DESPITE DISENCHANTMENT Canada Keeping By JAMES NELSON June, Infamous For Slump Not So Bad In Retrospect By DAVE McINTOSH Canadian Press Staff Writer There appears to be growing disenchantment within and out- side the government with Can- ada's self-appointed peacekeep- ing role, External Affairs Minister Martin sald Wednesday, how- ever, that Canada will pursue the subject of more effective peacekeeping measures at the United Nations General As- sembly this fall. Peacemaker Role man battery from an artillery regiment which won't take its guns to Cyprus, There is wide criticism among the military and non-military alike in Ottawa concerning the choice of the CF ~ 5 fighter. bomber, ostensibly to be used in limited conventional flareups anywhere in the world, | WHITER C¥-5? Many officials say they just can't see Canada becoming em broiled in a situation far from OTTAWA (CP) -- June, the month of the stock market slump, turns out now to have been not such a hard-times month after all, Figures only now becoming available for the month show strength in many of the impor: tant business sectors of the economy, : Except for the continued rise in prices and somewhat higher unemployment, caused mainly by the arrival of high school and university students on the labor market, ali these showed VERSATILITY BACKFIRES Mrs, Elizabeth Gordon poses today in her London apartment with her parrot, - Oscar. The 24-year-old bird talks, cries, cusses, whistles and sings. The parrot must Despite one disappoiniment after another,.Mr, Martin has refused to be dissuaded. from his goal of a world peacekeep- ing force. He is as relentless in this matter as his predeces- sor, Conservative Howard Green, was in the field of dis- armament. John Holmes, director-general) of the Canadian Institute of In- ternational Affairs and a former senior official of the external Affairs and a former senior of- ficlal of the external affairs de- partment, said this week that Canada's reputation is becom- ing slightly tarnished after 20 years of the kind of active jdiplomacy that rarely satisfies anyone, #g don Times by Mrs, Gordon read; What offers parrot, varied vocabulary, unsuit- able vicarage?" (AP Wirephoto via cable from London) go, however, because it has learned to bark like a dach- shund, "It's the most ter- rible noise,"' said Mra. Gor- don, mother of five children. Advertisement in the Lon- Steelers Topple Huntsville Davidson Scores Hat Trick By CLIFF GORDON A goal by Wayne Davidson, his third of the night, at 19.50 of the third period gave the Whitby Lasco Steelers a 10-9 win over the Huntsville Teen Towners at the Whitby arena, last night. The win was a must for coach Jim Hinkson and his charges, who were on the brink of elim- ination, having dropped the first three games of the best of seven all-Ontario Jr. B championship series, Fifth game of the series is slated for the Huntsville sieved on Saturday night. Besides having three goals, Davidson also picked up a pair of assists and played a stand- out game. Mike Leiws and Tim Gray each fired a pair with singles going to Pete Vipond, Stan Kolesnik and captain Dave ! OLD DRIVE LACKING "We are no longer looked upon as a fresh young force," he said at the third annual Banff conference on world de-| velopment. | Within the government as a whole, there does not appear to, |be the same drive there once| |was behind the objective of| | world peacekeeping. } For example, no atrenuous leffort was made to find enough infantrymen to reinforce the and Canadian Guards Battalion for its scheduled UN duty in Cyprus next month. The unit was far below strength and it {to make him another five-point; go, 'Then they really started to man on the Whitby team, {turn on the heat, The Steelers oun tA . were picking up foolish penal- ge Seng Spent trio eS and appearing to panic just | n Thompson scored a tri0'4 jittle under the pressure as {ee gE se gi losers with) they were giving the ball away poll ant any Larry Ire+! on 'numerous occasions, Brem- | Pas a ay Nn oo Mike ner in the Whitby cage was al oe and Tim Kelly each! mighty busy young man. He scored aces, stopped shots with everything! Huntsville appeared confident! py his ears, Canada-U as they took the floor for last night's encounter, They had| HIT POST FOUR TIMES | taken the measure of the County) Huntsville hit the post four) Towners six out of the last) times in the last five minutes of| seven meetings including three play and finally got the equal-| playoff games in a row. It was/izer at 18.09 as Thompson got! a much different story when the|his third goal of the game. A| play started. The Steelers were|/deep groan was heard from all ready and up for this game al-|the Whitby fans as they real- ving vo -- to tirejized their favorites were very) very badly in the final five min-/tired and that the visitors were utes and made several foolish starting to put the pressure on, ot a ae MR Bw or plays that almost cost them the But as they say all good things Caribbean will be headed by a By HAROLD MORRISON LONDON (CP) -- A joint Anglo-Canadian banking ven- Houston. Houston added four as- sists to give him a five-point evening. Gray had three carson WHITBY | PERSONALS Mr. and Mrs. Charles D, Jones, 930 Greenwood cres., at-) tended the wedding of their niece, Joanne Skillen, to David Cramer at Rochester, New York. Mr, and Mrs. David Cramer, ball game. come to those who wait, and|; Whitby held a slim 4-3 lead at\they did for Davidson, who Canadian and -- will ~ the end of the first as they were! chalked up his third goal of the|®Tow" gv ee " Pcty v8 not being over anxious to get|evening with just 10 seconds to|ment on both sides Of the Al: caught up the floor. In the SeC-| go. Huntsville pulled their goalie antic, ond period the Lascos encour-| but to no avail as the Steelers) aged by a fine crowd caught fire|/hung on with grim determina- and held the Teen Towners off| tion, the score sheet which is a fine) JUST TALKING - It was a feat for any team. In the mean-| good win for the Steelers who time the Steelers were racking| may just catch fire now and up three more goals to Jead 7-3/ give the Huntsville crew a real at the end of 40 minutes of ac- battle. They played well last tion, night but they will have to play The third period was almost a a lot better on Saturday night if repeat performance of the game|they expect to stop these fast|£6,000,000, with a substantial | in Brooklin the night before. The| hard running teen Towners. No/part of it coming in the form definite date has been set for\of Canadian dollars supplied by With an authorized capital of £10,000,000 ($30,000,000), the jnew entity known as Roywest /Banking Corp. Ltd, is being supported by some 40 financial and industrial companies but fi- nanced mainly by the Royal Bank of Canada and Britain's Westminster Bank Ltd, | ill be fleshed out by a 130- K.Bank Venture Pours Cash In Caribbean | The initial paid-up capital is| -- up-trends; Retail sales, $1,863,647,000, up 9.2 per cent in June from the level of a year earlier, bringing total retail trade for the first half of 1965 to $10, 133,357,000, up 5.6 per cent from the first six months of 1964, Manufacturers' shipments, valued at $2,044,000,000, up 4.1 per cent from the previous month and 8.2 per cent from UN ration or otherwise, . James Eayrs of the Uni- versity of Toronto, who. has written books on Canadian de- fence and foreign policy, said at Banff Wednesday that Can- ada's military policy is in dis- array because its military forces are used more for dip- lomatic than defence purposes On the CF-5, he said, "there its shores where the CF-5 would or could be used, whether in a 'ot reau of statistics reported June this year showed a real gain of 2.5 per cent from May, New car sales, up four per cent in June in numbers of cars and trucks sold over the, sumer THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, August 27, 1968 5 cent higher in June than they, RECALLS BARLY CARS were a year earlier, and have) WINDSOR, NB. (CP) since continued to climb, Con- George M. Robinson, a retired prices were 2.7 per cent|Teorge 4 higher in the June-to-June com-| Halifax businessmen, is at 95 arison, and continued to climbj| the oldest active member of the July but at a slower rate.|Masonic order in the Common- While a record 6,844,000 Cana-| wealth, In 1900 he brought the dians were employed in June,|first Reo car to Nova Scotia another $25,000 were unelt| 4m Lansing, Mich,, and later ployed, Unemployment was 4.5 4 he became the first car salesman per cent of the total labor force, he highest since last October's - taxi operator in the prov- May level, bringing total sales for the first six months of 1965 to $1,467,043,000, up 10 oer cent from the first half 0 064, é Construction started on new housing units in June at the pred annual rate of 165,700, compared with a rate of 181,400 in June, 1064, In July, however, the rate of new housing starts fell to 7 still ahead of the year's average, Revenue freight loaded on Canadian railways amounted to 15,010,000 tons, up nearly 5.5 per cent from June, 1064, and 7.8 per cent more than in May this year, On the debit side, wholesale prices were nearly three per June, 1964, Cumulative ship. ments for the six months were $16,268,900,000, up 5.6) per cent from the first half) of 1064 ORDERS ARE UP -~~Manufacturers' new orders, up 5.9 per cent from May at| $2,973,600,000, up 8.7 per cent from June, 1964, Ironing out seasonal fluctuations in the level of new orders, the bu- is nothing .. . 40 suggest that in Canadian service it can ever be called upon to do what It's designed to do," | Prof, Donald R. Gordon, as sociate professor of political) science at the University of Ale} berta, said too much stress has been placed on Canada's role} as a member of the UN "'ire brigade." UN TROUBLES | The coolness to peacekeeping is probably due, at least in part, to the inability of Canada and some of its friends to swing | the UN generally to the view! that peacekeeping costs must be a collective responsibility of all UN members, The special financial pledges by Canada, Britain and the Scandinavians to help meet the peacekeeping deficit have so} far not persuaded other UN} {members to fill the till. } ) One-Stop DECORATING SHOP Wallpaper and Murals Custom Draperies Broadloom | Flo-Glaze Colorizer Paints DODD & SOUTER DECOR CENTRE LTD, 107 Byron St. $,, Whitby PHONE 668.5862 | C.I.L, Paints and Varnishes || FRIGIDAIRE Rapid Dry Cleaning 8 Ibs. of dry cleaning $2.00 Blair Park Plaza Mon, te Fri, = 9 am, te > pm, Set, -- 9 om, te 5 pm, TO MAKE YOUR SAVINGS GROW Open an account at Victoria and Grey Save a little from every pay Whitby said the Commonwealth Carib- bean area has great investment potential and it was for this rea- son that he had approached the chairman of the Royal Bank three years ago to express Westminster's interest, His) bank was "delighted" with the} arrangements, | With Taylor as chairman, Roywest will have two deputy chairméf: A, F, Mayne of Montreal, executive vice-presi- dent of the Royal Bank, and G. 0, W. Stewart, European man- ager for Hong Kong and Shang- hai Banking Corp. Both will shift over to their new appoint. ments from the trust corpora-| tion where they were directors BROCK Evening WHITBY Rochester, New York, are|Teen Towners were down 9-5) honeymooning in Canada and| with less than half a period to! the sixth game. are presently visiting Mr. and -- -- Mrs. C. D. Jones. They plan) to spend a day at Toronto Exhi- bition. Best wishes are offered to Mrs, Lavina Fisher, 107 Euclid] Frenchman's Bay Sewers st., who is celebrating her birth- Tread Water At Council day today. PICKERING thelr Mrs. ¥red ae and hefiship council was trged to comr| work: ai --_ ousin, Bea Whitfield, have re- ion|,,A resolution was passed for tarsed from a two-week vaca- sider sanitary sewer. igstalinton the township engineer to pro- in Frenchman's Bay area aS\ ceed with plans for the servic- tion. They spent the first week : at Gemeaniees and the second|"forced local improvement' byjices, but it. was opposed by week touring the Ottawa Valley|Industrial Commissioner Mrs. Councillor Newman, not be- and Northern Ontario. iGladys Beckstead. i. he was averse to water, : ....|but more substantiation of the Friends of Mrs. Marie Bronks,| She said health considerations) neeq should be prepared. Town Line, extend their best|dictated immediate work On) 4 resolution to purchase 1.5 wishes for her birthday of Aug./sewer and water services for/acres at the site of the new 29. jy Aigo ss sia FR ge ay building was passed, s uttress her position s is was to augment the prop: Mr. and Mrs. Emmerson|reminded councillors of thelerty already pone wr the Gaskin and family spent a vaca-/petition with "a majority of per-jtownship for the project, and tion at their cottage at Lake!manent residents" listed thatthe cost was named at $4,000. Scugog. pic N oly syed three months ago) Councillors Newman and Mr. asking for the services, Spang, and Deputy Reeve Mrs. Pag Anarene er | Councillors noted that the let-|J. McPherson opposed the be eight years old today. jler from the Ontario Health| motion. {Unit saying that these services| County Assessment Commis- Visitors this week at the home|Would be desirable was notisioner G. D. Hepditch request: of Mrs. Frank Harris, 913}strong enough, and that if thejed space in the new municipal Centre st. n., were her brother,|OMB did not approve, that these| building for two desks and a Rev. James H. Bishop and Mrs.|works might be held up evenjcounter, Pickering Township a criticism of the Royal Bank which has about 50 branches in the British \Caribbean, These agents will jact as agents for the new cor- jporation, which will be headed iby the well-known Toronto in- dustrialist, E. P. Taylor, who now has a residence in the Ba-/ |hamas. Taylor also will continue as chairman of Trust Corp, of Ba- hamas Ltd, a company which specializes in estate, trust and investment advisers and cam- pany management. ) Roywest will get control { |Trust Corp, through an ex- change of shares, Roywest will jdeal mainly in medium-term and long-term industrial loans. | Its head office will be in Nas- sau. Trust Corp.'s wholly-owned subsidiary, Finance Corp. of Bahamas Lid., will continue op- erations in the savings and {home mortgage fields, ANNOUNCE VENTURE The big Canadian - British banking venture was announced at a press conference Thursday. The gathering included some of London's big financial inter- ests, These ranged from D, A. Stirling, chairman of Westmin- ster Bank, to Canadian-born} | of | | Bishop, Naomi and Alan of St.jlonger. They felt that the need/maps, and an assessment em- James, Manitoba, also Mr. and|should be more strongly sub-|ployee to be on hand to take Mrs, William Walker and daugh-'stantiated, jeare of assessment inquiries. ter Marilyn and Gerry Harding! "Unless the situation is just)He was willing to pay rent. of Peterborough. jabout dire,' said Councillor} It was believed that space ; Hubert Wank, "you do not seem/|would be available on the first| Tod, son of Mrs. Coreenito get action from the Health|floor, and Mr. Hepditch will be} Cochrane and grandson of Mrs./Unit." This, he said, was by no'so informed, Emily Strutt, Byron st., will pimicinnpceladokinsnen be three years old on Sunday. : i t : David E. McLean has retuin| Ge Ou Of Whea P od abi st Sea sa WON roduction, ritish West Indies, r spend-| BT, 8 ing nine weeks visiting with his) Bak Ad ; U K F & nine Sand Mess ers vise. U.A. Farmers icLean and brother Donald, By CARL MOLLINS 12,200,000 from an average of fc Mh vl with the) LONDON (CP) -- A British/about 2,100,000 during the last Canadian ig a - lbakers trade journal says far-decade. Canada's wheat acre- Commerce in St. George's. --| mors here should give up grow-|age is approaching 30,000,000. Gregory, son of Mr, and Mrs.|ing wheat and devote produc- British farms have produced Ronald Borchuk and grandson|tion capacity to something more|an annual average of slightly of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Borchuk, |useful. jmore than 100,000,000 bushels of is celebrating his second birth.| 'What always puzzles me is|wheat during the last 15 years) day today why so much acreage is wasted|compared with the yearly av- i r on growing wheat," writes edi-j¢ragé of about 500,000,000 bush- Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Fullerjtor Ronald Sheppard in the/@ls produced in Canada in the and children spent a three-week!current Bakers' Review same' period. Britain thus gets camping vacation in the Parry) 'Most years, unless there has/9ne-fifth as much production on Sound district. been unusually dry and sunny|one-fifteenth of the land. , weather, home wheat is of poor) The average yield per acre} Best wishes to William De-\quaiity so far as breadmaking|in Britain is about three times Geer who is celebrating his 12th)\. concerned. It always has to|that of Canada, but most pro-| birthday Saturday be blended with hard wheats Guction is devoted to high-yield + Montreal. is|/from overseas." soft varieties rather than the Ph age rae pee of| British farmers expect a rec- hard wheat essential for bread Mr and Mrs. Alvin Fraser andjord wheat crop this year, but/FEED FLOUR children, Jane Ann and Robert,|the quality is expected to be) British flour production takes spent their three-week holiday low because of a wet summer.jthe equivalent of 136,000,000] in Nova Scotia visiting his|Imports of Canadian wheat andjbushels of wheat a yeat--about) mother, Mrs. James Fraser|flour are expected to be slightly|twice as much as is milled in} and sister Ethel. higher than the average 88,000,-\Canada. Much of this is im- 900 bushels purchased during!ported, with a major portion o! Best wishes to Allan Stephen: the last few years domestic production going into son, Starr ave., who is cele-| Acreage devoted to wheat infeed brating his birthday Saturday. |Britain bas risen to more than' Editor Sheppard, understand- publisher Lord Thomson, a Royal Bank director, R, W. Shannon, the Royal| Bank's general manager for in- ternational operations, flew from Montreal to welcome the new partnership. He declined to -|disclose what percentage of the new corporation the Royal Bank will own, but said the flow of Canadian capital into the scheme will help strengthen the pound since the dollars will be converted into sterling. Initially the capital, including the paid-up capital of £6,000,. 000, will come from the joint participants, including the Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corp., Power Corp. of Canada Lid., Montreal Trust Co, and Morgan Grenfell and Co, Ltd of Britain. But later, said Shannon, when the new corporation establishes itself, the genral publi¢é may be invited to participate through investments on both sides of the Atlantic, A. D. Chesterfield, Westmin- ster chief general manager, | ably mindful of the needs of| millers and bakers, suggests that since British wheat farm- ers contribute relatively little to bread-making their efforts should be diverted elsewhere. "If the motive (of wheat farming )is to save expenditure on imports, surely valuable land could be used to produce something more suitable for the} British climate--meat, for in-/ stance." , SEAWAY Programs 7 and 9 P.M. Feature at 7:00 and 9:20 20th Century-Fox presents a MARK ROBSON #noavetion SoLor BY DE LUXE 4.9 per cent, Whitby Community Arena ~ ROLLER SKATING Friday Night Music by the "Silvertones" Admission $1.00 I Every | Case of The Bargaining Dealers When you trade in your used cor on @ new one, it Is often the cose thet the |) dealer's work has only begun in the | | arduous business of disposing of your used model ot a price that will leave him @ profit on the whole transection, As sometimes happens a ve took of storage space, or because he has too pn of this particuler model, or other reasons @ dealer must wholesale @ used ear te another dealer. ; When this happens as might be imagined, quite '@ bit ef price bargaining goes on between buyer and seller, sometimes | with a humorous twist, : This was the ease recently when two declers ended up | arguing over @ windshield with @ pinhole in it that the buying | dealer thought should be good for $50.00 off the price, "Come off it now," sald the selling dealer. "You KNOW you wouldn't replace that windshield!" The buyer kept insisting he would end finally won eut on the deal, The sale agreed upon, the selling dealer then treaty ed the buyer te @ coke from @ nearby cooler, With the papers all signed and the transfer of titles come pleted, the selling dealer finished his drink and wal over | to the windshield to examine it more closely, "Ye seams @ shame," he seid, "on account of such @ flaw, But ? ing to replece it anyway... al te go he swun Oh enety bottle 'at the windshield end ema completely. Used CARS Please Help Us! The Pressure Is On! We're Desperaie ; . . We Will Pay HIGHEST Trade-In Allowance . « » Featuring Low-Rate Ford Motor Credit Co. Financing See Our Huge Selection of ... 1965 FORDS -- FAIRLANES -- FALCONS 200 DUNDAS ST. WEST - WHITBY - and MUSTANGS -- immediate Delivery ! TOR ~ (1965) LTD. PH. 668-5893