Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 28 Apr 1965, p. 3

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Budget Reactions Balanced: One Yes, One No, One Maybe By KEN SMITH OTTAWA (CP) -- Finance machinery. Minister Gordon didn't balance his new budget, but he achieved) wait-and-see att announcement 0! reaction to it -- one plus, one $1,000,000,000 Canada Develop- ; iment Corp., to be set up to! The tax cut, which Mr. G he gen- provide financing for private|don described as an expansion- a balance of sorts in the early| minus and one maybe. The plus came in t eral approval of his 10-per-cent|C } taxes,|otherwise pass into foreign con- e cut in personal income effective July 1 and worth ajtrol total of $170,000,000 this year. The minus was the strong ob- increase in the gross national jection to his decision to leave)product this year of more unchanged corporation tax es|seven per ¢ and the controversial 1l-per-jday night for a deficit of $ cent sales tax on production! 000,000 in the fiscal year ending| next March 31. In the last fiscal/ The maybe was the let's-|year, he originally predicted a} itude toward his!deficit of $455,000,000, but the f the proposed! economic boom sliced that to $83,000,000. Gor- anadian businesses that might! any approach, was seen as gen-| ral approval of the line taken) jby the recent report of the forecasting an|Economic Council of Canada. Mr. Gordon indicated he feels} than\the cut is large enough to pro- ent, budgetted Mon-| mote higher domestic consump- 300,-\tion, but not enough to set off an inflationary spiral. Mr. Gordon, Cobourg Owns Lake-Bed | But Can't Charge For It Businessmen applauded the cut and the anticipated extra spending, but there was some criticism that it wasn't big enough and doesn't give max- imum benefit-to low - income |groups. There was nearly unanimous jeriticism of the lack of cuts for) COBOURG, Ont. (CP)--For a) The Ontario Municipal Board,| corporation taxes. few hours, Cobourg town coun- cillors had visions of their mu- nicipal financial problems being| solved with a toll on Great Lakes shipping passing through what may be legally the town limits, The hopes were dashed, how- ever, when the municipal so- licitor advised that the town might own the land under the water of Lake Ontario, but it does not own the water. At incorporation in 1849, Co- bourg town limits were estab- lished as being 1.4 miles under the water of Lake Ontario. In 1958, the town annexed a part of Hamilton Township and} town council was told the south-| ern limit of the land was 22.4 miles under the lake. That would take the town limits to the international boun- dary and ships using the Cana- dian side of the lake would be passing through the town, coun- cil was told. Greg Clark Wins Award As Top Canada Humorist in a letter to council, said Mon- . Pde poeta day that Cobourg might con- MAY DETER BUSINESSES ceivably have a new source of A. T. Lambert, president of revenue if it could substantiate|the Toronto - Dominion Bank, | a deed from Hamilton Town- Said in. Toronto the differential ship, approved by the OMB, between Canadian and United) designating the southern limit|States corporate tax rates--52/ of the land annexed in 1958 as|Per cent in Canada and 48 per| of the cent in the U.S. -- might keep PARLIAMENT _LJN Wins Praise Of UK. Delegate TORONTO (CP)--Lord Cara- | AT-A-GLANCE By THE CANADIAN PRESS TUESDAY, April 27, 1965 The Commons gave first reading to a bill that would don, the United Kingdom's per- set 75 as a retirement age for manent representative at the senators, United Nations, said Tuesday First reading was given inight the UN has brought to without a formal vote, some |the world new hopes and mo- members saying "on divi- |tives that are. stronger than the sion' to record their opposi- 'old fears and hatreds. tion. The British cabinet minister, Future senators would re- addressing the annual dinner of tire on an $8,000 annual pen- The Canadian Press, said the sion under the bill; present dangers to the world now are senators, appointed for life, far greater than were dreamed could either stay or retire. of in the past. But the UN had Douglas Fisher (NDP--Port added a new element--the test Arthur) said present use of |of international, rather than na- the Senate is as a reward for tional, advantage in resolving party fund-raisers. conflicts. Wallace Nesbitt (PC--Ox- "We mustn't expect too much ford) said provinces should be |\too son," he said, "but if this allowed to nominate some 'child is not strangled by the senators. great powers, it will grow Paul Martineau (PC--Pon- strong." tiac-Temiscamingue) said a| Lord Caradon, whose audi- committee should be estab- ence of about 500 included Ex- lished to recommend Senate |ternal Affairs Minister Martin, reforms, warmly applauded Canada's The government introduced | role in the UN. No country had a resolution seeking increased |a finer record of supporting the lending authority under the '[N's international activities. National Housing Act. Canada had taken a foremost The money would be ad- |nosition in its every effort, in vanced for urban renewal, |good times and bad. low - rental and university housing projects. DANGERS MENACING the southern boundary ome potential new businesses Dealing with necessity for vince some potential ne Sh eel ee Pg i ecessity agai Solicitor Fred C. Rich-|{'0m establishing plants here. | WEDNESDAY, April 28 : collective action, he said the avdion eaid Tuisday however, A. J, Little, president of the The Commons sits at 2:30 troubles and dangers of the that even it the Auk ts legal, (canadian : Chamber of Com-| P m, EDT to start the a world now are so menacing tha town could take no actonierce: said the high level of debate. The Senate stands that they cannot be settled by calculated to obstruct naviga-|Co™Poration taxes could make adjourned until May 4, the intervention of one nation sian On. the Great Lakes °"it more difficult for Canadian or bloc, They could be dealt : producers to compete in home with only by international ax _ The use of navigable waters|and world markets. e tion. That was the lesson of is vested in the crown, he said, There were some immediate D t F ] Suez, The Congo and Cyprus and no government has the/fears expressed that the pro- rec ue "Practical support for the right to deed the water to any|posed Canada Development United Nations now is not an other party. Corp. will lead to greater gov- optional luxury but an urgent A deed seems to have been ernment ownershkp of private aid h 4 business, although Mr. Gordon made out, he said, to the lan emphasized the agency will be junder the water, but this would! independent. |have no effect on the water it- i self. Its shares, to be made avail- able to the public initially at $5 ~jeach, would be valued later on the basis of the corporation's |investments | EXCHANGES CRITICAL The Toronto, Montreal and s Line Posed necessity," he added, The second half of this cen- tury could not be run on prin- TORONTO (CP)--A suburban ciples of the 19th century North York subdivision may be-'There must be expansion and come the Metropolitan Toronto advance, and this applied to the area's first district with an un-/YN, In this connection, Canada derground pipeline supplying/had given leadership for a fuel oil direct to houses, dis-\more vigorous and dynamic pensing with tanks and trucks. UN for the future, | Public Fuel Transmission) Peace was not enough. The Systems Ltd., the company now|UN must not. only be an instru- jmajor work of the UN was de-jtary Dean Rusk assailed critics 4 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, April 28,1965 3° LB] Wants To Win War Windiall Practices TORONTO (CP) -- The buy jand sell practices of Viola Mac- And Support By JOHN M, HIGHTOWER | Oils and Mines Ltd. stock last WASHINGTON (AP) -- Presi-/summer were described by dent Johnson clearly wants to|three members of the Toronto win as much world support as|Stock Exchange Tuesday. possible for his policies in South) Ted Hastie and Erie Watson, Viet Nam but he is also grimly| both of the brokerage firm of determined not to run U.S. stra-| Moss, Lawson and Co., said | tegy as a popularity contest. |Mrs. MacMillan, promoter of These two attitudes were) Windfall, directed the sale and 'sharply defined in his White| Purchase of shares through a House press conf »g-| number of accounts. | day. 64 pian eae They were testifying before a LORD CARADON In line with what the presi-| et officials discounted UA the impact of "severe disap- W Sla proval" of the war which was ms regteore by French President . 6 le Gaulle in a speech in Paris! |an hour earlier. | Injunctions This was the second time in five days that a top administra-|. TORONTO (CP)--The United "It's no good telling a hungry|tion spokesman had dealt di-|Auto Workers union (CLC) com- man that what he needs is) rectly with criticisms of the U.S,| plained Tuesday about court in- peace," Lord Caradon said.jrole in Viet Nam which hadijunctions that restrict picket- The gap between the have andjbeen made both at home andjing in labor disputes. the have-not nations was widen-| abroad. The union asked the one-man ing rather than narrowing. The] Last Friday night, State Secre-; Ontario royal commission on |etvil rights to recommend curb- when|ing such injunctions because voted to bridging, this gap, andifor talking "nonsense" the work going on in the field--/they say the United States they "encroach unjustifiably"' "at the perimeter" -- was at/should find some quick way of|° basic civil liberties. least as important as that at| getting out of Viet Nam or _ The union brief to J. C. Mc-| the centre of the UN. It in-|should at least halt bombings of|Ruer, former chief justice of| volved 80 per cent of the! the north. the Ontario Supreme Court, agency's money and manpower. asked recommendation of a la-| While there would be dis- SHOWING RESTRAINT bor - management - public com-| appointments. and dangers in| At his press conference, John-|mittee to establish picketing) ihe work of the UN, this called|son argued that the United) scope. for determination rather than|States has used its massive) Religion cropped up several) defection. Poverty and racial power with great restraint. He|times in Tuesday's briefs, The| Buy-Sell Bared royal commission appointed to investigate the circumstances surrounding the rise of Windfall shares to $5.60 from 56 cents and their subsequent collapse to 80 cents on the exchange last: July. Mr. Hastie, a floor trader for, the firm, identified various transaction slips and said in some cases Mr. MacMillan han- died the sale and purchase of the same block vf shares. Eric Watson, head trader for the brokerage firm, said Mrs. MacMillan had a direct tele- phone line to the trading floor. Windfall shares through a num- ber of accounts. ' Mr. Watson said he bought and sold 5,900 Windfall share' himself for a personal profit of. about $2,000. Both men said Mrs. MacMil- lan would sometimes place or- ders to sell or buy without first instructing them as to the name of the account doing the trad- ing. R. J. Breckenridge, partner in the firm of Breckenridge, Mc- Donald and Co., and exchange member, said he received a call from Mrs. Mac Millan who asked if he would like to have some business from some of her companies and if he would take personal care of her orders. d He said he sold 68,000 shares at her direction July 6, while on July 9 she sold 100,500 Wind- fall shares through him and bought 1,500. strife were threats put the full blame on the Com-|Ethical Education Association A great danger was that 'we! munists, and specifically North of Toronto said the Ontario gov- may become so self - satisfied| Viet Nam, for causing the con-jernment's provision for reli- that we forfeit our leadership." flict by waging a campaign of)gious education in public Another fear was that, "when terror and guerrilla warfare in)schools encroaches on freedom the danger becomes greatest,|an effort to conquer the south.|of religion because such teach- the UN may be too weakened) When the president was asked|ing is confined to Christianity. to meet it." specifically whether he thought} The Canadian Jewish Con- Lord Caradon was introduced|the United States was losing|gress suggested policemen by Stuart Keate, publisher of|friends around the world be-| should be instructed in the basic the Vancouver Sun and presi-|cause of its military operations| beliefs of minority religions, so dent of The Canadian Press,\against the Communists, he} officers could have a better un- who presided. He was thanked| summed up his reaction in these|derstanding of citizens with by William J. Campbell, vice-| words: |whom they may have to deal. president of the Toronto Star| | J. A. Fullerton, a Toronto sep- ORILLIA, Ont. (CP) -- Greg-)sion during 53 years as a re- ory Clark, newspaper short story and feature writer, is the 1965 winner of Stephen Leacock Memorial Medal for humor. Mr. Clark, 72, last week was named first honorary member of the newly instituted News) Hall of Fame, sponsored by the, Toronto Men's Press Club. The Leacock Medal awarded annually for the best! is| Toronto Star. utes articles to that publication/¢Xchanges said Canadians al- although his columns no longer ready are free to participate in appear on a weekly basis. almost all Phases of Canadian Gregory Clark began his industry, and setting up a new newspaper career in Toronto as/@8ency would have little merit.) a reporter for the University of, One stock market analyst Toronto Varsity and later the/Susgested the corporation, if . set up. as outlined, would be) In 1916 he served with the/Dound to make it more costly) port to-council, SEXES BATTLE ENTERS PROBE lout the world, and he argued jin substance that many other governments understand what ithe U.S. is trying to accomplish) in the defence of South Viet India-Pakistani Conflict | By JOSEPH MacSWEEN theirs main problem, disputed) yam, | Canadian Press Staff Writer |Kashmir. He asserted that a successful Pe we ast And when Lal Bahadur Shas-/Communist conquest would China is seen as the only win-|1+; succeeded Nehru there|threaten all free nations and Canadian stock exchanges were| supplying the system in Nepean|ment for peacekeeping but also|and president of the Canadian|U-S. WILL STAY arate school trustee, said in his quick to criticize it; Lt.-Gen.|Township near Ottawa, madelan effective force for economic|D aily Newspaper Publishers! "We're resisting aggression,|brief Roman Catholics may not Howard Graham, president of| an application for permission to|and social advance. Association : and as long as the aggressors/educate their children the way the Toronto exchange, said it)jnstall the pipeline to North---- _ . _ " __.| attack we'll stay there and resist/they want to. They receive no looks as though the govern-| York board of control |them whether we make friends! grants for Grades 11, 12 and 18, man,|porter and columnist. ment is trying to get into the Board of control asked the Ld Ld = _ 'or lose friends." |he complained, and receive Now associate editor of Week- Stock business. : township's works committee to n 7 e na ] In| But actually, he said, the|grants instead of tax money for the|end magazine, he still contrib- The Montreal and Canadian study the application and re- |U.S. has many friends through- Grades 9 and 10. In lower grades they get even less sup- port. Mr. Justice McRuer said Mr. Fullerton's brief is a matter for the legislature's committee on taxation and that he should not be disappointed if the commis- sion does not deal with it. The correctional chaplaincy \for firms competing with the book of humor written by ajinfantry and at war's end was) s : : Canadian and published in the|a major. He resumed his news-|©0rPoration for public savings. previous year. It is a memorial] paper career and in the Second) ae Sar aa to the late Canadian humorist,, World War was a war corres-| {pondent in Sicily, Italy and) Stephen Leacock. | The award will be presented| Normandy. to Mr. Clark for his, Gregory Clark War Stories, a recount- ing of anecdotes gathered dur- ing two world wars. The presentat | Clark's presence will depen the advice of his doctors. Mr. Clark was named to the) Hall of Fame for his contribu-| published by Ryerson Press. It tions to the newspaper profes-|includes 38 short stories. la the Stephen Leacock Associates |from Orillia. Previous fon _ will| have included Harry Boyle, be made at a dinner in Orillia|O. Mitchell, Pierre Berton, Eric} in late May or early June. Mr.| Nichol | don|Thomas Allen and Robertson Vertical Jet Blows Apart SANTA BARBARA, Calif.) (AP) -- A promising vertical take-off plane ran into unknown) trouble on its first public flight at Edwards Air Force Base Tuesday, nose - dived into the desert and exploded in a ball The Leacock award winners re chosen by a committee of| winners| W.| (three times), Robert} Davies. Gregory Clark War Stories is) Ottawa Would Make Loans For Low-Rental Projects OTTAWA (CP)--The federal government sought approval Tuesday night of National) Housing Act amendments to in-| crease its lending authority sor] urban renewal and low - rental] and university housing projects. Immigration Minister Nichol- son, responsible to Parliament for the Central Mortgage and Housing Corporation, said increased amounts are needed to finance the 'ambitious' plans of the corporation. The Qu'appelle) of flame. The pilot ejected but his parachute didn't open. W. L. (Lou) Everett, chief engineering test pilot for Ryan Aeronautical Co., was _ switch- ing from jet power to fan power jat 800 feet preparatory to a | landing when the tiny craft be- {gan to flutter A crowd of several hundred, watching from three miles and to meet obligations in- curred from these projects To $150,000,000 from $50,000,- 000 the ceiling on advances to|away, saw plane and _ pilot public housing projects de-| Plunge side by side on to a dry veloped jointly by CMHC and lake bed a province or its agency. --To $8,500,000,000 from $6,- 000,000,000 the ceiling for loans for which insurance pol- Pearson Orders the) icies may be issued under ed the act, Bankrupt Probe Alvin Hamilton (PC -- OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis- said his party ter Pearson agreed Tuesday to TORONTO (CP)--The bat- iner in the new border clash tle of the sexes was taken |between India and Pakistan, the into the royal commission on |Commonwealth sister countries civil rights this week, with |which so often seem ready for former Ontario Chief Justice ja cat fight. | J. C. McRuer and a spokes- | To British observers it seems) | | committee of the Anglican Church of Canada suggested persons innocent of crimes with the anti - Communist fight in|which they are charged should Southeast Asia is regarded here) be awarded legal costs from as an important one. |the Crown or complainant that would endanger the freedom of the U.S. itself. The issue of the popularity of seemed to be a _ gentleman's agreement -- perhaps unspoken --between Shastri and Pakis- tan's President Ayub Khan to avoid mutual recriminations and provocations. man for a business women's group the protagonists The brief of the Business and Professional Women's Clubs of Ontario asked for changes in the Ontario hu- man rights code to clarify and strengthen its provisions against discrimination by em- ployers. on the grounds of sex, "You wouldn't go so far as to require advertisements not to specify male or female?" asked Mr. McRuer. "T can't see why not," re- plied Isobel McLellan, the group's employment condi- tions chairman Mr. McRuer suggested a school might reasonably feel that a woman could not teach 15-year-old boys as well as a man could "That hasn't been proved," Miss McLellan said. Laughing, Mr. McRuer re- , I was a boy and you NAME NEEDED LONDON (CP)--The National Union of Genera! and Municipal Workers is running a competi- iclear that frontier clash be-| The agreement--if it ever ex- tween the-two countries in the|j.teq -- was short - lived and| \barren Rann of Kutch can onl¥|within a few months there were| {benefit their powerful Commu-inew Indian statements about nist neighbor. bringing Kashmir into the un- The British government hasijion, accompanied by moves to} jundoubtedly pleased publicidraw Kashmir under closer| opinion by instructing the two}control: | high commissioners, John Free-| British newspaper comment REDS SEEK SUPPORT | Earlier this month the North Vietnamese called for organiza- tion of a worldwide movement to bring pressure on the U.S, as "an imperialist aggressor' to get out of South Viet Nam. The call was enthusiastically en- New alhi Sir! " dorsed by China, which threat- alt sac eee for.|on, the new quarrel is severe,|ened to send its own people to 1 : : ' along the lines that neither) fight against U.S. forces in mally to express concern to the!country can afford this fight squabbling administrations. when "they should instead be} At the very least the co jdevoting their full resources to must deflect Indian attention|crucial internal problems. and resources from the Chinese] lborder, a danger district ever|/PUZZLING MATTER |since the Chinese aggressions of| There is. considerable puzzle- 1962. There are ominous reports) ment as to why the fighting oc- |that China may be ready tojcurred over the barren area, take advantage of the diversion.|although one possible: explana- | tion is the oil potentialities of A SAD FACT the district where there has India may well feel that the|never been a definite, agreed- trouble, for which she blames|upon border line, Generally the |Pakistan, has been inspired by/fighting is seen as a sympton |Peking in the light of the recent/of tension between the two |friendly moves between Pakis- countries rather than outright /tan and China and the exchange|contest for land. of visits by their leaders. But} gome British observers com- the sad fact is that India and) ment, somewhat ironically that Pakistan have not needed altndia's strong stance was taken ine a4 to stir up trouble/ not because the Shastri regime ee ae | has established itself firmly but There were encouraging signs| because of its weakness. Southeast Asia. Authorities here believe Hanoi; and Peking may hope that dem-) onstrations against the U.S. will force the president to make peace on terms acceptable to) them, | | OR ALL YOUR DRUG STORE | NEEDS Phone 723-2245 FREE-CITY-WIDE-DELIVERY JURY AND LOVELL IF YOU ARE THINKING ABOUT LIFE INSURANCE Why Not Call TOM FARQUHARSON SUN LIFE Assurance Company of Canada BUSINESS: 723-4563 RESIDENCE: 668-4371 | accuses them. EMERGENT MEETING No. BRO. W. H. Wednesday, Gordon Pierson, Worshipful Master LEBANON LODGE A.F. & A.M. All Masons ere requested to attend @ Masonic Service for Our Late et 7:30 p.m. Meclintosh-Anderson Funeral Home Masonic Clothing 139 PERRYMAN April 28th WOR. BRO. H. A. Sudderd Secretary original amendments were|would support the amendments. make inquiries about the bank-/tion passed almost a year ago. The new amendments loans for university housing projects. This resolution seeks smaller parties also supported to increase the lending author- the legislation but criticized it ity to $200,000,000 from $100,-'for not going far enough. 000,000. INCREASE AMOUNTS ' --To $3,250,000,000 from §$2,- 500,000,000 the amount of di- rect loans that may be to aid in the construction of houses and housing projects. --To $300,000,000 from $100,- 000,000 the amount that may ent of older homes, be used for loans and grants for urban renewal schemes JUDGE TURNS UP NOSE CHELMSFORD, England (CP) John Adams, chairman of Es- sex Quarter Sessions, recently threatened to close the court be- cause of the smell of onions drifting in from the nearby po- lice canteen, After a quick change of menu, the court car- ried on. HOLE RECORD SET A new world record for tun- neling was set recently when 42 workers on a Scottish hydro pro- ject drilled a seven-foot hole 650 feet in a week. GOOD FOOD BUSINESS MEN'S LUNCH 12 Noon to 2 P.M. DINNER 5:30 to 8 P.M. FULLY LICENSED DINING ROOM HOTEL LANCASTER 27 King St. W., Oshawe } also|accomplished more permit the corporation to grant NHA, he said. |Private lenders had failed dis- No act recent had the in years than national defence department. Gordon Aiken (PC -- Parry) Sound - Muskoka) asked Mr. Pearson whether there was an investigation into Walsh Adver- Spokesmen for the three Murdo Martin (NDP -- Tim-|tising Co. which carried the mins) said a full-time housing Canadian Army's recruiting ministet and sharply-increased| program spending on low - cost public} Eric Winkler (PC -- Grey- housing are needed to cope|Bruce) also asked that the gov- with the problems of blight.)ernment consider some form of creditors than compensation to 581 he said are owed more $500,000 by the company mally to assist the improve- | See Page 18 TONIGHT'S TIMES For Money-Saving GRAND OPENING SPECIALS eBridgelande MEAT PACKERS & PROVISIONERS 909 Simcoe St. North 723-1359 and 728-3361 ruptey of an advertising firm)with a £100 ($300) top prize.|Nehru's death last year that that had an account with the The contest -- find a modern|both name for the union, for its 784,000 members|before Indian Prime Minister } countries were taking a more moderate approach to Your Money Earns More At CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST & SAVINGS CORPORATION zi on Savings Accounts. Poid and compounded quart- erly, SAVING HOURS: Head Office: Mon.-Thurs. 9% to 6 19 Simcoe St. N. Friday 9to? " Oshawa Soturdey 9 to 3 FOUNTAINHEAD Tel. 723-5221 OF SERVICE FOOD MARK 54 SIMCOE ST. NORTH ET, : ) HIGHEST QUALITY MEATS "cw aor ORANGES on Chequing Accounts & ae E REMOVED == 5 (BLADE ROAST 45%: 3 = 99. Sone a BLADE RO Wb § Serrano [ |] BONELESS BEEF rf ERED FORK. 39; MILK aes 45: when invested in our | SHOULDER 45: SHOULDER . tek alas ; " Sovcs||ammmer 39 | purr 49: | BREAD 2~39! on death. | LEAN MEATY 59: FRESH PORK Twink 1 Ib. peat eg 2 for 1 oles sdiven [J CROSS CUT DS" } LON END HOF j uocoLATE --¢ wp cet ont FREE ECONOMY 6 & 7 RIB A PRIME RIB Qe § oma 5g: mi C 9 OVEN READY SHORT CUT Ist 4 rib rf ib ' CHICKENS Ib PRIME RIB / 51 ; BACON ree ' 4 73

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