Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 15 Dec 1962, p. 12

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12 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturdey, Docember 15, 1962 By DOUG MARSHALL LONDON (CP) -- A heated argument is developing in the House of Commons about the best way to harness the ad- ministrative octopus of London. For local government, Lon- don is at least three cities in one -- Greater London, the County of London and the orig- inal square-mile city of London. This awkward superstructure is administered by a plethora of regional, municpal and depart- mental authorities operating on a variety of levels and <sften against themselves, In 1960 the government ap- pointed a royal commission to examine the problem, the fifth commission in 130 years. The hody's findings were embodid in a bill now moving slowly through Parliament against heavy opposition. Broadly the bill will scrap ex- s\isting boundaries and reorgan- traffic London Governed By Long-Armed Octopus cleus of Britain's financial and business world, it is jammed during the day and virtually lifeless at night. Scattered around the outer perimeter are dozens of inde- pendent urban boroughs which on paper, if not in practice, are part of the counties of Kent, Surrey, sex or Essex, The bill proposes a greater, [London council ruling over 52 boroughs and equipped with machinery to solve th prob-e sewage dis- Herefordshire, schmes, 4 Lighthouse Keepers Saved By Fishing Tug WHEATLEY, Ont. (CP)--The Middle- CALGARY (CP) -- Nuclear- powered submarine tankers or fire and ambulance| nay be the answer to transport- ing crude oil out of the Arctic, TOP-HEAVY COUNCIL says a Calgary oilman. The LCC, criticized by the} §. D. Moore, president and commission as too top-heavy|general manager of Phoenix and remote, wou.d disappear|Canada Oil Co. Ltd., said he after a transitional period.|expects the Japanese will have Housing minister Sir Keith Jos-|built a. prototype of such a eph told the Commons 'he pres-|vessel before crude oil produc- ent "'ossified and anachronistic|tion facilities are in operation structure" will be repiaced byjin the Arctic. "a new 20th-century urbanity) Phoenix, a Canadian inde- worthy of the best in our his-/pendent which has acreages on tory. Cornwallis and Bathurst Nuclear Sub Tankers May Tap Arctic's Oil Deposit be avoided. Mr. Moore said another advantage is that sub- marines require 40 mer cent of the horsepower of surface ves- sels because of the absence of resistance. "This means that a decrease in the time it would take for a A submarine tanker, he said,|round trip decreases the total could operate for five years on/number of tankers which would a few handfuls of fuel, leaving|be required." space normally occupied by fuel Any problems. of radiation oil available for the vessel'sfrom nuclear reactors would cargo of crude. NO WEATHER PROBLEM Such a submarine would be able to operate on a year-round said. Without armaments and expensive equipment of military subma. rines, the tanker would evolve basis, he into a simple tube. The delays, discomforts and dangers of bad weather would| The LCC, faced with the im-jislands, plans to participate pending destruction of its 70-|with Bankeno Mines Ltd. of year - old authority, reacted|Toronto in one or more drilling strongly by rejecting the gov-|projects next year. ernment's plans after a nine-| The discovery of oil sands and hour debate. seepages on several arctic is- A council report called the|lands was reported in October. bill a 'Frankenstein monster)' Mr, Moore said the deep-sea . .. created with irresponsiblé| channels between the islands, blindness and a callous and|while restricting overland ac- brutal disregard for human|cess, make tanker shipping the values." most economical method. LCC councillors said the bill) the solve themselves, said Mr. Moore. AUTO - LIFE - FIRE McMURTRY INSURANCE EST. 1913 21. King St. W. 723-3722 DRUG STORES OPEN THIS SUNDAY | 12:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. ize under one central counciljfishing tug Alex B out of Wheat- the 840 hg do - mile built - upjley Friday took on eg four area within the green belt that/stranded 1i ght house keepers, : ; encircles greater London. two of whom had to climb hand ar pec ond aimed kB The commission concluded|over hand along 70 feet of rope wa 1890 ing =accomplishe: that the alternative to such re-|to reach safety. | Th bill cw we s\organization was the progres-| The boat, skippered by Ray} aig baat Pi de 'f inte- sive decline of local goveri-\Getty and owned by Getty Fish-|8 Hf to e fh iad ere er 7 ment to the point at whichleries, attempted to reach the ainsitative agile Rae ad. Westminster would have to take\men early Thursday, but was| ood an, 'die ' 5 control and administer the cityjforced to turn back by rough re sdidoats vith aur local through a bureaucratic minis-/ water and ice. wate | Tottenh a? we try of London. Kenneth -Wilson of Wheatley\"0OUs in nham, Lemonton f Essex. op-|°° Enfield apparently resent be- Orposrrion wicwr ----__(ad Jack, McLeod of Essex. oPling lumped together. 'in- some Opposition Leader .Hughisen e ehtal iles off subtopian district that would Gaitskell has promised to figrtiine ue or Point Pelee, had to|°bliterate traditional ~boundar- the 9,000-line bill "line by line," climb along the rope when the\'*S of Jurisdiction. mainly because it proposes tolice prevented the boat from| dissolve the Labor-dominsted's.aching them. London County Council. Andy Telfer and Ronald The LCC now administers the yoodridge, both of Riverside, 28 municipal boroughs forming y >re able to step right into the London's middle ring. They sat from the lighthouse in cover 117 square miles an¢ ¥ Jee passage, 16 miles off contained everything the coun-| cil has consistentiy opposed and ALL DRUG STORES OPEN THIS SUNDAY DEC. 16th COMMERCIAL | FOOD MART | Canada's most complete food plan. Compare our food prices against all competition. FOR FURTHER DETAILS PHONE 728-7331 also WANTS HOSTEL NETWORK A Canada-wide system of tional secretary of the Cana- cost accommodation for youth hostels is the objective tional secretary of the youngsters visiting scenic and of Charles A. Harris, 52, of Canadian Youth Hostel Asso- . historic parts of the country. Toronto, newly-appointed na- ciation. Hostels provide low- --CP Photo 48 Percent Growth Predicted For ECM By GODFREY ANDERSON BRUSSELS (AP) -- The pain- ful. progress of Britain's slow- motion courtship of Europe will probably dominate 1963 far be- yond the six Common Market nations. Wherever businessmen meet in Britain or on the continent, the Brussels negotiations are a main talking - point. Will they succeed and when? If they fail, what next? Much else depends on their success. The entry of Denmark and Norway, for in- stance, the possible association of so-called neutrals -- Sweden, Switzerland and Austria-- maybe the later coming in of such nations as Israel and Spain. But Britain is the first big pill the Six must absorb if their present market of 170,000,000 is to expand to rival] the major trading blocs of East and West. Some, mainly the French, seem to be having trouble in getting it down. Meanwhile the uncertainy is bad for business -- in Britain. The Six -- France, West Ger- duction to the point where they|barriers. However, the outlook have healthy surpluses to ex-jis good, order books are well port. That' why they want tojfilled and production is siowly nail down a close-at-hand mar-|rising ~ Sak nea og 6 Industrial production in Hol- which wou ave built - In ad- " vantages over any Canadian or land went up 30 per cent, while Australian growers. |the national product rose 19 per West Germany's traditional|cent. Market membership has trading partners have been the resulted in a slight increase in other five who form the Com-|food prices, which were for- mon Market. Its two-way trade|merly lowest among the Six. with them showed a 10-per-cent|Wages _have been "raised to- 3,500,000 The inner core, the old city of London with boundaries dat- ing back to the Saxons, is gov- erned by a corporation with its own police force. As the iu- wards those prevailing in other member nations. Final figures for 1962 commu- nity trade are not yet available, but the trend is everywhere good. have a population of neariy } .amington. ORGANIST LILA TREDWELL Appearing Nightly GENOSHA HOTEL Seevict CLEANERS ond LAUNDERERS OSHAWA - PORT HOPE WHITBY - COBOURG BOWMANVILLE - SCARBORO Curtoins, Drapes, Blankets, Rugs OSHAWA'S ONLY UNIONIZED SHOP 723-4631 50 MILL jump in the first half of 1962. The gradual lowering of tariffs) --now 50 per cent below the} 1957 level on manufactured goods -- has brought more im-| ported items into German| |shops. But there have been a i\few spectacular price drops. ITALY BOOMING Italy has probably never had) it so good, despite a continuing) unemployment problem in the} south. Her. exports to her Com-| mon Market partners leaped 25) per cent in 1962, while her im- ports from them rose 20 per cent. This rate of increase may drop next year, but the general air in Rome is one of optimism. NOVEMBER 1962 TIED FOR FIRST Oshawa & District REAL ESTATE BOARD Salesmen of the Month! * gi eae fe Un" . ue » kee 7 ae many, Italy, Belgium, Holland) jar of Belgium's. exports go and little Luxembourg--go their|ty other Common Market pots booming way. tries, although exports to ou It is true their balance fo/siders fell off slightly in the face| trade deteriorated further injof keener competition and tariff the summer. Exports to non-| | member countries dropped a} | little. Imports continued to 7 } PLACE HENRY STINSON Schofield-Aker Ltd. Oshawe < JOE MAGA 1 ; Lloyd Metcalf Real | grow. But their experts say there is nothing to worry about. The economy is healthy and ex- panding, if at a slower rate. GROWTH FORECAST | An average growth of 4.8 per cent is still forecast for the Six| in the 1960 - 1970 decade. In-| u | creases in their gross national] FUN AT THE products are expected to give) OSHAWA FLYING an average community increase' of 59.1 per cent during the! CLUB'S ANNUAL | NEW YEAR'S DANCE same period. to be held A report prepared in Brussels by French economist Pierre Uri) ' MONDAY, DEC, 3! in the Recreation Hall || and a group of five other ex-| perts says the population of he! Oshawa Airport Lunch will be served Common 'Market area should) reach 175,000,000 by 1965. Em-| ployment should rise by seven) hots ..; horns... noisemakers Tickets at 10.00 per couple Available at AIRPORT OFFICE |) NOTHING YOU DISMAY One of a million carolers, And on Christmas Eve she will bring come fort, reassurance, joy to many. t fi Mrs. J. is blind. She has never seen the carolers ... but eagerly she aa for ood g 5 * pak wd ip listens for their arrival. spiritual values, Without a stron Mr. H. is an invalid. His nurse invites the boys and girls in and serves them cocoa. Mr. H. loves their happy smiles as well as their joyous voices, Little Paul R. broke his'leg last Saturday. That's why he's not caroling this year. But they'll be around to sing "Silent Night" under his window. That one is Paul's favorite. THE CHURCH FOR ALL... ALL FOR THE CHURCH The Church is the greatest factor on Estote Ltd., Oshawa SECOND PLACE TONY SIBLOCK L. S. Snelgrove Co. Ltd. Oshawa When you hear the carolers on Christmas Eve, pause and consider the Love that inspires their singing. That Love was born in a Bethlehem stable one holy night centuries ago, Tuesday Psalms 52:1-9 Monday Ephesians. §:11-20 Wednesday John 1:9-14 Thursday John 8:16-21 Friday Philippians 4:10-13 1902, Keister Adi tising Service, Inc., Va. JERRY COADY Urioh jones Reol Estete, Oshawa BILL HORNER Lloyd Realty Oshawa MILDRED BILIDA Metoey ey Estate HOUSTON'S SERVICE STATION AND GARAGE 67 King St. W. BROWN'S LUMBER AND SUPPLIES, LTD. 463 Ritson Rd. N. A. W. RUNDLE GARDEN CENTRE 725-1764 1016 King St. E 723-7822 725-4704 STAFFORD BROTHERS CEMETERY MEMORIALS MO 8-3552 318 Dundas St. E., Whitby JOHN BURTINSKY FLORIST Res. MO 8-5285 Store MO 8-3334 ROY W. NICHOLS 124 Dundas W., Whitby G.M, SALES & SERVICE 723-7242 Courtice It all looks healthy enough. What do the individual club the market as it now stands and é ' BRR her farmers have boosted. pro-iL_. SAWA, Ont. i i ' ied 70 King St, E, WHITE ROSE STATION 177 BOND STREET EAST CLEMENTS SUPERTEST STATIO! hag agai Baer 102 SIMCOE STREET NORTH : eer per cent and the 40-hour week is| , ates ta 00 Geo eam Come, tes TIED FOR GREAT : lub evenings coll 725-163) Hae IN nrance veeineeied about) . the | F ' : THIRD PLACE roughly half'the arable and in| OShawa Flying Club | SERVICE ST ATIONS THIS FEATURE IS CONTRIBUTED TO THE CAUSE OF THE CHURCH BY THE FOLLOWING | INTERESTED INDIVIDUALS AND BUSINESS ESTABLISHMENTS OPEN THIS SUNDAY | GENOSHA COFFEE SHOP. : 7:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. ONTARIO MOTOR SALES MEADES SUNOCO STATION 588 KING STRET EAST SILVER'S TEXACO STATION 83 RITSON ROAD SOUTH LAWLESS SHELL STATION 'ee ad | : 227 SIMCOE STREET SOUTH be? be. ; ATTEND THE CHURCH OF YOUR CHOICE STATHAM'S ESSO STATION R i i i igi i Gente tame Me cutree KtaaNTs ead The Oshawa Times Church Announcements for Times of Services and Religious Activities

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