2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, April 27, 1962 GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF JOYCE KILMER The life of a service club president is not always a bed of roses, a gay round of hand-shaking social events. Macaulay Leaves For Europe Tour TORONTO (CP)--The whirl-|\Canada's imports which he said wind of the Ontario cabinet is!average $250 annually per per- about to descend on Europe. |son--some five times the aver- Robert W. Macaulay, so-|age in the U.S. and Britain. If called "minister of all the de-|these imports could be cut as partments," leaves here by air/much as one-sixth, he said, Monday for a six-week trip to|Canada's import bill would be the United Kingdom. jreduced by $1,000,000,000 and The trip is designed to give|Canadian industry would have him a first-hand look at Eu-|a good chance to fill the gap. rope's burgeoning trading blocs} "It isn't an impossible task. to assess their potential effect|11's simply one that no one has on the industrial and commer- really concentrated on." cial life of Canada's largest province. Almost incidentally, it} PLANS EXHIBITION To meet the second challenge, Renting Subsidy Expansion Seen TORONTO (CP) -- A penser reperian Toronto housing au- Ontario program to subsidize|thority has signed leases with rent for low-income families is|26 landlords, is in the final likely to be expanded later this|stage of negotiation with four ; ; lyear, Economics and Develop-|more, and has inspected and Sometimes, just when everything appears to be going |i Minister Macaulay indi-\generally approved almost 100) | along well, he is suddenly confronted with the most frustrat- [cated 'Thursday. lother housing units. Since Tor- ing, policy-making decisions (ones that could alter the course | Originally designed as a pilot onto has a long babes He rl of the club for several years to come). * \project in metropolitan Toronto, ge Fpacrmg pont -- be Take Douglas Hart, the the rent certificate plan has|"@ Giffticully 8 Pp eae "h a "tremendous suc-|Proved units. iable president of the proved such a "tr s i , h cess" that it could be expanded pypsyp OF KIND ee ora i" pellet in both dollar volume and num- 'The rent certificate project-- is currently wrestling with a ber of communities involved,| nart or the co veramaat i problem that could easily Mr. Macaulay said in an inter-|,oint program in the public province, Alsen tnasentaly become an international sit- view. housing field -- has been des- 4 Vile. wite and yours. (amily: is weaaied Gea Ger Gk se ce oe tee ee eS ee ee ee q | Mr. Macaulay holds the port-|port replacement exhibition" to posing lingam ead lee gig Ml. gr a Aa Manes ' folios of economics and devel-'be held here next fall. os *e estimates of his department 50 Under a bill passed at the re- opment and energy resources.| Canadian, and especially On- Fe oe roadened. je cent session of the legislature, a A 40-year-old Toronto lawyer|tario, manufacturers will be in- The other evening he was In the three weeks since the| municipality can be given' per- wun henaiiess Give aut aera Te te ee at home alternately reading plan began operating, the Met- mission to lease homes from iosity, he has become the right-| product. or part of a prod ct the Club's latest fiscal re- --_---- ect "private landlords. hand 'man of Premier Robarts|that they import. fron other port (which brought a glow of joy to his face) and a D d S Low - income families which and the mainspring of the five-|countries and are for sale in handsomely - bound volume ymon ens S would normally qualify for pub- months-old Robarts administra-' Canada. (which had a directly opifo- Fe ent' ACKNOWLEDGE APPLAUSE British Prime Minister Har- | can Newspaper Publishers | outgoing chairman of at ocnit A Association (ANPA) at the | eay of advertising of / A. mye Ror sH ee . | Waldorf Astoria Hotel. At} Macmillan is scheduled to acknowledging applause fol- right is Russ Stewart, ex- | meet with President Kennedy lowing his address Thursday | ecutive vice-president of the | Saturday. night at dinner of the Ameri- | Cosily, Slick Voting DOUGLAS HART (AP Wirephoto) lic housing are then placed in tion. Mr. Macaulay explained: the homes and pay as much A prime purpose of the cur- "Each company will say in ef- lrent as their income allows, rent visit is to jack up Ontario's fect: 'We are now Importing all site effect). lwith the provincial government trade representation a broad, the articles you see on this The name of the book? paying the landlord the differ- Ontario House in London is un-|table. They cost us so much and "The Home Book of Quota- In Education jane from his normal rent for oak' cea th eee He Bor our total gg pes. ge tions" the part that the building. : ms is 50 much. © ' each HP. Hart Wah Fetes, TORONTO (CP)--Minister of|,, Not only are we able to set- i ponies oo Ga Comduant pl oe that made him slightly un- Health Dymond said Thursday tle people into homes immedi-| itself. Mr. Macaulay was convinced i a eine . ately under the plan," he said,} | : y easy, was a short quotation |the new program for secondary |', : Is ripe Dae na ea |many manufacturers would dis- from "Trees", a poem by Joyce Kilmer, which ran some- | oqycation in Ontario is a strik- Praia ro A ge aga Be ag gg vet. where|COVer new customers for their thing like this: : ing advance but he senses "althan would be involved in high-| we'll pire Briss Coa aitiee an products or new products that "Poems are made by fools like me, but only God can seething ferment' in other! ice apartments or other forms the Continent," Mr. Macaulay|«*" be manufactured in Ontario make a tree." sai lee Surenae'sapea of public housing." said in an interview. "We have gg be gor sth pony f ongena As he re-read the quotation and glanced sadly at the Ponape on eke y Nuceea For the people involved, there ' people studying the question, ae at the Onace govern- huge pile of recent press clippings on his table, Mr. Hart (4. ciation of Ratan he saia| Were additional benefits. Since) | but there are a great many fac-| ment's efforts to attract skilled was immediately reminded of the unhappy series of events this applies particularly to nurs- they were spotted throughout| |tors to be considered. labor. With immigration down that followed the sod-turning ceremony of the club's new ing. fea : ~ |the fixes gro kenga ¢ od | Mr, -- a bi sharply in recent years, "quite community centre on McMillan drive earlier this week. "Nursing education in the rib age Bg + Bl Se pot ime tie UX Ss ak ae ine critical shortages' of certain An irate citizen, Robert Edward Rockbrune, 61, had |main has not been fluid," he!) housing tenants, they "oat problem, ec radhcli developed in Ontario succeeded in kicking up quite a storm of opposition because = iy Giathivda al uit lac hold their heads high and de- The economics minister said ur ny the Kinsmen (on the advice of a firm of Toronto tree spec- togink alvas ns ia fleet year|VeloP a real sense of independ- he sees a two-fold challenge for) jalists) had decided to remove a 130-year-old Elm from the jence and of belonging to the Ontario industry. site of their new property, which is to house a community centre. What was the diplomatic thing for a Kinsmen president to do in such a touchy situation that had already attracted publileity far beyond the limits of Oshawa? Would he listen to the persistent, influential voices of a club group that in- sisted the tree be felled as originally planned (because it was already dying), or would he abide by the wishes of citi- zens like Mr. Rockbrune ("This tree is an historic land- mark -- you can't remove it -- the City needy trees') who are appalled by the mere thought of such municipal renova- tions, even regard such acts as tantamount to vandalism? What would President Kennedy do in a situation like this or Prime Minister Diefenbaker? Regardless of which decision his executive makes, some pretty important furs will be ruffled and Mr. Hart will un- doubtedly be the target for some unkindly barbs -- that's one of the hazards of accepting a role of responsible leadership, such as Mr. Hart's. Meanwhile, the Kin executive has decided to play it easy, to first explore every reasonable possibility of keeping the tree. "If the worst comes to the worst, and we dicide the tree must go, we will do so only after consultation with one or more outside tree experts," he said. STARR'S NOMINATION MEET ON THURSDAY William E. Austin, assistant to the president of General Motors of Canada Ltd., and president of the Ontario Safety y League, was guest speaker this week at the Sarnia # Safety Council Safe Drivers' banquet in the petro-chemi- cal City. John G. Geikie, president and chair- man of the Board of The Pedlar People Lid., is sched- uled to arrive in Vancouver, B.C., April 30 from his re- cent visit to Australia -- it is not known whether he will proceed to the Seattle World's Fair before proceeding home to Oshawa. . . . Quinto Martini, (PC Federal mem- ber for Hamilton East, who was the guest speaker g ail Thursday at the nomination mpios meeting in Whitby for Labor QUINTO MARTINI Minister Michael Starr) is Parliamentary secretary to Transport Minister Balcer. Mr. Martini, a real estate broker, is married and has six children (five of them girls). He was born and educated in Hamilton. He was first elected in 1957 and re-elected in 1958. BATTLE OF THE ANGEL GATES IN FULL 8WING The battle of the Beau Valley Angel Gates raged with new fury today, especially in the Rossland road east area where they're located (at least temporarily). The next episode has been scheduled for City Council Monday, May 7 -- an appeal will be made to elected repre- sentatives to allow the gates to stand, despite a ruling by City Engineer Fred Crome that they contravene a bylaw because they're too high. He says they should be no higher than three feet. The controversial $3,000 gates -- made of Angel stone and adorn- ed by handsome black iron grilling that once belonged to the Ontario Jockey Club -- grace the entrance to Beau Valley, that elite northeast subdivision owned by Herman Kassinger. Mr. K is understandably angry "on a matter of princi- ple." : He says he told the City engineer of his plan to build the gates and that no opposition was voiced at first -- two days later, when the gates were almost constructed, Mr. Crome ordered them to be either removed or made to con- form to the three-foot high ruling. Says Mr. K: "It seems strange that the City would want to trip me up on such a small technicality especially when I'm trying to improve the appearance of the community along the general lines so often suggested by such people as our industrial commissioner and others who want Oshawa to have the most attractive scenic atmosphere possible. Mr. Crome's ruling is disheartening, nonsensical. I intend to fight it." STARR HAS NEW CAMPAIGN MANAGER Edward J. Parsons, Dominion pensions advocate for the Canadian Corps Association, will be in Oshawa May 7 to answer questions regarding veterans' pensions. He is from Rouyn, Que. . . . Robert J. Nicol of 132 Division: street was recently appointed campdign manager for Labor Minister Michael Starr in the forthcoming Federal election in Oshawa. He is a district manager for a national distributor of laundry store equipment. He was one of the organizers of the recently- formed Catholic Luncheon Club. He also attended St. Mary's College, Brockville, St. Alphonsus College, Woodstock, and Assumption University, Windsor. . . . Alderman Albert V. Walker was a spectator last week at the Pittsburgh Pirates- N.Y. Mets game in the Smoky City. He said 21,000 turned out mostly to cheer Casey Stengel and that the Ol' Professor put on quite a show while his team was humbled 8-5. ' of a three-year course for stu-| dent nurses. "The average student can | than memorize her notes.' | . , The education of nurses|USed were ae needs much study and not a/Cause landlords could not ob-|millions of pamphlets and book-| llets. The poster piles are grow-| ing. Thousands of TV and faa) -land newspaper appeals are in | llittle change,"' he said |Ontario's new Nursing Act, passed in the legislature this} jmonth, will become a model throughout Canada. | The act sets up a College of |Nurses to control the training jand practice of nursing as the College of Physicians and Sur-|tional Union of Public Employ- office. ees (CLC) has applied to the) | "Some of you may feel we/Ontario Labor Relations Board|to the June 18 federal general |have simply handéd over to you| for bargaining rights at fourlelection, some of the products geons controls doctors. community. jscarcely be expected to do more ae it also helps the neigh- tain enough rent to make re- Mr. Dymond said he hoped|Pa!rs. " In some cases, Mr. Macaulay orhood. Some of the houses) deteriorating be-| € Union Looks For Jails Bargaining -ommon to all four national party : phones ring continuously andjgo no further than applying the Campaign In Canada OTTAWA (CP)--The mechan-|consensus that political expen-|tial commercial value of the 26 ized vote hunt has begun. \ditures will be higher than ever Machines are cranking out/|before, although cost estimates range widely Progressive Conser vative party outlays vary from $5,000,- 000 to $11,000,000 in estimates already published: A tep party jofficial called the higher figure ridiculous. A liberal party officer would he making An atmosphere of crisis is headquarters where TORONTO (CP) -- The Na- people half-gallop from office to|\same word -- "ridiculous" -- jto published estimates that his |party would spend about $3,000,- 000. A top New Democratic Party With. seven full weeks to go ja host of problems that have jails, P. J. O'Keefe, national re-|of this hectic industry are being) campaign officer just smiled at {plagued all health people for|presentative, said Thursday/kept as secret as a federal bud-jsuggestions that NDP costs | jp generations, and that may be/night. |partly true," he said, 'But it is a. forwards step." The applications cover a total of 300 employees at the Metro-|far: Earlier, in her presidential|politan Toronto Don Jail and jaddress, Ella M. Howard said|the Lambton, Welland and Lin- \there "is apprehension and even|coln county jails. pa Mr. O'Keefe said the applica-\ew of the country's estimated|Prefer to offer a cost range in jalarm'" among many _ nurses jover the new Nurses' Act. it She appealed to the govern-|cent amendments to the Muni- |ment to take its time in drawing|cipal Act changing the status of up the regulations '"'to ensure}j the protection of all parties." £6 re) SS noite 4 to municipal. ion was made possible by re- ail employees from provincial] get. of ESTIMATES VARY jwould run to $2,000,000. But a h i t so|Social Credit official said his But this much is apparent s party will spend $1,500,000 on |advertising and promotion. vill be the costliest and one sadder chap | Obviously it's a delicate sub- the slickest election cam- t igns in Canadian history.|ject. The behind-the-scenes me 19,800,000 voters will escape it.Jeach of the 263 'electoral con- |stituencies--$5,000 to $20,000 for Conservatives and Liberals, and A Canadian Press survey' of|$1,500 to $10,000 for the NDP Iparty campaigns revealed aj/and Social Credit. Of course this doesn't include {the estimated record of $10,700,- 000 in public funds spent on the election machinery itself--such as the enumeration that begins Monday with about 60,000 work- ers ringing doorbells. Nor does it include the poten- Star Denies Delaying Of Board Hearing OTTAWA (CP)--Labor Minl- ister Starr said Thursday there has been "'no undue delay" in the appointment of a chairman for the conciliation board which 'lis to hear a contract dispute between the railways and the '|non - operating employees' un- ; jions, A decision will "soon," he added. be made SUNNY WEATHER TODAY "WEATHER FORECAST Cloud, Showers | | For Saturday Forecasts issued by the Tor-/Kitchener onto weather office at 4:30 a.m:|w Synopsis: warm, sunny) weather will continue over most| of Southern Ontario today, Shower activity that has been occurring west of the Great lLakes will spread across south- ern and central Ontario. Satur- day. | Lake St. Clair, Lake Huron,| Lake Erie, Niagara, southern) |Georgian Bay, Lake Ontario) | regions, Windsor, London, Ha-! milton, Toronto: Sunny and con-! Hamilton |St. Catharine Toronto .. ve Peterborough ..... Killaloe |Muskoka North Bay.... Sudbury Earlton .... Kapuskasing . | White River 65 62 65 65 65 60 60 | 55 58 55 55 45 45 45 ingham renton i | Moosonee Sault Ste. Marie... Mount Forest..... 'Low overnight, High Thursday Dawson Victoria .. |Edmonton .ss+esees Regina ..... | Winnipeg Fort William ..... White River |Kapuskasing ...... |North Bay.. 9 | iS. S. Marie. . [Windsor «ss+reeeee |London .-.+ ' Toronto .. Ottawa ....» vr Montreal ..-+++++ Quebec ........ Pek Halifax The 15-union negotiating com- jmittee sent a telegram from _|Montreal Thursday expressing concern over the delay in nam- ing a chairman. Mr. Starr made public a tele- gram he sent in reply. | It reads: "There has been no undue delay in efforts to obtain services of competent chairman of board of conciliation. You will recall it was by letter re- ceived only April 9 that your nominee advised that he and employers' nominee were un- able to agree on selection of chairman. Am devoting atten- jtion to this matter and expect to give you word soon. Talks between the railways jand the non-ops unions--repre- 35 55 62 45 55 Observed Temperatures |senting employees not involved) --- lin the actual running of trains--' jcollapsed in February. | The labor minister's |ment was issued by his office ihere after Mr. Starr conferred with department officials by tel- ephone from his home in Oshawa. state-| jtinuing warm today, Partly jcloudy with scattered showers jtonight and Saturday. Winds jlight, increasing this morning to | southwesterly 15 to 30. Algoma, southern Timagami, northern Georgian Bay, Hali- burton regions, North Bay, Sud- bury, Sault Ste. Marie: Sunny jwith cloudy periods today, a |few widely scattered showers, jlittle change in temperature, |winds light, jSunny with some cloudy riods and showers Saturday. White River, northern Tima- jgami, Cochrane regions: Vari- able cloudiness, cool today and |Saturday, Winds northeasterly 10 to 20. pe- Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, High Saturday Windsor 70 TH 55 55 \St. Thomas. ' 65 (LODGON <scerscesese 65 | \ Cliff Mills 48-Hour Special CLIFF MILLS MOTO 230 KING STREET WEST 1959 BUICK steering, power brakes, custom radio. Seafoam green and Alaska white. Spotless. $1645 RS LTD. 725-6651 Dynaflow, power hours of free electioneering time provided by the publicly- jowned CBC on its English and \French radio and TV networks. n the basis of published ad- vertising rates, the value of this free time is about $250,000. Television campaigning--free land paid -- will be far greater than in the 1957 and 1958 elec tions, said ali four parties. Spe- cific comparisons were not of- fered and neither were the time periods in which appeals likely will be concentrated. The free CBC television time is in the early evening, ending around 10 p.m. Indications so far .are that paid announce- ments will be crowded into the same top viewing period, } "The first is to sell more of} our exports to Europe, which) has become a potentially larger) customer than the United States) and which could help greatly to} take up the slack in Canadian) production," he said. | Lakes Vessel Picketed By Seafarers FORT WILLIAM (CP)--The Seafarers' International Union (Ind.) Wednesday threw a picket line around the third ship of Upper Lakes Shipping Lim- ited into port. though many will be spotted in the afternoon for the house- it wife's benefit. TV appeals may be a little more lively than in the past-- but only a little. The Board of Broadcast Governors has _ re- laxed its rules slightly, allowing greater use of charts and graphs and sequences showing the candidate at work. RADIO USE DROPS | Radio has become a dimin-| ishing campaign asset. Cam paign directors indicate that lighter use will be made of it than in 1957 and 1958, though there still will be a heavy run of promotions in specific time periods and in the few remain jing non-TV areas, One factor in radio broadcast- ing is that since 1958 it has be-} come increasingly apparent} that many stations gain their} | Lakes The grain carrier Maunwoa II was picketed when it docked jat Fort William. Pickets fol- lowed the ship when it went to the N. M. Paterson elevator on the Kaministiquia River. The pickets carry signs claim- ing they are locked out. The ship carries a crew be- longing to the new Canadian Maritime Union (CLC), Upper signed with the CMU when conciliation hearings with the SIU deadlocked last month. The first Upper Lakes ship to dock at the Lakehead last week, the grain carrier Douglas Houghton, also was picketed in Port Arthur, Later in the week, the Upper Lakes package freighters James B. Eads ar- rived, but no pickets appeared. The SIU has blacklisted 14 Upper Lakes ships which carry CMU crews. The second revolves' around) NOW... | AFTER | YOU'VE SEEN EVERYTHING! | | | a | | See: The Best THE "Alps Chateau" MODERN HOMES +» TONNO | PARK RD. N, |biggest. audiences in early; |morning, say between 7 and 9 la.m. So the electorate can ex- pect politics. for breakfast. One of the biggest changes will be in campaign literature. There will be much more of it from all parties. Posters are just starting to appear, with the national head- \quarters turning out the big jones of Prime Minister Diefen- baker, Opposition Leader Pear- son, NDP Leader T. C. Douglas and Social Credit's Robert Thompson, One feature is that the gen 'eral social credit posters will, jin line with the party's antici-| pated big drive in Quebec, em-) phasize the English - French team of Mr. Thompson and Deputy Leader Real Caouette. | ELIMINATE MUSICIANS MOSCOW (Reuters) -- Three Ontario musicians, planists) Raymond Pannell of London and Elaine Keillor of Wallace- town and cellist Michale' Kil-| iburn of Toronto, were elimin- jated in the first round of the} Tchaikovsky International festi- val here. With The Kind Pi DR. M. B. "OPEN ONTARIO Friends of the communi and tour the Ontario REFRESHMENTS WILL BE MENTAL HEALTH WEEK April 29th- May 5th, 1962 Honorable Minister of Health of Ontario WHITBY WEDNESDAY, MAY 2, 1962 2:00--4:00 P.M. 7:00--8:00 P.M. KINDLY MEET IN THE ROTUNDA -- MAIN BUILDING ermission of The DYMOND HOUSE" HOSPITAL ty are invited to visit Hospital at Whitby SERVED AFTER THE VISIT it's FURNACE TUNE-UP TIME now! Call 725-3581 and we'll make @ time to suit you. ugeys | 43 KING STREET WE in fo th If OL te ST, OSHAWA With summer "j the corner', your furnace will soon be having a long eorned rest. A good cleanout and tune-up now will put it and send us the reply card now, won't you? If not, just Wage wn ust around tip-top condition ready r a sure, clean start in e fall. you have already received ir Card in the mail, fill out lephone us, PHONE 725-3581 \ 4