Oshawa Times (1958-), 27 Sep 1966, p. 3

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\ MRS, R. OH, BEDELL Would you like to see the Robinson house restored as a historical site? Six people were asked this question dur- ing a man-on-the-street sur- vey. They said: Bill Jaze- _ Bou, 98 Stevenson S.: "Yes, 1 would like to see it restored. I think that it is very impor- tant to keep some of our heri- tage. In years to come, peo- ple will always have a first hand account of what the past was like and it would also benefit school children. They could actually see it rather than read about it." Joe Van- Beek, RR 1, Hampton: "I HELEN FENTON ALEX ROBINSON think that it should be re- stored. There are a lot of things that they pay to have kept up nowadays that are not nearly as important as Robinson house. I know that whenever I go on holidays, these are the things that I look for. They are very worth- while projects." Alex Robin- son, 125 Wellington, Whitby: 'Why shouldn't it be restored and kept up? I know that we should keep up with the times but I don't think that all of the old buildings should be demolished just to make something prettier. I am sure BILL JAZEGOU that a lot of people would agree that some of the older buildings are much prettier than a lot of the newer ones they build today." Mrs. R. H. Bedell, Whitby: "Yes, I think that it would be a good idea to restore and keep the build- ing up. I'm in favor of pro- tecting our heritage, because once it is lost, it cannot be re- gained, It would be better to do it now than be sorry in the future." Shirly Contoris, 101 Craydon: 'I think so. There aren't that many historical sites around here. We have the automobile museum, | SHIRLEY CONTORIS JOE VANBE GK Henry house and maybe a few more, but this isn't really enough to give a good impres- sion of our heritage. The more that we can preserve, the better, then a whole pic- ture of the past will form." Helen Fenton, 1309 Broad- view: "I don't think they should wreck any of these old buildings. The architects say that Robinson house is sound enough to restore. I think that the citizens should take ad- vantage of it and show the visitors that they are proud of their heritage." U.K. Industry, Unions Talk On Productivity LONDON (CP)--Seventy top British industrialists and union chiefs assembled here today to discuss productivity with fresh evidence to prove their trips to the conference were necessary. The captains of industry and labor met at the government's behest for a one-day National Productivity Conference in ful- filment of a government elec- toral promise to stir the coun- try into more productive ways. Plans to increase industrial efficiency include more open trading of experience among businesses, better organization of professional and research services and methods to in- crease labor mobility. With government austerity measures beginning to slow down activity in such key fields as automobile production, the conference has acquired added importance since it was first proposed last March. On the eve of the meeting, car manufacturers announced reduced output. British Motor Corp., with almost half its 140,- 000 workers at 20 factories on short time, said between 11,000 and 12,000 men will be laid off outright early in November. Vauxhall Motors said 5,000 men will go on a four-day week shortly. SLOWDOWN SPREADS The snowballing repercussions of the automotive slowdown are already beginning to hit indus- tries dependent on car manu- facturing. Be's problem--and the gov- ernment's -- has been compli- cated by a strike of car-delivery men protesting against the fact that some of their fellow car- transport drivers have been laid off. Frank Cousins, union chief and former Labor cabinet min- Communist Headquarters Ati J i Dy MOSCOW (Reuters) -- Young Red Guards from Peking stormed and sacked Communist party offices, in the Chinese port of Fuchow, Pravda re- ported today. Tass news agency said the Peking correspondent of the So- viet Communist party newspa- per reported that a leaflet signed by Fuchow workers de- hea Guaras [Sen in The Daily Express. sulted them in every way and kept them in the building by force, the leaflet said. DENOUNCED HOODLUMISM The leaflet denounced the "hooligan actions" of the Red Guards and said shortcomings and mistakes in the work of party organs must be corrected by established methods of dis- i with which the young- scribed "with profound anger and indignation" outrages com- mitted by the youngsters. The leaflet said that in Fu- chow streets the Red Guards as- saulted party members, beat up workers and peasants, over- sters' "'pograms" had nothing in common. The correspondent said an- other leaflet told how the work- ers at a Peking woollen mill split into two groups, one of 'which formed a 'detachment turned cars of local party and state organs and searched the apartments of old revolutiona- ries. They openly declared their in- tention '"'to overthrow the pro- letariat and its dictatorship" and prepared to attack city and for beating dogs"--persons ac- ;cused of opposing Chairman |Mao Tse-tung's ideas. | "In the course of three weeks 29 persons, including 22 Com- munists, were attacked and beaten up by 'dog hunters'," the correspondent said. provincial party committee of- fices with the rallying cry "'fire atc om m and posts and head- quarters!" : At the city committee they ar- rested some party workers, in- The leaflet said a woman | worker who criticized the "dog | hunters" was whipped with |belts and beaten with sticks. |Several hundred workers were \labelled as monarchists. PC Annual Assembly Has Key To Leadership Convention By KEN KELLY OTTAWA (CP)--The drive for a national leadership convention of the Progressive Conservative party may depend on next month's annual meeting of On- tario Conservatives. Backers of the leadership campaign figure the Ontario| meeting will be crucial. If the) Ontario wing, or a major part) of it, supports national Presi- dent Dalton Camp's call for a leadership convention, they ex-| pect it will carry out the party's| annual national meeting here! Nov. 13-1 Opposition Leader Diefen- baker, fighting for his leader- ship for the fourth time in four! years, plans to be on hand for) the Ontario meeting. | His date to attend was made| before Mr. Camp publicly) raised the leadership issue but! it is safe to say he recognizes that the Ontario Tories could be the deciding factor at the na- tional meeting. } Court Confirms Liberal Victory | | WINNIPEG (CP)--The Mani-} toba Court of Appeal Monday confirmed the June 23 election of Liberal Edward Dow to the Manitoba legislature for the Turtle Mountain constituency. | After a review of 173 conten- tious ballots, the court gave Mr. Dow 2,149 votes, a five-vote edge over incumbent Peter Mc- Donald, Progressive Conserva- tive candidate, in| | Delegates to the Ontario As- sociation meeting Oct. 30-Nov. 1 |in Toronto are expected to have ja lot on their minds, It may }be their last annual meeting | before a provincial general elec- |tion. This, too, may play a part jin the Ontario association's at- titude to the national meeting and the leadership question. DIVISIONS A BARRIER Sharp divisions on the tional leadership within the provincial association might not be a good thing close to a prov- incial election. However, it appears likely that efforts will be made at the Ontario meeting to discuss the national leadership at least, if not to pass a resolution for or against a call for a national leadership convention. So far the Prince Edward Is- Jand association has come out in support of a decision on a leadership convention at the na-| tional association's annu !} meeting. The federal executive in Brit- ish Columbia took a similar line last weekend. And there now are stirrings on the Prairies. Eldon Woolliams, MP for Bow River and generally regarded as a Diefenbaker man, said the leadership issue should be de- cided now, "once and for all." L. R. Sherman, MP for Win- nipeg South, said he agrees with Mr. Camp that the national as- sociation meeting should look at the leadership question and de- cide whether a leadership con-| vention should be called soon. | na-| ister, has backed the strike in a direct challenge to economic policies that the government says will produce a beneficial shakeout of labor and which Cousins denounces as causing enforced unemployment. The productivity conference thus has developed into a dis- cussion of how best to get pro- duction off on the right foot when the present austerity hold- down is eased next year. Meanwhile, the pro - Labor Daily Mirror publishes a fea- ture article telling its 5,000,000 subscribers that "Britain lags shamefully behind" other indus- trial countries in productivity. CITES EVIDENCE The newspaper cites evidence that in the electrical machinery and appliances industries it takes four British workers to produce as much as one Ameri- can. The over - manning ratio amounts to more than three to one in chemicals and more than two to one in steel. Shipbuilder Iain Stewart puts most of the blame on "'un- trained managerial neonte" in , is chairman of Fair- fields-.of Glasgow, the ship- building firm bailed out of bank- ruptcy earlier this year by cap- ital from government and busi- nessmen -- including Canadian- born publisher Lord Th of Fleet--and an unprecedented productivity contract between unions and management. "The tendency has been to blame the unions for everything that's bad about industry," Stewart said. "This is nonsense --it's up to the management to create the setting whereby the unions can give their people the right kind of lead." Primate Hopeful On Union WINNIPEG (CP)--Most Rev. H. H. Clark of Winnipeg, Angli- can Primate of all Canada, said Monday he is hopeful his entire church will move together to- wards union with the United Church of Canada. Archbishop Clark was com- menting in an interview on a prediction 'by the editor of an independent Anglican newspa- per that hundreds of church members will leave the Angli- can church rather than partici- pate in such a union. Rev. Maurice Hardman of Winnipeg, owner and editor of The Communicator, said in an interview last week that cath- olic-minded Anglicans now are deciding whether to form a con- tinuing Anglican church or join other catholic communions. These people, like himself, "cannot see any satisfactory merger with the United Church," Mr, Hardman said. Archbishop Clark said: 'We are hopeful when we move for- wards towards union, we will carry the entire church with us. We would not want to take any iGves tat would divide us." He said Anglicans as a whole are willing to take as long as is necessary to ensure their church will not be split by un- ion. KILLED ON HAYRIDE PARIS, Ont. (CP)--A young woman was killed Friday night after falling from a hay-filled trailer loaded with young per- sons on a hayride. Mrs. Arnold Hutty, 28, of Paris, was pro- nounced dead on arrival at hos- pital. Police said the woman fell from the trailer as it passed over a bump and a rear wheel passed over her head. Called Threat To Peace WASHINGTON (CP) -- Worl tion in foreign aid, three finan- cial leaders told the annual meeting of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund 'y- "Tf the momentum of eco- nomic growth in Africa, Asia and Latin America is 'allowed eer SAMTC VAIL WWAEL FOR PICTURE * INVERNESS, Scotland (AP) It should have been 2 great picture. On the shores of Loch Ness sat the Loch Ness Phenomena Investigation Bureau, re- inforced by an American pro- fessor. , On Loch Ness itself, not 30 yards away, sat the Loch Ness pl valipa 'a ise ' ) a a4 tor of the Scottish tourist trade. "He came up under the very nose of our camera," said Professor Roy Mackal, a Chicago University biologist. "Tt appeared to be basking with a great hump sticking 14 'feet out of the water, Then it sank, creating a great vortex about 20 feet across." Unfortunately, Mackal ex- plained, the monster was so close that the bureau's high speed cameras could not tilt low enough on their mount- ings to photograph it. Still more unfortunately, one TOO CLOSE OF CENTURY of the bureau's technicians tried to get it with a hand camera but neglected to change the telefoto lens, All he got was an excellent pic- ture of the other side of Loch Ness. The Loch Ness Phenomena Investigation Bureau was formed five years ago to keep constant watch for the mon- ster. It gets its support from the universities. This sighting--last Friday-- was their nearest to success. Mackal says he believes the monster is a giant gastroped or sea slug--and that the loch holds not one monster but sev- eral. "Later the same day two English women reported see- ing humps in the loch," he said. "Then, we spotted four humps in the water moving independently. The fish in the vicinity were leaping about in excitement." Hits Toronto COOKSVILLE, Ont. (CP) -- School bus drivers failed to set- tle their differences with their employers Monday, forcing board of education officials to find. other means of bringing about 3,700 students to school today, The students in the Toronto Township board of education system were affected Monday when 66 bus drivers booked off sick, crippling school transpor- tation in parts of Peel County. Robert Wilson, spokesman for the drivers employed by Streetsville Coach Line, said Monday night' the drivers had been unable to resolve their dif- ferences at a meeting with Frank Galway, owner of the coach line. He said the drivers booked off sick when they were asked to work about five hours a week longer without additional pay. The Toronto Township Board chartered huses Monday to bring the students to school to- day. However, Harry Caswell, secretary of the Toronto Town- ship separate school board, said his board had been unable to arrange transportation for its 700 pupils. H. J. Brown, township busi- ness administrator, said the failure of the drivers to report affected four secondary and 15 public schools. Mr. Galway told the board his company had lost money for the Yast three years on the contract. He said he asked his drivers to work an hour a day longer for the same take-home pay to try and put the firm in the black. School Bus Drivers Strike Township Mr. Brown said Mr, Galway had been told that the board was holding him financially re- sponsible for the $100-a-day cost for the chartered buses. Most of the students walked or were driven to school Mon- day by their parents. Mr. Brown said more than 75 per cent of the students reached their schools, but most were late. The drivers, in this area near Toronto, average about $7 and $10 a day. to slow, if Nations in those re- gions iose heart, then the pros- pect is for deterioration in world affairs that in the end will in- evitably become of the highest concern in the industrial na- tions themselves,' President George Woods of the bank de- elared, ... Managing Director Pierre Paul Schweitzer of the fund said the leading industrial nations are ignoring a situation of the "gravest concern" if they fail to expand foreign assistance be- cause of preoccupation with their own inflationary trends, pursuit of economic growth and measures to reduce their bal- ance-of-payments deficits, Conference Chairman Jam- shid Amouzegar of Iran, wel- coming the 105 countries from the non-Communist world, said it is unrealistic to think a situ- ation can persist in which the industrial nations of North America, Europe and the west- ern Pacific, with less than one- fifth of the global population, "produce and enjoy more than half the world's wealth." It would be much less expen- sive in the long run to provide enough aid to prevent political turmoil than to have to move in after the turmoil has flared, he said. Finance Minister Sharp, head- ing a Canadian delegation that includes Governor Louis Ras- minsky of the Bank of Canada, was to address the five-day con- ference today. nagging backache! He used to be bothered by backaches and tired feeling. When he that irritation of the bladder and and tired feeling, Kidney Pills. Smart man. Dodd's Pills stimulate the kidneys to help relieve the condition causing the backache and tired Lag Soon he felt better --rested better, If you are bothered by backache, Dodd's Kidney Pills may help you, too. You can depend on Dodd's, New large size saves money. THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, September 27, 1966 3 An attempt oe oe to move the house to aa Historic Site | cation on the Galt Under Hammer | OTTAWA (CP) -- Sir Alex- ander Galt's historic home in Sherbrooke, Que., will be de- molished, a victim of moving difficulties and a financial pull- out by the Quebec government. The resources department an- nounced Monday a contract has Deen let REAL ESTATE | Reg. Aker -- President Bill McFeeters -- Vice Pres. SCHOFIELD-AKER LTD. 723-2265 tional historic importance, Owners of the former Galt es- tate administer a children's home and wanted the original site for new construction. The 5th "C" Of Saving COMMON SENSE: meaning that now is @ good time to be setting aside money just in case. At present, conditions generally are unsettled, to say the least and people who have money on deposit at 442% (Like OUR saving depositors) cre realizing the full benefit of the first 4 C's of savings as well. THESE ARE COMFORT: that feeling that comes from knowing that you have cash avoilable when you need It. CONVENIENCE: Longer saving hours dolly and all day Saturday, CONFIDENCE: Knowing that you are receiving the best rate of interest paid more often. CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST: dealing with a COM- MUNITY Trust Company, local savings Invest- ment growth, Central Ontario Trust & Savings Corporation 19 SIMCOE ST. N. OSHAWA, 723-5221 sai-s2ht SOWMANVILLE Unionist Hits At Inflation 'Myth' } | HAMILTON (CP) -- William |Dodge, executive vice-president | of the Canadian Labor Congress, }said Monday that inflation in |Canada is a myth. While prices, wages and sal- aries have risen in recent years, these developments have been greatly exaggerated in public discussions, Mr. Dodge told delegates from Ontario, Quebec | and the Maritimes at a Kiwanis | Club convention here. | Consumer. prices in Canada| have risen "nine per cent fron, 1960 to 1965, in comparison with a United Statés rise of seven per cent, he said. In the same period price rises in other industrialized countries have been much greater, with |Germany up 15 per cent, Swe- den up 2% per cent and Japan up 35 per cent, Mr. Dodge said. 'Whatever increases we have experienced in Canada have been exceeded in almost all other industrial countries, so that our competitive position has not been undermined. "The large wage increases |which have received so much |publiec attention recently are not |typical settlements. They repre- jsent a long overdue correction of the very inequitable treat-} ment accorded to special groups | of workers over a period of fe Ee oe DANCE) OR TWIRL REGISTER | DAILY 4 pm to 7 pm 'FOR FALL TERM. I"ARVEY DANCE ACADEMY Oshawa Shopping Centre 725-6122 WAN clothing and books, paper boy for on them rests combined labour of thousands skills. Address . , | Energetic, Enthusiastic | YOUNGSTERS Age 10 to 14 who want to-earn extra money as Times Carriers Entering High School this Fall? Help purchase beck to school Sturdy are the shoulders of the news- sponsibilty of bridging the gap be- tween newspoper and the reader. The newspaper. they deliver represents the ple both here and abroad, plus pro- duction costs that run into the thous- ands of dollars, It is therefore a job that cannot be token lightly, the suc- cess or failure of the route depends entirely on a keen sense of detail and strong interest im business, Both Strong prerequisites in today's world of business. But few people have such on inbred instinct and the carrier's job affords an excellent opportunity for a young boy or girl to learn these -- APPLICATION MAKE YOUR APPLICATION NOW! Mail or Bring Your Application to the "Times" Circulation Department in Oshawe or Whitby. TED! the' re- of peo- Would you really like to put Some money away and let it grow for a year... and a second year... Buy our new Growth Savings Certificates You receive $10.00 for every $7.50 you invest for six years. That's a one-third Increase in your money. 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