? iz THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, January 30, 1962 Economic Board Bill ets Tangled Support By ARCH MacKENZIE 'AWA (CP)--The four par- ties played a political version of musical chairs Tuesday in the Commons. Variations and combinations of voting blocs developed as op- position pe rty amendments came thick and fast on the gov- ernment bill to establish a na- tional economic development board. Detailed study of the 22-clause bil had reached the. fourth clause by adjournment, with ernment spending estimates scheduled for today and the rest of the week. Box score at the close of play: One Liberal amendment adopted unanimously. One NDP amendment de- feated by a Conservative and Social Credit alliance. Qne NDP amendment de- feated by the Liberals and Con- servatives -- the Social Credit abstaining. One Social Credit amendment facing a. vote, with the NDP and Conservatives in agreement and the Liberals apparently supporting Socia] Credit. THINKS TOO HASTY Lucien Lamoureau (L--Stor- mcnt) said the development board bill was a hastily con- ceived plan to find a plan. It Ties Gallery Denies Charge ' On Stories VICTORIA (CP)--The British Columbia Legislative Press Gal- lery has denied what it terms a "serious charge' by John Tisdalle (SC--Saanich) "im- pugning the integrity of the legislature's press gallery." A statement issued Tuesday by the gallery's annual meeting quoted Mr. Tisdalle as saying in a legislature speech last Fri- day that "reporters wrote spec- ulative stories about the throne speech to encourage investment in shares of B.C, Power Corpo- ration, former parent of the B.C. Electric Company Limited. "He implied that the report- ers were trying to increase the value of the shares because of their own stock holdings -in the corporation. "The Press Gallery categori- cally denies both the outright afid implied accusations. It re- quests the member for Saanich to retract the changes in the House immediately, or to repeat them. naming names, outside the House, where appropriate legal action may be taken." The statement said all gallery members are prepared to make statutory declarations that they have not traded any B.C. power stock within the last year. A copy of the statement was eent to Mr. Tisdalle, to Premier W. A. C, Bennett and to Legis- lature Speaker Hugh Shantz. (Premier Bennett's govern- ment expropriated the B.C. Electric for an eventual $172,- 000,000 in August, 1961 in a con- troversial action. B.C. Power now has a suit before the courts seeking a declaration the ex- propriation legislation was il- legal or to have the court set a "fair valuation" on the BCE.) would be a very weak instru- ment in efforts to spur the eco- nomy. "This board likely will have a career as unproductive as the National Productivity Council." Only one member, the chair- man, would serve on a full-time basis. The bill provided for 15 to 25 members and this would produce much talk and little ac- Polite Gunman Robs Bank Ot $140,000 LIVONIA, Mich, (AP)--A_po- lite gunman robbed a branch of the Bank of Livonia of an es- timated $140,000 Tuesday and then fled through the back door while police pe'indedj on the locked front entrance, Waving a .45-calibre automa- tic pistol, the robber walked into |the bank in this Detroit suburb la few minutes before closing time and said: 'Everybody in the back,' "' After locking the door, he herded the lone customer, the branch manager and three tellers to the rear of the office. He had the men take off their coats and spread them on the floor for two women tellers to lie on. Then he bound everyone with wire he had brought with jim. Calmly he went from one teller's cage to another scoop- ing lange bills--nothing under $20--into a brown paper shop- ping bag. The robber spent eight to 10 minutes gathering the loot be- fore walking out the back door, While the robbery was under way, the bank's president, Guy Spencer, tried twice to tele- phone the branch from the main office. Spencer called Livonia police when he got no answer the second time. The branch has no alarm system. Police arrived just as the gunman was leaving. It took some time before employees could free themselves and open the door for police. On Test-Ban UNITED NATIONS (AP)-- The United States, the Soviet Union and Britain failed again Tuesday to agree on how to ban nuclear tests. But UN Sec- retary-General U Thant said chances for agreement now are the best ever. A U.S. spokesman said the next meeting will be Thursday. He coul not say whether any progress was made, But another source following the talks said the United States was sticking to its demand for eight to 10 on-site inspections yearly 'n the Soviet Union, compared with the two or three offered by the Russians, At a midday press conference, | Thant declared: "My personal feeling is that the prospects of a test ban are much brighter than at any time in my memory, or the history of the United Nations." He did not say why. INTERPRETING THE NEWS Kennedy Move Expected Next By ALAN HARVEY Canadian Press: Staff Writer "We are whelps from the same litter... ." ' ; & : |ter Guardian calls his "ultl-| But what is good sense to Mr. mete sanction,"' by going slow jon U.S, tariff reductions and }closing a large part of the | | '2 med aie ea eS Se Se SS SS eS ee tion. The board should be lim- ited, to three or five members and have daily contacts with various government depuit- ments and agencies. Aside from the tangled pat- tern of support for the minority government, the debate also provided a vehicle for Liberal J. W. Pickersgill (L--Bonavista- Twillingate) to allege unprece- dented political patronage in sp- pointments since the general election last June, VOTES WITH LIBERALS At one stage, amid laughter, Finance Minister Nowlan cast his standing vote from the Lib- eral benches where he was con- ferring with his counterpart, economic spokesman Walter Gordon, Toronto Davenport. But since Mr, Nowlan and the Liberals were voting the same way on that occasion, it made no difference. The first amendment, pro- ilton East), was accepted unani- mously. It means that the cab- inet will consult with major la- bor and business groups before selecting membership on the board, The second was a motion by Arnold Peters (NDP--Timiska- ming) that at least half the board members be qualified professionally, technically, aca- demically or scientically, It was defeated by 82 to 71 with Social Credit support pro- oe posed by John Munro (L--Ham- ee " » ~~ 5 Nd he ah Ah Ste viding the government's margin of victory. ALSO DEFEATED Then Arnold Webster (NDP-- Vancouver Kingsway) proposed that the finance minister be the chairman to give the board its proper authority and impor- tance as a planning body. That was defeated 125 to 13 by the Liberals and Conservatives, So- cial Credit not voting. Finally, Jean-Paul Cook (SC --Montmagny - I'Islet) moved that the chairman's term be trimmed to a maximum five | This is a new portrait of Princess Beatrix of The Neth- years from 10. The government and NDP said no. Liberals Face No Agreement | On Timing | powers. ;ment can be put forward, would ;make it virtually impossible,for |sions, allowances, interim pay- | ASKS FOR 'GOOD SENSE' Big Decision By KEN KELLY OTTAWA (CP)--The Liberal party faces a crucial decision in the next few days on the timing of an all-out drive to force a dissolution of Parlia- ment and a new election. They have two clear choices-- hit the government when it asks for temporary spending author- ity, probably next week, or con- centrate their efforts on the five upcoming supply. motions and the subsequent debates on the 1962-63 spending program, At the moment, the weight of opinion in the party appears to favor a_ go-for-election drive when the government asks for further temporary spending From a_ tactical standpoint, this is probably the most prac- tical method. The government's current spending powers expire Jan, 31 and debate of about a week, provided forceful enough argu- the government to pay its bills --civil service salaries, | pen- ments to contractors and the like, Veterans Minister Churchill, government leader in the Com- mons, has expressed the view that "good sense' 'will prevail in debate on the spending pro- ram Churchill may not be good sense |to the opposition. By ALAN DONNELLY OTTAWA (CP)--The case of the three income tax files that former revenue minister Now- lan kept from Parliament's auditor-general took a new turn Tuesday as the Commons public accounts committee delved into the matter. Deputy Revenue Minister Gear McEntyre said Auditor- General Max w ~1] Hen2crson had been refused access to the files partly because they con- tained "personal and confiden- tial" correspondence between the taxpayers and Mr. Nowlan, now finance minister, He said Mr, Nowlan "'seemed) concerned that the auditor-gen eral should see this correspond-| ence." Mr. Henderson testified that the refusal to let his audit staff check into the files--involving unpaid taxes back to 1954--was the only such refusal in 16| years. | The committee, opening study of the auditor-general's report made public last week, turned directly to the tax files issue--| one of 115 points questioned by| Mr. Henderson in his review of! government financial operations in the 1961-62 fiscal year. MAY BE CONFLICT - The committee did not resolve) an apparent conflict betwee} Mr. Nowlan and Mr. Hendsrson SOLO PSOE PSPS OT OS TO CELEBRATE 25TH BIRTHDAY Auditor Report Probed On Secret Tax Files Ay Sera ow Seay 5 i is the oldest daughter of Queen Juliana and Prince Bernhard, --(AP Wirephoto) erlands who will celebrate her 25th birthday Thursday. She payers, and he referred the matter to the minister, He said Mr, Nowlan had asked him whether there were any grounds on which the tiles could be withheld, and he told the minister there was "'an ar guable case" on the basis of secrecy provisions in the In- come Tax Act. Harold Winch (NDP--Vanocu- ver East) said it wasn't an is- sue of the auditor-general's le- volved ARS. gal right of access to the files. Mr. Macnaughton said the| 'It's a question purely of a question could be put to Mr | Personality and a decision of Nowlan when he attends a later|{M€ minister that he doesn't want the files disclosed because committee meeting. The minis iad , i ter was not present Tuesday.|"€ has something in them he joes not want disclosed." Mr. Henderson said the three cases came to his audit staff's|pENIES IMPROPRIETY R. J. McCleave, parliamen-| notice because the cabisct's treasury board had approveditary assistant to Works Minis- ter Fulton, protested that this withholding of government pay- statement was '"'an improper in- ments due to the three persous as a means of collecting taxes|ference," and there was . owing. Last January his audi-jpestion that Mr. Nowlan had tors had asked to see the collec-/written an improper letter tion files.in the revenue depart) mh committee questioning ment head office here, also centred on the question of REFER TO HIM whether Mr, Nowlan obtained a Justice department ruling on his Mr. McEntyre said his file) clerks considered it "a rather -- powers to withhold the iles, as to whether laws of secrecy protecting income tax files ap- ply to the auditor-general. Nor did it obtain further clues on the identity of the three in- dividuals involved. Last week Mr. Nowlan told reporters that some of the files involved members of Parlia- ment. But Tuesday Committee Chairman Alan Macnaughton (L -- Montreal Mount Royal) ruled out a direct question as to whether the three cases in- By Rockefeller On Cuba Crisis ALBANY, N.Y. (AP)--Gover- nor Rockefeller of New York struck sharply at President Kennedy's administration Tues- day night for what he said was failure to tell the American peo- Seer mitts mE Se perm eR gf ae ME he CERNE Meh SOLO PO DOL LIE ee 2 E a B.« =. mates the American of democracy itself." that He said the American people/to certainly '"'did not panic whenj|vulnerable fo Kennedy finally went on televi-|tion and false sion'"' last Oct, 22 to report that/he said, makes there were. offensive Soviet mis.jthe democratic siles on Cuba, tion. COMING EVENTS f a z 3 = 3 = ¢ i ui f z E " 3 z i a? 01 if = j z s bak ple "the true situation" in Cuba, The Republican governor, a potential presidential candidate in 1964, said in a speech at the annual meeting of the New el State Publishers Associa- ion: : "I am old fashioned enough NOVEL BINGO THURSDAY EVENINGS 7:45 RGE'S HALL SOCIAL » Wednesday, J 90, # pam, Bt Soba's Hale sorear aod. Simcoe. Retreshments tHE saad BINGO, Bathe Park, Bulalie Hees uredty, 2 pm, Euchre, Saturday, A PART-TIME job means extra ay| cash Check the Wi pe Classified today to: tind the "one haa right for you, $200 IN JACKPOTS to believe that no political leader has the right to try to fool any of the people any of the thme--either hy withholding legitimate public information, by false or misleading state- ments, or by 'managing' the news," Rockefeller said there was a philosophy, ."all too popular in high places, that the public can not. be told the whole truth = the international situa- "might panic," He said this was "fundamen- tally and dangerously wrong" because the people} because "it grossly underesti-|>~ Door Prize $15 TO - NIGHT LIONS BINGO 8:00 P.M, JUBILEE PAVILION | OSHAWA & DISTRICT DIABETIC ASSOCIATION MEETING Thusrday, Jan. 31st AT 8:15 P.M, McLAUGHLIN HALL (338 SIMCOE NORTH) Crown Attorney Bruce Af- fleck speaking on "The Rights of the Individual" EXTRA BUSES Everybody Welcome FREE ADMISSION SPVOS TF SIG OPS ee ree ReEr eT oy Judge Assails -- JPs Trying Court Cases HAMILTON (CP) -- Judge John S, Latchford lashed out Tuesday at the practice of al- lowing justices of the peace to try magistrate's court' cases. In allowing an appeal of a conviction by a justice of the peace on a careless driving charge, Judge Latchford said the practice is "untoward and absolutely improper."' "T am of the opinion that this matter should be brought to the attention of Attorney - General F, M, Cass,"' the judge stated. In quashing the previous con- viction against Joseph Feliszew- ski of Hamilton, be awarded the appellant $75 costs and added: "Maybe this will put a stop to this practice." At the outset of the appeal case, Judge Latchford referred to the fact that the careless driving case was not heard by a magistrate, but by C, T. Gled- hill, justice of the peace, on Oct. , 1962. David Mitchnick, acting for the Crown, admitted this was not a good procedure, but stated was proceeding with the ap- peal as a "new trial." OSHAWA JAYCEES Monster BINGO Thursday, Jan. 31st 20 GAMES AT $20--5 GAMES AT $30 1--$150 JACKPOT $20.00 PER LINE PLUS $50.00 PER FULL CARD 2--$250.00 JACKPOTS JACKPOT NOS. 51, 56 $10 PER LINE. PLUS $200.00 PER FULL CARD IN 51, 5 NUMBERS THIS WEEK PLUS $25.00 CONSOLATION PRIZE $150 TOTAL PRIZES GUARANTEED IN THESE TWO GAMES DOOR prizes. RED BARN, OSHAWA A2MISSION WHITBY BRASS BAND BINGO CLUB BAYVIEW, BYRON SOUTH, WHITBY WEDNESDAY, JAN. 30th EARLY BIRD GAME -- SHARE-THE-WEALTH Bus Leaves Oshawa Terminal -- 25c¢ Return $200.00 SPECIAL $20 EACH HORIZONTAL LINE -- $100 FULL CARD $50 ADDED IF WON IN 51 NOS. OR LESS 5 GAMES AT $30 -- 20 GAMES AT $20 TWO $250 JACKPOT GAMES Ist 52, No, 2nd -- No. 56 -- $30 Consolation $1.00 ADMISSION INCLUDES ONE CARD Door Prizes Children Under 16 Not Aamitted _ Four Children Die In Burning Home PUYALLUP, Wash. (AP)-- Four young children died Tues- day when fire swept a home in this central Washington com- munity. The victims were Deb- bie Spencer; 8, and two of her brothers--Scott, 7, and Stephen, 5--and an overnight guest, Linda Mathews, 8. Mr, and Mrs. Harley Spencer, escaped along with a fourth child, Michael, 10, and another house guest, Chery! Mathews, 14, Linda's sister, All extraordinary request" and re- ferred it to him, Mr. Henderson said that a He told the committee he/year ago Mr, Nowlan had told| found the files contained copies/him he was seeking the legal opinion. Mr, McEntyre testified! were severely burned. Cause of the blaze was hot known. BINGO - Wednesday, Jan. 30th AT 8 P.M, ST. MARY'S AUDITORIUM STEVENSON'S RD. NORTH AT MARION 16 GAMES OF $8 1 GAME EACH -- $10, $20, $30, $40 SNOWBALL -- 55 NOS. -- $140 -- $20 CON. $5.00 FOR EACH HORIZONTAL LINE $10 ADDED EACH BINGO _SHARE-THE-WEALTH 50 EXTRA-- 2 CARDS 25c or 10 for $1.00 FREE ADMISSION -- EXTRA BUS SERVICE of personal correspondence be- that he has no knowledge of it! WEATHER FORECA tween Mr. Nowlan. and the tax- ee eee being received, and inferred ST i that it hadn't. Mr. Henderson said that last October Mr. Nowlan told him he Forecasts issued by the Tor-| 'onto weather office at 4 a.m.:|Thursday, Sy: Ontario tempera-| Cold Weather Expected Again | thought the opinion had been. re- -- but must have been mis- aid, COTTAGE TO RENT OCHO RIOS, JAMAICA Two bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, lounge, dining room, kitchen loundry and one maid. Private White Sands Beach Phone: 668-3161---9 o.m. - 6 p.m. ] Modern Square and Round Dancing ' Ontario County Square Dance Club SPONSORED BY THE JUNIOR FARMERS flurries, Winds westerly 20) Forecast Temperatures IN TROUBLE WITH YOUR 8 lessons commencing February 6th to March 27th, Wednesday, 8 p.m. to 10 p.m. REGISTRATION AT PORT PERRY PUBLIC SCHOOL AUDITORIUM ON FEBRUARY 6th, FROM 7:00 tures are falling gradually | Low tonight, high Thursday again. Cool west to northwest) windsor winds, temperatures 10 to 15). : degrees below normal and scat-|St. Thomas Robbery Believed tered snowflurries near the|London ....... Reason For Killing Great Lakes make up the|Kitchener ae TORONTO (CP)--Potice Tues-|weather picture over Ontario! \ount Forest day night charged Harry Wil-|for today and Thursday. | Wingham Se with a Lake St, Clair, Lake Erie, i. itton murder in the slayi i-| ny : ;.| liam Fox fuse Wh Pi Niagara. Lake ue ee itt Catharines.... frozen and battered body was|urton regions, Windsor, Ham- ilton, Toronto: Turning colder |Toronto found in an_east-end Toronto | Peterborough alley early Tuesday. today, Thursday partly cloudy) nition es with little change in tempera-/Kijlaloe .....ssces Police believe robbery was the motive for the killing. About ; 20 Y $40 Young was known i i nog Winds westerly 20 Thurs-'Muskoka .. oo gencdlla l uasantiars Lake Huron, southern Georg-|Sudbury .... | . . ian Bay regions, London: Turn-|Earlton ing colder today, Winds west-/ Kapuskasing erly 20 Thursday. |White River That is the sentimental vision| American market to continental | of Anglo-French relationships, | Europe. sententiously expressed in the) In the last resort, says the| euphoric haze of many an aft-/Guardian, Kennedy would use| er-dinner speech. this sanction "with resolute| This week, with the apparent} force." | failure of Britain's bid to join) Similarly Bruce Rothwell, the Common Market, a grim-|Washington correspondent: of mer reality emerges, and the/The Daily Mail, writes in the struggle for Europe is joined in}London newspaper that. the a. wider, almost certainly| United States cannot opt out of tougher, context. Europe. In the crisis for the West that} «america now seems to be developing, | merely commentators expect the next/ writes Rothwell. "It is there be- move to come from President/eause that is where the cold Kennedy, whose "grand design"| war js being decided." for Europe is challenged by} : General de Gaulle's concept of BLOW FOR BRITAIN a' European third force led by| Nevertheless, the French veto France and Germany. is a bitter blow for Britain. Six.| p.m. TO 10,00 P.M, First Class Commences at 8:15 p.m. to 10 p.m. INSTRUCTORS ARE THE WELL KNOWN ROD AND ELSIE OXFORD. PRICE $5.00 AND $3.00 FOR SCHOOL STUDENTS For Further Information Call: Ted Gordon .... 432-2243 Bruce McMillan . . Cecil Noble ... UL 2-6556 Aubrey Carson . Donna Johnson UL 2-3577 Howard Philip Neil Raines .... 985-7842 Don Lynd .... OSHAWA AND DISTRICT | | | | We Are Now Authorized To Give You Immediate Insurance And File Required FINANCIAL RESPONSIBILITY CERTIFICATES To Protect or Recover Your Driver's License ' '. | .. 61R24 is not in Europe 649-5525 to protect Europe," | PLAN PRAM TOUR | As long as de Gaulle clings to power, with not much outside support except that reluctantly teen months and many sleepless) nights of negotiation have gone for naught. | | baby buggy - pushing family is off on a new peram- AUCKLAND, N.Z. (CP)--The} Begbie|/regions, Sault Ste. Marie: Vari- Algoma, southern White River} | di al with occ: Moosonee Sault Ste, Marie.. TRAOMAS ac ssceeis 15 Notice to Car Dealers SOCCER ASSOCIATION - ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING IN GENOSHA HOTEL ON SUNDAY - 2:30 P.M. 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Kennedy can/failed to get in on the ground | seam play for time, hoping that Ad-|floor of the new Europe, but ehauer's retirement in October|@s been ignominously turned will remove de Gaulle's chief . at the tradesmen's en. and bring a new, more ' : ; : aeey pro-British administra-| For the time being, fine tion to power in Bonn. speeches about Anglo - French| Or the American president){tiendship won't make much may apply what the or cert alice bulation. Mrs. Begbie, her two sons, 21 and 17, and 15-year-old daughter have covered thous- ands of miles in New Zealand pushing all their camping gear in two perambulators. Now they Finance Companies and Salesmen! 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