2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesdey, Februery 26, 1963 Liberals, NDPs Eyeing Quebec Socred Seats By THE. CANADIAN PRESS The Liberals and the New " Democrats are eyeing Quebec's 7% seats in Parliament with eager enthusiasm. And both parties are aiming their fire in the opening rounds of the April 8 federa! election fight at the Social Crediters who htld 26 Quebec seats in the last Parliament and are honing for at least 60 in the ne? Parlia- ment. Liberal Leader Pearson said Monday in Trois - Rivieres, Que., that the Social Credit party has no chance of forming a govemiment, bence "a vote for Mr. Diefenbaker." In a television talk--all in French -- Mr. Pearson urged Quebec voters not to throw away' their votes on a party "which creates only confusion by appealing to special inter- ests." At Rouyn, Que., Socia! Credit's deputy leader, Real Caouette, fired a counter at- tack at the Liberals, charging that Mr. Pearson and other Lib- eral leaders missed _ their chance to promote biculturalism when they were ' power. "We stand for Canadianism, for a fair deal for French and English Canadians from coast to coast," he said. While Mr. Pearson continued his Quebec election tour to boost the Liberals' 35 - seat standing in the last Parliament, the New Democrats also made overtures to Quebec voters. National NDP President Michael Oliver arnounced in Montreal. that Gerard Picard, prominent Quebec trade union- ist, will act as chief part y lieu- tenant in the province, runn as one of some 60 NDP can dates in Quebec. Mr. Picard said he expects the main opposition in Quebec to come from Social Crediters, to which Mr. Oliver added: PWA Suspends | Pilots Who Honored Picket VANCOUVER (CP) --Pa- cific Western Airlines Monday suspended four pilots for honor- "We believe the Progressive Conservatives are dead here end that the Liberals are bank- rupt as far as having new can- jdidates who can properly pre- sent the new Quebec." In the last Parliqment, the Conservatives held 14 Quebec seats, the; New Democrats had none. Campaigning out west, New Democratic Leader Douglas told an Edmonton rally that Quebec separatism is a serious problem for Canada. ous rupture could develop Canada. tion. We ought to see it." PM FLYING HOME For the Conservatives and the Minister Diefenbaker flying home from Britain and Social json .working privately tawa in Ot- Mr. Diefen b a ker, - arriving} home: today, was to remain in |Ottawa until Thursday. Then Albert for his own nomination meeting Saturday, followed by the formal start of his national next Monday. Great Lakes 90 Per cent Ice Covered DETROIT (AP)--AIl of the reat Lakes except Lake On- tario are 90 to 100 per cent ice- covered, the U.S. weather bu- reau says. The inland lakes' worst freeze in many years, result of a se. vere winter, was reflected in the weather bureau's first ice report of 1963. A late start in the spring) shipping season appeared al.| most certain. Ordinarily, ship- ping gets well under way by mid-March, but the change for "If the feelings of the people of Quebec are ignored, a seri- in We are a_ bicultural people, we are a bilingual na- |Social Crediters, Monday was \relatively quiet -- with Prime Credit Leader Robert Thomp- he leaves by tran for Prince election campaign in Winnipeg E this was believed to be slight. The report Monday said ice generally is at least two feet thick north of Grand Haven on Lake Michigan and north of Bay ing picket lines as stewardesses and traffic employees struck the airline in a wage dispute but failed to disrupt its flights. Mr. Thompson was expected to stay in Ottawa today to make final arrangements for his cross - country drive for votes. Meznwhile, Mr. Douglas flies to Calgary: for a night rally, while Mr. Pearson travels by train from Levis to Rimouski, then by car to Mont Joli, with public appearances at both Que- bec stops. Flu Outbreaks In' Two Areas Of Ontario By THE CANADIAN PRESS Influenza outbreaks were re- Ontario Monday but health of- ficials in the London and Wind- sor areas think that serious epi- demics may pass them by. Dr, J. A. Tavior, medical of- Ported in two areas of western) © ficer of health, for Leamington and Mersea township, said more than two per cent of the popu. lation of Leamington has Asian flu. - It was too late for immuniza-. tion, he said. 'lt takes at least }four weeks to achieve immuni- jzation and the bug is already }upon us." | In Sarnia, Dr. Gordon L. An- derson, diector of the Lambton County health unit, said true in- fluenza is spreading through the city and outlying areas. Cases have been turning up in indus- tries as well as in schools. St. Thomas Acquinas School was closed early last week when 146 of 345 "students were ill and about 30 students were absent when the school re. opened Monday. About 80 of the 473 students at nearby Forest District High School were re- ported ill Monday. | However, Dr. D. A. Hutchin-| son, London medical health of- spell may do much to ward off the influenza epidemic he had forecast for the city. In Windsor, Dr. John Howie, director of the metropolitan health unit, said there is no in- dication a flu epidemic is start- since: Friday, when heavy ab- senteeism was reported in sev- eral schools. Senior airline officials -- all veteran pilots -- left their desks to replace the suspended flight teams and supervisory person- nel took over ticket-selling at the airport terminal. PWA President Dick Laidman said the four pilots were "taken out of service without pay" as the first step toward their dis- missal under an agreement with the Canadian Airlines Pi City on Lake Huron's Saginaw Bay. Saginaw Bay and other! harbors are frozen over tight. The report described Lakes |Superior, Michigan and Huron as 90 per cent ice-covered and Lakes Erie and St. Clair nearly 100 per cent covered. 'On lower Lake Michigan the coast guard cutter Sundew,| '\breaking ice for tanker ship-| lots Association. |ping, progressed only 21 miles He said the airline, which op-|Within 24 hours after leaving es .qut of Vancouver and|her Charlevoix port. teri, was "a lifeline for, Only in the middle of Lake the people in the Northwest|/Ontario was there any reported Territories . . . we couldn't let|Substantial area of open water. it he disrupted." | Lake Michigan is the only one Two flights went out as sched-|of the Great Lakes that has reg- uled to coastal communities|ular winter traffic of car ferries) north of here Monday. land oil tankers. WEATHER FORECAST Cold To Ease By Wednesday Forecasts by the Toronto US To Lend $240,000,000 To Indians NEW DELHI (AP)--U.S. Am- bassador John Kenneth Gal- braith has signed an agreement to lend India $240,000,000 and) said it was "'the largest dollar| loan without interest ever made by the United States." At a signing ceremony Mon- day the Canadian-born ambas-| sador said the loan will pro- vide a sizable part of the for- eign exchange needs of India's! industry and commerce, ding: | "We agree that India cannot risk having its industry oper-| ate at less than full capacity} at this juncture," he said. | A similar loan of $200,000,000| last June provided foreign ex.| change for.more than 6,000 In. dian firms to import capital) Forecast Temperatures equipment and raw materials for industry, he added. | Finance Minister Morarji R.| | British tanker Abadesa. Twen- ty-nine crewmen and the pilot aboard the 20,776-ton tanker escaped the flames as rescue vessels moved 'in to remove them. Crewmen of the 13,350- The Panamanian flag tank- er Miraflores lies abandoned and burning in the Scheldt river at Antwerp, Belgium, Monday after collision with the Prices Not Too OTTAWA (CP) -- The pres-jgovernment control of distribu- ficer, said the prolonged cold|ent level of drug prices is|tion at the retail level, he said.jrelation to the capacity of the "right" and not high, the pres-| Mr. Larose said he personally ident of the Canadian Pharma-|would favor a true health insur. ceutical Manufacturers Associa-|ance plan, including drugs, and tion said Monday. jhe thought this would cause Roger Larose, vice-president|prices to go down a little to However, the total ABANDONED SHIP BURNS Drug Makers Insist By MICHAEL GOLDSMITH GENEVA (AP) -- Neutral delegates said today they see an ultimate compromise on the nu- clear test ban issue involving five annual on-site inspections in the United States and the So- viet Union. } They based this analysis on speeches in Monday's session of the 17-nation disarmament F |\conference by U.S. delegate Wil- / \liam C. Foster and Romanian | |Deputy Foreign Minister George Macovescu. The neutral delegates stressed, however, that they be- lieved agreement is still a leng way off and may come about only. after some top-level bar- gaining on such far - removed ; |\cold wat issues as. Berlin and Cuba. 1 | Foster and Macovescu seemed to leave the door open for a final inspection quota com- promise between the U.S. mini- mum demand of seven and the Russian maximum offer of three. MAY AGREE ON FIVE "The natural ccnclusion to draw from this is that the two sides u'timately will come to- gether on five inspections," said one highly - placed neutral ' | source. Such a compromisé would in- volve a major political conces- sion by each side. The United States for months has warned the Soviet negotia- tors that the fewer inspections they agree to, the more diffi- cult it would be for the Ken- nedy administration to get a treaty ratified by the US. Senate. ehieindallees ton Abadesa stayed aboard to battle fires which broke out after the collision. 2 --(AP Wirephoto by cable from Amsterdam via London) | Union-Settler Inquiry Said Not Needed TORONTO (CP) -- Attoiney- General Cass said Monday nigh: there is no apparent need for a further inquiry into the circumstances of union-settlér' strife in the Kapuskasing area. In answer to renewed opposi- tion demands for a public in- quiry into the backgrovrd of the | High Prices were not too high with | population to buy drugs. It had |been shown that Canadians have ithe capacity to buy drugs, al- |though there were some individ- jual cases of hardship, he said. of Ciba Company Limited, Mont-|the public real, told a press conference he | cost ing. The situation had improved|did not think prices could be|would not be lower. lowered much as long as Can-| ada retained a free coempetliivn| total annual prescription|think they are right." system. No real reduction could come}ceedingly small at an estimated about unless pharmaceutical/$200,000,000. Approximately an- manufacturing was socialized,jother $100,000,000 was spent on with the further implication of' patent medicines. INTERPRETING THE NEWS to | The association president|sirike, and the Feb. 10 shooting of drugs the nation) said: "I don't think the price ; of drugs is high. . . . I wouldn't He added that he considered! jike to see prices higher. . . I rug bill for Canada was ex-) The press jcafled by the association, which jrepresents 57 pharmaceutical manufacturers, to present its ___|views on the restrictive trade {practices commission's report |into the drug industry published last Wednesday. Chinese, Soviets Mending Break By CARMAN CUMMING jpart of Pravda, began publish- Canadian Press Staff Writer jing The gove' ent's antl - com. bines Senet recommendations included abelition of patent pro. tection for drugs, wider use. of generic - named drugs and tighter government controls on manufacture and safety. It made no allegations of offences jagainst the anti-combines legis- | lation. detailed criticisms of the| Meanwhile, the Canadian Fed- The Soviet Union and Com-)|Chinese from other Communist] eration of Agriculture said in a seemed certain to cause an open} break between them. | On Jan. 18 China's delegate to the East German Communist party congress was publicly hu- miliated by boos, shouts and foot-stamping from his Commu- |MAO TAKES HAND have cleared the way for the series of conciliatory meetings and statements of the last few days, | lmunist China are moving cau-\parties -- including speeches by| Statement that implementation tiously to. settle ideological dif-| Khrushchev and Pravda editor-| ad-|ferences that only a month agojials. of the commission's recommen- dations should follow quickly the |good job that has been done by |the commission. There could be These developments appear to\no excuse for Parliament not to implement the proposal for abol- ition of patents. "The other recommendations of the commission for better in- notably the "friendly" conference was Leader Dov a'd C. MacDonald guarding a settlers' wood stock- pile where curred knew that the settlers were armed. affadavits available to prove deaths of three striking work- ers, Mr. Cass said in the leg- islature he did not feel such an inquiry was necessary. in any event, he added, fur- ther consideration of the matter should await the outcome of 20 settlers on non-capital mur- der charges and 243 strikers on charges of rioting. New Democratic Party repeated allegations that police the shootings oc- Mr. MacDonald said he had his charge. | Mr. Cass said he had delayed sending more provincial police- men into the strike area after repeated letters and telegrams from officials of the striking Lumber and Sawmill Workers (CLL). ' Union requests, saying that more police were not necessary. had meant there were not rough police to search the 1,000 settlers. spread over 300- miles of woodland, Mr. Cass said. Vernon Singer (L--Toronto- York Centre) said that the meeting in Peking Saturday be- tween party leader Mao Tse- tung and Soviet Ambassador S. V. Chervonenko. There was immediate specu- lation that Mao, who now seldom nist colleagues. Many in the West -- and in the Eastern bloc as well -- felt the split d gone beyond the point of no re- turn. handling of the Kapuskasing} strike situation by the attorney- general "confirms me in my be- lief that he was too late with spection, regulation and enforce- ment and for close supervision of advertising literature and dis. Test Ban Compromise Foreseen By Neutrals | Soviet Deputy Foreign Minis- ter Vassily V. Kuznetsov, in turn, threatened to withdraw the inspection offer altogether if the United States continued to insist on more than three in- speetions. Foster is trying to bypass the numbers deadlock temporarily by geiting the Russians to ex- plain exactly what they mean by am on-site inspection. - Many western and neutral delegates have suspected that the Soviet offer of three inspec- tions may itself be a trap. They fear that the Russian) idea of on-site inspection may. burn out to be little more than a meaningless formality: The Soviet Union has refused to spell out its proposed inspec- tion procedure unless the West first commits itself to accept- 726,000 Licences Before March 13 TORONTO (CP)--There are still about 726,000 passenger ve. hicle licence plates to be is. sued in Ontario before the March 13 renewal deadline, Transport Minister Auld says. Al'hough plates were made available earlier this year, Mr: Auld said Monday, the number issued to date was "still little better than four-per-cent ahead|largest sunermarket chain in of las! year at this time." He|Canada, behind Lobiaw Groce- warned tha: the deadline would|terias Co. and Dominion Stores: not be extended. Ltd. COMING EVENTS KINSMEN BINGO (ee we bdines $6 and $10. Seven $40 TUESDAY, 8 O'CLOCK Jackpots, door prizes, FREE ADMISSION SOCIAL BINGO, st. Jobn's, Hall. Con EXTRA BUSES day, February 27, 8 p.m. Everyone Jackpot Nos. 51 ond 55 welcome. EARLY BIRD GAMES YOU'LL HAVE more fun with the bet- KINSMEN COMMUNITY CENTRE |', Sporting eautpment you find 109 COLBORNE ST. W. te Gs Clascitied section sown ne LIONS BINGO WEDNESDAY, FEB. 27th, 8:00 P.M. JUBILEE PAVILION 20 --- $20.00 GAMES -- 20 5 -- $30.00 GAMES -- 5. 1 -- $150.00 JACKPOT -- 1 $20.00 A LINE -- $50.00 FULL CARD' 2 -- $250.00 JACKPOTS -- 2 NOS, 53 - 56 EARLY BIRD GAMES ____EXTRA BUSES -- FREE ADMISSION _ BINGO -Wednesday,.Feb. 27th AT 7:30 P.M. ST. MARY'S AUDITORIUM STEVENSON'S RD. NORTH AT MARION 16 GAMES. OF $8 1 GAME EACH--$10, $20, $30, $40 SNOWBALL -- 57 Nos. -- $160 -- $20 CON. $5.00 FOR EACH HORIZONTAL LINE $10 ADDED EACH BINGO SHARE-THE-WEALTH 50 EXTRA--2 CARDS 25c or 10 for $1.00 _FREE ADMISSION -- EXTRA BUS SERVICE LIBERAL NOMINATION MEETING ing 21 annual maximum of three inspections. Canada's Gen, E. L. M. Burns described this as "the argument over whether the chicken or the egg came first." i To break the stalemate, the |United States is reported. pre- paring a complete treaty draft which will spell out the missing details. Safeway May Enter Ontario. TORONTO (CP) -- Western Canada's largest . supermarket chain is considering a move into the Ontario market, partic- ularly to counter moves by its st competitors into the West. E i W. B. Monkhouse, British Columbia property manager for Canada Sefeway Ltd., said in an interview Monday the com- pany is studying a possible ex- pansion into the Toronto area, southern Ontario and such cities as Sudbury. | "There's only so much busi- ness in the country," Mr. Monk- house said, "and if the other chains are going West, we'll just have to come East." Canada Safeway is the third tribution of samples are simi- too little." larly sound and should be im- cas plemented," the agriculture fed- eration said. Mr, Larose said the associa- tion intends to present a brief to the government in aticipa. tion of a possible revision of the Patents Act, possibly next year. It believed the commission, in advocating patent abolition as the only effective way to reduce prices, had stepped well beyond its terms of reference. y He did not think patents had much bearing on price, Nor did he believe loss of income would result for major manufactur. ers, although the field might be- come even more highly compe- titive if all patents were abol- ished. Mr. Larose said the assocla- tion will continue to ask for bet. ter protection to those willing to exploit patents to the full. Such exploitation included pro- ducing in Canada pharmaceuti- eal chemicals, which now are mostly imported, On the question of the. use of generic and brand-named drugs, he defended the manufacturer's right to identify his products | with a distinctive name. weather office at 4:30 a.m.: Synopsis: Strengthening west- erly winds will bring somewhat milder weather to upper lakes area@foday and to the lower lakes Wednesday. This trend however is likely to be short lived because of: cold moving rapidly southward from the far forth Lake St. Clair. Lake Erie. southern Lake Huron. Niagara, western Lake Ontario regions, Windsor, London, Hamilton, To-| ynto: Cloudy. with a. few) anny intervals and not so} old Wednesday. Southwesterly winds 15 to 25 Wednesday. Haliburton, eastern Lake On. tario regions: Cloudy with snow- flurries and not quite so cold) Wednesday. Southwest winds 15 to 25 Wednesday, Observed Temperatures Northern Lake Huron. Geor-|Low overnight, high Monday gian Bay regions: Clouding| nawson . 4 4 over with snowflurries late to- Victoria night. Not so cold tonight. Wind) yf, becoming southwest 15 to 25 to-| night. | Timagamj, Algoma, southern White River regions, Sudbury,| Sault Ste. Marie.. North Bay, Sault Ste. Marie:| White River.. Cloudy and not so cold tonight| Kapuskasing . with occasional light snow be-|North Bay.. giming in the late evening.|Sudbury . Clearing and turning colder Muskoka again Wednesday. Winds be-|Windsor . coming southwesterly this even-| London .... Low tonight, high Wednesday Windsor 5 25 8'. Thomas 25 London ... 22 Kitchener 22 Wingham 20 Hamilton .... S'. Catharines..... Toronto 2 Peterborough . Trenton |Killaloe ... Muskoka . North Bay... Sudbury... Earlton .... Kapuskasing White River....... Moosonee .,.....5 «1 Mount Forest...... Sault Ste. Marie... 5 Timmins 5 NEED FUEL OIL...| CALL PERRY THURSDAY NEXT, 28 FEB. 8 P.M. Henry St. High School, Whitby DAY OR NIGHT 723-3443 To nominate a candidate to contest Ontario Riding for the Liberal Party. NOW SPEAKER: MISS JUDY LAMARSH | The Dynamic Voice of Women in Parliament ALL LIBERALS AND THE GENERAL PUBLIC : . bovis _ x [ARE CORDIALLY INVITED. o have that carpet or chest- erfield cleaned professionally in Oshowo"s Original Carpet Cleaning Centre . . . where fully guaronteed satisfaction is assured. Phone 728-4681 NU-WAY RUG CO. LTD. 174 MARY ST. Reco oooemuemuansoon 5 6 | This time, make certain. This time, work and 'vote Liberal. ONTARIO RIDING LIBERAL ASSOCIATION THE ONTARIO COUNTY » REHABILITATION COUNCIL Winnipeg -.. Lakehead ,....... invite the public THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28 jof the loan, a 40-year period/soviet relations has swung muey, bad given Meecew & o> a credit charge of three-fourths | 544, Canadian publisher Roy|munist gathering. | |Russian proverbs for one ex-|gress has been made towards 3 | . y 5 | Ruling Reserved | themselves. volve only an attempt to plaster 0 | int C ta jnow released in Peking, indi- 15 |the court battle over expropria-|°f the Soviet Communist party, the | fi si . " " | Arguing that conditions were 19 |. The suit, launched by the|' hinese "at any level' as aisty! the longest trial the history|the correct road to world obtn.| kt it 1s striving: (avert an: Peking -- although it had pro. : province to pay $11,000,000 and jadvocates peaceful coexistence asicis --reacted without enthusiasm to) nossibility of also using peace-| clare the takeover illegal or, al- to repudiate Yugoslav "'revi- tishment of the dictatorship of -\*|be possible, | rice." The corporation : i BCE| Khrushchev warmly welcomed | Peking has yet to confirm it. to| Chief Justice Sherwood Lett,|Moscow and promised that : ; , | ' oF with no principal due until after/siowly in the other direction. ply on possibilities for bilateral of one Pat Seat sopually. |Thomson, Premier Khrushchev) Still unclear is the question of 25 25 t ; ' plaining that "when der friends}a- policy reconciliation or over, the crack. 2 | VANCOUVER (CP) -- Judg-SUGGEST TALKS 19 |tion of the British Columbia|S#id the Soviet leadership bis al ae ital iE Denes Oncperausn, Hormer(first. step towards a broader | Tishi for healing the rift, it said of Brisk Colginkia courts. male: jother world war and believes in sed such a conference earlier) po: ' ifferi offer the federally chartered . between states with differing On Nov. 13, 1961, the power| te, £ avae, editoria. Tt sald Inlful forms besides the armad tetnatively, to have the B.C sionists" before a meeting would| , ta | Such a statement, if true, is esti- mated the worth of the a new Chinese amb in reserving iis decision in B.C.|'when the last spadeful of earth | | AW Al i |Desai noted the generous terms) Since then the temper of Sino- sitanhs 6 Baked Ck. 10 years and no interest except On Feb. 9, in an interview/meetings and a general Com-| jreached deep into his store of/whether any substantive pro- * | B.C. Electric Fray |quarrel they are just amusing|whether the current moves in- Pravda's Feb. 10 editorial, 15 |ment was reserved Monday in| The next day Pravda, organ) 5 |Electric Company. jready for a meeting with | made. owners of the BCE, touched off| conference that would decide|'"° Chinese party has stressed The proposal a tor thas \the feasibility of achieving this, only to be rebuffed by Moscow | coc} ; corporation $68,000,000 for its y social systems and admits the corporation launched suit to de- effect that Moscow would have forms of struggle for the estab- |the proletariat." Supreme Court set "a | jo But only a few days later | good news indeed for the West: takeover at $225,500,000. Supreme Court, said he may|is thrown on the grave of capi-| ing and northwest 15 to 25 Wed-| nesday. Northern White River, Coch- rane regions: Cloudy with oc- casional light snow tonight, turning 'colder and clearing early Wednesday. 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