a Cea. soembatt: su. eres macmsnaace 2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wedn/edey, September 18, 1962 $300,000 BAKERY BLAZE Firemen at St. John's, Nfld., stand on precarious footing atop what is lefi of the roof at East End Bakery Limited to play hoses into the centre of the $300,000 fire that de- Drew Plans To Write, Stay Out Of Politics By JAMES NELSON OTTAWA (CP) George Drew, 69, will retire as Cana- dian high commissioner in Lon- don next Jn. 1, and intends to travel, write his memoirs, and stay out of active politics. "T think I have had a fairly ges run at it," he said in an terview after it was an- nounced he will stay in his Lon- don job at Prime Minister Pear- gon's request until the end of the year. Mr. Drew was premier of On- tario from 1943 to 1948. He be- came national leader of the Progressive Conservative party in 1948 and led the party in two unsuccessful general election at- tempts to unseat the Liberal government of Prime Minis- ter St. Laurent. He resigned as party leader in 1955 after a series of ill- nesses and rigorous parliament- ary sessions left him weary and in poor health. Mr. Drew was named high commissioner in June, 1957, a few days after the government of former Prime Minister Dief- enbaker took office. He said it was clearly understood from the outset that he would take the job for only six years. WROTE Mr. declining Canadian prestige in ---- Mr. Drew blaméd these Tuesday on partisans working for Britain's Common "I don't think the impression of Canada was ever better than it is today' as far as the gen- eral British public is con- cerned," he said. "There were those with a real obsession about joining Eu- rope, who felt it was necessary to minimize the importance of the Commonwealth in order to justify their course. That did have some effect in the state- ments that were made, But I don't believe it had any effect whatever on the thinking of the people there." IS MEASURE But, Mr. Drew said, the real measure of Anglo-Canadian re- lations is in trade and tourist traffic. This year, for the first time, Canadian exports to Brit- ain will exceed $1,000,000,000. Last year, 130,000 tourists went to Britain from Canada and there will be more this year. "In the very nature of things," Mr. Drew said about the tourists, "these people have succeeded sufficiently in this country to be able to make a trip of that kind, and it has been Market membership. | stroyed the bakery Tuesday, --(CP Wirephoto) the world, and about some of my recollections of events which now. go back over quite a few years." He would not take another diplomatic posting, "but that doesn't mean of course that there might not be many things that I would undertake if I am asked because I am just as in- terested in Canadian affairs as I ever was." About politics, he added: "I have no intention of taking any active part in politics. I think I have had a fairly good run at at?' to CHICAGO (AP) -- A federal judge has called tic Seafarers Intérnational Union a "violent"' organization and urged a gov- ernment agency to "go after it." Judge James 8B. Parsons spoke out in U.S. District court Tuesday in the case of the How- ard L. Shaw, a Canadian freigh- ter. The ship, caught in the mid- dle of a dispute between the in- dependent SIU of Canada and the Canadian Maritime Union (CL£), has been idle and empty in Chicago for almost five months, A dynamite blast knocked a hole in her side Sept. .|7 in an unsolved bombing, The judge heard arguments on a motion to remit fines on Local 418 of the Grain Elevator Work- ers Union. Members of the small unit have refused to load grain on the Shaw. Judge Parsons denied the mo- tion to wipe out the fines, He announced that the fines will stand, and that, moreover, they will be increased from the. cur- rent $200 a day to $500 @ day. WON'T PRESS However, the judge said he will payment. Lawyers for the local planned to make an appeal to a higher court, The judge commented that the president of the local, Jack Connor, had purged himself of contempt of court by recom- mending that the members per- form their jobs. But the union itself, he added, has done noth- ing to purge itself of contempt and has continued on its course of refusing to put grain aboard the Shaw, "If I ordered these men to work and they didn't work, | think I'd fire them," the judge sald, The Shaw is owned by Upper Lakes Shipping Limited of Tor- onto, The company once drew its sailors from SIU ranks but since last year the sailors have been represented by 'he CMU. Judge Parsons told a lawyer for the U.S, National Labor Re- lations Board that the 'other un- ion is the violent one" and re- sponsible for the continuing sec- ey boycott of the Canadian ship. He said the NLRB should in- vestigate the SIU and "'get your injunction on them." "Get busy and go after the big union," he said Ben Bella To Aid K Blames Poor Grain Harvest On Fertilizer CP from AP-Reuters MOSCOW -- Soviet Premier Khrushchev, in a speech re- leased Tuesday night, blamed the chronic shortage of mineral | Africa Liberation ALGIERS (Reuters)--Ahmed Ben Bella, in his first public speech since his election Sunday as president of Algeria, pledged to assist "with arms" African liberation movements. The Algerian leader spoke Tuesday night at a meeting marking Africa Day. He said Algeria is training be- tween 900 and 1,000 officers and men for all the "liberation arm- ies" of Africa. not press for immediate) | | } | | | Judge Parsons said the SIU is 'creating a dastardly situa- tion between the United States and Canada." The controversy between the SIU and OMU and violence at several Great. Lakes ports has been a matter of concern for of- ficials of 'both governments, ranging up to Prime Minister Pearson and President Ken- nedy, John Youngblood, a lawyer} for the NLRB, told a reporter the agency is continuing to in- vestigate the SIU in connection) with the Shaw case but said it hasn't been able to "dig any- thing out' thus far, Judge Parsons on June 14 en- joined Local 418 from a second- Federal J udge Raps 'Violent' Seafarers cal in contempt of court in mid- August. He also set fines of $100 a day from June 14 to Aug. 14, and $200 a day after Aug. 14. Irving. Friedman, lawyer for the local, argued Tuesday that the judge should vacate the fines. Friedman said the local's president, Jack Connor, had ad- vised members to comply with the court order in letters to them and at a membership meeting. That, the lawyer con- tended, is compliance in full. But Youngblood said that did not even amount to token com- pliance. Three supervisory exec- utives of the Continental Grain Company testified that mem- bers of the local, acting individ- ually in response to roll calls, refused to load the Shaw on two ary boycott--refusing to handle grain loading--and held the |o- dates in August, -- : Panel Discusses Value Of Arctic MONTREAL (CP) ~- Gordon Robertson, former deputy min ister of northern affairs, su gested Tuesday, that the Arctic may be valuable in the Cana dian search for a national iden tity Magazine editor Blair Fraser questioned whether the Arctic had much value at all Mr. Robertson and Mr, Fraser were members of a panel dis cussing the Arctic's impact on life at a symposium organised by the Arctic Institute of North America Mr, Robertson, now secretary to the Canadian cabinet and clerk of the Privy Council, said Canadians have been agonized for decades by the problem of who they are and what makes them different from Americans He suggested that taking up the "national challenge" of the Arctic, which the U.S, does not possess, would provide some focus for a national identity, This would be something Amer: icans couldn't do "bigger and better." DON'T CARE Mr. Fraser, European editor for Maclean's Magazine, said dedicated arctic buffs are baf- fled because the average Cana- dian doesn't care much. about what they say. The average Canadian knows enough about the six-month win- ter to realize that nine-month winters are not necessarily fun, he said, and the average Cana- |dian detects "a certain lack of a sense of proportion" in arctic promotion. Passionate cries for preserva- tion of Eskimo culture and inte- gration of the Eskimo into Cana- dian life seemed odd to people who realize Canada has only about 10,000 Eskimos and nearly 250,000 Indians in about the same state of backwardness. There was little excitement about the Indians. He said Eskimos he had met fertilizers for poor Soviet grain harvests. In a lecture to farm officials near the southern Russian city of Colgograd, the Soviet leader LETTERS Pearson and he ex-|my experience that when people|aiso criticized Soviet farmers changed letters last Friday injin that position do traveljfor misusing and wasting pre- which Mr. Drew sought retire- ment as soon as possible, and Mr. Pearson asked him to re- main until the end of the year. This appeared to indicate that the prime minister has not yet picked a successor. External affairs department sources said that of the senior depart- mental personnel, no one ap- pears to be a front - running candidate for the position, Can- ada's oldest diplomatic posting abroad. Mr. Drew told reporters his six years in London have been "one of the most interesting pe- riods in the long association be- tween Canada and Britain." Highlights included three prime ministers conferences organ- ization of a Commonwealth ed- ucation body, and a series of in- ternational conferences on the law of the sea, in which he was Canadian delegate. His term also saw Britain's preparation of an application to join the European Common Market, and its rejection by France. During this period, there were repeated reports of abroad, they're not particularly modest in. their claims about Canada. "In fact, if anything, they sometimes paint almost too glowing a picture. But those 130,000 people are unpaid prop- agandists for Canada. I'm con vinced that what was referred to as some deterioration in the image of Canada was nothing but a reaction to this obsession of some people with regard to Britain's entry into the Common Market." As to his personal future, Mr. Drew said he would return this week to London to fill out the year. There will be a Common- wealth economic conference there this fall, as well as prep- arations for the annual NATO ministerial meeting in Paris, After Jan. 1, he and Mrs. Drew--who has been recovering from a serious illness --will travel widely and settle in) Guelph, his birthplace. "T intend to do a great deal of writing in regard to places where things of interest are happening, in different parts of WEATHER FORECAST Sunny Weather For Thursday Forecasts issued by the Tor- onto weather office at 5 a.m.: Synopsis: The high pressure @rea .that has been hovering over the lower Great Lakes for the past few days is gradually weakening but oa still .provide mainly sunny warm wea- ther over southern Ontario to- and Thursday. Disturbances| pao through Northern Onta-|London rio are causing spotty showers end thundershowers Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, southern Lake Huron, Niagara, Lake Ontario, Windsor, London, Hamilton, Toronto: Mainly gunny and warm today and Thursday, winds light. Northern Lake Huron, Geor- gien Bay, Haliburton, Algoma, North % Lone Sault Ste. Marie: Variab cloudiness with a few showers this morning and again Thurs- Cloudy and cooler with scat- tered showers tonight and Thursday. Winds becoming nor- therly by tonight and east 15 Thursday. Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, High Thursday Windsor ......-.-. 60 80 55 55 Hamilton .... St. Catharines.... to Sault Ste Marie... day afternoon, little change in temperature. Winds becoming southwest 15 Thursday. _ White \M » Cochrane:\Ti Kapuskasing White River. cious fertilizers. Poor grain harvests. have been reported largely responsi- ble for Russia's $500,000,000 wheat and. wheat flour pur- chase from Canada, announced in Ottawa Monday. Khrushchev, in the speech made Monday, also urged that an "insurance fund" of Soviet grain produced on irrigated land be set up to provide a guaran- teed harvest in future. | Khrushchev made his remarks during a visit to the Volgo-Don state. farm near the former town of Stalingrad. His speech was published Tuesday in the Soviet government newspaper Izvestia. "We export mineral fertilizers because our economists haven't learned yet to calculate realis- tically what this costs,' Khru- shchev complained. "If they calculated, then they would see that it would be bet- ter to put a ton of these fertiliz- ers in the earth . . . it would be more economical to export the grain received than mineral fertilizers. And only after we have fully satisfied our domes- tie needs for mineral fertilizers can we then export them." He said Russia plans to in- crease production of mineral fertilizers by 1970 to about 100,- 000,000 tons, compared with 20,- 000,000 this year. He made no reference in his speech to this year's total har- vest, but Soviet newspapers con- tinued to urge farm workers to expend all efforts to bring in the crops and appealed to all citizens not to waste bread. INTERPRETING THE NEWS By CARMAN CUMMING Canadian Press Staff Writer The autumn opening of the United Nations General Assem- bly is customarily a time for international stock-taking; for examing the ups and downs of world relations in the past year. The opening of the 18th ses- sion Tuesday had an extra significance; coming two years to the day after Dag Hammar- skjold's aircraft crashed in a Northern Rhodesia forest. The death of the quiet Swed- ish diplomat came at a time when the UN was faced with a threat of full-scale war in The Congo. At headquarters, the Russians were pressing for Hammarskjold's replace- ment as secretary-general by a three-man "'troika."' BACK THANT Since then the troika idea has faded completely with East and West both backing Secretary- General U Thant. The Congo has been tamed. And more important, in terms of changed international cli- Pearson Pledges Aid To Countries UNITED NATIONS (CP)-- Lard Minister Pearson pledged Liver Transplant From Dead Person BOSTON (AP) -- A human liver has been transplanted from the body of a dead person to that of a patient seriously ill from damage to his own liver. The announcement of the rare operation was made Tuesday by Dr. F. Lloyd Mussells, director of Peter Bent Brigham Hospital, pioneer in developing techniques y pport for a program to train civjl serv- ants of underdeveloped coun- tries. The Canadian leader spoke briefly at a luncheon of the Dag Hammerskjold fund, a private foundation set up to help emerg- ing nations establish trained civil services. Pearson is a trus- tee of the fund. He said Canada was willing to give in-service training for a number of the trainees under the fund program. He noted that Canada already is training a number of junior civil servants for transplants of human kid- neys. The operation Monday night was the first liver trans- plant operation at .the Boston hospital. Dr. Mussells did not identify the patient, described only as a male, and said evaluation of the WE ove 5 jsuccess of the operation could not be made immediately. from emerging nations. } FOR PREFERRED ATTENTION PAUL ISTOW 728-9474 rEALTOR Y Changed Climate At UN Assembly mate, new hope has come in the disarmament field with the signing of a partial nuclear-test an, A sign of the new atmosphere came Tuesday before the ses- sion opening. Adlai Stevenson, with a couple of top aides, visited the Soviet mission on New York's Park Avenue and| stayed for morte than an hour discussing UN affairs with For- eign Minister Andrei Gromyko. The word relayed to report- ers afterward was all had been amicable and good-humored. Stevenson, U.S. informants said, felt strongly that. cold-war polemics would be avoided dur- ing the assembly session, But despite the rise in the in- ternational barometer, some storm clouds were left, includ- ing the crisis in South Viet Nam and the threat of a new janti-colonial violence in Africa. STILL NEED CASH And in the background was the UN's chronic inability to raise the money needed to do its job. This problem has been a par- ticular interest of the Canadian mission for some time. In the future it will be of even more concern since Milton Gregg, former Canadian labor minis- ter, has been named to head the assembly's budgetary com- mittee, Gregg will hold the post for a year, during which time the financial problem could come to a head. _At the start of next year Rus- sia, refusing to pay certain UN levies it considers illegal, will owe the UN the equivalent of two year's assessments and thus may have her assembly vote taken away, would rathes live in a tar-paper and crate-wood shanty than in an igloo, indicating how they feel about their own culture, A A CURIO? fikeptics felt that white men, rather than really wishing to bring the Kekimo into the 20th century, want to keep Wekimos as some kind of a curious an thropological specimen It was questionable whether the grevts of population in the north waa due to real develop: ment or just @ greater and greater influx of administrators under 'Parkinson's law" on the growth .of bureaucracy Mr, Robertson said the CPR was once described as unecono- mic; British Columbia as a bar. ren, and worthless land; Mani- toba as a place where men froze to death or were maimed for life by frostbite, and Ontario as debt-ridden and ready to secede to the United States, Voltaire once dismissed all of Canada as 'a few acres of snow." Rernloes Plan Probe Urged At Conference BANFF, Alta. (CP)--A public investigation of Ottawa's 'pro- posed pension plan was re- quested unanimously Tuesday by businessmen taking part in the first day of a national con- ference on Canadian economic survival. The sessions are closed to the press, but a press statement said the conference, attended by some of the country's execu- tivs, agreed that full implica- tions of the pension plan have yet to be made known to the Canadian public and that more information is required. Some delegates suggested that higher costs of production and a slower rate of capital formation could result from implementing the plan in its present form, Because of the importance and urgency of the problem, it was felt that a joint parliament- ary committee could be an ex- peditious way of carrying out the inquiry, the statement said. Conference delegates also list- ened to proposals for promoting export trade and a review of trends in agriculture. Fifty - seven delegates each paid $1,000 to attend the four- day business conference on Ca- nadian economic survival, spon- sored jointly by the Universi- ties of Alberta, British Colum- bia, Manitoba and Saskatche- wan. The $57,000 in admittance fees financed 18 months of economic research at the universities, the results of which are contained in six volumes being uséd as the conference texts, The volumes examine topics such as unemployment, living costs, the rate of Canada's eco- nomic growth and the influence the United States and other countries have on this country's economic sovereignty. Canadian Swept To Death In Sea BAR HARBOR, Me. (AP)--A Canadian visitor was swept to his death in the sea from rocks on Ocean Drive near this resort town Tuesday. . Acadia National Park Ranger Roy Stamey identified the vic- tim as Gerald Don Paul Pois- son, 51, of Puce, Ont. Stamey said Poisson, bare- footed, was walking along the shore snapping photographs. A heavy surf was running and an unusually large sea swept the man into the ocean. ; Poisson's wife, Thelma, and their friends, Mr. and Mrs, Stanley Byrne of Windsor, Ont., tried to rescue Poisson but a strong undertow swept him be- yond their reach. UN SESSION BEGINS Carlos Sosa-Rodriguez, fore- ground, 51-year-old Venezuelan lawyer-diplomat, makes open- ing speech to the 18th session of the United Nations Gencral Assembly Tuesday after his Decertify election as president of the body. Listening to his speech is .United Nations Secretary General U Thant. Sosa-Rodri- guez at once proc'aimed the assembly as one of hope and |; declared that international ten- sions had been reduced by the signing of the limited nuclear test ban treaty. --(AP Wirephote) Union, Firm Requests GRANBY, Que. Laurion, president of La Voix ment Tuesday that the Quebec labor relations board has been asked to decertify a union rep- resenting striking employees of the company. The strike began Aug: 27 and has affected the daily newspa- per La Voix de |'Est, radio sta- tion CHEF and a printing plant, all owned by the same com- pany. About 100 employees are affected. Mr. Laurion said the Union of Employees of La Voix de l'Est Limitee, an affiliate of the Con- federation of National Trade Un- ions, was informed Monday of the company's decision to seek decertification. The request for decertification was filed with the Quebec labor relations board Tuesday. The statement said the decer- tification was urged on grounds that officers of the union have committed illegal acts since the certification was granted, and aiso on grounds that due to a lack of members there was-no jonger any reason for the un- ion's existence. Gerard Picard, president of the Canadian Federation . of Printing and Publishing (CNTU). who has been attempt- ing to negotiate a settlement on behalf of the employees, said Monday night that the company had broken off negotiations after announcing its plans to seek de- certification of the union, Mr. Picard said Attorney-Gen- eral Rene Hamel of Quebec had refused the union permission to take legal action against Mr. Lauron on grounds that he was conducting an "illegal lock-out." In a statement Sept. 8, Mr. Laurion announced the company had decided to discharge the strikers on grounds they were conducting -an illegal strike. In reply to that statement, Picard said the employees had been fired by Mr. Laurion for having refused to become strike- breakers by handling work nor- mally done by the strike-bound Progres du Saguenay, a Chicou- timi weekly. Mr. Picard said Building Of Fair ~~ |ners Timetable Planned MONTREAL (CP) -- Plan- of, the 1967 Montreal world's fair are using compu- ters to help find out how fast they can build the fair. Chief planner Claude Robil- lard said in an interview a con- struction timetable may be worked out by the end of Sep- tember. He said preliminary findings indicated that all the work en- visaged, if done at a "normal" pace, might be incapable of completion before 1969 or 1970 "but this is'not the final 'report from our study." : Your Original 'CARPET CENTRE Over 50 Rolls of It will take a lot of good hu- mor and amicability to find a way out of the impasse. "KINDNESS BEYOND PRICE, YET WITHIN REACH OF ALL" GERROW FUNERAL CHAPEL 390 King W. 728-6226 OSHAWA'S BIGGEST REAL ESTATE MOVE ..sSOON! Carpet on Display oe Select from the largest § display east of Toronto, N-I-R-C LICENSED CARPET CLEANING 728-4681 NU-WAY RUG. CO. LTD. Expert Upholstering 174 Mary Street (CP)--Aime|Mr, Laurion is one of the main of Le Progres de |'Est Limitee, said in a state-|where a strike started Aug. 13. Strikers at Le Progres are seeking the five - day week. About 37 are affected by the shareholders | SHORGAS HEATING & APPLIANCES Industrial and Commercial The established, reliable Gas Dealer in @rec. 31 CELINA ST. (Corner of Athol) TRUE -TRIM BEEF | Freezer Special BEEF Hind Quarters Cut and Wrapped Free SHOULDER LAMB CHOPS | "2 lbs. 1.00 SKINLESS WIENERS yon 1 e Gg 5 BOX LEAP PEAMEALED Cottage Rolls u. 49° LEAN Beef Hearts vu 29° Rie. 12 KING : iP ST._E. } f"103-3633 BONELESS Rump Roast BONELES ROUND Steak Roast CHEF STYLE PRIME RIB ROAST Rindless Breakfast ' BACON na, GO*