2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, February 12, 1962 ™ sus" LEAVE IN A HURRY in their haste to flee from a Windsor, Ont., pharmacy they robbed Saturday. The rob- bery was interrupted by the C of C Executive Urges Incentives OTTAWA (CP) -- Tax incen-|legislation to boost old age pen- tives to promote economic|sions to $65 monthly from $55, Druggist Joseph Pelletier and clerk, Mrs. May Roung, examine a screen door that three bandits pushed through fare programs~were advocated] Parliament. today by the executive council] Among incentive measures, of the Canadian Chamber of|the brief called for a tax bonus Commerce. |to stimulate research expendi In its annual pre-budget brief|tures by industry, increased to Finance Minister Fleming|'@X - free depreciation allow- and Revenue Minister Nowlan,|ances and study of a possible the council also gave its ap-|tax incentive for export sales. proval to another, though| 1 smaller, government cash defi. full review be made of taxes cit in the coming year and indi-|!evied by all levels of govern- cated it doesn't expect any ap-|ment to determine their eco- preciable easing of the tax bur-/Nomic effects and to find in- den. jequities that should be re- The council said it "deplores the possible introduction of any additional measures of social security, such as a contributory system of old age pensions an- nounced in the speech from the throne, or any other new meas- ure such as state medicine." "|, . New measures should} + ' await until the nation can af-\¥a's Negro nationalist -- ford them. Government deficits|)Jomo (Burning Spear) Kenyatta must 'not be accepted as a per-|flew into London Sunday and manent way. of life." expressed "great confidence' for the success of a constitu- MAKES NO MENTION jtional conference on the Brit- The brief made no directjish colony opening here Wed mention of the government's nesday. moved. On trade policy, it said Brit- ain's desire to enter the Euro- pean Common Market "bodes IS CONFIDENT LONDON (Reuters) -- Ken- Si MAINLY CLO WEATHER FORECAST Little Change In Temperature i eis Forecasts issued by the Tor-| onto weather office at 4:30 a.m: Synopsis: Cloudy skies and light snowfalls were widespread OTTAWA (CP) -- Parliament misteps gingerly today into an- Hiother week of what Opposition Leader Pearson has aptly: de- scribed as "'the electoral war of nerves." All eyes focus on Prime Min- ister Diefenbaker amid undim- inished speculation of an early federal general election and challenges being tossed about like rice at a wedding. The de- cision on the date is the prime minister's alone. By the time the week is out,! Mr. Diefenbaker probably- will be in as good a position as any time to call an election--that is, as far as getting priority, vote- attracting business through Par- liament is concerned Current speculation is that the Parliament elected March 31, 1958, will be dissolved to- wards the end of the week for |sitting at 2:30 p.m. EST. Election Speculation Continues In House considered the next most likely election dates after April 16. The last week saw the gov- ernment get most of its major welfare legislation through the Commons -- increases from $55 to $65 a month in old age pen- sions, old age assistance and blind persons allowances. A sim- ilar increase in disabled per- sons allowances needs only fi- nal reading, scheduled for today when the Commons opens its An unusual feature of this week--and another spur to the galloping election speculation -- is that the Senate is starting its work week tonight instead of Tuesday, as is customary early in a session, DEVELOPMENT NEXT After the formatity-- of thing reading of the disabled allow- ances bill today, the order of! Commons business set out by the government concerns three na- tional development projects -- the core of the Conservative platform in 1958 -- and the re- mainder of the welfare legisla- tion. The development projects are proposed railway extensions in northern Alberta, northern Ma- nitoba and the Gaspe region of Quebec. The welfare measures are amendments to the Civilian War Pensions and Allowances Act, the Children of War Dead (Education Assistance) Act, the War Service Grants Act and the Veterans Insurance Act. Beyond that, in the estimation of some veteran observers, there is little on the Commons order paper or in the throne speech which cannot wait--untii after an election as far as vote appeal is concerned "ian election Monday, April 16. Dissolution, say, on Saturday would leave 57 days before the Hlactual polling day -- the bare| minimum required for the elec tion processes. MAY BE IN FALL However, there also is an in- f@ \formed body of opinion leaning} # towards a later election date, in| = June or the fall Because Eas- ter intervenes, the first two Mondays of June are generally | Editor Warning | Separatism chance arrival of two police- a | Move Serious men, but the gunmen man- aged to get $132. --(C Jirephoto (CP_Wirephoto) | saInT JOHN, N.B. (CP) -- Those in Quebec who advocate |separation of their province lfrom the rest of Canada are a |small group as yet, "but what jis going on in Quebec could tear \this country apart,"" Emery: Le- blanc of Moncton, managing ed- Lumber Export Increase Seen growth--but no new social wel-|now nearing final adoption jajenaian lumber | The optimistic note was|John Men's Press Club. The brief also urged that a} *€S/Muirhead said, but exports to for a strengthened Eu-|the Common Market countries |have jumped 100 per cent in the last two years. | lately on what might be the ef- leader, |fect on Canada should Britain | | lour economy." Cart Ci fu TERAS UDY WEATHER Eastern Lake Ontario, Hali- burton, Georgian Bay regions: Mostly cloudy today and Tues day with possibly a few brief/Trenton ........ ive a\Vangeline and president of the et|Canadian Managing Editors' |was forecast today for the Ca-|Conference said Saturday night. industry during} He spoke at an organization |dinner meeting of the Saint breaking production and increase in the export mark sounded by A. G. Muirhead, of} Mr. Leblanc said representa- |Braeside, Ont., president of the|tives of news media have a re- Canadian Lumbermen's associa-|sponsibility to understand some tion, in his address to delegates|of the reasons for the current of the group's annual conven |«separatist movement" in Que- tion. bec. Canadian lumber poduction| «None of the people who are maintained a high level during | preaching separatism are as 1961 in spite of strong compe-|important as the people of Que- tition,from Japan and Russia in! bec think they are, but they are the hardwood plywood field, Mr.| more important than most of Muirhead said. you think they are," Mr. Le- The United States and the/planc said. "As for what is go- United Kingdom are the tw0ling on there, you cannot take principal export markets, Mr-.|the responsibility of ignoring it." Winds of liberation were blow- ing across the world and 15 of |the 40-odd nations created since |the Second World War were \French - speaking. Quebec he jsaid, was in a better position to operate as an independent state than any of these. He cited many reasons why the separatists felt Quebec would be better off to leave Con- federation. They felt French was not really an official language _j|of government; that much in- dustry was controlled by Eng- lish-speaking "strangers; that French magazines had been |bought up, closed down and re- |placed by French versions of |English magazines, and that French-Canadians were not suf- ficiently represented in the gov- "We have heard a great deal join the European Common Market. I feel that whatever will benefit the British economy will eventually benefit us, al- though it may cause some dis- locations to certain phases of FICURES INDICATE EXPICTEIO TEMPERATURES TODAY aiid In Car Crash TIMMINS (CP) -- Three per- sons were killed and five others injured Saturday in a two-car head-on collision on Highway 101 about 50 miles southeast of here. Dead are Arnold Tremblay, a| \27 - year. - old social worker _{|with the Kirkland Lake Chil-| :idren's Aid Society; Raymond Schryer, 13; and Lawrence Har- |wood, 12. Both boys were wards 'jof the Children's Aid. +| Raymond's brother, Andrew, 12, and Sterling Antler, 16, also |passengers in the Tremblay ve- \hicle, were injured. | James Cullen, 26, Ted Mil- \lette, 33, and Norman Gentile, /31, all of New Liskeard and oc- cupants of the second car, are jin good condition in hospital. | | Police said the accident oc-; jcurred about 7:45 p.m. near \Shillington as Tremblay, who jhad taken the boys to Timmins for golden jubilee celebrations this weekend, was returning to \Kirkland Lake. | Police said Cullen's skidded and Tremblay's ve- hicle crashed into it. The road |was centre - bare but the shoul- {winds and not much change in | temperature, Forecasts temperatures: |Low tonight High tomorrow 25 | St. Thomas ..+..-. | London Kitchener ... Mount Forest . Wingham .. Hamilton .... \St. Catharines \Toronto ..... |Peterborough car MONTREAL (CP) -- Record-|itor of the daily newspaper L'E-| Station's Boost Contested QUEBEC (C) -- The Board)station proposed to move to 590| few hours after his arrival | : f Broadcast Governors lacks|on the dial from 580 and in-| ---- . 0 jurisdiction to. recommend gov- ernment approval of a power increase sought by radio sta- tion CKEY Toronto, lamfer L: H. Schipper contended before the BBG here Saturday. | He said the CKEY power boost would interfere with the {signal of radio station CKTB St. Catharines in Metropolitan Toronto to an extent that ex- jceeds the limits set out in the {North American regional broad- casting agreement. Since the Canadian law pro- vided that' such international treaties could not be breached by stations, the BBG -- if it recommended approval of the CKEY application -- would be acting against the law. Mr. Schipper said he realizes jthe BBG's main function is to make recommendations to the transport department. But, he argued, it also is a judicial or sions. | However, board counsel Wil- liam Pearson said the law re-| quires the transport department} "before dealing' with an appli- |cation to refer it to the BBG for ja recommendation. He added! that he has justice department support for his argument that the BBG is not a judicial or} quasi - judicial body. WILL HEAR APPLICATION The upshot was that the board chairman, Dr. Andrew Stewart, said the BBG would hear the CKEY application, in which the STRIPPERS COAX BOARDER GUARDS BUDAPEST (AP) -- Hun- gary accused Austria Sunday of sending strip teasers to the border to entice Communist border guards to defect. The strippers stand on the bor- der "and display themselves with ingenuity to make them- selves wanted," said the Com- munist newspaper, Nepszab- adsag. The striptease acts take place so frequently, the paper said, that "there is hardly a single frontier guard who has not had this strange manner of enticement directed against im." Even in winter time, Nepsz- abadsag said, the girls lift their skirts high -- and "'they are obviously not receiving sufficient money to make it worth their while to contract influenza." 23,000 Chicks Die In Huge Bam Fire DUNDAS, Ont. (CP) A five - storey chicken barn and 23,000 baby chicks on the nearby farm of Public Works Minister Raymond Connell of Ontario were destroyed by fire early Sunday. The Connell family were roused from their beds by a neighbor who noticed the fire shortly after 6 a.m. Firemen sprayed water on Mr. Connells home and another barn housing 10,000 chicks when it was feared the fire would spread. However, the blaze was confined to the one building. Mr, Connell said it would cost} $50,000 to replace the chicken jbarn and equipment, exclusive jof the cost of replacing the chicks. He sid he thought the fire was caused by a faulty propane gas heater or electric wiring. Dundas is five miles Power crease its power to 5,000 watts} day and night from its present) 5,000 watts day and 1,000 watts) night. Mr. Schipper said the trans- port department itself has indi- cated in a letter to CKTB that it agrees the international treaty would be breached by CKEY interference with the CKPT signal in Meiropolitan Toronto, W. B. C. Burgoyne, president of CKTB, said BBG approval of the CKEY move would have "serious implications' for the Canadian radio broadcasting in- dustry. Mr. Schipper added that it would be a "'serious depar- ture' from Canadian practice. The only conceivable reason for approving a power in- crease that would breach the agreement would be overriding Canadian public interest, Mr. | Schipper added. He contended of CKEY. SAYS NEEDED D. C. Trowell, general man- ager of CKEY, said the station is licensed to serve Toronto but does not have a competitive sig- nal in the area. The power in- crease would make it possible for CKEY to "properly serve' an extra 400,000 people during the day and 900,000 at night. He said CKTB objection is dif- ficult to justify, since a Novem- ber, 1961, survey indicated that 10,824 homes in Metro Toronto out of a total of 400,000 listen to CKTB. He said the figure is relatively small -- hardly sub- stantial listening. "We feel it is important to emphasiz that CKTB is in no way suggesting or complaining that the proposed CKEY changes will in any way inter- fere with the CKPT signal in St. Catharines or the wealthy Niagara Peninsula," Mr. Trow- ell added. NDP Praised : By Tim Buck Democratic Party, while it did not adhere to a 1958 Canadian Labor Congress resolution about its formation, nevertheless is a tremendous forward step in uniting farmers and the labor movement, Tim Buck, former Canadian Commu nist party leader, said here. He told 70 persons celebrating the founding of the Communist party 40 years ago, that union of the farmers and the labor t 1 t quasi.- judicial body and there-|that in this case the only inter-|Toronto, in 1923. He graduated fore must make judicial deci-|est involved is the private one/from Osgoode Hall in 1926 and iwas called to the bar the same {Murphy, 14, of Toronto was ser- POWERS This photo was released by | he .White House Sunday af- ern§on which was made a Canadian Made |dates from about 700 BC. Theft Of Records _ Competition Held | SIMCOE (CP)--Town police said Sunday night 11 youths and juveniles were questioned dur- ing the weekend in an investi- gation into the methodical shop- lifting of 400 records from a music store here. No arrests were made. Police said the records, val- ued at about $1 each, have been taken over a period of five months by youths holding a "contest to see who could steal the most records in one haul." Police have recovered 84 of the records. HEADS PRESS CLUB ,OTTAWA (CP) -- Bruce Phil- lips of Southam News Services Saturday was re - elected by acclamation as president of the National Press Club of Canada. WARM AN ARCTIC ATTIC ROOM WITH QUIET, CLEAN, SAFE ELECTRIC HEAT For further information IN U.S. back in the United States. No further details were given. --(AP Wirephoto) | ANCIENT COMETS Earliest record of comets President Of Cyprus Court TORONTO (CP) --Mr, Jus-| ice John Leonard Wilson, 62, a) member of the Supreme Court | Contect Your Locel UTILITIES or HYDRO OSHAWA--WHITBY BOWMANVILLE--AJAX EYE EXAMINATIONS by appointment PHONE 723-4191 F. R. BLACK, O.D. 136 SIMCOE ST. NORTH of Ontario since 1945, has been|= appointed president of the High Court of Cyprus. He will leave, with his wife, | to takeup his post March 5. Thes appointment is for six years. | Mr. Justice Wilson has been} granted a leave of absence from | the Ontario court. Born in Schomberg, Ont., he attended public and high school} in British Columbia and gradu- ated' from University College, | year, He is known as an outspoken) man, Last November he was re-| primanded by the Law Society of Upper Canada for criticizing the way Queen's Proctor Elliot! Pepper handled a divorce hear- ing. | In 1950 Mr. Justice Wilson re- fused to hear the case of a law- yer who appeared before him} wearing a light - colored sum-| mit suit beneath his robes, say-| ing "there is a recognized and a proper dress." | Less than a year after his ap- pointment to the bench Mr. Jus- tice Wilson ordered a man) freed who had been placed in} jail for contempt of court after) refusing to make interim alim-| ony payments the court had or-| dered. | "The day has long gone by| J. M. "Jimmy" DOBBINS Jimmy has, been with the com- pony for many years. He is one of our fleet of fuel delivery men. He does service work too, He would serve you corefully and courteously. FOR TOP QUALITY FUEL Oil The Best In Heating Service CALL FUEL & HEATINGI " a PHONE 723-4663 Serving the Public For More Than Fifty Years when men are left to rot in} |jails for non - payment and I jshall not countenance it," he said. | Under the constitution of Cy- prus, which became an indepen- dent republic in 1960 after 82 years of British rule, the High SASKATOON -(CP)--The New Court president must come from a neutral country and not from Cyprus, Greece, Turkey or Brit-| ain. | Toboggan Mishap | Hurts 14-Year-Old | ALTON, Ont. (CP) -- Janis iously injured Saturday when| movement has been a Commun-|her toboggan struck a tree near ist party objective throughout|"°T°: : its history. | She was taken to hospital at The NDP is a move towards|Orangeville near Alton, a_vil- achieving socialism and then|!age 40 miles northwest of Tor- next forward step towards so-|onto and then transferred to the) cialism in Canada will depend|Hospital for Sick Children in upon the NDP, he said Satur-/Toronto 'where her condition) day night. jwas described as fair. She suf-) "The NDP will provide' an|fered a fractured skull, broken) area for an ideological struggle|nose and broken leg. for socialism." | The girl, daughter of Mr, and, DON'T WAIT!! DO IT NOW!! © WEDDINGS © ANNIVERSARIe> © BANQUETS @SALESMEETINGS RESERVE NOW!! © PICADILLY @ FLEETWOOD © CORVAIR Mr. Buck told the meeting a|Mrs. B. C. Murphy of Toronto, | limited number of candidates|was sitting on the front of the} will be entered by the party injtoboggan when it hit the tree. | the next federal election. While|George Catlewgh, 15, of Toronto) it would not be right for the|suffered a sprained ankle when} CCP to endorse the NDP, Com-jhe tried to pull the girl off when munists without a candidate ofjhe saw it heading for the tree. | their own would have to decide|Two other children riding the to-| whether they could accept the\boggan were uninjured. For further details contact manager of HOTEL GENOSHA 70 KING STREET EAST 723-4641 NDP progranf and vote accord- ingly. The recent repudiation of Communists by T. C. Douglas, | national NDP leader, would help in his defeat, said Mr. Buck, because he was dividing the progressive forces when he WOOLWORTH'S Super Bakery Specials BAKED FRESH DAILY IN OUR OWN KITCHEN I! periods of light snow today. Light winds and not much change in temperature. {North Bay .. 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