Oshawa Times (1958-), 9 Mar 1963, p. 2

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Pa 2: THE OSHAWA TIMES, Saturday, March 9, 1963 GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN AILEEN HALL HAS BRISK SCHEDULE Miss Aileen Hall, New Democratic Party candidate in Ontario riding in the April 8 election, is no stranger to hard work. -- The young Edinburgh University grad who came to Canada from Scotland five years ago rises at 6:30 a.m, these days. ae Before she is ready to start class at 8:30 a.m, (she holds an MA in Maths and English) she carefully scans the City and district press for clippings, possible speech material. There is a 90-minute break at noon and frequent- ly she gets time to get to her Simcoe street north committee room -- she is busy after school preparing lessons before supper, but in the evening she gets back to her political campaign. Miss Hall will also have an extra-heavy scholastic chore in the next few days-- she will mark several hun- dred exam papers. She will be the guest of honor tonight at a dinner- meeting of the Ladies' Aux- iliary of Local 222, UAW- CLC. She will make one of her most important speeches at a massive NDP rally March 15 in Central Collegiate at 8 p.m., when Tommy Douglas is to be the other guest of honor. MISS AILEEN HALL THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF MR. KELLY -- CHAPT. 2 Mack Sennett in his heydey couldn't dream up a comedy sequence to top it. There were eight or nine members of the Oshawa Busi- Cars and trucks ride bump- as workers er to bumper along a main thoroughfare in Paris Friday STRIKE PROBLEMS BESET FRENCH CAPITAL utilized surface transportation due to halting of subways for two hours be- cause of a strike of eleciricity and gas workers. A week-old walkout .still paralyzed UAW May Seek EVENTS Voting Probe ST. CATHARINES (CP)--The United Auto Workers (CLC) in- dicated Friday it may seek an investigation into. a vote in which the union was turned down as bargaining agent for Thompson Products Limited. Employees voted 423-206 Thursday to retain the Thomp- son Products Employees'. Asso- jeiation as their bargaining gent. Robert White, UAW staff rep- resentative, said he would first representatives were actively campaigning in the plant up to and including voting day. The Labor Relations Act calls for a 72-hour curfew. d The company, which man- ufactures automotile compon- nents, was negotiating a new working agreement with the as- sociation last December®when the UAW applied to the Ontario Labor Relations: Board for cer- tification as bargaining agent. Socred Claims Finance Sharks Back Parties France's coal mines. --AP Wirephoto via cable from Paris Liberals, NDP Seek 'Fair Wage Clause MONTREAL (CP)--Real Ca- ouette, deputy national leader of the Social Credit party, said Friday night on television that the "old parties are financed by the sharks of finance." He said the old parties are obtaining funds from financiers and are making "'official prom- ises . . . that they will be paid back with lush government con- tracts after the election." | No Preferred Treatment -- CSL Counsel OTTAWA (CP)--Canada check complaints association) Children Under 16 Not Admitted SHARE THE WEALTH SOCIAL Bingo and tlome Baking Sale. * St. John's Hall, 31 Bloor Street East, * COMING B N G ¢) covey Bes an 12, 8 p.m. ets ORANGE TEMPLE SATURDAY, MARCH 9th RUMMAGE SALE 7:30 P.M. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH ~ 20 Gomes -- $8 MONDAY, MAR, 11, T p.m.: Share the Wealth ad 4--$40 Jackpots to 90 2 FINE BUS TRIPS 1--$150 Jackpot to go Easter In New York APRIL 11-14 STAY AT DIXIE HOTEL AT TIMES SQUARE Florida 4 - 19 May 15 nights in AAA approved accommodation. Very reason- able. Personally arranged and escorted by Nancy Col- mer. Write to COLMER TRAVEL SERVICE Box 631 Bowmanville Phone Anytime -- 623-3265 BINGO U.A.W.A. HALL SATURDAY, MARCH 9th 7:30 P.M. 20 GAMES $10 A GAME 4 GAMES OF $20, $40 $40, $50 JACKPOTS ONE GAME $150 ANNUAL MEETING and ELECTION OF OFFICERS of the Oshawa Riding (Provincial) Young Progressive Conservative Association Friday, March 15th, 1963 Progressive Conservative Committee Rooms, storey tower at one corner and|Steamship Lines has kept its an 850-car two-level under-|peace with the Seafarers' In- ground parking garage for civil] ternational Union of Canada by 37 KING STREET EAST, OSHAWA, ONTARIO Time 7:00 p.m, nessmen's Association bedecked in overalls, rubber boots and caps (and augmented by four or five women members). Mr. Caouette was speaking) on the CBC French television) network in the free-time elec- By DENNIS ANDERSON |there was the possibility "the = |maximum rate would become TORONTO (CP)--A schedule aad tise could = te. afi a ~& Ol i 8 zs = a ee a ee eee The placard-carrying group ("Dirt and Snow Has To Go -- Do It Yourself") quickly got down to the work-job at hand -- cleaning up snow: and debris from the road on King street east in the Four Corners vicinity. As the troupe wielded brooms and shovels, the noise was deafening, especially the laughter -- the man who shouted éut the crisp, staccato orders like a movie director on an MGM set was an old and familiar face, President Dean Kelly (currently carrying on a three-front war with the Board of Works, the City Engineering Department and City Engineer Fred Crome), The stunt was a gimmick designed to embarrass the Board and the Department for not keeping the downtown clean -- Mr. Kelly, never one to overlook a possible public- fty angle, brought along three Press cameramen, one from CBC-TV as the drama unfolded in front of 'Mike' Starr's éommittee rooms. The high-jinks were enjoyed by some, but not by Alder- man Hayward Murdoch in his second-storey insurance office pear Mr. Starr's -- he was forced to postpone a long-distance phone conversation with a client because of the clamor. ("I don't mind fun, but this is carrying things too far," he com- plained). The hihglight was when a Board of Works crew drove up in a truck and started to repair pot-holes -- when last seen, Mr. Kelly was helping them. "DICK" McLAUGHLIN HOME FROM CORTINA, ITALY ~ E.R. S. "Dick" McLaughlin has returned from Cortina, Italy, where he was a judge at the World's Figure Skating Championships. He had been invited twice previously to judge in this event, but this -was the first time he was able to accept. He was most "impressed by the "'scrupu- lous impartiality and fair- ness" displayed by all offi- -¢ials. He spoke words of high "praise for Dick McPherson "ef Canada who won the World's Figure Skating Championship. . . . The Osh- awa and District Liberal As- -sociation executive held a special noon-hour meeting "Thursday in the Hotel Gen- "osha. "It was not a secret meeting," smiled President William Lawson of Ajax as he emerged. 'We just map- ~ped some campaign plans." Others in attendance were Norman Cafik, Party candi- date, John, Lay, of Ajax, George K. Drynan, QC, and Terence V. Kelly. * DICK McLAUGHLIN | -Bomarc Could '| Credit Unions =Turn On User | May Be Hurt of minimum wage rates for|the minimum u various job categories should|Work against the employer. be written into all provincial} Earlier, Mr. Connell government tracts, Liberal and NDP mem- Ray Edwards (L--Went- ati worth) said the practice he pro-| Celebrations. eral government contracts. works estimates, Mr. Edwards|opened by Premier t : ards) Robart said Ontario's policy of writing] July 1, 1967. jin only a general clause stip-; julating the contractor must pay|INCLUDES TOWER The $22,500,000 first stage of| the project will include the 15- "fair and reasonable' wages on| a government job gave the ad- an- _|nounced that the first stage of construction con-| "new $50,000,000 office complex id i Ontari js-|@ast of present Queen's Park pene ee Se -- | buildings will be finished in = jtime for Canada's centennial | -The works minister told the posed was followed on all fed-\touse @ two-storey central| _ |building and the first of four During debate. of the public|office towers will be officially servants and visitors. The second stage, an 1il- storey tower costing $5,800,000, would be completed about 15 to 18 months after the first stage at $3,750,000 nine%gstorey tower 12 to 18 months after that, and the fourth tower, a 24-storey $10- 350,000 unit, about 20 to 24 months after the third. The schedule would place completion of the entire project s|somewhere between mid - 1971 jand early 1972, Mr. | said. vantage in bidding on contracts to firms which used "cheap or scab labor." -- Kenneth Bryden (NDP--~--Tor- onto- Woodbine) asked for a s.atement of government policy on using specific rates to guide the payment of wages by not only the main contractor but sub-contractors. The clause now Rircraft Role In N. America Secret --- PC included in| fend North America, Mr. Harkness, campaignin for re-election in Calgary Nort ASKS FOR OFFICER NDP Leader Donald C. Mac- Donald said there also should be a provincial fair wage offi- cer, whose duties would in- clude investigation of com-) plaints about wages paid on government projects. | Works Minister Connell said the only time he heard jsaying that Liberal party spokesmen sai of the House. - jnied any breach of security. I have not had a single com-|, A U.S. Air Force spokesma in the last 270 days," Mr. Con-|U.S. F-101 ule were included in contracts! formation. WEATHER FORECAST Cold Sunday; Mainly Sunny | Forecasts issued by the Tor-;Hamilton .....+0. onto weather office at 4:30 a.m,/St. Catharines ... Synopsis: A weak disturbance] Loronto ; IP eee moving across the Great Lakes icin paging will bring cloudiness amd light! Killaloe ce > TORONTO (CP)--An Amer- ~ rie yer ays lican credit union official ' jwarned Friday that Canadian VANCOUVER (CP) -- Paul|banks may follow the lead of 'Hellyer, former Liberal asso-|their American counterparts in ciate defence, minister says thea drive that has severely hurt "bomarc missile could be turned|the credit union nrévement in - against its own bases by enemy the United Statés. «radar, Orrin Shipe of Madison, Wis., Nevertheless, he told a meet-|managing director of the Credit sing of 100 University of British) Union National Association, told "Columbia students Friday night}a meeting of the Ontario Credit "the Bomarc is the most effec-| Union League that he would not "tive anti-bomber weapon avail-/be surprised if Canadian bank- "able and Canada should stick/ers began acting like their «with it. counterparts in the American * Answering a question, Mr.|Bankers Association, ~Hellyer said the published) He said the ABA, through a "range of the Bomarc is about|credit union committee set up "450 miles but its effective range|three years ago, has urged «is only half that. state bankers' associations to = "Once out of range of the|seek legislative amendments {ground radar at its base, the|that would prevent the organ- «missile could be turned back to-jization of state-chartered credit "wards its base by the radar|unions. « set in the bomber it was attack- -- FIGHTERS APPEAR «in Aad be Fo do this, however, he said,) Former world middleweight . my would have to know|boxing champions Rocky Gra. ' of the missile's|ziano and Sugar Ray Robinson ; control mechanism- will guest star on Car 54, Where » 'That was the way it was ex-|Are You? March 17. snow to southern and central Ontario tonight. Clearing bee Ee ae hind it will ensure more sunny] «4 y | weather for the district Sunday Ke? 'teh . lake St: Clair, Lake Erte, | ation «+--+see0s Lake Huron, Niagara, Lake On *| Kapuskasing ..... |tario, Haliburton, Georgian Bay,| White River ...... regions, Windsor, London, Ham- Moosonee ..+++++. lilton, Toronto: Clouding oVer Mount Forest .... late today with a' few light|Sault Ste, Marie «. | Snowflurries tonight. Sunday)Timmins . mainly sunny and cold. Winds} southwesterly 15 to 25 this after-| "15 Observed Temperatures noon and shifting to northerly ior, overnight, High ae ney 15 overnight. AWSON sesesseeeee 19 |" Algoma, 'Timagami regions, Victoria . | North Bay, Sudbury Sault Ste..% |Marie: Few periods of light) Regina snow late today or tonight, Sun-/ Winnipeg ... |day mainly sunny and cold.|Lakehead .., | Winds northerly 15 to 25 tonight| White River... jand decreasing to light Sunday.|S. S. Marie ...... | Cochrane, White River re-| Kapuskasing ..... gions: Sunny and very cold.|North Bay Winds light, |Sudbury .. Forecast Temperatures ohn atl Low tonight, High Sunday | a ohne Windsor ...sss006 42 St. Thomas 30 London .... 30 Kitchener 30 Wingham ... -10 -27 -12 -15 seeeees CALGARY (CP)--Former de-| government contracts was "'not|fence minister Douglas Hark- a fair wage clause at all," Mr.|ness said Friday it is a viola-| spmories say le Front de Liber- Bryden said. "An employer is|tion of security regulations to} ,;; h b H | jation Quebecois (the Quebec going to pay what he thinks is|reveal the number, type or lo- fair and reasonable." \cation of aircraft used to de |constituency, said he was not Prime Mimister | Diefenbaker broke security reg- julations during a speech at Prince Albert, Sask., last week. |Mr. Diefenbaker violated secu- 20m-' rity by saying the United States Plaints about government con-|had 1,200 Voodoo jet intercept- tract wages was on the floor/ors. The prime minister has de- plaint in the last 365 days, or) said Wednesday the number of : | U Voodoo and other nell said. But if a wage sched-|fighter aircraft is classified in-|toria Rifles.of Canada drill hall Fire Bombs Hit Quebec Armories MONTREAL (CP)--Leaflets left in three Montreal area | Liberation Front) "'is a revolu- "\tionary movement made up of volunteers ready to die for the Bieconomic and political inde- h! pendence of Quebec." The leaflets were left after kerosene-filled "Molotoy cock- tails" were tossed at three ar- mories in the Montreal area Thursday night and Friday. diTwo of the armories were un- damaged and the army de- scribed damage at the third as slight. : The home-made incendiaries --using beer and liquor 'bottles nj--were thrown at the Royal Montreal- Regiment armory in suburban Westmount, the Vic- the armory of the 4th Battalion, Royal 22nd Regiment, on north- west Lacombe Avenue. The army immediately an- nounced it was adding guards to all Montreal area armories and was tak'ng "certain meas- ures judged appropriate in the present circumstances." One Quebec separatist group, the Republican Party of Quebec |headed by Marcel Chaput, con demned the bombings. DESCRIBES TARGETS The roughly typewritten leaf- lets said '"'the -suicide com- mandos" of the FLQ have as |their main mission to destroy |"'completely by systematic sab- jotage": | 'All symbols and colonial | (federal) institutions, in partic. jular the RCMP and the armed | forces; | 'All information media in the colonial language which hold us in contempt; | ."All enterprises and mercial establishments which 'discriminate against Quebec- which do not use French s their first language, which have advertising signs in the colonial (English) language; "All factories which diserim- jinate aganst French-speaking 'employees. | "The FLQ will progressively ;eliminate all persons who col- \laborate with the occupier. | "The FLQ also will attack all commercial interests of Amer- com- ican colonialism, natural ally of) English colonialism.' SHOWED STATUS Mid-19th century English hik. ers carried umbrellas to fhdi- cate they were gentlemen and not tramps, 2Fhould know, said Mir Hellyer, Sqho holds a degree in aecronaut| SHORGAS HEATING & APPLIANCES * ical engineering. * The Liberal defence spokes-| Industrial and Commercial =man said Canada had made} NEED The established, reliable Gas S commitments to arm the mis- FUEL OIL oes | ler in your area. THERE IS A BETTER DEAL for YOU in AUTO INSURANCE well over WE SPOT CASH OR TERMS placed their cer insurance with us in 1962. Why not Investigate ond seve money. SCHOFIELD-AKER i BOLAHOOD *siles with nuclear warheads Sand these should be honored, CALL | 31 CELINA ST. PERRY (Corner of Athol) DAY OR NIGHT 723-3443 | 728-9441 ee kes eeees LIMITED REAL ESTATE -- MORTGAGES 44 |] 360 King West 723-2265 HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS 24-HOUR SERVICE 313 ALBERT ST. 723-4663 it Connell . }on midtown Cathcart Street and) ..ig |dealing with the "top of the |house" in the union, the Norris \labor inquiry was told Friday. William Dunkerley, CSL' per- sonnel manager, said relations between CSL and Hal C. Banks' Seafarers' Union have been "very good." But he couldn't explain why CSL escaped the wildcat strikes and stern treatment levelled by the SIU against many other shipowners on the Great Lakes. tion campaign series. He did not name the Progres- sive Conservative and Liberal parties but left no doubt that he was referring to them. He said 'these people who are paid by finance don't pass the hat around at their meet- ings because they are ashamed to do so." The Social Credit party, which usually has pretty girls a Testifying before Mr. Justice) collection boxes at meetings, \T. G. Norris at the 103rd ses-|W8S not ashamed to pick up sion of the investigation of|Party funds that way. Greet regal _ far Mt Pi unkerley insiste at 4 s bed issing Plane May Be In Sea kept its contractual rights to ST, JOHN's, Nfld. (CP) |transfer and promote its sea- men. Other shipowners have testi- fied that the SIU has taken over There is a 50-50 chance a Jight aircraft missing in the Notre Dame Bay area since Wednes- day may have gone down in the these management prerogatives by imposing its shipping rules, Atlantic Ocean, an RCAF search and rescue official at nearby which bar SIU members from jaccepting promotions or trans- Torbay said Friday. The aircraft, piloted by) | fers, | TRIED IMPOSING RULES Robert Thurston, 31, of London, Ont., disappeared on a 30-mile | Mr, Dunkegley told the Norris pore that gometimes SIU flight from Tilt Cove to Beau- mont, patrolmen have tried to impose \the shipping rules on CSL. | "But when we got to the top of the house, it was set right," he declared. | "Why did they do it for you land for mobody else?" asked Charles Dubin, lawyer for the federal commission of inquiry. "That, sir, I can't answer."| VICTORY LOBA Euchre, Orange Hall, | The 53-year-old CSL, officlal,|teer tenon prises' "Oe {who is also a trustee of the|------,,;i7av ppace BAND |Canadian Seafarers' Welfare WHITBY BRASS BAND plan, insisted that.CSL does not BINGO |get preferential treatment from] WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13th the SIU. Other witnesses, in- CLUB BAYVIEW cluding shipowners, have said Early Bird Games that they felt CSL was favored Jackpots -- 58-53 Special Games |by the union. Peo redo day gta Mn STU ; ~ PATRICK'S | shipping companies, Mr, - Dubin Chicken Pattie Tea Bazaar, and Bake Sole Rundle Park Club House Wednesday March 13 ot 2 p.m. Admission 50c "CHICKEN PATTIE TEA | AND HOME BAKING SALE CENTRE STREET UNITED CHURCH -- East Unit MARCH Mee 2:30 P.M. Oc "After 5 p.m. 75¢ | "Trouble seems to visit them | quite often, but you don't get \that visit." | "We get no preferred treat- ment from anybody--period," \declared Mr. Dunkerley. | He testified that CSL--as did all other shipping firms with contracts with ihe SlU--sent its vacation pay money owing its employees to the SIU to be handed out. He agreed that this was done even though Labor Minister Starr had insisted that ja company-union board of trus- jtees be set up to administer the vacation pay fund, an action never taken by the union or the companies. Mr. Dunkerley said it was up te ipdividual seamen. to make | Sure they collected their vaca- \{ion pay~money. He said he would not lauwich a crusade or act as nursemaid for sailors to {get them to go after their right- }ful money, : "T haven't tinie to be my brother's keeper," he said, -- The hearing continues next week. | BACK ON BOARD HOT ROAST | BEEF DINNER at WESTMOUNT UNITED CHURCH SATURDAY, MARCH. 1éth 4:30 P.M. ADULTS -- $1.50 CHILDREN 6 and UNDER 50c 6 to 12 years -- 75c COMING EVENTS > | TORONTO (CP)--Col, W. J. | Stewart, one-time mayor of Tor- }onto and former Speaker of the Ontario legislature, has been re-elected chairman of the Tor- onto Historical Board, Estab- lished in 1966, the board is re- |sponsible for all public histori- jcal sites in the city. Breaktast, Lunch, Dinner cide | MEN'S LUNCH Hotel Lancaster Monday, BINGO 8:00 p.m. ST. GERTRUDE'S AUDITORIUM 690 KING ST. EAST AT FAREWELL FREE-- ADMISSION -- FREE 20 REG. GAMES -- TOTAL $300 SNOWBALL 56 NOS, -- $210 CON. Plus $10 Each Horizontal Line, Regular Jackpot 54 Nos. -- $100 -- $20 Con. Share the Wealth EXTRA BUS SERVICE NO CHILDREN, PLEASE. WOODVIEW COMMUNITY CENTRE BINGO-MONDAY, MARCH 11th 2 -- $250 Jackpot Nos. 51 and 52 1 -- $150 Jackpot (Must Go) Jackpot Poys Double in 52 Nos. or Less 20 GAMES $20 and 5. SPECIAL GAMES at $30 REGULAR GAMES PAY DOUBLE IN 17 NOS. OR LESS $100.00 DOOR PRIZE ADMISSION $1.00 -- EXTRA BUSES EARLY BIRD GAME AT 7:45 ADMISSION $1.00 -- EXTRA BUSES Admission Ticket Gives You Free Chance On Door Prize RED BARN NORTH OSHAWA YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO ATTEND i THE CITY OF OSHAWA Progressive Conservative Assoc. Monthly Dinner Meeting THURSDAY, MARCH 14th, 1963 Piccadilly Room -- Hotel Genosha Speaker: MR, HAROLD BRADLEY, M.P. 'One of the most outstanding Speakers in the Progressive Con- servative Party to-day."' SOCIAL HOUR 6:00 P.M. Ladies Welcome Coys ADMISBION. 82:00 FREE ADMISSION FREE KINSMEN BINGO KINSMEN COMMUNITY CENTRE 109 GOLBORNE ST. WEST TUESDAY, 8 O'CLOCK 20 -- $20 GAMES $150 Jackpot -- $20 each line plus $50 Full Card 5 -- $30 Games; 2 -- $250 Jackpots JACKPOT NOS. 53 and-57 EARLY BIRD GAMES : -- EXTRA BUSES -- _7:30 BUS DIRECT FROM 4 CORNERS LIONS BINGO WEDNESDAY, MAR. 13, 8:00 P.M. JUBILEE PAVILION 20 -- $20 GAMES -- 20 5 -- $30 GAMES -- 5 1 -- $150 JACKPOT -- 1 $20.00 A LINE -- $50.00 FULL CARD 2 -- $250 JACKPOTS -- 2 3 NOS. 55 and 58 EXTRA BUSES -- FREE ADMISSION EARLY BIRD GAMES GOOD PARKING DINNER 7:00 P.M. Public Invited HAWAII leave any day YOU wish | 14 DAYS "485.10 INCLUDES: air transportation and first class hotels, (based on double IS THE TIME | To have that carpet or chest- erfield cleaned professionally in Oshawa's Original Carpet Cleaning Centre . . . where fi) fully guaranteed satisfaction is assured. | Phone 728-4681 || | NU-WAY | RUG CO. LTD. 174 MARY ST. slightly extra, BOOK NOW | Four Seasons Howard Travel Travel | AJAX OSHAWA PHONE PHONE 668-3161 728-6201 942-6690 N.U.P.S.E. ~ LOCAL 18 DANCE LEGION HALL Band 8.30 P.M. - SATURDAY, MAR. 9 $2.50 Per Couple COUPLES ONLY Bob Parkinson's

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