Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 30 May 1963, p. 1

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THOUGHT FoR fopaY It used to be considered a sin _ to be rich,\but with today's taxes it's a miracle. Se ~-- She Oshawa Cure . Mainly clear temperature. WEATHER REPORT tonight: Friday sunny, not much change in Not Over OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1963 Authorized os Second Class Mail Post Office Payment of Ottawa and for Postage in Cash. TWENTY-SIX PAGES VOL. 92--NO. 127 10 Cents Per Copy B i | D fi i t OTTAWA (CP)--Another bigjallocated under special gover- federal budget deficit appears|nor-general's warrants for April certain in the light of the rec-jand May. ord-high spending program of| Friday the government will new Liberal government. ask Parliament for an interim $400 MILLION FUND Spending estimates totalling $6,545,504,515 for the current fis- cal year begun April 1--more than $300,000,000 higher than ' \last' year--were presented in | |nance Mi 6,000-MILE VOYAGE Jack Wheeler, 45, and his with pennant family sailéd into San Fran- Wheeler was -transferred by t the Weather Bureau from cisco Bay yesterday complet- pit to Alameda, Calif. From ing a 6,000-mile voyage from left are Sharon, 7; Steve, 3; Truk in Western Pacific: in Wheeler; Linda, 5, and Mrs. their 48-foot ketch, Poseidon Leah Wheeler. The Poseidon High point of their trip was has been their home intermit- week stopover, at Midway where they were presented built. they hold. (AP Wirephoto) Alberta Expects Severe Drought MEDICINE HAT, Alta, (CP), Ranchers say the cu rrent Farmers and ranchesr in the|drought, now in its third year, parched south-eastern corner of|has left only patches of under Alberta fear they face ore of|nourished grass in pastures and the most severe droughts in/has.-dried out top soil to the memory extent that the black earth is Tanned by a burning sun'being blown into drifts which also has dehydrated fields) 'The business community cer- and pastures rancher Lance tainly has felt the impact,"' said Brown said Wednesday thej/bank. manager Wally _ Hayne, drought may be as cruel as president of the Medicine Hat those of the 1930s. Chamber of Commerce. "It's "I'm working on the theory,very serious considering this is that one of the driest periods|the third year in succession 'we ever experienced on the Prai-|have experienced drought con- ries is coming up," said Mr. /ditions.' Brown in an 'interview in the} Added rancher Henry Cavan: jeisurely, air - conditioned Cy-|'It's extreme -- probably the press Club, a hangout for own-| worst period I've known. tently since 1959 when it was | s Wednesday by Fi- ster Walter Gordon. He offered hope that some trimming may be done on this basic spending plan, most of which was prepared by the for- mer Progressive Conservative | government But unforeseen costs as the year progresses, plus imple- |mentation of the government's |planned legislative twill add many mi} |outlays that Mr. Gordon must lconsider when he presents his |the Comm 11963-64 budget speech, expected lin mid-June. |EXPECT INCENTIVES | A $570,000,000 deficit for 1962- 163 was forecast last Oct. 22 by Mr. Gordon's Conservative pre- decessor, George Nowlan. Mr. Gordon has said his eventual goal is a balanced budget, though not necessarily in one or even two years,- and it is anti- cipated his next budget will con- tain some industrial tax incen- tives that will affect revenues. | So-called uncontrollable costs such as hospital insurance and lother welfare measures, public |debt charges and shipbuilding lsubsidies, together with pay lraises for government employ- ees, were mainly behind the 5.1- per-cent rise in the spending es- timates. The estimates compare with $6,229,169,134 in 1962-63 esti- jmates presented to the las |Parliament but never approved. | A forecast $755,000,000 in old lage pension payments, which aren't included in Wednesday's money vote to cover June and July bills,,pending approval of the complete estimates. The great bulk of the new spending program was prepared and printed before the former Conservative government left joffice and Mr. Gordon: reserved the right to reduce the appro- priations before seeking Parlia- }ment's approval of them. | An economy study by the cab- inet's treasury board would take |"'some months to complete," he jsaid Mr low up the cost-saving efforts begun by the Conservative gov- jernment. He also suggested ac- |tion to validate last year's esti- jmates which were never ap- proved. Mr. Gordon made no ;comment on this. NEED MORE MONEY | Unforeseen expenditures have always required governments to come back to Parliament for extra appropriations which, in recent years, have ranged from $120,000,000: to $280,000,000, | As well, |have yet been requested for a jnumber of the government's an- nounced programs such as -in- jcreased aid for technical and |vocational training -- already jcosting $156,649,000 -- establish- jment of a new department of jindustry and two new economic jagencies, and a $100,000,000 cap- jital fund for the Atlantic De- velopment Board. Biggest single increase an- nounced Wednesday was a $92,- 827,600 jump in the cost of jcarrying the national debt. The new estimate of this cost, $881,- | Nowlan, comnienting inj measures,|the Commons after Mr. Gordon| ; . llions. to the!spoke, said he hoped the new} Liberal government would fol-| no appropriations} 008,900, isn't precise since it doesn't reflect current borrow- ing costs which are lower than ptior to leaving for the Vati- can to examine the ailing Pontiff. Dr. Gasbarrini lives in Bologna, The Pope, 81, was near death two days ago. The DR. ANTONIO GASBAR- RINI, main personal physi- cian of Pope John XXIII, gestures as he is questioned by newsmen in Rome today Pope Reported TORONTO (CP)--The federal government's $400,000/000 mu- nicipal development and loan fund will be used for a broad, frontal ment. Prime Minister Pearson told 800 delegates to a municipal convention here Wednesday night he-hopes the fund's re- sources will be taken up quickly, and that the fund should be op- erating within a few weeks. The fund will be used by the federal government to buy mu- nicipal debentures for loca] pub- lic works projects approved by the provinces, Without specify- ing interest rates, Mr. Pearson said the federal government will #4 |be generous, even to the extent : of foregoing some repayment of ; |principal if the municipal proj- ects are completed quickly. Mr. Pearson did not spell out details since legislation is only in its preliminary stage in the House of Commons. It was un- derstood, however, that an. at- tempt jill be made to empha- size projects that can be under- taken ckly and which will consume relatively high vol- ume of manual labor. Long-range development proj- ects using more brain than brawn will be treated less fav- Vatican today said his/condi- tion has improved and that his hemorrhages had ceased for the' present. --AP Wirephoto via cable from Rome Better economy. attack on unemploy- orably. It is to be a spark for employment, as a means of put- ting new life into the Canadian Mr, Pearson was cheered and FOR MUNICIPAL AID Fund Expected To Aid Jobless the municipalities are creatures of the provinces. "It is the provinces, not the federal government, which must provide the (sanction as to what 2 nicipalities do, or do not do. The aid We are prepared to extend to municipalities for spe- cific projects will be--and cai be--given only if the provincial government has approved the project and approved of the municipalities selling debens tures to the federal government to assist in financing the proj- ect. The prime minister, who flew to Toronto for the dessert course of the convention banquet and to deliver his 30-minute speech before returning directly to Ot awa, also declared his governs ment has no intention of dis- continuing any of the municipal aid programs of the former Con. servative government. He said they were sound and worked well. Some might be ene larged, and his government is working on further assistance to housing and urban renewal and development, which is part of the Liberal party's program for the current Parliament. Before his arrival, the federa- tion had cailed for a revision of the British North America Act to clarify the relationship of various levels of government. ers of large ranches. At 76, the oldest white child!pydgetary estimates, would The temperature outdoors injborn in Medicine Hat area, he/pysh total spending to $7,300,- highest this year. keeps 600 head of cattle. It is | the "most intensive drought" he Osh W k He sent some of his livestock awa or er to the British Block, a 1,000,000- | 4 | government which last year was| 1es n 1S ap jconverted to an emergency grazing area. Approximately At G 'worst in the memory of white worker, Edward Cieslik, of| District agriculturist Jack An- 156% Olive avenue, was killed|derson did not paint as bleak a when a truck backed over him.|to fall before June 10 if it will The deceased was an em-|do any good to the grain crops. the shade was 87 degrees, the|runs two ranches on which he/504,515, Last year's comparable recorded | has experienced. | lacre strip owned by the federal 5,000 head have been sent there. A 38 - year - old construction|men here," said Mr, Cavan. in Oshawa Wednesday afternoon'picture, but said rain will have ployee of Piggott Construction "It doesn't look too good. but to the General Motors chassis|ter. The trouble is that we sim- plant. He had worked for this|ply have had too much hot company since last November.) weather." Police say the truck, owned| The drought in this area of by Beatty Haulage of Oshawa,| Alberta is concentrated in a cir- was driven by Olin M. Wright,|cle, with Medicine Hat its cen- 29, of 110 Albert street tre, of about 200 miles in dia- Mr. Cieslik leaves his wife and, meter four children y came to Can- ada from Poland two years ago YOU'LL FIND INSIDE... He was born in Poland August Houdaille Workers Pledge 20, 1924 and married the former Adelaide Rokita there in 1947 Mr. Cieslik was a member of St. Hedwig's Roman Catholic Church "This dry spell could be the) total was $6,964,524,470. It likely will be some time before the Commons gets around to debate on the full spending program. Already some $550,000,000 of it has been Bay Of Bengal 'Cyclone Kills 500 Persons | DECCA, East Pakistan (Reut- ers)--Between 400 and 500 per-| and was working on the additionjif we get rain it could be bet- sons were bélieved to have died| the in a cyclone that struck Wed- Bay of Bengal coastline nesday, the governor, of East) Pakistan said here today The governor said one seaside resort and many offshore is- lands' struck by the season's lfirst cyclone still were cut off and there was no way of know- ing the exact extent of damage. The East Pakistan govern- ment immediately sanctioned 200,000 rupees ($42,000) for im, mediate relief The governor, Abdul Monem Kha, said 85 per cent of the when the figure was struck late last year. About one - quarter of the spending budget goes to de- fence, up $38,083,363 to $1,628,- 833,538, This includes $38,000,000 of the extra $65,000,000 listed in} the finance department budget for pay increases. The defence budget has $7,- 000,000 for nuclear "facilities" jsuch as storage dumps, in line jwith the government's decision jto acquire nuclear warheads, \plus a $6,400,000 start on a $374,- eight frigates. ewig naval program to build | Viously. VATICAN 'CITY -- The Vati-; can today reported further im-| provement in the condition bal Pope John and said his hem-| orrhages had ceased for the present. A communique, although carefully worded, emphasized a new optimism at the Vatican concerning the 81-year-old, Ro- man Catholic ruler, who had been near death 48 hours pre- | The communique said treat- INFORMAL NOTICE OTTAWA (CP)--Canada has jreceived "informal" notice that \the United States government intends to make some proposal "bout stationing more U.S. squadrons in this country, De- fence Minister Paul Hellyer said U.S. To Propose Jets In Canada He is survived by his wife, $17,563 To Arena .. Page 13 | mud-and-cane houses in which dor, and a detachment of inter-| ceptors at Harmon Field, Nfld.} They are not armed with nu-} clear weapons, | A request similar to that ex- pected now from Washington was made by the U.S, during the Cuba crisis last fall, It was 'Constitution Of Iron ment. of hemorrhages, provokeditinues showing improvement, by a stomach tumor, had pro-| Vatican sources said. duced good results "thanks to} That statement indicated op- the strong fibre of the august/timism. But it also pointed to patient." | Pope John had two medical)10 days might be crucial, with examinations today: His usual|jthe threat of new hemorrhag- one at 8:30 a.m. by his Romeling still present. physician, Dr, Piero Mazzoni,| Vatican sources said .the doc- and a second one by his main|tors spoke today of renewed personal physician, Dr, Antonio|color in Pope John's face and Gasbarrini, who lives in. Bo-jexpressed the hope that he logna. |would gain strength little by lit- Gasbarrini was summoned ur-| tle in coming days. He was un- gently Sunday but packed his/derstood to be receiving nour- bags to return home today, The|ishment by artificial means. Vatican said his visit to the! However, even though the at- Pope was a farewell one. mosphere in the Vatican was Before seeing the Pope, Gas-|calmer, the sources made no at- barrini said the Pontiff's "'con-|tempt to minimize his illness stitution of iron joined with his|and held out no hope of ulti- will of iron are a good sign."| mate recovery. Gasbariini said he and Maz-| They said the Pope had a zoni and the Pope's surgeon,|"heart like a horse" and might Pietro Valdoni, "believe the|be able to hold out for a month. Pope will rally." His stomach tumor, said to be BLEEDING STOPS about a year old, was revealed The Vatican's noon eoinmuni:|*° the world only two days ago. the fact that the next week or) applauded by the Federation of Mayors and Municipalities when he mentiqned the sum of $400,- 000,000, although the amount was previously announced, He got another cheer from the mu- nicipal leaders when he urged them virtually to "come and get it." "An important part of our ob- jective is to encourage immedi- ate increases in employment," he said. "Indeed we-hope that munic- ipalities will begin to take ad- vantage of the program in the next few months so that there will be as many new jobs as possible this winter. I hope you are getting your additional proj- ects ready. We will be as anxi- ous as you that they should move off smartly, if Parliament gives the green light." Mr. Pearson said the new fund would be an additional source of municipal financing. It is not to compete with or to replace existing sources of fi- nance. Moreover, it will work within the constitutional concept that SIU Port Agent Shot In Back In Vancouver VANCOUVER (CP)--Rod Hel- nekey, Vancouver port agent of the Seafarers International Un- ion (Ind.), was shot in the back early today by a shotgun. He was treated in hospital for minor wounds and released. Police in neighboring Burm aby said Heinekey left his house around midnight to put his car in the carport. He saw the sil- houette of a man raising the gun behind the car and slumped down behind the seat. The gunman fired through the back window, shattering the glass, Some pellets penetrated the seat and wounded the port agent. 'Police said the gunman ap- parently hid in some bushes. The SIU: has been involved in disputes on the west coast with the Canadian Brotherhood of é pap ; _|. The Rome newspaper Il Mes- que, folowing 2 morning state saggero declared "this dlagne cellent night with perfect rest," 'ee -- aoe ago, had never said: een officially revealed to him "Further signs of improve- until now. ment ascertained yesterday, The Pope long has been rum- and which arejored to have cancer but this Railway, Transport and Gen- eral Workers (CLC) and on the Great Lakes with the Canadian Maritime Union (CLC), The Seafarers' Union, headed in Canada by Hal C.'Banks, has been embroiled in a federal in- Canada Approves Air Fares Boost OTTAWA (CP)--Canada has three daughters, Helen, Sophie and Stella and a son, Edward,} a'l at home; a sister, Mrs. John Balko (Sella) of Oshawa and a brother, Zigmund, of Poland. The body is at the Armstrong Funeral Home, High Requiem Mass will be sung at St. Hed- wig's' RC church Saturday, June} 1 at 10 a.m. by Rev. A. Bagsik.| Interment will be in St. Greg-|. ory's Roman Catholic Cemetery. | Separate School Board Lets 3 Contracts .. Page 13 Union Elects Education Comimittee Page 13 Injured Child Said Improving ... Page 3 Will To Live Factor In Longevity . Page 13 Red Marshal Demoted In Fresh Spy Scandal testified in a trial early this month, Penkovsky passed on 5,000 photographs of secret doc- MOSCOW (AP)--The scandal of a Western spy in the Soviet secret archives broké out anew today with the demotion of ajuments to British and U.S. in- former artillery marsha! and telligence. For that crime Pen- new attacks on the British ané«ovsky was shot May 16. U.S. embassies. A British businessman, Gre- Sergey Sergeawich Varentsov,|Ville Wynne, 44, was sentenced 62. Soviet marshal of artillery|to eight years' confinement for until 1961, was reduced in rank helping deliver the espionage for having opposed separation material of 'executed former Col. Oleg The arinouncement of punish- Penkovsky from the army and ment for those involved one way for pushing him into a job in/OT another with Penkovsky was the state committee on co-ordin- made " oo ag agoegiaet news- P secientific researc paper zyvesiia in an terview . th a were soxiawatt with the prosecutor at the trial ARE DEMOTED The prosecutor, Lt.-Gen. Ar tem Gorny, said the marshal was reduced in rank and Maj.- Gen. A. Pozovny, Col. V. Buzi- nov and punished. The nature of the punishment and demotion was not given Western CITY EMERGENCY PHONE. NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 embassies, particu and others were demoted! llarly British and U.S., were ac-} in the Commons Wednesday. | However, no official communi- cation has been received, he said in reply to Hon. Marcel Lambert (PC -- Edmonton West). Mr. Hellyer noted that the) government plans a thorough) review of defence policy in which questions of North Amer- ican air defence would have-a place. Earlier, Prime ister Pear-| son had told a reporter: "I }would be very surprised if such la proposal were on the way." Mr. Pearson was in the Com- }mons when Mr. Hellyer replied ie M.r Lambert, | thousands of persons lived were idestroyed or damaged. Khan spoke to reporters after returning from a three-hour fly- ing visit to Chittagong on the Bay of Bengal. Khan said damage might "far exceed" that of the 1961 cyclone 'and: tidal-wave in which about} 900,000 homes were damaged or} destroyed, The death toll then was more than 14,000. Mr. Hellyer, also talking to a) reporter earlier, said he was un-} aware of the exact nature of! ithe U.S.. proposal, adding: "I would have to see on what basis cused again of espionage, an (Wednesday) steadily being accentuated were tives, then in office. noted at 8:30 a.m. in the daily When the Liberals were injvisit. The hemorrhages which power before the 1957 election,|in the previous days caused con- they resisted any deployment of/cern have now ceased. American interceptors on Cana-| "The substitute therapy, dian bases. Goose and Harmon/thanks to the strong fibre of the turned down by. the Conserva- has not been stated officially. "The constitution of John XXIII is still resisting the dis- ease," Il Messaggero added, "but it is a question of how long it can continue to do so." The paper reported "a little relief," saying "the Pope is im- proved but alarm has not been dispersed because it is known how serious the illness is. tic air fares but has served no- be going down--not up. The Air Transport Board has given a reluctant blessing to a compromise deal on the Atlan- day in Montreal by the Interna- tional Air Transport Associa- tion. approved a boost in transatlan- tice that it believes they should tic fare dispute, settled last Fri- vestigation of labor strife and shipping disruptions on the Great Lakes. The report on this investigation is expected any day now from the one-man come mission of inquiry, Mr. Justice T..G. Norris. The seven-month Norris ine quiry collected evidence on @ series of violent incidents on the waterfront, both on the lakes and on the west coast. , ked rally." Gasbarrini said the Pope was in good humor and serene and United States | Vatican Palace and he also re- PHILADELPHIA (AP)|ceived communion this morn- Picket line violence in this city,)!"8. are U.S. bases. august patient,has produced |that there had been no hem- orrhages since Wednesday: prompted by Negroes' demands| One of his doctors said Wed- for the right to join labor un-|nesday night that the Pope activity which Soviet it is made and what is involved almost never admit. |about it." | Gorny said British and U.S!" phe U.S. has an interceptor| intelligence services '"'use for oose for their espionage activities squadron uG Bay, neni members of various delegations, | scientists, businesmren, cultural} figures, students and_ tourists who come to our country." Gorny mentioned 12 British and U.S. embassy staff mem- bers who had been named, in T connection with the case. All have left the Soviet Union Suicides Planned | By Buddhist Monks SAIGON, Viet Nam (AP)-- wo South Vietnamese Buddhist) monks have volunteered to com-| : ' mit suicide to dramatize de- Gorny conceded that "Penkov- mands for more religious free-| sky handed 'over to U.S. and! qom British intelligence important in-| Rey, Thien Minh said Wednes- jformation, a part of which con-\day the Viet Nam Buddhist As-| stituted a U.S.S.R state secret.' cociation was studying the offer| He insisted it "could not deal|but had not yet decided whether any serious damage to the de-|to accept it H fence potentiality. of the Soviet} The Buddhists, who' make up Union." He said Penkovsky about 80 per cent of the popula-| managed to get some informa- tion, claim the government un- tion on old rockets while he still\der Roman Catholic Premier} was in the army, and passed it\Ngo Din Diem discriminates on to Western agents. lagainst them. : officials! before expressing an 'opinion|ail across the northern United Ition barriers in other cities. good results, 'and the general s Race Violence Mass was celebrated in} the ions, may have spawned a vem be able to get out of bed condition has indicated a mar- |study adjoining his bedroom at assault on segregation barriers|in a week or 10 days if he con- States. Demonstrations which started peaceably two weeks ago with} a sitin in the mayor's office| erupted into violence for the! second time Wednesday. Urged By Group | TORONTO (CP)--The County Ten persons were hurt asjof York law association recom- pickets, laborers and _ police}mended Wednesday night that a clashed at the north Philadel-|royal commission be set up to phia site of a $6,000,000 schoollinvestigate the existing system project. if of legal aid in Ontario. - The National Assoriation for! The association's legal aid the Advancement of Colored committee, which began a study People, prime mover in the lo-jof the. problem three months cal demonstrations, has charged|ago, said in a report to the labor unions with failing to hire! group's spring meeting that law- non-white skilled workers. The) yers have a "duty to provide the unions have denied it. best possible system of legal After Wednesday's outbreak| aid." during which massed police} Should a royal commission faced as many as 500 pickets,/find that the public would be national officers of the NAACP|best served by a different sys- wired support of local leaders|tem, '"'we hope that the lawyers and promised an all-out effort/of this country will lend their | to the recommenda- 'Legal Aid Inquiry || A demonstration ' against Jackson .racial policy ends into paddy wagon shortly after noon Wednesday. They to break down labor segrega-|support |tions," the report said. with bi-racial group being put were arrested for "parading 1 DEMONSTRATION ENDS without a permit." Jackson police Capt. J. L. Ray (ex- treme right) led arrests. | | \f

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