless'don, floors White River ....... Moosonee .. Timmins ..... feces Stewardess Dances Now' In Boston NEW YORK (AP)--an East-| ern Airlines stewardess is work- ing as a go-go dancer two nights a week in Boston to pay the rent during the airlines strike "t had no choice," said Julie Markakis of Lynn, Mass., a@ stewardess on the New York- Boston shuttle run. "My room- mates in New York are also stewardesses so somebody had to come up with the rent. Be- sides, it's been fun," But it hasn't been fun for thousands of other non-striking employees of the five airlines grounded by the 26-day strike of the International Association of Machinists (AFL-CIO). A reaction from other airline employees is mixed toward the jstriking machinists, who re- jected a While House-engineered settlement Sunday. The machi- nists voled almost 3 to 1 against the agreement reached Friday night. | The would - be airline pas- senger was as disappoinied by the weekend breakdown in the dispute as were the non-striking employees. More than 230,000 reservations were accepted by Trans World, United, Eastern, National and Northwest during the interval it appeared the strike was settled, spokesmen for the carriers said. TWA said a 'desperate situa- tion" is building up, for some 10,000 overseas passengers, most of them students, who are Liberal, Associated Press diplomatic reporter just back from sounding out European NATO capitals, looks at the | changing continent. By JOHN HIGHTOWER | WASHINGTON (AP) -- The political distance between | Washington and NATO capitals | across the Atlantic is greater to- day than any time since the Second World War, Leaders of the faltering alliance not only disagree on long-range goals, they also differ on present dan- ers. 'The North Atlantic Treaty Or- ganization is being mau led about and reshaped to cover & European defence front that in- creasing numbers of Buro- |peans themselves consider less and less threatened. On this is- sue the United States and its NATO allies seem hardly to speak the same language. The sense of urgency and peril that once invigorated NATO has declined. Europeans who once worried day and night about Soviet power masked be- hind the Iron Curtain, worry | now about ways of promoting trade, travel and politics with the countries of the splintering | Soviet bloc. |HAS OTHER THOUGHTS | "These are the tides of change |which President de Gaulle of | France is trying to harness to |his purpose and which, in the lview of many Furopeans, U.S. | President Johnson ignores be-; 'cause of preoccupation with! Asia. Even a brief swing around western Europe suggests to a U.S. observer that the U.S. and its allies are badly out of tune with each other, To the allies, the cold war in Europe is over, but to the U.§. the hot war against Communist conquest in Viet Nam is the dominant re-| ality on the world scene today. Europeans, concentrating on internal problems in their rel- atively prosperous and secure continent, generally ignore, when they do not bitterly de- nounce, the Viet Nam conflict which is costing the U.S, scores of lives and $1,000,000,000 every month. The more deeply the U.S. be- comes involved in the war in Viet Nam, the more western Europe pulls away from Amer- ican influence. Antagonism to the U.S§.-Viet- namese policy is most evident in France where it ranges from high officials of the de Gaulle government to marching dem- onstrators in Paris' Place de Ja Concord. J ohn son's argument that the U.S. is waging a sirug- gle for freedom everywhere does not seem to get through to the NATO peoples of Europe. MAY CUT BACK They are nol even deeply con- cerned with military problems nearer home, Early last week at a meeting of NATO defence ministers in Paris, U.S. Defence Secretary. Robert S. McNamara was reported to have told the Europeans that the U.S. 'might be compelled to reduce its forces in Europe unless the Eu- peans do more for their own « applying -- Brotesting any American reduc- rotesting also against ffort to get forces on the is no great dan- against tion, but any ger stranded in such cities as Lon- Paris, Frankfurt, Rome, Athens and Tel Aviv. These are 'eléments of the crisis in' NAT which often have been blamed on de Gaulle, bigger than the actions of any single leader, The Europeans, in sum, see evidence that the U.S. is absorbed in Asian issues which they often do not like-- while France has taken a lead in European affairs with poli- cies which they sometimes ap- prove and sometimes bitterly resent, but which at least deal with problems that are close to home, ASIA 18 CRUCIAL If there were any doubt where major U.S. attention is fixed, Johnson himself undertook to dispel it in a speech July 12, when he proclaimed that the U.S. is a "Pacific power' and told the world: 'Asia is now the crucial arena of man's striving for independence and order and for life itself." | De Gaulle's policy of splitting the NATO military system, withdrawing French forces from NATO as he did July 1 and trying to diminish Amer- ican leadership has been -repu- diated by all the other 14 NATO allies. But his parallel diplo- matic campaign to build new economic and cultural ties with the European Communist coun-| tries seems to have widespread acceptance. | Furthermore, his drive to the East is in line with Johnson's announced policy of two years ago io construct bridges be-| tween western and eastern Eur.| opean countries, But with the spreading complications: of the war in Viet Nam and related) antagonisms between Washing-| ton and Moscow, the whole! Johnson policy bogged down. The appeal of de Gaulle's) European reconstruction et- forts, controversial though they are, may prove to be his major source of strength in trying to) construct the leadership posi- tion for France in western Eur- ope. His critics in Washington particularly are quick to say that his fledgling atomic force will always be small as com- pared with those of the U.S. and Russia. And he has pared down conventional French mil- itary strength to concentrate on nuclear weapons. | DeGaulle cannot match the} | big countries in real power, but he can hold out to Europe the dream of a more peaceful and normal continent and hope to |generate support from his ef- |forts to achieve it, He may also temper the re- sentment he has so far aroused by becoming, now that he has made his break, more of an ally than seemed possible last spring. MAY COME AROUND U.S. diplomats in Europe think de Gaulle will agree to jpractical co-operation between French troops remaining in West Germany and the NATO agree to let military planes of} NATO countries fly over France rather than compel them fo fly! around. gotiating for the right to return| to abandoned military bases in! France in event of war. French real estate for bases) and for overflights has always) been at the heart of NATO lo-| gistics and strategy, If the new agreements work out, some of the value of France would be saved for the alliance even though present headquarters, be moved from Paris to Brus-| sels. | "It looks as if France will wind up as half an ally,' one} NATO diplomat said, 'which is) certainly better than no ally at all," Thus there is widespread con-} fidence that NATO not only will survive the French break, but will also enjoy some French co-operation. How this works oul, however, will depend not only on negotiations now under way with France, but also on the ability of the defence} system to bear other strains. Ever since NATO was formed 17 years ago, iis main military muscle has been supplied by the conventional and nuclear forces of the United States. Today the U.S. has 225,000 men in West Germany. The West Germans have 440,000 under arms. France has 72,000 and Britain 53,000. MAY REDUCE FORCES 'Typical of the proliferation of NATO's troubles is the fact that the British may soon withdraw some thousands of their troops to save money at a time when Britain is in serious financia) difficulty at home, Such problems of sharing bur-} dens pose difficult issues for the} NATO allies. In an interview in| Bonn last month, Chancellor} Ludwig Erhard deplored talk of} troop withdrawals from West) Germany for cost reasons, say- ing this gave the "smell of bus- iness" to a vital problem of se-| curity. He protested against any substantial cut in American! forces particularly. "These troops are neces- sary," Erhard said. 'The pres-} ence of American troops in Ger-) many is the best guarantee of} peace, not only for us but for the Americans too." Geod Nemes To Remember When Buying or 'Selling || REAL ESTATE Reg. Aker -- President Bil MeFeeters -- Vice Pres. SCHOFIELD-AKER forces there. They expect that! in return for co-operation from the NATO radar network guard- ing western Europe against LTD. 723-2265 Now Is The Time To Order Your Winter Fuel Save PHONE On Premium Quality FUEL OIL 668-3341 DX FUEL OIL Serving Oshawa - Whitby - Ajax and District played 'as a young musician| i é ' Minton's Playhouse in Harlem, | prompted The U.S. also is hopefully ne-| where he met saxophonist Par- fears of ker and trumpeter Gillespie. Truck Firm Plans Plant CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) -- White Trucks, a division of White Motor Corp., will build a new plant at Kelowna, B.C., to expand production of its heavy duty trucks in Canada, it was announced Monday Cost of the land, building, machinery and inventory was estimated al $4,000,000, Con- struction is scheduled to begin immediately, with March 41, 1967, as production target date for the trucks. The new vehicles. to he celled White-Autocars, will be light- weight versions of the com- pany's new 4000 model series, introduced e@arlier this year, The company said it will eventually employ 150. The head of the plant will be Doug las Robinson, now manager of White's Cockshutt truck plant in Brantford, Ont, Daily pro- duction will average eight or 10) trucks, H. J. Nave, president of White Trucks, said the new models "will be designed to meet the requirements of oper- ators in Western Canada as well as the western United States and will be in addition to the production of certain con- ventional models . now being built in Brantford," | | Hausa soldiers from the Mos-| Kidn |with several jazz groups, even-\lem north who staged last tually graduating to sessions at) weck's army revolt were in their mutiny by domination by the Ibos. stimulate the kidneys to help relieve the condition causing the backache and tired feeling, Soon he felt better <rested better, If you are bothered by backache, Dodd's Kidney Pills may help you, too, You ean depend on Dodd's, New large size saves money. of Saving CONFIDENCE ! CONVENIENCE ! COMFORT ! CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST CONFIDENCE -- knowing that you are receiving the best rate of interest -- paid more often. daily and all day pany, SAVE WITH... CONVENIENCE -- longer saving. hours Saturday. COMFORT -- dealing with friendly people --~ with a community Trust Com- Central Ontario Trust & Savings Corporation 1% Simeee St N. Oshawa, 723-8221 23 King. St. W. Sewmenvile, 623-2527 "Let's call our Imperial Life man. He'll shed some light on how our insurance fits in with the government pension plan." Will government pension plan benefits --disability, retirement, death--be enough for you and your family needs? With the unique Security Planner, an Imperial Life man can show you how they fit in with other financial provisions you may have made for the future. Don't be uncertain--call him today. No obligation, of course. onan IMPERIAL LIFE covers yous for life Life, Pension, Health and @ Accident Plans Individual or Group Basis. J. C. Waldinsperger « R. J, White Ask too, about the new Imperial Centennial Pian.

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