Oshawa Times (1958-), 1 Mar 1962, p. 2

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2 'THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdey, March 1, 1962 Boost For Education Greatest In History TORONTO (CP)--A $60,900,-) 000 boost in net appropriations|cost, said: for the department of education in the Ontario government's 1962-63 fiscal year is the great- est in the province's history, Provincial Treasurer Allan said today. The increase brings total net appropriation for the depart- ment to a record $329,800,000. or an outlay of roughly $200 pe: student in elementary and sec- ondary schools and universities. Feng survival, than it 4s to-\end of 1961, Estimated expendi- ay. In his budget address Mr Allan, who dealt at length with Wider Exemptions From Sales Taxes TORONTO (CP) -- Broadened, exemptions to the Ontario three- per-cent retail sales tax, and some amendments to simplify) administration, were announced) today by Provincial Treasurer Allan, | Also announced in his budget} address to the legislature were) changes in the Succession Duty! Act, the Hospitals Tax Act and some technical amendments to the Income and Corporations Tax Acts. The new sales tax exemptions will reduce the total revenue by| only about $1,000,000 a year, Mr. Allan said at a pre-budget press conference. Introduced last Sept. 1, the tax is expected to bring in $76,000,000 in its first seven months instead of the estimated $60,000,000 and for the next fiscal year is forecast to raise $160,000,000 rather than the $150,000,000 originally esti- mated. The changes: Exempt food products will be; broadened to include insulin, vi- tamins and certain dietary sup- plements now classed as drugs and medicines; SCHOOL SUPPLIES The definition of classroom| supplies will be broadened to in-| clude all instructional equip-|will be permitted to make pay-| by one cent. the educational program and its;commodation will be paid by the senior levels of government "Never before has the role of|up to April 1, 1963. education been more vital to) The provincial treasurer said our economic and social pro-9992 building projects had been gress, indeed, even to our Na-\begun under the scheme by the ; |ture under the program, includ- Mr. Allan said the particular! ing both re anboricken by need of secondary school CUr-|<choo) boards and projects of ricula across the province is for|the department itself, is ex- nore commercial and technical pected to total $20,000,000. nstruction. This accounted for) Mr. Allan reported "excellent he federal - provincial agree- progress" in attempts to over- ment under which full capital|cgome the province's teacher costs of vocational school aC-|chortage. The supply of teach- lers for elementary -- schools nearly met the demand in 1961 although a shortage persisted in some separate schools. In September, , 1961, he sald, |6,058 students were enrolled in \the province's 10 teachers' col- i\leges. The supply of teachers for secondary schools had in-| creased "significantly." | 961) Vendors whose taxable sales do not exceed $100 a month will/ piovided 66,150 pupil places in! be permitted to file returns OM|elementary schools at a cost of| a quarterly or half-yearly basis $53,000,000 and 19,520 pupil] instead of monthly. places in secondary schools for FORMAL CHANGE $32,000,000. = The corporations tax amend-|, While these figures reveal a ment will be simply to bring it|4eceleration in the building pro- into line with adjustments made'8™am," he said, "I would point at the last session of Parlia-/0Ut that the volume of second- ment. jary school construction will un- The income tax change witl| doubtedly advance sharply in permit tax collected by Ontario| "2 and 1963 due to the pro-) during th to ba 4 d vision of technical - vocational] uring the year to be turned) accommodation made possible Garees ta teat province: Vereen CL nh enTinee! TE HU the end of the year. ean in secondary Changes in the Hospitals Tax schools in the current school| Act are designed chiefly to help) year was about 1,462,000, an in- the small movie theatres which) crease of 73,000 over the 1960-61) have been suffering a pinch iniyear and nearly twice that of recent years, Mr. Allan said. |19 years ago. Effective April 1, tax exemp- e H tion on admission prices will be SCHOOL GRANTS RISE increased to 56 cents from 25| School grants in the 1962-63 cents. In places of amusement|fiscal year are expected to total not classified as Class D thea-/$208,000,000, an increase of $26,- tres in communities of under 900,000 over the current year's 10,000 publication, the exemption| expenditure. will be raised to 75 cents from| Grants made under the Resi- 65. Tax on admissions between|dential and Farm School Tax 57 and 92 cents will be reduced) Assistance Grant Act will be boosted to $15 a pupil from $5 Under Succession Duty Act|in 1962-63, increasing total pay- changes, an insurance company|ments under the act to $16,000,-/ '4 parylo00 from the $6,000,000 spent New accommodation in 1 ment and equipment used for|ment up to $5,000 to a widow) this year. research by universities, the ex-' without consent of the provincial; Both capital and maintenance} emptions to apply when the ma-|treasurer -- double the present|grants to universities are to be} terials are purchased by schools, amount. Interest on unpaid duty,|boosted in 1962-63, to $22,400,000 school boards, colleges and uni-|now effective at the death of the|/and $23,000,000, respectively. versities; deceased, in future will not take| 'In the last two years alone A new definition of students'| effect until six months after the|the province's grants to univer-| supplies will be included for|death. The latter change is ex-|sities have been increased by} exemption, to be spelled out in/pected to become effective when, $15,500,000 or 52 per cent," Mr. detail in the regulations; the amendment has passed/Allan said. "This is eloquent Certain equipment to be de-|through the legislature and been|testimony of the support we are fined in regulations will be tax-given assent by the Lieutenant-/giving to the universities and free for hospitals when pur-|Governor. \colleges in meeting the demands chased for their own use; | On the sales tax in general,|ahead." Works of art will be exempt)Mr, Allan said that without it} The provincial treasurer sald when purchased by museums|the government 'simply could|the province's program of stu-| or art galleries supported by/not meet our obligations to edu-jdent aid is "'clearly achieving} public donations and grants by/cation, health, welfare, high-|its objective of ensuring that no| public bodies; ways and all the other services|student who has the ability to) Religious institutions will be which are essential to a modern|benefit from higher education is| exempt from tax on purchase of! expanding. economy." denied the opportunity because equipment for use in parts of ~---------_. +--- -- mages o=igg "abe their premises where religious . | In the current fiscal year worship is regularly conducted; | FIND NUMBERLESS BILL | nore than 5,200 students re-| Religious and educational pub-- EDMONTON (CP) -- Mrs.|ceived bursaries and scholar-| lications to be defined in regu- R. W. Dann of Edmonton saidjships worth $1,450,000. In ad-) lations will be exempt; Wednesday she has a one-dollar|dition more than $1,750,000 had| Equipment to be defined injbill that has no serial number.|been loaned to more than 4,000 regulations, purchased by a li-/The bill has been judged genu-|students under the. province's censed trapper of fur-bearing|ine by two bank managers and|student aid loan fund set up in animals, will be exempt. 'an RCMP officer. 1958 | PRACTICING FOR TEST Chief Warrant Officer Ed- ward J. Murray, right, of Dayton, Ohio, gets set for a manual ejection practice in a training capsule, similar to the one he used Wednesday at Edwards Air Force Base, Ontario Budget Highlights, As Shown Today By THE CANADIAN PRESS Ontario budget highlights: No new taxes or increases In existing taxes. Broadened exemptions In re- tail sales tax, reducing tota revenues about $1,000,000 yearly, to benefit religious and educational institutions, hospitals and licensed trap- pers. Surplus of $432,000 on ordi- nary account in fiscal year ending March 31. Surplus of $374,000 forecast for new fis- cal year. Provincial contribution to hospital insurance plan in- creased by $7,500,000 to keep monthly premiums stable at $2.10 single, $4.20 family. Gross ordinary expenditures forecast at record $1,005,034,- | 000 for next fiscal year. Gross provincial product in- creased' more than six per cent in last year. Corporation tax biggest single revenue source, pro- viding $166,000,000 this year | and estimated at $185,000,000 next year. Education tops spending on current account at | 000 with $334,082,000 estimated for next year Highways top spending on capital account at $175,520,000 with $185,887,000 estimated for next year Net debt increased by $148,- 112,000 to $1,240,729,219. Supplementary estimates of $13,973,000 from this year's | account include $9,000,000 as- | sistance to school boards to HATIERAS 'ai SUNNY AND COLD TODAY WEATHER FORECAST Wingham . Very Cold Toda | communications | Ontario Northland Railway. provide and equip new voca- tional units Government announces new | five-year plan for economic development. Accelerated program of northern development in- cludes expansion of rail and facilities of fy Mentholatum Ointment quickly helps to clear head cold stuffiness! Eases congestion, opens nasal passages, Te- lieves miserable dry mouth-breathing. SS head Soothing Comforting Mentholatum _ Ointment @ 2... | Calif., in the first manned test of the sieei cocoon, de- signed to save lives of crews forced to leave their bomb- ers at unendurable and altitudes. Murray was blasted away from a speed- INTERPRETING THE NEWS speeds | | AP Wirephoto) Link Suspects To Cuban Gambling CHICAGO (AP)--Two of four 'Surprise Attack Curbing Planned WASHINGTON (CP)--A halt States Federal Court on charges/sionable materials, attempts to signed on Western terms of in- defendants on trial in Unitedjin the military production of fis-/spection and control. Along with the test ban com- of dealing in stolen bonds were/prevent surprise attack and aj linked by prosecution witnesses|ban on the transfer of nuclearjits allies | pronose the' dnesday with gambling oper-|weapons to non - nuclear coun-|\establishment of a number of ations in Cuba before the revy- tries will be among top propo-jsnecja] commissions to invest- olution. jsals the Western powers willlate how the-arms race could The defence sought to have place before the 18-country dis-/phe reduced in the field of bac- the testimony stricken from the|armament conference opening'terjiglogical and chemical weap- record as irrelevant to the case.|March 14. ons and how concéaled stock- Judge Joseph Sam Perry re-| vy. authorities, in disclosing|piles of nuclear weapons could oe ae are Wil.\{his, Wednesday, said that as be detected. : us . =e as "";soon as the conference opens, . iv is- liam Rabin, Chicago, George E.'the U.S. will propose the imme- A comprehensive Western dis mittee, tng U.S. and some of: Iso wil Rosden Sumner, Md.; Sam Man- narino, New Kensington, Pa.; and Norman Rothman, Miami Beach, Fla. They are accused of conspir- ing to transport and transport- ing in interstate commerce diate establishment of a special committee made up of the three armament program now is in the final stages of development nuclear powers -- Britain, the among the U.S., Canada, Brit- |U.S. and the Soviet Union -- to/ain, Italy and France. Authori- |renew negotiations for a nuclear tjes said some minor differences jtest ban treaty. still remain among the U.S., some bonds from the $3,350,000/ They said that while progress Canada and Britain but they, loot taken by burglars from the or agreement on any number of along with Italy, are in general Brockville Trust and Savings|issues may result in a spring|harmony. Company May 3, 1958. isummit conference, President; John Portella, an agent from|Kennedy would be sure to at-| the FBI's Pittsburgh office, tes-'tend if a test ban treaty is tified Wednesday that he had sparta talked with Mannarino in Man- narino's office at the King Nov- elty Company in Kensington in October, 1956, about shipping} slot machines to Cuba. | Portella said Mannarino told him he had shipped some slot) TORONTO (CP) -- "Every- machines with approval of the body should have one, "de- Cuban government to Albert Ar-|clared an Albanian immigrant dura in Havana in July, 1956. |Wednesday, explaining to a Ardura was identified by the|magistrate why he carries a FBI agent as a former owner|stiletto. - of the Tropicana night club in| Muhamet Avdo, 28, charged Havana. The agent said both)py police with carrying a dan- Immigrant Urges Stilettos For All ing B58 bomber high in the sky and parachuted safely to earth, eight minutes after | ejection. At left is William B. Powell, a technician. --U.S. Air Force Photo via Spaceman Glenn Image Of Hero By JOSEPH MacSWEEN Canadian Press Staff Writer |aganda stunt, they declared istoutly In the face of all evi- i {flight $270,915,- It was not only the scientific/dence. success of John Glenn's orbital} After the Russians released that sent the United! pictures, the question was "why States into an emotional binge. | didn't they show these at the Glenn's attractive personality| time, as we will do?"' Kennedy's had something to do with it. |messages of congratulations to Americans would have been| Premier Khrushchev didn't con- wildly delighted in any case|vince the sceptics. with Glenn's' pioneering space} When Glenn's flight was re- flight. But they were given ajpeatedly postponed, the wisdom) - Rothman and Mannarino had an|gerous weapon, vigorously de- interest in the night club before! nied the knife is dangerous. it was confiscated in 1959 by the -poioe said 'they arrested 'idel C y nienadbcies i be haribo -|Avdo after the manager of a Beating De site ee pirogue! Term, 20 Years | guilty and has been remanded TORONTO (CP) -- Lorenzo to March 5. Hiscock, 41, was sentenced Wed-| nesday to 20 years on a charge) WEIGHT WATCHERS! of manslaughter arising from Guernsey Gold Milk the death of Mrs. Marion Tay- eee lor. : Low in Calories Hiscock, a steeplejack, had As High Or originally been. charged with Hioh 3 Cand non - capital murder. igher In Fo At his trial the dead woman's, Value ! cousin, Rene Sharpe, testified) Gain Energy Walmsley & Magill OFFICE EQUIP. LTD. 9 KING ST. E. OSHAWA 725-3506 ! she saw Hiscock beating Mrs.) | Taylor on the night of Oct. 6 but was warned not to inter- fere. | Mr. Justice J. F. Donnelly | said "Mrs. Taylor received a most brutal and callous beating without receiving the medical treatment which might have saved her life." Testimony was heard that i sat nearby drinking) beer as the woman lay dying.| Vdeal Dacry tbonus--they got not just a hero,|of total publicity exposure was) but the image of a hero. jsometimes questioned. It is) Not only did Glenn come|really the weather that is caus- through his space ordeal withing delay? Some doubters REDUCED '2200 It's @ big, handsome end modern home within 5 minutes drive from downtown Oshawe . . - on os calm, quiet end pleasont a street es you'll find anywhere. 6 big rooms... huge living room, approx. 15' x 17'), complete with stone fireplace . . . separate dining room _ kitchen and breakfast nook . : . 3 bedrooms, with master bedroom a big 15 x 15° approx. . . . bathroom tiled all-way 'round with built-in vanity and huge mirrer . . . plenty of cupboard space! BASEMENT .. . hes finished Rec. room, walls panelled, floor tiled, ceiling tiled and fixed with recessed lighting, built-in bar, brick fireplace, a big 30' x 12' room... separate laundry room equipped with new 40-gal Hydro water tank, wired for dryer, p!umbing in for euto- matic wosher . . . plus fruit cellar and big work area, Oil heat, LOT ... 100' frontoge x 120'... 2-cor goroge... paved driveway ,.. fully landscaped, front and reor. WAS $23,900 now *21,700 Call HENRY STINSON; daytime 723-2265; evenings 725-0243 SCHOFIELD- AKER Limited *°2"S2"" 723-2265 cool courage. He then met the| wanted to know. Is there danger| highest dignitaries of the coun-jto the astronaut cracking | try with poise, cracked jokes |der the strain? Will this be the with President Kennedy, spoke| worst disaster of them all? of his wife as the "rock" of his) : ete family and--above all -- spoke with obvious sincerity of his US Red Party deep patriotism. ones Newspaper writers have been ' digging all the way back to 1927| S t W | for a parallel in the wild ac-| uspec ont | i that greeted ys ody Lind- e | bergh's epic solo flight across A Qu the Atlantic. Some sort of a) nswer eres jcomparison may be possible to-/ WASHINGTON (AP)--A man adage oot wi peta treated described as the organizational way ticker - secretary of the U.S. Commu- jparade in New York, as was |nist party refused to answer a | Lindbergh. : |grand jury's questions for the The propaganda potential of) second time Wednesday and was Glenn is a prime topic of the/ordered jailed by federal Judge day but Kennedy and other high} Alexander Holtzoff. government officials are re-| But the effectiveness of the or- |ported cautious about sending/der was delayed until Friday |him abroad. Perhaps they feel|while the ruling is appealed. that, after all, his exploit fell) The defendant is Philip Bart, short of those of the Soviet Un-'a 59 - year - old printer from ion's spacemen Gagarin and ee N.Y, He was released tov. | without bond. | Observers feel that even if} Bart refused to answer more Glenn ~ pot je his own/than 40 questions about party country he is doing a needed/operations, saying to do so job of morale building at|would violate his rights under home. The frenzied reaction to|the First and Fifth Amendments we oat was itself a measure he da al gate . of how much Americans were| Judge Holtzoff sa art {hurt by Russia's earlier advan-| Would be jailed a maximum of ces in space exploration. six months if he did not answer | This was sometimes demon-\by the Friday deadline. strated in an odd, inverted kind| geuseeemmneee of way. | In New York, for instance, it |was easily possible to come |across people -- and not just) simple people -- who refused) to believe Russia had conducted) | orbital flights. It was all a prop? f Special Weekly Message | To Members Of CHAMBERS FOOD CLUB 3 | eee ee e HIGHEST QUALITY MEATS e CANADA'S St. Catharines Toronto ..... | Peterborough .... Trenton cessessvee |Killaloe . Muskoka . bed bed |North Bay . er Tl ay |Sudbury .... |Earlton ... -20 Kapuskasing «+++. +25 Forecasts issued by the Tor-| Northern Georgian Bay, Hali-|White River ...... -15 onto weather office at 5 a.m.:| burton, Timagami, Cochrane re-| wogsonee 25 Synopsis: Cold' weather wil gens, North Bay, Sudbury:}--------_°"""""""" i continue throughout the province Sunny today and Friday. Very) today and tonight but tempera-|cold today and tonight. A little tures will moderate in all re-|milder Friday. Winds north- gions Friday. Southeasterly| westerly 15 to 20 today, south- winds are expected to bringljeasterly 15 to 20 Friday. light snow to southwestern On-| Toronto: Sunny today. Cloudy tario Friday afternoon. Friday. Light snow beginning Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie,| Friday afternoon. Very cold to- southern Lake Huron, Niagara,|day and tonight. Milder Friday. Lake Ontario regions, Windsor,| Winds northwesterly 15 to 20 to- London, Hamilton: Sunny today,|day, southeasterly 15 to 20 Fri- cloudy Friday. Light snow be- day. ginning Friday afternoon. Very}. Algoma, Sault Ste. Marie, cold today and tonight. Milder;White River regions: Mainly Friday. Winds northwesterly 15'sunny today. Cloudy Friday. to 20 today, southeasterly 15 to|Light snow. beginning Friday 20 Friday. jafternoon. Very cold. Becoming) Northern Lake Huron, south-|a little milder Friday. Winds ern Georgian Bay regions:| westerly 15 to 20 today, easterly Mainly cloudy with snowflurries|15 to 20 Friday. today. Friday cloudy. Snow be-| Forecast Temperatures ginning in the afternoon. Very; Low tonight, High Friday cold today and tonight. Milder| Windsor 0 35 Friday. Winds northwesterly 15|St. Thomas to 20 today, southeasterly 15 to| London : 20 Friday. 'Kitchener sscsesees Cliff Mills 48-Hour S MERCURY Ya-TON PICKUP Finished in equipped with cer lights, dises and other extras. 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