2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, July 7, 1961 By DAVE McINTOSH Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis- ter Diefenbaker sounds like a man spoiling for a general elec- tion. None of his opponents seems to be quaking at the prospect. Opposition Le ad e r Pearson last week dared the government to call an election. H. W. Herridge, deputy CCF leader, threw out a similar challenge Thursday. So did Robert N. Thompson, new leader of the Social Credit party, though the party has no representatives in the Com- mons. The only group which appears to be on the spot is the Liberal- dominated senate, whose mem- bers are appointed for life. CHALLENGE TO SENATE Mr. Diefenbaker declared Thursday that the Senate must retract: an amendment to the Conservative government's Cus- toms Tariff Bill or an election will be called "sooner or later" on the issue of Senate reform. Election talk petered out like a brook in the Sahara after the $650,000,000 deficit budget was presented June 20. But it was spouting like a geyser on Par- liament Hill Thursday night. It may get an even higher lift today when Mr. Diefenbaker re- sumes the debate on the govern- |ment's bill to sack James E. {Coyne as governor of the Bank of Canada, INTERNATIONAL KISS Premier Louis Robichaud seals New Brunswick friend. ship for Maine with a kiss during Frontier Week celebra- tions in the border towns of St. Stephen, N.B., and Calais, Me. On the receiving end is Fr i 'eek pe dal. the Frontier Week ques n, Pat the a wi he meant hy ricla Stewart of Calais "sooner or later' or by Senate |reform. But on the latter noint |he indicated he has in mind a |constitut fonal amendment to Ld {prevent the Senate from deal {ing with money bills, roug 1pes u | The measure in question is a {money bill but the Senate did {not amend its financial provi- | sions specifically. any West Farmers moo me the bill, designed to provide ESTEVAN, Sask. (CP)--High-|inated because of lack of 'mois- At Yellow Grass, west of stronger tariff protection for way 39 from Weyburn to this ture. Weyburn, farmers were count- certain Canadian manufactursd southeastern Saskatchewan city, At every movement hundreds|ing their meagre blessings. Inigoods, the right of appeal to the Wednesday was a burning rib- of grasshoppers flew up to land the village itself 2.6 inches of Tariff Board against arbitrary bon of asphalt pulled across a again a few yards away to con-|rain has fallen in June and 4.3 --(CP Wirephoto) The prime minister left up in| !decisions by the minister of na- tional revenue. The governm ent maintains this amendment would affect revenues and therefore infringes the "sole and undoubted" right of the Commons to impose tax- ation. The opposition maintains that the issue is the right of appeal against ministerial decisions. The Commons voted 134 to 39 to reject the amendment and dumped it back in the Senate, where it might come up for dis- cussion -- but probably not-- when the Upper House met at 3 p.m. EDT today. There has been no similar case since 1934 when the senate amended a money bill dealing with the Excise Tax Act. The Commons refused the amend- ment. The Senate insisted on it. But a compromise was reached in a conference between the two houses. Thursday it won't agree to ap- prove a government bill author- izing new capital expenditures by the CNR until it whether Donald Gordon is in or out, Iionel Chevrier (IL--~Montreal Laurier), Liberal spokesman on railway matters, said the oppo- sition also wants to know the names of five new CNR direct- ors whose appointments were authorized some weeks ago by legislation. He was speaking on a prelim- i | | Finance Minister Fleming which {was approved at the night sit- ting. The bill, would authorize Both Sides Of House Spoiling For Election | Mr. Diefenbaker ruled out any compromise Thursday. He said: "We shall not accept the au- thority or right of the Senate to make this amendment. . . . "The bill will be sent back to that body. If they choose to stand on what they have done, this legislation . . . can only pass out of existence, for we on outside will not take the amend- ment. "In the days ahead, we shall ascertain the constitutional rights of this country in the only way in which they can be ascertained. "I said a moment ago that that would be sooner or later. . . . "This house, if we are to maintain the Canadian constitu- tion, cannot in taxation matters terruption and interference of the other house. I make that Liberals Won't OK Rail Spending Bill OTTAWA (CP)--The Liberal/900,000 in 1961 on capital proj-| opposition in the Commons said|ects. clear." Mr. Gordon, CNR president for the last 10 years, now | continuing in this post on a day- knows to-day basis. The government! has said that when an appoint- {ment is 'made it will be an- {nounced | "We are entitled to obtain this information before we vote these | large sums of money," Mr. Che- vrier said. | "Who is the president of the [CNR at this moment?" Opposi- |tion Leader Pearson asked. 'Tam surprised that the inary resolution introduced by|leader of the opposition is not aware that Donald Gordon is {president," Mr. Fleming said. | "I wasn't sure," Mr. Pearson Its amendment would insert in|the CNR to spend up to $178,-ireplied. 'George Medal be subject to the untoward in-|. LIGHTER SIDE LONDON (AP) -- Prince Philip complained good- naturedly Thursday that London's building boom is interfering with his tele- vision reception. Visiting the congress of the International Union of Architects, Philip asked of- ficials of one big construc- tion company what tall structures they were work- ing on. "The new 18-storey build- ing on Victoria Street," said one of the officials. "That's one of ours." "Ah," said Philip shaking his head, "that's the one that interferes with my watching television at Buck- ingham Palace. When I'm watching the test (cricket) Strikers "Turn Down 'Hotel Offer | | TORONTO (CP)--More than! 1650 striking Royal York Hotel workers Thursday hooted and jeered a management offer to end a work stoppage which is {in its 11th week. Then members {of the Hotel and Club Employ- ees Union, calmed down and unanimously rejected the offer. | Strike leader Archie Johnstone |said he never had seen "a more |dastardly agreement proposed to workers in the 20th century." | The offer would exclude 250 workers from unipn protection, |including the entife front office | staff, The hotel offered a, 2'4-cent- |an - hour increase, the same |amount offered April 24 when ithe strike began. The union de- manded nine cents an hour over {wo years. The offer would throw out pre-| sent seniority and modified un-| ion shop provisions. { It also cut the present layoff notice of seven days to four match, everything appears double on the screen." RELIC RETURNS MALVERN, Ark. (AP) -- Dennis Wheat bought a new car in 1050 and traded it in reluctantly for a newer model in 1955. Several days ago Wheat saw the car on a lot and tried to buy it, but it had already been sold. Wednesday night Wheat at- tended a drive-in movie and won a car given as a prize, It was his old automobile. BANGTAIL BAND BANNED BIRMINGHAM, England (Reuters) -- Serious horse players will not have their handicapping disturbed by the raucous noise of rock 'n' roll music at the racetrack, a court ruled here Thursday. The court turned down a racetrack's application for a licence to have a six - piece rock 'n' roll dance band play in the enclosure bar to attract teen-agers. Judge Francis Ingram said: "We do not consider a race | course a suitable venue for a form of entertainment which will attract large numbers of people under the age of 18." CHASTE, CHASTER PARIS (Reuters)--The "im- mortals" of the French Acad- emy Thursday hammered out a definition of chastity, the latest word they have reached in more than 10 years' work on revising the official dic- tionary of the French Lan- guage. The argument raged long in the academy between those who saw chastity only as a complete abstention from sex- ual pleasure and those who viewed it as consistent with "moderation." Finally, the academicians, some of them white - bearded octogenarians, settled for a compromise. "Chastity" in French hence- forth will mean: "State of he or she who is chaste, that is to say ob- Parliament | Dim Royal View |At-A-Glance ' On Construction | By THE CANADIAN PRESS | Thursday, July 6, 1961 !| Prime Minister Diefenbaker | said there will be a general elec- ition "sooner or later" on the question of Senate reform un- less the Upper House retracts an amendment to the govern- ment's tariff bill. The Opposition maintains the issue involved in the Senate amendment is the right of ap- peal against ministerial deci- sions but lost 134 to 39 in the vote on the measure. Hopes of a summer adjourn- ment by the weekend were ex- pressed by Veterans Minister Churchill, government House leader. The Liberals said they won't agree to approve a bill author- izing new CNR capital expend- itures until they know whether Donald Gordon is in or out as president of the publicly-owned railway. Friday, July 7 The Commons meels at 11 a.m. in resumption of a gov- ernment bill to dismiss James E. Coyne as Bank of Canada bovernor; the Senate meets at 3pm. Forest Fires Yield Slightly | PORT ARTHUR (CP)--Fire- fighters gained slightly Thurs- day in their battle against flames ravaging Northwestern Ontario's forests. Regional director A. 8. Bray of the Ontario lands department reported 12 fires had been ex- tinguished and only three new ones discovered during the pre- vious 24 hours. Mr. Bray said flames have destroyed more than 910,000 acres of jack pine and spruce throughout the region. The Sioux Lookout district has been hard- est hit with 880,000 acres de- stroyed. There were 54 fires burning in the region, with 27 out of con- trol. Lands department person- desolate land. On either side of it lay pas- tures burned brown by the re- Jentless rays of a brassy sun| and grain fields turning yellow| and withering in the 90-degree| heat. Not since the days of the never-forgotten 30s have condi-| tions been worse. Farmers say the crops are| tinue their destruction. Across the road a few head tered areas of the district more of cattle and some horses nib-| than this has been recorded. bled at some volunteer growth| - showing in a sum me r fallow field. Many farmers have lost heart. I talked to one of them in a tiny cafe at Halbrite. As he spoke, dust devils whirled in the street and grasshoppers crawled across the step. | | inches since April 1. In scat- "Coyne May Girl Admits End Career Kidnapping Today OTTAWA (CP)--A 35-year-old| Army corporal who risked his| life to make a mid-air Tescue) of a parachutist whose chute failed to open, today was dec-| |orated with the George medal, the highest peacetime honor for| | bravery. | Cpl. Alfred Coxall of Paris, | For Paratroo days and said strikers could come back to work only when| jobs became available. Nine hundred strike-breaking workers the hotel has hired have become a key issue. The hotel insists they must not automatic- ally be dismissed if the strike is settled. The union wants them out. Angus P. MacKinnon, man- ager of the hotel, said the work- nel, numbering 350, are rein- forced by 2,430 extra fire fight- ers. The main blaze in the Kenora district continued to be one that swept over the Manitoba border from the Whiteshell forest re- serve. served continence. But chas- tity can only mean complete | abstinence from pleasures of the flesh." The earlier definition, now discarded, had termed as chaste a person who ab- stained from "all illicit pleas- ure" in lovemaking. per student's was opened. Both landed uninjured. FO Alexander, now serving with No. 408 Phot og r aphic Squadron at Rockcliffe, earned| his AFC while serving as a na- vigator on a CF-100 jet inter- ceptor with 433 squadron at North Bay. Flying at 43,000 finished, that even a rain now cafnot bring them back to life. It hasn't rained in any amount ing conditions proposed by the management are the same as| those accepted by the union at| other hotels in competition with| the Royal York. SMALL CONSOLATION THE COUNTY LOYAL ORANGE LODGE. OF ONTARIO SOUTH AND ASSOCIATED LODGES WILL HOLD OTTAWA (CP) -- The Com-| | "My crop won't be worth cut-| In Buffalo AWA (CP)--C. H. Rich-|eight of them--were delivering ardson, deputy secretary of the 300 to 350 copies of the state- |Bank of Canada, has charged ments and letters' of Mr. Coyne| ii | Prime Minister Diefenbaker "is the evil genius behind this whole {matter." {CHARGES DECEPTION Hw ARM 75-85 THUNDER _ SHOWERS ter today to James E. Coyne's| Canadian Engineers ft London, exercise May 24, 1960, the pilot career as governor of the Bank om, Tecelyed jis Award from|of the aircraft suffered eiiteme ; i i i ven' --Polic id| . i t an|anoxia when his oxygen supply tricts received moisture this|good thing, I haven't any stock Police said of Canada. overnor-General Vanier a 1 spring, the storms passed this|to worry about." heryl Jolls, a 15 - year - old] The government bill to re investiiure ceremony at Govern failed. district by. He said, however, that if a schoolgirl, admitted Thursday move him from office was|/ment House, THE on kS| ttle Andy Ashley and left him business for the House, opening|sented to FO Charles Alexander, | I te f pull their combines into the field|that some late crops, not yet I side a park lake June 23. The at 11 a.m. EDT. It was possi-|30, of Ottawa and the British n Tr erence : |" According 19.1 dv Empire Medal to Police Consta-| S : A 2Y? ccording to farmers and el- i 2 0 days 14 approved in time to be intro- : WHY WASTE MONEY? evator agents there is little found in the lake two days later. |APPTO in the Senate when it met|sor, Ont. i " . ad h | FO Alexander, a navigator, away," gloomily asked one Ma-| them up financially if the crop/Frank Felicetta said, however, Concludi Commons. debate coun district farmer. {fails completely. {that the girl did not admit cluding ety when the pilot's oxygen sup-| OTT : "I have already spent money| "Except for a few big farm. drowning the thre-year-old boy.|y, pot and heavy as a result of|PlY failed. IN OSHAWA--SAT.,, JULY 8, 1961 spray it. Look for yourself what|will clean us out," said a Hal- the admission to a psychiatrist|.o tr oversy Th |while foiling a bank robbery. : ARK h an us out." s; 2 trist| controversy Thursday by Mr. Parade Will Leave ALEXANDRA P I am going to get in return. Itiprite district man. "The aver.at Meyer Memorial Hospital, |Coyne, whose seven-year term TANGLED LINE lers delivering stajements by Mr. Groulx said he knew of| ; ; 3 enc [Gc . Coyne to . Like other crops in the area except for what he needs for mental tests in the kidnap-slay-| After a 10-day silence, the|ing a course at Camp Chilli-| Gvernoy Jamis E. Ye er D0 Bank of Canada messengers | much of it had not even germ-'seed." ing investigation since Tuesday. governor issued a blistering| wack, B.C, made his parachute M"* , / : ou - ee | ed. ; However, it was "an estab.] Proceeding south on Simcoe St. to Lloyd St., west em las jump master and instructor security officers. 1s » ! during a Parachute Club of Can-| The charge was denied by J. lished ule Jat no outside mes.| on Lloyd to Centre, north on Centre and Church |ada meet at Paris. The incident|P. L. Groulx, chief of the par-|SeNSers deiver material from om : X ON | dents, George Van Roosmelon of [said his men merely asked the Hi. he said. edd F. W. ROCHE, P.C.M. The governor, in his first at: woodstock, became tangled in|messengers to leave their bun-| Postmaster Yvon Lavoie said CHAIRMAN. [cused him of "unbridled malice|from a Cessna 172 aircraft, [the parliamentary post office and speedy delivery of any mail |and vindictiveness." He also] Cpl. Coxall, seeing the chute|for delivery according to estab-|that comes to the parliament. [charged that Finance Ministerihad not opened, began to cut|lished rules. ary post office. "We'd deliver it| \ if it was dynamite, as this was," | | Parliament. that the student's arm was|porier one of his messengers he said. Mr. Diefenbaker was speak-|pinned making it impossible for|was 'chased down a hall" of |ing Wednesday at the end of him to pull open the reserve|the Parliament Buildings 5 | mons may write the final chap-|{Ont., stationed with the Royal|feet during an RCAF defence i fall. en other dis-|ting," he said. "But there is one| since last fall. When g, BUFFALO (AP) C | Ini i i ir F Cross -| Some farmers say they won't|good rain fell within two weeks night that she tied and gagged scheduled as the first item of The Air Force Cross was pre this fall. | head, could be saved. bl sas ble that the measure would be body of the drowned boy was ble Brian Pickup, 30, of Wind-| 2 "Why throw more money grain left in storage to back! Buffalo Police Commissioner| 3 pm In Coyne Case 4 THE BATTLE OF THE BOYNE helped guide a jet plane to saf-| | | on the measure was expected to on seed to sow it and money 10ers another bushel on the quota| Felicetta said Cheryl made|g.oc, fe] being added to the| Const. Pickup was wounded that Bank of Canada messeng-|to the MPs and senators. I wouldn't go five bushels." age farmer is cleaned out now, Where she has been undergoing is due t ire Dec. 31. Cpl. Coxall, at present attend-| is due to expire Dec. AT 2.00 P.M. Ph : {being chased down halls. ----|press release charging that/rescue last Oct. 16, while acting fered with" by parliamentary| | ; |§ Sts. returning to Alexandra Park. !occurred when one of his stu-|liamentary protective staff, who(foom to room on Parliament| 9 |tack on the prime minister, ac-|ihe static line when he jumped | dles of addressed envelopes with his department sees to the safe GOD SAVE THE QUEEN |Fleming deceived and misled|the static line but then noticed Mr. Richardson told a re-|i {|that day's debate on the Coyne chute. | another was forced to hand over {issue and had the first oppor} The corporal then slid down|some 30 copies of the Coyne tunity ta speak in resumption of the static line. intending to 1 to to the parliamentary! debate. 3 himself to the puptl by means | There is some doubt about|/of another line, cut the fouled {what will happen to the Coyne|static line and then they would {bill after it reaches the Senate.|descend tbgether on his own Liberals in the Com m on s|chute, tial oy post office, Other members of the House of Commons staff blocked the way of the bank's plainclothes | messengers delivering the text HUNDER OWERS WEATHER FORECAST Cloudy Today Some Thunder Forecasts issued by the pub- lic weather office at 5 am. EDT: Synopsis: Scattered showers fell overnight in Central and Southern Ontario as cooler air pushed southward across the Great Lakes, Skies have cleared in Northwestern Ontario but con- siderable cloudiness is expected |d to persist elsewhere over the province today with a few show- ers this afternoon. i Sunny skies are forecast for almost the entire province Sa- turday but temperatures will continue cool. Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Lake Ontario, Niagara, Georgian Bay, Haliburton regions, Wind- sor, London, Toronto, Hamil- ton: Mainly cloudy today with a few showers or thundershow- ers clearing this evening. Satur- day sunny and continuing cool. Winds northeast 15. Timagami, Cochrane regions, North 'Bay, Sudbury: Mainly! cloudy with a few showers to- day clearing this evening. Satur- day sunny but continuing cool. Winds northeast 15. Algoma, White River regions: Mainly sunny except for a few cloudy intervals and continuing cool today and Saturday. Winds northeast 15 today light Satur. ay. Marine forecasts valid until 11 a.m. Saturday: Lake Ontario, Lake Erie: Winds variable 15 knots becom- ing north to northeast 20 knots by this afternoon. Cloudy with occasional showers today clear- ing this evening. Lake Huron, Georgian Bay: Winds north to northeast 20 knots. Cloudy with a few show- ers clearing this evening. Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, high Saturday: Windsor ... 70 London ... «eves . 50 68 Kitchener ...,..... 50 68 Toronto «...uveesss 55 70 fought unsuccessfully to have, However, the static line broke the bill referred to a committee (lat which Mr. Coyne could ap- {pear as a witness. || The normal procedure in the Senate is to refer almost all bills to committee. This is done] i because the Upper House does i student away, at the same time to open his own chute until the {before he 'could tie himself to|0f Mr. Coy Mr. Van Roosmelon, and both|!ing fell free. Cpl. Coxhall shoved the| Pie the gov: pulling the rip cord and waiting have him removed as governor. ne's statements level- charges at Prime Minister fenbaker in connection with] ernment's legislation to] FRED DeNURE BUS LINES LTD. The bank messengers--six to (PORT PERRY) "not normally go into committee [to give legislation clause » by- clause study. 'MOTORS--APPOINTMENT Ward Nos. 3&4... Realty PAY TAXES BY MAIL b venient) enclosing COMPLETE be returned. any time, accept current taxes within two HARRY DICK EARL SCHAEFER We are pleased to announce the appointment of HARRY Action in some cases and by | DICK and EARL SCHAEFER to our sales staff. They bring many years of experience in the retoil automotive field with them. Being residents, they are well known in the Bowman- villle-Oshawa District. CIVIC ADMINISTRATION CITY OF OSHAWA -- JULY INSTALMENT 1961 TAXES DUE Color of Bills Business cheque or money order (if con« AVOID STANDING IN LINE by paying before any due date OR by depositing sealed envelope containing cheque and Tax Bill in "City Hall Mail" letter drop at City Hall main entrance ALL OSHAWA CANADIAN BANKS OF COMMERCE will date providing Tax Bill is presented for receipting AND PRO. VIDING NO INSTALMENT IS PAST DUE WITHOUT CHARGE, ALSO PAYABLE AT CITY HALL if preferred. Office Hours: 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Closed Saturdays SPECIAL HOURS 7 TO 9 P.M. INSTALMENT DATES ONLY FAILURE TO PAY ANY ONE INSTALMENT on or before due date necessitates the Tax Collector to proceed to collect by several Statutory and Local By-Law provisions such as Collec- tion of Rents where property is tenant occupied; Division Court chattels, subject to additional costs. Telephones: RA 5.1153; Evenings Dial RA 8.6881 == announces -- NEW BUS SERVICE Commencing Mon., July 10 -- From Oshawa To -- CAMP SAMAC -- KEDRON KIWANIS CAMP and GENEVA PARK! Buses will leave Gray Coach Terminal starting at 2 p.m. via Simcoe Street North, covering both West and North Entrances to CAMP SAMAC thence to KEDRON and North from KEDRON to KIWANIS CAMP and GENEVA PARK. Returning over same route. Third instalment Due Dates coon JULY 10th JULY 13th tax bill--receipted bill will weeks before any instalment possible "Balliff Seizure" of For further information Telephone DeNURE BUS TERMINAL, 723-2241 or PORT PERRY 985-2132 f) CLARENCE L. COX BLDG. City Tax Collector ]