2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Saturdey, March 16, 1963 GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN . ELECTION LISTS CAN BE AMENDED = . Harry W. Jermyn, Federal election returning officer for Ontario riding, would remind one and all today of a most 'mportant point: pe : Next week will be Revisal Week when corrections and alterations can be made to Federal! election lists. These tevisals are for any- one left off, or included in- correctly on: official lists, or for anyone who has infor- mation which would indi- cate that the lists are in- correct, Such alterations and amendments can be made next Thursday, Friday or Saturday by any of the fol- lowing City and district elec- tion sub-revisal officers: District No. 6, Ajax -- Hen- ry Polak; District No. 5, Whitby -- Hugh Nichol; Dis- trict No, 4, Oshawa -- Alex Shestowsky, Ukrainian Na- tional Federation Hall, 68 Bloor street east; District No, 3, Donald B. Dodds, 174 Heathercourt, Oshawa; Dis- trict No, 2, Oshawa -- Richard Donald, Lake--Vista Plaza; and District No, 1 -- John Vivash, 741 Jasmine Crescent. HARRY JERMYN LOCAL 222 UNIT TO VOTE BY MACHINE * Local 222, UAW-CLC, will hold an election Monday to pick West Plant (GM) committee men and alternates. The vote will be of special interest because vote-count "machines will be.used for the balloting for the first time in the history of the Local. If the experiment is successful, these same rented-mach- :-ines will be used next May when the 13,000-member Local (largest in the Canadian UAW and second largest in Canada) votes to fill 49 of the top positions under the following cate- Bories: The presidency, now held by Malcolm Smith. 12 executive slate posts. j Four standing committees. Delegates to the District Council. rs The 1960 elections for these posts cost the Local more than $12,000 (41 members were needed for polls, counting, ete.), and required four days, so it is understandable why the Local is anxious to slice costs in this election, one of the most important in Oshawa, not excluding the municipal vote, ; The big feature with these vote-count 'machines is that the total vote is available as soon as the final ballot is cast, Malcolm Smith, who learned his first Trade Union lessons » while working as a boy in the coal mines of Scotland, has held the presidency longer than anyone else, starting back _in 1940. His present term extends back to 1958, "BIG FEDERAL VOTE JUST THREE WEEKS OFF The big Federal election will be held three weeks from Monday. My ¢ This is an incredibly short time when it is considered + how many political fences there are to be mended by all par- > ties concerned. One of the biggest fights in the riding will be concen- ~ trated in the City of Oshawa race, won last year by Labor * Minister Michael Starr with 11,458 votes as compared with his 1958 total of 13,048 for the same 133 polls (Norm Cafik, Lib- eral, was third in the City last June with 7,559 and Miss Ail- *een Hall second with 8,495). Mr. Starr let it be known to his Party workers that he * was not satisfied with his 1962 City majority over Miss Hall « of 2,963 and most agreed that it was not good enough for a : political campaigner of his stature regardless of what the * trend was in other parts of the country. As a result, the PC's have redoubled their efforts to strengthen their Oshawa ne . « Officials of Renault "Auto- mobile Company of France hold talks with Ontario Pre- mier John Robarts in Toronto Friday on the possibility of setting up assembly opera- tions in Canada. The Renault group has already visited Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and Quebec to investigate the regional labor market 'and transportation facilities. With Mr, Robarts (second from left) who' discusses Ontario itinerary of the auto group are (left to right): G. C. Rob- DISCUSS BUSINESS LOCATION | INTERPRETING THE. NEWS By ALAN HARVEY Canadian Press Staff Writer There is a growing conviction in France that the present so- cial troubles mark a_ turning point in the life of the Fifth Re- public, With the coal-mining stoppage now in its third week and a 24- hour national railway strike dis- rupting the weekend, many ob- servers feel the Gaullist govern. ment has blundered badly in its first clash with labor since the Algerian war ended, There are two related criti. cisms. The first is that the gov. ernment needlessly provoked the miners by arbitrarily decid- ing to 'requisition' employees if the strike continued, This move worked with the railway- men in 1959 but did not pay off this time simply because to en- force requisition orders the ad- ministration would have needed two policemen for each of the 192,000 miners. The second complaint is more eg ase Si gl it is nughag = . that President de Gaulle, by the Lager Claude ecremge ho 4 | very nature of his personal rule, nault's representative Of fl- | tends to try to solve problems nance and assembly opera- |simply by ignoring them. tions for export; Georges Basi- : igenee ; | INCREDIBLE REVOLUTION liou, Renault $ Reo dian France, once. predominantly manager. (CP Wirephoto) | an agricultural coury, is mov- erts, Ontario manager for Re- Veteran Labor MONTREAL (CP)--The New|Montreal Island, managed to Democrati¢ Party, with 50 can-|finish ahead of Social Credit or didates in the field so far, is|/independent candidates. making an 'unexpectedly strong] Chief Organizer Andre bid to grab some of Quebec's/L'Heureux, on loan from the 75 seats in the April 8 federal|pariy's national secretariat in election. \Ottawa, says "a wave of sym- Although its Quebec wing is|/pathy is transforming the NDP not yet officially organized, thejinto a truly representative party has found a provincial|party' in Quebec. leader in Gerard Picard, 55, a)NEVER WON A SEAT veteran labor leader who has| The predominantly French- launched a province-wide cam-|speaking province has never elected a candidate carrying the banner of the NDP or its predecessor, the CCF, in a fed- erai election. NDP spokesmen are wary of making any predictions about the number of seats they hope to win but they say they are WEATHER FORECAST Late Rain Ends At Sunday Noon Forecasts issued by the Tor- Forecast Temperatures onto weather office at 4:30 a.m.| Low tonight, High Sunday Synopsis: A storm heading) Windsor ... pee 40 towards northwestern Ontario|st, Thomas will bring southerly winds and|London .... mild, cloudy weather to the/Kitchener .. paign. The NDF has nowhere to go but up in Quebec--and it's a long way up. Its 40 candidates in the June 1962 federa) election in Quebec all lost their deposits. Eighteen trailed the poll while the others, mostly on At Quebec NDP Helm trial and technical age, Sea- soned diplomats who remember what things were like in Firt World War days say the nation is experiencing an "incredible revolution." In the last five years, some 800,000 farmers have drifted ing headlong into a new indus- Industrial Tide = Sweeping France from the land. Economic prob- lems abound; but de Gaulle, his critics say, just isn't interested in economics, Only in global grandeur, He has created a_ political void around him. Believing that the politicians of the Fourth Re- public were intent only on their own sordid intrigues, de Gaulle set out to smash them--and smash them he did in the elec- tions last November. Some suspect that in the pres- ent industrial crisis he may be trying to do to the unions what he did to the politicians, This would remove the final obstacle to the Gaullist concept of gov- ernment as a dialogue between the head of state and "'the people." - | FACES REDUCED PRESTIGE This theory, however, seems far-fetched, De Gaulle would certainly have chosen a more appropriate battleground if he really wanted to shatter the trade unions. | Whatever happens, the gov- lernment may emerge with re. | duced prestige. | The + Manchester Guardian| | says things will never be quite) |\the same again; two London |weeklies, the Economist and the New Statesman, visualize the possibility of the present stoppages growing into a gen- leral strike. | "This is the general's first trial of strength, not with the |debris of the Fourth Republic, but with the stirrings of the sixth," says the Economist. confident of doubling or even tripling the popular vote in their favor, Mr, L'Heureux said the NDP expects to nominate at least 60 candidates. in Quebec before the March 25 deadline. Mr. L'Heureux said _ there have been cases of groups of private persons picking a can- didate in ridings where there was no local NDP organization ng the NDP to organize a /campaign. NDP spokesmen say they are gating support from a number of} young businessmen, whion le whp, in provincial politics, have beén supporting Premier Jean Legage's Liberal party. PARERS FRIENDLY T NDP program, mainly on Ns stand against nuclear arms, its call for more flexibil- ity in federal-provincial rela- tions and its declarations of support for a more genuinely bicultural Canada, has been getting sympathetic _ treatment from editorial writers in some Quebec newspapers. The party's Quebec leader, Mr. Picard, is a Laval Univer- sity law graduate who served as president of the old Cana- dian and Catholic Confedera- tion of Labor from 1046 to 1958. He now is president of the By THE CANADIAN PRESS Quebec became the third member of Canada's '"'billion- dollar' society Friday, when Premier Lesage tabled record jestimates in the legislature for the 1963-64 business year. The federal government has its first budget of more than $1,000,000,000 two years ago. Mr. 'Lesage's estimates of |$1,045,245,000 included four de- partments -- youth, health, nearly 75 per cent of the spend- ing. The total compared. with estimates of $987,811,975 for the current fiscal year. Opposition Leader Daniel Johnson predicted new taxes. If the premier doesn't introduce new taxes in the April 5 budget speech, Mr. Johnson said, he will have to borrow to meet current expenses since "I don't think Mr. Lesage will print his own money." TO AID TOURISM long been in the billion-dollar ers and professional people|¢lass, and Ontario brought in roads, and family and social welfare--which accounted for Estimates Reach | Billion Dollars A rare recorded vote in the Manitoba legislature resulted Friday when Education Minis- ter Stewart McLean declined to supply specific information to the opposition about financial aid for university students. The Conservatives defeated the op- position request for details 31 to 20, with the NDP, Liberals and Social Credit voting against the government. In Regina, Bill Berezowsky (CCF -- Cumberland) _ intro- duced a motion urging Canada to forbid the use of nuclear arms by any of its armed forces, a motion described as |'shameful and deceitful" by J. H. Staveley (L--Weyburn), The CCF member said billions of dollars has been spent on weap- ons which could have gone for social and education benefits. USE OLD WAYS Many farmers in East. Pakis- tan still use agricultural prac- tices that have remained un- changed since biblical times. COMING EVENTS 9TH OSHAWA CUB AND SCOUT MOTHERS AUX, BAKE SALE MOTOR CITY BOWLING ALLEY Tuesday March 19th at 1:30 p.m. NIGHT OF CARDS Legion Hall, Centre St. March 19th at 8 p.m. Auspices of Ladies' Auxiliary © Branch 43, Tickets 50c---Good Prizes LADIES' AUX, TEA and BAZAAR MARCH 20, 2 P.M, * BATHE PARK CLUBHOUSE Aprons, cake sale, candy, tea room, | BINGO ORANGE TEMPLE SATURDAY MAR, 16th 7:30 P.M. 20 Gomes -- $8 Share the Wealth 4---$40 Jackpots to go 1--$150 Jackpot to go Children Urider 16 Not Admitted Smart Business People Sing the Proises of Oshawa Times Classified Ads. Proceeds in aid of Cub and Scout projects. Oshawa' and District OLD COUNTRY CLUB | Presents St. Patrick's Ball Saturday, March 16th, 8-12 THE NEW KINSMEN -- HALL MacMillon Drive Dance to THE "THE CAVALIERS" ° REFRESHMENTS DOOR PRIZE SPOT PRIZES $1.50 PER PERSON $3.00 COUPLE ST, PATRICK'S DANCE SATURDAY, MARCH 16th 8.30 P.M. to 12. P.M. Ukrainian National Federation Hall : 68 Bloor Street East Music By: "LAURENTIAN'S SEXTET" Admissions 3 PER COUPLE WOODVIEW COMMUNITY CENTRE BINGO-MONDAY, MARCH 18th 2--$250 Jackpot Nos. 52 and 53 1 -- $150 Jackpot (Must Go) Jackpot Pays 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 GENERAL MEETING LAKE VISTA RATEPAYERS ASSOCIATION will be held at ST. PHILLIP'S CHURCH SUNDAY EVENING 7 P.M. Guest Speaker: MR. G. A. WANDLESS Montreal central council of the Confederation of National |Trade Unions, successor to the COCL. * 'City machine. This is exactly what the two opposition parties « -thave done, however, so that the odds are strong that Mr. * "Starr will still again have a tough fight on his hands before « he gets to the outside-Oshawa hustings where he fared well ; once again last year (winning all 13 riding municipalities), if * not as well as in 1958 when he scored the greatest triumph of « his career. ; That was when he was returned with a whopping 26,768 province today, Snow is eX-\Wingham .. pected to spread slowly east-\Hamilton ......... ward across Northern Ontario/st, Catharines ... today. Rain is expected to|/Toronto spread into southwestern On-|Peterborough ..... $ tario later today, [Trenton ssseseseses Lake St. Clair region, Wind-|Killaloe .... jsor: Rain, beginning this after-|Muskoka ... jnoon or evening, .continuing|North Bay . The Quebec legislature went} on to debate a bill to set up) a ministry of tourism, fish and game--which Mr. Johnson said the Union Nationale will sup- port--te provide what the pre- mier said would be 'new growth of an industry which) meetings. \plays a. primary role in the COMING EVENTS ANNUAL MEETING OSHAWA DIVISION DIRECTOR OF OSHAWA PLANNING BOARD The neighborhood and Oshawa public, ere urged te come out and enjoy on interesting ond informative evening. Monday, BINGO 8:00 p.m. ST. GERTRUDE'S AUDITORIUM He said the NDP is using the |same money-raising method in Quebec as the Social Credit-- passing the hat at campaign = vote-total as compared with 10,662 for Dr. Claude Vipond « (Liberal) and 5,430 for John Brady (CCF). =* The political temper in Ontario riding, like that outside, ~ has been changing, but has it changed enough to put the seat overnight. Cloudy Sunday with| Sudbury .. a few showers early in the day. |Earlton wraea 4 Winds shifting westerly 15 Sun-/Kapuskasing ...... day. |White Rive Lake Erie, Lake Huron re-l\Mooscnes mt Mr. L'Heureux said the/economy of the province." |NDP's anti-nuclear stand is the |biggest thing in its favor in/Quebec fron national leader T. Quebec, Liberal Leader Lester|C, Douglas' proposal of a "con- |Pearson had alienated some/federation council" that would GIRL_ GUIDES OF CANADA 8 P.M. TUESDAY, MARCH 19th 690 KING ST. EAST AT FAREWELL FREE -- ADMISSION -- FREE 20 REG. GAMES -- TOTAL $300 " of Mr, Starr (certainly one of the strongest PC candidates = from coast to coast) in jeopardy ? The best guess is that it ~ has not, but his two opponents -- Aileen Hall, NDP, and Norm " Cafik, Liberal -- appear to have gained impressive strength, = especially within their respective parties. Whether or not they * will kill each other off and thus ease the route for Mr. Starr's return to power, they are supported by strong, well-organized = 'political machines. 'The NDP's are making their strongest pitch yet to win « this riding, bringing in seasoned campaigners like Allen > Schroeder, Education Director. of the Canadian UAW, to ~ direct Miss Hall's program; not only is the Party conducting ~ an intensive door-to-door City campaign to pick up needed * votes, it is concentrating more of its efforts towards the + Ajax-Pickering area, where the trade union representation is * strong. . All parties pretend to know the real answer, but another ~ big question in this riding campaign is: Will the farm vote, traditionally Tory, continue to vote ~as a bloc pretty well and remain with Mr. Diefenbaker ? ~ Liberal. John Lay noted at the Party's recent overflow nom- * ination meeting in Whitby that "there are many faces here ~ tonight from the rural districts that I have not seen at a " Liberal meeting since 1953." HAROLD BRADLEY TOPS AS SPEAKER Terence V. Kelly must be one of Oshawa's busiest cili- * zens -- the 3l-year-old lawyer who plays such an active : role in civic affairs is in Winnipeg this week-end as a * delegate to the annual con- » vention of the Canadian Soc- * cer Association, of which he « is a director. He was recent+ > ly elected president of the * Ontario Soccer Association, + the youngest executive to + ever hold that post. ... + Harold Bradley, a Campbell- + ford High School teacher * turned politician (he's seek- «ing re-election as MP for = Northumberland) js one of ~ the better public speakers ~ to show up locally in the " current election campaign. » He was the guest of the ~ Oshawa Progressive Con- ='servative Association month. » ly dinner-meeting Thursday = night in the Hotel Genosha. « Other head-table guests in- * cluded Labor Minister Mich- = ael Starr and Albert V. Wal- « ker, PC candidate in Oshawa * riding for the next Provin- « cial election. Mr. Walker is scheduled to appear with Mr. "Starr at several Party rallies within the next few days, gions, London: Rain beginningig.s Marie ..... we 30 towards evening, tapering off to) Mount Forest an occasional shower Sunday|Timmins morning. Winds westerly 15 to} \20 Sunday, | Niagara, Lake Ontario re-| gions, Toronto, Hamilton: Rain) beginning late today, likely end-/Dawson tees ing mid-day Sunday, Winds|Victoria .... westerly 15 to 20 Sunday. Edmonton . Georgian Bay, Haliburton, Al-|Regina .... goma regions, North Bay, Sud-| Winnipeg ....... bury, Sault Ste, Marie: Wet|Lakehead ......... snow or rain beginning late to-| White River ....... day, continuing overnight, de-| Kapuskasing creasing to an occasional|North Bay .....+.. shower or snowflurry by mid-|S.S, Marie .. day Sunday. Winds westerly 15)Sudbury | to 20 Sunday, |Muskoka . ' 3 Timagami, Cochrane regions:| Windsor .... | Snow beginning this afternoon|London ..... or evening, tapering off to/Toronto ..... *s snowflurries Sunday. Winds|/Ottawa ...sssseese westerly 15 Sunday. {Montreal .. White River region: Intermit-|Quebec ... tent snow in west sections,|Halifax ... spreading eastward throughout|/------ pool Capieeine on ory CANADIAN VOCATIONAL TRAINING PROGRAMME Winds northeast 20 Sunday. The Province of Ontario, In Co-operation With The Government nade and the OSHAWA BOARD of EDUCATION will provide training et The R. $. McLaughlin Collegiate and Vocational Institute 570 Stevenson Read North OSHAWA, Ontario for UNEMPLOYED PERSONS | In The Following Courses: ind Sal hip (a 12 week Course for | CITY WIDE nacetin ce emt «om ™ PICK-UP & DELIVERY for Men and Women) | OPEN NIGHTLY TILL 9 P.M. General Woodworking | For Fast Service Call Us To-Day MISS _KEITHA MOSIER Guest Speaker GUIDE HOUSE 123 Simcoe Street South HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS 24-HOUR SERVICE 313 ALBERT ST. PRESCRIPTIONS OUR SPECIALTY pro! SNOWBALL 56 NOS -- $230. -- $20 CON. Plus $10 Each Horizontal Line. Regular Jackpot 55 Nos. -- $100 -- $20 Con. Share the Wealth "EXTRA BUS SERVICE NO CHILDREN, PLEASE, FREE ADMISSION FREE KINSMEN BINGO KINSMEN COMMUNITY CENTRE 109 COLBORNE 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. 54 and 58 EARLY BIRD GAMES -- EXTRA BUSES -- 7:30 BUS DIRECT FROM 4 CORNERS LIONS BINGO |Quebec support by declaringjkeep an eye on relations be- himself in favor of Canadianjtween "our two nations of acquisition of nuclear warheads|French and English - speaking) and the Social Credit was not|Canadians." | Observed Temperatures united behind Mr, a , ' ; avowed opposition to such Low overnight, High Friday weapons. oe 27 The NDP also got a boost in SHORGAS HEATING & APPLIANCES Industrial and Commercial The established, reliable Gas Dealer in your area. 31 CELINA ST. (Corner of Athol) 728-9441 | i we | GOOD PARKING | LIST "ONLY TO SPOT CASH OR TERMS | BOLAHOOD REAL ESTATE -- MORTGAGES aa 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 Nos. 56-50 EXTRA BUSES ---- FREE ADMISSION EARLY BIRD GAMES Children Under 16 Not Admitted Breaktest, Lunch, Dinner BUSINESS MEN'S LUNCH 12-2P.M. Hotel Lancaster OSHAWA'S ORIGINAL CARPET CENTRE at Nu-Way, carpet and broad- loom has been a specialty for 18 years . . . with thousands of yards on display to select from, PHONE 728-4681 NU-WAY || RUG CO. LTD. | 174 MARY ST. j PORN are acedeancevmuennoen 12th Annual Nights of Harmony S.P.E.B.S.Q.5.A. R. S. McLAUGHLIN COLLEGIATE 8 P.M. SATURDAY, MARCH 23rd ADMISSION d 50 PER PERSON FOR TICKETS TELEPHONE 728-239: d 2. 3. 4. | Small Engines & Service Station Work (Courses 2, 3, and 4 are now in progress) All courses will take place Monday through Friday, 4:45 te 11:15 P.M, Provision hes been made each day for a half-hour rest period, ° Pp Pp should Office for further details. Mr. G, L. Roberts Co-Ordinator of Program "5 tect the N Y L. Gifford, Mayor City of Oshewe Chairman, Vocational Training Committee ao DRUGS 9 SIMCOE ST.N. OSHAWA) LIMITED TELEPHONE 723-3431 TERENCE V. KELLY G. Drynen, Chairman Oshewa Board of Educetion