| THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, November 28, 1958 Retail Stores Get Longer Store Hours MONTREAL (CP)--The city ex- ecntive committee decided Thurs- . day to allow retail stores--with in for the exception of grocery and butcher stores--to stay open un- til 10 p.m. Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays. The measure will be sumitted ' to city council next week. E Under existing regulations The Night, stores may stay open late only : on Friday. The committee's deci-| IALS! sion comes after widespread eva-| |] sions and protests from merch-| ants who felt they could not com-| pete with suburban stores out- side the jurisdiction of the regu- lation. | Independent grocers were strongly against extending late- closing regulations, and 500 of them promised Thursday to march on city hall Monday to pro- test against abolishing the preseat bylaw since it would mean the hiring of large staffs. Labor circles in Montreal were highly critical of the new regula- tions. GIVE MEETING TIME MONTREAL (CP) Annual meeting of the Intérnational Base- ball League will be held Nov. 30 A LOOK AT THE SCHOOLS Free TuiionFor Honor Is Grads U Of T Aim By ROBERT CAMPBELL Institute, described the proposal pand fast ough iv Sandie Je . Sena .(as a good thing. increased load," he said. 'This glan week, BIE Seuste uf ne "We have been losing a very will provide them with a more in principle a proposal which large proportion of our univer- valid .neans of limitation. would guarantee a university|Sity potential," he said. "Many| He felt if this was necessary, education for any Ontario high| tudents give up the idea of over| The academic standard is the school graduate with first class|trying to reach Grade 13 because!standard which should be used. honors. they see no prospect of being (oo the opinion of Mr. Sisco The proposal included financial gbie to afford university educa-\y,.¢ "tho change in the school 2nd for Students Wi ston Class "A move. such as. this: could Year was the weakest part of he he Naa) A provide them with the incentive ™ - the academic year Instead of aly keep trying," he added There are many costs, other five month summer vacation, 1" Regarding the rescheduling of than tuition, to a university edu- Sept. 1 to June 30 schedule would Co hool vear, Mr. Roberts felt{cation." he said, "and it could be substituted with a week offl¢, Sac, had intellectual advan-|c8use definite hardship on 'ome|aity for men who live off the im-|port, the new contract, to run un-|expired. at Thanksglving and tour weeks) cas hut would be hard on a|students moral earnings of women to five (til Dec. 31, 1959, provides for a] The unions originally asked for off at both Christmas and Easter. | 'jon with less than second! "Further," he added, "'umiver-|years imprisonment from two. |three - stage wage increase that|a flat increase of about 35 cents There would be no restriction] 1 cq honors who is good college sity tudents should be rel Butler wus opening debate on|works out to a total of about 14!a hour--eplit into 17 cents an hour on which university the subsidiz | ata ia) hut must work his way enough to work hard over :.onglthe controversial Wolfenden Re-/cents an hour. land 11 per cent. ed student chose to attend through periods. ' port, result of a three-year study| The first increase is for a flat| In calculating the amount of in- While the proposal has barely Dr. C. M. Elliott, superinten- H, E. Murphy, principal at Osh. into sexual vice in Britain by a(four cents an hour for every|dividual increases, the railways| breathed its first life, residents gant of public schools, was verv awa Central Collegiate Institute,|committee headed by Sir John worker covered in the non - op|have to take into account the total | of Oshawa should be enthused | much in favor o° the idea and| said the plan was excellent in|Wolfenden. |agreement. This payment is ret-|working days of each employee about its potential. There is a re-ifejt jt was long overdue. principle The report, published a year |roactive to Jan, 1, of this year|and the basic wage scale during mote but still possible. chance' <There are brilliant students + approve wholeheartedly f|ago, advised that the streets be'a"d comes out to about $83 for an the retroactive period. that a university may be estab- who are unable to attend uni- any means which will assist|cleaned up, a recommendation employee over a full working -- rere lished here reasonably soon. Also, versity because of financial rea- needy and worthwhile students."'|that generally was greeted with year. MINER KILLED the proximity of Oshawa to the|sons," he said. The scheme would! Mr. Murphy thought the re- Public approval. SECOND STAGE ELLIOT LAKE (CP)--An inves- University of Toronto makes the provide them with a mean of arranged schoo' year required) But the committee's recommen- The second stage of the wage, tigation is being held 'o establish g ) prospect of such a scheme doubly attaining a higher educational careful examination because of dation that private homosexual agreement is a three - per - cent circumstances of the death 4f an|in Washington, D.C., it was an-| | great man* student who de- conduct between consentin® boost, effective 'last Sept. 1. The unidentified miner killed Wednes- nounced Wednesday by league 130,000 Rail Workers Get Wage Increases Prostitutes MONTREAL (CP) 9 Payment proportionate boosts to workers of retroactive wage increases|with- widely-varying pay scales, LONDON (Reuters)--The gov. granted in a new two-year con:\ranging from about $1 to $3 an ernment decided Thursday fo tract to 130,000 non-operating rail-| hour. crack down en London's numer. way workers is to be made as| Non-op workers are those who ous street prostitutes but declined | 50 as possible do not actually run trains--ma- to accept the advice of a govern as po: : ' 1 y run t ittee" 1 Yogisla-. Railway spokesman said it was chinists, stenographers, . clerks, Tex [COMmIn! eh 4 ease wih too early at present to set a date|maintenance workers, freight ion dealing with homosexuality | yen the cheques -- expected tolhandlers and porters. Home Secretary R. A. Butlé|range from about $70 to $100--| Their average hourly earnings told the House of Commons of|will be distributed across Canada.|is about $1.64. On this basis, the government plans to clean up the| The retroactive increases are|average take-home pay of a non- streets of downtown London, |included in the terms of an agree-|op workers is about $65 a week. where prostitutes openly solicit|ment signed by the railways and|The four-cent hourly increase will customers. : representatives of 15 unions bar-ladd another $1.60 a week to this Prosecution can be initiated gaining for the non-op workers.|and each of the three-per-cent only if prostitutes annoy citizens. The agreement was reached Wed- boosts would add '$1.95 a week, Butler said Parliament should [nesday, averting a nation - wide|bringing the pay to $70.50 a week. do away with the provision re-|strike threat set for next Monday.| All the increases are set on the yuiring proof of annoyance and| Based on recommendations of a|basic wage scales of last Decem- 'should raise the maximum pen- majority conciliation board re- ber, when the old non-op contract | UX Decides Crackdown On "All Tucked © NORM ADVERTISING, tne. GYPROC WALLBOARD sq. fi. 5¢ DONNACONA 16" x 16" CEILING TILE ea. 1.94 approved as rau el miversitie 10 ie to build more|Gr sities," he u Lor 'hey to uni tha to cope see and y He TELEPHONE ORDER SERVICE OPENS «1 8.45 .... PHONE RA 5-7373 to tually Sisco, principal Dr Donevar Cellegiate [nsti- viewed the plan as a means pin vith. the erious 1c commodation problem which iner vearly in Canada INCREASED LOAD "Universities can't hope 0 ex- at ies 15 inviting to students in bigh school «ta ue and thus to contribute now who might reap its benefits. more richly to the community. pended on summer employment. |#dults cease to be a crime cause final three-per-cent increase is to day in an underground accident President Frank Shaughnessy. He Nothing has been \VORS MEANS TEST - a countrvwide uproar. Some be paid next April 1 at the Spanish-American mines, said the league session will ore. | yet and it will no doubt be some silo pbs ' church and public leaders de- Dividing the wage boost into a in this Northern Ontario uranium cede the minor league baseball time before anything final is dc However, Dr. Elliott felt the G ' Ab b nounced tte committee but two flat cents-per-hour plus a percent- community. Further details were convention which starts next Mon- cided assistance should not be given out ov t Sor S Church of England leaders, the age increase was adopted to give not immediately available. 'day. SIX VIEW POINTS indiscriminately and favorad a | Archbishop of Canterbury and the -------- - -- m-- This should be borne in mind as EL Ti als les "hoo : Archbisop of York, agreed with ne change in the school yea: art the recommendation. Jou consider the opinions of Lh Pre-supposes a rather mature On homosecuality, Laborite An- shawa men and one from 0 > o ar,'"" he sé "It im- ; pM 0 sa} ", i ronto who, while desiring to study ps " x pin Pu Bog # o_ Frei ht Hik ony Stewed A the matter further, consented ©|who will all use the time to ad 3 20 L 8) e by sending him to prison as to give an opinion on the alue! vance their studies hy. I ; . of the proposal Dr. C. H. Vipond, who recently OTTAWA (CP The federal File £ druskand BY, earcerating Kurt R Sw nto: Loronto,| retired from the Board of Educa-|20Vernment is absorbing part of A member of the Wolfenden chairman of the Canadian Con-|tion after sir years' service, the cost of increased railway , oo ittee" Sir Hugh Linstead. a ferene on Educ !aelthought. "The ualifications freight rates where they affect |) 0 ative told the Commons could see no real valid criticism enter university should be ability the movement of prairie feed| Britain "had at least 2,000.000 of the plan nc rit irathe thar family income rains to livestock and poultry|y o ocaxuals, roughly one-half of big step forward It is tragic that Osha va, one raisers in other parts ofthe COUN-| them women. About 100 were con- "It will probably )ntario's most prosperous cit-/ try victed for offences each year. capacities of our has so few students going to The cabinet passed /T'hursday an - ee | make it necessary de 13 order-in-council authorizing some and bigger univer Dr. Vipond said the reason increases in the government's "I have faith the nadinn| th dy robably because feed freight assistance subsidy as Inquest Held ple will find ay no prospect of getting of Dec. 1, when the increased rail- with the scheme financially tr way rates go intr effect . I hope it wil. set a pattern for added, "People with firstt The government will absorb the Without Body other provinces to follow an econd class honors should|increased freight rates on west- f On the latter thought he not go to waste. Borderline "ase<|ern feed grain shipped to eastern SASKATOON (CP)--An inquest quick adc |) the| should come after these' Quebec, the Atlantic Provinces|yas to be held here today with- federal government will have to He looked upon the change in/and British Columbia, but not to i body i * provide more muaney th hoo' vear as a good sug-|Ontario points and that part of Ls inquest arises from the ex- Mr. Swinton said he igreed| gestion which, in order to be suc-| Quebec west of the so-called Mon- losion of y To! ane tanks on a with the -earrangemen! of the sful, would have to be contin-!treal freight rate zone ry Canadian Propane Limited university year but that It| gent on the first part of the pro Federal assistance on feed truck here July 11. When police would onsidere~ 'nfair and|posal grain movements to Ontario and! and firemen arrived they could undemocratic to exclude students N A Western Quebec rem ai ns un- pot approach the burning truck with less ha second 38 nh F. J changed at $5 a ton because such |pecause of intense heat. ors. et elore Jur : agd! tute shipments are mainly by water Later, sifting through ashes Scholsegtun: ould be used 18+10 The changes elswhere May add/and debris, police found frag- ssl | between $1,000,000 and $1,500,000 ments of bone that could be hu- A GOO HING to the government's annual out- man. However, police chief Jim lay on feed grain assistance, of- Kettles says he doubts any per- ficials said G. L. Roberts, principal at Osh awa Collegiate and Vocational son was in the truck. "'Snowmate" anticipating something see In the next 20 years atrip? a new home? college education for your children? Then Sun Life's Anticipated Endowment Policy may be just what you're looking for. It will do two things: e Provide you with cash in 10, 15, and 20 years. » Give you insurance protection for 20 years. 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