a A Story Of Donald Gordon Is Of Horatio Alger Type By MICHAEL GILLAN OTTAWA (CP) — Donald Gordon’s .is a Horatio: Alger etory, the self-made man who rose from a $l-a-day factory job ON THE AIR FRIDAY PROGRAMS ‘CFCY-TV 1:30 p.m.—Musicale 2:00 p.m.—Luacneon Date, 2:30 p.m.—My Son |g A Viking 3:00 p.m:—Take Thirty 3:00 p.m.—Edge of Night 4:00 p.m.—Canada's Story §:00 p.m.—This Is The Life 5:30. p.m.—tet’s ‘Sing Out 6:0 p.m.—Mr. Ed - 630 p.m.—Gazetie 7:00 p.m.—CFCY IV News 7:15 p.m.—Robin Hood Buckboard 7:20 p.m.—TBA 7:30 p.m.—The Virginian 9:00 p.m.—Get Smart (Color) 9:30 p.m.—The. Tommy Hunter Show 10:00 p.m.—Friday” Theatre “Miss Grant Takes Richmond” 12:00 p.m.—CBC TV News 12:13 @.m.—Local Weather and - Sport Scores 12:15 e.m.—Sign Off ¢ to the $75,000-a-year post of president of the public - owned CNR:, ; : Short on-formal education but long on intelligence and with: a jnative talent for. administrating, ‘the gruff, burly Scotsman ranks as one of the giants among Ca- nadian businessmen. His drive and briskness gained him some enemies along the way, with some critics call- ing him a dictator. Others wanted him fired and some stu- dents once burned: him in ef- igy. eo But others said that although | lhe was tough he was also fair. ‘And one notable opponent, Que- separatist MP Gilles Greg- loire who battled him over with, by acquisition or inherit- ance, but what he does with what he -has.”" In 1935 he was tapped by Gra- ham Towers to be secretary to the newly-formed Bank of Can- ada and three years later he be- came deputy governor of the central bank which handles Canada's monetary system. SET UP EXCHANGE BOARD During the Second World War he helped organize the foreign exchange board which was set /up to ensure that Canada’s for- leign exchange earnings were preserved as much as possible for the war effort.’ One story about this job which displays his quick wit concerns a meeting with senior officials French - language representa- | tion in the CNR, eventually | turned into one of his greatest admirers. ' j If the criticism and contro- | versy bothered him, he hid his! feelings and pointed to his working motto: worthwhile by pussy-footing.”’ FIRST SOLD PAPERS . Mr. Gordon arrived in Can- ada from his birthplace of Old Meldrum,” Scotland, in” 1914" at ar magazines. From a $l-a-day job in a box factory he joined the Bank of Nova Scotia where his meteoric rise began. By night he was working on - by - letter courses and For The Best In Color TV. See the 1967 Dumont In Charlottetown night school, later taking a spe- cial correspondence course in from: Queen's Univers- ity and earning a feHowshi> in the: Canadian Bankers’ Associa- tion, equivalent to an econom- ics deerec 3 By day, Mr. Gordon rose to the executive levels of the bank at-a breathless pace. At 24 he CKCW-TV 10:27: a.m.—Siation Sign On 10:30 @.m.—Nove Scotia Schools 11:30 a.m.—Sign Off : 1:00 p.m.—Playbi!l— 2:30 p.m.—At Home With Helen Crocker 3:00 p.m.—Take Thirty 3:30 p.m.—Edge of Night , 4:00 -p.m.—Caneda‘s Story 5:00 p.m.—On Saferi © §:30 p.m.—Outlook 6:00 p.m.—Supper Club + 6:15 p.m.—LTV News ' 6:25 p.m.—tIV Weather 6:30 p.m.—LTV Sports * 7:00p.m.—Lost in Space 8:00 p.m.—Peyton Place 9:00 p.m.—Get Smart—C 9:30 p.m.—Tommy Hunter—C - 10.00 p.m.—Friday Night et the Movies Part I—Come Fill The Cup Part lI—Rio Bravo 12.00 p.m.—CBC National News . 12:15 a.m.—LTV News Highlights 12°17 a.m.—Fridey Nite Movie Con- : tinued 11:30 o.m.—Station Sign. Off 9.00—1967 and All That —CBC 19.45—In Canada This Week—CBC 10.00—CBC National News—CBC 10.15—Today’s Editorial and Speaking Personally—CBC 11.30—News and Maritime Weather 11.35—Starlight Serenade 12.00—CBC News, Wr. and 12.15—6:30 a.m.—News and : Jo CBA RADIO’ FRIDAY Sone Morning Show, Part 1 7.90—?Ke Morning Show, Part 2 7.03—Inland Weather, Sports Scored MW Abe sic ai 7 .06—Music ‘& %.27—In'and Weather, Sports Scorts 7.30—Lift Up Your Hearts wAsKt Haopened Today “B.00—CEC News Music | was one of the youngest bank inspectors in the country. He was assistant chief accountant at 26 and assistant manager of the main Toronto office at 29. “It seems to me that all suc- cessful- men are self - made men,” he once said. “‘It isn’t a matter of what a person starts 8.12-—Regional Weather 8.16—Maritime Sportscast 8.21—AWusic 9:00—CBC Newe - 9:10—Commentary %:15—Assignment 9:21—A.M. Chronicle - 10.45—Playroom 11:00—CBC News 11.05—Joan-Marshall 11:15—For Consumers. 11.20—Record Album 11:30—The Archers 11.45—On The Sunny Side 11.55—Assignment : 12.00-C8C News 12.03—Jamboree Junction 12:30—Maritime Farm. 8’cas? 1:00—CBC News and Weather 1.15—The Gordie Tepp Show -1.45—The Open Road Show 1:59—D.O. Time Signal 2.00—CBC News 2.03—The Open Road Show 2.45—The Feminine Touch 3:00—CBC News 3.03—Matinee With Pat Patterson, Part 1 3.30—Matinee With Pat Patterson Part 2 ._.. 4:00—CBC News 4:03—Canadian Roundup 4:10—Musie In The Air 4.30—Assignment 4.35—Music in The Air: $.00—CBC News 5.03—Mar. Fish P’Cest 5.23—CBC Note Book 5.35—Assignment $.40—CBC 6:00—CBC News ~6.15—From The Capital ~ 6:20—Torlay‘s Editorial Sonres 6.25—Business Barometer 6.30—Inland Weather and Sports - 6.33—Musie Scene, Halifax: 7.00—CBC"News ~ ' 7:05—Musie In The Evening 8.03—Charter Flight 10:00—CBC’ National News 10:15—Tedey’s Editoriel and Speaking Personally : 10.30—Around The Horne 11.00—Jazz En Liberte 12:00—CBC News 12:08—Sports Scores, Inland and’ the age of 13 with his family | and at> first -peddled-newspapers’|poard whigh of - the. chartered banks who were kept locked in an office until the cabinet had passed: an order - in - council implement- ing new regulations. One weary and annoyed banker asked’ what would hap- pen if the cabinet never got “Nobody--ever did anything jaround to passing the order. “Ah,” Mr. Gordon said with ja broad smile, ‘‘then I shall ,have to shoot you all.” i Next he was handed one of wartime prices and trade ‘ toughest jobs, chairman of prices; -ra- hao goods and controlled sup- plies. | It was during this period he picked up the dictator label jwhile successfully drawing top minister the board. “He never would have suc- ceeded had he sought to live up to the reputation which his de- tractors gave—the reputation of a dictator,” said then justice miniser J. L. Isley when the prices board. was disbanded in 1947, “‘True;-he was , firm and décisive. He did mind a fight.” - HELD OTHER POSITIONS He held other positions simul- taneously during the war, and in 1947 returned to the Bank of Canada where he remained un- til taking the top CNR job Jan. 1, 1950, at the age of 49. The. public saw and heard a great deal of Donald Gordon during the following 17 years, particularly reports of his an- nual encounters with the Com-. mons railway committee. Flanked by countless vice- presidents and officials balane ing overflowing brief cases on their knees, Mr. Gordon and a were an awe-inspiring sight. Some-MPs, like former New Democrat MP Douglas Fisher who had studied the railways » |thoroughly, took him on about CNR policy and methods. His|- s most famous encounter was with Mr. Gregoire over use of French-speaking employees in the CNR. Mr. Gregoire in 1962 charged that Mr.. Gordon was “passing over French - speaking Canadi- ans in making: senior appoint- ments. ~o/ Mr.. Gordon replied that . this might have been the policy 20 or 30 years before when the present top executives were starting out, but i was longer the case. _. : “We havé done more for the cause of the French language in the CNR than any other or- ganization,” he added. The CNR had reeruited many young French-speaking men from the universities and in 10 years some. would be in the top jobs. STOOD FIRM He stood firm on this issue with the statement that ‘‘as long as I am president of the CNR, there is not going to be a promotion or an appointment made just because a man is a French-Canadian. He has to be as able as the other fellow who has a claim on the job.” CNR headquarters issued sta- tistics to back his contention that there was ne discrimina- tion but the issue snowballed in Five MPs from Quebec spon- sored a resolution demanding the appointment of French- Maine Weather 12:18—Musle In The Night speaking Canadians to every vel of the CNR’s executive. A CONTRAC T BRIDGE By B. JAY BECKER 3 F yee ¥ = ga 3E 8 x) = g Ss + g Pg ie Fes FS 3 SS te g USTs] CH tit ti eset ye neat r : rey: ‘ i fist i ee > x wit cae i ay if 2 i [3 gene! junip bids forcing, South is ATequired to bid ‘i two notrump bid in this sequen- ce shows 13 to 15 points, though he may occasionally have only 12 points. The same general principle would apply if North's last bid were three clubs in- stead of two notrump. This also would be a forcing bid which South could not pass. 3 in, North's | 3, Impossible. The two ne- trump response showed 13 to 15 to game. South must ‘therefore bid again over three diamonds. almost entirely on not losing the first two tricks in the adversely bid suit. Thus, South may have a hand such as “his suits in reverse order, shows an excellent hand with at least 17 points, but, as played by nearly everyone, the bid is not to bid again, but with a poor Qf ‘course. a partnership-could hand he is expected te pass. industry leaders to help him ad-|- ‘would utterly inconsistent with h’s bidding for South es rf PP . private bill was introduced ‘in Cemmons by Creditiste Leii@r Real Caouette to reduce Mr. Gordon's salary to $1. Resolutions urging his — dis- missal came from one city council and from a uni student association. Arnold Pet- ers, New Democrat MP for ‘Timiskaming, called the pres- ident “a silly ass” and de- manded he be fired. Mr. Gordon was burned in ef- figy in Montreal, Quebee City, Sherbrooke and Ottawa was there was a bomb threat scare in ‘the CNR’s Queen Elizabeth Hotel in Montreal. CONTROVERSY DIED DOWN The controversy died slowly and in the end Gilles Gregoire, o deputy leader of the Cred- ported tion for Mr. Gordon when he appeared before the railways Under Mr. Gordon the CNR, formed from a network of debt- ridden or bankrupt railways and ‘communications sy stem, was revamped into an aggres- sive company using modern The Guardian, Charlottetown, Fri, Oct. 7, 1966 9 senger and freight business... Although he didn’t see the CNR’s ‘inherited debt wiped out ‘by government legislation as he wanted, the railway now shows an -operating surplus. The 1965 annual report says that operating profits last year were $28,500,000, but the com- pany still had a $33,400,000 def- icit because of annual interest eharges on the inherited debt of $61,900,000. sales techniques to attract pas- WNWaGNVUS Corner Brook | ‘Builds Centre CORNER BROOK (CP)—Ex- cavation work has begun here on a $1,000,000 arts and cultural centre due to be ready next summer. The centre Is due to be fin- ished by June and will include a theatre, museum, art | '. music rehearsal room, Olympie ‘swimming pool and @ large parking. area. : It will be known as the Bowate. ers-Lundrigan Centennial; Cen- tre. RIPLEY'S BELIEVE IT OR NOT ~ WI >|DIO}o} PSI MCI D i=) © 12] >] 70] oD ienisal sly a> l= [1-10 9 ZSNOW AaSIN earn >| Pri—||> || Om] — 1A) ANT] > | OfoolO} ZIC >) my NCIS RD) 2|—|—1[010) RD} AaMoee Mi lole * (ORETO} DIM BCGVG BSB PB DTx SHBX.— BPILMEBSDO PE te Tecess _ Justice 6. Society gal, 25. Mountainss tree 14. Signs as for short USSR, 34. Perform correct | 7.Strangle ‘° 26.Chance by oneself IV. Exclama- 9. Entice 27. Weird 26. Bern tion 12. June-bug 28. English river 18. Secret. 13.Growold ‘river 37. Talk 19. Decline 1 72 4 1F [6° to acca, 21. Doom 22. Excavas “ 7 rock for Yj 28. Wander / about 8 24. Scorch or scald 26. Right, > q Jeft, 72 heavy, ete. . oo a 2 [28 30. Girl's name sO 31. Confeder- 4 ate gerieral 3s 32. Arabic ; consonant 38. 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