Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 7 Apr 1964, p. 2

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Q THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tussdey, April 7, 1964 GOOD EVENING -- By JACK GEARIN -- SERGEANTS TO HONOR 19 LIFE MEMBERS President Ross Hodges and the gxecutive of the Ser- geants Mess, the Ontario Regiment, have an important pro- gram upcoming. The date will be Saturday night, April 18. : | The occasion -- a dance at which the 19 life mem- bers. of the Mess will be special guests. The aforementioned 19 ser- geants and ex-sergeants have each averaged 30 to 40 years in the armed services the 19 have a combined service record of more than 650 years, "The grand daddy of the group, in point of service ' DAVIES SMART mer Regimental Sergeant Major of the Regiment (1933-1946) with 43 years -- he is close- ly followed by James Smart, past president of the Unted Veterans' Council, with 39 years. Davies has been a Mess member since its origin in 1926 (it was formerly for all NCO's). President Hodges and his staff are to be congratulated for arranging such a get-together -- the Old Sweats should have a great. time of it reminiscing about the past. record, is Harry Davies, for- By BOB EXELL TORONTO (CP)--The possi- bility arose Monday that the Ontario government may notify the legislature before the end of the current sitting of its inten- tion to introduce a contributory pension plan, | There was only a slim chance that full-fledged pension legisla- tion could be put before the house. However, the govern- ment of Premier Robarts could introduce a resolution or a bill outlining the principles of a pub- lic and universal Ontario pen- sion plan. Premier Robarts told a press conference Monday that in view of the federal government's in- tention to push ahead with the roposed Canada Pension Plan, a rega' ds the i ti in Ontario as "a matter of some urgency." During the federal-provincial conference in Quebec last week Mr. Robarts said Ontario would reserve the right to decide on how best to provide pensions for the people of Ontario if the federal plan was not "'truly na- tional' in scope. . Mr. Robarts made this state- ment after Premier Lesage of own, The Conservative premier has not made it clear whether On- tario will make any representa-' tions to the joint committee of! the House of Commons and the Senate which is to study the fed- eral pension bill, However, by introducing in the legislature within the next month an outline of an Ontario pension plan, the premier could put the pressure on he fed eral government to adjust its own plan to conform with those of Ontario and Quebec. ANNOUNCES DATE The premier announced the second session of the 27th leg- islature will resume April 14-- a week later than first contem- plated--following its Easter re- cess, After that, he said, the sitting may itast another four weeks. Presumably, by extending the sitting until May, the govern- ment would have time enough to provide the legislature with a broad outline of independent pension proposals. Mr, Robarts has said all pen- sion schemes in Canada-- Quebec Pension Said Better Than Ottawa's tario is to have a plan of its; yseemed to accept the right of| minimum levels for programs jointly financed by the federal and provincial governments. He did not refer specifically to. pen- sions, Mr, Robarts told his press conference that even if some provinces decided not to parti- cipate in various shared-cost programs, they still may have to meet the minimum federal requirements in their own pro- vincial schemes, the federal government to. set! fj tor Co, of Canada Lid, reached record levels, |quarter of 42,498 units jper cent higher than for jsame period last year and 22.5 per cent above the ord set in 1951, Automobile, Truck Sales | Hit Record Combined sales for the first was 28.8 previous rec« March sales of 17,177 cars trucks topped the 1963 figure 38.1 per cent and was @ of 8.6 per cent on recorg established the in 1 | INTERPRETING THE NEWS By CARMAN CUMMING Canadian Press Staff Writer Last Saturday Lyndon B. ton press corps and observed) Brazil Revolt Lauded By LBJ that once again a Latin Ameri can ges has shown itself in- capable of function! unde: Johnson called in the Washing-|democratic Phe vit omega wes Similar failures have been that "this has been a good week/recorded in recent months in for this hemisphere." |Ecuador, the Dominican Repub- This is the kind of week itjlic, Guatemala and Honduras. was: \In their wake comes the threat 1, On Monday an anti-Castrojof a leftist takeover in Chile and whether federal] or provincial-- must be as similar as possible. The primary requirement is that pensions be portable Quebec killed any chance of his province's participation in the federal scheme. The federal plan, therefore, would not be a COST-OF-EDUCATION-DEPT.: DID YOU KNOW THAT?: Total expenditures for the Oshawa Board of Education DEMONSTRATOR JAILBOUND Police haul off to jail one face down Monday in a ditch charge construction of three schools to relieve overcrowd- (OSHAWA DIV.) in 1963 were $5,098,956.97 -- this is to be compared with $4,664,058.94 in 1962; $4,161,636.22 in 1961 and $3,759,482.88 in 1960. Regarding total 1963 expenditures the breakdown was as thliows -- Collegiate, $1,605,409.09 (31.4 percent); Vocational, $474,131.75 (9.33 percent); and Public Schools, $3,019,416.13 (59.18 percent). The total expenditure increase for 1963 over 1962 was $435,084.12, or 9.325 percent, with the following breakdown: Collegiate--$227,312.80; Vocational--$64,985.98; Public Schools =~ $142,785.34. The Board's total revenue for 1963 was $5,168,078.47 as compared with $4,719,528.65 in 1962 and $4,185,097.24 in 1961. This $4,168,078.47 total reveue for 1963 was broken down as follows: General Legislative grant. -- $1,209,831.27 (23.41 percent) LOCAL TAX LEVY --$3,557,184.43 (68,83 percent and Farm asst. grant --$2,644,866.10 (5.13 percent) Tuition boards, individuals --$62,311,77 (1,20 percent) Sundry receipts $15,329.33 (.30 percent) Surplus from previous year --$58,551.57 (1.13 percent) The Board also had a surplus from the previous year fn 1962 ($60,232 -- 1.28 percent), It was $53,327.59 in 1961 (1,27 percent). Here is the net cost of Education to Oshawa ratepayers for 1963: : Collegiate: -- $1,142,725.99 (in 1962 it was $984,982.07 and of six civil rights demonstra- tors at a Cleveland, Ohio, con- struction site for a new east- side grade school. The six lay to halt work by a steam shov- el. Police moved in when they refused to leave the ditch, The civil rights groups national one. GAVE OUTLINE | Premier Lesage presented an outline of Quebec's legislation ing in the predominantly -Ne- gro area will "promote re- segregation." | |the Senate. | Barring the unexpected, the \debate will likely be a wide- japen, free-for-all lasting for pre- icisely one hour--but without jany vote one way or the other on scrappi the 102 h r 2 Parties Blamed For Jobless Pay Fund Debt | OTTAWA (CP)--The House of tion of the Senate must lead tojan Easter recess, then marched Commons today tackles a pri-jthe equally absurb proposition|them down again--without do- vate member's bill to abolish/that the Senate could legislate|ing any business. jthe abolition of this chamber,"'| jhe declared. "Tt is repugnant, sir." Fifty-four Conservatives voted against giving leave to intro-| duce the bill for first reading-- | upper chamber. | The debate follows the bill's |stormy introduction Monday by |55-year-old New Democrat Satn- ley Knowles over Conservative opposition. | It is set against a backdrop jwith 104 Liberals, New Demo- jerats, Social Crediters and Creditistes uniting on the other| |side | Mr, Knowles then suggested that his bill should be put at the top'of the list of some 75 private members' bills for de- to the federal-provincial confer- ence, While details of the plan still are secret, it was learned that Mr, Robarts and other pro- vincial premiers were highly impressed with the Quebec pro- posals. Mr. Robarts confirmed at his press conference that he found the Quebec plan more to his liking than the federal scheme. The premier was asked whether the Quebec plan satisfied some of the objections Ontario had to the federal plan. "Yes, it did,"' he replied, Mr. Robarts indicated a decision must be made soon whether On- It was irrational and fantas-| tic, a contempt of the rights of] Senate, a travesty of the legis-| lative process. | throughout the country. For the last four years the Ontario pension commission has been delving into all aspects of pension portability. The provin- cial government feels it could produce on short natice a draft public pension plan providing universal retirement benefits. The pending federal pension legislation would allow any province to adopt its own pen- sion scheme as long as it met certain minimum standards, RAISED DOUBTS Doubts as to the constitutinal powers of the federal govern- ment to set these minimums in the pension field were raised by Premier Robarts at the federal- provincial conference last week. However, on Monday he "This Senate is an integral part of Parliament, with well- defined rights, powers, duties and privileges," he said, "If we here, in this House, forget or ignore those rights, if we permit others to trample on those rights or to despise them, then we condemn this House to! Near Cyprus By DAVE McINTOSH a place of Shepherds Herd Goats Fighting |waved as the Canadians passed. that thé Cuban government is using a new device described as 'death on wheels' to trans- port court, jury and execution- ers ahout the country to deal committee in the U.S. reported|the total degradation of Haiti's Political structure. It may have been a week for the hemisphere but it wasn't much of @ week for de- mocracy. with the rebels. 2. On Tuesday the tanks) came out in the streets again in Brazil as a military upris- ing broke out. 3. On Wednesday Haiti's in- credible dictator, Francois Du- valier, told his squalor - ridden people that they would have the good fortune of his services as| president for life. 4. On Thursday a leading can- didate for the Chilean presi- dency, Salvador Allende, prom- ised that if elected in Septem- ber he will nationalize $1,000,- 000,000 worth of U.S, copper properties, 5. On Friday tiny Panama knuckled under and agreed to resume relations with the United States without fulfilment of its condition that the U.S. undertake to re-negotiate the jtreaty under which the Ameri- jcans control the Panama Canal] India Ready To Take Back China Area NEW DELHI (AP) -- Prime Minister Nehru declared Mon- day India is preparing to re- gain territory along its northern border now occupied by Com- munist Chinese troops. "We want all our territories back," he told Parliament, Nehru made the same type of statement shortly before the outbreak of the China - India frontier war in 1962, The Chi- mese drove back the Indian troops and occupied some of the disputed territory. inconsequence, pills ace for only ceremony a u'S/ ritual, a place with no meani 4 KOKKINA (CP) -- Canadian|Many still carried arms. Defence Minister Y, B. Cha- Nd | troops Monday saw for the first] 'The Dragoons didn't reach ngs! rk ag ; | . a weird combination Of/tnei- original destination of i 1961 Ht was $761,633,34). lof a dramatic weekend w ate today nha or Vocational: -- $327,037.52 (in 1962 it was $281,302.24 and |one" Conservative senator, "8 let pine members' sical oeaeiaeiind van told Parliament the Chi- GOULART FLED nese build-up along the border By this time Brazil's Presi-|20W fs heavier than in 1962 but dent Joao Goulart had fled|Mdia has made preparations across the Uruguayan border in|@8ainst any more setbacks. the face of army columns ad-| Cheered by members of Par- vaneing on Rio de Janeiro and|liament, Nehru said the Indian the Congress had named anjdefence preparations were acting president. jaimed at not only meeting any Johnson said the U.S. govern-|future Chinese threats but alse 1962 and $1,927,580,29 in 1961). |was a betrayal of the rules andja_ purpose in the Commons.that we ourselves have no right |i northwestern Cypriot _vil-| ' Roa ; Greek and Turkish|blown up a stone bridge on the The estimated cost of Education to Oshawa ratepayers i" a If the Senate is treated | |the Ottawa Journal, refused|--"talked out" m peel ie NET COST ine and ; : . while Nils ee vce. angunera for quick approval of a govern-|the end of the list. They rarely|Mr. Knowle: " hills near the village, shepherds|the road by a Gre $2,058,711.97 $1,486,822.85 Ad § es is right "and this y ek armored COLLEGIATE: jemerge for debate again. in 1961 it was $177,298.07). jyear-old M. Grattan O'Leary,|come up for debate during hour-| bl oes : time ; | HI : ful legislative existence in this! ee Public School: -- $2,005,204.13 (it was $1,953,491.47 in |rebelled against what he felt/long periods set aside for such|land, Doing that, we declare| "2" and peace in and around Sekiy Aeniiie bounties tn WHAT WILL OSHAWA'S EDUCATION COST IN 19647 [Tights of the Senate. Often they are debated to thelto sit here at ail." lage. Turks a few hours earlier had | Senator O'Leary, president ofjend of the hour without a vote! oo ge Fie ' in parliamentary|contempt, as a second chamber|SueTTilas fired at each other|hair-pin turn just west of Kok- Rar 1008 ts Oe feliewe: GROSS COST \Friday to, waive Senate rules|parlance--and then dropped to|without worthwhile powers, then|With bren guns and rifles in the/kina to prevent an attack down PUBLIC SCHOOLS $3,246,976.88 VOCATIONAL $ 552,764.54 $2,088,460.04 $ 36,764.54 YOUNG LIBERALS HOLD MEETING NOTES FROM THE HUSTINGS: The executive of the newly-formed Ontario County Yeung Liberal Association met last Sunday at Sam Hollings- worth's in Ashburn. The group will hold a dance in Whitby fn tate May. A membership of young Liberals throughout the riding was drafted. Others interested should contact any of the followng executive: President, Lioyd Semmerville, Brooklin; first vice-president, Bruce Mackey, Oshawa; second vice-president, Dave McInnis, Ajax; secre- tady, Reg. Philip, Port, Perry; treasurer, Gary Lomax, . Whitby; director, Fay McLeish, Ajax. WEATHER FORECAST Showers Tonight, Cooler Wednesday Forecasts issued by the Tor-|Trenton onto weather office at 5;30 am. Lore PPrPOe TT Ty Synopsis: Colder weather) Muskoka trem Northern Ontario is fore.|North Bay. cast to spread through central|Sudbury and southern Ontario by Wed-|Hariton tases nesday morning bringing a re-|Sault Ste. Mari turn te. the unseaseably cool|/Kapuskasing ..... weather that has been typical|White River....... | ment loan to bail out the bank- rupt unemployment insurance | fund. His action--taken, he said, on a question of principle--forced the Unemployment Insurance |Commission to delay the mail- jing of about $1,900,000 |cheques to some 36,000 jobless workers Monday. {APPROVES LOAN WANTS DEBATE Opposition Leader Diefen- |baker threw his weight behind |the idea for an early debate of ithe Knowles bill. "We would certainly do that) in order to give the members of| this House an opportunity to} stand up and be counted on the} question of the abolition of Par-| Senate should be is * p,/continued to herd their goat added. ene he flocks in nearby pastures beside He warned that never again|the Mediterranean. will he allow Senate rules to be|. Eight anmored scout cars of waived unless a real and pres-| the Royal Canadian Dragoons ent peril exists. jleft their camp near Nicosia in If some people are deprived of|the morning and took up posi- an unemployment insurance|tions near Kokkina and in two cheque for a single day, he said,|other villages about three miles it was a small price to pay for|from the coast, among the hills the assertion of the rights of|where Greeks and Turks have jthe Senate and of Parliament.|been fighting since Saturday. bulldozer, an ungainly rig with a small cover of steel built over ithe driver's seat, | The Dragoons didn't have any \difficulty manoeuvring on the jnarrow, twisting roads which hang on cliffs between the hills and the sea, They remained in the area Monday night, They carried sleepin. bags and food for just such an eventuality. ~ 000,000 money bill. After hearing an eloquent de-|!iament," he said; contending} \fence of senatorial rights from|that Parliament under the BNA |Senator O'Leary, the red cham-|ACt consists of the Queen, the |ber--so dubbed because of its|Senate and the Commons. red carpeting--gave its final) Prime Minister Pearson also approval Monday night to the|/asreed, with a swipe at the Con- emergency loan, part of a $130,-\servatives for refusing to al- low. the introduction of the bill The measure was promptly --8" action ,he said, in violation given. Royal Assent. of the Bill of Rights. Within minutes, four cabinet} Expressing shock and amaze- |ministers gathered quietly injment at the Conservative posi- the office of Privy Council|tion, Mr, Pearson added: President George Mcllraith to) "! think he (Mr. Diefenbaker) lapprove the cabinet order au-jought to be given every oppor- \thorizing the loan. It was rushed|tunity, as quickly as possible, |by messenger to Government|to explain his unbelievable posi- |House for the signature of Gov-|tion on this matter." jernor - General Vanier. | Meanwhile in the upper cliam- | Before the night ended,jber, Senaotr O'Leary heaped cheques were being mailed|blame on the government for. al- from unemployment insurance|lowing the unemployment insur- offices across the country tojance 'fund to "sink ito disas- waiting recipients. \ter'--then to come to the Sen- When Senator O'Leary\ate at the final minute of the blocked the government's|llth hour with a cry of emer- money bill Friday, New Demo-|gency to make a quick loan. I have been first, last and| fll the time with the underdog, and there is not a social secur-| ity measure in the statute books) jof Canada which did not have| |my undivided and vigorous sup-| |port.'" | Senator O'Leary said that the \loan could have been made at {any time under previous author- jity before it expired at the end jof the fiscal year, March 31, |He criticized the government of |Prime Minister Pearson and the former Conservative govern- jment for' not having moved in jthe past two years to bolster the insurance fund. | 'Who was mainly at fault?" jhe asked. | "The government saw the fund going bankrupt. It was jbroke, insolvent, couldn't con- |tinue without these loans, While {this was going on,' the govern- ment had the Gill commission jreport recommending 42 steps In Kokkina, life went on to the sound of gunfire. Occasion- ally one of the guerrillas came Kokkina where he talked with/@0wn from the hills for a quick jocal Turkish leaders. drink at a cafe. A 10-year-old On the way to Kokkina, 75/0Y carried a double-barrelled miles from Nicosia, the Dra-|Shotgun and a small pair of bi- goons rumbled through Kata) nocuars. Two of the cars accompanied Lt.-Gen. P. S. Gyani, the United Nations force commander, into ition in Brazil has been con- stitutional." This prompted some cynics to wonder whether Johnson would feel the same way if the U.S. 7th Fleet attacked San Fran- cisco and the 6th Fleet attacked New York and he was forced to flee to Saskatchewan. Constitutional or not, the overthrow of Goulart appears to be regretted by few capitals of the hemisphere except Ha- vana, There was plenty of evi-| dence that Goulart was leading) | t "4 .|to "regain the territory lost te ment was "glad that the. trans Ching "ine ona Tibet Aksai é Aksai Chin is a high plateau in the northern Ladakh area of Kashmir. The other disputed area is about 1,000 miles to the east, in the Himalayan moun- tains separating Chinese--held and India's Northeast Frontier. NEED... FUEL OIL? Call PERRY his country into an economic and political morass The tragedy lies in the fact Day or Night 723-3443 Pyrgos, where 20 British sol- diers were held hostage Sunday for two hours. The Greeks had put up a roadblock of trucks parked across the narrow road. They removed the trucks when they found the troops were Ca- nadians, although the Dragoons were accompanied by two Brit- ish scout cars. WAVE AT CANADIANS Villagers who had been ready to shoot British troops Sunday, NEW HOMES OR RENOVATIONS by Expert Tradesmen Mrs. Elizabeth Dueck crat Stanley Knowles, Ameri-| "I do not rise to apologize for,| : : can-born feviner United Church] to recant, or to retreat one inch|t0 be taken. While the fund was minister, hurriedly submitted|from the course which I took|8ig bankrupt for a year, they -VADIANT CLEANERS j t of On-|Moosonee .. .~ on oo Timmins ...+.000. CALL 723-7122 snever moved a hand to deal Leke St. Clair, Lake Erie Observed temperatures his bill to amend the British|last Friday with respect to thi Lake Huron, Windsor, London: ; é Mainly cloudy and much colder Aw Srernle, high ease 4 tonight and Wednesday with alcnay PETMAN We : few showers or snowflurries.| victoria. Ane yee Winds becoming northwest 2 ietntnn ak tonight, | Regina 11 Niagara, Lake Ontario, Geor-|winnipeg .. ... «21 gian Bay, Haliburton, Hamil-\rakehead ... ... ..25 ton: Cloudy and cooler tonight |White River ... .. .32 eloudy and cooler with a\ Kapuskasing 27 few showers or snowflurriesimariton ... ... .. «30 Wednesday. Winds northwest 25\sauit Ste. Marie .. .34 Wednesday ip 'ia on Gerente: Cloudy with a few et" | Ee Pa | | showers and turning cooler to-|Muskoba fie night. Mainly cloudy and cooler|windsor ... ... .. .48 y. Winds northwest 20|rondon sie ee Wednesday. TOPE iss cas vs Algoma, Timagami, southernitrenton ... ... .. .37 White River, North Bay, Sud-iottawa ... ... 2. ..35 bury: Cloudy and cooler with\vontreal ... ... ...35 rain or snow tonight, CloudyiQuebec ... ... 0. ..32 and with occasional snow-| Halifax ... ... s. ..31 les Wednesday. Windsichicago ... ... .. ..48 northerly 3 tonight and Wed-\New York ... .. ...42 rn White River, Cochin A oer vee ee conte rane; Cloudy with light snow sie Anacles se Mf drifting snow tonight.| with snowflurries and) colder Wednesday. Winds be- coming northerly 25 tonight. (44 7] Cents Lb. Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, high Wednesday St. Thomas 36 } } Tobacco Sells At | TILLSONBURG, Ont, (CP)--| 40 |Ar average price of 44.71 cents a pound was realized Monday jon 1,495,287 pounds of tobacco jauctioned at Ontario Flue-Cured Tobacco Growers Market- ing Board exchanges, So far, ithe 1963 crop have sold at average 50.33 cents a pound, 137,358,111 pounds of| an North America Act wiping out|bill." |the Senate, | When it was brought forward|ment, as in the verse about the |Monday for first reading--nor-|King of France, had marched mally a formality--the Conser-|senators up Parliament Hill all vative opposition demanded ajduring what was supposed to be He charged that the govern- with the problem at all." recorded vote on whether it|- vere should be introduced at all. | Ronald Ww, Bilsky, D.C, Former Commons speaker! Marcel Lambert (PC---Edmon-| CHIROPRACTOR Slipped Dise ton West) argued the bill was| unconstitutional and out of or- der. : Nervous Stomach "To concede that the Com-|| 100 King St, E. 728-5156 mons could legislate the aboli-| WE HAVE BUYERS For The Following Homes --Cash buver fer @ roomy 2 bedroom bungalow with rage, Central Park gree close to King St. wulout level or ranch bungalow with attached garage. Must have 3 bedrooms. Can be large down payment, $15,000 - $20,000 price range. Prefer north west oreo. --WNerth of King St. -- 2 or 3 bedroom bungalow in an establi: area, We hove 2 buyers with cash r large down payments for this type of home. Coll ROY FLINTOFF 725-3454 GUIDE REALTY LIMITED PHONE 723-1121 16 SIMCOE ST. S. REALTOR sae grea whiskies in Private St CANADIAN RYP WH There are 29 James O'Malley Const f orea ock ISKY accepted beth wins the - "Spotamanship Mrs. Elizebeth Dueck of VADIANT CLEANERS Oshawa Shopping Centre, was honored this week for her professional drycleaning skill. Mrs, Dueck the challenge of DRYCLEANING WORLD Magazine and successfully removed a difficult Mystery Spot on a swatch of material af- fixed to the magazine's cover. DRYCLEANING WORLD dared its 32,000 readers to clean the spot without damaging the material, VADIANT CLEANERS was one of the drycleaners in this who did a perfect job. "The "Spotsmanship Award", which is now prome inently displayed in her store, reads: 'To Elizae ueck, VADIANT CLEANERS, in recogni- tion of professional drycleaning skill as demon strated in the successful removal of problem spots." For The Finest Cleaning Call VADIANT CLEANERS Pho cave ne 725-1023

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