COs PMN Rabe "¥@ THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, Jenvery 21, 1963 OTTAWA (CP) -- Election of Egan Chambers of Montreal as Conservative national president is seen by some observers heré as an example of the winds of change blowing through the Pro- gressive Conservative party, Mr, Chambers, 42-year-old bi- lingual insurance broker, has a solid record of party achieve- ment but has shown an occa- W. I. WHELER, VICE PRESIDENT, DAVID M. WOODS, PRESIDENT AND D. G.. BRASS, GENERAL MERCHANDISE MANAGER Award Presented To Walker Stores The Judy Award is_ the "Oscar" of the Canadian Gar- ment Industry, It is presented annually by Garment Sales- men Ontario Market Inc, in re- cognition of outstanding achieve- ment in the field of fashion. Walker's Stores were present- ed with the 1962 Judy Presiden: tial Award for their dramatic and outstanding contribution to fashion retailing. ' Wailker's brought a new level sional tendency to kick over the traces and was not the first choice of the party old liners. But he won popular support at the party's annual meeting here and quietly admitted his own ambition for the job. - Runner-up was Preston Gil- bride, 51, a Toronto insurance executive reported to be first choice of the convention's nom- inating committee. He was little known outside the inner con- claves of the party and Toronto business circles. SAT IN COMMONS Mr. Chambers, before his gen- eral election defeat last June, was MP for Montreal St. Law- DEATHS of fashion to the doorstep of On- tario women, and presented it in an interesting and unique manner. Much of what they did are "firsts" in Canada, Of par- ticular significance are: 1. Walker's fashion presenta- tion to the "young adult" in Seventeen Magazine. For the first time, fashion - conscious "young adults'? were shown fa- shions, made in Canada for them, and available in Canada to them, 30 Areas Will Fight End Of CNR Lines | CHESLEY, Ont. (CP)--Mayor 'William Matheson said Friday night at least 30 municipalities have indicated they will defini- tely oppose plans by Canadian 'National Railways toend serv- fice on branch lines in their areas, The CNR wants to end serv- ice on its Guelph-Owen Sound, Guelph-Southampton and Strat- ford-Kincardine lines. It con- tends it is losing $300,000 an-| nually on the three lines. | . Mr, Matheson, chairman of a committee 25 municipalities 'have formed to present a brief g service curtailment to the board of transport commis- sioners, said he has heard the CNR will apply to the board og a week to end the serv- ce. | He said the committee will meet in Walkerton Wednesday to prepare its brief. 2. The development of pre- teen and "young adult' depart- ments in the Walker's Stores -- not as off-shots of the overall ia- dies department, but as separ- ate and complete identities: in themselves. 3. The presentation of pre-teen and "young adult" fashions through daily fashion shows at the Canadian Nationa] Exhibi- tion. 4. Promising that "'good taste in fashion need not be expen- sive" and proving it by offering Ontario women smartly styled apparel for fashion needs as well as family needs -- at prices keyed to the budget of the average consumer. Palmateer of Kincardine, Bruce County warden, has told the committee that $820 donated by communities which had been threatened with a rail service cut-off about six years ago has been held in trust by Kincar- dine since then. Mayor Matheson said the committee has not been worried about raising money, but the money will be welcome in ob- taining legal assistance to op- pose the CNR application. Chesley is about 20 miles Meanwhile, Reeve Harvey southeast of Owen Sound. Amateurs Injured By Pro Theatre By EDNA BLAKELY OTTAWA (CP)--The rise of the professional theatre in Can- ada in the last 10 years has 'taken its toll on amateur thea- tre, Richard MacDcnald, na- tional director of the Dominion Drama Festival, says He told a press conference) Saturday he expects the situa- tion to level off "in the next few years." Good amateurs who had pro- gressed to a point where they might become directors of ama- teur groups were lost to the professional theatre. This had Row Develops Over Stock Exchange Rule MONTREAL (CP) La 'Presse says a row has oc curred in the Montreal finan cial community over stock ex- change rules which make it pos sible for Toronto brokerage «firms to control admission to membership. ' 'The daily newspaper says in +a financial page story that the fight results from a move to 'break the veto power Toronto firms may exercise over ad- + missions. ) La Presse says the first round ;was won by Toronto brokerage firms, through their represent- Safives on the Montreal ex- j;change, when a proposed amendment to rules governing jadmission of members was set jaside at the annual meeting , last Thursday. Under present rules one neg- ative vote t am applica- 'tion for membership is said to 'cancel five favorable votes. The pro amendment, ' said to have had the support of 'Eric W Kierans, exchange 'president, and the nine - man ; mors, would have + reduced strength of nega- 'tive votes to one cancelling ' two favorable votes. " ronto brokerage firms are { said to have more than 25 per , cent of the stock exchange's 78 t seats and votes and La Presse 'says this proportion, under ex- ; isting rules, gives them control over applications for member- affected the quality of some festivals, This will be the third year in which the festival has used pro- fessional people as adjudicators at regional festivals and it has helped to raise the standards, Mr. MacDonald added. | _Adjudicators for the 14 re-| jgional festivals, to be held in| March, were mamed Friday. _ Two of them have taken part jin festivals. Herbert Whittaker, |Toronto drama critic, is the jonly person to win the direc- tor's award twice in Dominion festivals. _ Another adjudicator is Wil- {liam Needles, who has been with Ontario's Stratford Shake- spearean Festival for eight years and appeared in festival production with the Kitchener. | Waterloo Little Theatre about 1935 or 1936, He said it was because of an adjudicator's remarks im that |first festival thaf he decided to attend drama school cago. Other adjudicators for re- gional festivals are Montreal roducer Norma Springford; oronte actor and director Esse Ljungh and Montreal bilin- | gual directors Guy Beaulne and | Florent Forget The final Dominion festival ill be held May 13-18 at Kitch- ener. The eight cme winners | will compete $1,000 offered jby the Canadian Association of | Broadcasters. A $2,000 scholarship to the National Theatre School in Montreal has been offered by the Social Register of Canada One candidate will be selected from each of the eight ones by the regional adjudicators and the finalists will be auditioned by school officials during a } | Ww By THE CANADIAN PRESS Toronto--Dr. Frank E. W Wetmore, 52, professor of chem- istry at the University of Tor- cond and principal of New Col- lege. Toronto -- Edgar William Thomas, 63, vice-president of E. G. Thomas and Son Limited, stationery manufacturers and bookbinders St, Georges, Que.--Edouard Lacroix, 74, former Liberal member of Parliament for Beauce from 1925 to 1944, Bracebridge, Ont. -- Msgr. Michael O'Leary, 84, who was a priest in Bracebridge for 50 years. Toronto-- Mrs. Mary Agnes Pease, a member of the Cana- ae Women's Press Club since Dublm--Dr Adolph Riffer- scheidt, 59, West German am- bassador to Ireland and for. merly West German consul- gore in Montreal and New ork; following a cerebral hem- orrhage. rence-St. George constituency and parliamentary secretary to Defence Minister Harkness, Mr. Chambers' election was, in some ways, a tangible reflec: tion of the spirit of the meeting. There was a strong undercurrent of feeling among the party rank- and-file, represented by a pre- dominant number of the 1,800 voting delegates present, that younger, more energetic men less tied to old party traditions |were on the move within the party. This was not necessarily in- terpreted' as criticism of the present leadership by Prime Minister Diefenbaker, 67, his chief lieutenants, External Af- fairs Minister Green, 66, and retiring national organizer Sen- ator Allister Grosart, 56. It was, instead, a feeling that a second generation of Conserv. atives who had demonstrated electoral success should be moved into a position of more prominence, Hence the appoint- ment of Dalton Camp, 42, to succeed Senator Grorart as na- tional organizer, and the elec- tion of Mrs. H. S. Harrison BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT By GREG MacDONALD_ | Canadian Press Staff Writer The New York and Cleveland newspaper strikes are cutting deep into the Canadian news- print export trade and industry wages. It is estimated that approxi- mately $11,000,000 in newsprint exports has been lost and $4,- 000,000 in wages since the strikes began in New York seven weeks ago and in Cleve- land eight weeks ago. Robert M. Fowler, president! of the Canadian Newsprint As- sociation, recently estimated that the strike in New York is costing the Canadian industry about $1,500,000 a day in news- print export. The average weekly tonnage of newsprint to New York from tons. Cleveland newspapeis absorb 2,000 to 3,000 ton of Ca- nadian paper a week Mr. Fowler said the loss of sales to the two cities is not recoverable in any post-strike surge of sales. . He added that each week the strikes continue mean a loss of about $1,750,000 in sales and | $650,000 in wages. The strike began in New York Dec. 8 and in Cleveland Nov, 29. MAY DEVELOP TAR SANDS Alberia's Athabasca oi] sands --believed to be the largest oil reserves in the world -- may soon be developed if the oil companies have their way. Three proposals for commer- cial development of the sands were heard by the Alberta Oil and Gas Conservation Board in Calgary last week. Another pro- posal was approved by the gov- ernment earlier. Can-Amera Oil Sands Devel- Husband Charged After Shooting TORONTO (OP)--Peter Vin- cent John McLean, 24, has been charged with wounding in the shooting of his wife Florence, 22, Friday night, police said Sunday. Strikes Cut Into Canadian Trade sion to produce 40,000 barrels jof oil daily from the sands at a cost of $70,000,000, Shell Oil Company of Canada Ltd, wants the night to construct a $350,000,000 plant that would produce 100,000 barrels a day. Cities Service Athabasca Inc. is seeking permission to build a $356,000,000 plant 'would also produce 100,000 barrels a day. Great Canadian Oil Sands Ltd. has already been granted gov- ernment approval for a scheme which would produce 31,500 bar- bon a day on the Athabasca site. The sticky sands, on the banks of the Athabasca River 180 miles northeast of Edmonton, are estimated to contain 300.- 000,000,000 barrels of oil--five times greater than the volume found in the United States since Canadian mills is about 12,500 805 Unlike a conventional oil well field where wells are drilled and oil pumped to the surface or flows under natural pressure, the Athabasca oil is in the form of tiny drops, each surrounding a grain of sand. DETAILS AWAITED Details of the Rio Algom Mines Ltd.-Atlas Steels Ltd. takeover are expected to be an- nounced his week. On Friday Atlas announced it |has approved an offer for the purchase of its assets by Rio Algom. The offer is subject to approval by Atlas shareholders jwho will meet at a special | meeting Feb. 15. It is expected that Rio Algom |will offer about $45,000,000 and |680,000 Rio Algom shares for | | Atlas, | AIRLINE EXPANDS Lufthansa German hich entered the | Airlines, | wi Canadian in Chi-}opment Ltd. is seeking permis-|civil aviation field seven years }ago with two employees, one in {Montreal anc the other in Tor- jonte, now has seven branches jacross the country and a staff | Of 59 employees Wolfgang A. Kittel, a member of the airline's board of man- jagement, said in Toronto Fri- |day that the company has put {$5,000,000 into the Canadian jeconomy and further expansion is under study. He said negotiations now are Police said McLean ag wel in to provincial police) untsville, 120 miles north!Ganadair Ltd. in Montre: of here, Saturday. | "The purchase may te ae Mrs. McLean was wounded in/py th, as : jby the German air force, with the back by a chot fired through) Lufthansa equipping, servicing the plate glass window of at) and operating the planes except east-end restaurant where she when they are needed by the air worked as a waitress. She was! force. . under way for acquisition of three CL-44 cargo planes from New Tory Chief Seen Evidence Of Change Smith of Kelowna, B,C., to suc- ceed Senator Jose Quart, effer- vescent and personable Quebec City matron. MORE HAS BIG CHANCE In his new position, Mr, Chambers has an opportunity to make a name jor himself within the party in his new post. The presidency can be a sinecure for an old party stalwart called on only to preside at national party functions and dip into his own pocket or encourage his busi- ness friends to dip into theirs for party funds, On the' other hand, it can be an active job of party organiza- tion and enthusiasm-sparking, which entails much travel across the country, innumerable) coffee parties with the ladies and late nights with the men, and counless speeches designed to boost party fortunes. During the 22 years before 1957 that the Conservatives were in opposition, the former trend was' predominant among party presidents. HEES STARTED TREND Hon. George Hees, now trade minister, is generally credited with changing the concept of the office to the active line and he ee RE ele = ON ringy" sci was followed by Hon, Leon Bal- cer, now ransport minister, the first French - speaking party president. Senator G, §, Thorvaldson, who has just retired as party president, was formerly presi- dent of the Canadian Chambers of Commerce, a long-time friend of Mr, Diefenbaker, a person- able man in small! circles, but no orator in large gatherings. Mr. Chambers combines the quatities of an effective political mind with the image of a young suburbanite--friendly, frank, at- tractive physically as a man, and with an attractive, effer- vescent wife. After his election, Mr. Cham- bers spoke feelingly of his poli- tical philosophy but guardedly on his plans which he said were subject to a later meeting with the newly-elected executive of- ficers, His philosophy was simply Conservative, with an apprecia- tion of some problems facing the country as he saw them-- principally the need for under- standing in the rest of Canada of the FrenchCanadian view- point, and the need for better communication bet ween the party officers and its member- ship. | OTTAWA (OP) --Liberal Leader Pearson has suggested a "continentalcommon mart- ket'? between Canada and the United States in the event Bri- tain is unable to join the Euro- pean Common Market. In a speech at London, Ont., Friday, he described such @ North American trade area as "both a dazzling and a difficult idea." It would have to be brought about in a way that could be reconciled with Canada's Com- monwealth and world trading requirements. Mr. Pearson listed the sug- gestion as one of several alter. natives for Canada in the event Britain is unable to negotiate adequate conditions for entry to the six-nation European Com- mon Market. WARNS OF PROBLEMS Such a development would face Canada with "even more difficult decisions" than if Brit- ain joined the European six. One alternative for Canada if Britain did not join Europe-- Store Manager Chases Robbers) BURLINGTON, Ont. (CP)--A shoe - store manager, furious when one of two armed men tried to hit him with the barrel of a shotgun, turned on the ban- dits Saturday night and chased them from his garage. Thomas 'Tonelli, 36, told po- lice he was accosted in the ga- rage of his home by two hooded men armed with shotguns after he returned home from his Tor- onto store. "T figured them for a couple of jokers until one of them pointed a gun at me and told me to get into the trunk of my | ar." Mr. Tonelli refused twice to get into the trunk, and then re- fused when the bandits ordered him outside the garage. "IT told them that I realized they were holding guns, but I also told them they woudn't be stupid enough to shoot me." Mr. Tonelli said he became progressively angrier as the men ransacked his car and dumped his store records out, seeking his weekend receipts. He had deposited the money in a night bank depository en route home. The frustrated men advanced on him and one tried to club him, but Mr. Tonelli deflected the blow. When he tried it again, "I got good and mad." The manager took a swing at one of the bandits, then chased them to the end of the drive- way. The two fled on foot. ~ IF YOU ARE NOW TAKING A LAXATIVE ONCE, TWICE or THREE TIMES A WEEK ++ THEN YOU SwouLD BUY WR TODAY! the Laxative Tablet with the GENTLE DIFFERENCE Take gentle-acting Ne... Nature's Remedy! There is no letdown, no uncomfortable after-feeling. NR is an all-vegetable laxative. For over 70 years, Nt has been giving folks pleasant, effective relief overnight. = Helps you feel better ... and look better! | REGULAR + CHOCOLATE COATED + JUNIORS S realeieys , cross-Canada tour. admitted to hospital but later) N. America Trade | Plan By Pearson some special Commonwealth] economic arrangement -- would be difficult because of the na- ture of the Commonwealth, It would be impossible for Canada if it meant exclusion of the U.S. from benefits. | Another alternative -- asso- ciating the U.S, with such a "would certainly be difficult" because of U.S. trade relations with Latin America and Japan. Then he added: "What about Common market, if all | proves impossible, between) Canada and the U.S., to be; brought about in a way that/ could be reconciled with our| Commonwealth and world trad-| ing requirements? That is both a dazzling and difficult idea," In a London dispatch Satur- day The Canadian Press errone-| ously reported Mr, Pearson as suggesting this as an alterna-/ tive for Canada if Britain does enter the European Common Market. In another report, CP erroneously reported him as putting it forward as an alter-) native in the event of failure} of a move towards a North At- lantic trading community, The reference in the report to a North Atlantic trading| community was to Mr, Pear- son's proposal that, if Britain joins the European Common Market, Cafiada should work) with the U.S. to negotiate tar- iff reductions and trade ar-| rangements between Europe) and Norh America. | Commonwealth arrangement --| 4 Toe eae VATICAN CITY (AP)--Vin- cen Pallotti, 19th century Ital- ian priest who founded a mis- sion society credited with shielding thousands of Jews from Nazi persecution, was pro- claimed a saint of the Roman Catholic Church Sunday Pope John. About 10,000 persons, includ- ing large pilgrimages from a dozen countries, attended the ceremony in St, Peter's Basil- ica. The Pope read a lengthy speech reviewing the life of the new saint, He was in the basil- ica for half of thé three-hour OIE ge Coy ee Oem MIE Or Vincent Pallotti Named Saint By Pope John XXIII bY!director of a Rome seminary Pk i ong OMe ey ees iy OVE + Father Pallotti, who founded the Society of the Catholic Apos- Olate (Pallottine Fathers), was born April 21, 1795, in Rome. He was ordained in 1818, In 1827 he was appointed spiritual and six years later was given the same job at the Vatican's Propaganda Fide College, now the University for the Propaga- tion of the Faith. ony CGF QOmg this work which resulted unas he Pee in 1835, The Pallotines number 3,000 priests . nuns who pf ne Daited States, Latin. America, south ~~ east Africa, India and Aus- Talia, FEVERISH, SNEEZY, STUFFED UPP When a cold strikes, insist ona» BUCKLEY'S COLD CAPSULES The fast results will Only 450 -- family tise oo During these years he de- voted much time to aiding mis- sionaries passing through Rome, It was his interest in ceremony, This was approxi- mately the same length of time he had participated "in cere- monies for the canonization of three other saints, on Dec, 9, shortly after he began to re- cover from anemia and & stom- ach ailment. Hé seemed strong, Twenty eight cardinals at- tended the ceremony, s s Eight People Die s In Burning Home POTEAU, Okla, (AP)--Trag- edy 'interrupted wedding plans Sunday when a fami! and the 14-year-old died in an early a that destroyed a small frame house in nearby Calhoun, The victims were Bert Brown, 67, his wife, Maggie, %, five children--twins Carl Shirley, 12, Gary, 17, Terry, 10, and Johnnie, &--and a visiting Ineighbor girl, Christine James. 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