Q THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, October 7, 1964 WEATHER FORECAST Injunctions GOOD EVENING -- ByJACKGEARIN -- THOMAS RUNDLE TO ACCEPT PROVINCIAL POST Alderman Thomas M. Rundle will move to Toronto soon to accept a position in the office of the Attorney-General of On- tario as-Director of Legal Offices, effective Nov. 2. He recently announced that he would not compete in the ide: nic race this year -- he will also resign his post as 'secretary of the Oshawa Har- bor Commission which he took over in December, 1963, on the resignation of David Bowman, a fellow lawyer. Mr. Rundle had _ previously been a Harbor commissioner, but resigned early in 1963 be- cause he thought this posi- tion, a paid one, was in con- flict with his post as a City alderman. Mr. Rundle ran_surpris- ingly strong in 1962 (in his first bid for public office), finishing fifth in the alder- manic race with a whopping 7,987 votes as compared with the first four (Attersiey, 9,348; Branch, 8,902; Dafoe, 8,405 and Brady 8,085). The 34-year-old graduate of the Osgoode Hall Law School, has long been active in Pro- gressive Conservative associations in Oshawa and district -- he is a fotmer president of the PC Association of the City of Oshawa. . THOMAS RUNDLE CIVIC ELECTION LI READY FRIDAY For those citizens who regard the 1964 Oshawa municipal elections as some far-off event: , * City Clerk Roy Barrand will have his election lists -- the names of eligible voters -- ready 'next Friday, and there will be 37,361, approximately 2,970 more than in 1962. Mr. Barrand will officially announce in The Oshawa Times where the lists will be posted for inspection. The City Clerk's office at the City Hall, the Post Office and Central Fire Hall on Simcoe north will be three of the places (they are also sup: plied to officials to be employed on the election). This year's postings are 16 days in advance of those in 1962. For those who would toss their hats as candidates into the upeoming Oshawa election -- nomination day will be Novem- ber 19. Citizens whose names are omitted from the election list, or whose names are misspelled, etc. can apply to the City Clerk's office -- County Judge Alex Hall will preside, QUEBEC JAYCEES WOULD FORM SEPARATE BLOCK NOTES FROM THE SERVICE CLUB WORLD: President Donald E. Netley of the Oshawa Jaycees will depart on an important mission October 17 with Don Brown and Tobi Couture) -- the seven-day an- nual. convention of Jaycee In- ternational in Oklahoma. High on the agenda will be an application from Que- bec members of the organiza- tion to set upa separate Jaycee group in the Interna+ tional framework -- this is to be opposed by. non - Quebec clubs, as was anounced in Winnipeg last week by W. J. A. Rowe of Calgary, president of the Canadian Junior Chamber of Com- merce. Such a move must be ap- fe proved by the International DONALD Jaycee executive because the international constitution stip- uates there can only be one national chamber of each coun- try. A dispute between the Quebec branch and the parent Canadian chamber erupted last January and Quebec members voted to form a French-language group. NETLEY LITTLE NOTES FROM HERE AND THERE Wedding bells will ring next January 23 for Miss Joan Mary Starr, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Michael Starr -- she is to matry Robert Nicol in St. Gregory's Church on Simcoe north that day. The groom is the son of Mrs. A. Walker of Oshawa and the late Robert Nicol -- he is one of two Separate School representatives on the Oshawa Board of Education. . . MEMO TO ALL MUNICIPAL VOTERS: The City will hold an advance poll for the municipal election Friday, December 4 -- this will be for voters who will be either out of the City on election day, December 7, or in hospital. These voters must appear at City Hall December 4 to vote. They must also sign an affidavit. This new advance poll bylaw was passed February 18, 1963. coat Wand Taxmen Says | Supreme Court By JOHN E. BIRD OTTAWA (CP) -- The Cana- dian Bill of Rights does not grant taxpayers the right to be} present at inquiries at which| their financial affairs are being investigated by officers of the of revenue, the Su- preme Court of Canada ruled! Tuesday. | The court made the decision | in a judgment granting an ap-| | Niagara, Lake Ontario, South- Forecasts issued by the Tor- onto weather office at 5:30 a.m. Synopsis: A rapidly moving storm centre is expected to bring cold air again Thursday settling southward to give con- siderable cloudiness and a few snowflurries to the province. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, ern Lake Huron, Windsor, Lon- don, Hamilton, Toronto: | Cloudy and not so cold Thurs- day with occasi showers. Winds southerly 15. ' Northern Lake Huon, Geor- gian Bay Southern Timagami, Algoma, Haliburton, North Bay, Killaloe, Sudbury: Thursday cloudy with a few showers or snowflurries. 15. Northern Timagami Coch- rane: Thursday mainly cloudy} with a few snowflurries. Not) quite so cdld. Winds east 15. | White River: Thursday) cloudy with sunny periods. | Winds northeast 15 to 25, Western James Bay: Vari- able cloudiness with a few snow- | flurries Thursday. Little change jin temperature. Winds light. | TORONTO (CP) *Yarine forecasts issued by the wéather office at 8:15 a.m. Valid until 11 a.m. Thursday. Lake superior: Winds south-| jeast 25 to 35 knots, becoming} northeast 20 to 30 toggght; rain} Cloudy, Warmer Some Showers 'Vicious' OFL Told NORTH BAY (CP)--Court in- junctions issued by judges to 'ain picket - line activity have become a vicious anti- strike weapon for employers, the Ontario Federation of La- bor was told Tuesday. and snow tapering off to flur- ries tonight, Lake Huron, Georgian Bay: Winds southeast to south 15 knots, increasing to 25 to 35 this afternoon and shifting to north- erly Thursday morning; becom- ing cloudy with rain and snow beginning this evening and end- ing by morning. Lake- Erie, Lake Ontario: Winds variable 10 knots, be- coming south to southeast 15 co 20 this afternoon and southwest 25 to 30° tonight; showers to- night. Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, High Thursday: Windsor se eeeerees Winds northeast}, Mount Forest.... Wingham .... Hamilton .. St. Catharines Killaloe . Muskoka . |North Bay. Sudbury .. Eariton Sault Ste. Marie.. Kapuskasing ..... White River....... Moosonee ..++» Timmins ...< SPYING A LA BOND . 4 MOSCOW (Reuters) -- The| | United States and Britain Tues-| day rejected Russian charges | that three American and one} British military attache en-) gaged in' espionage while tra-| er | Spies On Train Soviets Charge "The Russians said the four engaged in espionage travelling to the Russian far east port of Nahodka. The American attaches were named as Col. George A. Aub- while | The 1,000 delegates at the fed- eration's annual meeting voted unanimously to ask the provin- cial government to_ restrict the issue of injunctions, which one dziegate said "are being handed out like peanuts" by judges biased against trade un- ions, ~ F A resolution asked that in- junctions be granted only after a trial and processed through the Ontario Labor Relations Board. Under present law, an employer can obtain an injunc- tion by giving evidence to a judge that there has been vio- lence in picketing. * Oliff Pilkey of Oshawa charged that ,labor's right to picket. is slowly being de- stroyed. Using injunctions, em- ployens were picking off the smaller unions one by one, breaking strikes with 'scab la- bor" brought through under- jmanned picket lines. ' The 500,000-member federa- tion winds up its three-day an- nual meeting today. -| Plant Rumour, No Comment QUEBEC (CP)--Gerard D.} Levesque, Quebec minister of trade and industry, declined comment Tuesday on a pub-| lished report that the French automobile manufacturers Peu- geot and Renault will build an assembly plant at Pointe-aux- Trembles, on the east end of Montreal Island, Montreal Le Devoir had Said announcement of the plant, which would cost about $3,500,- /000, would be made in about |velling more than 4,000 miles|rey, the. army attache; Maj.| by train in the Soviet Union. The U.S. embassy here said lit did not accept the validity) of the changes. | In London, Britain rejected) |the Russian charge that its as- |sistant navel attache engaged) in espionage while on the trip.) | The rejections followed Rus-| jsian protests to the U.S. and! Britain and were contained in eign office here Tuesday. The notes followed American and British protests last week hotel r- f the four HEADED BOR TOKYO against an incident in which the|erty confiscated from the *S|mats were 900 photographs and were ioreibly entered and| 6 notebooks, the Soviet news jsearched by Russian officials.| gency Thad sold. James F' Smith, assistant air attache, and Lt.-Col. Karl R. Liewer, assistant military at- jtache: The British attache was Lt.- |Cmdr. Nigel N. Laville. The Russian notes said pas-|1964 International Plowing/the UAW, said telegrams were sengers on the train reported|Match, sponsored by Ontario|sent by Mr. Burt Monday, seek- that a "group of foreigners"|Plowmen's Association gets. un-|ing Mr. Robarts' and Mr. | systematically photographed in- notes handed over at the for- --: plants, railway junc- ions, bridges, tunnels; made notes and marked maps. The notes said among prop- diplo- | The imeident allegedly took) place on the night of Sept. 28 in Khabarovsk while the four men were on their way Tokyo. They arrived in Japan| by ship Saturday, and then pro-| ceeded to Hong Kong. GALLERY LARGEST BRISTOL, England (CP)-- to|This West Country border city's new £2,000,000 museum and art} | gallery will be Britain's largest | post-war building of its type. | COUNCIL CHAMBER IS OVERCROWDED The City Council Chamber o: n the fifth floor of the City | Hall had a strange look Monday night. It was more crowded than a department store basement jamongst the populace at large. _ 94 SIMCOE ST. HIGHEST QUALITY MEATS on a sale day with space, even for standing, at a minimum. The situation became so acute that Terence V. Kelly of the Civie Auditorium committee gave up his ringside seat behind Alderman Walter Branch, chairman of finance, to a lady and Mayor Lymn Gifford ordered more chairs to be brought in |from the rear room. The big decision from the City's Centenial committee was not the only reason for the overflow: turnout; at. least three delegations turned up, including a large one from Lake Vista Ratepayers who heard President John DeHart ask Council not to allow septic tanks in that district. It was the kind of overcrowded Chamber that is rarely seen at City Hall -- let's hope it augurs well for a spirited election campaign and a heavy turnout on Monday, Decem- ber 7. It shows that there are still plenty of people who still care jabout what goes on at City Hall, despite much apathy | Plowing Match | Starts Today PETERBOROUGH (CP)--The |der way here today with Pre- mier John Robarts handling of- ficial opening festivities. The match will be held just west of the city limits where, |for the last week, workmen |have been erecting tents and/ | setting up machinery and equip-| pment displays. roa | COSENS & MARTIN Insurance 67 King St. E., Oshawa 728-7515: Vise Insurance Res: 725-2802 or 725-7413 PRESCRIPTIONS City-Wide Delivery MITCHELL'S DRUGS 9 Simcoe N. 723-3431 Open Evenings: (ll? FI, PARTING SMILE | Queen Elizabeth flashes a parting smile as she prepares to board the royal yacht Bri- tannia,. Tuesday night after attending a' variety perform- ance at the Confederation | Memorial Centre in Charlotte- town. ( (AP Wirephoto) t U.K. ELECTION Name-Calling, Jeering As Election By ALAN WALKER LONDON (CP) -- Labor Leader Harold Wilson was called a to'fee-nosed, puffed-up adder. A little later Prime Min- ister Douglas-Home's evening speech was nearly drowned out by _jeers. The issues may be less than earth-shaking but as the cam- paign approaches the final week today nobody can complain about a complete lacklu$tre British election. Sir Alec Douglas - Home tried to tell a Leeds audience' that socialism would ruin Britain. Most members of the audi had trouble hearing because of catcails, and the prime minis- ter said after his speech: 'J think the Labor Party must be very hard up if they have to hire these kind of people in order to prevent people from hearing the seri- Flows issues before the country." During his speech Douglas- Home said the country that really experimented with social- ism in Russia, "and having learnt their lesson they now are galloping back to the system of enterprise and reward." He spoke in Bradford, in the 2 \ middle of the textile belt of Brit- ain. drowned out his words cries of "rubbish + Meanwhile Wilson was telling a Coventry audience that ,the election campaign had been re- cently transformed into some- thing lively because there was a general realization 'that the economic success story. the His hearers consistently with Patricia Juchk PIANO CLASSICAL, POPULAR, THEORY u Burk St: PHONE AWS 725-4587 Day Nears Torries hoped to fight on was a phoney." Earlier in the day Frank University he was briefly a eral. Byers, Liberal Party cam- paign manager in said Wilson had since he left the Libe "It shows how peopl hill when thev leave," he The Liberals held seven in the last Parliament and son commented after he told what Byers had said: Liberals had better get busy de- fending their seats." At prorogation, standing of the 630 - seat Commons was: Conservatives and allies 353; Labor 260; Liberals 7; independ- ent 2 with two vacancies, eer FAMOUS BRANDS BEST STYLES - FINE QUALITY Bras Foundations Uniforms FREE ADVIGE AND FITTINGS BY TRAINED EXPERTS y} HEE 22 s | 6 | WARD'S Simcoe S. et Athol 725-1151 |mands for a first contract with | Robarts Asked tie'compary | | Mr. Specht said Tuesday he T I t |had no further information 0] n ervene | about plans of the department Pt \of labor for future meetings In U AW Strike | with the company and the un- lion. Representatives of the two| LONDON, Ont. (CP)--George | Parties met with Deputy. Labor Burt, of Windsor, Canadian di-| Minister J. B. Metzler in Tor- rector of the United Auto Work-|onto last Friday in what were ers (CLC), has asked Premier|termed exploratory talks. There John Robarts and John White,,was no indication. after the |Progressive Conservative MPP|meeting that further meetings lfor London South, to intervene|might be held. in the dispute at Wolverine Tube here where UAW mem- bers are on strike. George Specht, London's in-| PAUL RISTOW LTD. | ional tiv of ternational representative REALTOR | White's intervention in the} seven-week-old strike. | Local 27, UAW, is striking the | |tube and pipe making division | of Calumet and Hecla of Can- | ada Limited in support of de- 728-9474 187 King St. Eost CURLING | SOUTHVIEW CURLING CLUB BOWMANVILLE BUSINESS GIRLS SECTION Two Draws Wednesday Evenings 7:30 and 9:30 e MEMBERSH MEMBERSHIP MEETING OCTOBER 14, 1 Applications Phone @ NEW MEMB IP FEE $30.00 964 -- 7:30 P.M.. Now Available 623-2670 snail ERS WELCOME @ peal by the revenut department | against Quebec court judgments | ruling that Rene Lafleur of Montreal had that right. The case dates back to 1960 when Philippe Guay, an officer of the department, in-| structed to investigate the af-| fairs of Mr. Lafleur and 13 other businessmen, corporations and estates. At the opening of the inquiry, | counsel for Mr. Lafleur asked) that Mr. Lafleur be allowed to be present and be represented | by counsel. The request was de- niod by 'Mr. Guy. | Mr. Justice Douglas Abbott, | who wrote the Supreme Court @ecision, said the trial judge ap- pears to have based his judg- ment primarily on the ground that in refusing Mr. Lafleur permission. to be present Mr. Guay had infringed a provision fo the Bill of Rights. Fresh Large Turkeys LEAN. MEATY BLADE ' LEAN MEATY SHORT RIB Short Cut Ist 4 PRIME RIB BONE! FSS BRISKET FRESH KILLED-OVEN READY TURKEYS hy) 39 69: POT ROAST 9) C lb AS - Capons - Roasting Chickens Available Cc FRESH PORK 39: Ib § » ' SHOULDER FRESH PORK BUTT FRESH PORK: 49; ; NORTH EXTRA FEATURE Ontario No. 1 Snow White Cauliflower Grade A" Large Size ; EGGS 2 In your container BROOKSIDE 24-02. ; BREAD 4 FIRST GRADE ORONO CREAMERY 15: 43: 239, Cc Ib " SMOKED PICNICS 99: 49% _ @ EXTRA FEATURE © Fresh Killed OVEN READY CEICKENS 2% te 3% Ib. Av. 35 It's impossible to hang a price tag on this bottle of blood. Fortunately, in this country, no one ever does. Your Canadian Red Cross provides whole blood and blood products absolutely free to almost 300,000 victims of illness, accident and disaster every year. All that's ever asked is your support. The Blood Transfusion Service is one of the many ways the-Red Cross serves this community, this nation and the world. Through the Red Cross your help does so much for so many. YOUR RED CROSS SERVES YOU OSHAWA BRANCH: 73 King St. E., 723-2933 -- Fred Roberts, pres. cg EVERY STEP OF THE WAY