tr es. SENT 2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Pridey, July 16, 1965 "Hellyer Sets Ceiling Cost On New Jets ' By DAVE McINTOSH ; OTTAWA ie eotee spend "4 CF-5 con-| 000 for up to 125 jet fighter- four years, Hellyer an-| Minister 'Thursday. Bas Defence vee ? Foe i! i : : Ege i i i F : i: z 3 a 2 i a fe 3 3 , é 28 5 a £.. iF =e f EF ~assembly line in about two 'years. The last one will be pro- duced in early 1970. Defence Production Minister Drury said the program will program for Quebec and an ap- , Al Hartshorn, manager of the Regent Theatre, is seen, left, receiving an engraved silver tray from R. W. Bol- FAMOUS PLAYERS RECENT MANAGER stad, president, - Famous Players (Canada) Corp. Ltd., at a testimonial dinner in Toronto. The presenta- tion marked 40 years of con- tinuous service with Cana- dian Players and was made during a recent 25-year club 'dinner. NDP Will Go After Quebec, $1 Million Campaign Fund By MICHAEL GILLAN | TORONTO (CP)--With a new provide 2,100 jobs during the four-yea: 'be used for support of the army in pI plane will tg 2 $3 lie t refuelling. spurts, Its range 500 r 2,500 miles with in-fligh' » fuelling. * MONTREAL (CP) -- F. R. «Kearns, president and general Smanager of Canadair, said » Thursday that the manufactur- Sing and supply of equipment @Mecessary to produce the new 'CF-5 fighter-bomber for the 'AF will be spread through- out the Canadian aerospace in- dustry in different parts of the country. "Canadair's participation in this program will be about 45 the total dollars, ¢ Pee eee rere Perey a ) os 's choice of the air- To Tea, Or Not To Tea BARROW - IN - FURNESS, England (AP)--Britain's new atomic submarine faced a building delay Thursday be- »cause of a tempest over who *eould use the teapot. About 200 men working on the | . craft voted to quit unless man-|d: "agement lets them use its hot water boilers to brew the morn- "ing tea. » The dispute steamed up dur- ing negotiations on wages, and *the local head of the engineer- ing union said a company wage er had also been rejected. Vickers turned off its copper ~hot water boilers a week ago. company said the men wasted too much time lining up to fill their teacups with hot wa- ter and asked them to bring their tea in vacuum bottles. Union spokesmen said many of their members live in board- ing houses, and landladies won't let them .-have hot water for tea. Vickers has four atomic sub- marines under _ construction here, two of them built to carry « American Polaris missiles, The 'dispute threatens completion of » the program. $270 Weekly iGuild's Aim eh s © DETROIT (AP)--The Amer. PAlcan Newspaper Guild has set lew minimum wage goals of $270 a week for key classifica- Povo and a seek a four-day, ir work week in fut - pet sea 'uture ne- Delegates to the Guild's na- tional convention here also adopted week minimum goal for any adult classification, and re- newed emphasis on steps to cope with automation and new processes in the newspaper and magazine field. Meanwhile, the International Typographical Union agreed to meet Guild officers next month to "work out mutually accept- able solutions to our common problems," . Ate * The two unions have clashed | recently over the issue of cross-| ing each other's picket lines! during newspaper strikes in Toronto, Albany, N.Y., and pat] 723-4663 le said a few Hercules or transport planes will be so that they can re- the twin-engine CF-5 in This will be the first the RCAF has ever done The CF-5 can fly supersonic- ally--1,000 miles an hour--in miles it re- Y 8 $135-per-|down peal for $1,000,000 in campaign funds by leader Tommy Doug- las, the New Democratic Party wound up a four-day convention Thursday promising a strong fight in the next election. | Eight hundred delegates heard Mr. Douglas at the con- clusion of the convention say the NDP now has the platform to rally voters across the coun- try and with enough money the party could put up the '"'tough- est, most effective and most aggressive" campaign in its history. The NDP leader had just ing Canadians," said afterwards. The response of English- ispeaking delegates to several Quebec support "surprised me very much--happily surprised me." National unity, and relations with French Canada, dominated the meeting, although the NDP and its predecessor, the CCF, have never elected an MP from Quebec. The convention approved res- olutions put forward by the fed- eral council that called for a rewriting of the Canadian con- stitution to recognize Quebet's jal place in Confederation, been returned pp for a third four-year term as national leader. The delegates, subdued throughout most of the meeting, let go with their emotions and accorded Mr. Douglas loud and prolonged standing ovations. "This convention made it clear that our English-speak- ing Canadians fully understand the aspirations of French-speak- Revenge Of TORONTO (CP)--Dale Agar of Tiny Township was awarded $900 Thursday by the Ontario Municipal Board for damage done his farm by beavers. The township must pay him for the loss of revenue from pasture land flooded by beaver dams. Tiny is the most northerly township of Simcoe County. Mr. Agar bought his farm in 1958; in 1959, 30 acres were flooded, He complained to the township council. The municipal board was told the township road overseer had been instructed to blow up the offending beaver lam, In 1960, however, nearly 40 acres of Mr. Agar's farm were under water and in the next year another 10 acres were sub- merged. He sold the farm in 1963. Mr, Agar claimed his loss of revenue from the flooding was between $25 and $50 an acre. The board, however, decided the flooded land could have been used only for pasture and allowed him $15 an acre, or $900 for loss and interest on his claim, Sgt. Escapes Cong Prison SAIGON (AP) -- U.S. Army Sgt. Isaac Camacho of El Paso, Tex., has escaped to safety after 20 months as a' captive of the Viet Cong, a _ military spokesman announced today. Camacho was the fitst Amer- ican known to have escaped Viet Cong captivity. Thirteen other U.S. servicemen are still held by the Viet Cong, the spokesman said. Camacho was taken prisoner) Nov. 4, 1963, when several hun- dred Viet Cong overran a U.S. Army special forces camp at Hiet Hoa in Hau Nghia prov- ince, 5 miles northwest of Sai- gon. He was last seen leaving a sugar cane field and running a dirt road. The Dammed| and new tax arrangements and consulting machinery to im- prove federal - provincial pro- grams. There was a call for recog- nition of the rights of French- speaking minorities in English- speaking provinces. resolutions: aimed at winning Mr. Douglas| The key resolution pledged an terest but "should be offered| NDP government to set up a planning and development coun- cil to handle federal-provincial affairs, and permit greater pro- vincial autonomy -- with the money to pay for social needs-- while retaining a strong cen- tral government. Another said Canada was facing the gravest crisis in its history, and to solve it the NDP |would "adopt a new and dy- namic approach to Confedera- tion which will balance a strong federal framework of leader- ship with an expanded oppor- tunity for provincial and re- gional development." Mr. Douglas set a $1,000,000 |\target for a campaign fund to ifight the next election, which |he said should come within 14 months. With more than 1,000,- 000 NDP votes cast in the last election, this target was not too high, he said. |Grants Asked For Mothers Not Working PORT ARTHUR (CP)--Tax and incentives or government grants should be provided for mothers of young families to encourage them to stay in the home rather than work, the Young Family Movement of Fort William said Thursday. The group's brief was pre- sented to the Ontario select committee on youth. It said| parents should be educated to recognize their rights and du- ties in society and should be given financial support to foster a proper home environment. It recommended a course in secondary schools to instruct students on the rights and du- ties of parents. Churches should be encouraged to provide pre- marital courses and a centre should be established which would direct parents to specific agencies when the need arises. The movement is made up of 25 married couples of a Roman Catholic church. Another brief, presented byj Elizabeth Peters, counsellor for |Youth Anonymous at the Lake- jhead, urged that a special pro- jgram be set up for "detached"| young people who likely would) develop into delinquents. | Earlier a committee repre- jsenting student councils from |Lakehead high schools asked WEATHER FORECAST TORONTO (CP) -- Official forecasts issued by the weather office in Toronto at 5:30 a.m. : Unsettled weather will persist through the upper lakes region where the cold and warm air masses lay side by side. Southern Ontario will gen- erally remain under the influ- ence of a high pressure area for another day. However the leffects of the high pressure are weakening and the zone of un- settled weather now over the upper lakes will gradually set- tle southward bringing warm muggy showery weather to the lower lakes Saturday. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Southern Lake Huron, Niagara, Lake Ontario, Toronto, London, Hamilton, Windsor: Variable cloudiness with showers and scattered thunderstorms. Warm and becoming more humid. Winds southwest 15. Northern Lake Huron, Georg- ian Bay, Timagami, Algoma, Southern White River, Sudbury, North Bay: Mostly cloudy with occasional showers and s cat- tered thunderstorms. Winds Hot And Humid, Thundershowers northerly winds 10 to 15. cool, Winds light. and Forecast Temperatures northerly near 15. | Northern White River, Coch-| Low tonight, high Saturday: Windsor ..... soon 87 St. Thomas 65 London . - & Kitchener - 62 Mount Forest...., 60 Wingham ... 60 Hamilton 62 St. Catharines.... 62 Toronto ....... eos §=665 Peterborough .... 58 Kingston ...se060. 58 Trenton .... 60 Killaloe ... 55 Muskoka .. oo §=--#S8B North Bay...ccccs 55 Sudbury .....6005. 55 Earlton .......+ eo. 50 Sault Ste. Marie., 55 Kapuskasing 40 White River 45 Moosonee . 35 Timmins ....+++.. 45 rane: Sunny with a few cloudy intervals, continuing cool with Western James Bay: Sunny with a few cloudy intervals and Haliburton, Killaloe: Showers scattered thunderstorms. Winds southwest 15 and cooler. SSssusesss |for greater specialization in high school courses. URGE SPECIALIZATION | The committee said in its ibrief that a student should not be forced to take several courses in which he has no in- |special courses of use to him." | The student brief also said |there is too much stress placed jon university degrees. "Instead of telling us to finish school and get a degree, tell us to finish our education, whether it is in a technical, a {commercial or purely academic field." The Thunder Bay branch of the Ahtletic Union of Canada suggested to the committee that organizations fostering individ- ual athletic development be as- sisted by government agencies. Lothar Bode, chairman of the branch's track and field com- 'Who Clapped TORONTO (CP)--A Scotsman paid the piper and called the tune as well at the New Demo- cratic Party convention here thursday. John Robertson, 36, who came to Canada 14 years ago from Dundee, Scotland, was irked at delegate David Middle- Pipes-Dirges Haunt ND er TORONTO (CP) -- James Bartlett, 64, former deputy pro- vincial police commissioner who once said he found a gam- bler's $1,000 bribe offering in his flower pot, died Thursday. Mr, Bartlett resigned as dep- uty commissioner in March, 1963, a few days after the move was recommended by a royal commission in a report to the legislature. Mr. Bartlett said later that he had submitted his tion 11 days. before the report was tabled on the ground of poor health. He said he had had six heart attacks. The royal commission under Mr., Justice W. D. Roach of the Ontario Supreme Court was formed to investigate crime in the province. Mr, Bartlett testi- fied at commission hearings in May, 1962, that gamblers Vin- cent Feeley and Joseph McDer- mott had visited his home in July, 1957. They wanted his. ad- vice on getting a service station franchise on Highway 400, but Mr. Bartlett testified he told them to leave. Three weeks later an anon- to look in a flower pot in his back yard. He testified he found $1,000 in $10 and $20 bills in the pot. : Man Who Rejected $1000 Bribe, Ex-Deputy Of OPP Bartlett Dies Mr, Bartlett also testified he gave the money to an ex- gambler with instructions for it to be returned to McDermott and Feeley. ; ; Both McDermott and Feeley denied offering him the or seeing it after Mr. gave it to the ex-gambler. ymous telephone caller told him| Poa' p insurance protection Adlai's Death ;cost $20.-Mr. Middleton, re- buked on the floor by Mr. Douglas for his "bad taste," apologized later Wednesday for a "totally unseemly and shame- ful act on my part." Mr. Middleton was the un- successful NDP candidate in the 1962 and 1963 federal elec- © AUTOMOBILE e URBAN FIRE © FAMILY LIABILITY @ LIFE © ACCIDENT AND SICKNESS AND OTHER INSURANCE NEEDS © JOHN McPHERSON 728-7207 110 Cabot St. Phone CO-OPERATORS INSURANCE ton of Toronto who applauded tions. Wednesday when Adlai Steven- son's death was announced to the convention by Party Leader T. C. Douglas. So Mr. Robertson hired a |piper in full regalia and had him play lunchtime laments for 20 minutes in the lobby of the Royal York Hotel here where the NDP is 'meeting. "I did it to teach a small lesson to people,' Mr. Robert- son said. 'People should re- spect the dead." The lesson |mittee, said individual sports NEED A NEW jare not being given the place they deserve in high school! physical education programs. He contended organized team; sports provide a convenient es-| cape or cover for the shortcom-; ings of the individual. | |] Ne. Down Bl ees 9 74 Payment FURNACE? 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The rea- son for this was to give faster and better service to all Robson Motors custom- Increase your milk production by obtaining FRESH and CLOSE COWS FROM SCHWARZ BROS. LIVESTOCK For Further Informetion PHONE 623-2895 R.R. NO. 3 BOWMANVILLE ers. There are 30 employees, SEE US FOR COMPLETE SHOE REPAIR SERVICE Rubber Footwear Tropical Fish & Supplies JOE'S SHOE REPAIRS 80 King St. W. 623-2921 Bowmanville Frigid Locker System Meats Sold In Quarters Cut to Order and All Frozen Foods, Fruits, Vegetables and Fish LOCKER RENTALS 73 King St. W. 623-5578 including the service de- partment. The salesmen with Robson's, are exper- ienced, courteous and have over 75 years selling exper- ience -- they know what the customer wants. Rob- son's also has a complete shop service -- for Bear alignments and baked en- amel finishes. All his mech- anics are members of the Technicians Guild. 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