INTERPRETING THE NEWS Home Can Thank Labor Party Bill -- 2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, October 24, 1963 | RULE CHANGES SOUGHT. GOOD EVENING Committee To Probe By JACK GEARIN REGINALD STEWART TO PERFORM HERE There is no doubt about one thing -- Oshawa needs a good shot in the arm culture-wise. This is not the fault of a gallant little band of local culture-lovers who never appear to be discouraged, despite disheartening re- verses at the box-office in bygone years. These are the supporters of the Canadian Concert As- , sociation of Oshawa, who are conducting their 1963-64 mem- bership campaign this week (adults' subscriptions -- $6 for four concerts; students-- $3 for four concerts). The opening concert No- vember 25 (all concerts will be in the R. S. McLaughlin Auditorium) will feature Reg- inald Stewart, internationally acclaimed concert pianist and former conductor of the Tor- onto Philharmonic orches- tra. Mr. Stewart is head of cretion ay cvalsinaie the piano faculty at the Uni- versity of Southern California. The Canadian Opera Company will present Strauss' '"'Die Fledermaus" next April 4. Tickets can be bought at Wilson and Lee Music Store Thursday and Friday 4-6 p.m., and all day Saturday. NO EASY SOLUTION TO AIR POLLUTION Remember Mrs. Hubert Boorman, of 22 Frank street? She spearheaded the anti-Air Pollution drive in her dis- trict last summer. Her special target was the Robson Leather Co. Ltd.; like most tanneries, the company occasionally irked nearby resi- dents by permitting offensive odors to emanate from its premises. Mrs. Boorman took up a petition, badgered Coun- cil, several of whose members later made personal visits to the area. Mrs. Boorman turned up at Council again Monday night, but this time in an altogether different role. She did not come to badger Council or the company. She came to praise them for the completely changed picture -- atmospherically- speaking -- down Whiting avenue way. It was a complete change of pace, a gracious act of good citizenship on Mrs. Boorman's part. It was also a worthy tribute to the company which has instituted several important improvements of late to improve, if not altogether remedy, the situation. Mayor Lyman Gifford was quick to thank Mrs. Boorman. He did not forget to speak a few well-deserved words 2f praise for the company, which certainly set a good example for other local companies to follow. There was one thing wrong with the over-all performance in Council; the impression seemed to be created, quite erron- 'eously, that the City's Air Pollution problems had all been solved by two such displays of good citizenship. Such progress is only a scratch in the bucket, affects but one small locality. No elected representative stood up to re- mind the public that the Whiting avenue problem represented by an infinitesimal part of Oshawa's over-all Air Pollution problem. No member of Council's Air Pollution committee reported on recent meetings held with Brad Drowley, acting Control pane Air Pollution branch, Department of Health, Queen's ar' Much pessimism persists @n Council regarding the effec- tiveness of the proposed A-P bylaw, which has been gathering dust in the City Hall archives for more than two years, Some councillors claim that such a bylaw could not have teeth, that big industry would openly flout it. They want the provincial government to carry the ball alone, which represents buck- passing at its best. Such pessimism is understandable to a degree but it shouid not be allowed to permeate a municipal council so much that the Council fence-sits for two years on an important issue. Metro'Toronto has displayed good leadership in the A-P fight by instituting such legislation at the municipal level. Oshawa should do likewise. This much is conceded -- Air Pollution is one of the most serious problems confronting this continent today. It will not be solved, even partially, overnight or by half-hearted legis- lation. It will never be solved by elected representatives who too-quickly adopt a defeatist spirit. Let's tackle it at the Municipal level first. If this fails, we can turn our sights on Queen's Park, which, too, has been dilatory in not imple- menting 'the 1957 recommendations of an A-P committee for the establishment of a commission to handle the problem. GM PRESIDENT LAUDS CITY FIREMEN A serious fire at GM, Oshawa, would undoubtedly repre- sent a serious blow to this City's economy. Therefore, it was with a sense of gratitude and relief that many received the message contained in last week's congratulatory letter sent to Fire Chief Ray Hobbs by Mr. E. H. Walker, president of General Motors of Canada. Mr. Walker paid tribute to the speed and efficiency dis- played by the 50-odd members of the Oshawa Department in last Wednesday's blaze at the South GM Plant. The fire was controlled in approximately one hour, but it could have easily gone the other way. It could have caused serious un- OTTAWA (CP) -- Having|pert witnesses and file interim |passed three items of legisla-|reports to the House. : \tion in the 18 working days siace| It starts with one _ strike of Commons Wednesday set up|mittees set up im recent years a committee to propose ways of/failed to agree on most of the making -it more efficient. propos.ls they discussed. Although all parties endorsed| Today the Commons resumes creation of a 15-member special ittee h ded Sr 1 Alan Macnaughton, they took different approaches to the is- sue of streamlining the ancient June 13 budget. nesday when preliminaries took the session resumed, the Houselagainst it, since similar com- debate on amendments to the income tax act arising from the The present legislative pace was demonstrated clearly Wed- Commons Efficiency jup two hours, leaving only 90 jminutes for study of govern- ithent legislation--in this case Mr. Pearson's motion for the procedure committee, | Prime Minister Pearson sug- |gested question periods be lim- ite to 30 minutes except on spe- cial occasions; that set periods be allocated for study of par- \ticular bills, and that the House sit beyond the normal 10 p.m. adjournment to clean up unifin- ished business. rules of parliamentary proce-| dure. | Prime Minister Pearson and Social Credit Leader Thompson said far-reaching rule changes| are needed to speed up the par-| liamentary machinery and boost) | Opposition Leader Diefen-| |baker |Leader Douglas agreed that the/pnurovic, developer of the con- |Commons wastes considerable) ltime. But they warned agains: changes that would turn | pend : 1]-|biozen has. been sold to doctors) powerful cabinet at the expensejin Canada with the approval of) | over more control to the a of the historic rights of MPs. The new committee, |members will be named later, jwill be empowered to call ex- Police Jolted As Tito Takes Quick Tour NEW YORK (AP)--President |Tito of Yugoslavia made a spur- lof-the-moment sightseeing trip linto New York state Wednes- day that had New York City po- lice scrambling outside their own bailiwick to ensure his pro- tection. Anti-Tito demonstrators have jharassed the Communist leader on several occasions. | A private recreational area, | Sterling Forest, was selected. It is near Tuxedo Park in Orange |County, about 60 miles north of |New York. | Tito, carrying a camera like jany tourist, left his Waldorf-As- \toria Hotel headquarters in a large green Cadillac, Ahead and behind him in a 16-car motor- cade were. city detectives and|through the line and picked up| and worthless |New York police radio cars,|hamburger steaks and french agent. |Leading the way, and blocking off highway entrances for his passage, were eight city motor- cycle policemen. So impromptu was the junket that no formal arrangements were made to feed Tito when) fie and his party reached the whose \troversial cancer drug, Krebio- \zen, said Wednesday that Kre- the Canadian government. Durovic, in reply to an Ameri- can Medical Association state- ment that Krebiozen had been }sold for use despite a U.S. gov- emment ban, cited what he said was a Canadian government clearance of Oct. 6, 1954. The AMA statement referred to a U.S, government ban on sales of the drug under the Bio- logical Control Act. Under the provision of this act Krebiozen REAPPOINT PREMIER TEHERAN, Iran (Reuters)-- Assadollah Alam was reap- pointed premier by Shah Mo- hammed-Beza Pahlevi Monday 'and invited to form a new gov- lernment. He is due to present his cabinet to the shah Tuesday, announce his program to a Parliament elected last month and seek a vote of confidence. \Iran had been without a Par- Canada Okayed te pubic image ofthe sweat) Toy Cy Sale ag MD and New Democratic) CHICAGO (AP) -- Dr. Stevan,could once be distributed for ex- perimental purposes but not sold since the laboratory which pro- duced it was mot federally li- censed. | Durovic made no mention in| his reply of the. U.S, govern-| }ment sales ban. Both ihe reported sale of Kre- biozen in Canada, Canadian gov- ernment clearance and the sales ban under the U.S. Biological Control Act predate a more re- cent federal ban on U.S. inter- |state shipment of Krebiozen. STOPS U.S. USE Interstate shipment was pro- hibited in July because Durovic failez. to comply with federal| regulations regarding the dis-| tribution of experimental drugs.| This latest ban -has effectively stopped the use of Krebiozen everywhere in the U.S. but in| Illinois where it, is manufac-| tured. Ban of the drug is under| study here. Durovic and Dr. Andrew Ivy, | the drug's principal sponsor,} have denied that Krebiozen was ever sold in the United States, | They have depended largely on} contributions to support the) \liament since May, 1961, when|drug the doctors say. ithe shah dissolved it on grounds} previous elections "free and fair." reereational cafeteria there, wife carried their own tray: area. But at a Tito and his fries. Tito snapped a number of photographs. Cn the return trip to the ho- tel, a New York police helicop- ter hovered over the Tito motor- cade and traffic was cleared from the roadway. WEATHER FORECAST Forecast issued by the Tor- onto weather office at 5 a.m.: | Synopsis: More record max- imum temperatures are ex- |pected throughout Ontario to- day. A weak disturbance is moving northeastward and will cause some cloudiness in north- ern areas today and Friday. |Eisewhere warm dry, mainly sunny weather will continue. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, |Lake Huron, Niagara, Lake On- \tario, Georgian Bay, Haliburton, | Windsor, London, Hamilton, | Toronto: Mainly sunny and con- | tinuing warm Friday. Winds Sudb south 15 Friday. : Algoma, White River, Tima- gami, North Bay, Sudbury, |Sault Ste. Marie: Friday sunny |with cloudy periods and ccntinu- ing warm, winds south 15. | Cochrane: Variable cloudi- iness with a few scattered show- jers tonight and Friday, not so \warm Friday. Winds becoming westerly 15 Friday. | Forecast Temperatures | Low tonight, high Friday. Windsor .....-6++. 55 St. Thomas A Warm And Dry Today, Friday employment. Mr. Walker's letter pointed damage was "'relatively small. but those $1,000,000 Toronto scare-headlines on were away off beat. |the department's food and dru; Order Product |directorate, ssid the poisonous Off Market As Boy Dies -- MONTREAL (CP)--The fed- eral health department has or- dered a Montreal food products firm to remove all cans of its liver paste from the market fol- lowing the death of a teen-ager here who suffered food poison- ing. Jean Paquette, 17, died last Saturday after consuming Para- gon brand liver paste manufac- tured by Delicious Food Prod- ucts Limited. His 15-year-old brother Raymond was also stricken but was reported "'pro- gressing favorably" at Royal Victoria Hospital. The health department re- ported Wednesday night the death was linked to a poisonous substance in the paste and the London . out another important fact -- | Kitchener " He didn't say as much, the' story St. Catharines..... TOrOnto ..-ssee00+ Peterborough ..... FENtON ..sccescees Killal seeeeeeeres substance found in the can causes a disease known as botu- sm. The younger brother in the Taquette family was inoculated with anti-botulism serum. In Detroit last March two women died of the disease after consuming canned tuna. Three In A Bed Costs Two Years TORONTO (CP)--A. man who got into bed with a woman while her husband was sleeping next to her was sent to reforma- tory for two years less a day Tuesday. William Porte, 32, pleaded guilty to a charge of indecent assault. The court was told the woman awoke to find a strange man in bed with her. She poked her hus- band, who told her she was Sault Ste. Marie... Your Original CARPET CENTRE Over 50 Rolls of Cerpet on Display Select from the largest display east of Toronto. N-I-R-C LICENSED CARPET CLEANING 728-4681 NU-WAY company has been ordered to recall all cans on store shelves or in stockrooms. Housewives across Canada) were warned to check their cup-| boards for the cans. -- | Dr. C, A. Morell, director af| dreaming and went back to sleep. Minutes later the woman screamed. Her husband jumped out of bed as the man fled, es- caping over a back fence. He was arrested the next day, RUG. CO. LTD. Expert Upholstering 174 Mary Street Kapuskasing ...... White River.. Moosonee . Timmins .. Observed Temperatures Low overnight, High Wed Dawson . 26 3 Victoria Edmonton ... Regina ... Winnipeg ... Lakehead .... {White River . \S.S. Marie \Kapuskasing North Bay . S ury' .. Muskoka . |Windsor .. | London /Toronto .. | Killaloe |Ottawa .. {Montreal ..... Quebec \Halifax .... 48 26 36 54 oo 52 - 54 - 53 | from jitime unions under public trus-| Durovic says it costs him of the drug. The federal govern- jment in its most recent ap- praisail of the drug says it is an inexpensive and common as a cancer| K William Pomerantz -- and Martin F. Brecker wore their widest smiles after Mrs. Rhoda Brecker gave birth to quadruplets, three girls and a boy, Wednesday night at New York's Columbia Presbyterian WIFE HAS QUADS By JOSEPH MacSWEEN Canadian Press Staff Writer In one sense Britain's new prime minister, a dyed-in-the- wool Tory if ever there was one, owes the prime ministership io a former Labor peer. Prime Minister Sir Alec Doug- las-Home is able to disclaim his titles and make himself eligible for the House of Commons thanks t0 a peerage bill passed at the last session of Parliament after a long fight by Anthony Wedgwood Benn. Stansgate 10 years ago on the death of his father, The change interrupted a promising Com- mons career and Benn was tagged the 'reluctant peer'--he himself favored "persistent commoner," _ Benn, of course, was not the first man to try to avoid the perrage--and thereby an- other irony in a chronicle filled with oddities, Viscount Hailsham, who turned out to be one of Sir Alec's main rivals for the Although British premiers of the past have sat in the House of Lords, the overwhelming opinion is that it could not happen today because all real power has been trans- ferred to the House of Com- mons, It is just about unanimous that former Prime Minister Macmillan would never have recommended Sir Alec unless there was a procedure for him to enter the Commons. As one' left-wing commentator, Kings- ley Martin, puts it: "Ironically enough, Benn ig personally responsible for mak ing Home prime minister, for even Macmillan could not have selected a member of the House Hospital. Pomerantz is Mrs. Brecker's father. The Breck- ers live in Rego Park in Queensborough, and the pic- ture was made at his home. --AP Wirephoto OTTAWA (CP)--Erik Nielsen PC--Yukon) proposed Wednes- day that the Commons commit- tee on privileges investigate his contention that Postmaster-Gen- eral Denis and State Secretary Pickersgill misled Parliamen' in denying the existence of a document. "I feel their denials are false," Mr. Nielsen said refer- ring to statements by the min- isters Oct. 16 that there was no list of consultants prepared by Mr. Denis for cabinet ministers' " were not!$9.50 to produce each small vial|Suidance. Opposition MPs have alleged the list includes names: of de- feated Liberal candidates. Mr. Nielsen coupled the Oct. s|body chemical called creotine|16 denials with statements by Commons said, Mr. Denis in the Tuesday night which, he s Red Cros s Gets Seafarers Blood TORONTO (CP)--Members ol the Seafarers International pn-| ion in Toronto 'voted overwheha-| their ships in prot ment's legislation putting mar-) | teeship. The SIU's Toronto agent, Wil- liam Glasgow, vote that the 14 ships tied up} here will not be picketed. be-| cause the men do not consider) the walkout a strike. He said| the seamen "have just decided to stay ashore." Before the men raised their hands to vote, Mr. Glasgow out-| lined the situation and as he ond ished a seaman, Fred Garno, grabbed the microphone and yelled: 'The government is trying to get our blood. I move that we give it to the Red Cross right away--and to hell with the gov- ernment." EYE EXAMINATIONS PHONE 723-4191 by appointment F. R. BLACK, O.D. 136 SIMCOE ST. NORTH (The Canadian Press erro neously reported Mr. Glasgow as saying to the meeting ,"let's jtell the government to go to) ingly Wednesday to stay @W3yY\hell" and proposing that the) Toronto union members go toj jagainst the federal goverh-\the Red Cross to donate blood.)|poet Giorgos Seferis ASKED FOR DONORS Earlier this week me Cro MP Wants Probe Of Tory Charges |proposed by Mr. Nielsen. - Y MD t| |FORCES A VOTE oung Ss ~ get unanimous consent from the dical au-| jthorities in Toronto appended tis, a 63-year-old diploniat, is i for donors to replenish dwind-|the first Greek ever to r said after Wie | ing Red Cross blood supplies. \obe) Prize . A union spokesman said after) : the meeting that arrangements). i the Red|!s oy ie canes to donate|Seferis was awarded the 265,01 of Lords as premier." BENN RELUCTANT Benn, now Labor member for Bristol Southeast, unwillingly became the second Viscount Scholarship To Attract clearly show there is such a document. | Mr. Pickersgill said on behalf of the government that there }was no objection to the action | However, Speaker Alan Mac- naughton ruled Mr. Nielsen's motion out of order and the Con- servative MP challenged the jruling, requiring a recorded | vote. | The Speaker's ruling was up- held by a vote of 116 to 100 with 107 Liberals and nine Social \Credit MPs voting to uphold |Speaker Macnaughton and 76 'Progressive Conservatives, 14 |New Democrats and 10 Credit- istes voting against the ruling. Mr. Pickersgill attempted. to TORONTO (CP)--The Ontario Heart Foundation announced Wednesday establishment of a new scholarship aimed at en- couraging young doctors to make a career in medical re- search, The scholarship, to be worth $9,000 a year, was announced by Foundation President Martin L. Wills, director of Wood Gundy Investment Company of Tor- onto, at the organization's an- nual meeting. Mr. Wills and other foundation directors were re-elected for the 1963-64 term: The president said plans call for the establishment of addi- ;Commons to refer Mr. Nielsen's motion to the privileges com- mittee anyway 'so that the truth can be established." However, Mr. Nielsen insisted that the Commons vote on Speaker Macnaughton's ruling. Greek Poet Wins Literature Award STOCKHOLM (AP) --fGreek/tion, was) Mr. Wills noted that diseases Nobeljof the heart and blood vessels coming two years so that by 1965 three such awards will be operating. Mr. Wills announced the On- tario Foundation's objective in its 1964 fund drive will be $600,- compared with $461,456 raised in Ontario during 1963. Some of the money raised goes to the Canadian Heart Founda- | jawarded the 1963 |Prize in li Sefe- . safle Aerie evo but "medical achievements in tional $9,000 scholarships in the kill 75,000 Canadians annually uce ion, also sought to dodge the "politic th al ghetto," as he termed the House of Lords, after his father died in 1950, He was prevented by none other than Clement Attlee, the last ga premier, now Earl Att- e, y FINAL BLOW It is generally said that the practice of having premiers in the House of Lords received a final blow in 1923 when Bonar Law, Canadian - born British premier, lay dying and the choice was between a peer, Lord Curzon, and a commoner, Stanley Baldwin. The peerage was' not then thought a bar to 10 Downing Street and at least one of King George V's advisers suggested the brilliant Curzon was the better man. History is somewhat clouded on what followed, but one ver- sion says a couple of Baldwin's friends pointed out to King hep ge herbs 4 the draw- acks of havi a the Lords. ys eeodca _ Arthur Balfour, former prem- ier, endorsed their view and Baldwin emerged the winner, Rabbi Laments Integration Of US. Jews TORONTO (CP) -- A United States rabbi said Wednesday the Jewish community in North America is in danger of fading away unless its members pay more attention to their heritage of faith, tradition and language. Rabbi Arthur J. Lelyveld of Cieveland, former national di- rector of the B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundations, said the Jewish community in the United States is steadily dwindling because of intermarriage and a birth rate not adequate to maintain the" population. 4 Pig? rome ve beg B-woece | J e United Jewis are eg . of Toronto that' the away process was more vanced in the U.S. than in Ca ada. John Ovens, 0.0. OPTOMETRIST | 8 BOND ST. E., OSHAWA PH. 723-4811 the past few years have been The 18-member Royal Swe h Literary Academy said thi crown ($51,158) prize '"'for his Volumes the meeting the re- eminent lyrical writing, inspired sult of the vote was announced|by a deep feeling for the Hel- as 488 to 6. Reporters had seen|!enic world of culture. no hands raised when the meet-| WOOD FINISHING jing was asked if anyone would) jreturn to their ships. A voice in| the meeting shouted '"'no one." "KINDNESS || BEYOND PRICE, | YET WITHIN REACH OF ALL" GERROW FUNERAL CHAPEL 390 King W. 728-6226 e limited number of people can learn the art of/ finishing wood to give it that perfect look. Each Saturday et 10:00 A.M, to 12 Noon. j LADIES! ... Learn what to do, how and when to do it when minor house- hold repairs are necessary and hubby is not available. Each Thursday afternoon 2:00 - 4:00 P.M. SHORGAS HEATING & APPLIANCES Industrial and Commercial The established, reliehle Ges Dealer in your erec. 31 CELINA ST. (Corner of Athol) 728-9441 For futher information call 725-1111 or come tothe | Oshawa Recreation Centre -- 100 Gibb Street "It's in Walker's secret distilling process" hs puny aa wo "What's the flavour secret of Gold Crest Whisky?" HIRAM /GOLD SjpubConadien Whaby WALKER'S CREST| Herorm Malhar 9 Sona V Walkerville Canada EST" 25 SS ~ eet? nas Asecret distilling 'D 1858 02, process gives Gold Crest a flavour you'll really enjoy. It combines the qua lities you like best, in perfect balance. Gentle, light, golden-mellow to be sure--but with the subtle difference of a great flavour secret. And always of the same superb q uality. Try Gold Crest next time. You'll see why it's attracting so much attention.