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Oshawa Times (1958-), 3 Sep 1966, p. 3

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@. 4. POMERY ction law is grossly mis- and misinterpreted. It a tendency to lean too much in favor of manage- that is deserving of pro- tection." E. J. Pomery, 66 Stevenson Rd. W: "I don't really know, I think that they are a necessity of the times but I feel that if ma- nagemnet and labor got to- gether on serious grounds and left all of the little conflicts behind, they wouldn't be needed." Jack Adams, 340 Marland Ave: "I'm. against them, They cut down on the freedom of labor. I was in a union way. back in 1912 and we have really come ahead, but if injunctions are JACK ADAMS legal, it will take away the working mans voice. They put too much restriction on the movement." Mrs. Mary McIntyre, Little Britain: "I think that they cut down on labor's freedom. They may be alright and even neces- sary in some cases, for in- stance, if the men get out of control and there is the possibility of riot. But not just for stopping the labor movement." Joe Newell, 453 Juliana Dr.: "I think that they are bad because they limit the labor . movement against them. They cut down the picket line and the y can ignore the desires of the workers. They can also hire different peo- ple and jeopardize the wor- kers' jobs. I think that the picket line raises the sym- pathy of the public and aids the workers." In Manitoba Manhunt _WINNIPEG (CP) -- Four armed men today were trying to avoid recapture after a well- planned breakout from nearby Headingley provincial jail Thursday night, Six others who broke out with them were cap- tured Friday. The manhunt concentrated on the Warren area, 20 miles north. west of here, where one of two cars used in the break was found near an airstrip. The lo- cation posed an interesting pos- sibility because one of the four still loose, Kenneth Leishman, 34, is an experienced pilot. Leishman faces trial on theft and conspiracy charges in a brazen hijacking of $383,000 in gold bullion from Winnipeg air- port March 1. Also hunted were Barry Kay Duke, 21, held indefinitely after acquittal on a non-capital mur- der charge by reason of insan- ity; Joseph William Dale, 25, facing a rape charge; and George Wayne Leclerc, 26, of Montreal, accused of false pre- tences, Jules Chippeway, 21, involved with Dale in the rape charge; Riley Earl Nelson, 17, awaiting U.K. Invento r Designs Revolutionary Rocket NOTTINGHAM, England (Ruters) -- A revolutionary turbo-rocket that could enable Britain to undertake a space program has been designed by Rolls-Royce, it was stated Fri- day at a conference of the Brit- ish Association for the Ad- vancement of Science. It was claimed th turbo- rocket, a cross between a jet engine and a rocket, could launch @ space Capsule for one {ie tenth of American costs, be N.S. Premier * Calls Session HALIFAX (CP) -- Robert Stanfield announced Fri- day a special session of the Nova Scotia legislature will beg called for next Friday to deal with the "ag gressive cam- paign" of Bell Telephone Co. of Canada to acquire: controlling interest in Maritime Telegraph and Telephone Co. Lid. . Bell is seeking a 51-per-cent control of M. T. and T., whose board of directors already has advised shareholders not to sell to the larger company. Mr. Stanfield warned after partly built in a secret, re- inforced plastic, and, unlike conventional rockets, could be used again. Th turbo-rocket was de- signed some years ago by a Rolls-Royce design engineer, J. Palfreyman, but was moth- balled because £300,000,000 ($900,000,000) was needed to de- velop it. . Standage, head of us. ..cempany's _ ad- esearch department, said there is no doubt that the turbo-rocket will work. "We have never made a pro- totype, but we have all the bits and pieces," he said. Standage said the engine was designed. in titanium, but com- pressor blades now could be made in a new, fibre-reinforced plastic called Hifil, which Rolls- Royce is using in its Jumbo jet yengine. Jodoin Scores Injunctions OTTAWA (CP) -- Claude Jo- appeal on a capital murder con- viction; and Archibald Demas, 23, serving time for robbery, were the first to be collared in the hunt by Manitoba's entire 450-member RCMP force and all municipal police units. TOOK A HOSTAGE They took Donald Fast, 17, son of a jail guard at Head- ingley, hostage but crashed a stolen car into a ditch in front of a pursuing police car near Portage la Prairie, 50 miles east of here. Two other escapees -- Larry Ross and Edwin Martin Funk-- drove into Langdon, N.D., in a jail-owned ' station wagon and were apprehended by Patrol- man Al 'Thiede. A revolver and knives were found in the station wagon. Case, 18, was serving time for robbery. and manslaughter. Funk, 21, faced a false pre- tences charge. They were later returned to Winnipeg, 85 miles north of Langdon. A sixth fugitive surrendered to Winnipeg police after his lawyer arranged a meeting at a downtown hotel. Donald Wayne Joseph Poole, 22, held on a robbery charge, contacted lawyer Kenneth D. Klein through his mother. The mass break, believed Manitoha's worst, began about 7:15 p.m, when two prisoners called a guard into their cell on pretext of illness. They jabbed a sharpened table knife at his ribs, bound him, took his keys and free the others. Over- powering other unarmed guards by surprise, they made their way to the guard office where they. forced open the arms locker. Shots Down Escapee BERLIN (Reuters) -- Sub- machine-gun fire foiled today doin, pr of the C Labor Congress, says in his La- bor Day message compulsory arbitration and court injunctions the Bell offer was d last month that the provincial government might block the transaction. Mr. Stanfield said the legis- lature would be called into ses- sion unless Bell approached the government before Tuesday to discuss the situation. Th premier said it has been the government's policy to give Bell "'the opportunity to achieve with us a co-operative solution and leave the opportunity open as long as possible. It is clear, however, that Bell . . . is con- tinuing its aggressive campaign to acquire control of the M. T. and T." Mr, Stanfield said if the situ- ation remains the same on Tuesday, the legislature "will be summoned to meet on Fri- day, Sept. 9, to consider legis- lation on this subject." are ing the labor movement. The statement says many unions have won. "marked" wage increases recently but that the democratic rights of la- bor are subjected to subtle at- tacks On Many fronts. "Employers following a well- beaten path to the courts and getting injunctions are not only endangering the labor move- ment and all it stands for, but are interfering with freedom of expression and our democra- tic way of life." The statement also contends "renewed efforts to raise the old bogey of compulsory arbi- tration as a miracle cure for disputes. . . . a system under which a government - appointed body would impose wages and working. conditions smacks of slave labor." CITY OF Applicants should have full high cluding bookkeeping, typing and accounting experience, OSHAWA ASSISTANT ACCOUNTANT (Female) SALARY RANGE -- $3,556.00 to $4,483.00 (3614 hour week) Required by Treasury Department to assist in accounting data prepar- ation, reconciliations and distributions. school standing or equivalent, in- mathematics and previous office Apoly 'N WRITING ONLY, giving full details of education, experience, age, morital status, etc., before 5:00 p.m. September 9th, 1966, to: Personnel Officer, Hell, Oshawa, Ontario. Now Is The Time To Order Your Winter Fuel .... . Save PHONE On Premium Quali FUEL OIL 668-3341 GAL. ty DX FUEL OIL Serving Oshawa - Whitby - Ajax and District the escape of an East German as he tried to slip over barbed wire fences into West Berlin, police said. Witnesses gave two versions of the incident and a police spokesman said he could not say which was right. One report said the man, about 25 years old, collapsed and--was--dragged te 2. nearby earth bunker where the shots originated. But other witnesses in West Berlin said later they saw the man being led away at gunpoint by East German border guards to the bunker and then taken away by ambulance. Nicholson Gives Out Warning OTTAWA (CP)--Labor Minis- ter Nicholson warned Friday that gains in wages and work- ing conditions must be matched by gains in productivity if Cana- dian workers are to enjoy a continued increase in living standards, In a Labor Day message, he said that despite special prob- lems there are ways open of achieving this aim. During the last year Cana- dians had continued to advance and prosper. "Employment has increased by four per cent while unem- ployment has continued at the lowest rate since 1957. Indus- trial production has risen sub- stantially and total earnings of the labor force have increased by 12.5 per cent. "These developments have been accompanied by rising prices of essential items, which have made some workers natu- rally concerned about their liv- ing standards. This has been one factor giving rise to labor unrest, "Many important collective agreements have come up for negotiation this year. With em- ployment high and the economy buoyant, these negotiations have resulted. in_ significant gains in wages and working conditions. Union Signs Quebec Pact TORONTO (CP)--The Inter- national Brotherhood of Electri- Her husband was tilled in the Britan- . THE OSHAWA TIMES, Saturdey, September 3, 1966 3 crash of the nia, which pl into Ste. Therese Strikers - th ascesassik Threaten Plant Blockade Reaches 'Dead STE. THERESE, Que. (CP)--|their jobs Thursday to demand,away from the plant and this} LJUBLJANA, Yugoslavia Strikers at the General Motors|wage parity with fellow work-|was why they had not been|(Reuters) -- The death toll in plant here tried to prevent man-|ers at GM plants in Ontario. |paid. Thursday's crash of a Britannia agement and office workers} A plant spokesman said the) Some management cars were/airliner packed with British va- from leaving the grounds to get|men on the picket line say they|bounced by picketers as they|cationers rose to 96 a their lunch Friday but gave up|will blockade officials in thejentered the plant Friday morn-| Mrs, Ivy Johnson, about 50, after one plant official pushed|plant until they receive back|ing and a few women office em-|severely burned and suffering his way through their picket/pay which they would normally|ployees were too frightened to/from head injuries and frac- e, have received Thursday. come in to work, the spokes-/tures, died in hospital early to- The 571 members of the day. - : _ WARSAW (AP)--At the re- quest of Russian experts, says the Polish weekly Polityka, al- He said the picket line had|man said. coholic drinks will no be United Auto Workers walked off! mistakenly turned the pay truck STOP PRODUCTION = 'breakfast. pas ae Red Medical Standards [iiss &ae;| Continental French Buffet | of the office staff are on the job, production at the $60,000,- 000 plant at this community 15 miles north of Montreal has been shut down at a time when 1967-model Pontiacs and Chev- STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP)-- A group of United States doc- tors returned from the Soviet Uion today and said they found "almost unbelievably" low med- ical standards there. They said they saw anti- quated equipment and outdated procedures -- frequently dec- ades behind those used in the United States. They said the well-trained doctors in the Com- munist world seemed depressed by what they had to work with. The comments were made by members of a delegation of 42 doctors from Nebraska who have, been making a tour of Eastern Europe. "Some of the equipment and procedures we saw were almost beyond belief, defying any stretch of imagination in com- parison to Western standards," Dr. Hiram Hilton said. '"Im- pressions of surgery. in the So- viet Union in particular showed evidence of isolation from the mainstream of surgical pro- gress." No shortages of trained staff or medical students were ob- served he said. The doctors' study tour was sponsored under the people-to- people goodwill program. GATHER IMPRESSIONS They acknowledged they had a rather superficial look at Com- munist medical institutions, but said they had gathered enough impressions from visits to half a dozen hospitals and institu- Shock U.S. Delegation that the doctors--like most Rus- sians they saw -- seemed de- pressed, plodding along with the daily routine. "T visited an obstetrics insti- tution in Leningrad where the doctors and staff seemed very good but in which the material conditions were far below par compared to Western standards, even as far as simple hygiene was concerned," said Dr. Rus- sell Gortloy, an obstetrician. "The gynecological depart- ment used equipment and pro- cedures that by any Western standard were itdated and abandoned 10 to 15 years ago. I was told this was the best maternity hospital in the area." UC Delegates Vote On Union rolets were just beginning to roll off the assembly line. When the plant opened last fall workers were hired at an average wage of $2.05 an hour until they could form a union and begin formal bargaining for a contract, In January the United Auto- mobile workers became the bar- gaining agent and in February negotiations with General Mo- tors officials began. When no agreement was forthcoming a strike vote was taken in July. Thursday the workers walked out with no pre- vious warning. Union spokesmen say the company's latest offer was for pay rates five to 15 cents below the rate paid to workers in the same jobs in Ontario. Company and union officials have not met for further talks since the strike began but both sides say they are open to nego- tiations at any time. WATERLOO, Ont. (CP)--The future of Canada's two largest Protestant faiths could be de- cided when delegates to the United Church of Canada's 22nd general council, which begins here Wednesday, vote on the question of union with the Angli- can Church. Th principles of union, a joint agreement by committees of both churches, are expected to be the major piece of legisla- tion to come before the 400 pol- icy makers of the United Church during the 10-day coun- CALL OR SEE DIXON'S FOR OIL FURNACES SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS 24-HOUR SERVICE 313 ALBERT ST. 723-4663 cil. Hwy RECOMMENDED Che Rih Room Will Be Closed Sundays For The Summer Served Daily 11:30 - 2 p.m. -- 5 to 8 p.m. GENOSHA HOTEL cee The 5th "C" Of Saving COMMON SENSE: meaning that now is @ good time to be setting aside money just in case, At present, conditions generally are unsettled, to say the least and people who have money on deposit at 442% (Like OUR saving depositors) Gre realizing the full benefit of the first 4 C's of savings as well. ; THESE ARE; COMFORT: that feeling thot comes from knowing that you have cash available when you need It. CONVENIENCE: Longer saving hours daily and ell day Saturday, CONFIDENCE: Knowing that you are receiving the best rate of interest paid more often, CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST: deoling with a COM- MUNITY Trust Company, local savings invest- ment growth, tions and talks with coll to take a poor view of medical standards in the East--apart from training. The delegation stayed an- average two or three full days in each city and spent one or two days making study visits. The American doctors agreed that the Soviet installations they visited seemed overloaded and OLD WORLD TRADITION LONDON WINERY LIMITED eal Workers (CLC) Friday an- nounced the signing of its first agreement with Quebec Tele- phones, covering 500 plant em- ployees. Bill Ladyman, Canadian vice- president, said in a statement that wage increases range from 22 to 46 per cent over two years. The union now has contracts in Alberta, Manitoba, Nova Sco- tia, Newfoundland, New Bruns- wick and Prince Edward Island. It is trying to win certifica- tion at Bell Telephone Co. of Canada. The statement said the Que- bec agreement raises linemen from $81.18 to $111.60 weekly; repairmen from $87.98 to $111.60; central office workers from $100.73 to $122.80. The contract also includes im- proved working conditions, in- surance, welfare and pension plans, Bargaining will begin shortly on a contract for the company's traffic section, also represented by the union, the statement said. AT HOME © Grades 6 to 10 Course prepores you for mony government spon- sored trade courses. cial exominotions for recognized @ All books ond supplies provided. © Moil coupon for full information te: FINISH HIGH SCHOOL © Up to Grade 12 equivalent course for job improvement, © Senior matriculation course prepares you te write provin- certificate, ® Low monthly payments -- income tox deducfible. CANADIAN 4CADEMY P.O, BOX 356, HAMILTON, ONT. & et Mail Coupon Today Name.sscccescseess SS Oe ee eae eee aD HD en OS eS cae as OE | SSH SRO ER RRO NE THE ULTIMATE IN LUXURY LIVING! GEORGIAN mansions 124 PARK ROAD NORTH/ OSHAWA SAAT TENS Adult Building Central Location Prestige Address Distinction Beyond Compare Underground and Level Parking By Appointment Only 723-1712 -- 728-2911 LONDON » ONTARIO CANADA NEW WORLD PERFECTION Labor later { revised schedules. CITY OF OSHAWA GARBAGE COLLECTION NOTICE Central Ontario Trust & Savings Corporation 19 SIMCOE ST. N. OSHAWA, 723-5221 23 KING ST. W. BOWMANVILLE 623-322} Day There will be NO GARBAGE COLLECTION on the Labour Day Holiday, Monday, September 5, 1966. Garbage normally collected on Monday, will be collected on Tuesday, September 6, 1966, one day The day of the regular Tuesday collection will not Garbage for both days must be out by 7:00 a.m. on Tuesday to avoid being missed, as the time of collection may be different than normal because of Please do not leave garbage out over the weekend. R. C. BINT, Chairman, Public Works Committee EASTVIEW PHARMACY 573 KING STREET EAST PHONE 725-3594 Fast FREE Motorized Delivery e@ HOLIDAY HOURS e _ satisfaction. The magic of prefabrication means more for your money, choose a Colonial Home % Through Colonial, you can enjoy all the home- building savings made ible by modern mass-purchasing of materials . . . and assembly-line production techniques. Choose your lot--then let Colonial's wide experience and sound fe ier show you the way to true economy and long-term (Guaranteed. in writing!) possil The Sag ~ Carries for less than rent ee. as low as [Ss QW Split Level--Living area 912' garage (extra) 218'--3 bedrooms 00 per >» month 15-YEAR FINANCE PLAN AVAILABLE * Special MAIL THIS COUPON TODAY CONTACT YOU catalogue, NAME enclosed is 5S0c--Please send "Homes" '6? OT-9-66 ADDRESS ed ue Bonus Offers at No Extra Charge: @ Double glazing for all windows @. Aluminum combination doors R NEAREST DEALER TWO TORONTO LOCATIONS METRO SALES - WEST 32 Caledonia Road (just north of St. Clair) Toronto, Ontario Phone - LE. 1-2459 SAT. SEPT. 3RD 9 A.M. to 9 P.M, SUN. SEPT. 4TH CLOSED MON., SEPT. STH 10 A.M. to 1 P.M, 6 P.M. to 9 P.M. TUES., SEPT. 6TH 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. THE OSHAWA BOARD of EDUCATION EVENING CLASSES GRADE 13 1966--1967 DR, F. J. DONEVAN C. I. 250 Harmony Road South Telephone 728-7315 ART : BIOLOGY CHEMISTRY GEOGRAPHY HISTORY PHYSICS Monday and Wednesday evenings O'NEILL C. & V. I. 301 Simcoe Street North -- Telephone 728-7531 ALGEBRA' FRENCH -- GEOMETRY -- TRIGONOMETRY Tuesday and Thursday evenings, CLASSES will be held on one or more of four evenings, Monday to Thursday from 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. and will pct Bt until the middle of May. COURSES will be provided if 15 or more people register -- on or before opening night. FEES: $10.06 per course to be paid at time of enrolment, No refunds at end of term. REGISTER IN PERSON ON TUES., SEPT. 13 or WED., SEPT, 14 7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. BOARD OF EDUCATION, OSHAWA G. L. ROBERTS S$. &. LOVELL, Cheirman Superindendent of J. R. BACKUS, Business Secondary Schools Administrator IMPROVE YOUR EDUCATION, YOUR EARNING POWER AND YOURSELF CENTRAL C. I. 240 Simcoe Street South Telephone 723-4678 ENGLISH Mondey and Wednesday evenings

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