9 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Saturday, July 9, 1960 | INTERPRETING THE NEWS GOOD EVENING wt By JACK GEARIN New Congo Gov't. COL. WOTTON'S BOOK PRAISED There will be a lull in activities of the major labor bodies in Oshawa and district during the summer months. The Oshawa and District Labor Council, Local 222, UAW-CIO and the GM unit of Local 222 have all adjourned until September and most unions are expected to do likewise. . . . Col. Stephen Wotton, civil defence co- ordinator for Ontario County, was praised at a recent conference in Grav- enhurst for ' municipal elerks and managers, Col- onel Wotton's civil defence guide book for the local organization was discussed at the meeting and was most favorably received. Many of the questions at the discussion period were answered] in the book Ont- ario County and Oshawa city appear to be well in ad- vance of many othér municipalities in Emergency Measures planning. Thirty-five copies of the book have been ordered by ether munitipalities. POOL SITE MARS BEAUTY OF PARK Some members of City Council will hotly deny it, but the new swimming pool in Rotary Park is located in an abominable position, s6 much so that the good citizens in the Gibbs-Centre street area grunt and groan out loud whenever they pass it. What was wrong with building it in the old position, even if there would be excavation costs ? Wouldn't that be cheaper than wrecking a beautiful park, which is always a sound investment for the future ? Perhaps citizens should be grateful for any kind of pool, especially in a city like Oshawa where such items for children are almost regarded by certain influential aldermen as being in the luxury class,/ but this new site is grim. Any aldermen who had anything to do with. its selection should certainly be charged with vandalism. What the property committee has done -- no doubt jn its haste and confusion to get the public off its back after digging on the swim pool issue -- is to destroy a once-idyllic haven in the centre of the city where citi- sens, especially the aged and infirm, could relax in scenic surroundings. All kinds of excuses are made for moving the site of the pool-excavations on the old site would be too eostly, the land terrain was unsatisfactory, etc, the old site will be converted into a parkland extension equally as beautiful as the old, (but at what cost ? ). Such explanations are pure hogwash and do little but reflect the general confusion that exists around the eity property committee on the question of children's swim pools. Why didn't somebody tell the committee that it takes at least six weeks to build a $56,000 pool with at- tendant bathhouses, that the children's swim season con- eludes late in August. ' Those who associate the once-beautiful Rotary Park with happy memories of the past, would be well advised to look straight ahead when they pass it now. Otherwise the sight will sicken them, despite the fact that con- struction projects are pretty sickening things. Rotary Park, with its once lovely rolling terrain. has beén ruined unnecessarily as a pastoral beautyland. TWO UNFORGOTTEN RED-HOT PIANISTS There was some favorable reaction to a recent squawk herein that red-hot jazz pianists are sadly neg- lected, as a group, in Oshawa. The following letter is a sample: : Dear Mr. Gearin: -- Your column in Tuesday evening's Times was very interesting, particularly the mention of Oshawa's artists of the ivories. 1 know both of these gentlemen quite well and will agree that they are good in the modern type of COL. S. F. WOTTON Faces Tough Job from the rest of the republic. 'ably confirm the suspicions of The Baluba and Lalua tribes same Congolese who are already have revived a feud--complete resentful at the way Belgians with vengeance killings, sorcery|and sther Europeans eashed in and witch doctors--going back their holdings and sent millions many years. of dollars worth of capital abroad before last week's MUTINY ERUPTS rh , It is in such a climate as this, Congo, as is the case else that the Lumumba government where in Africa and Asia, will By DAVID ROWNTREE Canadian Press Staff Writer Friday's events in the Congo show. that Premier Patrice Lu- mumba's government will have lto work fast if the Congolese lare to enjoy the fruits of inde- pendence, gained little more than ia week ago from a reluctant | Belgium. Kennedy Surges Ahead In Presidential Race By JACK BELL {Would come up with something LOS ANGELES (AP)--Senator [that almost everybody would be John F. Kennedy tightened the! satisfied with. cordon around bis rival today as| BLASTS HOFFA pre-convention battling over the| . Meanwhile, Kennedy's cam- Democratic presidential i paign h ters Friday ac- tion neared a climax. {cused Teamsters President No matter where his opponents| James Hoffa of making "a crude turned for support from uncom-|éffort" to inject himself -into the mitted delegations, Kennedy's Democratic presidential momina- astute operators already had|tion race. Rohert Kennedy, made their effective calls. brother of the Massachusetts |, The M ¥ ts t senator and ign director, |due to arrive here today -- can|said in a statement: point to banked - up support in| "Mr. Hoffa has recently indi- every area still regarded as pol-| cated that he is going to support (Republican) Vice President jtical open range in advance of Nixon in the coming election and ic faced with the mutiny in the/need considerable help from the army. Congolese troops wanted outside world to make self-gov- their Belgian officers, who had|ernment work within two years. stayed on by agreement, re-, Wiether the help comes from moved. Lumumba had to bow to|East or West will quite likely their demands after a one-rank depend, in the words of The promotion all round failed to Economist magazine, on whether mollify the men Western policymakers are "con- The government's charge that tent to wait, arms folded, for Lu- a group of Europeans tried to/mumba to seek his own salva- assassinate Lumumba will prob-'tion wherever he can." A correspondent recently in i| Africa believes that two years will be enough to decide success or failure. . In that time the young govern- ment, starting virtually from |scratch, has to make itself "the rue of 13,000,000 people in an area almost as big as Ontario, Manitoba and Saskatchewan combined. Success would mean that the drive to independence in Africa's ° |remaining colonies would be |given a tremendous push; fail: Q 1C lure to co-operate would reverse . [the trend. | . | Questioned |THE HANDICAPS | There are some immense ob. |stacles: Not enough money, only ia handful of Congolese have had] - 2 poe AN + {anything "more than an element- OTTAWA (CP) --The RCAF, Art Smith (PC Calgary |ary education, new civil servants policy of requiring senior oliicers South), wartime pilot, and Paul were in administrative posts in| iD: desk jobs to keep in flying| Hellyer (L--Toronto Trinity), for- |the colonial government (Ghana i yas siiarply questioned in/mer_ aeronautical engineer, said \had 1,500 on the eve of the Brit- Re Commons defence committee te Michal 15 Sifieslt 1 aude " and Conia BE : Mr. Hellye: : oh withdrawal, three ears 366, | The committee alo heard an out of service. oo on 4 i other acrimonious debate on the Mr. Winch said with sarcasm speat o oot 'all Bomare anti-aircraft missile and! that this couldn't be done because LIS * its armament. it w. i There are authoritative reports "arold Winch (CCF -- Van armed forces. have only obsolete that European industrial inter-| ver Kast) maintained that Air equipment, ; : ests are urging the local govern- vijce-Marshal Keith Hodson, 44, Mr, Pearkes said senior offi- ment in Katanga province--rich| chief of operations for North|cers might be required to fly at in copper, cobalt, uranium and American Air Defence Command, | any time and thus were required industrial diamonds-- to secede should not have been flying when!to keep in practice. he was killed Tuesday in Col-' In the Bomarc debate, Mr. orado in a parachute jump from Hellyer succeeded in goading Mr a T-33 jet trainer. Pearkes to the point where he "Why do you risk the lives of|said nuclear warheads for the senior officers whose ability is! missile "won't be required un- so essential?"' Mr. Winch de-| less the enemy comes." | manded. b : Mr. Hellyer, Liberal defence Defence Minister Peatkes said | eritic, asked whether the govern- | senior officers must keep abreast! ment intended to run to Wasghing- of latest tactics and equipment|ton when the enemy was over- developments. Air Vice-Marshal| head to ask for nuclear war- Hodson was on an "essential| heads. test" but the minister didn't say Progressive Conservative mem- what it was {bers protested vigorously - and RECALL OTHER DEATHS commiitee chairman G. Ernest Committee members recalled Halpenuy (PC London) ruled that Air Vice-Marshal Robert C.| Ripley was killed in the crash off order. a Second World War Mitchell ; ) plane near here about two years|are being made with the U.S. to ago and that Air Commodore SUPPly nuclear warheads for the Joseph Stephenson was killed in|Bomare "if and When" they are the crash of another Mitchell into | required. They would be used un. Lake Michigan a few months|der authority of the prime minis- ago ter of the day. Mr. Pearkes saidethe Mitchell! Mr. Hellyer said this was not is a serviceable plane. The RCAF |in accord with U.S. Law. Would accident rate had been cut "con-|the Canadian prime siderably." have to telephone the U.S. presi- es ore |dent to get authority for use of Pay Boos 'Big Changes For UK. Government By ALAN HARVEY Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON (CP)--Big changes in the government are in pros- pect. They may be announced within two weeks Two senior ministers are defin- itely quitting, it was understood today. They are the chancellor | of the exchequer, Derick Heath- coat Amory, who is returning lo the family textile business in Devon, and the Earl of Home, Commonwealth relations secre. tary, who is expecteds to take a Conservative party post in Scot- land. There is also a possibility that Viscount Hailsham lord privy seal and minister for science and technology, will be involved in the extensive reconstruction that Prime Minister Macmillan is con- | templating. Although speculation on new appointments is dlways risky, the expectation is that Heathcoat the warheads? For Postal | been answered before by the prime minister." "No, it hasn't," Mr. Hellyer re. torted. { further questions .on warheads out | |] Mr. Pearkes said arrangements minister| Mr. Pearkes said "all this has' ON PARLIAMENT HILL the convention's formal opening Monday. yet he again attempts to inject If the platoon leaders of dele | Himself in the Democratic nom- gations from California, Minne-| ination battle." |sota, Illinois, New Jersey and| Kennedy said the latest at- | Pennsylvania consented to Jeon by Hoffa was to ask LONDON (CP) When it comes to choosing a Canadian university, British students pre- fer Toronto, British Columbia and McGill in about that order. This was indicated during the screening of 33 undergraduates who will go t6 Canada this fall under a scholarship plan dé signéd to strengthen the intellec- tual sinews of thé Common- wealth. | The British students, who will} graduate next month, are mainly from the "redbrick" universities, a térm used fo separate the newer seats of learning from seh old standbys as Oxford and Cambridge. They ecomé from Scotland, Wales and English cit- jes such as Birmingham, Bristol and Stafford. | Mostly male, they are young. bright and articulate, and al- ready know a lot about Canada. ing their destination, they asked pointéd questions about the forestry course at UBC, the advanced reactor at McMaster University in Hamil ton, Ont., and the medical facil- ities at MeGill. ~ SIDNEY SMITHS IDEA Academic circles were disap- pointed that none of the students| showed interest in the universi-| ties of the Atlantic provinces or| of French-speaking Quebec. In the same way, it is understood here that French-language stu. UK. Students Like Toronto Commonwealth countries to study, preferring to take their advanced studies at Grenoble or the Sorbonne. The Commonwealth education plan, which starts this year, is an imaginative, idealistic econ. cept, conceived in Canada and dedicated to the proposition that a common background of éduca- tion and experience is one of the vital elements in thé mySstérious cement that holds fhe Common. wealth together, First outlined by the late éxter- nal affairs minister Sidney Smi in 4 Montreal speech 1, 1958, the project involves a récip- rocal exchange of scholarships and fellowships. Each year, some 1,000 students will be at work in the classrooms of Common. wealth countries other than their own, absorbing new ideas and observing another way of life. NEW APPROACHES A The idea is to "scatter" Com» monwealth brainpower through a multilateral series of two-way educational streets, thus facilitate ing exchanges for éxample be tween Canada and Malaya rai than perpetuating the traditi academic route from countries to Britain. Though it has received little publicity outside specialist pub- lications, the edueation schéme has moved swiftly in the 22 months since it was officially dents in Canada are seld thusiastic about going to other en-|l hed at the C ealth economic conference in Montreal. COMING EVENTS SUMMER vacation church school at, | their delegages vote freely, there| Teamsters locals in Los Angeles seemed little doubt that Kennedy fo greet Senator Lyndon Johnson would gather a substantial ma-jof Texas, one of Kennedy's jority of them into his camp. |rivals, at the airport Friday. These five states could provide, John Kennedy was a mémbeér 203 of the meeded 761 votes for | of a special Senate committee Kennedy's nomination. His bit-|that investigated Hoffa "and the terest enemies concede him|Teamsjers. Robert Kennedy was around 600 votes on the first|the ittee's chief él ballot. Hoffa and the Kennedys have OPPOSITION HOPES been waging a running feud ever To keep Kennedy from storm- since. ing the nomination fortress on the first convention bios 1 Bedale . Democratic Leader Lyndon John- son of Texas and other aspirants Expansion counted heavily on Minnesota |and New Jersey from hese five) D . | Before leaving New York, Ken- I F ] {nedy said he is confident he will] ue n 1 m | win the nomination without any | prolonged convention fan ge I d 3 {said he had never conten e | t {would win on the first balls, 2} n us IY some of his strategists | hoped. 2 By DON HANRIGHT Also due in town today were Canadian Press Staff Writer {Senator Stuart Symington from OTTAWA (CP)--The Canadi Missouri and Adlai Stevenson, film industry is on the threshold [twice a candidate for the presi-(0} major expansion, Bidding Jit |dency, who seems increasingly| Welcome is the new group of in- {eager fo accept a draft. Former| dependent television stations to | president Harry Truman arrives 80 0n the air next year. | Monday. For Canadian TV viewers 'this A 20 - member subcommittee| could mean that within two years |was drawing up a preliminary | they will be watching this coun- | draft of the proposed platform to|(ry's first steady run of pri- |pe laid before the convention. |vately - produced programs in | Members voiced optimism they quantity, improving quality and | worthwhile content. | ! Film companies already are | 2 COWS STEER preparing for this upsurge in pro- | ] |duction, the incentive for which 'ROAM OTTAWA was provided in the two major {developments in Canadian broad- Sl % | casting during the last year. a AVA Pwo "he | First was the Board of Broad- range of downtown Ottawa | ©35! Governors' ruling -- neces Friday. {sary to avoid a preponderance All were finally rounded up. of American TV shows i that One was caught within | every television station in Can- sight of Parliament Hill and |2d2 must attain 55 - per - cent tied to a lamp post on Mac- Canadian content in program- kenzie King Bridge over the Mo by" April 1, 1962. Rideau Canal. Second was the federal govern- Another was coralled in a |ment decision to scrap the old backyard while the third |SinGie-channel policy in favor of escapee was subdued a few {competitive TV. This has led to blocks away and tied to a |BBG choices of second - station telephone pole. operators in Vancouver, Edmon- They escaped from a trans- ton, Calgary, Winnipeg, Toronto, port truck driven by Peler Montreal, Ottawa and Halifax. Burgess, 35 RI mer aelopentent 3 gin] ; of i ent sta- ns as Doreus bull Is | tions in the eight cities that will was 'feeling his 'oats" and {provide kicked out a panel in the |20MeS And the plain economics vehicle. of the situation will force them to steer clear of program medio. crity. Amory will be replaced at the {treasury by Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd. A possible successor to Lloyd at the foreign office is Housing Minister Henry Brooke The forthcoming changes Employees TROIS-RIVIERES, Que. (CP) | --Pay increases for 15,758 postal employees ranging from $300 to $480 a year were announced Fri- are day night by Postmaster-Gen- not expected to affect Macmil-| eral William Hamilton in an ad- lan"s No. 2 man, R. A. Bufler, dress to the Federated Associa- {who will probably remain as tion of Letter Carriers. The in- {home secretary and leader of the! creases are retroactive to July 1. House of Commons. The increases average 12.5 per . cent and will cost the govern- By JACK BEST Barrage On CBC By Angry MPs Ouimet as board chairman and on to note that public funds haveé the boost for film com- yte reh, orgamzed | nd St. Paul's Churches, July | am, to 11.30 am nox Pr by Knox te 22 | SUMMER TRAVELS | "Live a Borrowed Life", the CBC panel show with 'Charles Templeton as host, is on the road | for summer with TV programs from Halifax, Montréal, Ottawa, Winnipeg, couver. Edmonton and Van- BINGO CORONATION ORANGE TEMPLE SATURDAY JULY 9th 20: Regular fagmes $8 AA 1--$150 Game To Go 4--$40 Gemes To G8 20--$20 $50 Ful 5----$30 Games; 2 --Extra KINSMEN BINGO FREE ADMISSION--TUESDAY, JULY 5th GAMES $150 Jackpot -- $20 each line plus | Card $250 Jackpots JACKPOT NOS. 57 and 56 Buses-- JUBILEE PAVILION Monste r Bingo 16 PRIZES OF $10 | EACH OF $20, $30, $40, $50 SHARE THE WEALTH SATURDAY, JULY 9th ST. GREGORY'S AUDITORIUM iano playing, but I believe that Mr. Jenkins has the . Pp playing ment $7.341595 a vear which in| Canadian Press Staff Writer replacing him with Robert L. "far too generously been put at SIMCOE STREET NORTH edge on Mr. Miller due to his more extensive musical background. However, let us not lose sight of the fact that two #f the top men in the piano-playing end of the music business, as far as Canada is concerned, are two Oshawa men, Frank Harris and Jim Coxson. Jimmy Coxson is the pianist with the Jack Kane show, a CBC staff musician. Frank "Wimpy" Harris is at present with the Jimmy Amaro trio at Lichee Gardens, Toronto, Frank, who lives on Beatty ave- nue, here in Oshawa, has worked with Ozzie Williams and Moxie Whitney, but, perhaps, is better known for his work with the Ozzie Williams group that ap- peared years ago at the Jubilee Pavilion, 1 quite agree that there are probably good men in this are: that we do not know of and, like many other musicians of past days on the Oshawa scene, will gradually be forgotten. Yours truly, W. Askew 208 Park road south Oshawa. A WORD FROM REG. LANCASTER Reg. Lancaster wishes to remind one and all that this year's Kiwanis camp for girls at Camp Kedron will run from July 18 to 30. This is one of the Oshawa club's more ambitious projects -- all capital. costs, such as taxes, depreciation, etc., are paid for from proceeds of the Radio Auction and Apple Day drive. The club will run an additional camp at Kedron in August. . . . A campaign has beeh started at the Southview Golf and Country Club, Bowmanville, to build a $60,000 curling club for next winter. If "the early sale of shares 'is brisk. construction would start soon, , . . Mr. J. Heersink, of Burlington, president of Holshawa Ltd. was a recent visitor here to inspect the property his firm purchased recently in the northeast section from the City for. sub- dividing. He was accompanied by the president of the Holcan Investment and Farm Development Company, the parent organization for Holshawa. TA IT'S EITHER A FEAST OR FAMINE It's either a feast or famine with City Council, inso= far as open meetings are concerned. Ne inference is intended that our councillors are not working hard. Plenty of midnight oil is being burned in City Hall committee rooms, but why the reluctance to meet in the full light of day on regular schedule dur- ing the summer ? A city council, as a duly elected public body run- ning a $20,000,000 business, just doesn't pull down the blinds and operate behind closed doors for lengthy periods. One public meeting in 28 days is not enough for a eity council, regardless how hard it has worked in the past or in committee. A city council isn't like the ladies auxiliary or a service club that closes up shop for the summer, insofar as public meetings are concerned. A council has grave responsibilities - In Geirness to Council, it met publicly tour times in dollar 'amount is the 'largest OTTAWA enh as apn) Dunsmore of Montreal. single increase" ever granted Season on the CBC Friday in the| letter carriers, postal clerks, mail| Commons AN "AFFRONT" handlers and dispatchers, Mr.| Complaints about the publicly 'This was a shocking affront lo Hamilton said owned corporation from pro-| Parliament," said the Liberal MP In the case of letter carriers 8ramming to spending to alleged|for Bonavista - Twillingate. "It and postal clerks, the ingrease|Political pafronage -- flew thick| was a clear breach of the law" will be $420. For mail handlers itjand fast a the House debated In that Parliament had intended will be $300 and for dispatchersjthe CBC's ) , $480. "Appropriate" rates of in- spending program for the current owned corporation be chairman crease also have been granted fiscal year that began April, |of the board. : for part-time employees in these| Leading the attack was a phal-| "Whatever head was responsi classes anx of Progressive Conservative ble for this ought to have rolled." Letter carriers before the in-|backbenchers from Quebec who! A -former Halifax news broad- creases started at a salary of charged that the corporation is a|caster said that the CBC's radio $2,850 a year and could reach a|forum for Liberal and socialist and television networks do not |least 19 minutes, preventing an, maximum of $3,600. Postal clerks| propaganda. |carry enough commentaries ambulance from using the short- had a minimum of $2,850 and*a| At the other end of a different | about things that count in Can- est route to the scene of a traffic! maximum of $3.900, mail hand-|party line, Douglas Fisher (CCR ada. accident. lers $2,640 and $3,360. --Port Arthur) expressed disquiet \Robert McCleave (PC -- Hali- ---- - rn E ~ |about the 'CBC's relations with|fax) said the CBC carries too |the Conservative government, many broadcasts about issues in | He was 'greatly bothered" |the United States, Europe and |about the role of gévernment-- other countries. |and of Parliament generally--| Remi Paul (PC Berthier- | with respect to both the CBC and | Maskinonge - Delanaudiere) said: [the Board of Broadcast Gover-| I believe (the CBC) is a high- [Railway Blamed For Long Blocking ST. THOMAS (CP) {that the Wabash Railway and not its employees was responsible for the prolonged blocking of a rail {road crossing June 19, Magistrate Ruling {F. R Barnum levied $25 and costs Friday | The magistrate dismissed a joint charge against the train's | three-man crew Evidence revealed the (rain {had blocked the crossing for at a fine of {June (in addition to numerous committee meetings), if {you include that controversial June 9th pow-wow that {finally got under way sometime after 10 p.m. in a third | floor committee room following a red-hot discussion in Projected $71,700,000| that the president of the publicly. | the disposal of the CBC," and to suggest that a royal commission be established to inquire into CBC spending, which he and |other Quebec conservative MPs | represented as extravagant. > | CHARGES FAVORITISM Mr. Paul also charged that the |CBC in Montreal showed favorit-|~-- {ism on the night of the Quebec election, June 22, by inviting sev- |eral newly-elected Liberal legis- |lators to appear on television while passing over Union Na- tionale leaders, Mr. Pickersgill accused the | government supporters of trying |to turn the CBC into '"'a kind of | Tory radio Moscow." The government members were | complaining because Liberals are | allowed to speak on the CBC. "I should like to know why Lib- erals should not be allowed to speak on the CBC, or Tories or CCFers." Jeo tte on the Sklar deal. ; |nors, Canadian br o a deasting's| quality -organization." He went It's quite likely Council wit hold a brief open meet- | refiiatory body. | ADMISSION CHILDREN UNDER 1 50 CENTS 2 EXTRA GAMES AT $25 6 NOT ADMITTED 5:30 P.M. - 690 KING {ing at 5 p.m: Monday (no doubt to dispel wild rumors that the entire personnel has taken off for the seashore). From then on there will be no open meetings until |July 18, which means that there will be one meeting in {a 28-day period, hardly an impressive record | City Council in Peterborough meets publicly twice imonthly. -- on the second and fourth Monday of each month at 5:30 p.m. during the summer vacation ] | ASKS CLARIFY | "The air certainly needs to be {cleared up," Mr. Fisher de- | clared as he called on Revenue | Minister Nowlan, who reports to | Parliament on broadcasting, to | make a clarifying statement. Mr, {Nowlan is to reply later to this {and other points. Mr. Fisher took out after the BBG as well as the CBC, which | he criticized for its programming | policies, contending that many of | its programs are too 'high brow" These Peterborough open council meets are not ab- |breviated affairs, however -- they meet in committee lof the whole first, then the board of works and the fin- ance committee dispose of their work. Peterborough {Council then adjourns for evening dinner (served in the [for the average Canadian. [City Hall by caterers, so that little time is wasted) after |. Recent recommendations by {which Council resumes in the open again. the Bro regarding private_tele. One big item will likely be on the July 18 agenda OD ne food Mn Jorouto, have a discussion of the feasibility of instituting the city man- caused grave doubts as to its [reer or some similar form, of government here | impartiality, he said. A" good city manager could eradicate many of the J. W. Pickersgill accused the (ills that plague our municipal system. It is to be hoped | ing irresponsibility" in removin | that the proposal will be given a careful hearing. 2 2 corporatiop president J. Alphonse alt] CBC board of directors of "shock. | | | ) CITY OF OSHAWA THIRD INSTALMENT 1960 TAXES DUE Color of Bills Ward Nos, Third instalment Due Dates JULY 11th PAY TAXES BY MAIL by cheque or money order (if con- venient) enclosing COMPLETE tox bill--receipted bill will returned. AVOID STANDING IN LINE by paying before any due dete OR by depositing sealed envelope containing cheque and Tax Bill in "City Holl Mail" letter drop at City Hall main entrance f any time, | ALL OSHAWA CANADIAN BANKS OF COMMERCE will accept current taxes within two weeks before any instalment date providing Tax Bill is presented for receipting AND PRO- VIDING NO INSTALMENT IS PAST DUE WITHOUT CHARGE. ALSO PAYABLE AT CITY HALL if preferred. Green Pe | Ex-Minister Not 'Called Bird Brain | OTTAWA (CP) --~ J.C. Van Horne, Progressive Conservative MP for Restigouche-Madawaska, informed The Canadian Pre Friday that he has never called former cabinet minister ( D Howe "a bird brain." In a story July 6 on Mr, Van |Horne's announced plans to quit the House of Commons, CP cited the Howe reference among a Inumber attributed to the Ne Brunswick member as examples | of his spirited habit of speech, 3 REGISTERED NURSES Required for Floor Duty and Bed Care Wing, Hillsdale Manor, Oshawa's Home for the Aged. Duties to commence August 15th, 1960. : Attractive salary and benefits. Applications will be received, until 5:00 p.m., July 12th, 1960. D. FLEMING PERSONNEL OFFICER CITY HALL, OSHAWA, ONT. Office Hours: 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Closed Saturdays SPECIAL HOURS 7 TO 9 P.M. INSTALMENT DATES ONLY FAILURE TO PAY. ANY ONE INSTALMENT on or before due date necessitates the Tax Collector to proceed to collect by several Statutory and Local By-Law provisions such as Collec- tion of Rents where property is tenant occupied; Division Court Action in some cases and by possible "Bailiff Seizure" eof chattels. Telephones: RA 5.1153; Evenings Dial RA 8.6881 CLARENCE L. COX CIVIC ADMINISTRATION BLDG. City Tex Collector Plus free passes on right $1.00 admission gives chance on $100 RED BARN BUS SERVICE TO DOOR ST. GERTRUDE'S 9th ANNUAL CARNIVAL WEDNESDAY, JULY 13 GAMES-PRIZES-PONY RIDES SMORGASBORD 7:30 P.M. $1.50 = CHILDREN - 75¢ ST. EAST COMING EVENTS--COMING EVENTS---COMING EVENTS * WOODVIEW COMMUNITY CENTRE MONSTER BINGO MONDAY, JULY 11,8 PM, = $1,300 CASH PRIZE--$100 DOOR PRIZE TWO $250 JACKPOTS ONE $150 JACKPOT (MUST GO) 20 GAMES AT $20--5 GAMES AT $30 JACKPOT NOS. 54-56 of every regular winner you a card ond free Door Prize WHITBY BRASS Wednesday, Jul $20 each horizontal lin 5 games ot $30; 2 Door Prize and free BAND BINGO CLUB BAYVIEW, BYRON SOUTH, WHITBY y 13th, 8 p.m. Bus leaves Oshawa Terminal -- 25¢ Return SPECIAL GAMES OF $200 e; $100 a full cord 0 games at $20 TWO $250 JACKPOT GAMES 1st -- 58; 2nd -- 53; $30 Consolation $1.00 ADMISSION INCLUDES ONE CARD Admission Tickets Proceeds Go To Building Fund