The Oshawa Times, 24 Nov 1960, p. 2

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

INTERPRETING THE NEWS Britain, Italy Friends Now 2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thendey, Movember 14, 17960 . : Government Quiet Session Can't Afford {Becomes Heated [pension At 65 TORONTO (CP)--What was to rule change would remove the, TORONTO (CP) -- Ontario's have been a brief, routine ses-\need for 8 special act of the leg- civil servants were told Wednes- sion of the Ontario legislature islature, day i is economically unseund © erupted instead Wednesday into] The committee also recom. lo require compulsory retirement Hla heated, noisy debate on unem- mended that no member {of government employees at 63 Canadian Press Staff Writer "| ployment snd the seating of althe premier, opposition leader, a Years. Rome has become a pleasanter 'new Progressive Conservative minister moving a government] Albert Cowan, pension plan au port of call for British prime {order or the member speaking fn thority of the William Mercer inisters since Neville Chamber- voted along|reply, be allowed to spesk for Company doing research for the join went there in 1909 to bejlore Fanfal that both countriesinglt garbage collections in Tor- party lines in supporting a more than 40 minutes at a 'ime, Cll Service Assocation of Ontario, yarangued by Benito Mussolini, |are equally anxious to heal the 0, ong Goarborough Township Speaker's ruling that Liberal and| Arthur Evans, who retained old 200 delegates at the associa yuyective has not disappeared|breacs and that unofficial talks| ~o ." "oy pow CCF motions to adjourn proceed. Simeoe Centre constituency for|tion's annual meeting that em-'e on ne diplomatic arsenal of are to be launched between them, os well as cleaning, lings for an emergency debate on the Conservatives, was presented|Ployment of older persons should o"saess "and Prime Minister| The forthcoming talks, coupledmaintenance and other outside {unemployment were both out of ts the legislature and took his|continue on a yeardo-year basis yee omitian has been subjected to{with current discussions between|work throughout the Metro ares. order. The vote was 5 to 25. seat, [for persons physically and men. yo" pare But ofher tables are|British and West German trade In his ruling the Speaker, Hon. A striking committee was tally fit, : pounded by other statesmen to- experts, are viewed by Britain as william Murdoch, agreed unem- named to choose membership for| The delegates earlier received a useful preliminary for any Garbage Strike A Failure TORONTO (CP)--A last-ditch effort to avold a sire by hin Britain leads could breed poli Metropolitan Toronto cf tical difficulties, lers on outside jobs broke up But it was clear from the com. Wednesday without sn agrees munique that followed Maemil. ment, law's talks with Premier Amin-| The strike next Monday would By ED SIMON member, The legislature Bl ployment is an urgent matter of a 2W0-page report on job evalua. 94Y: publie Importance, but said the two motions were not sufficiently specific, 19 standing committees--on agri- culture, conservation, education, energy, game and fish, govern prepared by Th ment commissions, health, high. the Mercer Compan tion in the department of health Today, omas Torian of partner in the Western alliance, y. Mr, Tor- Politically, there are no problems He said adjournment to it ways and highway safety, labor,|/fan said health department em- of significance to divide them Haly stends as Britain's 48reement that may evolve, The communique stressed the {desirability of resuming East [Went disarmament negotiations Did You Know , , . in the main Dining Room of the GENOSHA HOTEL you con nave o Full-course Dinner for and indicated that the two prime ministers see eye to eye In " porting the Uniled Nations in WeiCongo and elsewhere, discussion of the subject would lands and forests, legal bills, Dloyees were 165 per cent un Foonomically, Rome has 8 {limit each speaker to 10 min- mining, municipal law, printing, |derpaid, more sinister ring in British ears. utes, He suid the question fs private bills, privileges and elec- J. Collins, recently 8p- 1 wag there that Italy and f worth more time, tions, public accounts, standing|pointed chairman of the Ontario. oo continental powers signed ONLY 95s. Civil Service Commission, spoke the agreement that produced the! OE EE European Common Market, the| great trading bloc that threatens to leave Britain isolated from her Premier Frost solid the legisla- ture next week will get a chance orders, and travel and publicity, | in favor of collective bargaining which the employees' association had been considering. The meeting continues to Fri- » to discuss the subject when « Canadians considers a motion by Richard} Sutton (PC--York Scarborough), The motion urges all sector's of Ontario's economy fo co-operate # (with government and business "to market our goods at home and abroad , to increase em ployment and job opportunities in Ontario," | (Liberal Leader Wintermeyer blocked the seating of Philip Hoffman (PC Timiskaming), one of two new members elected at recent byelections, Frost told the legislature the ne member Is owed money by the government, In preparing to Introduce Mr Hoffman to the legislature the premier sald the new member was entitled to $2,258 in holiday and sick benefits earned before his retirment from the lands and forests department in August, The Legislative Assembly Act prohibits a member from enter- ing into any contract with a gov- Lawyers ernment department or agency TORONTO (CP)~The govern: yowever, a special act can be ment took measures Wednesday passed granting individual excep- to protect trust funds where (ions, there is danger of a lawyer ab-| Mr Wintermever sald the leg sconding, |islation should be clarified in Introducing a bill to amend the| such matters, adding that same aren a month ago doing considerable damage AP Wirephoto) Protection From Crooked 50 feet up onto railroad tracks slong highway, Two were a total loss. A like wave hit this A surprise glant wave hit this Oregon coast ares early today tossing four homes some Periodical Press Part Of Nation VANCOUVER (CP) The im [alt sorts, but because they pro- portance of the periodical press vided a source of income of sorts! to the welfare of Canada as a|and encouraged newspaper men nation was stressed by a news. to write better copy. paper editor Wednesday as the There was a desperate need roysl commission on Jubliea. | for magazines cheaply printed tions wound up a three-day ses- yet filled with rich ideas, fine sion of public hearings here writing and ox loration of ideas. Collapte and Sappearance Jr GETTING " ER that United tion would permit the imposition p peri n Canada! Spea of fears i J y pid FR y Ihe a a national disaster, States pressures may overwhelm of a stop order by the Ontario PRESENTED A REPORT Ya 3 Ciheir LAW Society or any of its offi-| Coincidentally, the legislature's ruce Hutchison, editor of the Canadians "0 that they lon their cers on trust funds, select committee on house rules Victoria Times, told the commis: identity 28 anadiang, M11, The legislative gave the billlin a report presented to the sit sion ¥ "he Cana >. APS first reading, ting recommended that members : Gralian O'10ArY, A ates Ln oi The bill provides that the Su. be permitted to accept public dent of the Ottawa Journal, left| harder In their distinct identity, preme Court on application by| money other than that received or for Regina The best proof of this fact is the|the society may Issue a stop or-(as a member on passage of an later fo present general state of alarm der so no assets are pald out|assembly resolution, BEST FOR IDEAS about the nation's future an| Without the leave of the judge! In effect, the recommended Mr. Hutchison told the com-« alarm which I consider the most| _-- -- -- a A BE DE mission that periodical publiea- healthy sign In Canada today." tions are the best means of elr-| Mr, Hutchison said that any culating Ideas nationally in Can-|suapestion to eurh the flow of ada. Dally newspapers could not| foreign publications into Canada do so because of geographic bar-| vis so bad that I'm sure no one riers that prevented fully na-| is seriously considering it." ho ? tional distributon, But In reply to Mr, O'Leary, on- alises fr per iodicats had Joe other he sald he would agree to some . advantages, too, he sald, They sontrol over this in-| did not face the same deadlines fo orument Son proven that it| OTTAWA (CP) «= A part-now, | 3s newspapers and therefore had | ihreatened the existence of the|Part-later compromise solution to more time In which to think, ex:|indusry in Canada, There would|the railway wage crisis plore, research and ponder. They have fo be complete safeguards, Proaching a Dec, 3 strike dead were able also to print longer! however, to maintain freedom of| line -- is reported to be under articles than newspapers and the press. |consideration in cabinet circles, could examine ideas more thor. -- The plan, as it stands now, is oughly W-- To Canadian writers, they were a valuable Industry not only he- cause they nourished writers of Parliament At-A-Glance By THE CANADIAN PRESS Wednesday, Nov, 23, 1960 Premier Frost agreed to de. bate on unemployment n ext week, eral Roberts sald the new legisla s¢somnt to upset an election," ress Installment Plan hour for some "non-ops" workers, The money Shovel Operato Tells Of Bribe come subsidy | would cashed one for $10,000 which he|®pecial gave to Weldon, He then re. allways ceived $500, Weldon asked him to| The other return two other cheques for $25,- ment would be turned over to a 000 and $10,000, Mr, Higgins sald, | Bovernment-appointed arbiter for TORONTO (CP) -- Ebble Hig-|because "they will probably|a final decision gins, a shovel operator from bounce any way," A settlement along these lines Bobcaygeon, testified Wednesday| Mr. Higgins sald that later|is regarded as likely when the he had been asked to change a/ Weldon and a man identified to| government finally moves to pre- story he had given to an Ontario Nim as Mr, Jackson, asked him vent a crippling nation-wide rail. Securities Commission investiga.|to change his story for the OSC way tie-up set for a week this tor, and had been offered $10 a|Investigator and offered to pay|Saturday, day compensation for any day|for his legal services should hel yt would be based on a wage he was off work {do so, {recommendation made by a fed. Mr, Higging told H, G Chap:|eral conclli an ; Mr, Higgins testified at the 4 eral conciliation board, Al N p re dl p 3 pOUNSE! a y Liberal Leader Wintermeyer preliminary hearing of Fred W {pell, Weldon's counsel, that he blocked Phillp Hoffman (PC understood theslaims were to be|IN THREE STEPS 4 Jacks ( anne p ne | dnt Timiskaming), winner of a re-aacksol, - ond Xe RASEY hy sold for $75,000, and that he was| It proposed a two-cent hourly cent byelection, fror d his scelve 5 is shar | wage retroactive 1 : ) m, from taking hi {charges of fraud, forgery and ut to recelve $7,500 as his share, |wage boost retroactive to last seat | Jan, 1, plus a five-cent hourly in. : ering concé , ing © . Select committee on House, \SVIDg_concévning miring claims crease Sept, 1, followed by a rules recommended 40 - minute 3 ' ne | four-per-cent increase next May time limit for members speak. Mr. Higgins said that in 1958 1, No Decisions ing in general debates Weldon had asked him to stake . and record 18 uranium claims) R dl : : {to about seven cents an hour for He, 'his n an naquiry|:.. "non-op" workers would Thursday, Nov, 24, 1960 inear Peterborough ! George Gomme (PC -- Lan.|father and brother did this, and| bo of : ark) will move adaption of the/later gave the transfer of the] OTTAWA (CP) -- Mines Min.|be left undecided until later, reply to the speech from the|claims to Weldon, | Ister Comtols made clear Wed-| This would give the govern throne, with Arthur Evans (pe| He testified he was called to nesday in the Commons there ment time to get a report from Simcoe Centre) speaking as| Toronto, signed some papers, re.| Wil be no government decisions |the MacPherson royal commis. seconder, celved cheques for $45,000, and|0n Proposals of the Rand royal|sion, expected by March 31, - -- ---- -- commission on coal until an *'in.| Which Is supposed to spell out a S tensive" study by an Inter « de.|long-term remedy for the rail Against Polluti probably federal This final Increase--equivalent he Law Soclety Act, Attorney-Gen- wouldn't "use a technicality to|prospect of that in the immed. sald to Involve payment of the first seven-cents of a proposed fast ap-| conellintion award of 14 cents an 111,000 raflway half of the settle Will Stay 'In Congo | | OTTAWA (CP)~Externsl Af-| fairs Minister Green said Wed-| Inesday Canada will keep its troops in the Congo, | He also told the Commons that when Myr, Canada did not mean to imply Wednesday in the Ontario legls- w nck of confidence in President |lature, Kasavubu by abstaining Wednes- day In a United Nations General Assembly vote, He sald Canada resisted the) pressure of countries--he did not name them---which Canada Is a member of the 18-nation commit. tee advising UN Secretary-Gen- eral Dag Hammarskjold on the! UN's Congo operation, | Harold Winch (CCF -- Vancou- ver East) asked Mr, Green to comment on a statement by Mr, Hammarskfold that UN troops | might have to be withdrawn be-|; lenuse of the lack of finances. Mr, Green sald he had not seen such a statement, "I don't think there is any late future," Mr, Green said. "There may have heen talk from time to time that the UN will not be able to finance it, but that point has not been reached yet." | "The UN is doing an excellent job," he added, He sald the UN estimated the cost of administration in the Congo to amount to $75,000,000 or more, and Canada has pledged $1,000,000, subject to approval of Parliament, In addition, Canada was paying the pay and allow- ances of the Canadian troops there, The UN was to pay the bill for rations and quarters, traditional markets, | SPLIT COULD WORSEN | In his television talk to the Italian people, Macmillan admit- {ted that economic division be- |tween the six Common Market {powers and the seven - nation Kuropesn ¥ree Trade Area which ay. Plan To Chang Liquor Act TORONTO (CP) -- A bill to amend the section of the liquor Control Act dealing with drunk enness was given first reading TUBERCULIN | TEST CLINICS! Friday, November 25th ALBERT ST. UNITED CHURCH 348 ALBERT ST. 'Four-Year-Old Introduced by Attorney « oon LAQUOT Charge eral Roberts, the amendment| J the detentio | BRANTFORD (CP) -- Michael Pioxicated person na govern. Wickham, of Hamilton, Wedne- ment Institution established for any Na a the reclamation of alcoholics, [Sates oligo " nt 0: [© ze The amendments will provide a iy hard 8M A fine of not more than $50 or| 20 days in jail or both: a forced dust, 1956, for having liquor in Vi du Jail or woth: o Jorce r., He failed to appear in term of not more than 30 days his ca {in an institution for ryt court for the hearing and only land indeterminiate term of not|recently was located and ar- more than 90 days in an fastitu. rested, tion for treatment on a voluntary Wickham was fined $50 and 2 |costs, | The penalties are for being| = - {drunk in a public place, | | The amending act is in line| with the attorney-general's new | FOUR SEASONS TRAVEL policy of treatment in place of| Imprisonment for chronle drunk-| enness offenders, CONFIRMS The plan Is to select alcoholics | YOU ON THE SPOT Testing 2to 5S p.m.ond7 to 10 p.m. TB or Not TB + + » That is the Question! The Is In your hands, There are 10 active coses of Tuberculosis found every day! Whether there is more or less TB found this time next year depends entirely en you , , . the public, If you are X-Royed this year , . . and every yer , , there will be less, If you neglect to have your chest examined «+ + there will be more. TB or No TB , . , your ection Is the onswer, Help Prevent Tuberculosis, Have a Test «= Support The Sale Of Christmas Seals -- from magistrates' courts and| place them in surroundings more conductive to treatment, One pro- Ject Is the establishment of a farm near Toronto, where alco holics can be rehabilitated, ALSO ALL OTHER TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS RA 8-6201 IMPORTANT BRANCH The Geological Survey of Can- ada, oldest scientific branch in| federal government departments, | dates from 1841, | Spelling Pitfalls - about $9,000,000 TORONTO (CP) -- Secondary for the 12 months of this year school principals are being in from a|formed this week by the spelling to the pitfalls of thelr Grade 13 stu- dents, A survey booklet distributed by (the department of education lists {nearly 300 words most often mis- spelled In the department's Eng- lish composition examination last (May, | The words Include accommo- date, alleviate, barrenness, hustle, Canadian, cereal, despair, dying, emanate, embarrassed, foreboding, forty, gossipped, gov- ernment, hazardous, heroes, il- literate, immaculately, judg- |ment, lelsurely, luxuries, ma- |noeuyre, memento, noisily, no ticeable, occurrence, omit, pas- time, planetary, questioning, (quit, referred, rhyme, scene, |speech, temperamental, tolera- tion, uncontrollable, unmerel: {fully, veritable, visitor, woman, |writing, and yleld, "Many candidates substituted colloguialisms and cliches for | houghttul and precise lang: uage," the department sald. [JOHN A. OVENS Optometrist HARE OPTICAL 8 BOND ST, EAST, RA 34811 partmental committee is com. Ways' financial problems, pleted, | In the meantime, freight rates The Rand commission pro. would remain frozen, as they posed payment of federal subsi- have been for 20 months while dies Instead of transportation the royal commission made its subventions to help the alling coal | nation wide Investigation of Industry over the next 10 years.'transportation problems, . OTTAWA (CP) -- A Progres- ine the whole question of oil-gas sive Conservative MP who lives drilling on the Great Lakes. In pot far from the industrial city the meantime, there is to be no of Sarnia sald Wednesday Cana-|drilling off the Ontario shore in dans will have to spend a lot of 1960, effort just to stay abreast of the| Mp, Murphy lives 10 miles east! problem of pollution, of Sarnia on Lake Huron, He They will have to expend even noid tribute to the Industries of Be © effort If they are to bring|Sarnia which in the last seven or| HARRY MILLE Prestige Homes from REAL ESTATE .. RA 8-179 out any improvement In the sieht years had spent more than situation, J. W, Murphy (PC 1$7,000000 to curb - alr pollution Lambton West) told the Com and pollution of the St. Clair mons, | River, Speaking on a government res- olution calling for federal loans Under the legislation proposed, ! Genet | SOWaRe disposal and treatment Jo Jub isunleipalitics olsteuct plants will be built "right across " " the country," Mr. Murphy said. sewers, he sald very few Cana P y arllament Is being asked to set dians realize the seriousness of he pollution problem. {aside $100,000,000 for this pur. The resolution was later ap-|PO%®: proved and a hill embodying its DUMP IN NEAREST AREA Propentls given Brat Fading Le At present, many municipal. ur metho hill umy ng oy [ties dumped raw sewage in the| age into our wa o Js n Shy nearest available area ey unsavory but unsafe," Mr. ) ur are fortunate if it happens to be phy said. Ramiton. i 4/® Fiver or a lake--and that's the| Le amanies prong on nN ahd end ol Itas far as they are con: | JAKE at cerned, world's. most beautiful septic] 3 way time the government | tanks {put researchers and sclentists to! HEADS COMMITTEE | work on the pollution problem | Mr, Murphy Is chairman of a|Pure water was more important| Canadian - American committee|l0 Canada than any other natu. formed last September to stop| al resource, the proposed drilling of oll and| Jom Smith (PC -- Lincoln) gas in Lake Huron, {commended the government's The committee, representing a/plan to provide loans to build large number of communities on university student residences woth the Michigan and Ontario' But he asked consideration for a des of the lake, was Instrumen- similar scheme to provide resi lal in getting an Ontario govern. dences for student nurses, in ment commitiee set up to exam-'teras and hospital techaicians, through this office, PHONE RA 8 Designed with distinction, and situated in the desirable Ansley" Estate". This desirable split-level home shown by appointment SELLING PRICE $24,990 -1679 ONTARIO'S LARGEST HOME FURNISHERS WE'RE OPEN TOMORROW NIGHT UNTIL 9 O'CLOCK GIFT SUGGESTION FOR HER! Cy Pvp ES rm! 1 ids (SG ; ghd S40) -- INCLUDES... = or hi "Large meat platter Vegetable bowl [ ), J nner 7 \ 82 PIECE DINNERWARE SET. / 34 PIECE CUTLERY SET , l 37 PIECE GLASSWARE SET » plete le iy «WTR, ib RE ENGLISH © a \§ EXTRAORDINARY VALUE ALL 118 PIECES FOR ONLY TE ead Sol AND CUT TUMBLERS, LEAP PATIERN BEA SZ va 00 Gat Ahaon seh Let ONTARIO'S LARGEST HOME FURNISHERS ADAMS ADAMS . . . SERVING YOU SINCE 1881 40 KING STREET WEST RA 5-6535 Also at Whitby: 103 Mundas St. W., MO 8.2933

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy