Oshawa Times (1958-), 3 Aug 1962, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Pridey, August 3, 1962 Medicare Agreement Written Into Laws REGINA (CP) -- A special) day, session of the Saskatchewan| House. legislature has written into law Opposition amendments to the controyer-'Thatcher said the ame sial Medical Care Insurance Act| represented a major re ictates of outlined in an agreement made the government. servants and politicians. last week by the CCF govern- Premier Woodrow S. Lloyd uring the boycott the doc- ment andthe medical profes- said the plan will "enable every tors provided free, hospital- sion. family and every individual to pased emergency service. Nor- The agreement, signed in Sas- enjoy better and more complete maj service was suspended by katoon July 23, ended a 23-day) health care. a most doctors. Clients and doc- boycott of the compulsory, pre-| Th amendments permit doc- tors' offices were closed. paid and universal plan by most! tore to practise privately out- The college has 904 mem- Saskatchewan doctors. iside" the act, allow voluntary pers, about 700 of whom ave The boycott brought to a head'non - profit health insurance practising physicians. A num- a 2% - year government - medi- pians to operate along side with' per said they would leave the cal profession dispute over a the government plan and strip province rather than work un- - public medical care plan, ithe government's Medical Care) ger the plan. Soome did, but! ; In a one-day session--shortest| tpsurance Commission of many {he number has not been offi-| } in the province's hoo bill' powers cially stated. \k outlining the amendments was a is oe F placed in the statutes without) RESIST CONTROL mi Health a Oy Hy ve H a dissenting vote. It received When the boycott began July pati se eh toe esol royal assent at 9:56 p.m. Thurs-/1 the College of Physicians and Thursday . launched the first) insurance plan i Nordair Cancels (1 o."% Seaway Flights le The tax supported govern-| | ment plan will be compulsory | for most of Saskatchewan's 925, 000 residents i TORONTO (CP) Nordirjits leased Limited will cancel all flights be closed. linking Torcato and Montreal) Mr. Coghlan said he does not along the seaway route fromiknow what plans are being \ug. 16, the company announced! made for the 25 to 30 men who 'hunsday operated the flights The airline. with headquarters cancedlation prior to prorogation in the| Surgeons said "we are free citi- \zens and we do not intend to Leader Ross|practise our 'profession under ndments| government contro] and com- treat by! pulsion and the dictates of civil s CHARGE ORIGINAL ACT The original act was adopted at a special session last fall and! amended during the regular ses- sion last spring Liberal Chief's Toronto offices wi! will leave K Urged To Continue Bargaining For Peace WINNIPEG (CP)--The Free Press, in an open letter to Nikita Khrushchev, calls on the Soviet premier to continue bar- gaining if he really wants world disarmament. But it cites the Soviet's "'rec-| ord of acts that impress us much| more than the speeches of in- tent" and declares new Soviet proposals on West Berlin appear to be based on the hope that 'if the Western dike is broken there, it will soon collapse everywhere." The letter is written by Bruce Hutchison, editor of the Victoria Victoria Fete 'Curbed Some By Police Call By TOM WATT VICTORIA (CP)--Staid Vic- |toria is celebrating its 100th birthday with a party of such proportions that police were called to quell the noise at one Times, one of the FP Publica-| Mr. Hutchison said Western tions group of newspapers tolarmament "is nothing but a which the Free Press. also be response to yours, late and re- longs. It is in reply to a three-luctant, as you must know." |page advertisement inserted 'n| "As to the Western bases, all the Free Press and two other of them were granted voluntar Canadian newspapers July 18lily to the West by their legal by the Soviet embassy in Ot- governments established with tawa, containing the full text ofthe consent of the native peo- Mr. Khrushchev's speech to the|ples, Your foreign bases were World Congress. for Generaljalso established with the con Disarmament and Peace inisent of the local governments Moscow in June. but those governments were The Free Press had sought | powerless to resist and the con- without success to publish a re-'sent of the was not ply in the beaggees gird ci % newspaper Pravda or the Mos- cow evening. paper Vechernaya MUST USE GEOGRAPHY yh for the same price $2,800. |REPLY TRANSLATED The Free Press reply was ac- companied by a transtation in Russian and a note by Publisher R. S. Malone: "It .is possible. that some of our readers, particularly those with origins in Russia or its satellite countries, may wish to mail this reply to friends he- hind the Iron Curtain." | "Nevertheless, your speech Mr. Malone said qa copy of|while mystifying, is welcome. stage the article is being mailed to|At least it indicates to The incident occurred at a\Premier Khrushchey personally|you, too, are tired of centennial mall set up on ajand it was to be broadcast by|nacy, terrified of its downtown street and featuring|Radio Liberty, a private ongan-|eager to end it som . It amateur entertainers jization based in New York thatjare, let us continue bar, An elderly 'lawyer whase of-/beams_ broadcasts behind the for we have no other alterna- fice overlooks the mall became !ron Curtain. tive but a joint suicide pact." so incensed when an organ DD ee {player began beating ont his| rhythm that he complained to} " of events, the West must try to balance its inferiority by using geography as best it may and posing the ultimate threat of Mr. Hutchison said: The n Montreal, said the 12-month-'sarnia, Hamilton and Kingston service linking Hamilton Kingston and Montreal, never attracted sufficient tomers to meet costs 'We've been missing 50 ent of what we needed to brea even," said Terry Coghlan. Tor- onto operations supervisor After Aug. 16, Nordair will operate only on its northern route from Montreal to Great) Whale, Fort Chimo, Frobisher Bay, Hall Beach and Resolute Bay.. By the end of the month old Sarnia, | S| ha ctrs- per Cabinet Announces Labor Act Changes TORONTO (CP) Amend- ments to the Labor Relations Act, passed during the last ses- sion of the legislature, have been proclaimed by the cabinet Premier Robarts told a press conference Thursday struction industry. The revisions provide for a definition of the construction | local Mr. Coghlan said the two 44-| passenger k alds employed on jtrial city like Sarnia to adequate air service Walker said the meet amendments concerned the con- Airport week Windsor, | without air services, Airports at Toronto, |these centres are owned by the councils Her route Handley - Page the would probably be added to the|Mrs nine North aircraft operating in the will ask Nordair Limited 15, a decision an- earlier Thursday by 4 company official is to meet with council next week to dis- cuss tie possibility of keeping the operation "Tt indus- have Mr is essential to an limited early next In Kingston William Nickle industry establish a separate en-| provincial minister without port- tity of the labor relations board) folio, said the cancellation of the to deal with construction cases|service would hurt Kingston and provide for speeding up ot|tremendously certification votes in the indus-! try They also do away with' the) cil should sit down to living family about two weeks Mother Dies On Vacation SOUTHAMPTON, Ont Annie Pearson, 94-year-old mother Liberal Leader Lester of Pearson town 20 miles west of Owen Sound Vaughn Pearson whom Mrs. Pearson had in Toronto, said mother died suddenly | a son with ate Thursday from. what is believed tends he helped organize a to have been a heart attack. nese Communist club in ott the for she had been at summer cottage He said Lester Pearson, who was to his departure until Mrs. Pearson was_ prede- Rev. Edwin Pearson Surviving in addition to Lester and Vaughn is a son, Marma-| propaganda. One of their chie He said the Chamber of Com-| duke, of Newbury, Mass. merce and the mayor and coun.| body will be moved to Bedford diplomatic see| Funeral whether they can get the airline| funeral services Saturday Home, Toronto, for (CP)-- Opposition been his! Donald, Rodriguez | Detectives Don AFTER GRABBING GUNMAN last night after the gun-wield- | ing pipefitter had held host- | office eight posing as the by gotten into hours earlier (left) and Earl Moore over- | goo, for 12 hours in a state | newsmen. powered Charles E. Milligan | has SARNIA (CP)--Mayor Iven J,|died while vacationing at this Walker said Thursday night the) resort | city not to stop air service at Sarnia Airport Aug nounced the company By STEWART MacLEOD OTTAWA (CP)--Calvin Mac-| who. says he was aj Communist for the RCMP, psa ni-| awa! 18 months ago Similar clubs already existed Vancouver, Winnipeg, Tor in and Montreal, he said onto have left Thursday. to preside) Thursday in an interview. They P over an international conference -~ ler the name of the Sarnia © 4 } lang all went unde : . Sarnia haere aiso plan tO on tensions in: the Western Canadian Chinese W orkers with officials of Sarnia) Hemisphere at Bahia in Brazil, postponed after the funeral /Benevolent Association | The 39-year-old Cape Breton native, who says he was inside |Canadian Communist ranks for } cedsed a few years ago by her| 1914 years while he worked with husband , the RCMP, said the clubs are up spread Communist { set to | recognition of Com- munist China. } If and when this happened, he this. "I certainly understand the|found in cloth money bags office. 'The detectives had much of its staff from these clubs COME AS IMMIGRANTS The officials of the Chinese clubs, he said, are Communist Chinese who come to Canada as legitimate immigrants. Seven were in the Ottawa branch, he said, and all worked in restaur- ants attracting no attention. "| used to run their film shows for them," he said, "and there would be between 125 and 200 Chinese attending." He said at least every second film shown was "straight Chi- nese Communist. propaganda." The films came from Peking. he said Mr. MacDonald has: been liv- ing in semi-seclusion since he made his first statements last The targets was to win Canadian) yeu. 'The RCMP has declied to comment on any of his dis- closures. He said he expected (AP Wirephoto) Red Chinese Club OPP Arrest Aims Explained _ U.S. Suspect In Murders LEWISTON, N.Y. (AP)--A 21- year-old stock boy wanted for questioning in a double slaying in a Lock Haven, Pa., variety store being held by police here after being arrested in Canada. is state Dennis M. Vogel of Clinton County, Pa., was picked up in an automobile by Ontario Pro- vincial Police about 20 miles north of Niagara Falls, Ont. He voluntarily returned across the border and was taken in custody) by state police being a fugitive from justice. | Troopers said several hundred| dollars in bills and change were) will continue until October. Its! \. In| police An embarrassed inspector ar- rived and asked organizers to} "keep it down a bit."" They no plied, only: to get more com- plaints from elderly people who' said they couldn't hear. The incident was. not the only damper on the fun. PREMATURE BLAZE Seaway President Defends Record By ROBERT RICE OTTAWA (CP) -- Is the St. The hazard is greater for jsome salt-water ships because Lawrence Seaway fraught with| their flaring bows and high su- danger to ships? A British shipowner thinks so. | perstructure tend to catch the ; wind. In contrast, inland lake A massive bonfire was|But seaway officials take issue.| Vessels are built low and sleek Peter Dalgleish, president of|With the bridge up forward so planned for Thursday, official) date of Victoria's centenary as| Dalgleish Shipping Lines of|the skipper has a clear view of a city. The wood was piled up|fengland, said in Winnipeg re-|8n approaching lock. early and officials were confi- across the Strait of Juan de! Fuca, which is also celebrating its centennial. Monday night pranksters put a match to it. It was a lovely fire. A frantic plea for wood was made by officials, and Thursday night city residents gathered to watch as the spec- tacular candle was lit. As a birthday present to it- self, city council announced plans for a $1,655,000 civic pre- cinct of 3% acres, including re- habilitation. of city hall's inter- ior and a mapor addition behind on a charge of|it for an administrative and city, council centre The centenary started e highlight is an_ historical eant now being staged in Royal cently that the large numbe for shipping. In reply, seaway President R. J. Rankin says: "An accident ratio of than three inland vessels 1,000 and 11 ocean vess ° r of) 5 dent the fire would be seen}jocks in the seaway chain make| = easily in Port Angeles, Wash.,|the passage "very dangerous" authority less Is per XPERIENCE COUNTS The difference in the two kinds of ships, plus the exper- ience of seaway navigation built up by inland masters, accounts for the lower accident rate for inland ships. Mr. Dalgleish also suggested 1,000 in 1961. would not bear out/ that British insurance underwrit- the existence of the dangerous) ers have had to pay large sums conditions which Mr. Dalgleish suggests are present." FALLEN STEADILY Mr. Rankin said the acciden ratio has dropped consistently since the seaway started opera- tions in 1959 For ocean ships, the acciden » for damage to ships going up the seaway Mr. Rankin said the Lower St. Lawrence, the seaway itself and the Great Lakes are all lumped together as one insurance area for ships. "Marine accident records in- t t score dropped from 34 per 1,000/dicate that, except in one in- 'in 1959, to 15 per 1,000 in 1960,| stance, any large sums paid for into a restricted cha celebration| to 11 per 1,000 in 1961 and shows damage to ships in the course arly this summer andl signs of heading lower this year.| Of the last two years have been Mr. Rankin conceded there is|the result of mishaps that have pag-| always a hazard in taking a ship| 0ccurred either in the lower sec- NEA ROE Mente im TavidaT Ae Vota? continued, being, dis- usual three - man conciliation] t board in disputes, with any such |to give the service a longer try sides in the dispute request a|move a "catastrophe for Kings| EDINBURGH, Scotland (CP) . t ] board iton," adding that city and other|Prince Philip bought 13 paint-) 1r on TO ill Doubt by the lengthy and costly con-| "If you lose an airline, it's;Royal Scottish Academy. They Pil ou S struction disputes in Toronto|much worse than if you never are expected to hang at Holy- cal doubts about the new oral leontraceptive sold by the sBrit- | de ath of a woman who took the pill Medical Association, and in an jarticle that one woman who veloped a thrombosis condition | 'in the veins of her leg sis during pregnancy and that} the evidence linking her death) "But," the article "at least for the time garded as contraindica'ing the administration of Conov'd." i K said, the embassy would recruit/ dispute going directly to a con-, Kingston member of Parlia- Ss en -| ciliation officer unless both)ment, E. J. Benson called the PHILIP'S PURCHASES | Mr. Robarts said the revi-jofficials should work to get the|ings and three charcoal draw- sions were prompted, in part,|airline back. 'ings at an exhibition in the ast year thad one."' rood House here Creep In LONDON (Reuters) -- Medi- lish Family Planning Association |were expressed here after the The British Medical Journal, lofficial organ of the British |took the pill died of a blood clot on the hung after she had de- Mie journal said the woman had a past history of thrombo- with the pill was at present "only circumstantial." previous thromboembolic ease in pregnancy should be re- the brand name of the oral con traceptive * ERS POSSIBLE THUNDERSHOW WEATHER FORECAST Showers Seen For Saturday by |WAS ONE OF FOUR The Journal said the woran was one of four ' who had developed cis while taking the pil! Two of the women bad been taking the pill during tests for the council for the investigation of fe tv control.'a body which werks closely with the family planning association. Théy and the third woman recovered The Journal sa'd that at a recent private conference in the United States "it was concluded it oral contraception involved no more risk of thromboembo- lism than normal pregnancy." 'However the risk is greater in pregnancy than' at other times, and it must be asked whether even the risk should be run just for contraception." The association also urged that the oral contraceptives be iesued "in suitable cases only) funder strict medical supervi- sion." COST ACCOUNTING Opening tor cost clerk in cost accounting department. Appli- cants with accounting end payroll experience preterred, This position offers opportunities for R.1.A, students in a progressive company with excellent growth potential dead case Observed Temperatures overnight, High Thursday Low Dawson Victoria Edmonton Regina Winnipeg Lakehead : White ore. Partly cloudy , ue aah Winds south. Sault Ste. Maric Kapuskasing North Sudbury ... Muskoka Windsor London Toronto .. Killaloe .. i Otlawa 5 7h | Montreal Quebec Halifax Official forecasts issued the weather office at 5 a.m Synopsis: Southern Ontario \| have another sunny day to- with midafternoon temper atures in the low 80s. Clouds and showers are expected to nove into central Ontario dur- ng the day and into southern Ontario Saturday Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Niagara, Lake On- irio, Windsor, London, Hamil- ton, Toronto: Sunny and a little varmer today, Saturday mainly cloudy with a few showers or tundershowers. Turning cooler ate Saturday. Winds southwest 15 today and light on Saturday Southern Georgian Bay, Hall-| burton Sunny and a_ little varmer today. Becoming cloudy afternoon with scattered and thundershowers g Saturday morning and t g cooler. Winds southwest 15 today and northeast 15 Satur- ta Northern Georgian Bay, Al Temagami, North Bay, Sault Sie Sunny, clouding over Timmins showers andj Mount Forest thundershowers and cool Saturday west 15 White River Cochrane Cloudy and cooler today with a few showers or thundershowers Partly cloudy and continuing cool Saturday. Winds light day Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, High Saturday Windsor ... 60 § St. Thoma London ... Kitchener Wingham Hamilfon St. Catharine Toronto i Peterborough .... Trenton Killaloe .. Muskoka North Bay Sudbury Earlton .. Kapuskasing'. White River Moosonee this Reply in confidence with tull details of experience and salary required to: Cost Accountant Brunner Corporation (Canada) Ltd. Port Hope, Ontario zoma Marie... Sudbury with scattered | total membership of the Chinese | yw Attwood, 55, of Flemington, | nnel, par- tion of the St. Lawrence River or in the Great Lakes them- selves, but not within or in con- --_--__----|necion with the seaway ca- ager, were shot to death Wed- : io. Tug Said Visible force's position." the trunk of the car. They said) M f r 3 3 i the money had been taken from|Athletic Park with about 1,000; ticularly a concrete-bound sea- es FROM TORONTO the safe of the W. T. Grant\residents donating their talents.' way lock. ; He said he has no idea of the Sore in Lack Han, wee DL Bids clubs. When he had helped or- ganize the Ottawa branch in September, 1960, he had been working with two local Chinese and three from Toronto. Later the Ottawa club's executive had manager of the store, and Mrs- Shirley Rechel, 27, of Dunns- town, the assistant office man Two Youths Face Robbery Charges was "not third 1S GROWING! Come and see our 1962 "Dream Homes' now under construction, DRIVE UP TONIGHT Salesmen On Location 7-9 P.M. Daily inspection requirements if the Russians wo.'d allow che*ks by international scientific teams. NEUTRAL PRESSURE Meanwhile in Geneva there is increasing pressure from the neutral countries for beth nu- clear sides to start serious dis- cussions about control posts and an international monitor. ing commission CEMENT WORK Patios Our Specialty ¢ WALKS e STEPS @ CURBS e BLOCK LAYING Esti -- Work G Recommendations Supplied CALL BERT McLEAN 723-2867 'A PLEASANT PLACE TO LIVE' OSHAWA BLVD. N, (Just East ef Simcoe) : ON ROSSLAND SCHOFIELD-AKER LIMITED 360 KING WEST 723-2265 made these Free your Home Now... with a new oil furnace A brand new, modern Oil Furnace is a real asset to your home. It protects its value and assures you of better, more economical heating. Now is the time to have it installed. A small deposit and convenient terms spread over the next 5 years. Call us for Lunes f ' Bef grown to seven, of which two With Voegl when he Was e ore Accident | had to approve new members. |Picked up were his wife, Shitley| Pies ager oer dn gig ae to the Chinese group by Cana- Old son, Ronald. They were not ty which sank the Canadian-| practice" here.) lence after a 79-yearold pem dian Communist Party head- charged, but came here with owned British motorship Mont-| 2. The Montrose did not re- sioner renorted he had been quarters in Toronto Sbecoee : rose in the Detroit River Mon-| verse her engine, "but we could robbed of $50. The club's constitution was! Police in eastern states andj day night were "clearly visible') hear the tug's diesels, clearly' Michael Wayne Ca anit the Communist Party, Mr. Mac-!Haven authorities to be on the collision, the 'captain of the Montrose's engine." é Re we Donald added lookout for Vogel nearest. freighter Fold a US.| 3. Two nalts Gn the tug B. H. ine youl Soma py ge Moiod : an a ae 5 ia al Becker's mast, showing she was tive tenants for rooms Thomas 'apt. A. J. Chickonoski of De-| pushing a barge, were "'clearly|Mavin bad for rent rifh is INTERPRETING THE NEWS --" |mony of the English captain of Walker of the Montrose and Police are seeking a | the Montrose and his Canadian) Beatty said the two lights, three youth. | pilot that they could see the|feet apart, appeared to them as!---- es an red Vy | barge only seconds before col-|a confusing "cluster.") nif 4 Chickonoski, master of the De- Montrose's whistle was a blast troit-based auto carrier T. J. 'immediately before impact," McCarthy, estimated : he was while the tug sounded two about 1,000 feet downriver from'ajarms of five or more short! By DOUG MARSHALL 4 Canadian Press Staff Writer sels hit Recent scientific advances in CREW SAFE underground detection techni- A huge hole gouged in her side, the 444 - foot Montrose a nuclear test ban treaty The conflict between Russia sank in 35 feet of water. Her and the United States at the 17- crew of 41 was rescued without natior, disarmament conference injury Chickonoski upon on-site inspection. Russia | maintains that new capabilities Some neutral nations urge an, 1. The Montrose did not sound fer detection and distinction by immediate ban on tests in the What he termed a_ required deep subterranean instruments atmosphere and outer space. eight-second blast on her -whis- These involve no major control tle before leaving her Detroit In any case, observers say, the Russians are unlikely .o Commentators say tbe best parting Detroit when the colli- concede even the bare mini-jlong - term hope for a solution! sion occurred. Her pilot, George mum of on-site verification un- lies in agreement on a terminal|/E. Beatty of Sarnia, said the! date for all tests--a formula de-| clear deterrent less vulnerable It is estimated it would take It would probably take at! Russia three years to transfer least four years for an interna-) its nuclear weapons from the tional network of control sta- |} ground to unde}zround bays or|a treaty were signed after Rus- aboard submarines sia completes its forthcoming Because new detection) tests in 1963, he first inspection techniques the Americans have would not take place unil 1967.) mands. President Kennedy of-)of time to make its weapons!'}] fered Wednesday to scale down less static and vulnerable | 4 " | He said he was recommended Jean, 18, and their five-month) pepRorr (AP)--A barge and)whistle signal the 'charged with robbery with vio- "almost the same" as that ofjCanada had been told by Lock! and 'clearly lighted" before the| reversing, over the sound of the Dayid Bruce Wricth were are troit contradicted previous testi- visible." (Capt, Ralph Eyre-|pockets and fled. 3 liding with it. The only sound fror Va n the Hopes Brighten ---- the point where the other ves-| plasts. ques have brightened hopes for keeled over on her port side and in Geneva remains centred : points: makes inspection unnecessary problems berth. (The Montrose was de- til they have made their nu- veloped by Mexico and Sweden. present "soft', sites abovettions to be established. 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