2 'THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesdey, October 3, 1967 CORRIDOR CONFRONTATION Monday. The premier has a rebuttal. Earlier Mr. just finished a 10-minute in- Robarts turned thumbs terview and Mr. Nixon was down on a simultaneius in- heading into the studio for terview. The two were both Ontario Liberal leader Robert Nixon smiles as he greets Premier John Robarts in a corridor out- side an Ottawa TV studio A GLANCE AROUND THE GLOBE. Knowles Asks Pension Boost To Match Climb In Costs ee ee ea Night School First | parliamentarian Stanley) | : Knowles asked the Liberal gov-| | CHATHAM (CP)--A night ernment Monday for a 13-per-| jschool course in sex education cent increase in the $75-a-month/ jto be offered parents of Chat- old-age pension 19 match cost-| jham school children this winter of-living increases. | jis roman to r a gered as "s Mr. Knowles told the Com-! its kind, accor ing o the iat- mons the consumers price ham Board of Education. index stood at 133.6 in October, |, Course co-ordinator and 1963 when the current old-age| jinstructor, Ted Day, head of pension level was established. | physical and health education It was 150.9 last month. | jat John McGregor secondary . i jschool in Chatham, said Mon- I Rcangonhacg into fsa egg day the eight-week course is to} gh ag eng Sagt [provide parents. with basi pension should go up the same| |information they need to give) * |way, Transport and General tion," it says. "There are also|to that area today and Wednes- _ |Workers. junmistakable signs | A surprise policy statement, |calling for a merger of the var-| lious office and craft unions) involved with the so-called) Canada. "non-ops,"" was unveiled at the| "They Wit opening of the CBRT conven-|union on the railways, they also|Erie, Lake Huron, tion, held every three years. |want it to be a Canadian/Lake Ontario, The plan would involve 15 of| union." growing rapidly among mem.-|southern sections of the prov-| bers of international unions in ince. | Toronto, Hamilton, London,| 'the unions--all but the CBRT --| The statement says last Sunny and warm today. Sunny) giving up their ties to parent/year's railway strike, which organizations in the United)was ended by government |States. |intervention, showed Se PARLIAMENT President W. J. Smith told/for a single organization able to |400 delegates at the closed ce | spent with authority and pro-| AT-A-GLANCE ention that a well planned,/vide central direction. Raat : 3 |determined campaign could) "The federal government's)' By THE CANADIAN PRESS jachieve the unity target in/intervention was made _ easy| MONDAY, Oct. 2, 1967 : | three to five years. | because of the fragmentation of/ The Conservative Opposi- | in the Ottawa area cam- |week. If endorsed, the union's| diffusion of leadership. rev teed ernment over the increase to paigning toward the Oct. 17 |new executive will make an) A_ single union "would be 8% per cent from 7% in the ; : . limmediate approach to leaders;much better equipped to pre-| NHA interest rate. provincial election. lof the other unions for merger|serve our democratic right to George Chatterton PC -- --CP Wirephoto _ negotiations. 'strike."' Esquimalt - Saanich), the oe mover, said the government CREST OFFERED Expert Agreed To Be Shot *#.2:'ss'r.crs. FOR MOOSE JAW sg Cas ae | TORONTO (CP) -- The department of lands and forests has come up with a novel method of running their moose management program. All hunters who shoot a moose are asked to clean out the lower jaw, and turn it over to the.d2partment at 14 North Algoma St., Port Arthur. In return, the department going on in China at the B * t d present time rule out any a er an e ap ure \likelihood of China being ac- cepted into the United Nations PRETORIA (Reuters) -- A ig i the 25th anniversary oe world body's current 48-year-old South African busi-|of the raid. sce ae é nessman told Monday of the| Nissen sailed with the regi-, Trade Minister age a moment 25 years ago when "I/ment from Southampton, Eng-| the Canadian w i. in eel had to agree to be shot rather|jand, on the night of Aug. 19, has served at : be se than captured" on the Second -/1942, and '"'we landed at wheat internationally at com- World - War Dieppe raid. 4:40 a.m., but on the wrong Petitive prices, London-born Jack Nissen/side of Pourville." A Lider Me merge 16 recalled his part in the raid) « time we had fought) "0n-operating railway unions Aug. 20, 1942, when he faced Pig Mogg iio Pourville, vad into one with a single Cana- will give you a crest whicn |Possible death from the Ger-|yabJe time had been lost: We| dian identity was made sf portrays the head of a large |mans as an enemy and from|cjimbed up to the cliff top| the executive board of ~ bull moose, crossed rifles, the Canadians as "a man WhO where the radar station was, | ¢ anadian cho geehir 1) and the provincial coat-of- | knew too much." but we reached the edge round| Railway, 'Transport and Gen- arms. The words "Success- Nissen--his name then wWasS/the station as machine-gun fire eral Workers. ful Moose Hunter" are |Nissenthal but he has since|was cutting the edge down,"| Finance Minister Sharp emblazoned on top. jShortened it--was to accom-|saiq Nissen. said there will be no remis- Each year the crests will |pany Canadian troops to a Ger-) 'Though they could not get, sion in the immediate future be issued with the appropri- |man radar station near Pour-|into the radar station, Nissen) of the 1l-per-cent federal ate year, |ville, a few miles west of! out its wires. | sales tax on building mate- Dieppe, and probe the secrets} rials. sini jtheir children a knowledge of} | the social, biological and psy-| Mr. Knowles said pension leg-| chological aspects of sex. islation permits a maximum) | annual increase of two per cent! in keeping with cost-of-living increases, but the maximum is clearly insufficient. If applied for this year, it would amount! to only $1.50 a month. Welfare Minister MacEachen said he will make an announce- ment shortly on cost-of-living adjustments in the Pension.| Data. necessary to calculate) changes are not yet avyailable,| so the announcement could not! be made now. | | Vandals On Pelee PELEE ISLAND, Ont. (CP) | &" » Three Ontario Provincial! police officers have arrived here in the wake of reports of Convicts Pick Figs | MERCED, Calif. (AP)--Over the objections of organize d| |lahor, California convicts were| jout in orchards Monday--pick- |Ronald Reagan said would be aj, \disaster for growers. \authorized the use of about 200 prisoners from a tninimum-se-\ curity centre at nearby Tracy to lend a hand in harvesting the ripe fig crop, Brain Transplant | o«» Cheese Gift Lake Erie requested police pro-|cheddar was, presented to Com-,2?0ther. dog. The brain was pee been without police reyx in his chambers Monday: neck of the second dog. eidance for a month. by blonde Alexandra Robins, In @ report to Superintendent Miss Ingersoll, Ont., of 1967. E. J. Baker, head of the OPP for Kent - Essex district, the|wore a silver tiara and an|chemical activity. council listed 39 break-ins al/orange and gold gown for the summer cottages, a number of|occasion, and moved Wallace thefts of cars from the island|Nesbitt (PC--Oxford) to break NEW airport and from the town hall,| into poetry, Ay er sige _ at the air-| "'Hail to thee, O queen of port by vandals and four fire;cheese,"' quoth Mr. Nesbitt as qq. 7 ' % bombings of a store and on|Miss Robins,, who will reign at Hall fOr ta oax. Moneayy vacant roads. YORK the wine-and-cheese festival in Ingersoll this month, arrived. Death Camp Deputy ment wage offer. HERE and THERE _ SUPPORT STATEMENTS Oshawa Presbytery of United Church of Canada has adopted a resolution to support statements made by external affairs minister Paul Martin in regard to the war in Viet Nam.| Penny Singleton, second vice-| |death camp deputy in The + yer said today. and $175 in the third year. Cur- ; , The lawyer, Dr. Karl Boeck rently the Rockettes get $99 in E Supported Mr. Martin a actlon| ssid the former SS (Elitelthe first year, $110 in the A) American bombing of Viet Nam, | Guard) captain wanted by|0nd and $126.50 thereafter. | It also backs the position taken| Dutch authorities for his role in Centennial Coins | by Prime Minister Lester Pear- ie Se portatpn of thousands of son .i stating that Canada will/;CWS. © Concentration camps,| OTTAWA (CP)--The Mint 1s not participate in any way ini fed from a tourist resort on the churning out centennial coinage the planned anit-ballistic missle Adriatic coast Monday night. at the rate of 12,000,000 pieces a aed: Tt aten" petnemied ies: Rajakovic crossed the border | week, the Commons was told stand asking for an immediate |into neighboring Austria where Monday night dnd ty the sale of wens ts the he is safe from extradition) Jean Chretien. (St. Maurice- United States. because of his conviction in Lafle@he), minister without| Vienna on some of the warjportfolio, said three shifts are SATISFACTORY crime charges The Netheriandsion the job. Production of the Fizht-year-old Paul Ricci of Wants to bring against him,|special coins will continue until = 'Hanoi Vetoe |group at the end of January,| guage radio transmission and ing figs to avert what Governor North Vietnam today rejected| GIVEN OPTION President Johnson's latest offer! Nissen said he did not have 14 still hung from the clifftop. It ; ae qj (t0 talk immediately with Presi- 80 on the raid, but was told). i : The governor last week | dent Ho Chi Minh about peace that if he did he could not be|"2S elgg oata Hata bt in Vietnam. American leader's statertent on| men of the South Saskatchewan the prospects for peace came i the official daily newspaper) Euard him and to see that he/!o a ship. He came to South) First time ever offered in Canada. Nhan Dan. LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) --,quoted by the North Vietnam|were themselves killed going ALEXANDRA ROBINS "'Th ree Cleveland researchers|news agency, said President for the radar station. : 4 reported Monday the first suc-|Johnson's speech Friday was| A few weeks ago Nissen was|was.a terrible time. But I was\i Four Seasons Travel cessful transplant of a brain|aimed at "'pleading for the poli-|in Dieppe and '"'came face tojyoung and wanted to be in it. vandalism, thefts and "'fire| ; ' from one animal to another, |cy of aggression of the United|face with the last member of|By rights I ought to have been|p °" Kins St F. omens bombings. | Cheddar Chuck The scientists removed the|States in Vietnam and clamor-|my murder gang" -- Robert/killed and so I have regarded sidisbhaly The municipal council of this} OTTAWA (CP)--A fragrant brain of a dog and placed it in|ing louder for its faked desire|Thrussell of Moose Jaw, Sask. |every day 'since then as a' island community of 350 in 10-pound "chuck of Canadian 2 Skin pouch in the neck ofjfor peace.' " | "He got quite » shock," said) bonus." | tection last Wednesday. The! mons Speaker Lucien Lamou-|Connected to the arteries in the to recent Speecnes on Vietnam jeach other immediately, though|revealed in London by Air by U.S. State Secretary Dean|it- was exactly 25 years since|Vice-Marshal Sir Victor Tait, The physicians said the trans-|Rusk and United Nations|we had seen each other." planted brain performed well,| Ambassador Arthur Goldberg,) A radiant 19, Miss Robins with continuous electrical and|S#d: "All these speeches are jone and the same," Rockettes On Line |Antonio, Tex., Friday he is (A P )--T he|Ho Chi Minh and other chiefs of} Rockettes and tne ballet corps|state concerned" in an effort to' picketed the Radio City. Music|bring peace to Vietnam. after rejecting a new manage-|aiso is ready to stop the bomb- In "We are going to stay out 4S | thi vil] | a 'Sithis will lead promptly to pro- long as we have to," said|quctive dlertaston.' ae al VIENNA (AP)--Erich Raja-| President of the striking Ameri-! was reo: sas fl kovic, Adolf Eichmann's Nazi\Can Guild of Variety Artists. ling of Ve Kiedee pei The dancers went on strikeldid not repeat demands tha! Netherlands, has evaded a|Sept. 16 with a demand for base|Hanoi scale down the fightine police dragnet in Yugoslavia/Pay of $135 a week in the firstlas the price of a bombing and now is in Austria, his law-|Year, $150 in the second year|nayse, a of the German equipment. |LEARNED PLENTY | He joined the RAF radar} "They went on to plain-lan-) TUESDAY, Oct. 3 The Commons meets at /1940, and at the time of the raid/an army of people in London) 2:30 p.m. and will continue jwas "heavily involved in|, .. plotted out what they were) debate on a supply motion. LB Pro os ] ee." jdoing. We learned a very great} The Senate is adjourned until p a "I knew the circuits of every/deal." | Oct. 31, | d."" radar system we had. | He said that on his recent HONG KONG (Reuters)-- lvisit to Dieepe he saw the| --___ remains of the radar station CARIBBEAN | { TWO WEEK HOLIDAY see \tions for D-Dav in June, 1944 and part of * ff had 4faller Nissen escaped from the Every Seturdey by Alr Conede ) i f eae) \f charter flight, f Jon. 6th [Regiment were assigned to|Dieppe beaches, swimming out) laiels ot ie sl | allowed to be captured. Hanoi's rejectiog of the; On the raid, a group of 10) Africa in 1948 and now manu- factures radio and electronic § SAVINGS FROM $70 UP TO $123 equipment. PER PERSON, | Of Aug. 20, 1942, he said: "It| sean mew. et id not fall into enemy hands-- An article by Commentator|but nine of "my murder gang" Commentator, also referring|Nissen. '"'We both recognized] The Nissen story was first) | |RAF director of radar during Thrussell, like Nissen, was in|the war. President Johnson said in San ready to talk tomorrow with| Subscribers To see @ BLUE CROSS @ PS. @ GREEN SHIELD NEED NOT | PAY CASH! | | You Give Us The Doctors The United Staies, he added, of North Vietnam 'when! re BALANCE YOUR BUDGET AND PAY ALL YOUR BILLS WITH A SUPERIOR LOAN This statement on the air war » «2 and reduce your monthly payments by as muchas half INGROWN P ipti | | $50 to $5000 We de fe rect | NAIL OL) | SUPERIOR FINANCE FREE the fastest growing all-Canadian loan company City-Wide Delivery 3% Simcoe St. South, 725-6541 Don Rees, Manager Delly to 5:30 p.m; Friday to 8.00 p.m3 Other evenings by appointment. 31 SUPERIOR offices to serve you Relieve nagging pain quickly with liquid OUTGRO. After a few applications, OUTGRO toughens tender skin and pushes the nail up for safe, easy cutting. MITCHELL'S DRUGS 9 Simcoe N. 723-3431 GBekt Bikini ee satisfactory condition in Oshawa | #2 iittala General Hospital this morning. | Ricci suffered multiple abra-| yf } yt garry Road, Kingston, on Fri-| 01 ee The Most Carefully Tailored Clothes You Could Wear Sohn Ovens O. D. sions and contusions when he| OSHAWA'S SMART MEN'S SHOP day night. The accident took!" OPTOMETRIST Shiflor Hillman was struck by a car driven by|? Helen Rachel Giguere of Glen-}; 10 KING STREET WEST 'Tl place on Mary Street North, just] j south of Elgin Street. | PHONE 723-4811 i Crauiny tarceeee | 8 BOND ST. E, OSHAWA naga cee _-- ee 'EvVervsopy SENEFITS rei EVERYBODY"GIVES, * Summer Enjoyment THE All Year Round! With the indoor pool, Sauna room, sun deck, plus the spacious suites, personalized service, mail delivery, ample parking. Suites Open For Inspection 1221 Simcoe St. North Phone 725-9934 Open Daily from 9 a.m. till 9 p.m. APARTMENT SATURDAY and SUNDAY 11 A.M. fill 7 P.M. desire for national autonomy is/weather is forecast for thejers The policy statement will railway workers among 50) tion moved non - confidence Jevening and a few Wednesday cloudy at first then sunny. Temperatures jcome 'up for debate later this)many unions with its attendant| in the minority Liberal gov- |tonight. |near normal, Light winds. that the/day while mainly sunny, warm| mainly cloudy with a few show-| this afternoon. Variable cloudiness and cooler Wednes-| day. Light winds. easterly 15 Wednesday. northwest 15 to 25, becoming light tonight. Ottawa and Montreal regions: Mainly sunny and warm today. Increasing cloudiness this showers Forecast Temperatures .Low tonight, high Wednesday. | ne me Windsor . St. Thomas . 55 75 London ... 55 75 Kitchener 55 75 55 72 Mount Fores White River, Cochrane, Ti | Tima-| not only want one Windsor, Lake St. Clair, Lake|gami regions: Cloudy with a Niagara,|/few showers and cooler today. | Mingham «+eseeees BS 72 INon WEATHER FORECAST fospan ewe BOD i sg . oO Ss I e (St. Catharines ..-. 55 78 " bd Cl d Ee ayes oo 3% | Peterborough «+++. 9% | . : Sunny With Some Cloud, fi": 3 3 | I , I } n Trenton «+ oe 55 72 | e 1 g 10 d Kiialee ove = - Muskoka - | ' Cooler For Wednesday 'vision 8 & b | OTTAWA (CP)-- Formation}; -A major point in the state- =p : : Sudbury ee lof one big union from the 16/ment is that the new organiza-|. TORONTO (CP) -- Officiallwith a few cloudy periods and|Earlton ....0.-..+ 4 38 ' Ithat now represent Canada's|tion will have to be a Canadian|forecasts issued at 5:30 a.m.|not quite so warm ee Sault ol a <e 4 } |100,000 non-operating railway) one with no U.S. connections. | today. j Winds southwest 15 to 25 to ay,| Kapus easing . > = _ |workers was advocated Monday, "'All indications are that rail-| Synopsis: Cooler air spread- light tonight and Wednesday. ' {White Riv AS . by the executive board of the way workers in the existing ing into northern regions will} Sudbury, North Bay, North-/Moosonee .-- ee ' a ; \Canadian Brotherhood of Rail-|unions favor such a conselida- give generally cloudy conditions|ern Georgian Bay, Algoma) Timmins i regions: Sunny, becom in g|}--------------- southern Geor-|Mainly cloudy and cool nyednes:| gian Bay, Haliburton regions:/day. Winds northerly 15 today,| Western James Bay region: Cloudy with a few showers or| |snowflyrries today, Mainly, cloudy Wednesday. Cool Winds CANADIAN SHERRY a Phone Bright's for free home delivery ! balance. balance $3,000. Because the Real property ! TRUST WE ARE LAUGHING! Estate. Dept. ONTARIO TRUST just sold our house for us AND CHARGED US ONLY 4% COMMISSION That saved us $250.00, which is a lot of money to us! Why don't' YOU list YOUR home where they charge you ONLY 4% TO SELL IT, and where they also have their o This means they con get you more cash for your CALL CENTRAL ONTARIO Interest on daily balance Vv savings earn the highest true interest in a Savings Deposit Receipt Account. No other account in Canada earns you so much interest. That's because Guaranty Trust cale culates interest on the minimum daily There are no chequing privileges but with- drawals can be made any time, Minimum Guaranty Trust : Federally incorporated and supervised. Capital and reserve $27,000,000. Deposits in excess of $400,000,008, ' ae 32 King St. E., Oshawa Tel. 728-1653 Rein Harmatare, Manager Real Estate Dept, 723-5221 Tom Houston 668-4416 ed Allan Thompson 728-2826 Hervey Hogen 655-3663 FOUNTAINHEAD Reiph Schofield 576-1680 of CENTRAL wn mortgage money. ware By THE CANAD The importance unity as an issue Ontario provincia seemed to depenc the three party le tened to most clos In defence of | tion of Tomorro called for next m John Robarts s: Ottawa that unit; mount importance But Liberal 1 Nixon and Donal of the New Dem took exception to sive Conservative tention, Mr. MacDonald ing in Burlingto: since all parties the same on uni were simply tryir the voters from ti of the campaign. (mannan Pil Clifford Pilk Democratic Part date in Oshawa ri his nomination pa Whitl Back: BROOKLIN (Staff, Township Council, night, approved of $100 to the Garrard Lacrosse Club whic Ontario "'C" champ Speaking to the m James Brady coa team, said 242. ple registered this yea about 75 came fror He expected a m registration next y the enthusiasm arot winning of an Ontar He said the Pro munity Arena had profit of. $5,000 on operations during t compared with abot previous seasons. 50-Acr Consid BROOKLIN (Staff some members thot cision would be ar one in certain sect community, Whitby) council last night, the clerk to prepare ment to the puil which would prohibi ing of homes on | than 50 acres. Th bylaw would, howe' those 10-acre lots already registered. -- At the same ti referred the question pointment of a pla tor for the new Tow to the joint amalgar mittee for study. While Deputy Re Hanna felt such ment would be to tage of the new would improve iis ir James Brady said should have been cv the Central Ontario ning Board in_ th stance. Mr. Brady | latter action had the board could h an opinion as to could provide such : Mr. Brady also : lots were not a suffi to prevent homes s indiscriminately an a burden on 'the t 4 tox roads and schoc