Durham Region Newspapers banner

Oshawa Times (1958-), 13 Oct 1965, p. 25

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

ELECTION TALK Rhodesia Biockade PETERBOROUGH (CP)--A trade blockade against Rhode- sia if that country unilaterally declares its independence could provide a tremendous shot in the arm for the Canadian to- bacco - growing industry, George Hees said here Tuesday h night. 'Mr. Hees, a former trade minister in the Diefenbaker government, is Conservative candidate in Northumberland riding. "This can have a very im- portant effect on our Canadian tobacco industry," Mr, Hees d Tory Program ROBLIN, Man. (CP) . --For- mer Conservative agriculture minister Alvin Hamilton Tues-|have usually bought the maxi- day night proposed a_ three-|m nder the agreements a y point program to raise farm- ers' incomes. Speaking to a quiet crowd of about 40 persons at a political) lined new wheat-selling techni-| ques, a port program and al-je terations to the wheat quota) ers. n Mr. Hamilton said China tobacco each year, with 25,000,000 pounds which Canada. course, now is for the Minister of trade and commerce to im- mediately leave Canada and go to Great Britain and make sure that all necessary arrange- ments are made for the Cana- in and take over the market which would be vacated by Rhodesia," ing wheat for four years, They should be made to the current long-term agreement to put the meeting in this Dauphin consti-jsales on a more permanent ba-| tuency town, Mr. Hamilton out-'sis. more reciprocal system to benefit smaller farm-|ments with other state-trading @..5 Suits Hees said in an interview. "Rhode- sia has been selling Great Brit- ain about 100,000,000 pounds of compared as been sold to. Britain by "The important thing, of ian tobacco industry to move For Farmers "The Chinese have been buy- wt u n ave sometimes gone be- ond/ 'Pherefore adjustments w He said~the Canadian gov- ronment should encourage trade agree- Y ations. 5 "Tt it-is in Canada's interest N Newsprint Firms Succumb To 'Marketing Pressures' America where there had gen-\caied-freightrate_situation to! TORONTO (CP)--The Naval; erally been two--east of thejoffer customers newsprint at alOfficers' Association of Canadajsearch by thé ascocintion shows! Robert Thompson, leader of the| erals a Canadian Press Business Editor 'has asked the federal govern-|50 per cent of boat operators SEL LASER BE ACE {introduced by British Columbia poeeer: jponid |\COMPETITION LOCAL Instead, they say, the compe- tition was local. One official says, some Quebec mills were |taking advantage of the compli-| By' KEN SMITH TORONTO (CP) -- Marketing| Rockies, and west of the Rock-|lower cost, Oe ap sen ly sg Be eng a ng Oe Test For Operating Boais Requested As Mandatory THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, October 13,1965 29 need to return to responsible principals, national unity has Thompson Says "Today, broken down because today's Pendulum Swings proven play one against the BEAMSVILLE, Ont. (CP)---| other," he said. Both the Lib nd Progressive Conserv- Social Creait party, said Saiur-)2tives sre _hurying principles to day "the pendulum of strong sin power by perpetuating the The brief contends that re- jor firms to creasing stresses, try observers say the troubles may be really just beginning, "It's a messy situation and one we never should have al- lowed ourselves to fall says one company official. "But the competitive pressure got 6o bad we just had to move," The major changes announced so far are by Abitibi Paper Co. Ltd. and Domtar Ltd., who say th their) Ket. prices between 50 cents and $5 a ton, reducing their. base price to $125 or $130 a ton depending on shipping costs. These adjustments--the com- panies refuse to call them price custs--affect customers in On- tario, Manitoba and They also made price about $18 a ton less i United States funds than in New) ressures are straining long-established price structures set up for newsprint by eastern Canadian manufacturers. fforts by ma- t to the in- some indus- Despite recent ey have 'adjusted' an, but chiefly ork, OW THIRD AREA the into," sible," an observer says, "How much more does it cost to ship newsprint from northern Que- bec or Ontario to Buffalo, for example, than to Toronto? jasking very soon," Abitibi says the price differen- tial has beerf around since the 1930s, when a 10-per-cent differ- ence was introduced to meet charges from U.S. newsprint producers that Canada was dumping paper on the U.S, mar- | A spokesman admitted, how- ever, the recent price adjust- jments mean the differential is higher than ever, Both companies indicated they, too, are expecting ques- tions from U.S. customers, espe- Saskatche-|Clally those near border points in Ontario,|Since the U.S, absorbs more the companies' rejection of any the Toronto|than 75 per cent of Canada's\influence from the West Coast n {newsprint output, any deteriora- tion in the price situation there fect on earnings, Both companies are emphatic "These mills sell to. Toronto|m This splitting of the easternion a formula price. It's made quiring all boat operators more|sic questions market appears almost indefen-|p of the New York base price,/than nine years old to register|and about 40 per cent of boat and prove their qualifications,|operators do not observe exist- less freight from the Quebec mill to New York, and plus| jfreight from the mill to ie: onto, went down and again as freight! |prices. | "As a result there was dou-|jq \freight rates haven't changed. | "But customers started to ask what we could do about it. So jwe had to adjust our price to take into account competition) "It méiins we'll be earning a bit less. money, but we're sav- jing customers -- and that's the important thing.' Some analysis aren't buying @ broad ap reductions, | One says it is only tions is spreading east Some eastern newsprint The result, one analyst says, in denying that the price adjust lready has been displaced in the should be taken of the list of to sell grain to these countries Canada's temporary grain cus-|we should make an effort to} tomers and listed as a regularjhelp them sell their products i customer, all over the world." Diefenbaker Muddling: Sharp TORONTO (CP)--Trade Min-times wonders whether Mr. ister Sharp told a Liberal party|Diefenbaker "has a personal rally here Tuesday night Oppo-/feud'" with Prime Minister sition Leader Diefenbaker is| Pearson. conducting a mud-slinging elec-| Mr. Sharp said a Liberal gov- tion campaign and "he revels ernment would work after Nov. in it every day." 8 for a free society with equal More than 1,000 party work-|opportunities for all Canadians. ors ale oysters and broke bal, would irom Program ue loons during the rally at which\war against poverty and! Mr. Sharp also said he some-|broader educational benefits, | Pension Benefits Fit To Need | PRESTON, Ont. (CP) --|Club of Toronto that medical Health Minister LaMarsh saidicare by means test wouldn't Tuesday night that if the Lib-|work. | erals obtain a majority in the NO WAY TO KNOW | Nov. 8 federal election they will) She said there would be no, adjust the basic flat rate of the|way of determining who needed) Canada Pension Plan if assist-\public assistance. | ance proves insufficient to 'Such an approach would not meet pensioners' needs. taken into account the fact that) Miss LaMarsh said at a Lib-jeven persons with a, relatively eral rally in a high school audi-|high income can face crippling) torium, attended by about 60)medical costs,"' she said. | people, that benefits would be! She added that it could not) proportioned according tobe assumed that such persons needs, based on the cost of liv-\would be covered by private) ing in the area in which a pen-/plans. v4 sioner lives. | In Alberta, which uses the "A pensioner in Prince Ed-|voluntary approach, 25 per cent ward Island doesn't need in ac-of the population was not cov- tual dollars anything like ajered by the provincial, private pensioner living in Toronto," /or civil service medical plans, she said, |Miss LaMarsh said, She said a majority Liberal) "Can we fairly assume that) government would "offer what-|almost one in four of the popu- ever is necessary to help thoseilation has no requirement for in need" by enacting the Can-|protection In this erueia!l ada assistance plan as soon as area?"' Parliament reconvenes. She said it was this factor If the plan's basic rate is In-and not a desire for socialism adequate, she said the Liberals'that prompted the Liberal gov- will assure that pensioners getiernment to demand universal) sufficient money to pay rent,/coverage for provincial plans food and doctor bills to enableif the plans are to receive fed- them to live comfortably. feral fiscal assistance equal to Earlier in Toronto, she told/one-half the national per eapita the Liberal Business Men's cost. | Greatest Prosperity - Martin WEYBURN, Sask. (CP)--Ex-| He said every part ef Can- ports of wheat and wheat flour|jada is enjoying the greatest from Canada during the last/prosperity in history. | two years reached a record of} The main issue in the eurrent| almost 1,000,000,000 bushelsielection campaign is election of External Affairs Minister Mar-|a majority government which tin said Tuesday. ican implement its program Mr. Martin told a Liberal/wWithout constant fear of defeat rally that before 1963, Jig pros mete he sald. Pe No government can properly exports ranged between 27,000,- discharge its duties unless it 000 and 300,000,000 bushels an-jrepresents all sections of the! nually. 'people, Mr. Martin added, whea MacEachen Reviles Diefenbaker WHYCOCOMAGH, N.S. (CP){policy and caused the country Labor Minister Allan MacEa-|8 loss of international prestige. chen said here Tuesday John He said that in the last two years, the Liberal government Diefenbaker is not suited to be has done much to restore Can- prime minister of Canada ada to what it was before the Addressing a [Liberal party Diefenbaker government took rally, Mr. MacEachen said office Mr. Diefenbaker's government "Mr. Diefenbaker is afraid to brought Canada its highest un- appeal to the voters regarding employment rate in history, his record as prime minister," caused monetary tonfusion, Mr. MacEachen said. 'They could not decide on a defence want to forget about it." Majority For REGINA (CP)--It is unfair that Canadians should ask the Libera! government to continue in a minority role if the coun- try is to have a national medi 67 Medicare luncheon here, sala it was im- possible for the Liberal govern- ment to continue under the con- ditions that existed in Parlia- ment during the last 244 years cal care plan by 1967, [mmi-; Mr. Nicholson said it took the gration Minister Jack Nichol:|Liberal government almost two son said Tuesday * |years to pass the Canada Pen- Mr. Nicholson, speaking at asion Plan legislation, Students Listen For Tories VANCOUVER (CP) Two ghan are telephoning Conserv- University of British Columbia ative speakers across Canada students are using telephone and recording excerpts of their and tape recorder in a bid to speeches get radio time in B.C. for key Then they contact each of _ Progressive Conservatives B.C.'s 28 radio stations and of- Philip Lind and Bob O'Calla-ifet a recording free of charge Lesage, Pearson In Caucus QUEBEC (CP) QuebeciQuebec Justice department Premier _ a matter, "'our responsibility and told repor' rf our responsibility alone." meeting he and Prime Minister Pearson talked of 'everything, The premier said he knows. of under the sun" including the no special report made to Ot- Nov. 8 federal election. tawa on the arson and bank However, he said there was/ruptey investigations, referring no discussion of the currentito claims by Conservative Quebec investigations. Into ar-|Leader Diefenbaker that such son and fraudulent bankrupt:ia report is being withheld by cies. He said this is entirely a Ottawa. ae has been to set up a The 1966 luxury car year may now begin! The finest of all Cadillacs is here! And it greets you with an exciting new ele- gance surpassing even the Cadillac:styling triumphs of years gone by. Its dazzling new look is highlighted by a fotally new split-level grille and by new clean-swept body contours. And its interiors have never been more breath- marketing area in North'last year's $10-a-ton reduction'an third ma-\ments have anything to do with| middle west by the West Coast\to the supply this pressure will/relayed to the Commonwealth|next 10 years will increase 65 way system will cause the mo- id customers. have been askingiincrease," he adds, 18 mm "ZN impart an air of SEE AND DRIVE THE MAGNIFIGENT 1966 CADILLAC ON DISPLAY TOMORROW AT YOUR AUTHORIZED CADILLAC DEALER'S ONTARIO MOTOR SALES LTD. ernment now in the form of a 'ie '" glee brief, was out- ; "So as freight to New Yorkilined at "That's a question I'd expect); ' la lot of U.S. publishers to be|creased, their price in Toronto Tuesday, to Toronto went down so did the'of the association's water \safety ble pressure on our prices, Since|prief a we ship on a north-south freight/pring the law into force by jroute instead of east-west, our/next May, |boat operators would have to) thur Bottomley called in the dip- \declare their qualifactions upon|jomatic representatives of the jregistration, There would be n0/9}.nation commonwealth to ex- : jtest, as in licensing, but any po-| plain Britain' that resulted from freight rates.jiine' officer could require that| Rhodesian. by ni the qualifactions be demonstra-\prig, Andrew Skeen, was ab- safety has jwhere in the world, Mr, Man- chee said, ; logical; ' would have an immediate af-that pressure from those reduc-|for a long time why the Rockies|talks with Rhodesian should constitute a $10 - a - ton| Minister Ian Smith in a televi- al-|/barrier, he says, Mew Excellence! taking! New leathers, new fabrics and new appointments (with dramatic walnut paneling on all Fleetwood models) Cadillac's traditional engineering excellence rewards you with a number of suspension, chassis, and acoustical ad- vances which result in.an almost incredible smoothness ae "meron PS ent to enact legislation, re-jcan not answer correctly 10 ba- on regulations government has swung from/ Spoils system and bribing vot- Ottawa to the provinces." ers with their own money, he Mr. Thompson said at a fed-|5#!4. eral election campaign meeting in this community 30 miles west of Niagara Falls that any of the 10 provinces could provide Canada with a better govern- ment than the. federal adminis- tration in Ottawa. He said the real issue of the campaign is not a desire for majority government but the Traffic Threatens Metro With Massive Inundation TORONTO (CP)--Metropoli-| jtan Toronto is headed for a ti- dal wave of traffic congestion| . unless drastic measures are in- He proposed & ban o8 Seve troduced during the next Tchad parking and called for re- years, traffic commissioner Sa-/moval of street cars from all muel Cass said Friday. jmajor city streets within 10 to Mr. Cass predicted in an in-|15 years to improve traffic flow sion broadcast to the nation to-/terview that motor vehicle re-\although 'there is no evidence is to be gistration in metro during the to indicate that a metro sub- The proposal, before the goy-|ing safety regulations. UK. Reasons Given For "Blockade" LONDON (AP) --- The British and pleasure-boat regu-| government today told the rest committee, said that the/of the Commonwealth why it sks the government tolhad blocked Rhodesia's bid. for independence under present cir- cumstances. Commonwealth Secretary Ar- TAKE CRUISE BELOW The world's first tourist sub- marine has taken 25,000 pas- sengers on 850 dives in the waters of Lake Geneva. NOW EXPORT LESS Canada now exports about one-sixth of the national produc- tion, compared with onethird 30 years ago, a press conference Frank C. Manchee, chairman tions The proposals suggest all) inly the mmissioner, jsent, Britain has refused inde- pendence to the Salisbury re- gime until majority rule is guar- anteed, Prime Minister Wilson an- _. |nounced that he will give a pub- lie accounting of his abortive Prime It Is the first time that such proach to water been taken any-) changes in existing traffic ar- teries must. be made, 'As new mills open and addinight, His statement iby radio. }per cent and said a number ofitorist to switch to transit," The Sedan de Vitle eu' ©nicilement./ and quietness of operation, Finally, consider the excitement of Cadillac's new performance. You'll marvel at the alert unrivaled distinction and luxury. And __ response of Cadillac's new, exclusive variable ratio power steering and wonderfully steady handling. Very soon ... visit your authorized Cadillac dealer. Ask to see and drive the great new Cadillac, the new Standard of the World! S108 140 BOND STREET WEST, OSHAWA, ONT, PHONE 725-6501 ,

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy