innons out strikers ARINES (CP)--Co- 'innon Ltd. of St. 'hursday refused to 'iking employees to rk. who went on strike 23 but without the the United Auto d office, had voted o return to work. rt, UAW Canadian | urged the employ- 1 to work for seven hope that contract could be continued. any refused to ac- er, saying that it intless to start up ynly to have the on strike a week Marshall, interna sentative for the bed the firm's ac- cout and added that w has received full a the union. RED CARPET AND, England rham bride didn't car to take her to because she lived he corner from it, ther insisted she » in style. So he is of red carpet to alk to church look : Said. /aYo /INGS DUNTS PERSONAL CHEQUING ACCOUNTS SONAL VANS NTARIO TRUST CORPORATION W., Bowmenville 3-2527 OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS and SATURDAYS rm IIRL ELL f -olaroid ; in 60 + Pack | price of y autos -conds, it off, 18,87 1.00 WINSTON 8. CHURCHILL and wife, top, await results of vote recount after special Parliamentary election in Manchester, England yes- terday. The grandson of Britain's wartime prime minister Jost the election to Labor~--candidate,-- Kenneth Marks, bottom, also await- ing the recount results with his wife --AP Wirephoto Labor Party Loses Grip On British Electorate . By JOHN LeBLANC electorate was badly punctured today in the wake of a stunning series of byelection results. On the heels of two losses late last month, the Wilson govern- ment dropped two more seats Thursday, and barely held a third against a strong thrust from Conservative Winston Churchill, neophyte grandson of the late prime minister. The Scottish Nationalists--a home rule party that hasn't been heard in Parliament since 1945--stole Scotland's second- eafest Labor seat with a woman candidate, and the Tories took a prosperous Midlands industrial riding that seemingly had not much to grumble about from |the government's belt-tightningjof the national press has been LONDON (CP)-- Labor's con-) economic policies fidence in its grip on the British} While the results still left}heels of Foreign Secretary. Prime Minister. Wilson with a|George Brown over public out- | handy majority of 87 in the 630-|bursts of member Commons, they gave|Lord Chalfont, a junior foreign|CALLS FOR REFORM government strategists plenty to/office worry about. Everywhere, the;manoeuvres in connection with ment estimates brought calls|a price of about $13.000 for 40 Labor vote plunged dizzily in seats that were comfortably in the government column in the 1966 general election. BESEIGED BY SETBACKS The new setbacks came as Wilson already was beset on several other fronts--high un- employment, wage-price_ rela- tionship, trouble over European Common Market entry--and re- flect at least in part disenchant- ment over some or all of these. Several of his ministers are in hot water, and a large segment soviet Weapons Best Party Leader Claims By ADAM KELLETT-LONG |tation to attend the celebrations, MOSCOW Communist party, said today| the Soviet Union has the best) weapons in the world In a speech prepared for a ju-| bilee meeting marking the 50th anniversary of} the Bolshevik Revolution, Brezhney also pledged contin- (Reuters)--Leonid|but a J Brezhney, head of the Soviet jlieved to be charge d'affaires|jay) Kenneth Marks, a a7-vear-| Chinese diplomat, be An Chi-yuan, sat among foreign ambassadors in the vast hall. | He did not join in applause as) «py fight Podgorny read the list of dele- in the Kremlin gations attending the festivities, | g¢ the riding a few miles away |scheduled to climax Nov 7 with Red Square parade and a a [Kremlin reception ued Soviet aid to North Vietnam! Brezhnev accused the Chinese until U.S. forces get out of Viet-jof hindering Vietnamese Com nam, and again Chinese Communist leaders. assailed munists in |against their struggle "criminal the aggres-| He renewed a call for a world|sion" of the United States Communist conference, a pro- ject opposed by several Commu achievements would have been) ville SandelsofS"also a lawyer. nist countries, many of those greater 'were if not for the re |The 1966 Labor plurality was leaders were in the hall to hear |fusal | fully joint Countries in assistance efforts." Brezhnev's speech. Brezhnev addressed a session of the central committee! of the Russian Communis t!Thompson, party, the Supreme Soviet--the|the session in the Kremlin Pal-|have the!ace of Congresses, was not seen|there are one Welsh Nationalist Supreme Soviet of the Russian in the gallery for foreign diplo-and, now, a Scottish Nationalist." injmats while Brezhney spoke. u country's parliament--and Federation, biggest republic the Soviet Union. Delegates from 95 countries, representing Communist and left-wing parties and "national liberation" movements were present. Seated behind President Niko- lai Podgorny,. Brezhney, and Premier Alexei Kosygin on the platform were ruling Commn- nist leaders from East Europe CHINA MISSING China did not reply to an invi-| CREDIT UNIONS GAIN WINNIPEG (CP)---More than 16 per cent of Manitoba resi- dents are members of a credit union. The 1966 annual report of) the co-operative and credit union services branch of the de-| partment of agriculture shows that membership rose to 157,745 in 1966. T GUARANTY TRUST CO. All Types of Homes Needed BUYING OR SELLING FINANCING ARRANGED When you list wtih GUARANTY | Real Estate Dept, 32 King 728-1653 |, He said Vietnamese military of China to with co-operate other Communist U.S. Ambassador Llewellyn who was invited to| |baying particularly loudly at the temperament minister, over the Common Market. and strange} LA BILLION AND A HALF | Estimates Approved In. Spite Of Opposition _By TOM MITCHELL | OTTAWA (CP)--Accompanied | by, Conservative cries of "guillo- tine,' spending estimates total- ling $1,656,000,000 for a score of) |government departments were lapproved by the Commons late, Thursday. | Approval came shortly before midnight after a last-ditch effort by Conservative members to block it. They claimed provision- al rules setting a 30-day limit for consideration of 1967-68 de- partmental spending programs had been flubbed by the govern- {ment. Speaker Turcien Lamoureux ended a wrangle that lasted more than an hour by ruling the 30-day limit must apply and the estimates had to be approved by the end of Thursday's sitting. MPs then went through the jvote on each department and Ibranch, Liberals shouting "Car- 'ried'? and Conservatives calling "On division" to register their! protest. | MEET EXPENSES H Some of the $1,656,000,000 had} been released by Parliament for government use earlier through interim supply bills to meet month-to-month accounts | The actual total released for] government spending in the ap- propriations bill that ended) Thursday's sitting was for $1,- 134,000,000 Debate Thursday touched only on the finance and justice de-! partments. Several Conservative MPs made occasion, inside the House and out, to snipe at the 30-day lim:" for study of spending esti- mates. Michael Starr, interim Oppo- PARLIAMENT AT-A-GLANCE By THE CANADIAN PRESS | THURSDAY, Nov. 2, 1967 A Canada-France agree ment was announced for clos- er co-operation in defence pro- duction, research and devel- opment. Agriculture Minister Greene told a press conference Can ada is seriously concerned about charges of Inefficiency in the UN Food and Agricul ture Organization. Finance department esti- mates were approved after Finance Minister Sharp said Canada_ will protect itself against any U.S. failure to im- plement Kennedy Round tariff cuts, Final approval Jater was given to more than §$1,- 600,000,000 worth of govern ment expenditures as Aébate on the estimiates ended Several MPs criticized State Secretary Judv LaMarsh for Saying the CBC suffers from "ratten management' in many areas Dr. Michael €. Hall of Toronto, who spent three years in Vietnam, told the ex- ternal affairs committee that Canadian aid to that country is a "mess," FRIDAY, Nov, 3 The Commons meets at 11 a.m. to resume dehate_on the--government~ bréadcasting bill. The Senate meets at 1} a.m, sition leader, told a press con- ference the system is "not fair to the taxpayer."" He "said Con make Quebec «eparatisis ac-| | servatives would object to any|Countable for the property dam jattempt adopted as a trial measure .to|§ speed up Parliament's handling @l unity of business, for future sessions Eldon Woolliams (PC--Bow |? |River) said the rule prevents) |proper scrutiny by MPs of gov- against ernment spending. If MPs could|That there is ie and a law for the poor never been more amply demon not do this and get answers from ministers "you might as {well lock the doors of Parlia-| Debate on the justice depart-|t for reform of to introduce the rule,|a& they cause and for a federal) tatement on problems of nation Mr. Woolliams, a lawyer for 2 of his 51 years, said the ards of justice are stacked the poorer Canadian "a Jaw for the rich had strated in Canada than in present times. He cited an expropriation case heard by the court after he federal government had set the FExchequer|\acres of land near Lake Louise, To all this there now is added|Court of Canada; for laws tolAlta. ja new element--resurgence of traditional but usually muted Scottish dissatisfaction over ad- ministration from Westminster' as reflected in the startling win of Mrs. Winifred Ewing, a home-rule-for-Scotland advocate {in Hamilton. In a seat held by Labor since 1918 and which returned a 16,000 plurality last year, the 38-year- old lawyer-housewife rolled up 18,397 votes to win by 1,799 over a Labor coal miner. | WINNIE JUST MISSES Young Churchill gave the gov- ernment another scare, falling short by only 577 votes as he chewed into a 1966 Labor plurali- ty of 8.308 in working-class Gor- ton, skirting Manchester. The 27-year-old author-jour nalist boosted the Tory vote by 2.200 to 18,682 but failed to over | ald school principal, who regis- tered 19,259. | | again until I get) in,"' Churchill later told people from where his famous forebear) was first elected 67 years ago, | In a thriving Midlands riding --tTeicester Southwest--the Tory, ~ vote fell slightly from 1966 but the Labor vote tohogganed by 19.000 as lawyer Thomas Board- man scored 12,897 against 8,858 for government candidate Ne-| 5,554 The series of jolts still leaves Labor with 358 Commons seats including the Speaker who does not. vote, The Conservatives 256, the Liberals 12, and There are two vacant seats. Want Competent & Heating i ervice ;: Call 725-3581 We have ur own staff of exper- ienced, fully qualified heating technicians on every doay...R for quick service. All their work is guaranted. Bubs 43 KING STREET WEST, OSHAWA | 725-3 call 24 hours adio dispatched Wee, 581 | To Property Owners considering Sale of their pro- perty and who wont the best deal they can get! The Real Estate Department of CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST con get you the best deal in the sale of your property -- you 2--Because we charge you ONLY 4 4 COMMISSION on town and city homes So just think about this when you wish to sell your property to YOUR best advantage--then call us. REPAIRS TO ALL MAKES OF AIDS HOME APPOINTMENTS BUDGET TERMS Canadian HEARING AID Consultants NOT LJ 10 BOND ST. E. 725-2771 ICE 'WHY? 1--Because we are also a mortgage company who con often refinance the sale to get 1 more cash. That saves you @ lot of money! Real Estate Dept.. Central Ontario Trust TEL. 723-5221 Tom Houston Allen Thompson Harvey Hogan Ralph Schofield . % After "a long strugele Invols 'THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, November 3, 1947 3 PCs Make Only One Change In Their Shadow Cabinet By DAVE McINTOSH =| Mr. "Hees is chairman of the OTTAWA (CP)--The Conserv-|'Tade committee. atives have made only one Marcel Lambert, Edmonton COLOR BROADCAST LONDON (CP)--The Queen's Christmas message to the Com- ;/monwealth will be broadcast in jcolor for the first time this year on the BBC's newly inaugurated color service. The message will be pre-recorded for simulta- neous transmission on other sta- jing three or four trips to Ottawa change in their shadow cabinet| West, is still chairman of the|tions throughout the Common- from Calgary and payment of since Robert Stanfield was elect. defence committee, though, wealth $7,000 for a special property ap- ipraiser, 'the persons whose |property had heen expropriated® jhad won an Exchequer Court |settlement worth $96,000 includ jing interest. Rut Mr, jout that most Canadians are not jaffluent enough even to consider \starting such a suit' against the \ ]l-powerful Crown."' POORER JAILED } Harold Winch (NDP---Vancou yer East) agreed there is more justice for the rich. He had in vestigated many cases of rich jpersons being given plenty of itime to pay tax bills that mount Woolliams pointed ed into the $50,000 bracket while} |poor Canadiays were clapped in |jail for stealing 'two tins of sar |dines."? Creditiste Leader ( aouette jasked for a federal bill to force backers of Quehec separatist parties to pay damages for de facing property He said separatists paint their |slogans on public and private property throughout the prov ince. His house in Hull, Que had been decorated with them last month Foot, Mouth | Disease Hits OSWESTRY." England (AP) Britain's worst outbreak in_ six years of foot and mouth disease has been caused by migratory birds, a government veterina- rian said today. The agriculture ministry con firmed four new outbreaks over night, bringing the total of in fected areas to 49. They are all in Northern England and Wales The hardest hit area {ts around jthe market town of Oswestry. A jteam of 80 veterinarians in the area combating the virus which istrikes down cloven-hooved CITY OF REQUIRES A QUALIFIED Pong Harkness, former de- ence minister, w. That change, of course, is that] main east Peg ggg Poe hr Mr. Stanfield and not John Dief-|from the outset and is n : enbaker would become prime! st Wee ane le np LOnke! cAtaietay it' the Conservatives|which' Mo meet purgatory in ' : , S'whie r, Diefenbaker placed won the next general election. 'him after his resignation from The Conservatives do not the cabinet Feb. 3, 1963 refer to a shadow cabinet 'as The 'Co : s nservatives have cus commuitees, whieh are an lieees anent of the Liberals tn signed to'scrutinize the work Misirttt oe Aude various cabinet ministers and have taken a lot more lively in g terest in committee work. par Rb hguaned og Bio As one MP said, there's noth some changes m ing like the afier Mr. Stanfield finds a Com- portfolio mW ar bak a ne mons seat--probably in Mon i day's Colchester-Hants byelec-| « tion in Nova Scotia For one thing, greater recog nition is likely to be given Davie Fulton and George Hees, defeat ed Jeadership candidates who threw their support to Mr. Stan field. Premier Duff Roblin of Manitoha, once he enters the} Commons, would be given a kev! post. No decision is likely to he made on whether Mr. Roblin} will try for a Commons seat in a byelection or wait for a gen-| eral election until after he re signs the premiership. | ed party leader Sept. 9. NO SAFE SEATS Some Conservatives aay there are no safe seats in rural Mani toha for Mr. Roblin and that holders of Winnipeg seats are not prepared to resign to make room for the: premier Mr. Stanfield has heen more interested in changing the meth ods of operation of caucus cam mittees rather than in changing| their chairmanships, Mr children's children will Safety Problems Coll J. Feltis 728-6414 CHAIRMAN OSHAWA SAFETY. LEAGUE prize, animals and OSHAWA Winter Fair, PUBLIC HEALTH NURSE SALARY RANGE --- $5,658.00 to $6,307.00, Duties to commence as soon as possible gramme in.an official agency. experience. Liberal personnel policies and fringe benefits Apply to: Personnel Officer, City Hall, Oshewa. Genernlized pro. Beginning salary according to - EAL ¢, wien . The First Presentation is on Sunday, November 5 at 7:30 p.m. when the subject will be: "STRANGE SIGHTS IN THE SKY": Qpening Night will include Special Music by the Kingsway College Choir directed by R. C. Coupland HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS What's happening to the old the Conservative committee on energy, mines and. resources | How will Canada grow the food your eat? Will the farmer have to cultivate his ponds as well as his fields? Or push buttons instead of a plough? Find out at the Royal. This year, as well as the traditional produce, there's an exciting glimpse of things to come. Bring your children to the Royal and see See the spectacular film--"'A Place to Stand' -- direct from the Ontario Pavilion at Expo. Nov. 0to8 SE ae 668-4416 728-2870 655-3663 576-1680 FREE? | To Every Adult and Young Person over 16 years of age WHO ATTENDS THE OPENING NIGHT SUNDAY -- 7:30 P.M. NOVEMBER 5 DOES AN OLD BOOK HAVE A MESSAGE FOR THIS NEW AGE? Hear NEAL WILSON Bible Scholar and World Traveler DISCUSS "WHY MODERN MAN NEEDS THE BIBLE" Plus 14 Other Timely Topics Including: "New Morality and Situational Ethics' "The Sin That Will Pack Hell", etc. IN A NIGHTLY TWO-WEEK CRUSADE SPECIAL PROGRAMME Each Evening for Children Agés 2 to 12 COME AND BRING THE FAMILY COLLEGE SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH 1164 King Street East, Oshawa Prag PARK