Warden Michel LeCorre of St. Vincent de Paul Peniten- tiary near Montreal displays makeshift weapons found by guards during a search of "CONFISCATE WEAPONS cells in the prison. He pro- duced the weapons to show New Democratic MPs Frank Howard and Arnold Peters that prisoners "are not above Giant Canadian Captures Silver Medal In Judo three| Roswitha Esser and Annemarie, CANADIANS SEVENTH By JACK SULLIVAN | Canadian Press Sports Editor | TOKYO (CP) -- Doug Rog- ers, a towering young Canadian who studied judo showed today how well he has learned his lessons, capturing the silver medal in the heavy-/ gold medals, one silver and one| Oschepov weight class in one of the most} bronze golds, one silver and bronzes at Melbourne in 1956. HAD BIG DA Y Elsewhere on many and Russia. in canoeing and . 1 g0 the Olympic} te in Japan,| fronts, it was a big day for Ger-| Russia's the/dian doubles criticism'. The MPs _inter- viewed prisoners during a tour of the institution. By THE CANADIAN PRESS The events of 1863-67 wich led to the union of Nova Scot:a, New Brunswiek and the two Canadas are traced in vivid de- tail in The Road to Confedera- ton (Maemillan) by» Donald G. Creighton. : The author, a University of 'Toronto professor, moves with- in the political framework of the day, weaving his tory around the {ll-fated aim for maritime ion, the wranglings between pper and Lower Canada, the reform movement and the co- alition government of 1864. The fading hopes of a union of Nova Scotia, New Bruns- wick and Prince Edward Is- land, spurred spasmodically by the enthusiasm of Lieutenant- Governor Alfred Gordon of New Brunswick, were to be dis- cussed at Charlottetown in 1864. The conference wa attended by delegates from the refor- mer-Conservaiive coalition gov- ernment of Upper and Lower Canada. And Creighton sees the "interference" of delegates from this government as the cause of an awakening in the Maritimes 'and a major step to- ward a united Canada. Confederation Events Traced In Vivid Detail By Creighton fax and Saint John, N.B., to Quebec and the 72 resolutions, to Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto and finally to London where the British North America Act was passed in the spring of 1867, ; Creighton examines the per- sonalities of the time. Of politiciannewspaper man he says: "'He had stamped the impress of his powerful per- sonality upon 'the consciousness of Canadians more deeply and ineffaceably than perhaps any other Canadian public image of his generation." Describing John A. Macdon- ald, then a leader of the Cana- dian Coalition, as he appeared in a debate, Creighton writes: "The range of his knowledge and the scope and organization of his ideas were impresive from the beginning; ,and his tall, spare frame and oddly) youthful appearance, his easy,| jaunty manner and_ genial ways, began to win him friends at once, Columnist Maggie Grant fs not the usual children- and-hubby or social woman writer. She has domestic "The intrusion of the Cana- dians -- a reckless, quarrelsome} and ill-disciplined people--and | the agenda paper, dramatically | changed the whole character of} the conference, vastly enlarged) its cope, complicated its issues and invited or provoked com-| |ments, comparisons, and criti-| cisms from the public and the |press."" IMPRESSED BY BROWN From the Charlottetown con- ference, Creighton traces blossoming of a united Canada --CP Wirephoto jas delegations moved to Hali-| Zimmermann. Russia won three of the seven|finals and both came seventh, id medals in canoeing and|/Paul Stahl of Montreal in the yeden picked up two gold.|Canadian singles and Andor EI- Ludmila Khvedosiuk| bert and Fred Heese, also of took the women's kayak singles}Montreai, in the Canadian The Germans picked up two| Andrey Khimich and Stepan) pairs. captured the Cana dramatic surprises of the Olym-| gold medal in the equestrian) quartet took the kayak fours. pic Games. Making his way impressively through the preliminary round and the semi-finals .of the one-| United States and Russia, in|}mark in lost| terms of total medals. Rogers Isao. Inok- day competition, out in the final to uma of Japan, Nevertheless, the master of the sport fight. of his life. There wasn't a takedown in the entire 15-) minute match Inokuma got the decision lar-| gely on his slight superiority in the first eight or nine minutes. | A much more experienced ath- lete than Rogers, he always seemed to be perfectly poised Japanese | Singles by | team dressage event and, as at/ Poh + darrsch Rome in 1960, stand a strong}Peterson dethrone efending| § | ; 5 | third behind the two giants, the| champion Eric Hansen of Den- the U.S. men were out of the|on the port wing and, with one the kayak singles. |Sven-Olof Adjodelius and Gun-} The two German paddling|nar Utterberg gave Sweden a victories came in the Canadian|second gold medal when they} Jurgen Eschert and! successfully defended their title had the|the women's kayak doubles bylin the kayak pairs. Auto Tariff Talks Will [=-ine"*™ Sweden's 20 - year - old Rolf} and a. Russian| Canada got two boats into the A surprise feature of the ca-} noeing competition was the un- precedented showing of women} from 'the United States. While} running, as usual, the combi-| {nation of 15-year-old Francine | Fox and 35-year-old Floriane| Perrier came second in the ka-| yak pairs behind the German tandem of Esse™andaZimmer- mann, and pretty Marcia Jones/| | was third in the kayak singles, | barely nosed out by Hilde Study Increase In Exports | the}, difficulties but they're out of the ordinary. And while | her reactions to the world | of today's woman are not entirely out of the ordinary, | they are witty and intelli | gent. They come through | effectively in The Many | Lives of Maggie Grant (Clarke, Irwin), a collection of her columns from the Toronto Globe and Mail. John Gordon, 46, of Ottawa, a former RCAF pilot, has ful- filled a long-standing need in Canadian aviation history with his book Winged Sentries (Sen- tinelles de l'Air), This bilingual book, illus- trated by Claude Rousseau, is By DON HANRIGHT OTTAWA (CP)--The govern- ment is bent on capturing the full business' potential of the 1967 Montreal World's Fair de- spite international rules against trade promotion at such exhibi- tions. Plans are afoot here to use the federal trade commission- ers in 46 countries to persuade top foreign businessmen to come to the fair and meet their Canadian counterparts. The ob- ject is.to exploit every trade and investment opportunity. Nothing of this kind has been attempted at world fairs else- where, officials say. These fairs get world recognition only if they are designed for education and entertainment, rather than "trade-fairism." | However, authorities here say the International Exhibitions Bureau, created by Canada and 30 other nations in 1928, is "not) unfavorably disposed" toward| the Canadian plan. Applauding the government) scheme, the Canadian Manu-| facturers Association said re-} cently that because many for- eign businessmen have no con- cept of Canada's: industrial de- velopment over the last 30 years, the fair "is potentially an eye-opener of incalculable ef-| fect." |SETS UP BUREAU | Seizing the chance, the gov- | Ropwenitices Needed To Fill Gap | TORONTO (CP)--D. C. Me- Neill, director of the appren- Government Seek World Fair Trade) Fat Pad Common | ernment has established @ busi- ness development bureau at the fair, headed by G. H. G. Hughes of the Trade department. It expects to get help m | the CMA, the Canadian Cham-) ber of Commerce, various other | trade associations and the pro- vincial departments of trade and industry. Foreign businessmen will get preferred treatment. They will have a special lounge or "club" on the fairgrounds. Secretarial help will be available, as well as guides and interpreters, If he wants to get in touch with a Canadian business or government _ official anywhere in the country, the bureau will set up the meeting. It will have phone and teletype links with all the provincial capitals, A battery of government and in- dustry officials will be on hand to supply advice. By DOUG MARSHALL When All Said And Done 'Smethwick Talk'll Be Fun THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thuredey, October 22, 1964 29 YOUR HEALTH Rarely Dangerous By JOSEPH G, MOLNER, MD Dear Dr. Molner: What does a fat pad on the lung mean? Is it the beginning of a malig- nancy? An x-ray showed what was diagnosed as either a fat pad or cyst. What would be the treatment of this? Mrs. 8, B. Fat accumulates in lumps at times. These may occur under the skin. They are called lip- onas, or fatty tumors. They are quite c and not danger- ous. Less often a similar fat pad may be detected elsewhere, one place being on the pleural lin- ing which surrounds the lungs, It would appear on an x-ray as a shadow or spot, although it would look a good deal _ | |that Griffiths still has lots of/formed and, right then, ferent from some of the scars, calcifications an other pathol» ogies which we loosely jump to- gether as "spots on the lung." In practice, skilled reading of the x-ray will often afford an accurate idea of the condition, Or in some cases other x-rays, later on, will by comparison provide a judgment as to whether anything ought to be done, If the problem becomes sus- picious, then surgery. is war- ranted to remove the 'spot' end have the tissue examined microscopically. This will give the answer: Is it a mere fat pad or. cyst, or is it a tumor that is or may become malig- nant? FINAL DECISION The final decision rests on microscopic examination. This, indeed, is an every-day oceur- rence in operating rooms: if something appears sufficiently "suspicious," surgery is per- the LONDON (CP)--When all the|friends. One of the most em-|microscopic examination is con- other post-mortems on the Brit- ish election are finished, the re- sult in Smethwick probably will still be open for argument and analysis. As many predicted, Labor's | foreign affairs spokesman, Pat-| "Immigration was and is aN tells his family about 'my -op- rick Gorden Walker, lost his} seat in the crowded Binming-| ham suburb after an intensive campaign on the racial issue waged by his Conservative op-| ponent--new MP Peter Grif-| fiths. | Nevertheless Walker has been named foreign secretary in the the result of four years of re-/ticeship branch of the Ontario|2€W government. search by Mr. Gordon, who has been flying since 1937. It records each and every) plane ever flown by the RCAF, | navy and army and gives de- tails on each, together with a black-and white drawing. | Mr. Gordon, who published) North York Township's board of Stants out the 104-page book himself with| equeation advisory vocational| about 50,000. Department of Labor, said Wed-| nesday night that more appren-} tices are needed if the prov- ince's industry is to have enough} skilled tradesmen in the future. | Mr. McNeill said in an inter-|housing view following a meeting of) Griffiths repeatedly called for {stricter controls on further im-|men, migration from the colored) mmonwealth. | Smethwick has a_ chronic shortage and some} 7,000 Common wealth immi-| of a population of} 0. | the backing of some aircraft|ommittee that the demand for| Both parties are agreed that| companies and with help from} the defence department, has in-| cluded some fascinating details; in his painstaking work. For instance, he relates that it was in an Armstrong Whit- worth F.K.8 that Manitoban Alan McLeod won his Victoria Cross March 27, 1918. The wounded McLeod climbed out hand on the stick, side-slipped to keep the flames of his burn- ing aircraft away from his ob- server until the plane crash landed There: are also the planes flown by Billy Bishop, Ray- mond Collishaw, Roy Brown, A. E, McKeever, W. G. Bar- ker, A. D. Carter, Ellis V. Reid, |ment planned 'to compile lists skilled labor was growing fas-| ter than the supply. Mr. McNeill said his depart- of vocational school graduates and encourage them to enter apprenticeship programs. He} said the graduates would be| made aware of skill trade op- portunities in their fields, J, E. Sharman, G. E. Nash, W. M. Alexander and other Canadian aces, Mr. Gordon says he deliber- |drawing of one of the some 200) planes in his book to see whether it would be spotted. It was, almost immediately, ately ordered one error in al the Smethwick result at least) proved one thing: Immigration | and the white backlash issue| are real factors in British poli- tics that no one in future can| afford to ignore. | Most Labor leaders--and a) few liberal Conservatives--re- acted with disgust to the way the Smethwick Tories had capi- talized on white fears. Prime Minister Harold Wil- son said it was "a disgrace to British democracy." EMINENT FRIEND There are signs, however, minent of them is Enoch! Powell, former Tory health min- ister and a man famed for his! stern high principles. In a newspaper article, he wrote: | issue. The new foreign secre- tary is not a martyr; he is much more likely a humbug." | The people of Smethwick also defended themselves. Mayor C. V. Williams said: "People of Smethwick faced all the issues in this election and immigration was certainly one. It is a major issue." Several Smethwick clergy- acting belatedly, have formed a committee in an at- tempt to ease tension and clear the air. CPR Orders 42 New Locomotives | MONTREAL (CP)--Canadian| Pacific Railway ennounced Wednesday it has placed an or- der of approximately $9,000,000 with two Canadian manufac- \tunens to renew 42 units of the lcompany's diesel locomotive fleet in 1965, Montreal Locomotive Works Limited will build 82 of the lunits, each producing 2,400 horsepower, and General Mo- tors Diesel Limited of London, Ont., will tunn out the remain- ducted. Tf, as is more often true than not, the tissue is not malignant, the lump is removed, every- body heaves a sigh of relief and the patient goes home and eration." If there is a sign of malig- nancy, however, the remainder of the operation demands more precautions, Surrounding tissue is removed, to make sure that the malignancy has not spread. Neither fat pads nor cysts tend to become malignant. Can- cerous, that is. Unless aybse- quent tests make the x-rays look suspicious, there may be no reason for surgery. If sus- picious signs do develop, then it is time enough to operate and find out how much or how little need be done. At that point, of 'coure, don't procrastinate. Get. it done. and settled as quickly as possible. DESIGNERS GET AWARDS LONDON (Reuters) -- De- signers Jacques Fiffeau and Bonnie Cashin of the United States received Sunday Times 1964 international fashion awards Tuesday night, Awards also went to Andre Courreges of France, Princess Irene Galit+ zine of Italy and Ronald Pater- son of Britain. The awards were presented by Lord Thomson, the Canadian-born newspaper ider, magnate, OSHAWA whereas the Canadian some-| By ARCH MacKENZIE that the U.S, treasury depart- times looked wary and was! wasHINGTON (CP) -- The|ment agrees with them. | nearly dropped once or twice: next meeting in Canadian -| The question is how tong it TTLE INLY | United States auto tariff talks|can withhold its decision. e} uy the 5 ag they| is scheduled for Ottawa before| simple alternative for Canada,| vattled on even terms before! the end of October, informants faced with higher duties on 4 15,000 spectators in the packed, here say. _ {sales to a tg i Phone Nippon Budokan Hall, including! But there is no sign that this higher sar & ye t ie ~ Emperor Hirohito and Empress| session--following up the last wor ti merican au b Nagako. and the Canadian's|held here' Oct. 9--will be con- and parts timports every father, Rev. Albert. Rogers of|clusive by any means, While | Y¢ar. Vancouver the negotiations are -- as one Tae te net " rei ist 4 . '. save Janan| put it--going "all right,"" the) avowed policy of freer trade in ot doe te ictory gave Japan Cmohasis is on continued ex-| either Canada or the U.S., par- to-date. The fourth and last, in| Ploration and study of alterna-/ ticularly when hard bargaining | the open class, is up for grabs|tives to Canada's tariff incen-| for further reductions under the | Friday but Canada will not be tive plan to increase its auto General Agreement on Tariffs represented exports and Trade (GATT) resumes Competitors may participate} The U.S. is still withholding Now 16 at Geneva tn only one judo class and Rog-| the finding of a special investi But if tariffs are raised, the ers, a 2a-vear-old native of'gation into the Canadian pro-| U.S has much more to lose Truro, N.S., was the only Ca- gram whereby Canadian auto than Canada nadian taking part in the sport producers get tariff relief on At the same time, GATT at the Olympics certain imported parts if they poses difficulty in finding a so- His silver melal brought Can- achieve a matching increase in lution since U.S. preferential ada"s total of medals to four. | exports treatment for Canadian auto Oarsmen George Hungerford of} Under it, Canadian exports to exports would disturb other Vancouver and Roger Jackson|the U.S, have expanded to countries of Toronto won the coxless| about $40,000,000 worth for 1964, On proposal under discussion pairs for the only Canadian|--still a fraction of American|has called for gradual removal cold medal and, on the running! sales in Canada of about $600,-) of tariffs in autos in both coun track, Bill Crothers of Mark-| 000,000. This compares with (rias, which would expose the ham, Ont., took 'the silver only $15,541,000 in 1962. smaller Canadian industry to ' the full impact of competition SHOPPING CENTRE OPEN EVERY THURSDAY & FRIDAY NIGHT @ SPECIALS EFFECTIVE UNTIL, CLOSING SATURDAY OCTOBER 24" POWER Perfo GRAIN FED BEEF BLADE ROMST4 FACIAL TISSUES e SAVE8%e CS FOR SS Sema oe ceseteee medal in the 800 metres and Harry Jerome of Vancouver the bronze medal in the 100, This is Canada's second best performance at the Olympics the Second World War tapped only by the haul of twoi since Some American parts compa- nies applied for countervailing duties against such Canadian exports. The fact that the ne- gotiations are being held to find an alternative Canadian procedure is regarded as proof 'from Detroit. 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