Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 13 Jan 1964, p. 13

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_ € ides a: ¥ Paap page pngagupnpnpagls ron eae: eet Ee ep re fact te where two working. TIMBS, The po nadine red on Jon bsetmanins ng. Manday, Jenvery 19,1964 73. white Mooney Mark 20 aircraft : j - rashid inte. the Southwestern| AGREE YO CO-OPERATE .|would go to the Dominican Re. Bell Telephone Company, Vive|, JERUSALEM, Israeli Sector|Public in January, _ buildings were hit by parts of|(AP)--Israel and the Domini- : py the wreckage. con Ravan have announced aj. TRAINING ASIANS echnical ¢o - operation agree-| Some 6,000 Asians are The victims were Jack David/nent" A spokesman sald' theltrained Un@er the Coleal Gorham, 29, the pilot; Lawrence G. Trapp, 32; his wife, Helen,|{irst group of Israeli technicians!Plan, and their son, William Leroy Plane Strikes Tall Building, Four Killed KANSAS CITY (AP) -- A light airplane flying in darkness Income Tax Form Easier This Year OTTAWA (CP) -- Last year)fi deadline is not until April 800,000 Canadians made mis-/30, This year all returns except Canal Zone History Annoys Panamanians f ew CUMMING 1 American repub- decades. Panama Canal Zone came .§. control in. 1903, only it after Panama had independence from Co- with assistance from the States. Since then Panama has com- building up to the bloody e that broke out Thursday night. The list of Panamanian com- ts is a long one, but it down into three main {s- sues:. . Soverengaty -- Panama is content for the time being to let the U.S. run the canal, but wants its legal and civil author. ity to extend into the Canal Zone. The U.S. grants only "'tit- tar sovereignty" but no actual control, ~ 9. Money--Panama feels the current annual payment of les: than $2,000,000 for the zone is ridiculously low. The U.S. ar- that the' actual income to ma from the canal is much 000,000 in 1962, for ex- 3. Duration of U.S. rights -- The 1903 oben provided that the U.S. wo exercise all wer and authority in the zone perpetuity, Panamanians see to "the flying of Panamanian flags in an appropriate way in the Canal Zone." Kennedy and Chiari also agree on establishment of a commission to study points of dispute over the Canal Zone, an action which apparently gave the Panamanians high hopes that their claims would be rec- ognized. MADE TWO CONCESSIONS, . The results were limited. Last January the U.S. announced two concessions, It said that in fut- lure the Panamanian flag would fly beside the U.S. flag when- ever it was flown "by civilian authorities," And it permitted the Panamanians to license for- eign consuls in the zone, al- though the U.S, retained the right to veto, The Americans have refused to re - negotiate the treaty al- though they have made at- tempts, particularly since 1959, vd remove some causes of fric- tion, Salaries of Panamanian work- ers in the zone were Increased to bring them closer to the leve! of American workers there. Public facilities in the zone were officially desegregated in 1960 to get to know Panamanians. Amricans also discussed ways of increasing Panama's income from the canal, without preven | the "rent." The U.S started out by paying $250,000 a year, raising it to $430,000 in 1934 and to $1,900,000 in 1955. Panama has called for 20 per enues, with a fixed minimum o/ $5,000,000 a year, Some Panamanians have questioned the legality of the or- iginal canal treaty. It was signed hurriedly Nov. 18, 1903, by State Secretary John Hay and Philippe Banau-Varilla, a Frenchman who was named Panamanian representative in Washington by the new junta "oi the revolt against Colom- la, Panama's Foreign Minister Galileo Solis says Banau-Varilla was to have served only until a Panamanian negotiating team got to Washington--and that the ngotiators arrived hours after the treaty was signed, Others contend the treaty Is not valid because it was signed before the country's constitu- tion went into effect and it was neyer ratified by the National Assembly, Despite the differences, cool heads on both sides have tried to solve the issue without letting emotions get out of hand, Presi- dent Chiari has repeatedly em- phasized that he does not want to "pressure" the U.S, In the autumn of 1961 he went so far as to praise U.S, authorities in the zone for their 'firm and judicious attitude' during at- tempts by Panamanian extrem- ists to invade the zone, Diplomatic observers said this made it particularly regret- table that the action of a group of American high school stu- dents in refusing to fly the Pan- amanian flag has sparked this cent of the. canal's gross rev: week's revolt, this clause as a king of left-over colonial issue that can no longer be tolerated, They want a fixed time limit for U.S. withdrawal. EXPLOSIVE ISSUE Of all the complaints, the sovereignty question has been the most explosive, : In 1959 it. led to riots when a of students tried to plant Panamanian flag in the gone. : President Eisenhower later sald that the U.S. had recog- nized the "titular sovereignty of Panama" over the zone for 50 years. One Panamanian flag was permitted besid flag in a remote co gone, American residents were furious. The flag issue was raised in the summer of 1962 . President Roberto Chiari Us. |! er of the The Story of « Girl end the Men Whe Led Her To Become "THE STRIPPER" JOANNE WOODWARD CLAIRE TREVOR GYPSY ROSE LEE Adult Entertainment SHOWN at 7:00 AND O58 PUA, BILTMORE 5° TELEPHONE 725-5833 Brigitte quer BARDOT u're sone "PLEASE NOT NOW!" THE MOST PROVOCATIVE COMEDY OF THE YEAR! Ok SHOWN aT a friendly visit to Washing- . President Kennedy agreed | - "Nicknames For! Bosses Show Low Morale HALIFAX (CP) -- Employ. ess calling their bosses by nicknames like the Stutter Bum, the Informer and the gd are proof of low mor- ie. That was the contention of Reid Scott, New Democratic MP for Toronto Danforth, in an address here Saturday about "atrocious" conditions in the post office department. "Because of inadequate working conditions, the mor- ale in the working section of the department is at an ex- low ebb," he told the 'ova Scotia convention of the Young New Democrats. "As evidence of the deter- toration in relations between employees and the supervis- ory staff, I have in my pos session a list of the bickneanes Mr, Useless, the Weasel, Defeatist, the Agitator, Mousy, the Stutter the Big an." VB@ ~ 3:40 ~ 5:40 ~ 7:30 TR men increase the} ' of air navigation will be early this year by the me someone FEU TERRE E88 RT LUT ae connors . ote cmmeme © AAR ROSE WHEY 4 AFTON ADULT ENTERTAINMENT = 9:30 Lest complete show 9:15 _/ATWO SCIENCE FICTION THRILLERS IN COLOR | IFFI A ehh ig COME TO iT FRIGHTENED THE WOR takes in their income tax re- turns, It was the worst error year on record, It got so bad at one point that the national revenue department, fearful its new electronic computer had flipped their digits, hired people to check many of the returns the old-fashioned way Some tax receipts and refunds were weeks late, Taxpayers who weren't convinced they had made mistakes wrote letters and streamed into district taxa- tion offices for explanations. What went wrong? The tax forms themselves, that's what. For the first time, most tax: payers in filling out a federal return were up against the tas of calculating the amount of in- come tax they owed to both the federal and provincial govern- ments, And besides, they had to calculate their old age secur- ity tax separately. The guide attached to the tax forms used by _ individuals seemed simple enough, But the calculation was apparently just too much for thousands of kit- chen-table mathematicians, The rate of errors was twice what it normally is, But this year the department has revised its forms for taxing 1963 incomes in the hope of cut- ting down mistakes, The guides attached to the forms include a revised table that makes it pos- sible, for the first time, for about 75 per cent of all taxpay- ers to avoid all but third-grade adding and subtracting. The forms already are appear- ing in post offices, though the those for Quebec provincial taxes will go to Ottawa--about 6,000,000 of them, There will be no need for peo- ple in seven provinces, including Ontario,--an estimated 75 per cent of all taxpayers--to make detailed calcuiations, or even figure out their old age secur- through blinding snow and fog crashed into the 28th floor of an office building Saturday night, killing the four occupants, One of the dead was a three-year- 'old boy. No one was hurt seriously in the building or on the ground, (Bill) Trapp, all of Kansas City. The crash occurred at 5:30 p.m., closing time of downtown stores. The piane apparently was preparing to land at one of two airports more than a d,jmile from the crash scene, although wreckage and the bod- ity tax separately. The figures in the table will include the old age security tax A similar table was on the tax forms last year, too, but it could be used only by those in the seven provinces who had taxable income of $3,000 or less. One problem. was that thous- ands ignored the instruction to use the table, and plowed ahead with the percentages. Detailed calculations still will be required this year for peo- ple with taxable incomes over $5,000--regardiess of where they live--as well as for everyone living in Manitoba and Saskat- chewan, regardless of the amount of their taxable Income. After figuring out their tax- able income, they will use the guide attached to the form to figure out their basic federal! tax. Next step is to reduce that amount by the 17-per-cent fed- eral abatement, Then they add their old age} security tax, That tax was three) per cent of taxable income up| to a $90 limit for 1963. | Next to be added is the pro-| vincial income tax--23 per cent) of the basic federa! tax in Man- itoba and Saskatchewan, and 17 per cent in the seven vd provinces, jes fell over a wide area. One of the bodies hurtled through the roof of a baggage shed Gorham and Trapp were next-door neighbors and both were aircraft mechanics for Trans World Airlines. FRONT-END ALIGNMENT..;: | FOR on JOHN BEAN "Visualiner" SPECIAL 95 MOST CARS PHONE 728-6221 for appointment sua GENERAL TIRE OF OSHAWA TIRE 534 RITSON RD. S$. PHONE 728-6221 cd YOUR PAY CHEQUE GUARANTEED WHEN YOU'RE SICK OR INJURED EVEN FOR THE REST OF YOUR LIFE The Facts are . . . Disability strikes the average individual 17 times. throughout his lifetime. PREVENT FINANCIAL DIS- ASTER. Your first step towards this am- azing security is simple. 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