Oshawa Times (1958-), 21 Oct 1966, p. 2

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2 THE GOHAWA TIMES, Pridey, Getoder 21, 1955 A GLANCE AROUND THE GLOBE West Allies Affirm Strong NATO Needed |HOME. Will Picket BONN (Reuters)--The United States, Britain and West Ger- today stated their 3 ' AE Her a = viewed the range of subjects to be discussed and agreed th three delegation heads empha- sized the "importance attached by their governments to NATO and their determination to main- tain the strength, cohesion and vitality of the alliance and its integrated system of defence." iJ s ee? «& Minister Criticized OTTAWA (CP) -- The director of the Cigar Institute of Canada today said Canada's minister of Indian affairs had shown a hy- pocritical approach to his at- tempts to advertise the Cana- dian cigar. Fred Edge said in an inter- view Arthur Laing had refused to receive an Indian social sci- ence student, Mona Jacob, of Cold Lake, Alta., who has been chosen as "'the voice, the face and the figure" of the cigar in- dustry in Canada, Mr. Edge said Mr. Laing's office refused to receive Miss Jacob, also known as Whisper- Cloud, because "a colleague" of the minister's does ndét believe in smoking. Two Shot Dead TIMMINS (CP) -- Police Thursday arrested a man after two persons were shot to death in their home. The victims, both believed to be more than 70 years old, were identified as Dan Mousseau and his wife Ann. Police surrounded the house for 90 minutes while tear gas bombs were thrown through the windows. A brief exchange of shots took place between police and the man inside the house before the latter was wounded in the right leg and taken into custody. A .22-calibre rifle was seized. No charges have been laid The arrested man was to hospital for treatment. Licence Re-issued TORONTO (CP) -- Toronto's ehief coroner, Dr. Morton Shul- man, Thursday regained his driver's licence after passing a PRINCELY PAGE It's not Little Lord Faun- tleroy, but Prince Andrew, the 6 - year - old son of Queen Elizabeth II, strid- ing into Westminster Ab- bey in London today to act as page boy at a wedding. His parents also attended. It was the wedding of the Marquis of Hamilton to Miss Sacha Phillips. (AP Wirephoto) was confiscated last week when he was stopped in a traffic check and a policeman noticed the licence expired in 1964. He said he hadn't been reminded by the department of transport. He was told he would have to be retested and that he would have to wait until Nov. 4 for test. He said earlier his licence) the test. HERE and THERE SCHOOL REVIEW Frank Shine, business ad- ministrator of the Pare nt- Separate School Board, pre- sented a review of the Oshawa Separate school system at a St. Joseph's Teacher Association audience at their first meeting of the year. Mr. Shine gave statistics about administrating and budgeting schools and he pointed out the functions of the board's new schools, A parent- teacher association award was to John Kelly, custo- dian and cross-guard, by the Rt. Rev. Monsignor Paul Dwyer for devotion and interest to children. FANCY DRESS The Oshawa Humoresque Club, CCB (Blind) held its initial fall meeting Oct. 13. It was decided to hold a Hallo we'en Social Oct. 27. Members were asked to attend in fancy dress. Prizes will be. awarded for the most original costumes. OTTAWA (Special) -- An Osh- awa firm has been awarded a contract by the department of defence production. PAM Inter- national Electionic Special- ists Ltd., will supply electron tubes to the value of $11,014. The contract is one of 144 un- classified defence contracts totalling almost $5 million awarded by the department. MINOR BLAZE Whitby fire department was called to the annex of the Ontario Hospital, Whitby, NOW OPEN! JUG MILK 293 MARY ST. North ef Adelaide Thursday when a small carton caught fire. It was quickly re- moved and there was no danger or serious damage. BANK DEBITS Debits to Oshawa bank ac- counts in September totalled 378.2 million, an increase from August of 1966 and a substan- tial increase over September of 1965. August 1966 was 328.6 million and for September of 1965, 319.3 million. HEIFERS SOLD Garnet Symons and Son, Bowmanville, paid $800 to Bar- ton Bros., Vankleek Hill, for a holstein heifer at a sale held by the Eastern Breeders In- corporated Artificial Insemina- tion Unit of Kemptville. Hat Farms International paid $700 to Kahn Bros. Brooklin, another heifer which will be exported. The sale brought a total of $20,485 to establish a the series. of savings as well, THESE ARE COMFORT: that feeling for new high average of $706 fer TORONTO (CP)--The House- wives Organization for Modern Economy has chosen a Lob- law's store near the busy Yonge and Bloor intersection for mass picketing today by 2,000 house- wives protesting rising food prices, Albert Wallace, director of store operations for Loblaw Groceterias Co. Lid., said Thursday he thought the whole idea was silly. as ty ao an Gaiy a hundred or so of the women could get into this par- ticular store," he said. "Two thousand will paralyse the whole Bloor-Yonge area." Cannon Racers OTTAWA (CP) -- Federal archaeologists have unearthed two cannon racers installed by the British in 1849 at Fort Well- ington in Prescott, Ont., it was announced Thursday. Cannon racers are rails set| out in a semi-circle to help line up the guns. In this case, they were aimed squarely across the St. Lawrence at the town of Og- densburg, N.Y. Fort Wellington never saw ac- tion after it was rebuilt in 1839 but British troops crossed the river from the site in February, 1813, to occupy Ogdensburg. The recovered cannon racers and others the archaeologists expect to find soon will be the basis for reconstruction of can- non positions at the fort, now a federal historic site. Costs Soar WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Viet Nam war is costing more than President Johnson esti- mated last January. Treasury department figures showed Thursday that costs during July, that costs during July, August and September were 10 per cent above the president's earlier projections and hit an annual rate of almost $63,000,000,000, The annual rate was $1,700,- 000,000 higher than an annual rate announced only a week ago by the commerce depart- ment. | FM Station Okayed WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Federal Communications Com- mission Thursday granted Nor- mandy Broadcasting Corp. of Glens Falls, N.Y., a permit to operate an FM station on 95.9 megacycles, War On Skirts ST. HELIER, Channel Islands (AP)--Jersey, Britain's honey- moon island in the English Channel, has declared war on the mini-skirt. Two girls, one 15 and the other 13, reported they were taken to a police station Thursday and ordered to drop their hemlines after a woman officer found the skirts were eight inches above the knee. Mark Passed LONDON (AP)--Francis Chi- chester, Britain's 65 - year - old lone yachtsman, reported Thurs- day he has passed the halfway mark on his 15,000-mile journey to Australia from Britain. Chi- chester is averaging 140 miles a day in his yacht Gypsy Moth IV, a 58-foot ketch. He left Britain 54 days ago. NEW DELHI (Reuters)-- Presidents Tito of Yugoslavia and Nasser of the United Arab Republic today began a four-day conference with Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. The three, who are among the most prominent leaders of the non-aligned world, planned to mow the international situa- ion, Opening the conference, Mrs. Gandhi said the brutal and tragic conflict now raging in Viet Nam must be ended before it engulfs the world, The only real solution, she said, was a peaceful political settlement in keeping with the wishes of the people of Viet Nam, free from outside inter- ference. Reviewing the current world situation, Mis, Gaudi spune oF the "stark fact of poverty and hunger aggravated by the pop- ulation explosion" in the world. She said it was in the interest Of all nati tpst the threats KINGSTON, Ont. (CP) -- 'Health Minister MacEachen told Queen's University students to- day the government should con- sider establishing '"'a permanent committee, which will keep par- liamentary procedure under con- tinual review and put forward acceptable reforms." "Our political institutions have not been substantially modified since the 19th century," he said. Mr. MacEachen, addressing the students on the "new so- ciety," said a third major tech- noligical revolution is upon us. He called this "the age of cy- bernation--the product of the marriage of automation and electronic brains." While there were 1,500,000 re- searchers in the world today, most of them were in the fields of the physical sciences, not the social sciences. He urged man- kind to search for new ways to make these physical advances work for its betterment and ful- filment. In the age of the permanent scientific revolution education will cease to be a choice or a privilege but become a neces- sity, he said. WANTS FREE EDUCATION "Education will have to be free, to all, at all levels--and permanent." This new age will call for a complete revamping and revision of our social secur- ity programs and approaches, he said. "Ideals of a world in which poverty had always been man's normal lot, cannot be applied ef- fectively to the problems of the affluent age." Social scientists and econo- mists had proposed that the gov- ernment should transfer suffi- RED TAPE IN KNOTS NEW DELHI (AP) -- R. L. Mehta, city commissioner for public grievances in the Indian capital, has a complaint. Offi- cials in charge of complaints in federal government minis- tries sometimes take months to answer his letters, he says. MacEachen Claims Canada 'Needs Parliamentary Review naligned World Leaders Meet For New Delhi Talks of poverty and hunger are met. She said it is incumbent on ad- vance zations to help reduce the wide disparity between rich and poor nations. Non-aligned developing natio also must make a tremendous --_ to become self-reliant, she said. She said the three countries represented at the meeting shared concern about their com- mon problems. "Our attempt is not to: shut others out 'but to find ways to bring them in. The purpose of non-alignment is not to bring in new barriers but lower existing ones." Nasser said the most serious contradiction in the world today is the disparity between poverty and wealth and between prog- se snd under-develanmant. He said despite all their ef- forts, under-developed countries lacked the material, scientific and technological means they needed cient wealth to every member of the community to meet his basic needs, The great impact of automa- tion will not be on those already in the labor force, they would be protected by unions and on- the-job training, but on those en- tering the labor force in the fu- ture. For them automation would mean a narrowing of job opportunities, and possibly lim- ited incomes, The full implications of this era will only be realized by "your children and your chil- dren's children." Text of his speech was issued to the press before delivery. MP Suggests Tax Removal OTTAWA (CP)--Bryce Mack- asey (L--Montreal Verdun) said Thursday the federal govern- ment could lower the costs of drugs by 10 per cent "just like that" by abolishing its sales tax on such products, Mr. Mackasey, parliamentary secretary to Labor Minister Nicholson, made the remark as the Commons special commit- tee on drug prices wound up five hours of questioning offi- cials from the Switzerland- based drug company, Hoffman- Laroche Ltd. Replying to Mr. Mackasey, Hoffman-Laroche a Cc, A. Nowolney said a $4.50 item his company sells to a druggist carries an additional 50 cents for the federal tax. Mr. Nowolney said the same item would have a retail price of $10 since this was the "'usual markup." Dr. Harry Harley (L--Halton) said there was no assurance that lifting the federal tax would result in such a saving. The company suggested drug prices could be lowered by changing patent laws to protect new discoveries. Good Nemes To Remember When Buying or Selling | REAL ESTATE Reg. Aker -- President Bill McFeeters -- Vice Pres. SCHOFIELD-AKER| LTD. 723-2265 The 5th "C" Of Saving COMMON SENSE: .neaning that now is a good time to be setting aside money just in cose. At present, conditions generally are unsettled, to say the least and people who have money on deposit at 444% (Like OUR saving depositors) ore realizing the full benefit of the first 4 C's that comes from knowing that you have cosh available when you need it. CONVENIENCE: Longer saving hours doily and all day Saturday. CONFIDENCE: Knowing thet you are receiving the best rote 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 SIMCOR ST. NW. OSHAWA, 723-5221 23 KING ST. Ww. 623-5221 BOWMANVILLE THE Irks Professor MONTREAL haar McGill law professor Thursday night recent proposals by the Quebec government to make French the "official" language of Quebec as "a violation of human rights." Dr. John P. Humphrey, a for- mer director of the human rights division of the United Nations, and now a law and po- litical science professor at Mc- Gill, said that apart from every- thing else the proposals are "unconstitutional." He told a meeting on human rights sponsored by the United Nations Association of Montreal that the government is trying to "make a monolingual Quebec, where only French is spoken in the courts and in the legislature. "This violates my rights as a member of an English-speaking minority."' ae ease save the wastern nrov, inces an opportunity to refuse French-speaking Canadians the right to establish schools there. Detroit Police Fight Tryout DETROIT (AP)--Detroit po- lice are at war over the city's experiment of using only one of- ficer in a patro] car during morning and afternoon hours of duty, The police say it isn't safe --for them. One officer has been sus- pended for refusing to go it alone in a patrol car. The 3,000 - member Detroit Police Officers Association has filed unfair labor practices charges against the city with the National Labor Relations Board. The order for one-man cars, which took effect 10 days ago, came from Police Commis- sioner Ray Girardin. He blamed a shortage of of- ficers. Girardin said also: "An officer working alone tends to use less muscle and more of his intelligence." U Of T Planning Canada Teach - In TORONTO (CP)--The Univer- sity of Toronto will hold a two- day teach-in beginning Nov. 5 on the political and social future of Canada, it was announced Thursday. Speakers at the student-spon- sored teach-in will include: Dal- ton Camp, president of the na- tional Progressive Conservative party; Patrick Watson, former co-host of the CBC's This Hour Has Seven Days; newspaper columnist Peter Newman and writer-journalist Pierre Berton. WEATHER FORECAST TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts issued by the weather office at 5:30 a.m.: Synopsis: Warm air is streaming toward the Great Lakes and will d tures into the 60s across south- ern Ontario today. Farther north, where considerable cloud- iness is expected, afternoon temperatures should reach the 50s. Fair warm weather will continue into the weekend. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Niagara, Lake On- tario, Haliburton, Killaloe, Al- goma, Sault Ste. Marie, Geor- gian Bay, Windsor, London, Hamilton, Toronto, North Bay, Sudbury: Mainly sunny and few cloudy periods ana warm Saturday. Winds southwest 15 to 25. Timagami, Cochrane, White River: Clondv with a few sunny periods and warmer today and Saturday. Winds southwest 15 to 25. Ottawa region: Mainly sunay today and Saturday. Warmer Saturday. Winds westerly 15 be- warmer today. Sunny with alyary) Sunny, Warmer Weather Continués Over Saturday coming light this evening and southerly 15 Saturday. Forecast tures Low overnight, high Saturday Windsor ...cccssses 48 St, Thomas srsveceee 45 stone Wingham ..:.s++05 42 Hamilton .,...+000+ 45 St. Catharines ..... 45 TOrOnto ..+.+eeeees Peterborough eeeee White River ...... SRISSSSSSAASSASSSSASSS cession in memory of the 12 men killed in Monday's fire. -- Black-draped pumpers, their muffled bells tolling, will carry the bodies of 10 of the city fine- men down Fifth Avenue before fire delegations coming from as far away as Alaska. - that uled for Thursday.) be Fire officials: estimate that 10,000 firemen and retired fire- men will participate in one way or another in the funerals. Fire- men have come from Toronto, Ottawa and Montreal and points all across the United States. 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