Oshawa Times (1958-), 28 Oct 1966, p. 3

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" VIET CONG MINES BRIDGE NEAR SAIGON This bridge, only four miles from Saigon on Route 13, a main route to the north of South Viet Nam, is rendered useless for the time being by a huge land mine exploded by Viet Cong guerrillas at An Loe Grid- ers are twisted out of shape and planked roadway is ruined at the near end. One PC President Welcomes Rival For Top Party Post TORONTO (CP) Dalton Camp, president of the Progres- sive Conservative Association, Thursday said he welcomes Toronto lawyer Arthur Maloney as a rival. Mr. Maloney earlier in the day announced he will chal- lenge Mr. Dalton's position at the party's three-day confer- ence which begins Nov. 14 in Ottawa. "This will give the party a chance to express itself on the two points of view," Mr. Camp told a luncheon meeting of the Osgoode Hall Law and Literary Society. Mr. Camp has been cam- paigning across the country for Firm Questions Safety Of Competitor's Product By KEN KELLY OTTAWA (CP) -- The Com- mons drug prices inquiry de- cided Thursday to dig deeper into statements by a Montreal drug manufacturer that com- petitors sell eimilar but cheaper tranquillizers whose potency variations raise questions of safety. sThowe are serious charges, ean you back them up?" asked Dr. Lewis Brand (PC--Saska- toon) in questioning senior offi- cers of Smith, Kline and French, a Montreal subsidiary of a large United States drug maker. Robert F. Daily, SKF vice- president and general-manager, and Ross F. Bethel, SKF's tech- nical manager, promised to sup- ply the committee with two sets of scientific tests to support their case. The company's brief named the manufacturing rivals as Micro Chemicals Ltd., in asso- ciation with Paul Maney Com- pany, and Jules R. Gilbert Ltd. WANT TIGHTER LAWS SKF cited the practices of these companies in support of the contention that patent and drug safety laws should be tightened to provide greater protection for the general public and for drug developers against imitators selling at lower prices. SKF told the committee that Micro Chemicals - Paul Maney obtained a compulsory licence on SKF's process for producing trifluoperazine, a potent tran- quillizer used as a calming agent in cases ranging from minor to major menta) ill- nesses. Free of the costs of research and development, the company sold it at' prices 20 per cent lower than SKF's but with po- tency variations that meant a patient may "suddenly receive a 20-per-cent increase or de- crease in dosage" besides on the average getting 16 per cent less of the -drug than SKF's product. The SKF officers said tests in their own labs and tests com- missioned by the company from Warnock Hersey Laboratories established the potency varia- were even beyond the potency variations allowed in the offi- cial British Pharmacopoeia, Speeches Piped To Hospital For Ailing Governor - General OTTAWA (CP) -- Via tele- phone, Governor-General Vanier heard himself address the ban- quet Thursday night opening the first annual meeting of the Planned Appeal Right Defended OTTAWA (CP)--The power of the proposed Public Service Commission to hear appeals against its own decisions was actended Thursday by Arnold Heeney. He was testifying before a ee nie committee deal- federal employees. Mr. Heeney wrote the report on which the legislation is based. He is also a former chairman ef the Civil Service Commis- sion, to be succeeded by the Public Service Commission once the legislation is passed. Other witnesses have criti- eized the fact that the commis- sion will not only have the power to approve promotions, transfers or lay-offs in the civil service but to hear appeals against its own decisions. Union witnesses have said that every- thing but hiring should be sub- ject to negotiation. LEWIS OPTICAL Established for over 30 yeors King Street W. 'est 725-0444 NEED A NEW FURNACE? Ne Down Payment--First Peyment December--Coll PERRY Day or Night .. . 723-3443 with labor legislation for | Vanier Institute of the Family at Government House. ing from influenza, went by taxi) to Civic Hospital for a check-up Thursday afternoon. His address to the banquet was tape-recorded before he left. Government House electri- clans spliced telephone lines into the banquet sound equip- jment so the Governor-General jcould hear speeches by Bishop | Ernest Reed of Ottawa, institute President Dr. Wilder Penfield | of Montreal, and his own ad-| dress ~-Madamo-Manier_sttended the! dinner opening the two - day meeting. _ The Governor-General, speak- jing in English, spoke of the "new uncertainty and moral] confusion of our young people" and stressed the importance of religion in building strong fam- ily bonds. tions this year. The variations- The Governor-General, suffer-| a review of the national leader- ship of the party. Mr. Maloney says Mr. Camp is "'all wrong" to do this. He said in Ottawa that the majority of Progressive Con- servative members of Parlia- ment have pledged him support in his campaign to become party president. In an interview after his speech Mr. Camp would not comment on reports from' Ot- tawa that party headquarters had distributed an agenda for the November conference with- out consulting him. NOT SURE IT'S TRUE "T have heard this but I am not sure it is true. I would not like to comment until I know just what the situation !s." Normally, Mr. Camp, would determine the agenda in con- sultation with the party's prin- cipal officers and the national executive. Meanwhile, the Ontario Pro- gressive Association revealed Thursday that attempts will be made te head off any discussion on the.national leadership issue. at the provincial body's three- day annual meeting starting here Sunday. E. A. Goodman of Toronto, chairman of the resolutions committee and @ backer of Mr. Diefenbaker, said the idea is to keep the meeting focused on Ontario matters and not have it become an "advance battle- ground" for a fight due at the November national convention. of the militiamen guarding the bridge was killed. AP Wirephoto DON'T PUT BACK HANDS OF TIME TORONTO (CP) -- When daylight time ends at mid- night, Saturday, Oct. 29, don't turn' the hands of the clock back an hour, warns an expert. Stop it for an hour instead --and avoid damage to the works, says clock expert James Brown, In letters to Toronto news- papers for the second year, Mr. Brown warns that turn- ing the hands back on a striking clock damages the pins and levers which oper- ate the strike and chime mechanisms. The result could be an expensive over- haul of the whole clock, he said, Instead, stop the pendu- lum on valuable clocks for the first hour of standard time, he advised. FREIGHT PAYS WAY Freight accounts for 85 per cent of the CNR's earnings and passenger services for only seven per cent. OTTAWA (CP)--The spotlight shifted from housing to labor problems in the Commons Thursday with both Liberal and pposition MPs suggesting a good, hard look at the current labor situation. David Lewis, deputy House leader of the NDP, suggested the government set up special machinery to handle strikes in the transportation field before the next crisis arises. The debate took place during consideration of labor depart- ment estimates which had been before the House on three pre- vious occasions, Debate contin- ued until the House adjourned OTTAWA (CP)-A trusteeship that Parliament clamped on tne Seafarers' International Union of Canada three years ago is due to expire at the end of this vear. Government sources say there is almost no chance that it will be extended. The SIU will be on its own as of Jan. 1 Some labor leaders are un- easy about the government's re- luctance to extend the trustee- ship legislation by cabinet or- der, Spokesmen in the shipping in- |dustry have also voiced doubts privately to the government, They face critical contract ne- gotiations with the SIU early in 1967. Labor's uneaseiness' is evi- denced by the fact that the Ca- nadian Labor Congress has still not readmitted the SIU, despite federal trustees: last spring. The CLC's April convention in Winnipeg approved, after bitter debate, a resolution giving the 21 - member executive council }power to take the SIU back. The controversial sailors' union | was expelled in 1959 for raiding) the membership of other CLC affiliates. Two sessions of the executive council have been held since April and there have been in- formal talks with the SIU lead-| ership on reaffiliation. But there | has been no final action, even though a new round of talks is' reported to be going on. The unprecedented _ trustee-| ship was proposed by Mr. Jus-/ tice T. G. Norris after his fed-) eral investigation into labor] strife on the Great Lakes. His! HAVE YOU CALLED "1 FE-LINE" WHY NOT CALL TODAY? 728-2111 Good Names Te Remember REAL ESTATE Reg. Aker -- President Bill McFeeters -- Vice Pres. | SCHOFIELD-AKER LTD. | 723-2265 When Buying or S-iling |} | OFFICE EQUIP. LTD. 725-3506 9 KING ST. E., OSHAWA Quick! Do _ the name of your insurance company? 73 KING EAST OSHAWA. ONT. Don't be surprised if you find it's the "Royal". . After all, it's the largest general insurance group in Canada. Chances are you didn't know thatl You see, the Royal does not have salesmen, It deals through independent agents, like us. We are neighbours to you; we're impartial--- the best kind of insurance men to know your needs, It's an arrange- ment that works well for you, LIMITED nsurance Of Alii Ciasses DEER HUNTERS--Now is the time to buy accident insurance. ile you know OFFICE 723-5251 a direct appeal from the three | SIU May Be On Its Own When Trusteeship Ends report laid the blame for beat- ings and terrorism ai ine coor of the SIU and branded its then- boss, Hal Banks, a ruthless la- bor gangster. J The government enacted its trusteeship legislation only after ra long and desperate effort to work out a trusteeship run by labor. This effort foundered on disagreement between the CLC and its American counterpart, the AFL-CIO. MPs Suggest Remedies. For Labor Problems and the estimates remain as the first topic of debate today. Earlier, the House gave first reading to National Housing Act lamendments which. would in- crease the aggregate amount of loans insurable by Central Mort- gage and Housing Corp. and widen areas for loans for stu- dent housing, rental housing and sewage-treatment plants, MUST CONSIDER INTERESTS Mr. Lewis, a veteran labor lawyer from the Toronto riding of York South, said it is 'not always possible to strike for as long as the labor partner in the situation may like," especially when the interests of society "require that a strike be ended before damage which might be irreparable is done." But this did not justify com- pulsory arbitration, he added. "The process af rallactiva bargaining dies" when compul- sory arbitration becomes statu- tory. He suggested a separate transport labor act providing labor department staff trained in railway matters to assist in | are you going to make up your mind to | have that new Oil Furnace installed for eee luxurious, economical heating next | inter ? Lander-Stark's own staff of air § ~ + THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, October 28, 1966 3 the embittering experience of giving notice of bargaining in November, 1965, and not com- ing down to the wire until August, 1966." If negotiations in the recent railway dispute had Ed ahead last February or March "the likelihood is a settlement would have been made without a strike," he added in reference to the week - long rail strike which ended early in Septem- ber. The issue of injunctions against pickets was raised by Mr. Lewis and Ralph B. ! (L--York - Humber), both whom urged that they be abol- ished in labor disputes. 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