2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, January 11, 1965 THEYLL DO HIM PROUD, { The following year he was; elected member for Kingston in tives, working with the|and Ontario joined in Confeder- ation and, knighted, he became Stephen Leacock, an historianjada. wrote: (Continued from Page 1) In 1864 he secured agreemen Scotia, New Brunswick, Quebec the first prime minister of Can: as the finest municipal building in Canada in the 19th century. But by the time it was com- pleted, the capital was moved to Montreal. in principle of representatives ofthe Atlantic provinces to a federal union of all British North America, In 1867, Nova Kingston had been named in 1841 the capital of the United Provinces of Lower and Upper|builder, a retired grocer--was Canada -- Canada East and West, now Quebec and Ontario when plans were started for the massive city hall, regarded t, Originally {t had four 27-foot limestone columns supporting a 63-foot wide canopy on its face. This became unsafe and was, torn down in 1958 with the in-| tention of re-erecting it. The -Istone, however, was converted: into crushed gravel for oad re- -|pairs. Bellevue -- which Macdonald facetiously called Pekoe Pagoda after the calling of its original bought by the federal govern- ment last year. Work is to begin in April on restoring it. Dave Beck 'ECONOMIC (Continued from Page 1) the economy were operating at economic targets. It "Success, on the other hand, would bring great benefits. The increase in total output to 1970 'would be almost double the rate of the last seven years. The im- income FORCE TO EXPAND Key to the council's report was the future unprecedented growth in the Canadian labor This force--all those working and prospect for the 1965-70 was an annual rate of of 2.8 per cent, one- higher than the average . This would bring 000 persons into the labor 1965 and 1970, young, well- people. @ goal of three-per-cent un- employment therefore would require 'vastly expanded new employment opportunities."' "An appropriate combin- of strong .expansionary ig therefore to required / generate adequate levels of de- both at home and in ex- markets expending : ate Ha ay ent," FOR TAX CUTS? aa that mean income tax cuts The council didn't answer di- , though its report sug: county that it Bre council projection said that by 1970 all levels of gov- Canada will He ernment in * off by taxes" about $2,000,000,000 more than they on a national-accounts t is, including both budgetary and other spending. "In other words, this would be @ measure of the degree to which aggregate demand would be reduced by the operations of sector." ant questions for government policies. The council said it favors a level of taxes and that would be roughly in balance if ment in average personal would be even larger." in support of rap-|and employm: be| actually achieved over the last POTENTIAL its potential output. council said: total demand in the economy as a basis for attaining high em- ployment and high output. "Second, it must be vitally concerned with the impact of the tax system on the competi- tive position of Canadian pro- ducers. THOSE WHICH HINDER 'This implies, things, the need for removing, or avoiding the use of, partic- ular fiscal measures which handicap the competitive pro- duction and marketing capabil- ities of Canadian suppliers, especially in relation to of their chief competitors in the United States." The council said change is vital for growth. Government programs deali ng h are still in: --particularly labor market pol- "We place a great deal of em- phasis on the need for urgent and prompt improvement in the field of labor market policy." It also was was '"'vitally tant" to give education and training a "very high priority" in the Canadian economic gys- tem. HARD TO CONTROL Dealing with prices and costs, the council said it will be diffi- cult to keep these in line in a rapidly expanding economy. However, it looks for a "'rea- sonable degree of price and cost Stability" in the years ahead, within the limits of what it described as "relatively moder- ate average annual changes in prices and costs actually re- corded in Canada over the last decade," This would require better price performance than \other Paustiios which have expanded quickly during the last decade, certainly much better than -- inflation in the 1946-53 "we are well aware of the fact that we are setting for the Canadian economy the task, {over the balance of this decade, formance concerning price and cost stability under prosperous conditions, as that which was decade under conditions of rel- atively high unemployment and relatively slow growth." SETS CONDITIONS These conditions were neces- sary to attain such a goal: --Rapid productivity growth. This would minimize cost and price pressures in areas which achieve high productiv- ity gains. It might also induce price declines in these areas, helping to offset possible price increases in other sec- tors of the economy. Increased international com- petition. this would mean Government taxing policy must have two objectives, the "First, it must be designed to promote adequate growth of among other "lo: maintaining as good a per- jured his Gets Pardon Dave Beck was pardoned Sun- D. Rosellini announced. The executive pardon restored to Beck civil rights he lost by his conviction on state grand larceny charges, the out-going governor said. Beck, 70, will remain on fed- eral parole, The former Teamster presi- dent was convicted on state charges involving the sale of a $1,900 union-owned car. He was also convicted on federal charges of filing false income tax information and sentenced to five years in prison. He entered MeNeil Island fed- eral penitentiary June 21, 1962, and was released on parole last December after serving two and one-half years. Beck contended. he was not guilty of both state and federal charges. Trains Collide Killing Five | WOOSTER, Ohio (AP) -- A Baltimore and Ohio freight train and an Erie-Lackawanna freight collided head-on early today at a track crossover in Sterling, killing five orew members in a mass of flames. was thrown clear, was reported in fair condition at a hospital in Medina. The fuel tanks on the diesel engines of both trains exploded, igniting fuel oil, Firemen from 10 departments battled 150-foot- high flames for more than an hour before bringing them un- der control Firemen Injured In Guelph Fire GUELPH (CP) -- Thre@ fire- men suffered slight injuries Sunday in a fire that destroyed a store and 16 apartments in an old three-storey building in) downtown Guelph. Fire Chief Arnold Quillman rr gg damage at about $200,00; Fines Edward Holley in- shoulder and two other firemen, Glen McCord and Donald Bolton, suffered leg injuries when they slipped on ice coteiie the building. kets. With it would come improved access for Canadian consumers to many foreign goods. Thereby, Canadian in- dustry would be spurred into competitive performance. --lIncreased adjustment in both wage demands and busi- ness pricing policies Failure to get this would frustrate other economic ob- jectives and compromise Can- ada's capacity to get higher living standards, reasonable business profitability, and keep the purchasing power of} better access to foreign mar- savings and pensions. MONKEY BUSINESS This: marmoset is full- grown and he wants no part of a -- administered by a hospital attendant at the Stanley Park Zoo in Vancouver. The tiny tropical species of monkey has been at the zoo hospital during OLYMPIA, Wash. (AP)--For-' mer Teamster union president day from a Washington State parole term, Governor Albert THIS AERIAL photograph shows the western end of a gigantic slide that spewed across B.C.'s Hope-Prince- ton Highway Saturday and left four persons feared dead. The heat of the ex- posed earth has formed a cloud against the mountain where the original. break HIGHWAY OBLITERATED HOPE, B.C. (CP)--Gravity's awesome tug took away a mountainside Saturday, put a face of rubble on a beautiful valley, and killed four persons. The glide obliterated one of British Columbia's oldest moun- tain highways for more than a A sixth crew member, whol mile Rescuers recovered two bod- ies Sunday. The other victims may be found today. It will take many weeks to restore the highway for public use, and no one yet knows the route it must follow. The site is 110 miles east of Vancouver and 300 miles across the Rocky Mountains from the 1903 slide that wiped out the village of Frank, Alta., killing 66 persons. An entire side of the unnamed 4,000-foot mountain broke over the highway. An estimated 500 feet deep and between % and 1% miles wide, the crumbling wall plunged into the valley, carried 1,000 feet up the other side, and washed back down, GAVE WARNING SIGNALS It gave warning signals. Boul- ders and trees fell over the highway at about 4:45 a.m. Sat- urday, pinning a westbound con- vertible. without injury to its three occupants, Bernie Lloyd Beck, 27, of Penticton, B.C., Mary Kalmakoff, 21, of Shore- acres, B.C.,- and Dennis George Arlitt, 23, of Penticton. Behind them, trucker Norman Stephanishin, 42, a father of eight children from Kamloops, B.C., stopped his oil tanker. Be- hind Stephanishin, Thomas Starchuk, 39, parked his truck- load of hay. Stephanishin, a native of the avalanche + prone Revelstoke, B.C., area, warned the others the rock. get that car free," he said later in an interview. "T could hear it rumbling up there and knew there was more to come. . I don't think they quite realized what I was talk- ing about. |TURNS BUS BACK Stephanishin finally retreated alone; éncountered a bus carry- ing 10 to 12 persons and per- suaded the driver to (turn around, They drove back form police. Stephanishin stopped another bus and caught a ride back to the slide with a truck driver, concerned about the four per: sons he had left behind. ; "We drove on a bit and we were looking across the valley and there was something odd-- different," he said. "Everything -looked black. I couldn't understand what had happened -- and then I said: 'Those poor people down there have had it.'" WEATHER FORECAST Light Snowfall, Continuing Cold to run back out of the path of "But they were determined to| occurred, The road ends abruptly at the right of the picture. Below it the debris has displaced the waters of a lake. Mountain Side Topples, Kills 4 Rescuers flown in by helicop- ter Saturday and Sunday said the slide must have caught the car and iwo trucks as it re- turned from the opposite side of the valley. Wheels, tanks, hay and pieces of metals were scattered high up the side of the mountain as much as 150 feet above the road bed. A tracking dog led men to a spot above the twisted cab of the hay truck, containing the bodies of Starchuk and Beck. Beck had apparently got in with Starchuk when his car would not restart. The teams pulled away eight feet of rock, freeing Beck's body just before noon Sunday and Starchuk's body at 1 p.m. During the afternoon the dog repeatedly led searchers to two spots nearby and the digging for the bodies of the woman and in-| Arlitt was concentrated in that area when darkness fell Sun- day. But B.C,'s highways minister, P. A. Gaglardi, said the other victims may have been in their car, which could be "packed al the other side of the val- ey SLIDE EMPTIES LAKE A lake the size of four city blocks that lay in the path of the slide was emptied, its wa- ters gushing with heavy mud down the valley to splash moun- tains along the way in big brown streaks. Engineers still fear a large jut of rock at the top of the mountain may come down. As the men work at its base Sun- day, the mountain face was a shower of dust from minor falls of loose rock. E. B. Wikins, design and planning engineer with the B.C. department of highways, said the slide was started by rock at the top of the mountain. He said it will take some months to design a new road, which will go over the rubble covering the highvay. Various estimates placed the height of rock over the road at from 100 to 400 feet. Two bull- dozers pawed ineffectively at the wall Sunday, and engineers were forced to revise their ex- pectation that a path for heavy equipment could be cleared across the slide within 48 hours. RED CHINA'S QUESTION of Communist China's denunci- ation of the Wes Nations in connection with Indonesia's king hinting she will re- even if the invitation comes on Communist China's terms? There are indications Peking still has, its eyes on UN mem- bership but may raise new de- mands to increase its prestige among the African and Asian nations. The Chinese may call for amendments to the 20-year-old UN charter to benefit the Afri- can and Asian countries. ad- mitted to the world organization|a since 1945. In a government statement Sunday, the Chinese declared the UN needs to be '"thor- oughly remolded." Peking claimed the organization has become a tool of the United States. But Peking did not suggest how the UN should be changed. WORD ATTACK CAREFULLY In their attacks on the UN, the Chinese Reds were careful not to offend the new African targets in. tion drives. se statement said cabtctebdabie ee newly - tnlopentent Asian and' fuse to join the United Nations|African countries oe placed the founding ofa new faith|organization of the present hopes in the United Ni in the United Nations must be ie atl di Ma a att nes cate in ee ee an To Join Or Not To Join The UN? | TOKYO (AP)--The sharpnessjand Asian nations who arejorganization did not truly rep- '3 Com- here my the world's nations. a. announced it would establish a "new i fy saggedtiral but it not it would clear whether OR Peking's statement did mot liquidated." sia" Ah vn ---- it was col- Communist China repeat Indonesia edly claimed the UN needs heritablish a '"'new-styled" UN but more than she needs the UN,|twice in the last five days China She has said she will join onlyjhas issued statements whole- on her terms. backing Indonesia's She wants Nationalist China ousted. Both Nationalist and Communist China have rejected a "two Chinas" or "one China, one Formosa" compromise, be- cause both agree Formosa is part of China. Should Peking join the UN, it could be expected to demand) that the U.S. 7th Fleet be with- drawn from the Formosa Strait, which separates Formosa from the mainland, and that all U.S. at be removed from the is- and. FOUND NEW FORUM? Before withdrawing from the UN, Indonesia also claimed the hea! withdrawal from the UN. Should the two yong: at- 'ganization, it i doubttul it » or; s they will win much support from the rest of the African- Asian bloc. The African-Asian countries-- except for Communist China and her satellites--have dis- approved Indonesia's to withdraw from the UN. The new nations would be hard hit financially if they pulled out of the world organ- leatinn because many of them get funds from UN agencies for their development programs. JAKARTA (AP) Having walked out of the United Na- tions, Indonesia now may have to pull out of the conference of African-Asian nations, The test will come in Algiers in March when the second con- ference of African-Asian na- tions is scheduled. Malaysia, the announced reason for Indo- nesia's UN pullout, wants a seat at the conference and In- donesia is opposed to it. At the Algiers conference In- donesia will have to face up to the question of Malaysia's par- ticipation, One reason Indonesia gave for walking out of the United Nations was that Malay- sia had been given a Security|Union's -- Council seat. Indonesia maintains that Ma- laysia is a British "neo-colon- ialist'" enterprise and subse- quently has no right to sit in an international conference with other African -Asian na- tions. A preparatory meeting for the Algiers conference, held here last April, was deadlocked on the issue of Malaysian and Soviet participation. It was de- cided that the heads of states meeting at Algiers will decide whether the two countries may take part. The. objection to the Soviet WASHINGTON. (CP)--Primé Minister Pearson of Canada has provided a preface for his talks here Friday with Pres- ident Johnson in the shape of a written discourse on "good neighborhood." He discusses the 'almost unique" relationship between the two countries, with .empha- sis on the desirability of con- tinuing a continental co-oper- ative approach to economic mat- ters. His comments appear in For- eign Affairs Quarterly, pub- lished by the Council on For- eign Relations. The publication regularly carries articles by in- ternational authorities. The agenda for the Pearson- Johnson 'meeting, billed as an informal session, will not in- clude any urgent domestic mat- ters unless some sudden prob- lem emerges from two current sets of negotiations --. for an} auto - production scheme and a new @ir agreement, Both are} Stages. There is a good chance that the two men may spend much of their time on international matters, ranging from the United Nations to NATO, the TV and STEREO WAYNE'S 78 Simcoe N. Telephone 723-1411 TORONTO (CP) --Forecasts;Mainly clear and very cold to- issued by the weather office at}day and Tuesday. Winds light. 15:30 a.m Synopsis: Little significant Forecast Temperatures change. is expected in the|Low tonight, high Tuesday: weather picture over Ontario|Windsor .... - 20 30 today and Tuesday. Temper-| 20 30 ature variations will be much Land 18 30 the same as for the last couple|/0"¢0" of days as a series of very Mount Forest..... 15 28 weak disturbances move rap-|Wingham ......... 15 28 idly eastward through the/qamilton 20 30 Great Lakes area. Light snow St Gatiasines 20 30 or snowflurries will persist|"~ ab hick ite i Me mainly in central Ontario but TOFONtO ....seeeee 20 30 flurries will also occur over|Kingston ....... oe 15 30 southern regions. Peterborough .... 10 25 Lake St. Clair, Fier ing acl TrONtON os s.cersss 15 30 Niagara, Southern Lake Huron,|,; Killaloe, Lake Ontario, Halibur-|"illaloe «+++++10-. 525 ton, Windsor, London, Hamil- Muskoka .osesessee 5 25 ton, Toronto: Mainly cloudy to-/North Bay..... 5 20 night and Tuesday with occa-/Sudbury .. +5 20 og snow oF snow!lur-/Rariton ...++.+++- 20 15 ature, Winds lett [Sault Ste, Marie, 5 90 | Northern Lake Huron, Geor-|Kapuskasing ...+. -25 0 gian Bay, Algoma: Mostly|White River...... -20 0 cloudy with occasional light|M . 10 snow or snowflurries today and|Timmins 0 Tuesday. Not much change in onan snore temperature. Winds light. eed Southern White River, South- ern Timagami, North Bay, Sud- Mortgage Money? bury: or reg by te ALL H an occasional snowflurry ay Real Estate |) and Tuesday. Little change in McGIL Sick | temperature. Winds light Ro os Wtake s 728-4285 Northern White River, North-|| ~°" kd ern Timagami, Cochrane: | Vancouver's recent cold weather. PAUL RISTOW iro. | REALTOR 187 King East - 728-9474 -~(CP Wirephoto) | HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. | 24-HOUR SERVICE | 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS | Mr, Koehler has worked in such well known pictures as 'The Incredible Journey", Big Red", 'The Shaggy Dog Story' and with 'Bullet' of the Roy Rogers Series. At present he is Canadian T.V. series Classes commence WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 13th at THE UNITED STEELWORKERS HALL 115 Albert St., Oshawa -- at 8:00 P.M. for further information call 725-6030 or 723-9708 DOG TRAINING CLASSES Under the direction of Richard "Dick" KOEHLER Television and Motion Picture Animal Trainer "The Rorest Rangers', training animals for @ believed at or near their final) "Co-operative Needed On Economic Matters" Sino - Russian split, far east- ern problems or Africa. Pearson may invite Johnson for a formal visit to Canada, now that he has been elected in his own right, but all the signs indicate Johnson won't be able to accept in 1965. Johnson has scheduled a full year of travel to areas with higher priorities than Canada. For Pearson and Johnson, who will be having their third meeting, quick, short visits seem to. be adequate, But for- mal visits, for protocol's sake, are in the cards eventually. GOOD FOOD BUSINESS MEN'S LUNCH 12 Neon te 2 P.M. DINNER 5:30 te 8 P.M, FULLY LICENSED DINING ROOM HOTEL LANCASTER 27 King St. W., Oshawa Indonesia To Also Quit African-Asian Conference ? participation came from China. President Sukarno of Indo- nesia antagonized some African Asian countries at last Octo- ber's non-aligned corference in Cairo by saying that non-align- ment is a thing of the past and should be replaced by his new concept of "emerging forces," which in Jakarta means inten- sification of the fight against Western imperialism. He could not get his point across. Diplomats here say Sukarno's withdrawal from the United Nations, despite the disap- proval 'ot many of his allies, will cost him the support and sympathy he needs at Algiers. PLANNING A... © BANQUET © CONVENTION © MEETING First Class Facilities For 20 to 400 Guests Quality Service Experienced Staff RESERVE YOUR FUNCTION NOW! 723-4641 F- HOTEL ' , =----s AND AL SPEC LEAN BLADE STEAKS TUESDAY L DAY: WEDNESDAY IAL 2 tbs. 1-00 SHOULDER LAMB CHOPS 2 lbs. PURE PORK SAUSAGE 2 |hs. Freezer HIND QUARTER OF BEEF Special aii Ib "CUT AND WRAPPED FREE" LER' 12 KING STREET EAST -- 723-3633 sain apres