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Oshawa Times (1958-), 10 Jan 1967, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, January 10, 1967 A GLANCE AROUND THE GLOBE Union Says Marchand : ' ' ' OTTAWA (CP) -- An unsup- ported claim that Manpower Minister Marchand was in- volved in alleged interferences with a union certification vote among CBC production workers Montreal was placed before e Ganada Labor Relations Board Monday. The Canadian Union of Public mployees, which failed by nly 17 votes to w.n a national majority in the CBC balloting Nov. 23-24, listed Mr. Marchand among a group of prominent persons said to have advocated a boycott that caused 259 spoiled ballots. ' CUPE said the interference was organized by the Confed- eration of National Trade Unions in a bid to prevent a ¢lear decision by the 1,684 em- ployees in the bargaining unit. . However, none of the news- paper clippings or pamphlets filed as evidence with the board attributed boycott remarks to Mr. Marchand. The minister later issued a personal denial that he stand. The board hearing continues | today. Gone To Birds AYLMER, Ont. (CP) --This} community's tribute to Can- | ada's centennial year has liter-| ally gone to the birds. Christ: | mas trees which were to pro-| vide a centennial - welcoming | bonfire have been donated to the operator of a local phea- santry to provide winter shelters in his pheasant breed- ing pens. Dies At 111 WARSAW (AP)--One of the oldest women in the world died during the weekend at Grud- ziadz, central Poland, the Po- lish Press Agency reported. She was Magdalena Trepkowska, age 111. Maestro Angered MOSCOW (Reuters) -- British conductor Sir John Barhbiroll strode off a Moscow concert stage angrily Monday night when latecomers groping for seats ignored requests for si- lence. Purge Described BELGRADE (Reuters)--Milo- van Djilas, disgraced former vice - president of Yugoslavia who was recently released from prison, described the upheaval! | in China as a modern counter-| - of Stalin's purges in Rus-| sia, "What was happening in Rus- sia in the 30th year of the revolution when Stalin was crushing his opponents is hap- pening in China now," Dijilas said in an interview here Mon- day night. "It is another way of fighting in China now, compared with Russia 30 years ago, but in essence it is the same thing," he said. He predicted that Communist Party Chairman Mao Tse-tung| "will win in China." Stolen, Not Lent | BIRMINGHAM, England -- (AP)--A week - long campaign against vandalism was opened in a Birmingham exhibition hall Monday. A few minutes later police were looking for some- one who stole a boxing contain- ing 800 badges saying, "I am tending a hand to stop van- als." Plates Shelved TRENTON, N.J. (AP) -- Th New Jersey motor vehicle di- vision has shelved 900 licence Plates bearing the letters LSD. The agency decided to play it safe lest it be accused of run- ning an edvertising campaign for illicit LSD drugs. Gall Stone Record EAST: BERLIN (Reuters) -- ernment Monday officially for- bade Coca-Cola. The ministry of eco- CARL PERKINS ... mow in chair WASHINGTON -- D. C. Rep. Carl Perkins (D--Ky.), poses at the Cap- itol yesterday after being named chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee. He succeeds Rep. Adam Clayton Powell, (D--N.Y.), who was drop- ped from the post by Dem- ocrats at a caucus. BARBARA DEMING .--8aw bomb sites Back From Hanoi NEW YORK -- Miss Barbara Deming, 49, one of four American women who paid an 11-day holiday visit to North Vietnam, tells a brief news conference at New York's Kennedy airport today there is no indication that the people's resistance will "fade away unless. the United States decides to exterminate them.' Miss Deming is an _ associate editor of the magazine, "Liberation." No Sales Change | | DAMASCUS (AP)-- The gov- Syrians from drinking nomy issued a statement say- ing the Coca-Cola Co. and all its branches were blacklisted in Syria-But Coca-Cola has never been sold here. The ministry move was the government's of- ficial--approval of a boycott of Cg€a-Cola by all Arab countries retaliation to an agreement yy Coca-Cola to operate a fac- ory in Israel. Cleric Re-elected | OTTAWA (CP) -- Most Rev. |Louls Levesque, coadjutor 90 'Archbishop of Rimouski, Que., | has been re-elected for the com- -'Tampered With Vote Peace Area Study OTTAWA (CP) -- An inven- tory and analysis of resources | | in the Peace River area will be undertaken as an ARDA proj- ect, it was announced Monday. The two-year project will cost about $100,000 and be paid by) the federal and Alberta govern- | ments. Divorce Case Lost | NEW YORK (AP) -- A jury| ruled Monday against a Park Avenue doctor who charged his wife was artificially insemi- nated without his consent and therefore guilty of adultery. Dr. John Prutting, 56, had sought a divorce from his 35 - year - old wife, Kate, the mother of a 15- month-old boy. Mrs. Prutting, who has filed a separation ac- tion, ded her husband knew of and consented to the procedure. Steinbeck Attacked had ever taken such * Pow ell's Successor "MOSCOW (Reuters)--The So- {viet government newspaper Iz- vestia Monday night accused John Steinbeck, American |Nobel prize-winning novelist, of |"putting his pen and his reputa- |tion at the service of the dirty war" in Vietnam. The attack on the writer came in a dispatch from the newspaper's New York |correspondent, S. Kondrashov, commenting on Steinbeck's re- ports from South Vietnam in the Long Island daily Newsday. Milk To Cost More QUEBEC (CP)-- The Quebec government announced Monday that farmers will be allowed to charge higher prices for milk Feb. 1. A spokesman said that this increase will affect the cost to the consumer. The announce- ment, published in the Official Gazette, said that the price paid to producers will rise to $6 from $5.55 a hundredweight for raw milk. : Pavilion To Stay MONTREAL (CP)--The Chris- tian Pavilion at the 1967 Mont- real world's fair may be main- tained by various churches as a permanent exhibition after the fair closes, an official of the United Church of Canada said Monday night. | Rev. Louis Foisy-Foley, direc- tor of Credo, a French-language publication of the Unite Church, told a press conference the permanent status of the pa- vilion has been di d by Three elected represen- tatives in Oshawa discuss- ed the city's future Mon- day following the 37th an- nual Rotary Club civic ipaies 'ROTARY CLUB HOSTS luncheon. Robert Stroud, board of education trustee (left), chats with Ald. Gil- bert Murdoch, Rotary pres- ident and Edward Arm- CIVIC LEADERS a Public Utilities Commissioner. Elected and strong, 'appointed civic officials, former mayors, and may- ors and reeves from neigh- boring municipalities were among the luncheon guests. Oshawa Times Photo | PARROT PM WINS RAISE LONDON (AP)--A_ parrot who plays Prime Minister Wilson on the London stage has been given a pay raise | for taking on an extra role. | The Mermaid Theatre an- nounced Monday that 10-year- old Jack Spratt, the parrot, is receiving another £2 ($6) weekly despite the Labor gov- ernment's wage freeze. That brings his salary to £5 ($15) a week, Until now Jack Spratt has been giving one performance a night in the play The Bed Sitting Room, a romp about a world transformed by the dropping of the H-bomb. He has the part of .Prime Min- ister Wilson, who has been turned by radiation into a par- rot. Jack Spratt got his pay in- crease for also appearing at | the Mermaid in an afternoon | production of Robert Louis | Stevenson's Treasure Island, | in which he plays Captain Flint, the parrot pet of Long John Silver. | Actor Bernard Miles, who | runs the Mermaid and owns | the parrot, told a_reporter: "This is no stunt. Jack Spratt is a fully-fledged member of Equity, the actors' union. "The rest of the cast agreed that if he did extra shows he should get more money like everyone else. The additional cash will go on food, keep jing whatever to do with the and medical checkups." church officials. Seven Canadian cnurches are interested in the project. The pavilion, expected to cost about $1,300,000, is sponsored by the United Church of Canada, the Roman Catholic, Anglican, Presbyterian, Lutheran, -Bap- tist, and Greek Orthodox churches and the Ukrainian Greek Orthodox Church of Can- ada. Water Use Dropped AARHUS, Denmark (Reuters) Karl Kroeyer, Danish industri- alist and inventor, announced here Monday that he has de- veloped a new method of making paper which practically elimin- ates the use of water and which he claims could cut manufact- uring costs by 40 per cent. About 100 tons of water are normally used to produce one ton of paper. Under Kroyer's system, water is replaced by air and static electricity. Kroe- yer said it now is possible to make paper 'in the middle of the Sahara Desert." Hymn Writer Dies LONDON (AP) -- The death was announced today of Rev. Thomas Tiplady, 85, who wrote more than 200 hymns. He had been a Methodist minister since 3 | Mr. Tiplady started work at 13 in a Lancashire cotton mill. During more than 40 years with missions in poor distriet$ of Lon- |ing year as president of the Ca- |nadian Catholic Conference. |. The announcement was made |Monday by Rev. - Charles don, he found that' congrega- tions knew few, if any, of the Reform Study Possible: PM OTTAWA (CP) Minister Pearson said Monday he thinks the present Parlia- ment should get a chance to consider constitutional reform. But he told Stanley Knowles (NDP--Winnipeg North Centre) in the Commons that it would be unwise to separate this ques- tion from the question of a formula for amending the con- stitution. Mr. Knowles suggested in the Commons that, if the provinces and federal government are un- amending the constitution, steps be taken to bring the constitu- tion to Canada in its present form. Opposition Leader. Diefen- baker suggested a national con- stitutional conference as a pre- lude. to parliamentary action during Centennial Year. Mr. Pearson said this would be good if there was a chance of reaching agreement but "de- plorable" if the result was di- vision and disunity. las suggested that a_parlia- mentary committee examine the matter rather than wait for the federal and provincial gov- ernment to reach agreement. Crowd Seeks New Democrat Leader Doug: | Doctors in Bucharest removed a E. |traditional hyane record of 17,751 gall stones--70/ Mathieu, general secretary of| i : M Si it , Us of them as large as cherry pits/the CCC, the national associa-|simples diver oon cat Sait --from the gall bladder of a 65-|,. ' , f 'DORION CRASH INQUEST Railway Crossing Barrier Rose To Let Bus Pass DORION, Que. (CP) --- Four|pering with the barrier seconds|the bus moved ahead and the witnesses agreed Monday that! jan automatic barrier at a CNR| Mrs. Beverly Finlay, 35, of level crossing rose Oct. 7, al-|Toronto, a passenger in Mrs.|bus en route to a dance died in lowing a packed school bus to,Hardy's car, testified she did| the crash along with Marcel move into the path of an on-|not see anyone tampering with |coming freight train. | | They were testifying at the) 25 miles west of Montreal. | Mrs. Frances Hardy, 34, a| before it went up. the signals. {barrier came down behind it. Eighteen of 45 students in the Fleury, 20, the bus driver. [Another teen-age student died Constable Gilbert Fontaine,|of injuries eight days later. it, opening of a coroner's inquest|28, of Dorion police, walking) "The four eyewitnesses were| into the crash, which claimed| along a sidewalk 60 feet behind) among the first of 54 persons the lives of 19 students and a/the bus, said he saw the barrier|scheduled to testify at the in- bus driver in this community, rise, but saw no one fooling with) quest, expected to last a week. | Mrs. Hardy first testified that John C. Murgatroyd, a army she saw a young man lifting the CUSO Participation Denied In Anti-Viet War Protest' OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis- "I do not think the government|Were down for an eastbound jter Pearson told the Commons |Monday that the Company of |Young Canadians was not in- | volved | week at the United States con- |jsulate - general in Toronto: against the Vietnam war. The demonstration had "noth- CYC," the prime minister said in reply to a question from Op- |position Leader Diefenbaker. | He said the two CYC workers who took part in picketing at the consulate-general had acted privately and '"'as citizens of a free country." should interfere with the details of their operations." Mr. Diefenbaker said the CYC to know why it is 'permitted to take part in programs far re-| Just as Mrs. moved from what is set out by the government." The Toronto demonstration by about 150 persons Jan. 2 was organized by David DePoe, 22, son of broadcaster Norman De- Poe, and Lynn Curtis, 24. Mr. DePoe is a CYC volun- |teer in Toronto's beatnik York- | The CYC operates with ajville district and Mr. --Prime|maximum degree of independ- ence, the prime minister said.!pany at Victoria. Curtis does similar work for the com- Toronto housewife driving a car| officer from Camp Borden, Ont.,|barrier, She later modified this immediately behind the bus, | driver of the third car behind! to say only that the barrier had |said she saw three boys tam-/the bus, said the barrier rose,|been- raised and at least one }youth had his hands on it. "I was conscious of the bar- | tier going up," she said. "I was conscious of arms holding | up the barrier." | She said she could not des- | cribe the boys although she had seen.the face of one of them. Mrs. Finlay said the barriers \train which passed through at jabout 7:35 p.m. The barrier [facing them went up and the in demonstrations last|is supposed to be doing its part| US moved forward to cross the jto prevent poverty. He wanted) 'acks, \SAW LIGHT FLICKER Hardy's car |started to move forward, Mrs. | Finlay saw a flicker of light to jher right, Realizing it was a train headlight she screamed at her companion to stop. The bus kept going. | -Constable Fontaine said the | barrier lifted a few seconds: af- |r the eastbound train. passed. |The bus started forward. | Mr. Murgatroyd told the in- quest his attention was dis- tracted by a couple who ran If Red Chinas | WASHINGTON (AP)--~A Chi- nese Nationalist diplomat said| today President Chiang Kai-| shek is ready to return to the} |mainland if present disorders| 'munist China. | | Ambassador Chou Shu - kai} said in 'an interview that the time is drawing near in. Com- jmunist China for outside direc- |tion and organization. "That we can provide," he said. Chou foresees three possible outcomes of the present situa- tion: --Success of Chairman Mao Tse-tung and his defence min- ister, Marshal Lin Piao, in suppressing opposition to their rule. --An overthrow of the present hierarchy by the Communist party wing led by President Liu Shao-chi. --General chaos _ resulting from the intensity of the cur- rent power struggle as rival leaders purge each other. This would leave the 700,000,- 000 Chinese people virtually leaderless, he predicted. Chiang Ready To Take Over Wide Chaos across the tracks and ducked under a barrier an instant be- |fore the first train passed. |. But he saw the barrier go up in front of the bus. Then he |heard a warning bell. The bar- | rier went down behind the bus. terms of the security treaty be-! There was a collision and some tween the two countries, Chou said the Communist Chi- parts of the bus were dragged 2,000 feet up the line. nese army at present is looking) The inquest continues. on as clashes break out between able to agree on a formula for lead to general chaos in Com-'the Red Guard and workers groups. "There is a breakdown of Georgians Elect WEATHER FORECAST Some Snow TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts issued at 5:30 a.m. Synopsis: Little change in weather is expected through the lower Great Lakes with more. snowflurries and near freezing temperatures expected today. Snow in the north will gradually taper off to flurries as the storm centre moves away and temperatures will drop. Wednesday colder air will push southward over the province with northerly winds, snowflurries. Lake St. Clair, western Lake Erie, western Lake Ontario, Haliburton, Killaloe, Windsor, Hamilton, Toronto: Mainly cloudy with occasional snow- flurries and seasonable temper- atures today. Wednesday vari- able cloudiness with a few snow- flurries and colder. Winds south- west 15 to 20 today and west- erly to northwesterly 20 to 25 Wednesday. Eastern Lake Erie, Niagara, eastern Lake Ontario: Mainly cloudy with frequent snowflur- ries and a few local snow- qualls today. Wednesday vari- able cloudiness and colder with a few snowflurries. Winds south to southwest 20 today, becom- ing west to northwest 20 to 25 Wednesday. Algoma, Georgian Bay, North Bay, Sudbury, Sault Ste. Marie: Cloudy with frequent snowflur- ries and local snowsqualls to- day and tonight. Wednesday variable cloudiness with scat- tered snowflurries and colder. variable cloud cover and a few jiable Predicted As Cold Front Descends Lake Huron, London: Variable cloudiness with occasional snow- flurries and becoming cloudy with frequent snowflurries and local snowsqualls tonight. Wed- nesday mainly cloudy with oc- casional snowflurries and colder. Winds northwest 20 to i<y a White River, Cochrane, Ti- magami, western James Bay: Cloudy with occasional snow, gradually tapering off to snow- flurries tonight. Wednesday var- cloudiness with a few |snowflurries and a little colder. Winds northwest 20 to 25. Ottawa: Cloudy with a few periods of light snow today. Wednesday cloudy, becoming mainly sunny in the morning. Mild today but colder Wednes- \day. Winds southwest 20 today jand north 15 tonight. Forecast temperatures Low tonight, high Wednesday Windsor ...... 15 25 St. Thomas Ae |. 25 London . 25 Kitchener .... 25 Mount Forest... . 15 25 Wingham ........ 15 25 Hamilton ......... 18 25 St. Catharines .... 20 25 Toronto ...... wens' a0 25 Peterborough .... 20 25 Kingston .... s° 25 28 Trenton ... 22 26 Killaloe .....+0... 15 20 Muskoka ....+.+.. 12 20 North Bay ....... 5 15 Sudbury ....... Earlton ove Sault Ste. Marie .. 10 15 Kapuskasing ..... White River .. Winds northwest 20 to 25 this|Moosonee .... afternoon. 'Timmins ...... | WASHINGTON (AP) --The House of Representatives is ex- pected to vote by nightfall on whether Representative Adam Clayton Powell retains his seat in Congress. Fellow Democrats ousted him Monday as chairman of the House education and labor com- mittee, an action which trig- gered this exclamation from the veteran Harlem Congressman: "Jesus had only one Judas; \I had about 120!" | Only hours earlier, he had 'been confidently telling friends: "Keep the faith» baby!" Monday's action seemed to add momentum to the drive by Republicans and some Demo- crats to bar Powell from his |House seat pending an investi- 'gation. | Powell and many Negro lead- lers said racism was behind the attacks on him. (Vietnam Troops Numbers Known SAIGON (AP) -- The North Vietnamese Army has elements of seven troop divisions in South Vietnam, the American military commander, Gen. William C. Westmoreland, told a press con- ference here today. He said that during the last year infiltration from North Vietnam averaged more than 8,000 men a month and enabled expansion of the military struc- ture of the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong to include divi- sion-size units. He said in a summary of the 1966 ground and air war, "Based jon information from captives 'Controversial Harlem Leader communications between the! military high command and| New Governor forces in the field," and it means that no one is giving or-| ATLANTA (AP) -- Georgia ders to the army to suppress/legislators set out today to the rebel groups, the ambassa-| elect a governor. dor said. Chou visualized defections from the Communist Chinese army. He said that Lin Piao had the support of less than 65 per cent of the officers of the high command. Nationalist China is obliged to consult with the United States in advance of any plans to re- turn to the mainland under terms of the security treaty be- tween the two countries. The 600,000 - man Nationalist Chinese army, equipped with) U.S. would be dependent upon units jof the U.S. 7th Fleet for move- weapons and supplies, year-old woman, the East Ger-|ti0" of Roman Catholic cardi-|known tunes such as London. | Man news agency ADN re- ported. jnals. archbishops and bishops of Canada. } HERE and THERE GOODYEAR FIRE BOWMANVILLE (Staff) -- A |Electronic Engineers while at {Northrop Institute. derry Air. Many of his hymns became| popular in Canada. Mr. Tiplady died Saturday at his London home. Cause of death was not disclosed. Editor Returns HONG KONG (AP) --. Har- Bung's Head JAKARTA (Reuters) -- Thou- | sands of angry students howled "hang Sukarno' today a few hours before the Indonesian pre- | ident was due to address the, nation on his past policies. At a mass rally in the grounds | jof Jakarta University, some minor fire occurred in a re- 4,000 students chanted: "Hang DARLINGTON PLANNERS | 'ison E. Salisbury, an assistant |'WHERE WE COME IN' | "That is where we come in," said Chou. "'We have been pre- ment to mainland China in any The election-approved by both the State and Federal supreme Courts--was the first judicially- validated election of a governor by the legislators in 143 years. The choice was between Dem- ocrat Lester Maddox and Re- |publican Howard H. (Bo) Call- away. Neither got the required majority in the November gen- eral election. Maddox was the favorite in the 259 - member General As- sembly which has 229 Demo- crats. Maddox ran second in the popular vote but got his boost when first the courts upheld a provision of the state constitu- tion which says the legislature |we believe that he (the enemy) now has in being, or in process of formation, nine divisions, of which seven are North Vietnam- ese Army." Total strength of the force faced by South Vietnam and its allies was estimated to be more than 280,000 men, he said. Westmoreland said that at least 50,000 North Vietnamese and Viet Cong were killed last year and many of their units were under strength due to sertion. these losses, sickness, and de. 'May Lose Washington Seat "A lynching, northern style," was what Powell called the vote which booted him from_ the chairmanship. "We're going to burn this country down--the Mau Mau's going to run this country," shouted a Negro, identified as Charles X of New York, during a Capitol demonstration for Powell. Those opposing the Negro rep- resentative cite Powell's court troubles in New York--where he is subject to arrest --and a of. deception in his handling of committee travel funds. During the roll call for swear- ing in today, Representative Lionel Van Deerlin (Dem. Calif.) is to object to Powell's seating. This would require Powell to stand aside until all other members are sworn in. House Democratic leaders |then plan to move that Powell |be seated under certain condi- |tions, including possibly an in- vestigation. This would be the key vote. If the motion loses, then either House Republican leaders or Van Deerlin--depending who is recognized by Speaker John W. McCormack, who opposed the anti-Powell moves, would move that Powell be investi gated and barred from his seat in the meantime. | a PRESCRIPTIONS 1 City-Wide Delivery MITCHELL'S DRUGS 9 Simcoe N. 723-3431 |substantial numbers. \shall break a stalemate. paring for such a day and we cannot shed our responsibility to the Chinese people." Chou would not say what sup- | port could be expected from the United States in a "political oP; | eration carried out militarily." Instead, he said there would CITY OF OSHAWA PURCHASING DEPARTMENT REQUIRES ASSISTANT PRINTING CLERK (MALE) SALARY RANGE -- $4,106.00 to $4,595.00 (fer a 36% hour working week). Responsible to Printing Clerk in assisting with operation of claim machine at the Goodyear, Tire and Rubber Company re-| HAMPTON -- W. H. Brown | managing editor of the New claim plant, Bowmanville, in|and Harry Oyler were appoint- the early hours of this morning.|ed to the Darlington planning There was no serious damage. REAL ESTATE Mrs. Jeannette Nugent, 78 Thorncliffe St., has successfully completed Course 2 in rea estate, as approved by the Can- adian Institute of Realtors, The nine-month Toronto course, involved accounting, law, brok-| erage and evaluation methods. ENGINEERING A.W. Janzen, 468 Athol St. E., Oshawa, graduated this week from the College of En- gineering at Northrop Institute |York Times, arrived in Hong {Kong today but said he could board. for three-year terms at ithe inaugural meeting of the {township council. Mrs. R. Cle- mens was appointed to a com-) mittee of adjustment for a three-| year term | CONDITION ,""POOR" | William Sim, was again re-) |ported in 'poor condition" to-| day at Oshawa General Hospit-| al. Mr. Sim, 69, of 393 Elgin St. E., was struck by a car, at the corner of King and Mary Streets last Friday. In Toronto} o! Technology, where he was awarded the Science degree in Engineering: -Mr &clive in-the student chapter of the institute of Electronic A being treated for injuries he steps of his King Street East) home, | not discuss his two-week visit coup attempt. to North Vietnam until he gets back to New York. Suspect Caught PARIS (AP) -- Narcotics po- lice today claimed their big- gest catch since the Second World War with the arrest of Paul Mondoloni, a 50-year - old Corsican. They said he is sus- pected of being a principal sup- plier of heroin to the United States via Mexico, Jamaica and Canada. General Hospital 65 - year-old; Mondoloni was arrested Mon-/bat troops, Fahmi Idris, warned Frank Lem was also reported|day after a 12-month manhunt|more sacrifices might be needed Bachelor of|in "poor condition" where he is'as he arrived by plane for Mar- |to topple Bung Karno (Brother seille. Police on two continents | Janzen was sustained after falling down the had been looking for him since| He called on the' students to the arrest of a drug courier in|be ready to continue the strug: | 'Mexico last year, him! Hang him!" Student leaders demanded the president be brought to trial for complicity in a 1965 Communist Sukarno is scheduled to make a radio speech tonight explain- ing the policies which led to the Communist bloodbath that b ly not be a requirement for a large volume of shipping or for man- power. U.S. officials said there has| | been an exchange of views and information with Nationalist China on what is going on in the mainland. But there has Offset Duplicator, Camere, Burster and Photo-copy equipment. Should have at least partial High School education. Some related experience preferred. A full range of welfare benefits is available. Apply in WRITING ONLY, stating ane education and ex- perience ,ete. before January 20th, 1967, to: THE PERSONNEL OFFICER CITY HALL, racked Indonesia, a palace an- | nouncement said. Parliamentary Speaker Ach-| mad Saichu, addressing the stu- | dents today, said: "The end of the modern Pharoah in Indo- nesia is imminent. We should immediately end the role of the chief architect of the old order." The leader of the student com- Sukarno). REAL ESTATE Reg. Aker -- President Bill McFeeters -- Vice Pres. SCHOFIELD-AKER 7 LTD. | 723-2265 uprising and the | been no consultation under OSHAWA. | |] Good Names To Remember CITY OF OSHAWA When Buying or Selling REQUIRES FIELD CLERK Permanent Position) SALARY RANGE -- $5,261.00 to $5,980.00 (40 Hour Week) Work consists of totalling material weight tickets end summorizing | some, summarizing inspectors' daily reports, preparing payment cere tificates for contractors and in general, keeping records for quentity control on contracts. Minimum grade 12 education, including specialized course. Previous municipal experience is desirable, Applications stating oge, experience, quolifications, earliest date , available and other pertinent informaticrh will be received not later then January 20th, 1967. The Personne! Officer, City Hell, OSHAWA, Onterie, "I'd forgotten how well my false teeth could fit. Now they fit beautifully again!" The secret ? CUSHION GRIP*, unique pliable relining agent that you apply directly from a tube. CUSHIO; RIP makes teeth fit gums exacily to restore natural suction, srrenate lipring and sore sn spots. Tasteless, odorless, it provides remar! grip, yet never hardens. Unlike messy creams, pas' von and powders, ri application lasts up to 6 weeks, pt with nightly cleaning! For trial supply, send 25¢, your name and address to: Pharmaco (Canada) Ltd., Pointe + | Gaire, Que. Offer open toresidents of Canada only, o Reg. TM. House committee's accusation . TOL JOHN GC More th visited the Oshawa la visited the you think asset in th Six peop question di street sur Gennet | Whitby: " been there thought of that it is a have such awa. I'd li ably will g these days "etanygarenvtranent SHAR should be ] public scru finance co! Finance Monday. He made interview f to the Car onto. "We ce much more a year ago, Mr. Shar; tion on the Sep Que QUEBEC police said served a st motorist w ratist plaqu cence plate The actic torist Loui: Quebec m: case on 1 plaques, p was given ! court. The sur under Artic Code whict alter or m licence pla figures to Quebec's for the cu inscription 1967" and | in question "100 ans d of injustice The plaq' 50 cents e¢ party le | V'independa have been Prive Pres By T OTTAWS broadcaste: MPs Mond dian conter way for st ciplinary < partial ben The Cat of Broadc Sho Star VICTOR! for Canad from the p lenges of t retary Juc officially 4 car Confec Followin; mony, the for the firs exhibit - i which pre time - tun pre-history nation's to Premier British Co attend, wi York on a 000,000 loa power pro 'n her s 1,000 pers »redicted | more than the $1,500, train. "Within "signed con eration: tr sea to sez summary hundred y but indee centuries, our union. She pre: blew the signed ho first four

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