2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, Mey 2, 1961 | GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN | 22 | £ | 'Crack Shot' Police Seek 'House Starts Fast But Bogs Down Later In Killings HOLLAND, Mich. (AP)--Po- per cent the interest rate the hire a trained disabled person , government pays for the use| because they fear the public and lice intensified their hunt for a OTTAWA (CP) -- The Com: |of the 12300. balance of Thelhelr Suployess will react un- 16-year-old "crack shot" after Mons, in an uneven burst of Army Benevoien . i : the bodies of two missing school- speed on the first day of ex-|,ppRrOVE COST-SHARING If Youre TIRED MR. PICKERSGILL STEALS LIBERAL SHOW There were some good oratorical performers from the political arena on hand in the Picadilly Room of the Hotel Genosha Saturday, but it was easy to pick out the best speaker, the old pro of the hustings'. The Hon. John W. Pickersgill (Liberal member of the Commons from Bonavista-Twillingate, Nfld.) won this contest hands down. By JOHN E. BIRD Canadian Press Staff Writer girls were found under a man-|tended sitting hours, sliced into, tle of leaves near here Monday. government legislation at morn-| woe House gave Sina) apploval Carol Gee, 11, and Margaret ing and afternoon sittings Mon-|, cost-sharing programs be- Chambers, 12, had been shot day. tween fed eral and provincial Mr. Pickersgill is a man with a neat turn of phrase. He can poke fun effectively at a foe ("not with sword thrusts but with gentle pin pricks," as one delegate described it) with sly innuendo and quotations from speeches long-since forgotten. He uses such methods skillfully until his aud- JOHN CAMERON jence is in a mirthful state --then he attempts to drive his real message home ("The key issue in the next election won't be socialism, as the Tories would have us believe, because, there are no forces of socialism in this country now--the key issue will be 'John Diefenbaker', period"). Mr. Pickersgill (former Federal Minister of Im- migration) was one of the guest speakers at a day-long meeting of the Central Ontario South Liberal Association, whose area extends from Kingston on the east, Pickering on the west, and Peterborough in the north. Mr. Pickersgill turned his heaviest artillery on Prime Minister Diefenbaker ("I was one of the first 20 of the Diefenbaker unemployed,") but he also said that there was nothing new about The New Party and refer- red to it as "The CCF Party with a new cloak." John A. Cameron, an Oshawa lawyer who was form- erly secretary-treasurer of the Ontario Riding Liberal Association, was elected president of the Central Ontario South Liberal Association to succeed Dr. Dan McVicar of Deseronto. Mr. Cameron warned that the road ahead would not be easy if the Party was to regain its former prestige ("I don't want anyone coming to me asking what I can do for them--I want to know what they can do for the party"). He reminded his audience that organization won the most recent U.S. presidential election. Mayor Christine Thomas brought "good wishes" to the delegates from the City. Her Worship then created a mild furor by suggesting that the Liberals should join The New Party, of whch she is a supporter -- this was too much for William G. Lawson of Pickering (making the reply to Her Worship). He suggested that Mayor Thomas and, indeed, all members of the New Party attend a Liberal meeting soon "just to see how a real Party operates". C OF C HAS BUSY SCHEDULE The energetic Oshawa C OF C gives the grass little opportunity to grow under its feet these days. Six of its members--Charles World, Merle Book, Don Burns, Morley Wyman, Gordon Riehl and Manager Douglas Fisher--will attend the Provincial convention of the Ontario C of C in Windsor, May 10-12, Mr. World will seek a directorship. IN FAVOR OF FAMILY DOCTORS We usually enjoy Dr. Matthew B. Dymond's pungent speeches because they can on frequent occasions make a lot of hard-core sense. This doesn't mean that we could honestly acclaim his most recent Oshawa effort (at the Canadian Diabetic Association), the one in which he said something to the effect that "a family doctor is a 20th. century necessity". Such advice may sound impressve out on the hust- ings where doctors are easier to come by, but it won't go down so well in the larger centres, where MD's crowded waiting rooms are the rule rather than the exception, where most doctors appear to operate on a split-second schedule that rigidly rules against a "fam- ily doctor" atmosphere regardless of where the blame may lie, The doctor's advice would be far more valuable if he would give some inside tips on how to acquire a "family doctor," a rare breed of medical practitioner from this vantage point, thanks to the hurry-hurry pace of this atomic age. We are in accord with him on one point--the modern family doctor doesn't present the same image that he did in the old days ("There has been a great change in his outlook and attitude"). We are not at all perturbed, furthermore, by the good doctor's assertion that it would be in the interest of society if all medical columns in newspapers were cut out. Could such irreverence towards well-established newspaper features be smirched with a tinge of profes- sional jealousy, doctor? How can we get to know our doctor better? We think its a wonderful idea and would welcome any sug- gestions, STUDENTS FLOCK TO WASHINGTON Washington plays host to more than 6,000,000 tour- ists annually and they spend some $60,000,000 for the city's top non-government revenue producer, There are no industries to speak of and the city is one of the cleanest on the continent, Thousands of students visit Washington annually, especially in the summer vacation to historical shrines and to call on their senators and congressmen, Many of these youngsters come from such distant points as Alaska and California; also, they save their money for such pilgrimages. What a wonderful thing it would be if Canadians displayed such a proud patriotic streak, if they would flock to Ottawa in comparative numbers. LITTLE NOTES FROM HERE AND THERE The first installment on city taxes -- both business and realty -- was due Monday last . . , One of the delegates here Saturday at the convention of the Cen- tral Ontario South Liberal Association convention was Alderman Robert Temple of Belleville . . . Plans are being readied here for the start on June 1 of a city census campaign to last two weeks--it will be part of a national census . . . Lt.-Col F. Stephen Wotton, civil defence co-ordinator for Ontario County, is preparing plans for the district observance of "Exercise Tocsin 1961"--the second in a new series of annual exercises to test and practice emergency measures necessary for national survival and the continuity of all levels of government in the event of a national emergency , , , The Saturday Liberal meeting here attracted real dyed-in- the-wool Liberal types, not the Sunday-Liberal variety. Among the Oshawa and district members present were Glenholme Hughes, Bowmanville; William G. Lawson, Pickering; George K. Drynan, Gilbert Murdoch, Lyman Gifford, Terence V. Kelly and Dr. Claude Vipond, all of Oshawa. t several times each with a small found in a wooded ravine near calibre rifle. Their bodies were the night session. But progress bogged down at! er nments in the training of disabled pers ons. Legislation Half an hour after the evening also was introduced by the gov- ; |for the arrest of James Scott Lake Michigan after a search that began Saturday when the girls disappeared while picking wildflowers. A warrant has been sworn out sitting started, the House had {completed consideration of all {but one measure scheduled for debate Monday and today. The item was Agriculture Stephens for investigation of Minister Alvin Hamilton's farm murder. Stephens disappeared rehabilitation bill and Mr. Ham- early Sunday after having|illon at the time was returning breakfast at home. from Hong Kong where he The youth's stepfather and signed a long - term agreement mother, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth(with Communist China for the Kerb, said he left a note on his|sale of wheat, barley and flour. dresser indicating an accidental Warner Jorgenson, Mr. Ham- shooting of two persons and dis-|jjton's parliamentary secretary, closing plans to head for New introduced the farm rehabilita- Mexico or Arizona. [tion bill for second reading--ap- Investigators found a .22-cali-|proval in principle. The House bre semi - automatic rifle and|then heard a series of fill-in several empty cartridges hidden|speeches, pending Mr. Hamil ernment to remove the power act as both accuser and judge in dealing with fishing offences. gives Mr. make agreements with the prov- Tower of the new Canadian | Bank of Commerce building in | | Montreal is now three-quar- | ters of way to final height of 'Govern By DON HANRIGHT Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP) -- The Com- mons agriculture committee |tried Monday to get from one of the world's biggest farm ma: chinery companies the same sort of information on costs and internal affairs that even some Crown corporations balk at sup- plying. Immediate and stout opposi- tion confronted the committee. {It came from Massey-Ferguson |Limited, first of several manu- |facturers scheduled to appear |before the committee in Parlia- ment's first study of farm ma- chinery prices since 1937. T. J. Emmert, vice-president of the Canadian-based firm, ex- pressed "distress'" at the tack {taken by the inquiry, contend- ling that the committee was try- (ing to operate outside its terms TALLEST IN COMMOWEALTH 43 | 604 feet. The building's floors will make it the tallest building in the British Com- me Despite his objections, the 'committee passed two motions framed by Jack Horner (PC-- Acadia). SEEK COST BREAKDOWN One motion calls for all farm- machinery companies to supply a breakdown on the costs of ma- terials, wages, salaries and dis- tribution that go into the manu- facture of such equipment as tractors, combines, manure spreaders and balers. The other seeks the number of workers in each company-- classified in administration, dis- tribution and production -- and the aggregate amount of wages paid in each category. Both mo- tions require the information for the years 1954 to 1960 inclusive The motions were the product of seven hours of intense ques- tioning of Mr. Emmert. nt Seeks 'Machine Price Data | in the Kerb attic. | Indian Found Dead In Lake Et | KENORA (CP) -- Provincial police Monday reported finding the body of a resident of the Dallef Indian reserve in a lake near the reserve 10 miles north- |east of Kenora. The body of Ralph Joseph McLeod, 27, was found by two police divers in 15 feet of water. Police said they were notified Friday night that the man had monwealth. It is scheduled for completion in May, 1962. been missing since April 25. --(CP Wirephoto) It is believed he was drowned ~~ when a canoe he was pulling | [towards open water fell through [ the ice. Amateur Spy Gets $25 Fine OTTAWA (CP) -- Leslie Ar- Hawes agreed with Mr. Emmert thur Szoyka, 20, a Hungarian that it would be difficult to immigrant who allegedly tried classify employees. He also|to hire himself out to foreign noted that the committee's mo- embassies here as a spy, was tion perhaps would not include|fined $25 Monday for having un- all employees in Massey-Fergu- registered firearms in his pos- son's world-wide operation. For Session. example, it took no account of engineering and research, Calgary, was arrested last Mr. Emmert also said there week. Police said they found is no price-fixing in the farm two revolvers in his YMCA machinery business. Pricing by room and that he told them of Massey-Ferguson was guided by visiting several embassies here demand and the market. | seeking work as a spy. Pickets Want Tunnel Route TORONTO (CP) -- The Hotel|have any bearing on the strike. and Club Employees Union| Provincial T re a surer Allan of reference. He .complained As seen by several MPs, the (CLC) said Monday night it will said he had lived at the hotel [that the committee would be motions were an attempt to sub- ask the Ontario Supreme Court|six years and felt he was mer-| |digging into the internal affairs stantiate claims in Massey-Fer- for an injunction allowing it tojely going home--not crossing a lof the company for information guson's brief that the compa- Picket a tunnel between Union |picket line. {that could benefit competitors. Woman's Body Found In Flat TORONTO (CP) -- The death {of a Toronto woman whose hody was found in her third - floor bedroom Sunday is being inves- tigated by homicide squad de- tectives and the attorney-gener- al's crime laboratory. Police said Monday an au- Itopsy did not show the cause of tween Massey - Ferguson fac- awards at a convention. He said 28-year-old Wenda Plumridge's death, Begins long hike--Dr. Bar- bara Moore strides along Roosevelt Blvd., Key West, on ny's profits were too low and could not be identified with cur- rent prices, which had risen generally with labor and steel costs. " |CAN'T SUPPLY IT Repeatedly, Mr. Emmert said he information was a "practi- al impossibility' to collect. It might be different were the company turning out the same |product year after year. But there was nothing static in the industry. Models changed fre- quently. There was a continual "interplay" of production be- t C tories. Committee economist Gordon : a Ee BARBARA'S BACK first leg of her latest walking trip. Her goal is Boston, Mass. ~--(AP Wirephoto) . |tablishment running. Station and the strikebound| Mines Minister Maloney said Royal York Hotel. he had been a guest since 1958 The union has been prevented and none of the picketers, "all by police from picketing the tun-|good friends of mine," suggested nel through which 900 new em- he was crossing a picket line. ployees have been entering the, Premier Frost returned from hotel to keep the 1,600-room es- a European trip but went to his cottage in Lindsay. He said he did not plan to stay at the hotel during the iiext five days. Local 299 of the union is strik- Strikers stayed away from the tunnel Monday but costumed picketers staged a burlesque of their last week's eviction by CPR police. Meanwhile, Labor Minister Daley said he would cross the picket line today to present {hotel has offered 2'4 cents. British Choose Brand X Soap MANCHESTER, England (Reuters)--Brand X--the soap | powder that takes the rap for | all those dingy shirts--was en- he didn't like to cross the line but didn't think his action would Parliament At-A-Glance By THE CANADIAN PRESS Monday, May 1, 1961 Government bills establishing a National Design Council 'and aiding rehabilitation of the dis-| abled received warm general support from all sides of the House. Finance Minister Fleming said he couldn't see how the federal budget could possibly| be brought down before the} {middle of this month | Transport Minister Balcer |confirmed that legislation will {be introduced this session aimed |at assisting Canada's shipbuild:| ing industry. As the Commons embarked on its new 42-hour, six - day- week schedule, Lionel Chevrier| [(L. -- Montreal Laurier) re- marked that it will be extrem- ely difficult for opposition MPs to attend committee sessions while the House is sitting. Tuesday, May 2 The Commons meets at 11 a.m. to debate assorted govern- ment legislation; the Senate seven Manchester stores. With traditional British sym- pathy for the underdog, cus- tomers were snapping up the new product despite its bad name on television. The product was put on the market by Charles Terry, a 51-year-old storekeeper, who used an abandoned Manches- ter church as his factory. Terry said he is turning out 45,000 boxes of Brand X a day but demand is so great that tion to 500,000 boxes a day. "Like everyone else, I saw the washing ad where woman has to say which bun- dle of clothes is whiter," Terry explained. "How often I longed for her to choose the pile washed in did." Terry said Brand X gives clothes a perfectly aadequate wash, Besides, he added, it costs less than its competit- ors. : Szoyka, who came here from joying brisk sales Monday in | Brand X. Of course, she never | ton's return. "LIBERAL PROTESTS J. W. Pickersgill (L--Bona- vista-Twillingate) protested that besides Mr. Hamilton being &b-| sent, the Commons agriculture committee was holding a night session on farm machinery prices. He said that if the {House's business was arranged {properly this type of situation] would not arise. John Pallett, chief govern-| {ment whip, said there wasn't a {Liberal at the committee meet- |ing. George Mcllraith (L -- Ot- {tawa West) replied that "false- {hoods" such as that should not {be on record. | { At the morning and afternoon |sittings, the first under an ex- tension of sessions to 42 hours la week from 25%, the House |gave second reading--approval lin principle--to government leg- islation to: 1. Establish a National De- sign Council to promote and ex- nedite the design of Canadian industrial products. 2. Permit the Bras d'Or Coal Company of Cape Breton to de- fer to Dec. 31, 1962, a start on {repayment of a federal loan for special mining machinery. 3. Increase to four from 3; Non-Ops Another By KENNEDY WELLS Canadian Press Staff Writer MONTREAL (CP) -- Negotia- {tions between Canada's railways and their 111,000 non-operating railway workers, which some- times seem to move with all the {formality and predictability of an old - fashioned waltz, have once more reached an impasse. It was announced Monday the 15 non-op unions have broken off the high-level talks aimed at averting a nation - wide railway strike scheduled for May 16. |" Chief union negotiator Frank H. Hall has called a press con- ference for 10 a.m. today, but [there is little likelihood he will (do anything except confirm that | the unions have ended the week- long talks and set out their and. One thing seems certain--the ing to back demands for a 10- collapse of negotiations means|u |cent-hourly wage increase. The|the gulf between the railways|burden in retroactive payments. | and the non-ops, all those rail- way workers not actually en- gaged in running trains, is just about as wide as it was, for all] | practical purposes, when negoti- |ations first opened in Sepiem| ber, 1959. BOTH SIDES BURDENED The very length of time the dispute has lasted imposes a burden on both sides, It has been Mr. Hall's task to {hold two years of bargaining, the 15 Separate unions which represent the different non-op crafts. He {and his fellow negotiators have {had to convince the rank and {file that they must abide by le-| {gal negotiating procedures; ac- {cept a federally-appointed con-| ciliation board; and then accept the 14-cent-an-hour increase it {handed down instead of the 25 {cents an hour the union origin- ally. asked for. | he plans to step up produc. | the | washed | TAILORING | MOVED: FROM 4 ALBERT ST. TO 50 KING ST. E. (OVER REGENT THEATRE) HAND-TAILORING meets at 8 p.m. n BP ypaximum ENERGY GASOLINES give you maximum OPEN The Ontario Hospital, Whitby, the General Public, on WEDN the foyer of the Administratiol A cordial invitation is extende D. 0. Mental Health Week May 5th from 2:00 to 3:30 p.m. Conducted tours will leave HOUSE is holding ""Open House" for ESDAY, May 3rd and FRIDAY, n Building every half hour, d to all visitors. Lynch, M.D. Superintendent. together through nearly| of federal fisheries officers to The farm rehabilitation bill Hamilton power to inces for more efficient use of marginal and submarginal farm land, for projects for develop- ALLTHE TI wiped" Feeling aod may be bhred by bacco. Pete ule by A nary t 1] ' L f F £ i stimulate condition ma ache and tired fi A better, rest better, work Dodd's Kidney Pills now. blue box with the red band counters. You can depend on F : f f 14 FET x H : ment of income and job oppor- tunities in those areas, and for projects for soil and water con- servation. Research in all three fields also is provided. During debate on the design-| council measure, Trade Minis- ter Hees said that if Canadians design distinctive products of IT STARTS ON "FRIDAY MAY 5th" Skateland OSHAWA ARENA ROLLER SKATING high quality they will sell on ex- port markets at prices higher ------ than similar goods offered by competitors. Judy LaMarsh (L. -- Niagara Falls) protested that the CNR recently engaged a United States company to do its entire corporate identity program. The publicly - owned railway had failed to take advantage of ex- cellent designers available in Canada. WILL SEEK REASON Mr. Hees said he would ask the CNR why it went to the U.S. if similar design services were available in Canada. Labor Minister Starr, intro- ducing the measure dealing |with the disabled, said money spent on rehabilitating such in- |dividuals is an investment that {returns immense dividends to |Canada. | The legislation provides for a {50-50 sharing arrangement of {costs on rehabilitation for the disabled, to be set up in special] Dominion - provincial agree- {ments of up to six years. | Miss LaMarsh said many em- ployers, including Ontario Hy- dro, provincial and federal gov- ernments, frequently refuse to Reach > Block Then the negotiators had to OSHAWA SHOPPI [N\ NG OUTSTANDING SAVINGS IT N PRICE ON DATE 8 Margaret Stacey Lid. GIRLS' | STROLLER suITs Long cotton crawlers with cotton knit lined jackets, detachable hoods. Yellow, lilac, green and pink, Sizes 6 mths, 12 mths, 18 mths, Reg. 5.98. ONE DAY ONLY Basseit's Jewellers FLOOR LAMP AND SHADE | Reg. 29.95. 14.95 il SPECIAL .. | FAIRWEATHER'S |convince their members they \must abide by federal legisla- [tion that outlawed the strike | called for Dec. 3 when the rail ways refused to accept the con- ciliation board award. It is almost certain that nei- {ther side wants to sign another |two-year contract. Such a con- tract would ex pire next Jan. uary and would mean the two sides would have to go into ne- gotiation again next September. WANT THREE-YEAR PACT sign a three-year contract, ap- pear to be in no better financial position than they were two {years ago when they argued they {could afford' no increase In |wages. | Further, any increase agreed| pon now would impose a heavy | There has been no firm indi-| cation of what Parliament will |do, or when, with the report of the MacPherson Royal Commis- sion on transportation. | Did You Know . .. {} In the main Dining Room of |} the GENOSHA HOTEL you can {{ have a Full:course Dinner for ONLY 95¢. And the railways, hoping to| {| Terylene, Cotton and Arnel BLOUSES 34 and short sleeves. Many styles and colors to choose from. Sizes 12 to 20. Reg. 5.98. SPECIAL .............: | SEIGNEUR'S SPRING CLEARANCE of SPORTSWEAR Reduced 10% - 50% FRANKLIN-SIMON COATS & SUITS REDUCED 30% AND MORE TAMBLYN DRUG STORES MOTH-KIL (Paradichlorbenzene 1-1b Tin Reg. 63c. SPECIAL LOOK FOR THE A A NONTUES WED AM. BUEHLER Tender EATN A LITE ILT Td 12 KING E. -- RA 3-3633 Meat Specials ! Wed. 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