Oshawa Times (1958-), 14 Mar 1962, p. 2

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TNS GINAWA Timse, weonesacy, merch z BOATS HIT BY FLOOD These small commercial | when a flood swept down | day night. The boats are bee ee ' +i ed up on land; the ice-plugge craft and pleasure boats were | 'Kettle Creek at the Lake Erie crene 'ein backerodnd. BB hit hard by ice and water | village of Port Stanley Mon- --CP Wirephoto n Economy Growth Pla Stress On Research TORONTO (CP) -- A 20-point program for economic growth,|1964. A committee of the re-jister on the "general pattern" with emphasis on industrial re-|cently-established Ontario Eco-|of the program--but said he re- search and exports, was un-|nomic Council is to review the|gretted planning was not started veiled in the legislature Tues-|problems of industrirl research 20 years ago. day by Economics and Develop-|and recommend policy, | Liberal financial critic ment Minister Macaulay 2. A three-part survey of the|Whicher Bruce described The long-heralded plan con-|Ontario Northland Railway. Da-| program as the "greatest indict- tained several measures' pre-|yid Blair, former vice-president/ment of the Conservative party viously announced and cr_ tion|of the CNR, is studying opera-|and their government of the last of a number of committees and/tion and equipment; Prof. J. L.\10 years that I have ever study groups for specific »>ro-|MacDougall of Queen's Univer- heard." jects. sity is studying the railway's| He also suggested that the "We feel this program willjeconomic status; and Price Wa-| minister -- whom he called a help us achieve an increase of|/terhouse and Company, char-|"czar"--might be exceeding his six per cent in our gross pro-|tered accountants, are looking/powers vincial product and may help usjinto its financial structure. Ross E |penditure is highly concentrated sjin a handful of countries. $9,000,000 and be completed by| termeyer congratulated the min- : the} Total Disarming Good: UN Report of U.S. experts said disarma- ment could be carried out over 10 to 12 years without causing a depression in the U.S. NEEDS PEACE USE The 95-page UN analysis, es- ating that military expendi- tures range between one and fiv per cent of gross national prod- uct in some countries and be- tween five and 19 per cent in others, said such investment would bring a new era of pros- perity and progress if trans- erred to peaceful uses. It mentioned: Foreign aid in- creases; raising standards of living; expanding and moderniz- ing plant and equipment; pro- moting housing, urban renewal, slum clearance and rural devel- opment; improving facilities for education, health, social secur- ity and scientific research. Appeal Court By JOSEPH MacSWEEN UNITED NATIONS (CP)-- With proper planning, total dis- armament would be "an un- qualified blessing to all man- kind" and not a cause of de- pression, says a United Nations], study. ; The study, prepared by econ- omists from 10 countries--West- ern, Communist and non-aligned '--says fears that disarmament would throw many workers into idleness and bring about great hardship are not valid provided governments acted with fore- sight and co-operation. Canada is named as one of the seven biggest military spen- ders in the report, released dur- ing the weekend: "While the burden of arma- ments is widespread, the great bulk of the world's military ex- =} 'Available indications are that about 85 per cent of the world's military outlays is accounted for by seven countries" --the United States, the Soviet Union, Britain, | New Spotlight On Impact Of Automation OTTAWA (CP) -- Both labor and government leaders Tues- day threw a new spotlight on the impact of automation in Can- ada, 'The labor leaders representing 110,000 organized workers in Quebec asked for action--parlia- mentary action--to protect the' "victims of technological prog- ress," And Labor Minister Starr re- plied that action is being taken --with more planned. Mr, Starr, replying to a legis- lative brief from Quebec's Con- federation of National Trade Un- ions, said automation and its consequences will be the su- preme domestic challenge of this decade--an idea advanced recently by President Kennedy. 'New skills, new training, and new techniques must be invoked), in order to keep pace with the new technology," Mr. Starr said. He promised that special stu- dies now under way on the ef- fects of automation "will form Upholds Law 'On 'Checkoff' -- i i ie 8 VANCOUVER (CP) The tion written by Acting Secre-|, °" : RAY | alg U Thant--admits|British Columbia Court of Ap-| lthat available data is incom-|P¢@! Tuesday upheld the legality iplete but estimates that total A srornenee labor law that ili i w amounts] the use of union dues to military spending no upport a political perty. to $120,000,000,000, at least two-|§ f i thirds of the total income of all) The Oil, Chemical and Atomic underdeveloped countries. More|W ork ers International Union than 50,000,000 people -- some| (CLC), which appealed a Su- three times the Canadian popu-|Preme Court B.C. ruling uphold- ||ation--were in uniform or pro-|ing the Trades Union Act, said lducing for those in uniform, |it will take its appeal to the The economists were jeg Court of Canada. pointed in 1960 by the late sec-) The decision of the five judges! etary - general Dag Hammar-|of the Appeal Court was unani- France, Red China, West Ger- many and Canada. TOTALS ARE HUGE The report--and in introduc- | skjold and--acting as individuals|mous. rather than as national repre-| Mr. Justice C. W. Tysoe said sentatives -- came from such|jn his written decision that the countries as the U.S., Britain,|Jegislation is regulatory in char- Russia, India, Venezuela and/acter and is a method of control Sudan. of the use of membership dues. It was a source of "'profound) "The purpose (of the legisla- gratification," said Thant, that/tion) undoubtedly is to safe- the basis of an approach to this problem whereby we hope to be able to bring the attendant dis- locations within reasonable con- trol." Mr. Starr did not elaborate, ACOUITTED IN THEFT ~ CHrU'e orcs - » Sam Mannarino (left) of | acquitted of federal charges | lecigiktios th aravide Gout | New Kensington, Pa., shakes | on interstate transportation of eB 10D pensa-| hands with his attorney, Vin- ae al tion for displaced workers, for cent Casey of Pittsburgh securities stolen in a $12 mil- new re-training programs and) Tuesday afler Mannarino was other measures to avert the ills) ethane < of automation. The CNTU brief also urged a royal commission investigation of the "after-effects" of auto- mation. | Cuban Rationing aierventon'in eats we Tr Gicates Future pact of technological change By BEN F. MEYER vegetable oil and other products was made by spokesmen for the national legislative . committee of the international railway F " 5) ies WASHINGTON (AF) ; exe Cuba formerly imported from mier Fidel Castro's rationing|ihe ys. plan for food and other house- brotherhoods. This delegation, lead by A. A. hold staples shows the people of Cuba are in for a period of real), lion Canadian bank burglary. | | jing to supply the lard, pork, Hutchinson, represented 110,000 Canadian railway orkers. It called for changes to the Rail- HAD LOTS OF FOOD Cubans for generations have een people with an independ- TRIAL He was the second defendant cleared by a jury in a U.S. district court. --AP Wirephoto WANTS BACK ISLANDS TOKYO (Reuters)--The Up- per House of the Japanese Diet today passed a resolution calling for restoration of former Jap- anese territories now held or administered by Russia and the United States. The resolution referred to the Habomai and Shikotan Islands of Hokkaido in northern Japan now held by Russia and the Bonin and Ryu- kyu Islands administered by the United States. on a subject beset with ideolo-|guard the fundamental right of way act to provide financial gical differences experts from|the individual member of a un-|compensation to rail workers countries with different econ0-jion to give his support to the|whose jobs suddenly cease be- mic systems.and at different/ political party and the candidate|cause of railway efforts to stages of development had been)|for political office of his choice." |streamline services and opera- belt-tightening. for Cuba's plight on "the brutal|ways enjoyed good food and economic | United States, But the embargo ence of spirit in farming, busi- Castro laid part of the blame|ness and industry. They have al- the Plenty of it blockade"' Causes of the slowdown in pro by somewhat similar view was) able to reach unanimous agree-) The NDP-CCF and trade un-| }ment. : \ions have protested the legisla-! | An earlier report by @ group/tion, passed at last year's regu- ---- Be : ~~|Tar session of the legislature, is tions. The brotherhoods also urged the federal government to cre- ate a new over-all transporta- tion authority to regulate both ordered by President Kennedy|duction in Cuba are the collec- has been in effect only a month|tive methods and the loss of in- and in that period of time a na-|centive of individuals. : tion's own production does not Cuba is short of fish, which reach eight per cent,"" Mr. Mac-| 3. Establishment of a markets Penne by Ken Bryden (NDP} aulay said. |division of the trade and indus-|~Toronto-Woodbine) who said| Among the proposals is one|try branch in the economics de-|there seemed to be more propo-| to establish a $9,000,000 research] partment, to specialize in mar-|<ajs dealing with federal mat-| Catholic Monk mmunity in Toronto, to be|ket studies and find where O | community in toronto, |ket studies and find where On-|; th ith situations with Cl T B completed by 1964. tario manufacturers can fill the which he pennes g rpg ising alms 0 pe Also announced was the pos-/gap now met by imports. ered to deal sibility of giving tax rebates and) 4. A trade group from the) Ajso included in the plan are fall from a situation of plenty to abound in the Gulf of Mexico, lone of scarcity. | because Castro's regime dislikes ' ts ., |allowing Cuba's fishermen to By Castro's own admission, sai) their ships into the gulf for the fault iies in economic blun-'fear they will defect ders by himself, his advisers) Cyba is short of meat because from the Soviet Union and Com-|the regime confiscated once- munist China and from the col-|tioyrishing ranches and a cattle The Oil Workers took action|railways and inter - provincial against the Imperial Oil Com-|truck operators. pany last June after the firm re-| Jurisdiction over inter-provin- fused to checkoff union dues|cial trucking was delegated by when the union refused a dec-|the federal government to the laration chat the dues would not provinces. There is no common be used for political purposes. | basis of provincial regulation. jaimed at the party. incentives to firms which in-|Economic Council, industry and|<tudies of Northern Ontario de- crease their exports, their fac-|other organizations to go to Eu-|veignment, agriculture, automa- tory shipments or their capitaljrope to study potential markets! tion retraining of workers, in- expenditures in comparison with|for Ontario products. Others|qustrial incentives to encourage a base period. |may later go to South America|new products, tourism, creation 'This . . . would act as ajand Asia. of an Ontario development fund stimulus to aggressive firms, but) 5, Staffs of Ontario govern-jang co operative agencies would not be an umbrella for|}ment offices in Chicago, New the less efficient,' the minister/York and London to be en- said. \larged. A special committee will study; 6. A trade office for Ontario this section of the plan. jto be set up on the continent STUDY RESEARCH 7. Expansion of the province's abroad MINE COOKS VANCOUVER (CP) -- Male cooks in some British Colum- camps are being 1 | | Christian Jew jlective farm system set up growing industry, much of it fi- torepresent manufacturers) / _jite order in Haifa filed an ap- plication for an order by the JERUSALEM (Reuters) -- Is- rael's Supreme Court was re- INTERPRETING THE NEWS pee Inanced by U.S. interests, and | There have been reports that quested Tuesday to rule on the application of a Roman Catholic monk to be formally recognized as of "Jewish nationality." Brother Daniel of the Carmel- Report's By DOUG MARSHALL Supreme Court demanding that the interior minister show cause why he (Brother Daniel) should not be issued with an immigrant Smoking, Cancer {turned the ranches over to com jdespite shortages at home, Cuba|missar-managers. has been sending food to Iron| Working class Cubans, who de- Curtain countries. They in re-|pended heavily on such staples turn have not been able or will-|as rice and beans, now find stseedailnlli ___|themselves on a near-starvation diet. The rice diet of six pounds a month would mean that a |small family could have rice perhaps 15 of the 90 times a month a family sits down at the table. The same goes for beans, develte Stations For 401 Delayed Result £800,000,000 a year. Higher immigration services to help nie Among the proposals: _jbia mining 1, Study a "major long-term provide industry and the pro-| fessions with skilled personnel! replaced by women. Five certificate, which, under Israeli| Cigarettes are being stubbed|taxes could discourage smoking --The high- announced TORONTO (CP) a favorite with Cubans. exclusive fresh-brewed expansion" in the field of re- women are working as cooks search, with establishment of a satellite" research community here, to cost an_ estimated not available in Canada | : and waitresses at a Vancouver R7GRETS 'LATENESS' jisland iron mine, receiving the Opposition Leader John Win-'same wages as male cooks did. FCUMEY INDICATE EXFICTIO FUCK TEMPERATURES TODAY law, can be given only to Jews.| Ut all over Britain as a resultjand keep revenue at the same ways department flavour! And in a country where the Father Daniel contends he is/f last week's report by 'the/level. "a Jew of Christian faith," who|Royal College of Physicians' never abandoned his Jewish na-| Which indicates a direct link be-| tionality though he adopted the| tween cigarette smoking and Christian faith. lung cancer, Brother Daniel's move is the| Health Minister Powell said in latest in his three-year struggle|Parliament the government ac- to break the traditional Jewish|cepts the report as demonstrat- conception that Jewish national-|ing "'authoritatively and crush- ity and faith are one and the|iMgly the causal connection"| same thing between smoking and the lung But the case of 40-year-old 'disease. Brother Daniel is complicated) Tobacco shares slumped because he was born Samuel|Sharply on the London stock Aaron Rufaison to a Jewish fam-|eXchange following the report,| ily in Poland. which is a _burning issue He was a Zionist as a youth|throughout Britain. and during the Second World | q ar4are campaigning for more research into air pollution as a Debate centres on whether the| Psychological and pharmaceu-|posed stations, although they n|sudden switch away. from cig-|tical benefits in smoking. Tuesday it has temporarily|heat requires one or two baths la day there is one bar of toilet soap a month. cancelled all further calling of Taxes on cigars and pipe to- tenders for service stations on bacco may be lowered and ciga- rette smokers thus encouraged|Highway 401 after only one qualified tender was received for the first station. A department statement said the "oil industry has indicated its lack of interest' in the de- partment's proposal to procide service stations, since only one bid was received for construc- tion of a proposed station near Woodstock. The department added that it) there are|plans to go ahead with the pro-) | will be delayed while a revised! to switch to what the report Says is a less dangerous form of smoking. Meanwhile cigarette manufac- turers are hastily mounting a counter-attack. They say the re- port's conclusions are based on uestionable statistical evidence Everyone Shops | | | Va il ' f Say 46 SIMC cause of lung cancer. They also claim MEAT RA 5 3 964 OF and SAVES at MARKET ©@ OSHAWA AE Bee Our Newest Location .. . 909 SIMCOE NORTH - 728-7041 FINEST MEATS AT LOWEST PRICES ! BOLOGNA 29" BONELESS, ROLLED, WELL-TRIMMED BRISKET our POINT ur, 59 COTTAGE ROLLS >", 49 YOUNG, FRESH, GRADE A--FOR FRYING OR ROASTING w 31° CHICKENS **.. " Breakfast BACON cs'xc 55° PEAMEAL BACK BACON By The Piece - End Cuis -- 1, 55° Centre Cuts & Slices is, 69¢ FRESH FRUITS & VEGETABLES ! CALIFORNIA, RED EMPEROR 2 mn 29° GRAPES 2 BUNCHES 2 5 ° base for idag Is sett CONTACT LENS C ion by i Phone 723-4191 F.R. BLACK O.D. 136 SIMCOE ST. NORTH A New Low Group Fares TO EUROPE (Groups of 25 Persons er More) New low group fares available to organ- | izations of many kinds will save up to $285 per person. Better than charter flights. Stopover privileges at no extra charge. e.g. From Toronto Return: ur, 39 40 CLOUDY TODAY, SUNNY THURSDAY WEATHER FORECAST Forecast Sunny Skies Thursday Official forecasts Forecast Temperatures en ee ee | Low tonight, High Thursday Synopsis: Clearing will grad-|Windsor .. ss (00 40 ually take place across central|St. Thomas ....... 30 Ontario today and the southern|London ........... { regions tonight. Sunny skies are|Kitchener nenerasae . forecast for most of the prov-/Wingham .. os ince Thursday, |Hamilton ... Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie,|St- Catharines . o TOPONCO .6...ses000. 32 Lake Huron, Niagara, western >, . Lake Ontario regions, Windsor, /cterborough ..... 2 London, Hamilton, Toronto: . Mainly cloudy today. A few pe- riods of light snow or drizzle} ending by this afternoon. Sunny} Thursday. Not much change in} temperature, winds light. Eastern Lake Ontario, Hali- burton, Georgian Bay, Algoma, Sault Ste. Marie and White 2%4-3% AY. LB. AMSTERDAM . . $323 Inquiries from groups promptly end courteously acknowledged Donald Travel Service OSHAWA--WHITBY--BROOKLIN 300 Dundas St. W., Whitby MO 8-3304 Dawson Victoria Edmonton Regina | Winnipeg Fort William S.S. Marie White River ... Kapuskasing .. 'North Bay .. Sudbury ... Muskoka ... Windsor ... London .. vs TOFONO sesesecsees 1-LB. CELLO PKG. issued in | 40 40 40 35 40 40 40 35 35 35 35 | | Muskoka Miracle Cushion Holds False Teeth PROFESSIONAL FITTING OF SURGICAL SUPPORTS War escaped from a Nazi prisoi A only to learn that both his par- arettes will continue and what) How far the manufacturers ents had been killed. action the government should|will be able to inhibit .govern- After the liberation of Poland,|ake to ensure that it does. | ment action remains to be seen. Rufaison adopted the Roman| Already the education and) They demonstrated powerful Catholic faith and joined a Car-jhealth ministries have opened|pressure in Westminster re- melite monastery in Poland. [campaigns to prevent and re-|cenily when the government re- He arrived in Israel in 1959|duce the smoking habit among|jected a monopolies commission and applied to the Israeli au-| School children, The rate in high}recommendation that one to- thorities for immigrant status,|SChools has increased alarm-jbacco firm sell its substantial which so far has been deniedjingly in recent years. jholdings in a rival company. him. One headmaster wrote that 8) seuss --_ survey in his 700-pupil high) vm | school showed that 132 boys and Men Face Trial girls smoked regularly and 5 labout 35 started doing in : |primary school. | | The report's supporters rec- | | On Unfit Meat ommend that cigarette adver- : : \tising on television be restricted North Bay 20 OTTAWA (CP) -- Three menjand laws prohibiting the sale of Sudbury ... - 20 Tuesday were committed for|tobacco to persons under 16 be Earlton .. » 10 trial on a charge of conspiring|rjgidly enforced. Kapuskasing ...... 10 og sell dead animals and meat)' Other suggestions directed at White River . ++ 10 lfrom dead animals for human/aquits trying to give up the Moosonee .......+. 10 consumption contrary to Food/habit include public clinics and Mount Forest ...-. 28 ,and Drug Act regulations. la higher, perhaps punitive, tax! S.S. Marie ...++.++ 20 They are Germaine Menard,|on cigarettes. Observed Temperatures 45, and his sons Regent, 26, and| This last action might prove) Min. Max, |Jean Paul 17, all of Ste. Onge,/the most attractive to a gov-| 7 8 |Ont. ernment caught between the de-| 38 Their preliminary hearing con-/mon of lung cancer and the| 22 cluded Tuesday with testimony iucrative blue clouds of ciga-| - by Raymond Joseph Kipp of sub-| rette smoke. urban Eastview, operator of a} Tobacco taxes, the biggest | wholesale Py -- plant,| single source : revenue for the jwho said he has done business/government, ring in about with the Menards for 12 years. | Seems terns aerate Mr. Kipp and a brother also/ |face charges of selling meat un-| e e e \fit for human consumption. | Cl ff M TI 48-H Spe | He testified Tuesday that he} i I s our cia or his brother checked all beef| anu | -- carcasses they bought and "'if See --Clike . : 1956 lit looked good, I purchased it." 2 poaaaicagy: coke Mi) my F re) R D i es " Pigs Customline 2-Door Midnight blue in color. Fully equip- ped with automatic transmission, V-8 engine and radio. Excellent trans- portetion. LOW PRICE River regions: Variable cloudi- ness this morning becoming sunny by noon. Main clear to- night, sunny Thursday. A little Tight -- Eases Sore Gums | Snug® brand Denture Cushions, a sen. | sational new plastic re-lining, keep wob- bliest plates firmly in place. Ease sore gums, As Prescribed By Your Doctor TH $399 NO. ! | | H | HOME GROWN HOTHOUSE 1 FRESH, ORIGINAL BUNCHES CARROTS CUCUMBER ce. = 2 10 29° "Meat Makes the Meal" .. . Shephard's Makes The Difference In Meat! | give perfect comfort. Eat, laugh, talk -- colder tonight. Winds light. | plates "'stay put". Applied in minutes -- liast from 2 to 6 months, Stay soft and Timagami, Cochrane regions, pliable, Harmiess to dentures. Peels right North Bay, Sudbury: Sunny to-|out when replacement is needed, No daily bother with adhesives. 2 liners for upper ad and Thursday. Not much] or'ower plates $1.50, Money-back guar- | change in temperature, winds! antee, Get Snug brand Denture Cushions light. ltoday! At all druggists, 4 RS LTD. | 725-6651 | CLIFF MILLS MOTO 230 KING STREET WEST

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