| 2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesdey, February 7, 1967 A GLANCE AROUND THE GLOBE Receives Critics Praise MONTE CARLO (Reuters)--) A Canadian television film, Th Last Man in the World, Carlo International Televisio Festival. re- ceived high praise from critics Monday at the seventh Monte en "Ae gies ny | The film, a story by Philippe|f)-- Hersc about problems of. North|, - 'American Indians settling into) « modern life, was directed by for Societe Radio| | we the Ron Kelly Canada. Princess Grace of Monaco||» and her 10-year-old son Prince |}? Albert watched the day's pro-|} gram of 10 films with the in ternational jury of actors, ac tresses, writers and directors. | The jury's verdict on the fest ival program of 68 films from 27 countries was expected to be announced Thursday. Trial Put Over OTTAWA (CP)--The trial of} Raymond Denis, which | grew] out of the Lucien Rivard affair, was put over until October at a "if | LESLIE ROWNTREE Gives Assurance TORONTO (CP) -- The On- tario government will require will come from those who have |put off seeking medical care be lcause of the expense. | Mr. MacKachen said 'cumulative long - range resul in demands on medical serv. ices." |University of Ottawa's medica |awards night. A text of his re. lbefore delivery. NEW YORK (AP)--Tiny Ta four surviving Harris quintup rest following complications o pneumonia. Hospital of Brooklyn said the in- fant died at 4:15 a.m., about 24 |hours after she took a turn for |the worse. | Her two sisters and a brother were reported in good condition. The quints were born last Wed- nesday night to a Brooklyn the General Sessions of the|trust companies and related|couple, Mr. and Mrs. Lionel Peace Monday. firms to participate in the pro-|Harris. A fifth infant was dead Denis, 33-year-old former ex-|posed federal system of deposit! at birth. ecutive assistant to the minister 1964, is charged with corruptly offering of immigration in a@ sum of money to Montreal lawyer Pierre Lamontagne to have the latter drop opposition to bail for Rivard. At the time, Mr. Lamontagne was acting as lawyer for the United States government in Montreal court proceedings to extradite Rivard to the U.S. for trial there. Rivard now is serv- ing a 20-year prison term in Atlanta, Ga., for conspiracy to smuggle narcotics. Mexican Charged TIJUANA, Mexico (AP) -- A Canadian held on charges of slaying his wife says he wants to stay in Mexico and wed a Tijuana barmaid. Stephenino d'Ninlo, 25, was arraigned Monday in state penal court in the death of his bride, Margaret Currie d'Ninio, 48, They were married Dec. 16 in Toronto. The body of Mrs. d'Ninio was found Jan. 15 at the bottom of @.90-foot cliff 34 miles south of here.. It was not identified until a@'Ninio was arrested Jan. 26. told Monday. plying to a question Downsview). will pass its own statute. iday. "Our intention is to see tha no depositor is not without in per deposit, in conformity with the federal legislation." Medical Services OTTAWA (CP)--Health Min- ister MacEachen said Monday night that medical care insur- ance plans under the federal government's program may re- sult at the start in an upsurge in demand for medical serv- ices. A few people will be out to take advantage of. the plan 'but most 'of the increased demand HERE an SCHOOL APPROVALS Board of education Monday night was given tentative ap- proval by city council to spend $285,000 for an addition to Grandview Public School, and final approval to construct Lake Vista Senior Public School cost- ing $445,000. RARE MOTH Richard Rose, 13, 12 Lloyd Street, recently discovered a rare moth of 'the Cepcropia variety on his bedroom wall. His knowledge and subsequent examination show that it should not be alive at this six babies were born, One hun- dred and ten major, 131 minor d THERE DAMAGE CLAIM A damage claim of $1,000 by| C.. J. Casey for loss of business during July, August, Septem- ber and October while Simcoe Street was under construction was turned down by city coun- cil Monday night. Mr. Casey was informed that if he still felt he had a claim he could take legal action against the city. HOSPITAL REPORT There were 337 admissions and 356 discharges at the Osh- awa General Hospital during the week ending Feb. 4. Thirty- pov Pigg Mae rage / and 99 eye, ear, nose and has grown to three inches.|throat operations were _per- According to Richard, the in- sect has a life-expectancy of one and one-half years. CENTENNIAL PLATE Ald. John DeHart presented Mayor Ernest Marks, last night, with a centennial plate he had received while acting as the mayor's representative at the Salvation Army Festival of Music held at the Oshawa Cit- adel. The Salvation Army Cit- ade] Band of London were guests at the festival. LUNCHEON GUESTS Three students from the Osh- awa Missionary College were guests at the Oshawa Rotary Club meeting on Monday. Their homes are in Pennsylvania, Honduras and Nigeria. CURLING BONSPIEL The Rotary Clubs of Ajax and Whitby will hold their annual curling bonspiel, Feb. 15, at the Whitby Curling Club. The games will be followed by a dinner. ONTARIO MOTOR LEAGUE Mayor Ernest Marks will offi- cially open Feb. 14 a new On- tario Motor League branch at 172 King St. E. A noontime luncheon at the Genosha Hotel will precede opening ceremon- jes at 2 p.m. HONORABLE MENTION Major Pool Equipment Corp. of Oshawa has emerged from a world-wide swimming pool competition in Las Vegas with an honorable mention from the National Swimming Pool Insti- tute which recently held its 10th annual convention and trade show there. ROTARY SPEAKER Cliff Randell, of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, a past president of Rotary International, will be the special speaker at a meeting of the Rotary Club of Oshawa next Monday night. Members from the clubs in Bowmanville, Whit- by, Ajax and Pickering have formed. Two hundred and sixty- three treatments and examina- tions were given. The physio- therapy department gave 1,019 treatments and made 705 visits; while the occupational therapy department handled 175 cases. DROP-IN CENTRE Former Ald. Clifford Pilkey was last night appointed by city council to the committee for the establishment of a drop-in centre for senior citizens. He will replace Ald. Russell Mc- Neil, who made the recom- mendation, as the alderman is now council's representative on the drop-in committee. NEW MEMBERS Four new members were in- itiated by the Rotary Club of Oshawa at its Monday meeting. The induction was conducted by Past District Governor E. G. Storie, LIFE INSURANCE Amendments to the group life insurance plan for civic em- ployees were approved Monday night by city council. Among the amendments is a clause ex- empting employees over 65, in-| cluding those currently retired, from making further monthly contributions. Employees under 65 will have full coverage until age 65 and will continue month- ly payments until then. How- ever, upon reaching 65 their coverage is reduced 25 per cent but not less than $1,000 for their lifetime. Fire department per- sonnel are not included. | WELFARE BENEFITS Additional welfare benefits will be given to union and non- union employees who have not been previously received them, city council agreed Monday night. Effective April 1, the city will assume two-thirds the cost of Ontario Hospital Services Commission and Blue Cross Supplementary Plan, Group Life Insurance Plan and Physi- cians' Services Incorporated Blue Plan for all non-union per- sonnel under the direct control | | been invited to attend. MEMBERSHIP City council Monday night} authorized $200 be spent to re- néw membership in the Ontario Services Incorporated Extended Manieinal Association for 1967. iHealth Benefits Plan. 4 of city council. In addition, if 75 per cent of eligible workers want 'it ,the city will assume two-thirds cost' of Physicians' ' insurance, the legislature was Mr. Rowntree said, however, that there was no indication when the federal insurance scheme will come into force and that in the meantime Ontario He said he will introduce a bill on the subject, possibly to- surance to the extent of $20,000 |war. He has said publicly: 'No|t! blackout and sub-zero tempera- | Harris, 31, is a $105-a-week |post office worker. Leslie Rowntree, financial; The other babies -- the first and commercial. affairs minis-|born to the 32-year-old Mrs. ter, gave the assurance in re- from Vernon Singer (L -- Toronto Harris--are Lionel Jr., Louisa and Lianna, s CBC Spending? OTTAWA (CP) -- The pub- licly-owned CBC spent at least $4,260 getting an interview in West Germany with Adolf von Thadden, Opposition Leader Diefenbaker was told Monday. Exactly how much went to the itight-wing politician wasn't dis- closed in a Commons reply to a ti written question by Mr. Diefen- -| baker. An interview filmed and hitaped in- West Germany with jon the CBC program Sunday. Mr. viewers, fee, and the total of other ex- penses, Affirm Candidacy LONDON, Ont. (CP)--Davie Fulton, re - affirmed his can- didacy for Conservative Party leadership and rapped Liberal "isolationism" and "'continental- ism" during a visit here Mon- day night. The Kamloops Conservative member of Parliament, guest speaker at the London branch of the University of Toronto Alumni Association, sald in an interview he would seek the party leadership whether cur- rent leader John Diefenbaker "stayed or stepped down." The former justice and works minister during the Diefenbaker government said he 'expects to win and expects the Conserva- tive Party to win in the next federal election." "the will be a healthier population and a proportionate decrease Mr. MacEachen spoke at the marks was issued to the press Another Quint Dies litha Harris, the smallest of the lets, died today of a cardiac ar- : MP Swipes At Co-Op Canadian Television Film Receives Battering gested Mr. Byrne's-speech "'was| body." Mr. Byrne emphatically "T prepared this speech by myself and delivered By PAUL DUNN movement in Canada own party. James Byrne, t Kootenay East, rebuttal from Conservative, NDP and Liberal speakers. : as it chooses to be called, is business each year in Canada,"' he began. "Co-operatives have become a tive enterprise, but with a dif- ¢/almost completely exempt from income tax," OTTAWA (CP)--A Liberal MP} took a swipe at the co-operative in the Commons Monday night, then took a battering from other members--including those in his member for attempted to speak from copious notes in the face of repeated opposition heck- ling, points of order and finally "The co-operative movement, nothing more or less than cor- porate enterprise enjoying the benefits of $3,000,000,000 worth of corporate colossus in competi- ference. Co-operative profits are He made his argument during outside the House from Ron Basford (L -- Vancouver - Bur- rard), co-chairman of the par- liamentary committee on con- sumer prices. "I want to make it clear that Mr. Byrne was speaking entirely and completely for himself and wasn't, as far as I know, repre- senting government views or more particularly the views of the Liberal party or myself." The consumer prices commit- tee was interested in the co- operative movement and "un- like Mr. Byrne, I am prepared for our final report to recom- mend passage of a Dominion Co-operative Act to allow for the establishment of federal co-op- eratives,"' In the House, Mr. Byrne said he harbored "no ill will toward co-operatives as such."' But he appealed to the government to do something about their "special competitive position which threatens the very exis- tence of corporate enterprise." denied this: it with copious notes." DON'T PAY TAX sonal-income taxpayer. Canada, whose development and research he praised. He was concerned that Wesm- ern Co-operative Fertilizer, a newer firm, with "controlled retail outlets" had a big. com- Mr. Byrne, parliamentary sec- retary to Transport Minister Pickersgill, said the co - ops operated without having to pay the 52-per-cent income tax levied on corporations. This threw a heavier tax burden on the per- Such a development was "even more insidious than state owner- ship and control of our means of production and distribution." A large portion of his speech dealt with the Consolidated Min- ing and Smelting Co., a major producer of fertilizer in Western A spokesman for the Jewish debate on Finance Minister Robert McCleave (PC--Hali- jvon Thadden was used Jan. 22 Diefenbaker asked the cost of sending crew and inter- telephone and _tele- graph messages, von Thadden's continues today. LIBERAL CRITICAL of Mr. Sharp's mini-budget. The debate One of the sharpest criticisms Byrne's speech came "one of the most credit unions in Canada... it was atrocious." Along with other MPs he sug- | TORONTO (CP) -- Pickets braved sub-zero temperatures at 16 Canadian General Electric Co. Ltd. plants in Ontario today as 8,500 men and women went on strike against the company. Meanwhile negotiations be- tween the company and the United Electrical, Raido and Machine Workers of America resumed in Toronto under Wil- liam Dickie, Ontario's chief con- ciliation officer. About 850 men and women picketed the CGE plant in Peterborough as picket lines were thrown up as soon as the midnight strike deadline passed. At Barrie 200 of the 750 men and women in the union faced raw winds and _five-below-zero temperatures. At Trenton about 40 men and women manned the lines. No violence was reported at any of the 16 plants in Toronto, Guelph, Barrie, Trenton or Pe- terborough. A company spokesman said General Electric Workers Picket 16 Ontario Plants public. He said the company's service department will con- tinue to operate and stores are well stocked with CGE products. There was no word of the progress in negotiations which have been going on since Jan. 110. Closed door talks continued past the midnight strike dead- line Monday night and resumed at 10 a.m. today. Union representatives entered the final round of talks with proposals for a wage increase of 35 per cent in a two-year agreement, with 25 per cent in the first year, plus other bene- fits. The basic labor rate under the old agreement was $2.18% an hour while the top rate for tool makers was $3.09%. The com- pany has offered increases of 34 to 46 cents hourly over a three-year period. Other union demands were for elimination of geographical wage. differentials within the company and for job and wage this morning he couldn't foresee any immediate effect on the protection in the event of tech- nological changes. TORONTO (CP)--NGC Cine- mas Ltd. Canada, a $30,000,000 motion picture theatre chain and film production operation, has applied for a provincial charter Canada Chain Film Company Applies For Ontario Charter couver, the Plaza Theatre at the Plaza Shopping Centre in Oak- ville, Ont., and Cinema Bona- venture in Montreal's Place Bonaventure. fax) termed Mr. Byrne's speech|! singular attacks upon co-operatives and petitive advantage over Consol- dated because of the tax law. Later Russel Keays (PC -- give the House some details on the sources of fertilizer in Can- ada. Mr. McCleave replied that the only source he knew of "'was in the speech of the honorable member for Kootenay East.' IMPUGNS INTEGRITY NDP Leader Douglas, rising on a procedural objection, said Mr. Byrne's speech 'certainly impugns the integrity of Feder- ated Co-operatives." Donald S. Macdonald (L -- Toronto Rosedale) said Mr. Douglas had no point of order and told him to "'sit down." Mr. Douglas said he didn't need any orders "from any the House. Mr. Byrne said co-ops would soon control 20 to 30 per cent of business if their tax privilege wasn't removed. In 1964 the Federated Co-ops paid $207,000 in taxes on income of $111,000,000 and retained more than $5,000,000 which was not distributed to members. A pri- vate enterprise firm would have to pay taxes of more than $2,000,000, he said. Warren Allmand (L--Montreal Notre - Dame - de - Grace) took "strong exception" to Mr. Byrne's views on co-ops. The prices committee had heard praise from several witnesses on the value of co-ops. ATTACK BUDGET Earlier Monday, MPs attacked Mr. Sharp's mini-budget with such labels as shameful, de- ee misleading and heart- ess. David Lewis (NDP -- York South), who apologized for the "deliberately misleading" crack, accused Mr. Sharp of rapping the knuckles of those seeking advar.:es in social welfare by tying new welfare measures to tax increases, Gaspe) asked Mr. McCleave to pipsqueak over on that side of| 11) Moby Joe ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. Moby Joe disappeared today and there are fears the 80-ton whale is dead. Mrs. Farley Mowat, wife of the Keeper of the Whale, said her husband has searched the pond for several hours today but could not find the whale. She said the whale in the past has hidden in small corners of the pond but it wasn't certain today just what had happened to it. The whale hadn't been seen since Monday night. indiscriminate shooting at the whale when it first became trapped in the pond on the south - west coast may have Sealed the giant mammal's doom. Mr. Mowat reported finding huge abcesses in the bullet wounds and issued an immedi- ate appeal for drugs to be do- nated by large pharmaceutical companies. Union Heads In Ottawa OTTAWA (CP) --Union rep- resentatives from across Canada began streaming into Ottawa to- day for Wednesday's annual Presentation of the Canadian Labor Congress brief to the fed- eral cabinet. A CLC delegation headed by President Claude Jodoin is due to meet Prime Minister Pearson and members of the cabinet at 9:30 a.m. EST in the railway committee room on Parliament Mr. Jodoin wili read the brief outlining views of the 1,300,000- member labor body on a wide range of national issues. _ On Thursday members of the Canadian Railway Labor Exec. utives Association will present a separate brief to cabinet mem- bers with its emphasis on transportation matters. Vietnam Help Claims Four SAIGON (AP)--New Zealand artillerymen accidentally fired into an Australian infantry com- pany near Saigon Monday, kill- ing four Australian soldiers and (CP)-- It appeared Monday night that WEATHER FORECAST sued at 5:30 a.m. Synopsis: A high pressure as- and cold temperatures. Some lakes Erie and Ontario but this should clear later today. A heavy snowfall warning is in ef- Nfld. Whale| Little Change Expected Feared Dead| Cold Air Mass Continues TORONTO (CP)--Forecast is-;Mainly clear and cold today and Wednesday. Winds light. Cochrane, North White River: sociated with a cold air mass|Variable cloudiness and a few is stalled over Ontario bringing|snowflurries today. Mainly clear little change over the next twojand cold Wednesday. Winds days with mainly clear skies|light. Ottawa: Sunny and cold to- high cloud from an Atlantic|day. Mainly sunny and not so coast storm has spread across|cold Wednesday. Winds light. Forecast temperatures Low overnight, high Wednesday fect for the Niagara peninsula|Windsor ........... 5 15 and areas immediately south of igs deceeees : if Lake Ontario. ONdON .ss.066 sone ot Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie,|Mount Forest ..... -10 10 southern Lake Huron, Lake On-|Wingham ..... sees 10 10 tario, Windsor, London, Tor-|Hamilton ... 5 15 onto: Variable cloudiness today. |St. Catharine 0 18 Mainly clear and cold tonight|Toronto ..... 5 18 and Wednesday. Winds north- <i oan tees 4 " east 15. Kings' erecccces © | Niagara, Hamilton: Heav dP Elided foiahes - - snowfall warning. Mainly cloudy Muskoka oes 20 10 with snowflurries. Heavy snow- North Ray 95 10 squalls near Lake Ontario. Suabur y 25 10 Clearing tonight. Mainly sunny fates yes) 5 vee cas Winds | sault Ste. Marie .. -10 5 : Kapuskasing ..... -20 5 | Northern Lake Huron, Geor-| white River . . 20 10 gian Bay, Haliburton, Tima-| Moosonee . . 30 5 gami, southern White River, Al-/Timmins ......... -30 10 goma, Killaloe, Sault Ste. Marie, North Bay, Sudbury: St. Lawrence Being Cleared MONTREAL (CP) -- A heli- copter working from the Can- adian Coast Guard icebreaker MacLean surveyed a stretch of the St. Lawrence River between Sorel and Ile St. Ours early to- day as efforts to clear the first ice jam of the season continue in below-zero temperatures. The MacLean and the ice- breaker Wolfe were concentrat- ing their efforts primarily in the Sorel area, 45 miles down-| stream from Montreal. Another icebreaker, the Sorel, was re- ported by a National Harbors Board spokesman to be on its way to the jam from Trois- Rivieres. A spokesman for the depart- ment of transport signals ser- vice said the coastal ship Charny was still tied up in clear water at Sorel. The Scotia, a Cunard freighter, the Danish freighters Manja Dan and Remja Dan and the coastal ship C. A. Crosbie stopped at Sorel Monday. They started moving upstream to- wards Montreal early today, but became stuck in the jam at Tracy. | Central Ontario Trust & Savings Corporation RETIREMENT SAVINGS PLAN Saves Income Tex and provides Retirement Income %& Government Approved %& No loading fees er charges * Payments made before Feb- ruary 28, 1967 are deduct ible for 1966 Income Tax purposes, x Investment options ----- Stocks --Bonds -- Mortgages *& Official receipt for Tox pur- poses. CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST & SAVINGS CORPORATION 19 Simcoe Street North 723-5221 23 King Street West, 623-2527 OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS end SATURDAYS wounding 13 others, Australian military sources announced. The New Zealand 161st Bat. tery was firing support for the Australians in Phuoe Tuy prov- ince. A reporter at the scene re- ported the 6th Battalion of the Royal Australian Regiment came under enemy fire from its read and called in the New of incorporation to set up head- Plans also call for establish- ment of a Canadian film-produc- Mr. Lewis said the finance minister gave a false picture in quarters in Toronto. The new firm is to be owned tion unit and later expansion into international cinema oper- his Dec. 19 mini-budget speech of the funds available to pay the Zealand artillery battery which normally supports them. The first two rounds of 105- jointly by a Canadian invest- $30-a-month supplement to the _ |Paul + |ation Industries Ltd., Calgary. ; | Angeles, ment group and a United States theatre company. The Canadian investment will be held by North American Cinema Centres Ltd., Toronto, 50 per cent by Power Corp. of Canada Ltd., of Montreal and Nathanson of Toronto through North American Recre- National General Corp. of Los will be the U.S. half- Existing cinemas to be taken over by the new company in- clude Place Longueil in Mont-|@re real, Guildford Theatre in Van-/Said today. CARDINAL SPELLMAN Never Used Quotes NEW YORK (AP) -- Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York never used the phrase "Christ's war" to describe American par- ticipation in South Vietnam the priest-secretary who accompan- ied him there said Monday night. Answering a charge by Bishop C. Kilmer Myers of the Episcopal (Anglican) diocese of California last Saturday that the Roman Catholic cardinal used the phrase Msgr. Patrick V. Ahearn said in a statement: "I was with the cardinal In Vietnam for every one of his visits with our troops, and I never heard him call our ac- tion there 'Christ's war." "T have no idea where Bishop Myers found the phrase." Replying to another criticism by Bishop Myers that the car- dinal's alleged statement was "outrageous," he said: "Cardinal Spellman's position is nof the least bit 'outrageous.' His Eminence does not advocate one in his right mind wants war.' t 300 Firemen Battle Blaze MONTREAL (CP) -- Four hours after it broke out, a five- alarm fire fought by 300 fire- men was still burning in a 16- storey, uncompleted apartment building in west - end Montreal today. It was the city's fifth blaze of the night and fire department officials described it as the big- gest so far this year. In one of four other fires a 60- year-old man lost his life when the three-storey east-end apart- ment building he lived in was heavily damaged. The other members of three families in the building escaped. Three commercial buildings in other parts of the city--one containing five apartments-- were badly damaged, but no was injured. POWER CUT No one was reported injured in the partially - finished 16- storey apartment building, but firefighters were hampered in) heir efforts by an electrical ures. "He does believe firmly that Communist aggression is evil and should be opposed. by men fo enjoy the blessings of free- lom."" BRACE FOR BUSINESS TOKYO (AP) -- The fateful "year of the fiery horse" is over and maternity hospital officials predict a busy year. According to Japanese tradition, women born in "fiery horse" years--which occur every 60 years--end up devouring their husbands, Thus, when grown up, the girls have a hard time finding someone to marry them. good names to rewamber If you have a Commercial Property To Sell or Lease REG AKER, pres. BILL McFEETERS, vice-pres. SCHOFIELD-AKER 723-2265 Over 33 years in Business ations, not including the United States. through a Canadian subsidiary, Carthay Theatres Ltd., owner of the new theatre chain US., Canada Train Together OTTAWA (CP)--United States and Canadian air forces will participate in a joint training exercise over the eastern U.S. and Canada Friday but the ex- ercise will not last longer than one hour over any particular area, the defence department Planes of the North American Air Defence Command and U.S. bombers of the Strategic Air Command will participate, with subsonic B - 52 global range bombers and supersonic B58 depending on an _ individual's $75-a-month old age pension. The fund had sufficient money to pay the increase without tax in- crease. Marcel Lambert (PC--Edmon- ton West) complained that too much money was going into welfare schemes at the expense millimetre howitzer fire appar- ently landed on target, but from four to six rounds landed among the Australians. One round that landed 10 feet from a company headquarters inflicted most of the casualties. of industrial and resource de- velopment. Social Credit Leader Thomp- son said Mr. Sharp should have "forgotten all about the mini- budget" and admitted the in- flationary pressures on the econ- omy had vanished. The mini-budget increases the sales tax to 12 per cent from 11 and creates an additional levy of up to $120 more tax a year, A Complete Plumbing and Heating Service @ ESSO HEATING EQUIPMENT © KITCHENS COMPLETE taxable income, to pay the cost of the supplementary old age pension. Hustler bombers I out simulated targets over New- foundland, Quebec and Ontario. The department said air traf- fic control officials in Canada and the U.S. have received ad- vance information on the exer- cise and a minimum suspension of normal civil air traffic is expected, HERE'S THE PROOF PETERBOROUGH, England (CP)--Former policeman Hed- ley Stokes is trying to improve the public image of the game of bowls and wants it intro. duced in Northamptonshire schools. 'Bowls is ideal training for youngsters," he says. "The Peterborough Bowling Club has provided 25 mayors in 60 years. That proves bowl@ makes good citizens," AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION © BATHROOMS COMPLETE Phone 668-2991 P, : BEI "/ CENTRE 728-7339 Of oll Transmission 1038 Simcoe St N. Q/ _ Repairs Could've Been Avoided by Preven- 7 /° tive Maintenance Every 25,000 Miles. Reconditioned Transmissions For Chev., Pontiacs (Cdn.) Exchange $125. Plus Installation and Fluid. 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Speaking 1 district hig! Mr. Macaul: lelay in ox by's brain ie leaves t 'gme he star estionably g to many "Research sored by the ucation as t gen or lack birth proces: He said th age due to often caused dren which | difficulties. The Peter attending the sional develc was designec US. In Pre WASHING' United State little from tl in China in Whether it g the long hau wins in: Peki The odds, experts, now party boss M does not, th sure who will of the succes cisive in futu lations. The questio pen to the | Communist C out" is bein even as exp possibility Mz Yet so muc about China ance, and po: tory, the expe expected may In such a speculate the between Chin: on the verge would be reve The experts sians can be. Chinese, Inde perts believe with Russia party doctrine of the opposit China. Another pos post-Mao lea probably woul stimulating tr jor industrial and with Jap a modern indi There are between the 1 China which probably woul proved relatio: Rolicies shiftec Yormosa, hom ported Chinese ernment. And ment is likel; claim Formos: