2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturdey, Merch 30, 1963 ave Ve WEATHER FORECAST GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN Mainly Sunny; NO NEED FOR CITY HALL COMPLACENCY City Council has announced a 5 mill rate increase for 1963, lowest in eight years. This is not what many taxpayers wanted, but it should appease the majority, who were apprehensive of a much higher boost. ' After all Rome wasn't built in a day, and the job of chopping down a municipal budget is not an easy one, what with the constant pressures made on civic administrative bodies. Council's efforts to toe-the-line financially and adhere to the newly-inaugurated Austerity Program are off to a fairly good start, but there is no need for complacency. There will be need for much greater austerity in the months ahead, not only by Council but by the PUC and the Board of Education; insofar as Council is con- cerned, there are several places on the City's program where many tax dollars can be saved alone by the inau- guration of efficient admin- istration in certain depart- ments along the lines prescribed by the Woods, Gordon Report. Oshawa"s new with 1962 rates are: mill rates, in brackets Little Cooler Official forecasts issued by the Toronto public weather of-/Timmins ... five at 5,00 a.m,: | Sault Ste, Marie .. Synopsis: Cold air i surging) Mount Forest ..... southward across Northern On-| : tario, accompanied by snow-| Observed Temperatures flurries. This colder air will Min, Max, push into eastern Ontario by Dawson «s+sees «+ -21 8 Sunday morning. The outlook! Victoria ..., 38 for Sunday calls for mainly|Edmonton ., Moosonee zero 10 20 48 jain's Demonstrators Rock PMs Auto CP from Reuters-AP BROMLEY, England--Slogan- shouting anti-nuclear demon- strators Friday night rocked and buffeted the car containing Prime Minister Macmillan and his wife after he defended Brit- nuclear deterrent in a speech here, U.K. Tories May Offer Tax Cuts By DOUG MARSHALL LONDON (CP)--The British government is expected to pro- duce an expansionist budget next Wednesday, possibly with vote-catching tax cuts, Widespread rumors that the budget may be the last before Macmillan told a Conserva- tive party rally in this southern England town it would be wrong for Britain or Europe to deterrent. |many observers to predict that Extra police were rushed to\Chancellor of the Exchequer sunny skies and cooler temper-| Regina . atures except in southwestern) Winnipeg . Ontario where temperatures) Lakehead ., will be near normal, White River . Lake St, Clair, Lake Erie, Sault Ste. Marie Niagara regions, Windsor, Ham-| Kapuskasing ' ilton: Mainly sunny and mild!North Bay ... Sunday, Winds light Sunday. |Sudbury .... Lake Ontario, Haliburton re-|Muskoka . gions, Toronto: Mainly sunny| Windsor . on Sunday, cooler Sunday. London .. Lake Huron, southern Georg-| Toronto ian Bay regions, London: A few| Ottawa showers, clearing tonight.) Montreal . Mainly sunny and cooler on/Saint John . Sunday, Winds northerly 15 to| Halifax .....++.0+- 25 Sunday, coe nan neem seRat Northern Georgian Bay, Tim- agami regions, North Bay, Sud- bury: Sunny and colder on Sun-! Rain Compounds day. Winds becoming northerly 15 to 25 on Sunday, Ice Jam Threat Algoma, White River regions,) By THE CANADIAN PRESS |Sault Ste. Marie: Partly cloudy) 'The flooding waters of south- jtoday and Sunday. Turning! western Ontario rivers receded oo the scene when 150 ban-the-|Reginald Maudling would un- bomb supporters gathered out-|veil a series of popular meas- jside the hall, waiting for the | | rely. solely on the U.S. nuclear|the next general election led|Londen, | | ures designed to stimulate jing a few modest ones. home demand and increase in- dustrial production, If Prime Minister MacMillan COMING EVENTS is planning to call an election for May, 1964, Maudling may/|P well keep his more attractive|f, proposals in the bag and re- Strict himself this year to serv- The pound sterling has been} shaky following collapse of the} Common Market talks, and talk SOCIAL bingo Tuesday, April 2, at & nd Jackson Streets. Prizes and re- shments. RUMMAGE Sale Wednesday, April 3, en p.m, Simeoe Hall. Articles of excel- No. m, St, George's Hall, corner of Albert DEL-MAR U.C.W, Sponsors GE sale, | p.m, Tuesday, April come Street United Church, Unit lity, Clean and reasonable. U of devaluation has been com- mon in European financial cir- cles, Expansion, with its risk of inflation, might start a stam- pede of foreign capital out of On the other hand the gov- ernment can hardly afford to let the economy stagnate much longer. |prime minister to leave. | Seuffles broke out in the }crowd when he entered his car. COMING EVENTS |The demonstrators surrounded t | The anti-nuclear demonstra-) |tors prevented the prime min-| ister, with Lady Dorothy Mac- millan at the wheel, from driv- ing away. | | They: rocked and_ buffeted) Macmillan's car for several) minutes vntil police cleared a| path for it, Somé policemen lost their helmets in the clash, 4 the situation in' the Sudbury) Of. LOVETT DOUST, area, At Coniston, where public works employees built sandbag levees to protect Highway 17,| rain Friday night compounded Tickets on Sale 6th ANNUAL DINNER CANADIAN DIABETIC ASSOCIATION Oshawa ond District Branch ST. PAUL'S PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Wilson Road, block 'North of King East 6 P.M. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 10, 1963 Toronto, Guest Speaker Henderson Bogk Store Per Adult $1.50-----Per Child $1.00 PUBLIC WELCOME Children Under 16 Not Admitted Jayne-Mode Dresses ! PANORAMA OF FASHIONS 1963 King Street Church Centennial Hall WEDNESDAY, APRIL 3 8:15 P.M, BINGO ORANGE TEMPLE SATURDAY,. MAR, 30th 7:30 P.M. 20 Games ----- $8 Share the Wealth 4--$40 Jackpots to go 1--$150 Jackpot to go LOCAL 222 ANNIVERSARY DANCE U.A.W HALL SATURDAY, MARCH 30th - 9:00 TO 12:00 P.M. INDUSTRIAL MERCIAD (39,5) AND 40 COM- ane colder late today. Winds becom-|nast the danger point Friday,| ing northerly 15 to 25 Sunday./put rain and mild weather| Cochrane region: Cloudy with prought a new flood threat to} the problem of ice jams, which continue to form in the river and threaten to back up flood THE PARENTS AUXILIARY. OF THE OSHAWA SOCIETY FOR DEAF AND "GOLDEN VALLEY BOYS' RESIDENTIAL -- 37 mills (36.5) FARM -- 34 mills (33.5) Mayor Lyman Gifford said uthat City Hall expenses were not responsible for the new "mill rate increase, despite a big jump in the City's wage bill «(Fire and Police budgets hit a record high this year -- fire- ' fighters now have the 42-hour week and this necessifated 'hiring 10 new men). He said that 100 percent of the cost of «the new mill rate increase could be traced to the Board of %Education, but he said the Board had "co-operated" in trying sto keep costs down. | Chairman Walter Branch of the Finance committee said «that Education costs in Oshawa this year hit an all-time high * --~ $3,720,398, or 42.42 cents of every tax dollar (Trustee A. E. "O'Neill of the Board of Education earlier this week stressed «that actually the Board's budget was approximately $5,000,- *000 and not $3,720,398 which total he described as "a deliber- "ate attempt by the Board to mislead the public." The + difference was made up by Provincial grants, he said.) The angry voice of Alderman Finley. Dafoe was heard "this week as the effects of the new budget set in. He ob- «jected to any mill rate rise and said that the City's surplus sat the end of the year -- $319,983 -- plus revenue from new "assessment (total of the new assessment was approximately) * $8,000,000) would have supplied the equivalent of 1.5 mills. Mr. Dafoe was most critical of the total $141,514.89 in- 'crease for the Board of Works Yard and the Traffic Depart- "ment, each of which comes under the Engineering Depart- ment. He gave the breakdown later this way: 1962 Actual 1963 Budget > Works Dept. $1,090,370 $1,204,900 $114,529.90 = Traffic $58,415 $85,400 $26,984.99 * Mr, Dafoe has reserved his heaviest criticism for the «City Engineering Department and Board of Works Yards in "recent months. He has constantly reminded Council, in "the strongest possible language, that there was much ~ needless waste, faulty administration in those departments » until his efforts almost amounted to a one-man crusade, The overwhelming majority of Mr. Dafoe's Council col- leagues quiety ignore his constant warnings in this respect » (possibly because they feel he is too critical in general of all » things), but he has a large off-Council following who appre- ; ciate the importance of what he is trying to point out, which » fact was verified by the results of last December's aldermanic ~race when Mr. Dafoe finished a surprising third. His critic. isms were also strongly endorsed by the Woods, Gordon 'Report in regard to these departments. Mr. Dafoe wants answers to questions like this: Was the 1962 expenditure of $37,187.43 for overtime pay of Board of Works regulars (some received nothing -- others more than $1,000) necessary ? Was the 1962 expenditure of $21,034.75 overtime for Board of Works technicians (non-engineers) necessary? City Hall's total overtime pay bill in 1962 hit $83,313.00. Mr. Dafoe fully realizes that oevrtime pay is necessary "in many cases, but he seriously questions if such a high » total can be justified. He feels that it would be slashed by * about 50 percent. Quite true, but whose angry toes would be treaded on "if he attempted such economy, even in an Austerity Year ? ee wee eweng, a ALDERMAN DAFOE " " . . » * . . Increase ; NOTES FROM THE HUSTINGS OF ONTARIO RIDING: The mammoth PC Motor Cavalcade will be held Satur- "day, April 6 throughout the riding, Progressive-Conservative ~headquarters announced. The Liberal's motor cavalcade passed through here today on its rounds enroute to Whitby, Ajax and Pickering Village. It was climaxed by a coffee-and-sandwich party. ei* New Democratic Party officials here reported crowds Son all NDP buses from here Friday to attend the "Tommy" " Douglas rally in Toronto at Maple Leaf Gardens. eevtee Liberal Candidate Norm Cafik will appear with Senator "Arthur Roebuck at a rally Monday in Anderson Street High "School, Whitby, at 8 p.m. On Tuesday he will speak with «Elmer Sopha, MPP, Sudbury, at Ajax Community Centre. [On Wednesday he will appear with Senator David Croll at =St. Gregory's Auditorium. Pe Labor. Minister "Mike" Starr will be the guest speaker sat the Hotel Genosha April 4 at a dinner-meeting of the «Oshawa PC Association. He will speak at a Bayview Heights 'meeting Monday. snowflurries today and Sunday,|some northern points in the jmuch colder tonight and Sun-| province, day. Ice on the Saugeer' River at : Southampton, 22 miles west of Forecast Temperatures lOwen Sound, has already Min, Max.! caysed extensive damage, while 40 60 |the Wanapetei River continues 40 55 |to run through Coniston, six 35 50 | miles east of Sudbury. 35 Prediction for continued mild 30 jweather during the night and 35 \today were mot expected to ease Windsor ... | St, Thomas . London Kitchener ... Wingham ... Hamilton ... seeeeees waters, | Predicted clear skies were) expected to help ease the situa- tion in the faugeen valley. where rain seemed to be the major threat with the river fi- nally under control. | In London, the Upper Thames River Authority said the flood threat was over Friday, after the water level at the Fanshawe dam: fell 16 feet in 24 hours. 35 -- 35 St, Catharines Toronto Peterborough ..... Trenton Killaloe ... Muskoka .eeseeeeee North Bay ...+. Sudbury. ..seccsees Earlton ... Kapuskasing White Rive Y CEwTRe seen oe OPEN MON. PULITZER PRIZ HOW TO Tobaces Sells o At 49.97 Cents TILLSONBURG (CP) -- Sales Friday of 1,554,601 pounds of to- bacco at an average price of} 49.97 cents a pound were re-| ported by the Ontario Flue- REALLY DICK KALLMAN @ O'KEEFE CENTRE IN BUSINESS WITHOUT STARRING __PRIZES GALORE _ FOR 3 WEEKS E WINNER 1962 SUCCEED TRYING WILLARD WATERMAN EXTRA BUSES Cured Tobacco Growers' Mar- keting board, To date, 116,988,- 394 pounds have been sold at an average price of 51.15 cents. O'KEEFE CENTRE, FRONT & YONGE, TORONTO BOX OFFICE 11 A.M, - 9 P.M., EM 3-6633 aie IN FUEL OIL... CALL PERRY | DAY OR NIGHT 723-3443 LENSES CONSULTATION by APPOINTMENT |g Payment plan includes one trial period. PHONE 723-4191 F. R. BLACK 0.D. 136 SIMCOE ST. NORTH month HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS 24-HOUR SERVICE 313 ALBERT ST. . 723-4663 TRY STUDEBAKER Magy Motors World's Only 728-5178 KING ST. W. FLY 10 The Orient... delightful DURHAM RIDING NEW DEMOCRATIC PARTY Information Centres Port Hope |. a.crcnence::. Ph, 753-2200 Bowmanville ........:2::--202. Ph. 623-2501 Hampton scene. OR. 200-0aRS OrPONO . . .-.nxecrmncronea Ph, 1552 Orono Blackstock ..c.-.:caccrcere ene Ph. 986-4985 Janetville .....2c2-2-1ree---. Ph. 324-4031 VOLUNTEER WORKERS WELCOME :..the peaceful quiet of Macao's f _ EXOTIC EAST you've ever been. The hustle and bustle of big cities Shopping bargains in Hong Kong, The excitement ing, Ne Diol SS WES THE ly different from any place of quaint country inns. 1 + Convertible | " ! 1 | ot theatre in Japan. Plan STATION IS THE TIME light all the way! See Canadian Pacific office. now! Fly a luxurious Super DC-8 Jet Empress... the fastest, most direct jets from Toronto. It's day- ular Kabuki your Princess Orient Tour your Travel Agent or any LIONS BINGO WEDNESDAY, APRIL 3rd, 8 P.M. JUBILEE PAVILION 20 -- $20 GAMES -- 20 5 -- $30 GAMES -- 5 1 -- $150 JACKPOT -- 1 2.-- $250 JACKPOTS -- 2 NOS. 52-51 EARLY BIRD GAMES CASH PRIZES AVAILABLE Children Under 16 Not Admitted | SAIL WHITE EMPRESS NEWEST, LARGEST SHIPS TO EUROPE! With Empress of Canada and Empress of England, Canadian Pacific has the newest and largest ships on the St. Lawrence route to Europe. And, with Empress of Britain, offers unsurpassed ocean travel. Among the fabulous features: Un- limited deck space, gala parties, swimming pools, first-run movies, nurseries, gourmet meals, even a hostess to cater to your every whim! See your Travel Agent or any Canadian Pacific office. 3-2224. HARD OF HEARING CHILDREN Presents A NIGHT OF CARDS PROGRESSIVE EUCHRE AT The U.A.W. Union Hall, 44 Bond St. E., Oshawa WEDNESDAY, APRIL 3 -- 8:00 P.M. ADMISSION 75¢ REFRESHMENTS _ FREE ADMISSION | | WAGON To have that carpet or chest- ertield cleaned professionally in TOKYO-AND JAPAN 8-ca) (air fare extr Princess tours from #199 ®) MONTREAL-LIVERPOOL Tourist Summer fare from $244 if Oshawe's Original Carpet iB Cleaning Centre . . . where fully guaranteed 'sotisfaction is assured, Phone 728-4681 NU-WAY RUG CO. LTD. 174 MARY ST. HOLIDAY ALL THE WAY WITH (2 ki G2 Mi TRAINS | TRUCKS / SHIPS / PLANES / HOTELS / TELECOMMUNICATIONS ... WORLD'S MOST COMPLETE TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM NO CHARGE Buffet Lunch -- Refreshments $3.00 PER COUPLE Tickets Available at the Door WOODVIEW COMMUNITY CENTRE BINGO-MONDAY, APRIL Ist 2--$250 Jackpot Nos, 50-55 "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 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. 56 and 60 EARLY BIRD GAMES ---- EXTRA BUSES -- __7:30 BUS DIRECT FROM 4 CORNERS 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. -- $110 -- $20 CON. Plus $10 Each Horizontal Line, Regular Jackpot 57 Nos. -- $100 -- $20 Con. Share the Wealth EXTRA BUS SERVICE NO CHILDREN, PLEASE, ~ REPORT FROM RUSSIA The Canadian Cancer Society, Ontario County Unit BOWMANVILLE BRANCH invites you to hear MR. MAURICE GRIMES, Executive Director of Ontario Division GOOD PARKING Lay Delegate to the Eight International Cancer Congress held in Moscow, July, 1962. Mr, Grimes' talk will be illustrated Place: Lions Community Centre, 26 Beech Street, Bowmanville Time: Wednesday, April 3rd, 8 p.m, : EVERYONE WELCOME CITY OF OSHAWA Progressive Conservative Association MONTHLY DINNER MEETING THURSDAY, APRIL 4, 1963 PICCADILLY ROOM -- HOTEL GENOSHA GUEST SPEAKER THE HONOURABLE MICHAEL STARR, M.P. MINISTER OF LABOUR SOCIAL HOUR 6.00 p.m. -- DINNER 7.00 p.m, ADMISSION $2.00 PUBLIC MEETING