sad # THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, September 11, 1967 -A GLANCE AROUND THE GLOBE NDP Asks Stanfield e2ri- > BURNABY, B.C. (CP) -- fee ouglas Saturday night urged e newly elected Conservative feader, Robert Stanfield, to inter the House of Commons as uickly as possible and he Bssured NDP support to expe- dite his entry. * "He must have a forum to be eard,"' said Mr. Douglas in an terview. Doulas NDP Leader T. C. "And even. more important, F" he must be given an opportu- eg to indicate by vote where } e stands on various issues and what his alternative policies @re."' 'Join House Quickly he, { 40 Killed VIENTIANE, Laos (Reuters) |--Laotian Air Force bombers jaccidentally killed 40 pro-gov- ernment Laotians in the Nam Bac enclave, midway between the royal capital of Luang Pra- bang and the North Vietnamese border last week, official sourees said Sunday. The sources said the planes were attacking a Communist posi- tion, but missed by 200 yards. Pass Up Money TOKYO (AP)--The Japanese iPhysics Society, one of the Story Continued from Page One -- Then it was as past party leader that he told his party: "Now that I am: taking my retirement, I say this with the deepest of feeling ... I have nothing to withdraw in my desire to see Canada one coun- try, one nation," WARNS PARTY will have good government of, by and for the people." And again he and Mrs. Dief- enbaker left the convention for their hotel suite. His return had been unex- pected, He had dismissed his rented car and driver, He start- ed dinner with Mrs, Diefenba- ker and his close friend Senator David Walker of Toronto, the man who nominated him for Looking back over the 11/the leadership in 1956. years of his leadership, he} Mr, Stanfield, Premier Duff warned his party: |Roblin of Manitoba and Davie "Always remember those/Fulton, Mr. Diefenbaker's for- who haye on their shoulders the|mer justice minister, still were méaatle of leadership, They are| locked in the contest for ballots. | subjected, and expect to be sub-| On television came a report \jected, to persistent attack,|that Mr. Stanfield had agreed ee Mr, Fulton would be interim "Don't, as the fires of contro-| leader of the Opposition until he ;versy burn around your leader,!could find a seat in the Com- add gasoline to that fire. mons. Mr. Fulton would with- | "My course has come to an draw from the role. end." Swiftly the wounded chieftain, The crowd, dwindled to possi-|still leader of the Opposition bly 3,000 from the 13,000 who! until the caucus of MPs decided heard him speak Thursday otherwise, ordered a return to reporters and micorphones, he wheeled on the microphone holders: "Is there no privacy," he snapped. The bristle of micro- phones sagged. Mr. Roblin sat chatting, pat- ting the old warrior on the knee consolingly. The voting was nearly over on the final ballot but reporters asked as he left whether the visit constituted. an endorsement of him by Mr. Diefenbaker. "T was saying hello to an old | friend,"' Mr. Roblin replied. SUPPORTED ROBLIN Nevertheless, key Diefenha- ker workers had been circulat- ing the world that Diefenbaker votes should go to Roblin. After it was all over, their actions were repudiated by the inner circle. P It had been a day of similar problems in the Diefenbaker camp. At one point, a crew-cut young man who gave his name t , Mr. Douglas said he hopes} some Conservative member of the Commons will resign his} feat so a by-election can be galled with Mr. Stanfield as a Candidate. + The NDP leader said he was} T. ¢. *'saddened by the fact Mr, Dief- @nbaker sought the leadership and was defeated." ' ore +» "He served his party and| country well, and deserved something better than this end to his political life." DOUGLAS .+. extends welcome Hunt Flops CHESTER, Pa. (AP )--The night, responded with a deaf- ning "'No."" Among them were many who had sat in_ hostile jand stony silence when he first jappeared at the opening ses- sions, To his successor, he said: | country's most influential scien- \tific organizations, has decided | not to accept future financial aid from U.S, military forces. Fearing it might be linked with military plans, the 7,400-mem-} ber group took the action Satuc- day and expressed regret at) WISHES HIM SUCCESS having accepted $7,778 from the) "May you, with wisdom and U.S, military last year. forebearance and the success Tornado Strikes |the convention. He and _ his|@% Joe Crouchman from Sarnia, group went by taxi. 2 jorganizer for John F. Kennedy RETURNS TO SEAT in the U.S., vowed to reporters Back he marched to the box |that the Diefenbaker men |seat he had occupied through} would fight the convention deci- |most of the day. J jsion in the caucus of MPs, | Soon Premier _ Roblin|many of them Diefenbaker loy- appeared. lalists. "Hello, John,"' he said, This brought a vehement }Ont., and said he had been an) DIEFENBAKER WATCHES SUPPORT FADE made about Mr. Diefenbaker's future course by Sunday. He had confirmed to an acquaint- ance two weeks ago that if no longer leader he would not want to stay in the Commons he first entered in 1940. He planned to return to Otta- wa Monday and in a week or 10 days go to Prince Albert to meet his constituency execu- tive. They would be the first to know if he intended to resign. MAY BE CHANCELLOR One source close to Premier Ross Thatcher of Saskatchewan said before the convention that the 'offer of the chancellorship of the University of Saskatche- wan would be made to Mr. Diefenbaker, an alumnus of the university. After the Prince Albert visit, Mr. Diefenbaker was said to be talking of a fishing trip to Lac La Ronge with Ed Topping, his friend and campaign manager for 37 years, Even when the blows were raining on him hardest, fishing wasn't far from his mind. He leaned from his Gardens box to amuse reporters with anecdotes of his public life and about young John Weir, Mrs. Diefen- baker's grandson, who sat jas you leave the leadership of jthe party which you have | served over so many years with {such devotion and distinction." between them throughout the day. u "How are you," replied Mr. /denial that Mr. Crouchman was| "We went fishing,' he said of| This "two-nations" policy, you. have had in Nova Scotia,|Diefenbaker, Then, displaying| authorized to sa y anything on|John and himself. "He got a/declared Mr. Diefenbaker, was inches apart to indicate the size. "Then he said, 'I'd have done better if I'd gone alone.'" While the victor celebrated, Mr, and Mrs, Diefenbaker relaxed in their hotel suite with a few close friends--Senator Walker; Mrs, William Brunt, widow of Senator Bill Brunt who played a big part in Mr. Diefenbaker's rise to power, Mr, Diefenbaker's brother, Elmer, and Mrs. Diefenbaker's daughter Caroline Weir. TELEGRAMS ARRIVE A foot-high stack of grams rested on a table. Among them was one from Prime Minister Pearson: "My wife and I send Mrs. Diefenbaker and you our very best wishes for the days ahead tele- But most were in response to his Thursday night speech when he called on his party to repudi- ate the actions of the conven- tion policy committee, The committee overwhelm- ingly adopted a declaration that Canada is a federal state "com- posed of two foundi 1 570 Handlers Return Today DULUTH, Minn. (AP)--Some 570 grain handlers are sched- uled to return to work today at more than 30 elevators in the Minneapolis-St. Paul and Duluth-Superior, Wis., areas, following acceptance of a new contract, Ratification votes Sunday in both areas ended a strike which had continued for 25 days. The American Federation of Grain Millers walked out Aug. 15, and railways subsequently ordered an embargo on grain shipments to the affected areas. The votes Sunday were taken at membership meetings of Locals 112 and 118 in the twin ports of Duluth and Superior, and Local 1 in the Twin Cities. Lawrence Swanson of Min- neapolis, executive vice-presi- dent of the Grain Millers Inter- national, said the average hour- ly pay under the old contract was $3.10. The new pact also provides triple time for holiday work, improvements in vacation time, group hospital coverage and overtime provisions, DX -- DX -- DX ~~ DX deux nations with historic rights." $ leconemzts| $ rat tail hunt in Chester flopped Wise Decision |The hunt was organized by|A tornado which lasted about RED DEER, Alta. (CP)-- Robert N. Thompson, former national Social 'Credit leader, said Saturday the Conservative} party made "a very wise piano of hunting--if the 63,000/but a sion" in choosing Robert Stan- field as leader. Mr. Thompson said in an interview Mr. Stanfield has proven himself a man of integ- rity, ability and conviction as Nova Scotia premier. Mayor James Gorbey wholone minute caused an estimat- each rat tail collected, He fig-/night in St. Nicholas, 30 miles ured the city could eliminate south of Quebec City. No one 10,000 rats for $1,000, But in 29/Was injured in the windstorm, . two-storey house was residents of this industrial city|destroyed and a motel was joutside Philadelphia did any. at| heavily damaged. all--only a dozen turned in. tails were Heaviest Atom | LIVERMORE, Calif. (Reu- jters)--The discovery of the lheaviest atom definitely identi-| Link Seen QUEBEC (CP)--Education| Minister Alain Peyrefitte of| France said today his current visit to Quebec is directly linked with the July visit of President de Gaulle, and the French support promised to French-speaking Canadians, He made the statement to reporters on arrival at Que- bec's Ancienne Lorette Airport jurday by Dr. Glenn Seaborg, jchairman of the U.S. Atomic |Energy.Commission, The atom jis an isotope of element known as' mendelevium, aud B jhas 258 mass units. | Expel Newsmen | TOKYO (AP) -- The Chinese) | government expelled three Jap-| janese correspondents in Peking | to begin a five-day visit to the |Sunday after accusing them of| consistently writing biased dis- ST. NICHOLAS, Que. (CP)--|-- fied by man was disclosed Sat-/and threatened eastern Cuba. yor jand election so that we in Canada being surrounded continually by! « ° offered a bounty of 10 cents for/ed $300,000 damage Saturday! Killer Hurricane B lend that assistance in the next|the only signs of strain from|behalf of Mr. Diefenbaker. No final decision had been eulah Near Dominican Republic MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -- Beulah,! Sunday night as they did parts a killer hurricane that already |of Puerto Rico earlier Sunday. has caused 16 deaths, switled| Danger still remained for the dangerously close to the Domin-|Dominican Republic's Baraho- ican Republic and Haiti today/na Peninsula, The forecast jealled for Beulah to go inland Beulah was centred early|on the peninsula and cross the today about 80 miles southwest|country into Haiti which shares of the city of Santo Domingo) the island of Hispaniola. 850 miles southeast of Hurricane Flora tore through Miami. Winds raged to more ' than 125 miles an hour. Haitl -- an economically Poor But gale - force winds and Negro nation--in October, 1963, heavy rains hit Santo Domingo|on its way to Cuba. Flora was WEATHER FORECAST jiniaiglinnin i t blamed with killing 6,000 per- sons. ANOTHER IN SIGHT Meanwhile, Hurricane Doria churned along the east coats of the United States on a course expected to take her 250 miles east of the Virginia Capes. Hurricane Chloe swirled across the Atlantic more than 1,000 miles Bermuda still days from land, jand in --. | storm Lily brought forecasts of rain and high winds for south-| ern California and Mexico's! state of Baja California. | east-southeast of the Pacific tropical _ Santo Domingo's weather sta-| jon reported Beulah dumped} {unacceptable to him. It sought good one." 18|to turn back the clock 100 years province. "The visit I am making... is intended to bring concrete results to the visit of Gen. de Gaulle," he said. | "We must discover the wishes of our Quebec friends and find out how they fit in| with ours." | During his three-day stay in Quebec City Mr. Peyrefitte is scheduled to study, with Quebec government authorities, 'he terms of cultural and educa- DUFF ROBLIN e+ Will resign | | Appliances Dearer jfor products produced by Kelvi-| patches about China. LONDON, Ont. (CP)--Prices jnator of Canada Ltd., will be} . " : jincreased an average of two| TORONTO (CP) -- Official \per cent effective Oct, 1, R. 3epTS issued at 5:30 a.m. Po a et ag Lope Synopsis: The high pressure \announced here Saturday. Kel.|2re8 responsible for the cool \vinator makes household| Weather over southern Ontario Warmer Today, Tuesday Light Winds Forecast torrential rains on the capital} and brought winds with gusts to | 40 m.p.h. Sunday night. | | Beulah dealt Puerto Rico's | | south and west coasts punishing} |slaps --taking one life and | |smashing at least a dozen becoming southerly 15 this|homes---before charging across morning. Had os rane 22 toward the Montreal and Ottawa region: | Dominican Republic. eee ane cts ween: | 'The death was the 16th attrib- today and Tuesday. Risk of|ted to Beulah, The 15 earlier frost. in the low-lying ruraj|@eaths were on St. Vincent and ' He held his hands about MUST HEED WEEDS | WINNIPEG (CP) -- Home-| owners in Greater Winnipeg who ignore a little note in the }mail asking them to rid their |property of weeds may have to |pay for the job. Landowners |are legally responsible for con- | trolling weeds on their property }and the metropolitan corpora- tion has the right to mow or spray weeds after a warning has been issued to tardy prop- erty owners. More than 1,300 notices have been sent this year. LOOKING FOR A COMMFORTABLE QUIET RENDEZVOUS DOWTOWNP THEN GO TO THE Tally-Ho Room Hotel Lancaster 27 KING ST. WEST to before Confederation and would make second-class citi- zens of those not of French or English origin. He raised the spectre of a "Berlin Wall" around Quebec, pest ne that "we want no $ SAVE $$ $ 5) px w |S 0 $ Phone Seid $ check-point Charlies" in this country. DX -- DX -- DX -- DX NOT CONNECTED DAY, SEPTEMBER NOTICE Re: Street Fire Alarm Boxes ALL STREET FIRE ALARM OR INDUSTRIAL SYSTEMS, WILL BB REMOVED ON OR BEFORE THURS- THE MINUTES OF OSHAWA CITY COUNCIL ON JULY 24, 1967 BOXES, TO COMMERCIAL 21, 1967, AS PER NOTE: All Street Alarm boxes will remain operative until removed. September 11, 1967 FREE Estimates, Reasonable Retes, Repeir Specialist. Alderman G. 8, Attersley, Cheirman, Social Services end Generel Purpose Committee, Oshowa City Couneil i Martinique Islands. | areas tonight. Beulah also took a heavy toll tional agreements between Que- TORONTO bec and France which have fares will" ikely (CP)--Forecast|in drowned cattle and other livestock. Hydro |) WINNIPEG (CP) -- Duff Rob- £ D uae tee, s! finished | Tanks en a mle Robert stantield in the' LONDON, Ont. (CP)--The\than those of this morning. Terie' Installed j Policy Change race for the national leadership| Ontario council of United -Pack-| Across the north tne dacusaaing| Rintees SOUND HURTS TALENT Fest Dependable Radio Dispatched of the Progressive Conservative) inghouse Food and Allied Work.|Southerly flow over the north-| St. thomas Acoustics of the new concert Plumbing Service. ROUYN, Que. (CP)--Credi-| party, said Sunday he definitely|ers Saturday called for merger\¢™ Tegions will continue Ue si ate hall in Montreal's Place des SERVICE MADE US. Uste Leader Real Caouette said) wit) resign as premier of Mani-|of all unions involved in the|trend to warmer weather. aud 7 fe aes ee 68 | Arts are so pure that musicians Coll 723-1191 Sunday night that in electing] tobs. food and drink industry. jwarming trend will ay Fr OTESE +009 68 {call it "the Cruel Hall." Premier Robert Stanfield of] Anout 200 persons gave Mr.| It approved a resolution to/Southern Ontario on Tomiey,| Sane FA 68 Nova Scotia as national party|Roblin and his wife a subdued|the national director of the|Pushing afternoon temperatures) 'lam iene 68 leader, the Progressive Con-|reception when they returned| Canadian district asking that he "¢@? normal for mid-Septem- Ly a arines . voll be Van Belle servatives have "not changed/from the Conservative leader-|approach other unions about oe an Cee Betette ' each 4 < their policy, only their leader."'| ship convention in Toronto. amalgamation to '"'eliminate|, Lake St. "eave Lake Erie, AS ety * nH | Speaking in an interview, Mr.| Asked at an airport news con- jurisdictional disputes and| Niagara, ag ntario, aaa Ly ieee i : | Caouette said "'the only one] ference about his plans once he! strengthen our organizing and aig sg ee ee naa Ba ae 'e be among the candidates who was) resigns as premier, Mr. Roblin| bargaining position." Ki E oe, Wind at, London, "4 od tees 5 4 straightforward was Diefenba-|saiq: "t's a matter for dcci-. Unions which would join the agence zeros, orth Bay, Nowh wagon 5 : . ker. The others were skating] sion'on another day." proposed union include the, Sudbury: iodae" "-- ra Hee het BY .aneay ve 4 CENTRE pba Aa the two nations; He said the party has a Retail Wholesale Amalgamated | Wins light ay and Tuesday. Berton a eme." |"'good man" in Mr, Stanfield. |Meat Cutters, Bakery and Con-| : Care peat nacre ca sarees | : "There is no place for the) "Mr. Roblin said he will not/fectionery Workers, Brewery] pita ® ma: Timagami, wee sb Marie a a Take A Drive Conservatives in our province," resign as premier until a suc-|Workers, and Grain Millers le a ee tl wih ete ay al erte Rgae Beeie os To he said, "and the Liberals are/ cessor is selected. A provincial| unions, Teuay anieevaie ies eel Bd aac car hg Sa To = aeons oe ak hite leadership convention is expect B d Id tifi d revenge liken ely fa aed bot py tearm 3 VAN BELLE were nO said we only' ed to be called soon. fe) entitie bis bol Us Aa A SR tn eee ae) solution for the French-English| y GARDENS problems facing Canada is "deep reform in our monetary system which is responsible for) new YORK (AP)--Cellist the divisions existing in Can-|panig Casals has been selected ada _|by the board of trustees of ce ~~~ Freedom House to receive the HERE AND THERE |300i*s, ites ansousved Sun-|tt Casals Honored jday. Board Chairman Paul H.} bered Merger Asked Resignation Due 1" mer sare pight will still be the GRIMSBY, Ont, (CP)--James Harry Smith, 51, of Damascus, Ont., has been identified us the man found dead and dismem- beside a railroad track here Friday. Town police said Smith was a ansient worker. COMMITTEE ROOMS in| Douglas said Casals, 91, was) : " " 7 ectly| a are located at 423/ Selected "for having perfectly| Miney Age not on|harmonized the freedom-sup- erga ee sae re-| Porting acts of his life with the committee rooms LEWIS OPTICAL im be only a few degrees warmer| temperatures: Drive as previously : pat orted by a party spokesman. |Tich artistry of his music. Established for over 30 years ne P vay id P 10% King Street West is "Tato y PAINT-IN Car Burns 725-0444 CIUrSt emoney...| Participants in the "Happi- i : : a. 2 3 yi} &. eee ness-Is'"' paint-in at the city hall) CHICAGO (AP)--The show! ™ * addition are asked to register|went on even though the star's heir addresses at the Oshawa|car caught fire, Actress Ruth me. -- td 4 . 3 = ot a Ppow- + Art Gallery, 714 Simcoe St. S.!Roman leaped from her burn- 1 to 5-Year DUPLEX. Unser ae All adults will receive a galleryjing auto Sunday night and] membership and junior artists|jumped into a cab. 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High basement, suitable for fini: ------ Low mortgage, but owner will Then the house! Plan--together with your Royal Banker-- type and amount of mortgage you need (NHA for new homes, Conventional for new or existing homes); What to look for, and where. Then you can buy with peace of mind--because you know: The Royal is behind you--all the way! ROYAL BANK For The... DO-IT-YOURSELF Fertilizer Spreaders Tools Topsoils Seeds, Etc. Advice on your Garden Problems Van Belle Gardens "Your Friendly Garden Centre" 5 Minutes best of Oshawa On -- No. 2... . 623-5757 | ALUMINUM OSHAWA FREE PARKING Mtiocat Awnings Aluminum Combination . -- STORM-SCREEN Enclosures D @) 0) R S -"To Save Cash -- Buy Nash" Storms - Sicen nee Doors - Windows Prime Windows CMHC Accepted Many Modeis Aluminum Siding Jalousies o to re tia Choose Sliding Glass Patio Doors from Aluminum for Frame and Walls For bodies of Trailers and Pickup Trucks Te add beauty and comfort te your home. SEE them in our shows room NOW! a SHOWROOM AND FACTORY end Window PHONE 728-1633 95 ATHOL STREET E.-- OSHAWA ey er yr > i ®, 1) LL \ beg Ra) a2 § DIABETICS ENDANGERED ee] -- BY FOOT PROBLEMS hi ' ry il Infected corns, foot thickened toenails with ulcers et shoe pressure points, fungus end bacterial ae ere the most common ri) tohed with deb Pp To help the lesser h ling powers of most and the usual patent corn podiatrist, . attention by a physician. great mony people entrust May we compound and dis EASTVIEW 573 diabetics, strict cleanliness is a must. Strong antiseptics, be used only with the approval of a physician or Ulcers and infections require your physician and podiatrist by supplying any product they may prescribe or suggest. YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you need a medicine. Pick up your prescription if shopping nearby, er we will deliver promptly without extra charge. A _ PHONE 725-3594 Fast -- Free --- Motorized Delivery i P. B, Francis, Phm.B, -- J. R, Steffen, B:Se.Phm. end callous remedies should immediate We can co-operate with us with their prescriptions. pense yours? PHARMACY King Street East Oshawa FRESH SLICED TENDER Pork Liver 29. TASTY SKINLESS Jus] LEAN TENDER LUB c STEAKS \ ROBERT STAI! Nova Scotia and Mary, raise thei the air after he \ the new leader ¢ Greater For Ac QUEBEC (CP)- dian Bar Associati annual meeting § approving fiv aimed at giving : accused persons gr in the process of and sentencing bef inal courts. The assiciation for legislation to s' erature and an ar the Immigration down the number from foreign vessel Canadian ports. Last-day activity ed the election of Cooper, 58, of Halif dent of the 11,000-n ciation to replace I grain of Rimouski, In the criminal 1] lutions, the law mended that judge: to impose a suspen even if the accuset prior conviction an son's reco' on conditions to | Parliament. One resolution as Identification of C be amended so th where no convictio the convictio squashed, all reco' fingerprints and police mug files be Pedigreed | Increase Ni OTTAWA (CP 'think a poodle | demented, wearing bow and a moustat could afford a few cies too if you we greed dog folks love There are 9,000 p tered with the Cana Club, an agricult ment bulletin department admin Livestock Pedigree which the Kennel C porated. All those poodles almost one-quarter 41,000 pedigreed di ada. They're away German shephe spaniels (2,000), (1,100). Collies are even race to low-slung (1,900) and tiny (1,800). Even the Pekingese (1,100) right alongside. a e P.S.I. @ GREENS NEED N PAY CA You Give The Doc Prescript We do the FREE City-Wide I MITCHE DRUG 9 Simcoe N. 7 LTE