Fhe Oshavon Times Published by Canadian Newspapers Limited, 57 Simcoe St. S., Oshawa, Ont. Page 4 Friday, Mareh 6, 1959 Missile Debate Clouds: | Defence Policy Issue Prime Minister Diefenbaker gave a masterly exposition of the obvious in the Commons this week as he answered opposition criticism of the government's aircraft-missile policy. He quoted a year-old suggestion by Liberal Leader Pearson that Canada investigate the possibility of acquiring a missile such as the Bomare, and recalled the attitude of the former Liberal government to- wards alleged loss of Canadian sover- eignty to the U.S. in military matters. At the core of Mr, Diefenbaker's dis- course was the proposition that Canada cannot afford to pay the full bill for her own defence. That must be granted. Canada has never been in a position to pay such a bill, even in the days when warfare was comparatively inexpensive, All that has happened is that Canada has transferred a heavy reliance for de- fence from the United Kingdom to the United States -- from the Royal Navy to the USAF, And there is no prospect of any change in the situation in the foreseeable future. Our wealth and our population increase, but not nearly at the pace of defence costs. What must be remembered is that the defence of Canada is just as important to the United States as to Canada. Whe- ther we like it or not, we are firmly linked by geopolitical fact. If in the light of that fact we were to abandon all re- sponsibility for our share of continental defence, then we would have to be pre- pared to abandon a good measure of sovereignty -- just as we should have remained highly dependent on the U.K. had we done nothing but rely on the strength of the Royal Navy. There may be a threat to an area such as the Arc- tic, on the ground of occupancy, but as long as we are sharing in continental defence, within our means, it is diffi- cult to see a threat to national sover- eignty, The economic consequences are some= thing else. Despite all Mr. Diefenbaker's bluster and Mr. Pearson's fears, they cannot be estimated until we have more knowledge of how much sharing of pro- duction is to be done. In the meantime, the controversy over the missile-aircraft decision is still obscuring the need for a clear exposi= tion of general defence policy. We know that the government has decided (quite properly, we think) that since we can- not have both aircraft and missiles, we must rely on the latter, But we do not know how the missiles fit into the gen= eral plan for, the defence of Canada. Against what are we trying to defend ourselves--an attack across Canada at targets in the United States, an attack on Canadian soil by sea, air or land? And in the light of that assessment, what are the roles of the navy, army, air force and reserve army? There are few clues in the defence department's estimates of spending during the 1959-60 fiscal year. spending will be down slightly, largely becauss of a decrease in defence re- search and development, A little more will be spent on the reserve army. Nothing will be spent on tanks and ar- mored fighting vehicles, but about $1.6 million more fo~ mechanical equipment, including transport. Air force spending will be cut, all the reduction being at- tributable to a reduction of nearly $80 million in the allotment for purchases of aircraft and engines. The navy will spend less on ships and more on air- craft. And so it goes -- highly confus- ing until Defence Minister Pearkes tells the nation what he and his government are about, Saving Ontario Relics Ontario has a rich history, but the preservation of the material evidence of that history has largely been left to individuals and local organizations. Community museums have had to struggle first to establish themselves and then to maintain themselves. Now the Department of Lands and Forests is taking some action to assist in the job of preservation, Early implements, ma- chines and utensils, relics of the arts and crafts and industries of another day in the province, are to be preserved in provincial parks. In addition te placing such items in the parks, the Department plans to use its various headquarters across the pro- vince as display sites for historical rel- ics. Each headquarters is now seeking out links with the early history of its particular area. Old foréstry tools, coffee grinders, sewing machines, impor- ted into Ontario more than a century ago are among the items being collected. The staff of the Sudbury district has obtained a loggir.g locomotive and it will be on display in Algonquin Park. The old locomotive, in retirement at Biscotasing, attracted the attention of thousands of passengers on transcon- tinental trains for years as it stood on a 'of two rusted railway siding adjacent to the main line, There was a time when many such engines crude tracks through this province's great forests. Trucks, bulldozers and tractors have re- placed them, Also destined for Algonquin Park is a home-made cannon, produced by Tho- mas Patrick Lonergan in 1885 for use against the Riel rebels, It has an over- all length of only eleven inches, a bore inches and a weight of little more than 30 pounds. So far as anyone can determine, it was never fired in anger. It is one of three weapons given the Department by Mrs. George Dessau, of Chapleau, grand-daughter of Thomas Lonergan, The province could well extend its interest in Ontario history to cover sites and buildings as well as imple- ments and weapons. Through provincial and federal neglect, many historical sites have been lost forever under the brick, concrete and asphalt of "progress," and many famous old buildings have been allowed to rot. When a site or building is once destroyed, it is gone forever; an imitation can be built, but it is never more than that--an imitation, ran over Canada Sells To China In the past few months there has been a lot of talk about Canadian trade with China -- mainland China, not the little fragment of the Chinese nation that huddles in exile on Formosa. Most of the talk has been about the difficul- ties put in the way of Canadian trade by U.S. foreign policy. 'Surprisingly little has been said about the trade that is going on between the two countries. Exports from Canada to China in 1958 increased in value to some $8 million compared with $1.4 million in 1957, ac- cording to figures issued by the De- ! partment of Trade and Commerce. The export list grew in length and diversity, and there were new sales of magnes- ium, nickel, two cobalt beam therapy units and, after a relaxation of the "strategic import" controls, $8,000 The Oshawa Times I. L. WILSON Publisher and General Manager. C. GWYN KINSEY Editor. The Oshowa Times, combining The Oshawa Times testablished 1871) and the Whitby Gazette ond Chronicle (estatlished 1863), is published daily (Sun- days "and statutory holidays excepted). Members of Conadian Daily Newspapers Publishers Association, The Canadian Press, Audit Bureou of Circulation anc the Ontorio Provincial Dailies Association... The Canadian Press is exclusively en- titled to the use for republication of all news despatched in the paper credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reuters, and also the local news published therein All rights of special despatches are olso reserved Offices 44 King Street 640 Cathcart St Montreal, SUBSCRIPTION RATES Delivered by corriers in Oshawa, Whitby, Ajax, Pickering, Bowmanville, Brooklin, Port Perry, Prince Albert, Maple Grove, Hampton, Frenchman's Bay, Liverpool, Taunton, Tyrone, Dunbarton, Enniskillen, Orono, Leskard. Brougham, Burketon, Claremont, Columbus, Fairport Beach, Greenwood, Kinsale, Rog lan, Blackstock, Manchester, Cobourg, Port Hope, Pontypool. and Newcastle not over 40c per week. By moil (in province of Ontario) outside carriers' delivery areas 12.00: elsewhere 15.00 per veor AVERAGE DAILY NET PAID 16,166 West, Toronto, Ontario; PQ. worth of scientific equipment. Wheat sales were by far the largest, totalling some $6.99 million, followed by nickel at $562,000. The wheat sales were made before the extent of China's increase in grain production became known, and so far the Chinese» have shown no interest in buying more. Foreign exchange reserves will again limit Chinese imports to essentials in 1959. China's lack of knowledge of Ca- nadian export potential holds back trade expansion and this can only be overcome by thoroughly working the market, trade department officials say. Moreover, only Canadian products that are competitive ir world markets can interest the Chinese, who are just as price conscious as any other buyers. This was shown in Canada's inability to hola the market for fertilizers last year; although fertilizers were Cana- da's leading export to China for the previous three years, they disappeared from the list in 1958--European sup- pliers offered Inwer prices, Other Editor's Views TRAFFIC GROWING PAINS (Montreal Star) The problems which the motor age have created for cities are sometimes called growing pains, and the figure of speech is a good one. Neglect of grow= ing pains, as that childhood ill used to be called, often led to permanently damaged hearts, and temporizing with traffic tangles has equally serious con=- sequences for a city. Bible Thoughts Which hope we have -as an anchor of the sou.--Hebrews 6:19, Weyneed some fixed certain point in life, otherwise. we drift into silly and dangerous eiirrents Total' 4 SMOKING | VERBOTEN! ORDERS MOLD ROM A 7 we a 4% THINKING MAN'S SMOKE OTTAWA REPORT In Ottawa Revived By PATRICK NICHOLSON OTTAWA -- Dr. P. B. Rynard, Conservative MP for Orillia and chairman of the joint parliament- ary health committee, last week revived a very happy tradition in arranging a lunch meeting of the committee with a famous guest speaker. "Our purpose is to try to bring the most advanced medical thought to the attention of Par- liament," he told me. Among the members attending were ex-chairman Dr. W. H. McMillan of Welland, Kamloops' Senator Sydney Smith, P.EL's Senator Florence Inman, Rose- dale's David Walker, Barrie's Heber Smith, Fort William's Hu- bert Badanai and Nanaimo's Bus Matthews. Guests brought the at- tendance up to nearly 80, which jammed the famous Room 16 in the Parliament Buildings. The guest speaker was Dr. Bill Mustard, of Toronto's Sick Chil dren's Hospital and of the Bant- ing Institute. He gave a most in- structive yet witty address on the amazing developments 'in life saving heart surgery, bringing us right up to modern use of the artificial heart and plastic re- placement organs, which appear to be eliminating the only advant- age the model T Ford had over the. human body, And he de- scribed the "deep freeze" and other possible methods of slowing down the flow of blood, whose loss makes heart operations both messy and dangerous. LAUGHS FOR LAYMEN Although there were several professionals among his audience Dr. Mustard came right down to the lay level in describing how Dr. Bigelow of Toronto keeps a groundhog farm, where he is ex- perimenting to see just what makes groundhogs hibernate. If humans could hibernate-- namely, slow down our metabol- ism, allow our body tempera- tures to fall to near freezing, and decelerate our heart beats from the normal 72 to one or two per minute--the flow of blood would be greatly diminished and opera- tions immensely simplified. Dr. Mustard also hinted at other uses of hibernation. Think what a wonderful way to dispose temporarily of a mother-in-law; what help it would be in many other operations and in the treat- ment of mental disorders. While on the subject ot ground- hogs, the doctor explained that there are sound medica grounds for the weather forecast associ- ated with Groundhog Day. On that occasion, the amateur me- teorologist shakes off his state of hibernation to show his nose and perhaps a little more outside his winter home. If he can see his shadow, he knows thal there will be at least another month of winter, so he slips back into his hole and into renewed hiberna- tion. Dr. Bigelow believes that this trick of nature may be associ- ated with an unusual deposit of fat in a groundhog's armpits. He PARAGRAPHICAL WISDOM Well, at least some people on the way to the poorhouse aren't having to walk over that hill this - side of it--they're riding over it in expensive, unpaid-for ™ cars. Query to grammarians: What is the plural of "the foot of the bed?" "Amateur cowhands lassoed a runaway steer after she had broken out of a truck. Just as they congratulated themselves, the cow dropped dead." -- La Salle (I11.) Daily News-Tribune. Perhaps the sudden metamor- phosis was too great a shock for this animal Another bad combination is a new chase and an A'4 Aen is extracting this secretion from groundhogs on his farm, and from this he hopes to devise some similar elixir which will make you and me hibernate. Hooray for the upcoming super- tranquilizer! The medical reason which makes sense of the old wives' tale about Groundhog Day was explained to me by Dr. Rynard. On clear sunny days in mid- winter, the air is always colder than average. But clouds form an insulating blanket, which protect us from the chill upper air, So when the groundhog cannot see his shadow, because clouds are obscuring the sun, the air is warmer and so he thinks winter is over, and he emerges. Parliament's popular doctor told me that he has a friendly groundhog which sits on a fence outside his house in Oriilia--dur: ing the three warmer seasons only of course. BYGONE DAYS 35 YEARS AGO Local grocers were trying to sell their stocks. of oleomargar- ine. The product had been intro- duced as a war measure and the government now banned the use of it as of March 1, 1924. Mr. and Mrs. F. Patte, 85 On- tario street, who were married 52 years on Feb 29. 1872, cele- brated their 13th leap-year wed- ding anniversary. About 30 local Welsh citizens gathered at Park Road school to celebrate St. David's Day. The first part of the town's new fire alarm system was received and installed. The Board of Health passed a resolution to ask the council to pass a bylaw to enforce the pas- teurization of milk. Among the permits issued for building for the month of Feb- ruary was one for a proposed new grandstand in Alexandra Park at a cost of $25,000 and is- sued to W. J: Holland, contrac- tor. Another was for a home on Annis street at an estimated cost When he emerges from hiber- of $1800 nation--the groundhog, not the doctor -- in early spring, after three months of complete starva- tion in hibernation, be is skinny and looks bedraggled, with his coat resembling a shaggy buffalo skin. After about six weeks, he be- gins to fill out and his coat'loses that moth-eaten appearance. He progresses steadily until by late fall he has once again stored up enough fat and excess foodstuff inside him, to carry him through the long sleep of slow metabol- ism and no dinner. So it's true what they say about Groundhog Day. A truck owned by the Williams Piano Co. was the first to break the road through to Toronto af- ter a week of snow-blocked high- way. Driver of the truck was George Shemilt. District Governor of the Rotar- ians, Andy Wallace of St. Cath- arines, presented the charter to the newly organized Rotary Club at Bowmanville. Oshawa's first leap year baby was born to Mr. and Mrs. A. Kellar, 76 Royal street, (Ray Jasley). FOR BETTER HEALTH Doctor Suggests Ways To Manage Sick Child HERMAN 'N. BUNDSEN, M.D. What can you do when an ill child won't take his medicine without a struggle? Parents across the country have asked this question of them- selves and their doctors countless times. In the past, I have offered sev- eral suggestions to help solve this perennial problem. 7; 8 Norfolk, Va., pediatrician, Dr. Forrest P. White, has mapped out a real battle plan. GENERAL RULES In an article in a recent issue of the American Medical Asso- ciation's publication, 'Today's Health," Dr. White lists the fol- lowing general rules: First, plan the procedure. Have all the equipment within reach. If two adults are to administer the medicine, decide what each will do. Put the medicine bottle where the child can't knock it over. This is especially advisable if it is an expensive medicine. DETERMINATION HELPS Right from the beginning be determined that you will succeed. Perhaps this obvious determina- tion will be enough to convince the child that he might as well co-operate. Keep calm and don't let the child's excitement affect you. Talk soothingly to the youngster, even if he is yelling and scream- g. If the child vomits when a lig- uid medicine is given, wait until he calms down before trying to give it to him again. Generally, it will stay down the second time. Sometimes it is best to give only half a teaspoonful at a time This way less of the medicine is apt to be spilled. NO CHOICE Gently place the spoon on the tcngue and hold it there. Tip it to pour a small amount onto the back of the tongue. As long as you held the spoon in place, the Yori Tao n eA rapt endl pag and therefore has no choice but to swallow it. If the child clamps his mouth shut tightly, you can wrap him snugly in a sheet or blanket, thus freeing both of your hands to get his . mouth open and the spoon inside. Otherwise, it probably is best to let father hold the youngster on his lap so he can grab the youngster's wrists while mother adminsters the medicine, ONE PATIENT Dr. White also tells how to hold the child if only one parent is around to give the medicine, but this becomes a bit compli- cated what with holding the child's legs between your knees etc As 1 said, this is a real bat- tle plan. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Mrs. M. 8S. E..: Would you please tell me the symptoms and effects of multiple sclero- sis in its early stages? Answer: Multiple sclerosis may effect areas scattered throughout the nervous system and can producé symptoms in all regions of the body. In gen- eral these include numbness and tingling, weakness and paraly- sis, disturbance of vision, speech and balance, loss of weight. and strength and many other symp- toms of a like nature. REPORT FROM THE U.K. Smog Victims Tax Hospital Capacity By M. McINTYRE HOOD Special London (Eng.) Correspondent For The Times LONDON -- In a long, broad- windowed room near London Bridge, looking over the new wing of Guy's Hospital now under constructior!, a group of girls, on day and night duty, are having the busiest time of their lives. These are the girls who, by tele- one, oper2ie the Hosnital mergency Bed Service which acts as a middleman between doctors and hospitals in finding beds for patients. During the la-t, Emergency Bed Service on the fifth floor of a London building, and they take over the job. On huge wall boards in front of the girls are charts showing the hospitals in which beds are available. As calls come in, they Mi wi try of transport for permission to establish meters. Under sxigsing procedure in this country, the minister of transport will ask Parliam nt to approve orders giving these cities authority to have the meters. hester has presented a de. are routed to girls di th the hospitals in the districts in which the patients reside. The giv telephones the hospital, and when a bed is secured, she tele- phones the ambulance on a spe- tio cial direct line. The patient is picked up, and in a minimm of time and with a minimum of bormet is duly placed in a hospi- two weeks, they have found their ta] resources taxed to the utmost by the demand for beds for suffer- ers from 'smog flu" bronchitis and pneumonia. There are 14 girls on duty on each shift, now working around the clock. In the first week of the "smog" rush of cases, they dealt with 200 wnrgent admissions to hospital. The second week threat. ened to send the total mich hich. er as the dense fog continued, and cases of chest troubles mul- tiplied. JOINT UNDERTAKING The Emergency Bed Service is organized bv the King Bdward Hospital Fund. It is financed jointly by that find's volwitary subscriptions and the national health service. Busy medical practitioners have no time to telephone several hospitals seck- ing an empty bed for a patient. So they telephone to this group of girls operating the The value of this service dvr- ing these rush days of chest dis- eases brought on by the 'og has been tremendous. All over the London area, work stnfs are badly depleted and offices and stores under-manned hécause of the thousands afflicted by this virulent type of influenza. With- out the Emergency Bed Service. it i~ doubtful if the mediral nro- fession and the hospitals could have coved with the situation as efficiently as has been done. PARKING METERS As a result of the highly suc- cessful experimental insta lation of parking meters in the Mayfair section of London, these 2id to orderly parking and freer control of traffic will soon he sprouting in many of the larger cities of England. Tive cities, Manche ter, Liverpool, Bristol, Birmingham, and Sheffie'" have alre~Av nde formal application to the minis- READERS' VIEWS Education Week Called Foolish Dear Sir: The newspapers have been giv- ing a lot of publicity to Educa- tion Week. It does as much good as publicity for all the other weeks -- Fresh Salad Week, Bet- ter Bunion Week, Think Beautiful Thoughts Week, and so on for more than 52 weeks a year be- cause more Weeks are celebrated than there are divisions of seven days to handle them. Education Week is as foolish as the others. Education Week consists main- ly of a few speeches by educa. tional authorities and "open houses" at the schools, Parents who take an interest in their chil- dren's work do not need an "open house" to find out about their progress. Parents who do not take an interest either do not go to the "open house" or go only because they think it is the right thing to do, and in either case they get no benefit from it. Do teachers welcome the inva- sion of the school by parents? I doubt it, from private conversa- tions with a few teachers and re- cent speeches by teachers. It was the president of the University of New Brunswick, I think, who stated recently that the teaching profession should be considered in the same way as the medical profession, and laymen should not interfere with the profession- als. I do not know if this is the general attitude of teachers, but I suspect that most of them will agree. They want ty go ahead with their job without interfer- ence from the people who pay their salaries but know nothing about the profession cf education. Why not drop Education Week? It is of interest only to those people who are interested any- way, and it does not interest those people who have no interest at any other time. It is preaching to the converted, while the un- converted are not affected. It is also an interruption of school and teaching schedules. Oshawa. REALIST INFLATION Dear Sir: According to the Bureau of Statistic, tne ¢ st ¢ liv has declined again. Now what about all the gloomy talk about .nfla- tion? For months the presidents of banks, insurance companies and other financial institutions have been painting a black picture about the danger of inflation. To hear them talk, the dollar is just about finished and it won't be long before we'll need a bucket- full of dollars to buy a week's groceries. Then the cost-of-living figures come out and they show that you can buy more for your money now than you could buy a few months ago, and just as much as you could buy a couple of years ago. In my book, it's in- flation when you can't buy as much with vour maney, Why are the fingucial gentle- men so afraid of inflation? Or is it a cover for something else? Maybe they want the govern- ment to tighten up on monev so that interest rates are higher. Maybe they want less money to be spent on projects to cut un- employment. These things would make lending more profitable and labor cheaper. Whitby SUSPICIOUS MISSILE SWITCH Dear Sir: You say that the decision to 24-HOUR OSHAWA BLUEPRINTING AND REPRODUCTION SERVICES All Types -- All Sizes 136 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH RA 5-6569 SERVICE switch from aircraft to missiles was inevitable but you produce no proof to back up the state- men'. Russia is till building bombers and fighter planes, and Russia is the only country that we are afraid will start a war and maybe attack Canada and the States. We could use fighter planes to protect us against the bombers that Russia is building. That is a good reasor '+ the Ay: Bee Plant at Malton should sti working on planes like the Arrow. p In the last war, I joined up in the infantry in 1939. By the en of 1940 the experts we » {zlling us that the infantry was through and that only tanks were any good in the new kind of war fare. Then the real fizhting sta"t- ed. and guess who did most of the fighting and had . 0 m-1v casval- ties that had to scrape the barre! to get reinforcements? The infantry, of course. Now the ernerts are saying that the piloted planes are through. They could be wrong again. Oshawa. OLD SOLDIER tailed proposa' which calls for 2000 meters to be erect- ed in the centre of the city, Mean- while, extension o f parking meters to the St. Marylebone sec- n of London is likely to go ahead in March. TAX RATE APPEAL An entirely new angle of the parking meter situation here was brought tn light at a sessi°r of the Central London valuation court, when property owners on Grosvenor Square and Adams Row, in Mayfair, appealed to have their rating assessments re. duced on the groird that nrark- ing meters have depreciated the value of their property. These are the first cases to be brought on behalf of the owners and oc-u- piers of property since the meters were introfured in Tel, ihe ay, pellants include the Maharanee of Baroda and Lady DMinrworth, These appeals, considered of great imnorlance because of the plans for extension of the parking meter s'stem throveh ut the United Kingd were opposed by the Inland Revenue valuation department. At the hearing. it was claim- ed that the rateable value of the properties should be reduced be- cause the meters were a detri- ment to the amemties of the neighborhood. Before the meters came, it was stated, occunants of the properties always had reason- able facilities for parking with no time limit. Now they were unable to leave their cars outside their own homes for more than two hours at a time. On evidence being submitted that in spite of the meters, prop- erty leases and rentals on Gros- venor Square had ocaly recently reached a record high price, the appeals were dismi sed, the court ruling that there had been no de. preciation in rn nerty value bee cause of the meters. Pupils In Poor Physical Shape Board Informed PORTAGE la PRAIRIE, Man, (CP)--Physical fitness in schools here is at an "extremely low level," recreation director Stan Floyd told the elementary school board. Revealing results of a recent survey, Mr. Floyd said that in grades seven and eight the girls were found to have such poor co- ordination that only a few could catch a ball thrown at moderate He said there were boys in high school who could not do even one push-up or chin-up; probably two- thirds of the youths never played on a team. The remaining one- third is active. QUEEN'S PARK Action Of Session Best In Committee By DON O'HEARN Special Correspondent to The Oshawa Times TORONTO -- As usual some of the best action of the session Is taking place down in the commit- tee rooms. And also as is customary some of the best of this, in turn, is in the private bills committee. In the committee rooms all members are equal--there are no "back-benchers"--and in the in- formal atmosphere this equality can mean some rousing times. Given the variety of questions, many of them quite controversial which come before private bills, and the rousing can become roaring times, FERRY ROW One. of the most tempestuous sessions of this year's committee centred on a bill for a Pelee Island ferry service The Township of Pelee would like to try and run a new ferry that the federal government is building. To be able to tender on the franchise it needs provincial sanction, And so it was before the com- members were on their feet try- ing to be heard. The centre of the storm was Liberal Arthur Reaume, and yell- ing at him or at the chair were a bank of PC's whose feelings had been offended. Mr. Reaume had charged -- in his usual brash manner -- that the minister of municipal affairs was trying to dictate to the com- mittee. He contended that government members had been 'told how to ote." And the chorus of yells, boos and declamations thal resulted was a weird and wonderful per- formance. FAST ONE? The bill probably would have been defeated without Mr, Reaume's intervention, but never. theless there is a suspicion he may have pulled a fast one. Pelee Island is in 'he riding of William Murdoch, the veteran PC from Essex South and represents a substantial block of votes. The islanders were strongly in favor of the ferry. They will not feel very friendly towards anyone who voted mittee with a bill which would against it. give it the necessary authority. Yet when the vote was called It didn't get it -- and in the the Conservative members were hour-long wrangle building up to all so mad at Mr. Reaume they the refusal server might well have wondered the uniamiliar ob- voted solidly to knock it out, Mr. Murdoch was left to stand just what sort of strange brawl alone with the Liberals--and un- he had wandered into. doubtedly brood about votes At the height of the aispute 10 going out the window. To Discuss Formation of New Politic UAW, «5s Speakers $1.00 Registration Fee OPEN MEETING Saturday, March 7th 9.00 a.m. to 4.30 p.m. Hayden Argue CCF. canadian Labour Congress Executive Vice-President Stanley Knowles al Party ond St. E., Oshawa Noon Luncheon Provided