legion convention in Mont- real Sunday night, (CP Wirephoto) Royal Caradian Legion by President Fred O'Brecht at the opening session of the LORD MOUNTBATTEN is presented with the Meri- Aorious Service Medal of the TO AVOID "AGING WATCHDOG ROLE". 'Legion Must Expand new maple leaf flag, That con-|not ind vention approved a resolution | ¥45. that eehad fer the Red Ensign| He said it would be unfair to lasted about an hour. no-ammention Of the ters concerned only with vet-|the Commonwealth where ad- 'Canada Flag Diinutes to midnight or the extreme poverty, he said. night. The purpose of your or-\t,qrd Mountbatten is grand| onday, as a resolution on the "Nevertheless, with increas-jlegion executives earlier that|!ong debate that included inter- Winnipeg was the scene of buildings of legion branches. national flag of our country," Resources Minister Laing said'the heavy recreational pres- vide a wide range of outdoor|on the border of Alberta and|the use of other national and and -undevelopea-for tour- have developed around our na-| provinces which accounts for|/sion had been made because Canada, for what has been|must increase its scientific at Winnipeg be changed to al- | dian Legion," It was rejected evans if it is to escape becom-|ditional help is urgently neces- 'Is Supported dawn of a new era," he said. "wre needs of an emerging | ganization is to provide assist-| president -- believes that more|c2"8dian Flag won delegate ing social legislation which in-|the league hopes to establish a/ruptions, heckling and heated bitter debate after Prime Min- OTTAWA (CP) -- Establish-|recreation areas would be de- This year, the convention was today. sures would be diverted to-, CALLED FOR, RETENTION activities along shorelines, wa-|North west Territories in an|PYovincial flags on appropriate tional parks would be eased,' |only 23 per cent of the Cana- "there is danger in prolonging called rigid adherence to the knowledge in the field of out-|low legion branches to fly the In other resolutions approved : Oshawa board of education down approximately $550 from | | 'lated to national security. |witness was available but if his|behind closed doors but j\testimony was to be freely and fully given it would relate to RETIRING CP PRESIDENT MAKES REPORT News Coverage Expansion Seen TORONTO (CP) -- Sharp ex. tions popping up everywhere. He reported that CP's Service pansion of its independent world) 'And, more than that, these|in French, providing a full reporting was a major develop-|assessments are ap pearing|French-Janguage newsreport to ment in the last year for The|under the bylines of Canadians|10 French-language dailies in Canadian Press, who write with authority." New Brunswick, Quebec and TORONTO (CP) -- The Globe and Mail says a new master plan for Expo 67 which includes an $82,655,900 deficit has been » {approved by the federal and Quebec governments, Stuart Keate, publisher of} Mr, Keate noted that in the|Ontario, had been strengthened president of the countny's news| dailies, now numbering 103, hadjand that studies for improving co-operative, said: in his report agreed to a 15-per-cent increase/it further are continuing. "We have had our own man/joperative--the largest increase and English-language members in Moscow for two years now ever in such a period, of CP understand each other independent world reporting in|{o strengthen the news staff and and respective aims." the last year. limprove the news service at; "It is reassuring that to a from faraway places whose|1964 appointment of staff cor-\aim is this understanding and strange-sounding names hold in-|respondent John Best to the So- its extension across Canada, In ada and Canadians, "T think this is striking tecog-|8t0UP§ of CP members recog. "The result is that Canadian|nition by our members of their|"2e8 the concerns, as well as assessment of complex situa: Mr. Keate sald, AHEAD OF PACE sya ™ i ~| In the transmission of its 2 DENIED CONFIRMATION ire. ewan", : |more than keeping pace with field so that our news service lands (Reuters) A young|church council to make this sad|°8" be delivered in the most Dutch couple have been denied decision." possible," attending church services--be-|van Hoef and his wife, will be| Gillis Purcell, CP general jor technical developments: set, jget rid of their television set|"" 4, : Rev. A. W. Verhoef, vicar of;and confess their "sin," | Progressive conversion of | ada from ordinary teletype in nity here, told his congrega-|munity is a local sect with!" ' tion: "A great sin committed by|about 1,000 members. jcapital letters only to transmis es coded so computers can pro- duce from it a punched paper 'entinued ¥; P 1 \setting equipment, Continu cdg hadi 2 --Co + ordinated operation of E. A. Goodman, counsel forjhave part of the evidence in ing almost three-quarters of for open hearings. He said thejhe was formally requesting a! the CP membership from St, "outrageous untruths and scan-|secret session, : provide more and better- | made him most anxious for pub-|hearing of each witness could) edited news faster from the llic hearings. |not take place without reference | : : On the pieture side, Mr. jlate to the commission-prepared he planned similar applications Purcell said seven Canadian summary of evidence by RCMP) for secret sessions for the other \ ' ' |wirephoto equipm i secret opening of the inquiry.) Mr. Justice Spence said Helene out po so a = nothing in that document re-|jvery difficult to carry out ef-lrrom Gps coast-to-coast wire. \ficiently the task assigned him photo network, counsel, said the secret hearing| practically all hearings were in : |was held on his application be-| camera. a classified character. the evidence need have no fear The commission had to con-|that they will not be publicly U B 73 PC points--disloyalty of a person to} would be a public document. | p y ' The commission would have) . sons due to defects in character | before it considerable important) Pp Cl who may have access to clas-|and confidential information, in-| aper alms He said where there is doubt|did not see how cross-examina- about the reliability and char-/tion on. these could be carried "must be resolved in favor of|tents. the state." He said his "interim decision he| In an Ottawa dispatch, the jwou 1d consider applications certain security matters. He did|future to make certain testi- icate who the witness|mony public. Varicouver Sun and retiring|last two years CP member|during his two years in office to CP's annual meeting: jin their payments to the co-| He said he feels that French- and have sharply expanded our| 'The extra cost was primarily|and "agree on their common "Your evidence is CP bylines| home and abroad, including the;major extent their principal creasing significance for Can-' viet capital. any case, each of the two readers are getting an informed|responsibility to the public,' 'He goodwill, of the other," jnews report in words and pic- technical progress, CHURCH SERVICES OVER TV ite sre, watching deveion jments closely in the production BARNEVELD, The Nether-|the young couple has caused the convenient and efficient form confirmation and banned from; The couple, 23-year-old Bertus cause they have a television| readmitted to the church if they|M@nager, reported on two ma- the Reformed Church Commu-| The Reformed Church Com-| Pert clreults in Central Can- sion in capital and small letters GERDA PROBE SECRECY ENDS |i: to run automatic type- J ; three other news wires sery- Mr, Hees, supported the plea | public and part in camera 60 John's, Nfld., to Victoria, to dalous rumors" about Mr. Hees| As to future hearings, a full ) news hub in Toronto. Mr, Hees' testimony would re-|to security matters, Therefore, yr daili . officers at the April 6 initial! witnesses, ailles now are using automatic He agreed with Mr. Carson that|has concluded that it would be high-fidelity photographic prints J. L, O'Brien, commission|by the Liberal cabinet unless ee E «8 jcause it received documents of} Those who were cleared by| xpo Deficit sider security from two stand-|cleared, he said. His report Canada and unreliability of per-| jsified information, jeluding cabinet directives, He) acter of a person the doubt|out without revealing their con- Mr. O'Brien said a certaifjis that the inquiry will proceed from counsel at any time in the The subsequent secret session|:, forecast of DERBY, England (AP)--A British' charwoman is hang- ing up her mop because her husband has been elected to Parliament. "i'm saying goodbye to the old job," said Mrs. Ida Perry, 51, whose husband George, a socialist, won the South" Not- tingham seat in the House of Commons in the general elec- tion last. month, Thursday, Mrs. Perry will be one of the onlookers when the Queen opens the new ses- sion of Parliament, "Then I'll go back to Derby and say farewell to the girls at the old job," said Mrs. Perry. For the last 11 years Mrs. Perry has got out of bed at 5 a.m, six days a week to, join 12 other cleaning women at the offices of the Rolls- Royce foundry at Derby. She earns £4 198 6d ($14.43) a week, Before his election Mrs. Perry's husband was a rail- way mechanic in Derby, He made about £28 a week. As a member of the Commons he'll CHARWOMAN HANGS UP MOP) Court Rules HUBBY ELECTED AS MP In Favor Of The Fawcetts TORONTO (CP)--A Toronte |man Monday was refused an ine |junction in Ontario Supreme | Court to bar Frederick Fawcett, (51, and his brother, Harold, from a 100-acre section of their Owen Sound-area farm, Mr, Fawcett was released last May after 344 years in On- tario hospitals following a lengthy dispute with Euphrasth t t < Fe Pere a cracdmother, (Township officials over his re- says she hasn't decided {usal to pay land taxes. whether to move to London. Otto Bolter of Toronto claimed Appeal | GENEVA (Reuters) -- Can- ada today appealed to the So- viet Union to be as realistic and objective about disarmament as in exploring outer space. Lt.-Gen. E. L. M. Burns, chief Canadian delegate, d d To Russians day to Mr, Justice A, H. Lieff that he is owner of the Jand that Mr. Fawcett lost through non-payment of taxes, He said the Fawcetts are tres- passing on the land, He asked the court to prohibit them from going on the 100-acre section, He said he had erected no tres- ' passing signs on the property, armament, in which they will|put they were removed, apply the same realism and ob-) yy, potter gaid he bought the jective weighing of facts a8)land Dec. 17, 1963, in » tax aale their scientists have done in the| by Euphrasia Township, He said exploration of the cosmos," he paid §415 in taxes owing for Gen, Burns said. | 1960-61-62. in an affidavit submitted Mon- Soviet 'obsession with secrecy" which he said was blocking some paths of progress toward disarmament, He told the 17-nation disarm- ament conference here this was "an unfortunate example of the inability of certain types of military men to learn anything new after they have reached the age of 30," Gen. Burns criticized Russia for opposing United States dis- armament proposals for cutting off the production of explosive fissile material, Russia has said the measure |did not go far enough and that jinspection procedure to ensure it was carried out would preju- dice its national security. Gen. Burns-said this presum- ably meant if the sites of Soviet plants producing fissible mate- rial were known they would be destroyed immediately in a nu- clear war, |LOCATIONS SECRET? | "But do the Soviet authorities} ' really believe that the locations of these plants are a secret now?" he asked. | Gen. | States and Russia had said they had sufficient nuclear weapons to destroy each other. "When we have this kind of jwar to contemplate does it |make any sense to refuse to jtake a step away from such a |possibility -- an important first |step---because of military pre- joecupations with secrecy which jmight have been valid before Aug. 6, 1045? When the first atomic bomb was dropped on Japan)," He said Soviet exploration of outer space had been a progres- sion from one step to another, "The Canadian delegation sin- jcerely hopes that one day we shall be able to congratulate the Soviet delegation on a break- through in thelr thinking about how to get moving toward dis- shown to Trade Minister Robert Winters, federal sponsible for Expo," paper says. "Mr, Winters disclosed at the time that he had asked Expo to refer its 'financial back to its board of- directors before submitting them to the federal and Quebec cabinets for pproval. {pay roughly $41,000,000 of the total deficit, Quebec $31,000,000 and the City of Mont- real the remaining $10,000,000," data, pavement width, condition lighting facilities, traffic eontrol standing Apply in writing only. giv i full $:00 p.m, April 26th, | 'tg 966 OSHAWA See ,v." * CLERKS No, 2 SALARY RANGE--$4,348.00 te $4,943.00 (3614 hour week) To set up and mointain street Inventory records, process and record results of Traffic studies, assist in obtaining end mainta ning T affic of rood surface, structures, street devices, accident records, by-laws pertaining to traffic and amendments to by-laws, Full High School, Required to have 1966 Chauffeur's Licence in good persona! dote, educetien, ete, by PERSONNEL OFFICER CITY MALL Oshewe, Onterie, aiaeememmemnees aameneee = seater = newspaper says the deficit Is 73 per cent higher than the or- | 1963 "But income from all sources, cluding the value of salvage te is expected to amount to $250,- | 190,050, more than double the }original revenue | The latest budget--the third | Cloudy, Showers On Weed. oss. iii lan--shows total expenditures of $332,845,950, a 99-per-cent in- - Warmer Spell On Way -- ssusii.tws | 'The new budget figures were TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts|North Bay, Sudbury: Cloudy|drafted in November and then 5.30 a.m.: today, Wednesday cloudy with| sem Synopsis: Warm moist air will|rain and cooler. Winds south-| continue to flood northward but|east 15 today and east 20 Wed- neid Gown somewhat by cloudi-| Northern White River: Cloudy| ness and showers. An intensive|with showers today. Rain be-| TWO TRAFFIC storm developing over the/ginning tonight and likely! across the upper lakes Wednes-| Cooler Wednesday. ay. Widespread rain will occur; Ottawa region: Sunny: with in centr@t-and northern regions}some cloudy periods today. |showers and a few thundershow-|showers, Mild, Light winds. ers are expected. Temperatures | ' {will be higher over southern On- Forecast temperatures cast in the north, [Windaor .veescecces 62 Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Ni-|St. Thomas 50 agara, western Lake Ontario,| London Bay, Windsor, London, Hamil-|Mount Forest ton, Toronto: Cloudy with a few| Wingham showers today. Wednesday! Hamilton thundershowers and warmer.|Toronto Winds southwest 15 today and|Peterborough . south 25 Wednesday. Kingston ical estimate of $47,534,000 in ; it _.| after the six-month fair is over, FORECAST WEATHER A $119,613,000," jcrease over the original esti- issued by the weather office at| with scattered showers and mild/Tevised Jan. 17 when they were afternoon temperatures will be! nesday. | CITY OF American southwest will move|changing to snow by morning, | while in the south frequent;Wednesday mainly cloudy with tario but some cooling is fore-|1ows tonight, highs Wednesday | Lake Huron, southern Georgian|Kitchener cloudy with showers and a few)/St, Catharines . Eastern Lake Ontario, Hali-;Trenton 100% MORE 50% MORE INTEREST Burns said the United| 4 minister re-| | the news- estimates] | "The federal government will] ' almost} § : M tbatt Clai MONTREAL (CP) The| He complimented the legion| The legion is to vote later Royal Canadian Legion mustion its work in education but|this week on a proposal to eontinue to expand beyond mat-/said there are broad areas in' raise $200,000 towards the fund, ing 'some kind of an aging/sary, & IF tbat watchdog", Farl Mountba ten POINTS TO POVERTY of Burma told the legion's 21st ne £7 600,000 national convention Monday. | Many of the 17,000,000 ex- "For the legion it is either 10 /*™vcomen throughout the i 8 |}Commonwealth are living . in "If as a veterans organization nation are many and urgent. |, eh bg po (CP)--A Royal you are content to confine your|These needs and many more|°2"@dian Legion public rela- activities to matters of. concern! must be given priority. tions man poenee it up for ehly to your own veterans then) 'The British Commonwealth -- of 1,300 delegates to the it is getting very close to mid-\Fx-services League--of which |©Sion's 2ist annual convention ance to veterans and depend-| money must be spent in the support. 5 ' ents, This assistance may be| Commonwealth on education as PE ge God that's ved and required for quite a long time|_ safeguard against the in- hi tee ~ mrtg trouble = than and certainly should remain the roads of communism, he said. |' at, ne 6a _ legion's prime concern, Lord Mountbatten had told) The "trouble" was an hour- evitably must come to Canada, mutual aid: fund for Common-|tempers as the resolutions com- the need for such assistance|wealth veterans, It is trying to|mittee fought to soften the im- will gradually decline," Lord raise $150,000 a year for each|Pact of a flag ruling made at Mountbatten said. lof the next seven years. jthe convention in Winnipeg two years ago. e New Recreation ri rcs tsa ine irs his government would propose a to continue to be flown over the ment of new recreation areas | voted to that end only. offered a resolution which said by government may be the an-| 'In this way, the great scenic|the maple leaf flag "shall be swer to growing pressure on na-| treasures of the nation could be|honored and flown by legion tional parks and the debate rag-|preserved for all time and be | branches and commands as the ing over the new park policy,|available for all people while The new areas must be put|wards other areas that will ca-| Jt called for retention of the up soon by all levels of govern-|ter specifically to this type of Toyal union flag--the Union ment with the emphasis on rec- use." Jack; continued use of the le- reation, not preservation as it} Half of the existing park|Sion standard to sagghil 4 is in the parks. They would pro-|space is in Wood Buffalo Park|branches and commands; and terways and other recreational|area that is relatively inacces- occasions. areas sible Phere -wee "Tf these other areas existed, ists. Red Ensign. many of the stresses and strains) Of the remaining space, 94, A spokesman for the resolu- and misunderstandings that|per cent was in the western|tions committee said the deci- Mr. Laing told the Canadian/dian population. the issue' of a national flag. Forestry Association, Mr. Laing said the federal And President Fred O"Brecht The minister and his depart- government will continue to co-|of Durham, Ont., said he had ment have been severely criti-/operate with the provinces to received hundreds of letters cized, especially in Western provide more parks and Ottawa asked that the decision made wilderness aspect of the parks. door recreation maple leaf flag. National parks could continue' The time to develop new rec-| A British Columbia resolution to cater to outdoor recreation, reation areas was "not in a few moved that the Red Ensign said Mr. Laing, But 'the new! years but now." "continue to be one of the of- kage REN - ficial flags of the Royal Cana- Monday, the legion renewed a request for an immediate in- crease in the basic rate of dis- Monday night approved $50 ability pension to $3,880 a year. 'ants to Ridgeway Senior, g Street Senior and T. R. cEwen Senior publie schools for yearbook publications. William Kellington of Co- mant Public School and Rob- ert Brown of FE. A. Lovell Public School were chosen from about nine applicants as vice-principals within the Oshawa Public School sys- tem by city trustees last night. Oshawa board of education decided Monday night to have another fire insurance com- fany appriase O'Neill Collegi- ate and Vocational Institute. Board Chairman Stanley Lovell said he did not think the school could be replaced for the $12-a-foot appraisal evaluated by the Dominion Appraisal Company. A total of $14,408 has. been given by 4,277 contributors to the Oshawa Rotary Club's Easter Seal Campaign to aid abildren, The total ls last year. The present rate for a single ' sion Nancy Huska, of Ajax, won period on 300 per cent hens! is just under $2,600. three awards in the dance | ee ee classes at the Peel Music yg Abt ee giggriteel Testi eterans airs Minis Festival last Saturday, She Roger Teillet, in a speech, said won the tap solo class for |nension increases are difficult contestants 10 years and |to determine because of the ab- under, and placed second in |sence of "an equitable yard- the demi character class and |stick for adjusting pension the ballet solo class. Wendy | rates." : Mason, of Ajax, won the demi | The government is wiilling to character solo class for con- |consider a cyclincal review of testants | eight years and {pension rates, but cannot do so under. Jan Williamson, of {until it has "a barometer to Pickering, was second in the |use in gauging the need for an ballet solo class for contes- |increase in pensions, and how tants 14 years and under, much that increase should be," "WE BUY JUNK, scion cite "uci | SELL ANTIQUES resolutions committee touched on the transfer of veterans' af- | LONDON (AP) -- A used furniture dealer in suburban fairs hospitals to civilian op- jefating control for use as ac- _ Hammersmith hung out this Sign today tive treatment hospitals, an- }other subject that caused a stir We buy | antiques." at Winnipeg in 1964 Mr. Teillet said transfers had been effected or are being ne junk, We sell wick, Ontario, Nova Scotia, \Britab Columbia and Quebea, gotiated in Alberta, New Bruns-| burton, Killaloe: Cloudy with a|Killaloe ... few sunny periods today. Wed-|Muskoka nesday cloudy with showers and|North Bay . a -few thundershowers, Little} Sudbury jchange in temperature, Winds|Earlton .., jeast 15 becoming south 25 Wed-|Sault Ste. Marie . nesday. |Kapuskasing ....... Northern Georgian Bay, Al-;White River ....... goma, Sault Ste. Marie, White|/Moosonee River, Cochrane, Timagami,'Timmins ee ee se eneeees FOR THE FINEST Custom and Ready Made DRAPES in the letest Shodes end Fobrics .. . ee... Mé DRY GOODS & DRAPERIES DRAPERY TRACKS OFFERS the Oshawa working man @ 4% Personal Chequing Accounte--no service charges @ $% Guaranteed Investment Certificates--1 to 3% years @ Investment Funds EXPERTLY INSTALLED 74 Celina Street 723-7827 Central Ontario Trust 50% More Interest 4 querterly peried. Minimum eeceunt, en pevings (We ALWAYS here) poild and eempounded frem the day the ccount is opened, Ne waiting $ U% 100% More Saving Hours em. te 6 p.m, Monday te Thurade a.m, te 9 p.m. Friday a.m. te 5 p.m, Seturdey Estote Pienning Mertgage Loans Real Estate Sales end Purchases Pre-paid Save-by-Mall kite Free Heckey Ticket Drew Central Ontario Trust & Savings Corporation 19 Simcoe Street North, Oshawe 723-5221 Halifax... montreal... Windsor." © winniped." t Edmonton. 33.80 4 ° W 2 33,00 ean