Oshawa Times (1958-), 11 Jan 1967, p. 3

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| | | | THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, Jenucry 11, 1967 3 Canada's Big Banks |Bus-'Tyain Smash Survivor Attacked At Ottawa ays Boys Lifted Barrier north one before the bus began to move, but they felt no up- ward pressure on the north bar- rier and did not rivo Real Charotte, 17, a Dorion student, testified he ran across port in Mexico City after the the tracks beside the bus when : j * he south barrier rose immedi- By DENNIS ORCHARD \securities trading and into the publishes meaningless financial) - DAVE M : zi : t He ' jer OTTAWA (CP)--Bankers in|biggest underwriting organiza-|statements, and ran their insti-| Pi Bey i on ae minutes before the sr ids Nie i isi se , ' jtut vith ** ; ** the ae s ' nae g : Sa poten oh ee Oe as icaiive is stifled lathicimeey of Seectete beaks nesses at a coroner's inquest) She also said she-saw the boy As he reached the third set = ay were so accused Tues-|competition goes by the board| ,It was bop-the-banks day for|uesday night told of seeing)nearest the bus extend his arms of tracks he saw the 100-car r and Fy 0 ace 4 re ape fs fag PP ptaiiiaia: : alnee \two or three boys tampering|under the barrier as it rose to freight train barreling down the , mt £ g cloudy day in formal testimony before|and the press holds back news|the committee, which was be Sith a level oroeni Se caerilae ihe bud Giuht lke fatal chose: lit ' i Winds a committee of the House ofjunfavorable to the banking|ginning another wave of hear-| 3004. por arte ae : ene s fatal cross- line from Montreal. He had to rly 20 Commons, by a non - conform-|"cartel" for fear of reprisals,|ings on government proposals|*°CONOS Devore & Dus - train Ing attempt. _. dive into a ditch to avoid being ing financial analyst on the one he said. for revision of the Bank Act. |Tagedy Oct. 7. _She was seated on the tight hit because the north barrier hand and by a young promoter | Terry Howes of Toronto, self-| URGED BETTER SERVICES _. The. inquest started Monday side of the bus four or five seats was down. es on the other (styled entrepreneur-general who| Mr. Lafferty and Mr. How jand is being presided over by|from the back, next to the win- The inquest continues. sday yp the . ' te : wien ) Mr, Latlerty ang Mr. Howes! Judge Marc-Andre Blain. It was/dow. A young girl sitting beside ------ - ete 30 R. G. D. Lafferty of Montreal(freely admitted a background|were witnesses No. 2 and 3.|<et un to deal with the collision|her died in the flaming wreck- 30 said interlocking directorates|of curious business enterprises,|They followed the: morning ap- a MP higantauciene ey a CNH Pee: WEES extend the influence of banks |said bankers are too powerful./pearance of Joseph Pope, Tor- etween a westbound CNR age. | 30 into big trust companies, into! They ignored shareholders lonth inveNGHOnt deaiek Ge call freight train and a chartered) The bus was headed for a 30 : aides) : sti eal prolyl Ao ehould: offer better | DUS carrying 45 students. dance in Hudson, Que., to cele- 28 Haag ; | Eighteen students and driver|brate the fact that all students services for foreign exchange | ' ; | 3 28 Vi sd pods nbied Marcel Fleury, 20, died imme-|aboard had won recent student trading. digi : : 30 1et Cong Death Toll Rise te diately. Another student died of! elections. They would get the necessary |; : 30 maid SUMS - ae * injuries eight days later. As it pulled up to the crossing, 30 jexperience only if Toronto or) 'he inquest is being held in Miss Trudeau said she "noticed | Montreal were opened up as an| . . y 28 bs | 8 2 P es this community where the col- the barrier was coming down."| 32 As U ) Troo S Hit un le international mone y market. [tn happened, 25 miles west' A passenger train went past, | ; 32 -- te el iia a8 a af of Montreal. bound for Montreal, "and im-| i 25 | ; liwnatched' Bank he R ia One of five survivors who tes- mediately afterwards the bar-/ 4 25 ; SAIGON (AP)--Armored U.S.!rounds of Viet Cong mortar fire ; OR oF restric-ltitied at an evening session rier went up." 22 columns 'plunged deep into the early today, but there was no l00. agains! establishment ofl niesday was Carole Trudeau,| It was at this point that she 22 iron triangle from the east to- report on casualties. >a a of foreign banks in| j,.° °° "say iia lab BOWE. Sha could aol day and the Communist toll re: : In an unusual raid in the Me- Tha Gomimithee nek Me, ' : identify the pair. 3 ported in the big American kong Delta, B-52 bombers ham- SAW TWO BOYS P 2 1% drive, now in its fourth day, mered at dawn at a Viet Cong Howes first with amusement) Miss Turdeau said she saw DESCRIBES FIGURES | 0 climbed to 165 dead. jbase camp in. mangrave ~ then Ww ith some seriousness.|two boys aged about 13 or 14 In testimony earlier Tuesday, 10 The campaign to neutralize|swamps in Vinh Binh province nat portly eae accused|standing beside the bus facing/{BM operator Robert Brous- THE HEINTZMAN 15 ithe jungled triangular area 20 87 miles south - southwest of ~ ve ulton (PC -- Kamloops) |} --------- ------seau, 19, of Dorion, described ; pes? lin a0 miles north of Saigon was| Saigon of smearing him in bringing up three shadowy figures he PIANO RENTAL PLAN a # 'baits uf tet . 4 1 age . ai his business interests, {saw approach the south side ' supported by apoluyT reid bs ee Tae Fe ai ation we acknowledged that the barrier as he sat in his car on. Here's a novel plan for parents b |B-52 heavy bombers, the 11th) whether the strike by the B-52s\,; Sage: mber 4 A cackigesat hindi | : ; "5 U.S. post office had issued fraud| the other side of the lowered, who wish to test their children's |since Operation Cedar Falls be-/was a forerunner of another oraor< in 1965 and 1966 apainst| horth harer mutical ability before purchae spl vat 96: 9 gains ; Me ) 3 : e's. nie wee "he oe hea ye bech apt org td aletsth- Fl in Disc | When Mr. Brousseau said he irg a piano. Heintzman will rent ' iported frequent contact with sweeping the Thanh Phu penin- jy, had indeed mavens ed : ae grt ie 4 gi thee you an attractive, mew small |small enemy groups but no|sula in the delta since a big aM- Jain prices for lease PERLE RL. VANCOUVE : ae aw nel Lg Samant a piano for 6 months--if you de- llarge-scale engagement so far. phibious and helicopter landing mile tracts. of wildlife pe AN( ER (CP) > ie bed ne OO ue cide. to purchase it, the six |They said the 60-square-mile|last Friday, reported onlyji, Ontario. he said aln members of a Canadian Pacific|c Bait y ears 4 aly faa month's rent and cartage will be Ce ew : larea was pulverized by some sniper fire and only four Com- ' sald. ee, DC-8 hid gpg be: Ah sree Sa ihee ere allowed on the purchase price. pres. an Z Pt fe EE 2 400 U.S. tactical air strikes in| munists killed and 11 captured NO BEEF ON ARTICLE eae eee ee eee eee cat ihe Norn. barrier|. Tie valance on Hemtanian's v " the last four days in addition to|so far. He had no complaint against |" ane aRlicers DOW: Se cen. | Own Budget Tenis. s i e land $ The crew reported Tuesday shortly before the accident. LS the heavy B-52 raids | an article in a national maga- | Vi PEASANTS EVACUATED 88-| they saw one on a recent flight) They saw the south barrier : | Elsewhere, South Vietnamese | 4 zine that described other : ; ' 79 SIMCOE ST. N. A rounded Viet Cong Infantry Division, during Chang who accompanied | military headquarters reported, In the iron triangle, the meat-\"\money - coining enterprises". from Lima, Peru, to, Mexich rise and took their arms off the 1688 omg is reg iter' sl te today be ; 8. Division pind |government forces killed 172 ie igeghteoRggem He "Okay," he said at last \City. and couldn't explain it\, 728-2921 area jby. a_ Sout iet- "Iron Triangle," northwes part in the massive drive Viet Cong soldiers and captured |" , ey I'm a thief, a crook, a no-|o"ay" : ; =< ---- namese soldier and Amer- of Saigon. Lt. Wilson is against the Viet Cong in- |96 during five scattered engage- tion of up mated peasants_and goodnick from 'away back. W . tried to ---- me LEWIS ican Ist Lt. Steven F. Wil- from Seattle, Wash. Pic- the "Iron Triangle. ments, four of them in the their resettlement in er Ylo- " "Now that we're through with thing from beginning to end, bu son, a member of the 27th ture was made by Associ- ; lnorthern part of the country. calities. . : this, can we discuss my. propo- it couldn t be anything we could) OPTICAL T Infantry, of the U.S. 25th ated Press photographer Al (AP Wirephoto) Operation Cedar Falls is the .2).'5» think of,' said Capt. Robert) : y, 5 Pi Be '; . | Sals? | Established for over 30 years Launaaee =u | HELICOPTER CRASHES biggest of the war, \irvolving The 17 proposals were to Millbank of suburban Burnaby. | 10% King Street West | Nine U.S. marines were pre-probably up to 30,000 U.S.) , gine _| He said he saw two teams of} 725-0444 : |sumed killed today in the crash'troops plus several South Viet- cee cabacie ducaney IM night during the Dec. 29 flight. I Y Le] } I I 1e] ] O ] uor C lof a helicopter into the South namese infantry battalions. the banks change "voting and |second officer John Dennis Dahl mguaraaa: . : |China Sea off the coast near, The objective is to clear and proxy practices and.accord.the?* White Rock, B.C., navigator ne . {chu Lai, a marine spokesman /render--useless the triangle of }r.qeral authority various de.|Mike Mole of Mexico City, | announced. \forestland which for years have}, ; ' \purser Joseph Lugs of Vancou- | Allows Dr king On Sunday South Vietnamese headquat-|been a staging area for the Viet "ite St a history of a|ver and pilot trainee Wolfgang In \ters reported that the Tri Tam|Cong to menace Saigon and its); ' P 'onadian |Poepperl of Richmond gathered \airfield 38 miles northwest ofjenvirons with guerrilla attacks erat bank oun uit watch the object. TORONTO (CP) -- Ontario|clined comment on the possibil-jages with meals will be able to|Saigon took an estimated 100land terrorist activity. which he holds one share. He| 'It was getting bigger all the joined Quebec and the Mari-lity of any change. apply to the board for permis- had waged proxy fights to find oot ie bth brag poo Bgl times Tuesday by announcing| Judge W. T. Robb, chairmanjsion to open on Sundays. s out whether shareholders have|® or 8 Nk , an amendment in the Liquor Li-|of the Liquor Licence Board of| The extension will not apply Unemployment 1se ower any voice in the bank's affairs, |CaPt. Millbank said. cence Act to permit the sale of/Ontario, said government reg-|to bars or any other outlet jand had been rebuffed, he said. Then it seemed to be getting alcoholic beverages with meals|ulations will be amended to per-|which does not serve meals. s e | He said that three Canadian |Closer and we could see a string on Sundays. mit sale of spirits, wine and| Church and temperance lead- As Job Market Remains Firm banks had been substantial lend-|of lights between two white OSHAWA'S FOREMOST But the Sunday-liquor line|beer with Sunday meals from|ers greeted the announcement Jers to Pioneer Finance in De- nae ae Ra SSR FINE CLOTHIER E > wes i t .m, and 5 p.m. ith both anger and accept: ia 4 , |troit, a company he identified} ve ' oe ag Nether ihe Prairie 9:30, Poly hry Feb. 5. " pein é P| OTTAWA (CP)--The job mar-| The report said job opportuni-| «boing in aati "largely due|left wing-tip and, in the full MEN'S WEAR provinces nor British Columbia] The amendment means that! Rev. H. C. Slade, minister of ket showed firmness oawgert pret Fed ba gy Neaggecrv to the enterprises of the well-|moon, we could see a shape be- allow the sale of liquor on Sun-|premises which now have li-/Toronto's Jarvis Street Baptist November and December and/stantially Th y bak t| Known Texas bon-vivant, Billy |tween the two lights which ap- days and liquor. boards de-|cences to serve alcoholic bever-|Church, termed the action an|¥nemployed) rose by less than | comparison. eee ei jSol Estes..." |peared thicker in the middle. -- increase in the floodtide of in-| the seasonal rate, to 266,000;women employed in December He identified the banks as the| He said the object remained a ? spacey \- 129,000, or 6.2 per cent Pen i isap- ' iquity. "vr gen agg ~~ Cee aber' than the previous De.|Bank of Montreal, the Canadian |couple of minutes then disap 2 joyment report sai ay. S -\tmperial Bank of Commerce|peared behind the big passen- soe Strik B d T h Rt. Rev. H. R. Hunt, Anglican|""rhe rise of 28,000 compared|cember. Employed men_ in-|,™P - : : -- i ' de ee 2 y lane. He said he fil - e oun eac. ers suffragan bishop of Toronto,|:, 2 rise of 42,000 recorded be-|creased by 111,000, or 2.3 Pe lowell Bank of Nova Scotia. |ser plane al iled a re 100 STOCK Given New Salary Offer MONTREAL (CP) -- The Montrea} Catholic School Com- mission made a new salary of- fer TuesHlay night to 9,000 teach- ers who have set a_ strike deadline for Friday if their con- tract disputes are not settled before that date. Meanwhile in Chicoutimi, the executive of another 4,000 French-speaking Catholic teach- ers announced a strike vote will be taken Jan. 18-19 in view of "the intransigent attitude of 2) school commissions" with whom) they are bargaining. And in Quebec City, Educa- tion Minister Jean-Jacques Ber- trand closeted himself in gov- ernment: offices for 344 hours to discuss the threatened teachers' strikes with members of his de-| partment and 'the provincial} labor department. Robert Tremblay, technical adviser for the Quebec Corpor-| ation of Catholic Teachers, said| Tuesday that 4,000 Chicoutimi- area teachers have been bar-| gaining for eight months with) 68 commissions in the Sague-} nay-Lake St. John area north of Quebec City. REACH STALEMATE A strike by these teachers will affect some 84,000 students in primary and secondary Beaver Club Holds Party MONTREAL (CP)--It took a group oft frou-frou dancing girls to make 'the evening Tuesday at the Beaver Club's annual din- ner as 500 members and guests got together at the Queen Eliza- beth Hotel for their annual wing- ding. =! The reason is that Donald Gordon, 'known to club mem- bers as«Simon McTavish, at- tended the dinner as_ private guest attired in a dinner jacket rather than in the early 19th |no date. | century costume, beaver hat and sideburns he customarily dons for the event. Simon. McTavish this year was replaced as toastmaster by Centennial Commissioner John Fisher who did a dandy job of entertaining the guests, reliving the days of the voyageurs of 150 years ago. The frou-frou girls appeared) in what: looked like pink negligees; and went through their high - stepping perform- ances, dancing past the cos- tumed head-table guests. {lowing announcement of schools but "we have exhausted all possible means of arriving at a compromise," he said. Average. salary of the Chi- coutimi-area teachers was about $4,500--much lower than is paid in other parts of the province, he said. In Montreal, no immediate comment was available from joint negotiators for the French- speaking Alliance des profes- jseurs catholiques de Montreal and the Federation of English- Speaking Catholic Teachers fol- the wage offer. said a person who wants liquor with his meals during the week should be able to have it also on Sunday, but added that alco- holic beverages are a form of self-indulgence. Rev. J. C. Torrance, superin- tendent of the United Church Toronto Home Mission Council, said he was "'not friendly to any widening of facilities." |CATER TO TOURISTS? Mrs. Lilliam Lang, a member of the Women's Christian Temp- erance Union in Toronto» said she believed the change was to cater to the tourist trade. She thought liquor manufac- turers had pressed the govern- ment into the change. "They'll 'do anything to increase sales."| In the Maritimes, licenced) outlets in Nova Scotia are per- tween November and December|}cent. a year earlier. However, the un- December, mainly due to an in-|53,000 women looking for work; crease in the labor force. 22,000 of them married. The jobless rate for Decem-| All regional unemployment ber worked out to 3.6 per cent/rates rose in the month. of the labor force compared to 3.5 per cent in December ofj|cent of its labor force out of 1965 and 4.1 per cent in the|work, compared to five per cent same month of 1964: Novem-|in November. Quebec jumped to were issued on the basis of ajtario to 2.4 from 2.2. The sample survey in the week/Prairie rate was 2.6, up from ended Dec. 10 by the Dominion Bureau of Statistics and the manpower department. | The job picture in brief, with estimates in thousands: | Exported Autos Dec. Nov. Dec. | 1966 1966 1966 7,439 7,428 7,185, OTTAWA vanced to 5.6 from 4.9. Labor force Of the total unemployed, 213,-| Chinese Le ave employment total in December|000 were men and 123,000 of was 14,000 above the previous|these were married. There were Cairo Embassy CAIRO (AP) --Twenty - one |members of China's embassy left for Peking Tuesday, ram reported. No official reason was given \for the departure of the six |bers, Al Ahram said. Chinese |diplomats in several other coun- |wake of the power struggle now under way in China. the} The Atlantic area had 5.8 per/authoritative newspaper Al Ah- ber's rate was 3.2. Statistics|4.4 per cent from four and On- diplomats and 15 staff mem-) 2.1, and British Columbia ad-|tries have been recalled in the} Meet Safety Law $ BE WISE . . . ECONOMIZE! ;¢ flight. The passengers did not see the object. The crew did not wake them. ee | | BUSINESSMEN'S LUNCHEONS 95e -- 1.35 DINNER 5:30 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. Good Food Reasonable Prices Parking Rear of Hotel HOTEL. LANCASTER 27 KING ST. W. | | | \s @e eet tas /3 » 2 OFF OTHER SUITS AT SMALLER DISCOUNTS * WINTER |BEGINNING GETS $3,800 The offer suggested an im- mediate salary raise of about 10 per cent retroactive to Sept. 1. Previous offers had been for two six - per - cent increases mitted to serve drinks with meals between 11 a.m. and 12:30 a.m. on Sunday. Lounges! and taverns are closed. | spread over two years. | Licenced dining rooms in The 5,000 Montreal - area|Prince Edward Island serve teachers, who have been nego- liquor with Sunday meals from tiating with the commission|!1 a.m. to midnight. Beer, wine since last June, have asked for/and spirits are also available to a two-year contract with pay|Sunday diners in Newfoundland. | increases averaging 18 per cent,|_ The New Brunswick Liquor plus improved working condi-|Control com mission permits SAVE DOLLARS $ Premium Quality : FUEL OIL 16" ; $ Phone 668-3341 $ ; DX FUEL OIL , SERVING OSHAWA -- WHITBY -- AJAX & DISTRICT [I ee ee ee ee ee ee (CP) -- Canadian OUTERWEAR @ SUBURBAN COATS Employed 7,173 7,190 6,933) cars exported to the U.S. will Unemployed --_. 266.. 238.. 252) conform with U.S. official There was a drop of 17,000 in| safety standards, Industry Min- total jobs between November] ister Drury told the Commons and December, smaller than! Tuesday. normal, following the unusually; Replying to questions by -Alf- large job drop that took place;red D. Hales (PC--Wellington between October and November.| South), the minister said "to Employment dropped in con-| the best, of my knowledge" the struction and manufacturing but} same features will be incorpor- all other non - farm sectors;ated in Canadian - made cars @ PILE LINED JACKETS @ Plaid and Corduroy JACKETS HONK. dining rooms to sell liquor be- tween noon and 10 p.m. Sun- days. Current salaries range from) Quebec outlets in cities of $3,800 a year for a beginning|more than 50,000 may sell with two years of teacher train-|liquor without food until mid- ing to $10,400 a year for ajnight Sunday. In smaller} teacher with two advanced de-|centres, food must be served | grees and 14 years of classroom |with alcoholic beverages. | experience, A strike by these two associa r A lions would close nearly 500 Catholic elementary and his): schools to 217,000 students in Montreal and the suburbs of | Cote St. Luc, Montreal North | and St. Michel. In the St. Hyacinthe area wast 'of Montreal, 500 teachers have been on strike since Nov. 25 while another 500 Catholic 1 teachers in suburban Pointe (a) Claire and Beaconsfield have 2 set Jan. 20 as their strike date. Early Tuesday, a meeting of the 700 - member Chambly Teachers Association voted in b favor of strike action, but set | l Money To Invest! per annum for five years y investing in Guaranteed nvestment Certificates which are . Guaranteed--os to Principal and Interest. Flexibile--may be used as Col- lateral for loans. Redeemable--by Executors in the event of death, Authorized--as Trustee Act In- vestments. CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUS} & SAVINGS CORPORATION 19 Simeoe St. N., Oshawa 723-5221 Reports Claim | Reds Meet Che; BUENOS AIRES (CP)--Press reports, quoting police sources, | said Tuesday' night that pro-| Chinese and Bolshevik Argen- | tine leaders have made numer-, ous trips recently to the Bra- zilian frontier to establish con- tact with Ernesto Guevara, Cu- { | 23 King St. W., Bowmanville | 623-2527 | @ Top Coats with Zip-Out Linings TROUD' FOOD MARKET, showed increases. sold at home. HIGHEST QUALITY MEATS 94 SIMCOE ST. NORTH SPARE RIBS 9/¢| Touatozs 69: © carton CELLO Fresh Cut -- Rib End C Ib POPULAR BRANDS @ BOYS' Included 20 to 50% OFF * On Sale Starting THURS., JAN. 12th. Lean, Tender Blade Roast Pork Chops SHOULDER G5%|sHouLveR 493 |Cigarettesd™" Economy -- 6 and 7 Rib Prime Rib Buit Chops 69: Cc 65: ORONO -- CREAMERY MEN/'S WEAR LTD. ESTABLISHED 1924 Officials of the centennial|/ban Communist leader. | iA commission, the 1967 world's) The reports said Guevara, | FRIDAY. Boneless Rolled j BREAKFAST fair and individual Canadian pa-| whose whereabouts have been a NiGHTS Cc Leon vilions were guests of honor at! mystery since he left Cuba two SATURDAYS Pot Roast BACON Sliced -3361 the annual affair during which years ago, had been active in wn Ib Canadian industrialists and top the Argentine-Brazilian frontier oo cemace Ad executives let their hair down, jarea for the last two months. | hs 69: ae Ib Butter 63: 74 SIMCOE NORTH OPEN FRIDAYS TALL 9

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