st without e to ques- iptoms, MORE ome in the d by more 1066. ve, has City of for the r usual umula- g from house- uch as les. he above he same ste food . regular olds and bale 19.67 36.67 49.467 79.67 18.67 AERAS 67.67 167.67 34.67 24.67 34.67 pms up to in damage home new rection. Ww ! TORY SHAWA 533 TODAY'S TOPIC AUSTIN BENNETT WHAT DO YOU think of the new GO transit commuter service which starts May 23, and do you plan to use it travelling to Toronto for work or pleasure? Six people were asked this question during a man-on-the- street survey in Whitby. They said: David Waite, 401 Annes St.: "I think it's good. I think I will use it when I can. It's ideal for travelling to Toron- to. I'd like to see it extended G. B. LANNEY DAVID WAITE to Oshawa though, I think they would get a lot more use out of it.' Linda Garratt, 418 Cochrane St.: "If it were in Oshawa and Whitby, I would use it for pleasure. It's in- expensive enough but I'd like to know more about it." Austin Bennett, 793 Grierson St., Oshawa: "TI think it's a wonderful thing. It's the best thing that has ever happened to the area. I plan on using it quite a bit for business. I Does 'Go' Transit Go Far Enough? "MRS. JOHN WOODS travel to Toronto every day. I'd like to see it come. into Oshawa eventually though." G. B. Lanney, 404 Dunlop St. W.: "Id rather have it come to Whitby, I think that it would be a lot more conven- ient for a lot of people. I plan on using it to go to To- to whenever I have to, and that's quite a bit."" Mrs. John Woods, 1, Durham St., Ajax: "I hope to use it occasional- ly. I'd like to see it extended Juliana Thanks Canada Novel Dedication At Expo MONTREAL (CP) -- The Dutch had their big day at Can- ada's world's fair Thursday and said their thanks in a novel way. After the red, white and blue Netherlands flag was raised in Place des Nations, Queen Juli- ana moved to the Dutch pavil- ion where she dedicated a huge album. The book, measuring eight by 14 feet, expresses Hol- land's gratitude to Canada for sheltering Juliana during the war and for helping liberate their country from the Ger- mans. A crowd of more.than 2,000 attended the Place des Nations ceremony, biggest crowd to ap- Praise For Expo Plentiful NTEANSHOOM pear at any of the national days. | The attendance set the stage for the rest of the day when 189,508 visitors came through Expo's turnstiles by 12 midnight compared with a forecast total of 97,140. Total attendance at the fair to date is 5,156,725. Expo announced during the} day that it had been given an additional two days of life. The fair, which opened to the public April 28, was to close Oct. 27 LINDA GARRATT MARY CAMPBELL to Ajax. I think I would find time to use it often when the car is out. It's hard to get around when you haven't got a car and this would fill the bill." Mary bell, 528 DETROIT (AP)--Henry Ford II told the U.S. car-buying pub- lic Thursday it will have to dig deeper into its pocket to pay for » 11968 models. The chairman of Ford Motor ' |Co. said, at his firm's stockhold- ers meeting that "substantial price increases" are in the off- ing, due partly to costs of gov- ernment auto safety standards and air pollution requirements. He did not outline in detail the amount of the increase but previous estimates had been that price tags of next year's models will be up by $100 to $150. . Ford devoted' a major share of his report to the forthcoming 'Substantial' Price Hike |For Cars Seen By Ford auto labor contract talks with the United Auto Workers Union. "There are indications that there will be many: difficult is- sues and that the union's expec- tations may. be unreasonably high," he said. "In 1914, my grandfather-- Henry Ford--made history by introducing the $5 day. By the middle of this year, Ford's av- erage labor cost is expected to be $5 per hour. 'We have not, of course, re- ceived the UAW's specific de- mands but there are indications that there will be many difficult issues and that the union's ex- pectations may be unreasonably high. ! "We shall bargain flexibly this summer to reach a settlement that is responsive to all of the essential interests involved, in- cluding our employees." Ford continued his attack on some of the government's new federal safety standards as he told stockholders: THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, May 19, 1967 3 Tom Thomson ings by Tom Thomson, noted Canadian nature painter who died in 1917,. took top prices at an auction of some 100 Cana- dian paintings here Wednesday. $15,250 for one of the painter's | | Paintings Sold TORONTO (CP)--Two paint- Jerrold Morris Gallery paid early canvasses. The Framing Gallery paid $9,000 for another. Thomson, largely self-taught, worked with painters who later came to be known as the Group of Seven. Formed in 1920, the original group comprised Law- ren Harris, A. Y. Jackson, F. H. Varley, Franklin Carmichael, Franz Johnston, Arthur Lismer and J. E. H. MacDonald. Paintings by some of the Group of Seven also were fea- tured in the auction, which one buyer estimated brought a to- tal of about $105,000. "Unfortunately, we have had serious difficulties establish- ing meaningful communications with the government. As a re- sult, we have incurred extra- ordinary costs. | "And we, and other manufac- turers, have been forced to op- pose the imposition of some standards or proposed stand- ards that would be totally un- Kent: 'I plan to use it quite a bit. I'll be finished school soon and there are not that many jobs in Whitby so may- be I'll have to go to Toronto. I'd like to see the commuter come to Whitby as it would be more convenient." jugar agra AT ECM TALKS 'Watchdog' Attempt Thwarted LONDON (CP)--An attempt to place a Commonwealth of- fice minister on watchdog at the coming Common Market talks in Brussels has been foiled by Foreign Secretary George Brown, it was reported today. Commonwealth Secretary Her- bert Bowden is reported to after 183 days. APPROVE EXTENSION In Big Play In French Press MONTREAL (CP)--Praise for) Expo 67 has been plentiful from the press of France, clitnaxed by a lavish 26-page spread in the current issue of the mass- circulation picture maga- zine Paris-Match. The latest Match hit the streets in Montreal Thursday after air mail delivery from France. Statistics about Expo are more impressive than were those generated by previous world's fairs, says the maga- zine in introducing its treatment of the exhibition. "But statistics would not con- veye the fair's essence, because for the first time in a world's fair it is not tae. which is predominant but Man, whose! happiness the technical should serve." The cover is given over to a close-up photo of the United States pavilion. Expo already has taken the cover spotlight in zine, |'Express, which credits "ferocious energy' of Mont- real's Mayor Jean Drapeau with creating the fair. Jean Creiser of Le Figaro, a major Paris newspaper, writes that some English - Canadians "call Expo, while smiling sport ingly, 'the French - Canadian show.' "" Creiser, however, quotes Com- missioner-general Pierre Dupuy of Expo as denying this in an interview. The French-speaking Mr, Du- puy is reported as saying: "If we were the conceivers, the English-Canadians were the engineers and builders. Without them, we would not have been able to do anything: .. ." Creiser himself comments October it will have enabled Canada to show that "she has attained adulthood .. . and must that by the time Expo closes in|stationery, post - cards, bro- But Jean-Claude Delorme, sec- ternational Exhibitions Bureau Expo's 183rd day would have extra days will give the fair a full weekend before it closes. This would mean an additional 1,000,000 visitors. The extra time, however, could raise more problems than it solves. Robert F. Shaw, dep- 'uty commissioner-general, said the additional two days will executive committee which runs the fair. Stretching Expo out will mean g of contracts in many cases. All the fair's literature, chures and billboards now give the dates April 28 to Oct. 27. These would have to be be taken into t on the a leading French news maga-| world's map." Sharp Predicts Tax Growth To Top GNP Rate of Climb KINGSTON, Ont. (CP) -- Fi- nance Minister Mitchell Sharp Thursday predicted that provin- cial and municipal tax growth will exceed the rate of growth of Canada's gross national prod- uct in the next four years. The minister told a tax man- agement conference at Queen's University that federal taxes will rise six or seven per cent a year, on a par with the GNP growth, while provincial and municipal taxes may increase as much as eight or 8% per cent a year. Mr. Sharp predicted that in the same four-year period, the share of Canada's gross national product collected in taxes by all governments will increase two or three per cent. However, Mr. Sharp said this will not mean taxpayers will have less to spend because they will find their incomé will in- crease in similar proportions. M. Thorsteinsson, of the Vancouver law firm of Thor- steinsson, Mitchell and Little, told the seminar that a capital gains tax at less than full in- come tax rates will probably be introduced by the federal gov- ernment. He said a list of points on which Mr. Sharp has asked for briefs indicates the gover tt revolutionary legislation than had been recommended by the Carter royal commission on tax- ation. ASK FOR TROUBLE Prof. S. M. Beck of Queen's University law faculty, warned that U.S. experience indicates Canada would be inviting trouble if it adopts one tax rate for ordinary income and an- other rate for capital gains. In the U.S. capital gains are taxes at half personal tax rates up to a maximum capital gains tax of 25 per cent. Prof. Beck said that in Can- ada, where there is at present no capital gains tax, taxpayers try to arrange their affairs to receive income in the form of tax-free capital gains. In the U.S., he said, the same problem exists as taxpayers at- tempt to have their gains sub- jected to the preferential rate rather than to the higher in- come tax rate. y LOWEST EXCURSION FARES To Britain and Europe ARD TRAVEL BUREAU LTD. is preparing the way for less Pleze 942-6690 Take A Drive T 0 VAN BELLE GARDENS For The... DO-IT-YOURSELF Van Belle "Your Friend! 5 Minutes East @ FERTILIZER @ SPREADERS @ TOOLS @ TOPSOILS ® SEEDS, ETC. @ Advice on your Garden Problems Gardens Garden Centre" of Oshawa On Highway No. 2... 623-5757 During the Place des Nations ceremony, the 58-year-old Queer? did not reply to the welcome by sioner-general. MINISTER REPLIES who said Canada and Holland share a deep love of freedom rights of the individual. our historical bonds,'"' he said. At the Dutch pavilion, Queen Juliana pressed a button which enemy." Pierre Dupuy, Expo's commis-|couyples that she refused them The reply was made by J. M.|dismissed in magistrate's court Luns, Dutch foreign minister,| Thursday. crimination under the Ontario and a profound respect for the|human rights, code when Mr. and Mrs. "The many Canadian' war|Mr. and Mrs. Leon Bernstein graves in my country testify to|complained that she refused to rent them a cottage because they were Jewish. set the 16 pages of the giant al-|agreed with Mrs. bum turning. The pages show|Ccounsel there had not been suf- pictures of the Canadian mili-/ficient evidence to prove dis- tary cemetery in The Nether-|crimination, that 'cottages' do lands and carry such titles as|not constitute a public place "Thank you for hospitality" and|and that the issues come un- "Thank you for fighting the|/der federal jurisdiction rather than provincial. have nominated Lord Beswick, undersecretary for Common- wealth affairs in the House of retary and general counsel, an- Lords, for the British team at nounced from Paris that the In-| Brussels. Brown, who js in over - all h jr|Charge of the negotiations by Ent Gprcoe %0, extent thm felt ion fietinin: wid ty. 40. jin the market, is said to have re- fallen on a Friday and the two|Jected the Commonwealth Of- fice man. Brown's veto has caused deep resentment and suspicion a mong anti - market ministers, says the right-wing Daily Ex- press, itself an opponent of Brit- ish market entry. The Liberal Guardian, pro- market, maintained that without have to have approval from the|Beswick the protection of Com- monwealth interests will be left to relatively junior officials dur- ing the Brussels talks. Discrimination Case Dismissed BRACEBRIDGE, Ont. (CP)-- staff are working on five or six I sum-|l Deadline For OTTAWA (CP)--The deadline for the next report of the royal commission on bilingualism and 'OnB andB Extended Again Next Report view recommend changes in the constitution and provincial laws| to broaden language rights. biculturalism has been p back again, this time to No- vember or December. aah The 10-member commission ended its public hearings in De- cember, 1965, and has been meeting regularly since then to debate and draft its conclusions. The first volume of the final report was promised for the fall of 1966, then early 1967, then in Later vol turn with language and cultural in the federal public service and of the national capital region, the performance of news media in informing Canadians about each other, the cultural life of people with ethnic origins other than British or French, and bi- June but the task of prop 4 solutions to Canada's histori ethnic tensions continues to oc- cupy the commission full-time. Prime Minister Pearson told Martial Asselin (PC -- Charle- voix) in the Commons Thursday he "shares the hope' of the commission that the first vol- ume will be ready by the end of 1967. The commissioners and their in b firms and zations. The sweeping inquiry has cost more than $5,700,000 to date and another $1,000,000 has been budgeted for the fiscal year ending next March 31. The 10 commissioners, paid $100 a day when on public busi- ness, have collected: $410,000 in honoraria so far, plus $107,000 in tax-free travel and living al- v simult y, marizing research reports and briefs, rewriting chapters sev- eral times and polishing trans- lations. Informants say the delays and the record cost of the inquiry are causing growing embarrass- ment and displeasure in Liberal The commission submitted a 200-page preliminary report in February, 1965, saying that Con- federation was in grave danger lof breaking up because of French - English tensions. The report did not contain any pro- posals and stirred up a hot con- troversy. ranks. Opposition MPs have be- come increasingly critical. Com- mission co-chairmen Andre Lau- rendeau and Davidson Dunton have studiously avoided public statements. Tired of waiting for the royal ission's r d ations, the government has taken action in several areas being studied by the commis- sioners, who were appointed in July, 1963. Several new programs were jintroduced last year to encour- age the training and hiring of more bilingual civil servants; a committee of deputy ministers is drafting federal proposals to FREE Estimates, Reesoneble Retes, Repair Speciclist. SERVICE MADE US. Coll 723-1191 will deal in|Washington next week to hear courses in schools, bilingualism |¢4% Makers as to why one stand- the armed forces, government|ing the makeup of the car in-| voluntary national organi-|"e¥ police ruling in Thailand. | r ble and unrealistic or impossible to meet. in the time available to us. "We have been forced, in other words, into a position of appearing unco- operative and) seeming to resist actions that) presumably would improve the safety of our products. This is not our intention." The federal government will hold hearings in Detroit and arguments from Ford and other ard in particular--that govern-| terior--should not be eased. RULE ON BIKINIS | BANGKOK (AP) -- It is im-| moral for singers to appear in| bikinis at lunchtime, says a} The regulation drew howls of protest when it was first en- forced at a 24-hour nightclub serenading tired businessmen. oui "You'd think the distillery noted for its well-aged whiskies would have the oldest Canadian whisky available in Canada." "It has: Wiser's Oldest - 18 years old." (And it's too good to save only for special occasions.) COISECR'S Drink a whisky that's older and Wiser's Wiser's De Luxe, 10 years Wiser's 101, 6 years old: old: Wiser's Old, 5 years old, in a protective carton: Wiser's Special Blend, 4 years old. WISER'S DISTILLERY LIMITED, BELLEVILLE, CANADA > FIRST FOR OSHAWA CENTENNIAL "BUFFALO FEED" FRIDAY, MAY 26th, 6.30 P.M. ROYAL CANADIAN LEGION HALL 471 Simcoe St. S. Refreshments -- Entertainment -- Dancing $7.00 PER COUPLE--available at Legion Hall ! LIMITED NUMBER ONLY Buffalo Meat direct from Elk Island National Park, Albetta. jamend the constitution; the is- Charges against Mrs. Madeline Fletcher of Gravenhurst, Ont., resulting from complaints by two Toronto - area Jewish accommodation in the Muskoka resort area last summer, were She was charged with dis- Donald Organ and sue of creating a bilingual fed- eral district in the Ottawa area is being referred to a parlia- mentary committee; broadcast- ing and immigration laws, which directly affect various cultural and ethnic groups, are being revised. The royal commission now aims at publishing a series of five reports in 1968, plus numer- ous other reports on the basic findings of 175 research studies, to back up the broad conclu- sions of the first volume. This volume is expected to re- Magistrate Douglas Bice Fletcher's better. And we prove it! build the trend to reel mower for fine lawns, why is it \WWARD-MAN' SELLS Distributed By DUKE LAWN EQUIPMENT LIMITED 1184 Plains Rd. E., Burlington, Ont. Burlington 637-5216 At Your Local Deoler G. S. WHITE & W Sure, it's Springtime and the "mower fever" Is upon us. There are deals to be made. And we have as good as you'll find anywhere. PLUS, we have the new YARD-MAN line of mowers... Reels, Rotary Mowers and Lawn Tractors. None you to drop by and see them BEFORE you decide. Find out why YARD-MAN has helped REELS? Which is why we want mowers ... the only Phone Toronte 923-8474 er SON LTD. is for GENIAL (Kindly, Cordial) .». a8 in the Genial Folks you'll find € Murphy Oil 0. 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