Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 30 Oct 1964, p. 2

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wie @ THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridéy, Octobér 30, 1964 GOOD EVENING -- By JACKGEARIN -- CHILDREN'S POOL PLAN IS ADVANCED ~ Mayor Lyman did much Thursday night to restore order, sanity to the Centennial project debat His proposal for.a swimming pool on one of two city- owned sites (southwest corner of Adelaide avenue east and 'witsén rowd north -- or the southeast corner of the Hillsdale Maiior property) won overwhelming Council support, 10-1, at the .committee-lével. It now needs only ratification in open Countil to become a reality. His Worship's proposal has uniqie merit. It will _ un- quéstionably appeal to hun- dreds of parents anxious for moré civic-sponsored swim- ming outlets centrally- located. Mr. Gifford was careful to repeat his now- famous Centennial -- slogan: "We must take the pools 'to the children, not the children to the pools," a reference which will not ¢xacly endear him to his Civie Auditorium friends. One of the big selling points with Mr. Gifford's plan to date has been this double-edged feature -- not only will it stand out as a fitting birthday gift for Can- ada's Centennial year, but the cost can stay well within the gtant.figure of approximately $186,000. Mr. Gifford stressed that no official word had been re- ceived from Queen's Park about a deadline-time extension from November 9 for submitting project proposals. He said Council, therefore, would have to move fast. 'ALDERMAN MURDOCH WELL, LET'S GO AND TELL Herman M. Batten, chair- ber of Parliament for Hum- THEM... House of Commons early OTTAWA (CP) -- Thirteen of the 88 Canadian life insurance companies have already fallen under foreign control, the Com- mons banking and finance com- mittee was informed Thursday. With another -13 companies mutualized, that leaves only 12 to be affected by Finance Mim ister Gordon's proposed legisla- tion setting limits on the sale of company shares to non-resi- dents. The status of the Canadian the superintendent of insurance Richard Humphrys, as the com- mittee began detailed study of the bill. . : Aim of the legislation is to prevent a Canadian company from selling more than 25 per cent of its sharés to non-resi- dents;or more than 10 per cent to any non-resident or his asso- ciates, The information on the status of the Canadian life companies, whén matched against the sup- life companies was outlined by GANANOQUE, Ont. (CE)--| Magistrate Gordon Jermyn,} granted six months' sick leave} by. Attorney - General Arthur} Wishart, was complimented) Thursday in magistrate's court} here. ° Lawyer Stuart B. Scott of Gananoque and Kingston |wished Mr. Jermyn well in the jfuture. "I wish not to bury} Caesar but to praise him,". said the former Queen's University lecturer. ~*I have , always \of counsel as fair," he said. $ Magistrate Jermyn, who has need publicly criticized for his Thursday afternoon to report |% t...room conduct, replied P considered} ;your judgments and treatment Mag. Jermyn Gets Sick Leave Jermyn sick leave rather than accept his resignation. Mr. Wishart's department launched an inquiry last week into reports that Mr. Jermyn has used profanity on the bench. Two days ago, Mr. Wish- art told reporters he had re- ceived Mr. Jermyn's resigna- tion. Magistrate doctor and a number of others had asked the attorney-general | not to accept his resignation 'but to grant him sick leave, Mr. Wishart said Friday. There was no comment on the nature of Mr. Jermyn's illness. was reported by the Kingston Jermyn's family| The use of profanity iMeourt' erintendent's report on their 1963. operations, shows these 're- sults: HAVE. SIX PER CENT. The 13. foreign controlled companies have only six per cent of the entire groups' as- sets of about $10,500,000,000. These 13 are Allstate, Acadia Life, British Pacific Life, Cana- dian Premier Life, Canadian Reassurance, Commercial Life, Continental Life, Dominion Life, Excelsior Life, _ Fidelity Life, Montreal Life, National Life, and Western Life. -- Canadian stock companies have about 30 per cent of the total assets. They are Crown Life, Dominion of Canada Gen- eral, Eaton Life, Great - West Life, Imperial 'Life; London Life, Maritime Life, Monarch Life, Northern Life, Sauve-garde iLife, Sovereign Life and West- |mount Life, Biggest block of the assets-- about 64 per cent--resides with the Canadian mutual companies. They are Alliance Mutual, As- surance-Vie Desjardins, Canada sife, Confederation Life, Co- | operative Life, Equitable Life of UK. France | By JOSEPH MacSWEEN 13 Insurance Companies" : Under Foreign Control | Canada, Manufacturers Life, Life of Alberta, Mutual Life of. Canada, North America Life, Sun Life, Toronto Mutual Life, Wawanesa Life, Besides these. 38. companies, also operating in this country are 16 British and 57 Ameri life insurance companies. ie Canadian companies last year did about 67 per cent of all the business in life insurance, 2 pared with 27 per eent for the foreign companies and six per cent for the British, Two Into One Is Tanzania DAR ES SALAAM (AP)+The United Republic of Tanganyika and Zanzibar was christened . Tanzania Thursday, President Julius Nyerere told a press con- ference. The decision to do s0 was made at a cabinet meet-, ing. He said he had been asked by the cabinet to make thé an- nouncement, and added: "'It is now officially the United Réepub- lie of Tanzania." To Build | Joint Channel Tunnel portant legal and financial prob- There is no such thing as a perfect solution to this Cen- tennial muddle, but Council's majority can rest assured that its decision in committee will have the widest sort of appeal-- "| - ber-St. George's, Nfid.,..leaves |: Mian of . the "Common Flag his office in the Parliament Committee and Liberal Mem- Buildings in Ottawa for the |Whig-Standard in an editorial Ganadian Press Staff Writer Oct. 14. Earlier this year, Mr.| Prime Minister Harold Wil- spd a pr gg tig son's new hands-under-the-chan- lems to be solved. L. F. A. d'Erlanger, the Brit- ish banker who is chairman of on the commitice's work. 5 ">with one word: "Thanks." --(CP Wirephoto) | He commences his leave of absence after a final court ses- it will also do much to make amends for past neglect at the municipal level insofar as children's swimming pools are con- cerned. Apart from the much-needed Simcoe Hall Boys' Club pool which doesn't begin to supply the swimming needs for the-southeast, the City still has but two civic pools (the 'game number incidentally it had away back in the early 1050's). Rotary pool was closed down temporarily (and a new one built to replace it) and Ritson road permanently four years ago on order of the City Health Department when the bacteria content analysis was found to be on a par with that of a sewage disposal plant, thus narrowly averting an epi- demic. es Cotincil's 'majority should stand firm by their 10-1 deci- sion, come hell or high water. The 14-man Centennial com- mittee deserves high praise for performing a most~arduous civie duty, but the responsibility for the final decision in such an important matter could. not reasonably be foisted off on an advisory group. Alderman Hayward Murdoch was miffed because the three final: proposals were a pool, grandstand and arts theatre, whereas he refrained from advocating a Health and Welfare building with a juvenile court ("which is desperately needed"). Mr. Murdoch's disappointment is understandable, but Council heed not apologize for the official stand it took Wednesday night. STUDENTS TO HEAR POLITICAL BIG-WIGS So the students at the McLaughlin Collegiate Institute and Vocational School will attend lectures by prominent political figures starting with Pauline Jewett, MP, Northumberland November 9. The promoters of this revolutionary youth training pro- gram with emphasis on politics deserve a bouquet, especial- ly Principal George Roberts and James B. Palmer, History and Economics teacher at MCVI. The students will have an opportunity to hear these elect- ed representatives of various political colors first-hand; also they will have a chance to question them on controversial subjects. To give an idea of the top quality of the roster scheduled, "'Mike" Starr, M. J. Coldwell and Senator Jean Francois Pouliot will follow on different dates. Open political discussion is taboo today in too many @tratas of our society, a sad commentary on our way of life; the place to start to correct this situation is in the ranks of the teen-agers, the citizens of tomorrow. Too bad the schools don't inaugurate a course in Muni- cipal Politics, a fascinating subject and one worthy of the attention of all citizens, young and old. NDP WILL SUPPORT FLAG: DOUGLAS Tories Feel Have their party's strategic plays a ing's|close secret. They can. at Con- iservative insistence, shelve the g question. They can decide, By JAMES NELSON OTTAWA (CP)--Someth gotta give. i Thiszwas the view of poliical|!® H observers' and many politicians|@8 Mr. Pearson has said in the themselves late Thursday after/Past, that Parliament must the flag committee report was|Come to a@ decision on it. He tabled in the Commons, |has. expressed the hope | this It came on the heels of height-| oUt bp by Cheletmas. ening political tension which|SEES ELECTION |prompted Opposition Leader) Real Caouette,-léader of the Diefenbaker to cancel & sched-|13-member Creditiste group, juled trip to Regina, and brought/saw the makings of a general Prime Minister Pearson back to|electiop in the situation. Other the Commons from a day spent| minor parties see it the same at home with a cold. way, and say candidly that in Conservative party sources|finances and in party. organiza- say that, as Mr. Diefenbaker|tion, they aren't ready for an sees it, they are virtually in/election. command of affairs in the} Even before the committee House of Commons, They have|report was tabled, there was a the power to force a new gen-/flurry of reports Thursday: that eral election unless the govern-|Mr, Pearson and Mr. Diefen- ment shelves the flag issue and| baker might meet to discuss the drops other iegislation the Con-| so-called crisis. It was hinted servatives oppose. ithat the initYative might come Liberal sources were keeping|from the opposition leader. WEATHER FORECAST Sunny Today 4 Forecast Temperatures Windsor St. 7 TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts jissued by the weather office at 15:30. a.m.: | Synopsis: Clouds and snow-|London flurries will clear during the} Kitchener 65 Printers Fined $375 In Toronto TORONTO (CP)--Five strik-| Those fined were Kenneth Da-| more cloudine: morning across Northern On-|Mount Forest..... tario with mostly sunny skies|Wingham ... prevailing over the province to-|Hamilton ... day, Afternoon temperatures to-|St. Catharines..... day will be mostly in the high|Toronto 40s or low 50s. Prospects for| Peterborough .'.... Saturday are for the sunny|Kingston .... Warm Tomorrow Whip Hand In The Commons | Mr. Pearson told the House |later that, as he had promised ito do when the flag committee lwas set up Sept. 10, he would convene a meeting of all party Headers. It now is tentatively scheduled for Monday. But the flag issue is not the jonly one on which the Conserv- latives now are riding high. | Mr, Diefenbaker feels he has |found a flaw in the govern- ment's re-introduction of his | government's formula for con- |stitutional amendments, -the so- jcalled Fulton formula. By this flaw, Mr. Diefenbaker says,, the Pearson formula would balkan- lize Canada, letting provinces infringe on federal fields of jurisdiction, and enabling them to establish themselves as sep- arate states. Bond Mart Kept Firm TORONTO (CP) Prices closed on a firm note on the Canadian bond market Thurs- day after overcoming .a shaky opening when profit-atkers sent most issues lower, bond dealers report. Government of Canada's 54 | per cent, due May 1, 1990 typi- | fied activity, falling 4% in early | going and recovering all of its "| Joss later in the day. Day-to-day money was in \short supply and cost 3% per } cent. The new issue of treasury sion in Brockville today, during a trial of five membérs GRANTED LEAVE The attorney - gencral an- nounced earlier Thursday that of a family accused of assault- ing a school teacher because | the teacher had strapped a girl he had decided to grant Mr.'student of the family. LONDON (AP) -- Arthur Ries -- who has taken more than 1,000 driving lessons in the last 17 yeats--has flunked again. This time -- his lith test--he didn't even get be- hind the wheel. "Tim bitterly disappointed at the way I failed this test," he said. "There's always a different excuse they give me." | Ries, now 65, took his first | driving test in 1947. He failed it. "T ean't remember what excuse they gave me then," | he said, "but. it's always | something and the terrible part about it is that I'm a very fine driver." Since his first turn-down he said he had spent £3,000 ($8,400) on driving lessons and practice runs. As a learner - driver, Ries must: carry a bright L-plate on the front and rear of his | ear. Also as an L-driver he | is not allowed to drive alone, $8,400 ON DRIVING LESSONS; AND STILL CAN'T PASS TEST. but only when accompanied by a person with a valid licence. FAIL BEFORE START Ries failed his 11th driving test Wednesday before he got | into his car. He said that as he and the official who, was to give him the test approached his car, the official asked him to read the licence number on_ the back of a truck .parked be- side his car. This is a stan- dard eye - test procedure in Britain "I put on my glasses and I made a mistake in reading the registration," explained Reis, '"'but I got only oné fet- ter wrong. Anyhow, the plate was dirty." Asked if he would try still again, Reis said: "Yes. This won't stop me. I shall keep on until. I get the licence. I'm a splendid driver. I've never had the slightest accident." nel gesture to President Charles de Gaulle may take some of the |tension out. of relations be- tween their countries. The British labor govern- jment pledged Thursday to go ahead with France on plans for |a channel tunnel, a project that has been mooted off and-on for the channel tunnel study group, reported earlier this week the estimated cost now has climbed to £160,000,000 from the earlier figure of £130,000,000. "Our expert consultants esti- mate that a bored twin tunnel with services in between, wi take five years to build and an 62 years. Significantly, the pledge came n same day that Britain's jaViatioh minister, Roy Jenkins, began a re - examination" in /Paris of another Anglo-French | project, the supersonic airliner |Corcorde. Doubts about the fu- ture of the Concorde caused gloom in France: And the announcement also |coincided with shanp French | criticism of the new Labor gov- ernment's import surcharges, which apply to a high propor: tion of the goods sold by France to Britain. But, if the history of the chan- nel tunnel is any guide, the |Thursday announcement will }mean.no immediate or dra- matic moves, although it does remove French anxiety that} Britain might withdraw alto- gether. is COST RISING The French and British gov- ernments made it clear in Feb-| ruary that any cross-channel/ \link"Would be a rail tunnel, not} a bridge, but surveys. have yet! to determine whether it should |be a bored tunnel or an im-| |mersed tube There also are int: | immersed tube four years," |" British officials have ap- jpeared less enthusiastic about the tunnel than the French and jthe Conservative government was criticized by Wilson during the recent election campaign for its approach to the project. The project envisages two separate tunnels, each contain- ing'a single rail track, reducing jthe London-Paris train trip to |4% from seven hours. Apart \from normal' passenger and jfreight trains, there \would be automobile "ferry" trains at | frequent intervals. | Traditional British ob ons jto the scheme arose from 'te- fence considerations and thes®\.__ persisted until 1955 when for- mer premier Harold Macmillan, then defence minister, said. "strategic considerations" rev ally were not involved. NEED { Mortgage Money? McGILL *:.:0" Doy or Night - 728-4285 | 'Bomb Scare At Mrs. JFK's | | Apartment NEW YORK (AP) -- An an- }onymous telephone caller re- ported Thursday night that a |bomb had been planted in Mrs. bills attracted chartered banks.| 54) w, Kennedy's new apart- The 91-day bills yielded 3.70 Hats ment on Fifth Avenue. However, jcent and the 182-day bills 3.86 the threat turned out to be a per cent. hoax. . | Provincial issues traced the A gatket Babvice 'eeent Mhld |same course as the government | € on issues ici e wiet| Mrs. Kennedy and her two chil- istuea, Muricipals, Were \dren, John 3, and Caroline, 6, skies to continue in the south- lern portions of Ontario and for| Killaloe |Trenton ... soeee \and stronger. | were not evacuated from the apartment during a massive ss in the north) Muskoka ...... ing mewspaper printers were|vid Osborne, 30, Robert John|country with warmer temperat|North Bay. each fined $75 Thursday for cre-| Goodfellow, 34, Bruce MacMur-|tures in most areas. ating a disturbance while pick-|chy, 47, John L. Martin, 28, and the Enterprise Printing) David J. Robins, 30, all of Tor-|Lake Huron, Niagara, and Publishing Company here onto. Oct. x . 5. They pleaded guilty in police court and were allowed two weeks to pay the fines. They were among 240 strik- ers picketing the printing plant. Local 9i of the Titernational Typographical Union (CLC) went on strike against © The Globe and Mail, The Star atid Indian Bones Found Near 'First Site Sudbury ... Lake Erie,/Earlton .. : Lake On-| SauifSte. Marie... tario, southern Georgian Bay re-|Kapuskasing ..... -- gions, Windsor, London, Hamil-| White River....... |ton, Toronto: Sunny with Sea-|Moosonee ...... .. jsenable temperatures toda Y.\Timmins ...... /Sunny with a few cloudy pe-| jriods and. warmer Saturday. | Winds light. Northern Georgian Bay, Hal-|/DaWson ...0...... iburton, Killaloe, "North Bay,| Victoria ,... }Sudbury: Sunny with cloudy pe-| Edmonton .. jriods and warmer today. Vari-| Regina ... Lake St. Clair, 25 Observed Temperatures Low overnight, high Thursday: 30 63 53 61 53 Wife Keeps Tabs | search. Police originally re- | |ported she was forced to leave. | | | On Hubby 'On Air' A roof-to-cellar check of her iThe air waves in this Okanagan |hours; Police; fitemen, Secret jcity are becoming increasingly |Service men and FBI agents filled with homespun chatter. |took part. Nothing suspicious | It may be a wife on the air| Was uncovered. l|asking her husband how many| A male caller dialed the oper- iminutes he's away from home ator first at 5:12 p.m. and told jand dinner, or she May be tell-| her a bomb would go off in Mrs. ing him minutes affer he's left/Kennedy's apartment, but er- ifor work that he forgot his|roneously listed the address as lunch. /1050 Park Avenue. Police It all can be heard on the} found nothing there either. building at 1040 Fifth Avenue, | PENTICTON, B.C. (CP) --/at 85 Street, lasted almost two} Sliced Up Car TORONTO (CP)--Two Tor- onto youths have testified they cut a stolen car into '"'little pieces" after taking out the transmission and motor for a car they were building. | Bruce Cormack, 17, said Wed- | |nesday he was the organizer of} ja car-stealing trio which in-| {cluded Hugh Newman, 20, and ge | John Garbutt, 19. | | -All three pleaded guilty to car eft. | theft Aggressive representative ing stating age, educatio expected, SALESMAN WANTED Belleville and Orillia areas contacting the retail trades. We are Canada's largest supplier of live birds, fish and pet and aquarium products. Salary, bonus and all expenses paid. Reply jn writ- | VIOBIN CANADA) LIMITED required to cover Oshawa, n, experience and salary St. Thomas, Ontario etal | Announcing! : ST. JOHN AMBULANCE Senior First Aid Training Gourse Tuesday Evenings Beginning Nov, 3 AUDITORIUM DR. PHILLIP'S SCHOOL Simcoe ot Rossland ~ Interested parties invited to register; Phone St. John Business 668-4666. Residence 725-4197 PAUL RISTOW REALTOR 187 King East 728-9474 The Telegram July 9. The pa-' port ERIE, Ont. (CP) -- Ajable cloudiness and mild Satur-| Winnipeg ...... pers have continued to publish.| s.cond group of Indian bones|4y. Winds westerly 15. |Lakehead .... The printers contended = and artifeats tias been found| Algoma, White River regions: | Sault Ste. Marie... the company was settiik @4-/ about two blocks from the site|Cloudy this morning becoming) white River....... vartisements for use'in Toronto) of an eartier find, but the aec-/Sunny by noon. Warmer' today. | Kapuskasing sess. oS See jond discovery is being kept hhid.| Mainly cloudy and mild Satur-lrariton ..... : ay, Winds westerly 15 today|North Bay. s Aussies Sell den. oe d south 15 Saturday, City officials said the tatest|""%, sone: [DUC \find has been covered over PPh egies on Wheat To China MELBOURNE (Reuters) -- can come to Fort Brie at' the °" ah ag Kingston . ls daa : ; loudy with a few snowflurries. | again and will remain buried) Cjcaring and warmer this after- ; junti! a téam of archaeologists) oon Mainly cloudy and mild LONDON sere vere |from the University of Toronto , " Toronto ..se05 The sale of 56,000,000 bushels of} Australian wheat to Communist China on a 12-month credit was end of the year. Moroney. _RRNERRRIRRIR re mr se damaging others, Financial worry slows recovery during sickness. Eliminate the worry with PERSONAL HEALTH INSURANCE to replace income and pay medical expenses. "he EXC i : In July, hundreds of persons|snowflurries today and Satur-| reported to the wheat board|invaded the site of the first find,|day. Winds southerly 15 becom-| Thursday by Chairman J. V.|taking away some objects and|ing northwest 15 this afternoon ee eee ELSIOR LIFE Western James Bay region: |_-- general service radio band) jwithin a 20-mile radius of the) \city. | "We have an awful lot of fun," says Ben Biro, co-ordina-| tor for a club of 27 residents) who operate on the "citizens" band. The wave length, similar to) |the citizens' band in: the United | States, was autho rized for Can- jada by the department of trans- 'port two years ago. = CITY OF OSHAWA CLEANUP WEEK The week of November 2nd te 6th inclusive, hes been designated as CLEANUP WEEK In the City of Oshawa ond arrangements have been made tothe collection from privete id BUEHLERS:) Tender EAT'N TRUE-TRIM BEEF (( 12 KING. E. -- 723-3633 WEEK-END SPECIALS! _ MEATY * f on their usual garb |Mainly cloudy and cool with} jand decreasing to light tonight. Now 'Renting 1-2-3 Bedroom SUITES @ PENTHOUSES Complete with Indoor Parking @ Rente! Informetion by appointment only, 723-1712 728-2911 hold accumulction of furnitu All materials to be collected MATERIALS NOT I products (in excess of the nor The Ultimate in Luxury Living 124 PARK ROAD g ; Georcian man SIONS NORTHs OSHAWA age day of all discarded hovse- re, clothing, rubbish resulting from the cleaning up of grounds or from. minor household repairs, and domestic waste material such @s paper, rags, cartons, packing cases and bottles. should be put out during the above-mentioned week only, and et the some time ond in the seme place as the garbage for the regular collection. NCLUDED IN THIS COLLECTION - Large quantities of waste building materiel and waste food mal amount handled in regu- lar garbage collections) are not included in this collection. This special collection epplies only te private households end not to apartments, stores, businesses or industries. ALDERMAN R. C. BINT, Chairmen, Public Works Committee PORK HOCKS 5 1.00 ~ LEAN RIB STEW @ FREEZER Hind Quarters - BEEF "" "CUT AND WR 3» 1.00- SPECIAL@ 93: APPED FREE"

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