2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridoy, September 23, 1960 PP BABY RESCUED Moore from the sewer he was pushed into by children near his Hamilton home. Key- Wilbur Urlin and Mrs, Nat tie Buchke (left) show how they saved 5-week-old Kevin | other afety Regulations Bitterly Criticized industrie as t manufactur- | con- t in such ng mining hway and TORONTO (CP criticism of Ontario's safety regulations Thursday before the mission on industrial The bor no single, conscious industrial safety and what rules exist are enforced The ration char 1957 on dealing diation hazards has not implemented with necessar) ulat It said vention under the tion Act grants "If they have produced neither safety codes nor enforcement and are still accepting grants from the board, then we would conclude that all or most of the Scathing|ployers industrial | lumber heard ing, h struction The federation criticized absence of 1 ulations cover was general royal com- safety the Ontario Federatior ed in a brief there is {ransportation | rs in the backs of truck 1 WANT The Ontario char { DETAILED RULES t brief called for creation of approach health not proper an authority to a det set of safety or each and sub ndustry ( repare { fede that leg i federation urge ) ( given to e 1 rd work w f 40 p hours 0 David Hamiltor OFL STRIKE SITUATION ms and accident pre associations Workmen's Compensa receiving llega afety established e secre are owest construction ing more Timken Denies {| FROM SEWER in's year-old brother Brian is shown (right) with his father Harry Moore. The baby is in Preservation '0f Ontario | Forest Urged TORONTO (CP) ~-- Ontario should preserve its remaining igued you become and the more Virgin forests and plains for re- sceident-prone,"' search for future generations, A 'safety inspector who worked Dr Richard H, Pough of the mn the St. Lawrence Seaway told nited States nature conservancy he commission that an educa- 53d Thursday onal safety program had given He told 170 delegates at closing seaway project one of the sessions of a two-day seminar on accident-frequency rate narks and nature reserves in On n the history of Canadian heavy tario that untouched nature has provided half the known cures for diseases, fair condition with a fractured skull ~(CP Wirephoto) ary-treasure, said, "The longer jours you work the more fa he Cornwall, Hydro Electric Power ssion fire and safety in sald circulating the un Samuel G. Hill of Intario omm pector, "We have the responsibility to future generations not to act like bulls in a china shop," he deta of one accident "What we may have lost the effect of preveni- ready, no one knows,' ike it [] sald leasant al ften had M. Nicholson, eral of the British nature con ervancy, said his organization functioned under royal charter to carry out conservation measures and stimulate research into con ervation programs, but not to provide recreation, direcior-gen 'Tourist B B.C. Mansion To Be Vacated By JOHN MATTERS onanza 'Meeting Planned Being Measured HONEY HARBOUR (CP)--The|the Huron Indian village at Mid tourist industry is worth an an-|land to realize what ingenuity {nual $80,000,000 to the area|and hard work can mean in tour- Canadian Press Staff Writer VICTORIA (CP Lieutenant Governor Frank Ross, a wealthy industrialist, financier and host On Constitution OTTAWA (CP) A new at! But there was no agreement tempt--first in 10 years--to put on a method whereby all aspects Canada in sole control of its own! of the constitution could be served by the Georgian Bay De- velopment Association, Travel Minister Cathcart of Ontario told the association's economic de-| velopment conference Thursday. More than 200 delegates from member centres and from indus- {trial and tourist promotion agen-| | cies outside the region are attend ing, Mr, Cathcart said that of the 108 new tourist places built in the| province this year about one third have been opened in GBDA territory, Surveys to measure the impact lof tourist spending have been| conducted at Lakefield, Brace- bridge, Leamington, Bobcaygeon, Kenora and Eganville, he re- ported, "In Lakefield," he said, "we found that 57 per cent of the spending recorded in the survey was by non-residents, The im pact of this on the economy of the town would be equivalent to the payroll of an industry em- ploying between 60 and 70 peopl the year round, In other surveys the ratio was even higher." | Mr, Cathcart said two new) | movies have been produced by this department for showing in theatres. One of these d with the GBDA area and Algonquin Park, BUSINESS VARIES This year as never before, Mr | Cathcart told the gathering, there are contrasting reports on the state of the tourist business in Ontario, Some areas, he said good year, while have had a others have shown a decrease in business | 'This fact emerges very clearly," Mr, Cathcart added "Those areas which have had a successful season are those which contain natural, man - made or historical attractions which have heen properly developed and suc cessfully exploited "We have only to look at the Stratford Shakespearean Festi val, Santa's village at Brace. bridge, or the great attraction of Canadians Need Rest Of World QUEBEC (CP)--N, R, Crump,| president of Canadian Pacific Railway, says Canadians must face up squarely to the fact that he Par excellence, next week will end a five-year term of office as Mts . the Queen's chief representative You now have an industry "prick Columbia worth approximately $80,000,000 Sie and Ws. Rose. will vacate 5s lie means in Your hands lies the means of the new $2.000,000 Government 4 House overlooking the Strait of Juan de Fuca where thousands {of distinguished visitors and or- |dinary citizens have been enter- tained at fabulous balls, dinners land garden parties Mr, and Mrs, Ress have been hosts to the Queen and Prince Philip, Princess Margaret and dozens of members of other | United Kingdom and foreign roy- |alty, But their guests have been . To Africa By Canada mainly ordinary people--an es- timated 14,000 of them in the last OTTAWA (CP) -- Canada will year alone : : lose no time in making effective! "We conceived it as a house : i _. lof hospitality for all the province its pledged assistance to African po" ote than that, a residence members of the Commonwealth where distinguished visitors from under the new program drawn many countries have been able up by Commonwealth finance to confer on important projects," ministers at London this week, says Mr 088 Finance Minister Fleming said 'A mumber of these projects, Thursday night of value to the industrial develop- y ent of B.C., have been con- Mr, Fleming spoke to reporters Ment of 5. 8 ec on his retugn by air from the cluded after quiet talks at Goy- " Commonwealth consultative con. ®rment House ference which set up the Special SUCCESSOR UNKNOWN Commonwealth African Who will become the province's ance Program to which Canada ah Jieutenant-governor is any committed $3,500,000 annually for one's guess, There has been the next three years starting widespread speculation that De- April 1 fence Minister Pearkes would re- Technical and educational as- sign his cabinet post to return to sistance, well as help on his home town capital projects, will be given under the program, Confined to » Basic School Ideas Debated Commonwealth areas, the aid will go principally to those Afri TORONTO (CP)---The Cana dian Education Association heard can countries which have achieved full independence but pro and con arguments Thursday for a basic school currienlum will not be denied to those emerg- ing to this status, Mr, Fleming said, mon Market also came up at the Capt, J, D. Armstrong of Ot London meeting and Mr, Flem-|\(awa director of naval educa ing said the views of all other|tion said variations in curricula Commonwealth countries were stated in the lcearest terms t dollars to a community," Quick Rid as question of Britain's rela tions with the European Com sent constant upheavals that chal lenge cultural stability "The varying standards and options required for high school graduation and university en- trance leave most parents and children in a morass of bewilder- ment and despair," he said, Kurt R intn, chairman of the Canadian Conference on Ed- ucation, agreed that a greater percentage of the population is on the move from province to province, but he did not favor a basic curriculum capital investment in business and industry rarely result in immediate productivity gains "Inflation, too, has taken its "It would make for a rigidity that would be etalamatous," he said. "There would be loss of flexibility, a disappearance of leadership and experimentation," "Canada needs the rest of the toll of efforts to improve world more than the rest of the capita productivity. Every revo world needs Canada. lution of the wage - cost - price In an address Thursday to a spiral has lessened our ability to convention of North American complete in world markets." per constitution will be launched at amended in Canada, federal-provincial talks here Oct 6 and 7, The goal is to find a way of amending the constitution in Can- ada without reference to the Brit- ish Parliament, An anpouncement Thursday from Justice Minister Fulton's of- fice said he and attordeys-gen- eral of the 10 provinces willl meet then "with a view to arriv-| ing at a basis for the domiciling of the Canadian constitution in| Canada," Convening of the conference was agreed on at last July's fed- eral-provincial fiscal conference after Quebec's newly-elected Lib- eral Premier Jean Lesage made a surprise proposal that the sub- ject be reopened, | Canada still must seek legisla tive action by the United King- dom Parliament for any constitu- tional change in matters involv- ing both federal and provincial Jurisdictions, The last attempt to find a method of attaining full auton-| omy in constiiutional matters! was made in 1950, At that time, the provinces agreed on a constitutional amend ment openi g the door to th present program of universal federal old age pensions to all over 70 Canadian Atom Work Outlined | VIENNA (AP) -- Canada will| soon start operation of her first nuclear power plants to replace | conventional energy by the vast resources of the atom, the Cana- dian delegate to the International | Atomic Energy Agency said Thursday Ambassador Max Hirsch Wer- from one province to another pre-ishof told the agency that Canada| has done "ploneer work" in build-| ing two nuclear power stations with outputs of 26,800 and 268,000 horsepower of electricity | He said that while other coun- tries were still far from using {nuclear energy as industrial power, Canada was going ahead with heavy-water type reactors "to explore the possibilities of the atom in industrial produc- tion," The 268,000-horsepower reactor on Lake Huron will start opera. 1964 while the smaller station will be completed next year, Wershof said, tion in Prime Minister Diefenbaker"s Bill of Rights was passed as & simple statute, Mr, Diefenbaker said in July that once agreement is reached on a method of constitutional amendment in Canada, the first amendment then might be a con- stitutional Bill of Rights, GET THE BEST For Less At MODERN UPHOLSTERING 9262 SIMCOE ST. N. RA B-6451 or RA 3-4131 OSHAWA ONLY 10% DOWN UP TO 2 YEARS TO PAY Smallest Eyeglass® HEARING AID % Smaller Than Previous Zenith Adjust To Your Head Shape 4-Transistor Performance . "LIVING SOUND HEARING AIDS Imperial Optical Co, Ltd, 11 Onterie St Phone RA CONVENIENT TERMS 1 Going To Hamilfon? Make your visit a pleas- ant one by staying at the new $1,500,000 in grants is being paid illegally," federation president David Archer told the commis sion The Scott Bateman, deputy minister of education for Manitoba, was elected association president, J, L, Page, deputy minister and director of building services for | securities administrators, he] Mr. Crump said technological said advance is essential, 'not only to | "We must rid ourselves of the social progress but, in the face [notion that this country, together of the Red Menace, it is a prime with the United States, enjoys un-| condition of survival." B 1 a = th - ____| Quebec's department of educa- challenged superiority over the tion, was elected vice-president! rest of the free world industrial 4 {and according to tradition will |efficiency and technological and Youn Women |and CO! g to tra managerial knowledge. { become the mext president, | "We must discard the heady | Hees Speaker At Regional Talk Arranged ST. THOMAS (CP)---The gen-, The mayor anounced that both eral manager of the strikebound parties in the dispute had agreed Canadian Timken plant here said to attend the meeting, Thursday the company will not] General manager T. W. Clift be represented at a union-man- gaid that "as far as we are con- agement meeting called for Mon- cerned there is no meeting sched- DIPLOMAT HOTEL 737-9 KING ST. E. federation represent em RUG & CARPET SALES Broadloom wall Delence Irked Mr, Pa election was seen | as a favorable reaction to a new Ey By Jail Plans OTTAWA (CP) -- The defence St department apparently isn't happy about the justice depart ment's plans to establish work camps for minimum security prisoners on some defence sites Officially, however, neither the! defence department nor the army had any comment Thursday. It is understood that the defence de partment has not' yet formally agreed to the plan Some officers maintained that the presence of prisoner work camps on or near defence estab lishments would be bad for mor- ale, Wives of armed forces per sonnel would be alarmed at the possibility of prisoners on the loose Justice department officials dis-| counted this fe a (CP)--Pre. I ! a cornerstone CEDAR SPRINGS mier Frost laid a hospital school expected to be oc-| jg cupied by 1,250 mentally retarded children by next spring custodial institutions, He said this had happened Hospital School, Of 2,571 patients were over 21 years of age and 154 over 50. He said hospitals such as the 25-building complex ¢ A in this village, 12 miles southeast| They said the work camps|or Chatham, will be used as ac would be completely divorced| tive treatment hospitals as much from the defence establishments.|as possible, Minimum security. prisoners| Health Minister were those who wanted to be re- Ontario is giving habilitated They were not/ymany phases of mental health hardened criminals or dangerous A special unit for care, treat maniacs, The work camps would ment and study of the emo- | be well removed from the vicin-|tionally disturbed child will bec ity of defence department mar- incorporated in the Cedar ried quarters. Springs Hospital, he said. t almost 1,200 Dymond leadership in v {day by Mayor Vincent A, Barrie. yled," He said the union "was School Begun fio For Retarded |' here Thursday for a $12,000,000 Aug * wae Prefer fautiontd Again Chatham Girl that the association will take a « oils Polio Victim year-old satisfactory said | heim, admitted earlier this week tion, but the two boys had received all Industry Meet PETERBOROUGH (CP)--Fed- ipposed to call us and ask for meeting and they have nol speak at the evening session of the Lake Ontario Development Association's industrial c o nfer ence here Oct, 11, manager Don Kingdon said Thursday Premier Frost is scheduled to open the one-day conference at which area industrial executives and municipal leaders will ex- change ideas on industrial and municipal relations in the Lake Ontario region, Mr. Kingdon Kenneth Levack, business agent r the United Steelworkers of merica (CLC), said he had ac- thé mayor's invitation fter being told the company had greed to be present, Workers at the plant struck 11 for union security, wage creases and fringe benefits, also announced isplay to four sportsmen's shows this year to |advertise vacation facilities in Ontario, Last year a similar dis play produced 4,000 written in quiries, United States LONDON, Ont. (CP)~A four Chatham girl, Alberta feuston, was admitted ot hospi al here Thursday with polio. Her sondition is said to be 'fairly Soccer Player Wins Acquittal SUDBURY (CP)---Karlo Sopta, 26-year-old former Toronto soc- cer player, was acquitted Thurs. day of a manslaughter charge in [the beating death of Charles Bibby, Sopta showed no emotion until John Dinese, 5, of Chatham, and Paul Vanhenten, 12, of Blen vere reported in serious condi- Hospital officials said the girl| wad not received the complete sourse of anti-polio vaccination, he injections, the verdict was explained to him| by an interpreter. Later he said he intends to stay in Sudbury and get a job with International Nickel Company He said that at no stage did he have any doubts he would be acquitted, "I knew that a just verdict would be handed down because in Canadian law that Is the only way it can be." Mr, Justice J. F. Donelly con- gratulated the Ontario Supreme {Court jury and said he could see {how it arrived at its verdict. The {Jury deliberated for four hours Sopta was charged with murder after Bibby, 26, an off-duty Inco policeman, was fatally injured in la street brawl March 15. The {grand jury reduced the charge to eral Transport Minister Hees will tions instead to achieving reall KITCHENER (CP) illusions of the wage-cost spiral {and turn the focus of our atten- Also Deceive ! "It seems growth and real social progressito me women practise deception based "on increased productivity from the age of 14 almost to the not only of plant and equipment grave in frying to exaggerate | but of men.' their age when young, and con BOOM SLOWED , |cealing it after reaching a cer- Canada's booming economic tain point," Magistrate J. R growth of the 1950s, he sald, has Kirkpatrick said Thursday been slowed this vear by unem He dismissed a charge against ployment, a shrinkage in capitalla Kitchener hotel beverage room investment expansion and heavy | waiter of serving liquor to a recurring trade deficits minor, A solution to Canada's eco-| Told that a girl of 15 had been nomic problems meanwhile de- served by the waiter, the magis- pended a great deal on what oc-|trate said it is "shocking" that curred in the U.S a girl of 15 could go into a bever- International unionism: made It age room and be served without almost impossible for Canada to!detection. ; insulate from consequences of| - attitude on the part o fhis prov- ince to interprovincial relations in education, CITIZENSHIP RETAINED Frenchmen living in former French colonies now independent can keep their citizenship under a new National Assembly Law, ORGANIST Johnny McMann NIGHTLY 9-12 HOTEL LANCASTER to wall, Ru gs in the heart of Hamilton Kk Carpets, Stair {§" Runners. 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