Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 14 Aug 1964, p. 2

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August 14, 1964 2 ™ OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, Ontario To Aid yrought Areas THE CANADIAN PRESS P Ontario government ex- tended a helping hand to drought - stricken farmers in eastern and northern sections of the province Thursday. ; 'Noting that lack of rain had affected almost every country easty of Kingston and north as far as Sudbury, Agriculture Minister William Stewart an- nounced a subsidy to help farm- ets ship in hay from other parts of the province. He said he had been assured of federal government partici- pation in a subsidy of up to $10 a ton to bring in hay to areas where lack of rains have re- | Senators Say Tax Tangle Needs Parley OTTAWA (CP) -- As the gov- ernment's latest set of tax agreements with the provinces beeame law Thursday, three senators called for a national conference to straighten out the eountry's complex federal-pro- vineial tax setup and other con- stitutional problems. The trio, Senators Wallace McCutcheon (PC -- Ontario), Allister Grosart (PC -- Ontario) and T. A. Crerar (L -- Mani- toba), criticized the national confusion surrounding -- fedral- provincial tax agreements and the respective rights, duties and responsibilities. of the federal and provincial governments, They urged that the two levels of government get together to hammer out a more definite di- vision of- their responsibilities, particularly in the field of tax- aton. The Senate got its teeth into duced the crop by up to 75 to 80 per cent. The Ontario minis- ter will meet today with Agri- culture Minister Harry Hays in Ottawa to discuss the federal government's part inthe pro- gram, : Freight assistance also will be given to farmers who ship feeder cattle to Toronto for sale at the stockyards. The amount of this subsidy must still be worked out, Mr. Stewart said. WILL GUARANTEE LOANS The provincial government also .will guarantee bank loans required by farmers to fee their cattle. The same guaran-> tees will apply to farmers whose erops have been destroyed by army worms in recent weeks. At the same time, Mr. Stew- art said, a one-year moratorium! on the payment of principal and interest on junior farmers loans! will be granted to drought-area| farmers who suffer hardship. | M. Stewart appealed to farm- ers in other areas of the proy- incewho -- have had good first and second hay crops to har- vest a third one even if they do not need it for their own use. 'I appeal to them to harvest the crop and to make it avail- able to farmers that ~need it," he said. Mr. Stewart said north Ren- \frew in the Ottawa Valley is the worst - hit area, requiring at least 25,000 tons of hay. In Northern Ontario, hay crops in the Algoma district around Sault Ste. Marie are from 75 to 80 per cent smaller than in 1963. GRAIN CROP POOR | Lack of rain has also re- sulted in a poor grain crop, with stocks appearing short. Warm weather is needed to ripen grain and help growth of pastureland, In the Sudbury area, hay crops are reported to be down 50 per cent, George Gravelle, a taxation during debate on the North Bay area farmer, said he government's fiscal arrange-|got only 5,000 bales of hay off ments bill, which received royal his Jand this yea instead of the * assent late Thursday. The legis-|usual 13,000, lation puts into effect a series) Hay is about average in qual- of complex arrangements ity and down about five per cent)__ worked out in federal - provin-'in yield'in Simcoe County in! cia] talks over the last nine central Ontario. A poor yield is months. expected for strawberries. The provinces get a bigger' W. N. T. Ashton, agricultural| slice of the tax dollar--an extra representative fo Perth County, four per cent of personal in-\says the dry spell has not af- come taxes in the next two fected crops in his area. In years. Equalization payments neighboring Waterloo County, to low-revenue provinces will heavy summer rains have re- grant to Newfoundland will be sulted in good crop prospects. extended indefinitely. But wet weather during the tice Arthur The Senate agreed to adjourn Jast week has delayed: the har-|wide opwers until Tuesday, Sept. 15, subject vestand Kelly Thursday as a COOKING TO A TURN Wide Powers For Judge | Probing Stock Acrobatics TORONTO: (CP) -- Dr. Jus-)given the power to take an in-ident is Stan Devine, now the was given|quiry into brokers' offices. i Loses Office In Union Revolutionary Eating For London Tourists By DOUG MARSHALL jsion beams out of the centre of LONDON (CP) -- Sometime} 'London. The tower had to be at least next year tourists with a had! 55, feet High because. anictee for heights will be able to com-) THE DIVIDED LAND \PART -- 4 Old And Young Split Over Feuhrers Ghost |wave links operate on a line-of- bine an expensive meal with a) isnt pasis and London is in'a unique 23-minute round trip of London. {bowl : \Valley. The tower also had to The truck driver pulled up at/Younger and older generations, |one of his bloodiest purges. They will be taking theit/ye higher than any other build-\the Dreesen Hotel after a 200-\the young asking why their) "We formed by the Thames meal some 600 feet up in theling jin London--such as the clouds in a revolving restau-/new 380-foot Hilton Hotel or the rant on a tower near the heart'3e7.toot Vickers Building. of the city. Diners will see a London that/cal requirements had been Sat-\thanks to Hitler." few human eyes have seen be- fore--lower than any aircraft is}what other uses the tower could caje for some sort of tribute to! "Once these essential techni- isfied. we. began to think of allowed to fly yet higher than)be put to," said Geoffrey Rip- anyother building in Britain./pon, minister of public works,/was one of his long-time wa-| ! On a clear day the city and/at a "topping out" ceremony On|tering spots, And it was here camps in 1939. surrounding counties spread the tower recently. out like a panoramic relief map. "So we introduced the obser-| ime ivation galleries and still later|Neville Chamberlain in 1938. | On a foggy day in London decided it would be feasible to town, when the British Museum pave a revolving restaurant."' has lost its charm, disen- a 1,000-foot-a-minute elevator to The £2,500,000 tower, founded chanted visitors will be able to|on London clay and built of re-|proprietor of the hotel which) Mign. } head for Bloomsbury and take jnforced concrete, is about two-|has a fine terrace on the Rhine. Rhine is the Petersberg Hotel, thirds as high as the Eiffel liquidate Ernst Roehm, SA By JOSEPH MacSWEEN The ghost of Hitler has chief, and hundreds of others in BAD GODESBERG (CP) --|created a gulf between the were always relieved lmile haul through West Ger- fathers followed this man be- when he went away," said Fritz imany. itween 1933 and 1945. : "Pleasant drive," he said,) Some writers reply that the/for seven months after the war lthanks to the autobahn -- and Younger generation's anti-Naz-/as a Nazi with knowledge of | ism is cheaply acquired, since the dead dictator. -- lo- the angry young critics did not. Yet Dreesen and his friends live through the terror. Gestapo| apparently saw little or nothing records show 301,000 anti-Naziof the demonic side of Hitler Germans were in concentration|and some of them find it dif- 'ficult to believe he knew about Touring Commonwealth cor-or ordered the crimes com- respondents were put up at the mitted by his men. ry ce . Ab bbe to' In a reaction to stories about "You must admit that what/nearby Bonn, the West German the personal qualities of Hitler, \the lorry-driver says is under-| capital in the beautiful Rhine-| professor Golo Mann of Stutt standable," said Fritz Dreesen, land. : jgart has commented: High on a pinnacle across the) "What a nice fellow. this [Adolf Hitler must have been, such a true friend, cavalier to | It was perhaps a fitting jthe late Adolf since the Dreesen| he held. his fateful pre-Munich| meetings -with Prime Minister' "If a man is a murderer and| where Chamberlain stayed and the' sunlight above the gloom. Tower in Paris and about the)a kidnapper, and he also writes, Where, reports say, Queen Bllz- vonien, lover of children, anl- The revolving restaurant and same height as the restaurant cocktail bar above it exist only because of a hedonistic after- thought to a purely functional prohibits design. The tower commissioned by was telephone system, for a new. microwave hookup|mark for airline pilots homing evision to look In London, where soft clay Manhattan-style sky- scrapers, the green - giassed originally tower punctures the skyline like Germany, the generala huge rocket ship or a mis- death, post office, which runs Britain's placed lighthouse. It is already crime trials has caused popular hange as the pivotiestablished as a primary land- newspapers, magazines relaying telephone and te.evi-ion London Airport. beth will stop on her visit to} , ite a8 'a good book, people should not! @ mals and flowers . tower built for the world's fair|condemn the book. Hitler built Bonn next year, jold truth the devil has many in Seattle. good highways." While the birds oo : The Canadian' visitor realizes|this idyllic place, Dreesen to ig ty with a start that the subject of an interviewer at breakfast | Frits, Drewes Se) ae Hitler is once again topical in that the vegetarian Hitler wa past attracts tourist business 6F 19 years affer his a ae type A Curiosity seekers today. rs-on were boozers. "No indeed," he replied. Dreesen, who inherited 'We've kept no memorials, No- trom his father, a body has asked to sleep in comrade of Room 117." nice qualities." A new wave of war- guest and tel- But again at the life the hotel of Hitler and the Nazi era. Sin World. War <rhreceeeicomremenieomnemcmnr" FELIS OT, | Adolt's SANK WARSHIP learned early about love affair with Eva commissioned -- i . jBraun. He was 'd' NORFOLK, Va. (AP) -- Vice start an ] @ | e {o deliver a parcel to her | ,qmiral Hiton W. Grenfell, the | : j . _|Munich, first American to sink a Japa- MONTREAL (CP) -- One of} eight newly - announced candi- ldates for office in the Seafar- jers' International Union of Can- ada (Ind.) has been dismissed ifrom his union job, | Andre Bansept said Thursday he lost his job as a dock patrol- Iman for the union after he an- nounced his candidacy Monday las one member of the slate. | Leonard McLaughlin, the |SIU's executive vice - president, isaid in an interview that Ban- lsept's dismissal resulted from --|*a disagreement with Raymond 'Doucet, our port agent at Que- bec over the way Mr. Bansept was carrying out his duties." | Mr. Bansept is the slate's can- ldidate for Mr. Doucet's job. The Asked whether a broker could damage grain one-man royal commission to in-'should_ disclose information to-reeall if theflag legislation crops if it continues, Gold wea-|vestigate stock dealings ofjabout his clients, Mr. Robatts now. before available before that date. en volved in recent or discoveries in the Timmins area, WEATHER FORECAST | Premier John Robarts said |the Ontario Supreme Court Jus- ' tice will look into recent sales A Bit Warmer land recent fluctuations in the ] price of Windfall stock to ex- amine events surrounding them he and investigate their causes, ain unn He ,also said. the commis- |sioner would examine the role, ifunction and activities of the onto weather office at 5:30 a.m.|west to northwest 10 to 15, be- "ection with matters concern- Synopsis: A. slow warming coming light tonight. ing Windfall and other stock trend is foreseen for ail regions. White River region: Sunny dealings. during the next two days. Ajwith a few cloudy intervals and| In an eight - page statement gradual decrease in. cloud cover|continuing coo| today. Saturday he read to a press conference will accompany the moderating mostly sunny and a little war-|here, the premier said the in- temperatures in Northern: On-|mer with increasing cloudiness| vestigation might require Mr. sunny skies are forecast for Forecast Temperatures brokerage firms to find out who both today and Saturday Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Ni- agara, Lake Huron, Algoma, southern Georgian Bay, Wind- sor, London, Hamilton, Tor- onto: Sunny with a few cloudy day: Saturday mainly sunny and a little warmer, Winds light. Northern Georgian Bay, Hali-, burton regions, North Bay, Sud-} bury, Killaloe: Variable cloudi- mess and continuing cool with few widely scattered showers to- a little warmer. Winds north- west 10 to 15, becoming light tonight. Cochrane, Timagami, western James Bay: Variable cloudiness with a few scattered showers and continuing cool today. Sat- |and purchases of Windfall stock Forecasts issued by the Tor-|vals and a little warmer. Winds Toronto Stock Exchange in con- tario while in the south mostly late in the day. Winds light. (Justice Kelly to inquire into intervals and continuing cool to- day. Saturday mainly sunny and urday sunny with cloudy inter- Quebec MP Accused | ion sd Of Indecent Assault HULL, Que. (CP) -- Louis- Joseph Pigeon, MP for Joliette- L'Assomption - Montcalm, was served with a summons Thurs- day accusing him of indecent assault, He was summonsed to ar before the Hull magis-|th trate's court Monday. Police Chief J. Maxime La- vigne said the summons was is- sued following the complaint of a juvenile boy Aug. 3. He gave the boy's age as 16 or 17. Chief Lavigne told a press conference that Mr. Pigeon, 42- year-old Progressive Conserva- tive MP, was taken into cus- tody. about 11:15 p.m. Aug. by Hull police as a result of a telephoned complaint. He said the juvenile complained the as- sauit occurred on the main street of Hull across the Ot- tawa River from Ottawa. Chief Lavigne said Mr. Pig- eon was lodged overnight in po- lice cells and transferred Aug 4:to the Hull courthouse He then came under jurisdiction of the Crown attorney's office and Chief Lavigne said he couldiister Alvin Hamilton, 3 vate secretary to Hon Low tonight, High Saturday Windsor 45 \did the trading of the shares vl under investigation. He. said he St, Thomas,. believed this was the first time London ....... k ja royal commission had been ete | Printers Ask 'Retraint On Both Sides Hamilton . St. Catharines.... Toronto ,.... Kingston Peterborough . Trenton .. Fy Killaloe . b Muskoka . ° } North Bay... | TORONTO (CP) -- Local 91 Sudbury +e lof the International Typographi- ical Union (CLC) Thursday called for restraint from both sides in its dispute with the three Toronto daily newspapers, "The union seeks to avoid adding to the issues between us "jand asks the publishers to ex- ercise a similar restraint," Earlton ae Sault Ste. Marie... Kapuskasing ..... White River... Moosonee .. {Timmins jtelegram, sent the! union said in the second of two; issued during jday by local President R, J. {McCormack, chairman of junion's bargaining committee. harsh comments on advertise- jgive no information on subse-| ments, placed by the publishers lquent events, lin the newspapers _ Thursday, asking for applications from REFUSES COMMENT outside workers for composing Asked aboit the interval be-room jobs, jtween the arrest and issuing of| The Globe and Mail, a morn- the summons, Chief Lavignejiing paper, and The Star and said "I am not making any|The Telegram, evening papers, comment on that." He said nojhave continued to publish, us- jpreferred treatment was given'ing non-union and supervisory Mr. Pigeon. personnel to handle composing Mr. Pigeon is a graduate of room work since the ITU, rep- the University of Montreal andjresenting 680 printers at' the lists himself. in the Canadian|three papers, went on_ strike Parliamentary Guide as an ag-|July 9 riculturist. He is married and) The milder ITU. statement has one son. Thursday said the first 'did not From 1952 to 1958, he was pri-|accurately reflect the position of Antonio|the bargaining committee." It Barrette,|said the error in releasing the premier of/first statement was "due to re Quebec and now js Canadian/grettable confusion due to the 'ambassador to Greece, was pressure of work which recent Quebec labor minister events have placed on the ITU's He was elected to the Com- various operations," mons in 1958 and re - elected "The ITU expresses the hope in 1962 and 1963. In 1962, during|that the publishers will not pro the ous x ive Con-\ceed further with their plans to servative admi tton, Mr 'mplovees to re Pigeon varliamentary loya' printe who have retary to then agricuiture min-|left their jobs. because of the lcontract dispute," it said. t a Barrette while. Mr, who later became prey recruit new wa sec-iniac the, the) | The. first statement contained] the Commons is ther has delayed the corn crop Windfall Oils and Mines Ltd.|said there are existing protee- 'and could result in a lowyield.|and other mining companies in-| tions of which Mr. Justice Kelly is well aware. He said he as- sumed the hearings would be held publicly but this would be at the discretion of the commis- sioner. The premier said it is neces- Sary to investigate the extreme fluctuations in the price of Windfall stock which rose from 56 cents to $5.60 after rumors that the company had made a rich strike with its first dia- mond drill hole. The price dropped to 80 cents overnight after Windfall announced there was no ore of commercial value found, The investigation of.the stock exchange is necessary to main- tain its reputation in the eyes of the public, Mr. Robarts said, against it and it cannot inves- tigate itself. Meanwhile, the .president of Windfall Oil and Mines, George MacMillan, denied knowledge of a telegram sent to newspapers over his signature: The fake from Sudbury, said: "'My wife and myself have come under unjustified criti- cism and therefore I am ceas- ing all further drilling pending the outcome of the _ investiga- tions ordered," The denial was issued through lawyer N. O.: Seagram, who quoted Mr. MacMillan as say- ing: 'The drills are turning over."' Windfall has announced completion of three holes on its Prosper Township property near Timmins, lunion elections are to be held lin the fall. The slate's candidate for pres- SIU's port agent with the SIU of Canada's Atlantic region in Halifax. He will be running against Mr. McLaughlin for the job once held by Haj Banks. The remnants of the executive that served under Mr. Banks now are running the union un- der the control of the govern- ment-appointed Board of Mari- time Trustees. Mr. McLaughlin also con- firmed a report. that Gilbert Johnson, the slate's candidate for vice-president in charge of organization, is being sent to 2-Car Crash Kills 6 Near Parry Sound PARRY SOUND, Ont. (CP)-- Provincial police said six per- sons died Thursday night in a two-car head-on collision on iHghway 69, 10 miles north of here. They said fire broke out in one of the cars bearing Minne- sota licence plates when the gasoline tank apparently ex- ploded, The other car, from On tario, did not burn. Police believe there were four persons in the Minnesota car and two in the Ontario vehicle Identities had not been estab- lished by early today. Police said there had: been in termittent rain before the acci dent, which occurred on straight stret ch of highway They described visibility as good. EGGS GRADE "A" SMALL LEAN SHOULDER SMALL LINK PURE FRONT QUARTER BEEF (CUT AND W BUEHLER: 12 KING E, -- 723-3633. Friday and Saturday Specials PORK STEAKS > A T. te 2 07. 55° 2. *] PORK SAUSAGE 2. *l uw 39° RAPPED FREE) Fort William on an organizing job. Mr, Johnson said he was notified of the move on Tues- day. Mr. Johnson would still be fe- porting to union headquarters here and his new duties will take "not much longer than a month." Jack Dormer, public relations man for the candidates, said the moves involving Mr, Ban- sept and Mr. Johnson "are quite a bit more than coincidences." But Mr. McLaughlin said nei-| dismissal} ther Mr. Bansept's nor Mr, Johnson's new job are inspired by electoral considera- tions. He said Mr. Johnson was picked to go to Fort William be- cause he is French-speaking and the men to be organized there aiso are French-speaking "Anyway, what better place than the Lakehead could you want if you were interested in nese warship in the Second street, he World War, will 2 Sept. 1. de discreet inquiries to Running submerged one morn- which an urchin coptted: "Ah, ing in-early 1942 his submarine campaigning for seamen's|you mean Hitler's Eva--third sighted a Japanese est votes?"' the executive vice-pres-' door on the right." on the surface, its crew ry ident asked. Dreesen chuckled: "It was a dently lolling on the deck in Mr. Bansept was laid off but! secret here, but in Munich even bathing trunks. "We let him "he still is a union member the kids knew all." have three sara 9 down and will be considered for other, yitler, who made the Dreesen he went, Grenfell sa " MUNICH KNEW Arriving at her \Dreesen, who was "intemed" . duties," Mr. McLaughlin said.|, sort of headquarters for the Duesseldorf -Cologne area, set out from here June 30, 1934, to COSENS & MARTIN || McGILL "st: Pay No More Then 4% h -- When -- icGl Your Property DIVIDENDS = By THE CANADIAN PRESS | Abitibi Power and Paper Co. Real Estete Broker Insurance Day or Night--728-4285 Ltd., common 14 cehts, pid. 28%|] 67 King St. E., Oshawa _ cents, Oct, 1, record Sept. 1. All Lines of 728-7515 PAUL RISTOW LTD, Canada Wire and Cable Co.| Insurance Ltd., class A $1, class B 15 Res: 725-2802 of 725-7413 ye Sepf. 15, record Aug. 31. = REALTOR fanadian Salt Co. Ltd., 20) cents, Sept. 30, record Sept. | NEED A NEW... Dominion of Canada General | Insurance Co., 42% cents, Oct.| 15, record Sept. 30. Labrador Mining and Explor- ation Co. Lid., 25 cents plus 25 cents extra, Sept. 15, record OIL FURNACE? Coll PERRY 728-9474 lhug. 98 Day er night 723-3443 i] 187 King St. Eost FOR FIFTY ALE IN LABATT'S SUMMER FESTIVAL OF FLAVOUR Here's a great way to join in the Festival! Take five for Canada's fastest-growing ale --Labatt's "50" ""50"' is the ale to start with... and stay with! See for yourself, Celebrate Labatt's Summer Fert*--" of Flavour with a refresh- ing bottle 0: wu" Ale--one of four great Labatt brews for summer "do's'"'! For the reatest taste variaty in beer, look no urther than Labatt's. Ale! Refreshing? You bet! YR reece

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