oy Q 'THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, Mey 3, 1963 OD EVENING : By JACK GEARIN 'New Parliament Has Less Political Tension NAVY VETS TO PARADE TO CENOTAPH SUNDAY - Remember back in April of 1956 when the, Oshawa Naval Veterans' Association played host to the Second Annual Re- iifiion of the Naval Veterans' Association of Canada ? es More than 2,000 attended from many parts of Canada. There will be a reminder of that event next Sunday-- = Battle of the Atlantic Sun- day, which also marks the start of Navy Week in Can- ada. Oshawa's Navy vets will parade to the Cenotaph-- with the Royal Canadian Sea Cadet Corps Drake, the , Navy League Cadet Corps and the Girl Rangers where-- a memotial service will be held at 10:30 a.m. President Peter G. Tul- lock of the ONVA today ex- tended a personal welcome to '"'all ex-Navy types" to participate. The ONVA has a clubhouse on Simcoe "Simcoe street south. Battle of the Atlantic Sun- day is sponsored by th Navy League of Canada-- PETER TULLOCK *|communities, a spakesman for) |tions about the life of the new By KEN KELLY Parliament haye fallen off con- OTTAWA (CP) -- Less than leight months ago Parliament| siderably. ; \met in an atmosphere of tension| Broadly speaking, a number lin which the big question was: of reasons lie behind this ap- "How long can it last?" |parent change in attitude, de- Although many of the circum-|spite the fact this Parliament istances are closely parallelled/again finds the goveriument lin the ofrthcoming meeting ofishort of a majority in the 265- Parliament, the political cli-|/member Commons though it is |mate is far less tense and ques-)not so serious a shortage as in 'the last. Flood D anger oben Coamevarked Claimed Less Down Stream 95, Social Credit 24 and New Democrats 17. At the opening of the last Parliament, which followed an election just as this one does, the governing Conser- vatives held 116 seats, the Lib- CALGARY (CP) Floods One factor contributing to the which this week caused evacu-\generally more relaxed air as ation of the Northwest Territor-|the new parliamentary session jes communities of Hay River|@PProaches on May 16 is that a and Fort Simpson . probably|neW government has taken, of- were the result of local condi-|fice. The tendency among MPs they can do. : jthe water resources branch of| After the June election last |the federal department of north-|¥e@!, Ye smaller opposition ern affairs and natural e-/8roups--Svcial Credit and New sources said Thursday. Democrats, whose votes were , essential to the Conservative erals 100, Social Credit 30 and New Democrats 19. tions and should not be followea| i" opposition is to give the Lib- by similar floods at downstream|¢rals a chance to show what Liberal drives for another elec~ jtion and it soon became evident they would try to bring one on in the last Parliament as soon as possible. After some manoeu- vring, the opposition groups made common cause of the de- fence and nuclear arms issues to overthrow the Conservatives. Going into the new Parlia- atives haven't the same reasons tion as the Liberals had last all, - They have been turned out of office. Their strength in all parts of the country except the Prairies has been reduced by the April 8 election. Perhaps an additional reason is the uncertainty about the state of the Conservative party itself. After resignations of three ministers before the -elec- tion and evidence of an attempt to replace John Diefenbaker as jeader, the state of party unity remains untested by the strains ment in opposition, the Conserv-| © for pressing for an early elec-| : ANTI-TYPHOID SHOT This crying youngster ap- residents of flood-ravaged Hay parently doesn't appreciate the value of th anti-typhoid |of a parliamentary session. | The Liberals, before the last |Parliament met, faced none of --(CP Wirephoto) | shot it received with 1,800 INTERPRETING THE NEWS 'Ifice last month,, accused Mr. River, N.W.T. | Firing Of MacKay Said Disgraceful By JAMES NELSON _ The two men conducted. their OTTAWA (CP)--Gordon Chur.| @xchanges through telegrams chill, a former veterans minis-| 0d letters released to reporters ter, says he will seek an inten- gama ta A sive investigation by a pariia-|"" . , P mentary committee later. this\chill_ also cabled Prime Minis- month of the action of the new| ter Pearson in London: "I re- veterans minister, Roger Teil-| quest an immediate reinstate. a ment of MacKay and a cessa- let, in 'releasing a pension com-|" missioner pedi 4 from his| tion of this abuse of ministerial $14,000-a-year post. | authority," Mr. Churchilll,, who was first} The exchanges appeared to trade minister and finally de-| Set the stage for the first heated fence ministter in the Conserva-| Political argument of the new tive government when it. left ofe| Parliamentary session which starts May 16. Ps Mr. MacKay, 64, was available for comment. t. Churchill told reporters at Mr. MacKay was told last Fri- day that his annual term would inot be renewed when it expired Tuesday, 'No Contest' Plea Given By Demara LOS ANGELES (AP)--Ferdl- nand Demara, known as "the great imposter' submitted a "no contest" plea Thursday to a charge of using the mails to defraud, Teilllet Thursday in a telegram of 'a disgraceful act, and an) abuse of your ministerial au- thority." Mr, Teillet replied in a letter that Ken MacKay, who hat been appointed to the Canadian Pensions Commission by the Conservative government, sim- ply was not reappointed when his term expired this week. Mr. Teillet said the same thing had) happened during the oe a tive government's regime to some members who had been! appointed by the previous Lib- eral government. Moreover, Mr. Teillet told Mr. Churchill, the MacKay vacancy . ities ii €\these problems which are re- Both communities are on is- covernment on a vote of confi-| gard Ph : | lands in the giant Mackenzie ; : |garded here as a brake on any River dystem whose headwaters dence--promised the Conserva-|driye for another election soon.| | mee : Sitives. a chance to implement : | store to three the number of e are in the Rocky Mountains and) ipeir' program. However, a number of experi- Soviet Pressure | French-Canadians on the board, the northern prairies and which)" put there was a difference |°NCed MPs don't entirely dis-| land thus enable it to form. a | would be filled by a French- | speaking commissioner to re- The 41-year-old Demara was indicted last Jan. 31 by a fed- eral grand jury in Boston, Mass. The jury charged De- mara used the fictitious name if is set aside to honor those who gave their lives at sea. OLD 6167 -- BELOVED HISTORICAL RELIC There is at least one valid reason why citizens should make an effort to join that May 11 railway excursion to Co- bourg and back aboard old 6167, the CN's famous steam locomotive. They may not have a chance to ride the famous "steam- er' (Jast in this area) after this year. A CN spokesman in Toronto explained it all this way the other day: "No decision has yet been made as to the future of old 6167; whether or not it is destined for a 1964 trip to the junkyard, as some predict, only time can tell, but the 'steam- er' does pose some problems, especially in the way of ex- pensive maintenance. Do you ever realize how difficult it is today to get some of the needed replacement parts for her, and also how expensive they are a One estimate for a new boiler job recently' was $25,000. There is still strong public demand for No. 6167 (it made its debut in 1942) as excursions in the past few months have indicated. The question seem to be this: Will the continued demands be great enough to offset high operational expenses ? It costs the CN more than $400 every time the engine is taken from "the mothballs". Why wouldn't the Federal government subsidize such a worthy project for historical reasons ? It subsidizes other projects without any more appeal than old 6167 The Oshawa Kinsmen Club is sponsoring the May 11 trip Oshawa to Cobourg return. WORKS BOARD CHAIRMANSHIP UNFILLED City Council has decided to take no action for the pres- ent at least to name a chairman for the Board of Works, even on an interim basis. Alderman Cecil Bint, the present chairman, is convalesc- ing after a serious bout with pneumonia, He was ill at home for more than six weeks. He left recently for Florida and will not return for at least two weeks. Aldermen Norman Down and Clifford Pilkey, the re- maining Board members, have been carrying on with diffi- 'culty in Mr. Bint's absence. The Board chairmanship is the "most time-consuming job on Council outside the mayoralty-- it isn't difficult to ivsualize the amount of important work "that has piled up unavoidably because of this unfortunate s¢hain of events, all of which is costly to the municipality. " Council has decided to await Mr. Bint's return from the "Southland before making any final decision as to what should be done. 9 JAYCEES PLAN PROVINCIAL ELECTION FORUM President Fred Ball and an energetic committee from the Oshawa Jaycees have almost completed plans for their Ontario Provincial Election Forum, the format of which will be similar to that of the Jaycees' popular Municipal Elec- tion Forum There are still some kinks in the plan to be worked out, generally it will go this way: All candidates will be invited to speak. Admission to the Forum hall -- to be located in the Kins- men's Community Centre -- will not be restricted Questions can be telephoned in, or be submitted in writ- ing from the floor, but these will not be presented to the can didates until they have been cleared through a_ special screening committee composed of Jaycees who will take full responsibility for all questions submitted. Questions must be (in the committee's opinion) of gen- eral interest and not niended to create illfeeling Who would have a better chance of successfully putting on a political show of such !mmensity than the Oshawa Jaycees ? They have acquired their considerable knowledge of such things the hard way, by trial and error, while other groups "with far more financial backing have stood idly on the side- lines. but HUMANE SOCIETY TAG DAY DUE Don't forget that the Oshawa Humane Society is holding its annual tag day next Sat- urday and that your support is needed. President Ralph Jones and his energetic mem- bership of 76 have rendered the community a _ worth- while service in the past 12 months, One of their most important jobs has had to do with investigating com- plaints of cruelty to animals, of which there have been many; when further action is needed the Society re- ports to the Police and as- sists in the. presentation of the case to the courts, if re- quested. Did you know that the Society has a special trap to catch, without in- jury, squirrels and other animals which sometimes RALPH JONES gain entry to private homes? ;Sure July 27 unless they ge | drainage rights. They hay |yowed to keep picketing "da Couple Picketing ' At Queen's Park TORONTO (CP)--A Bramp- tion. and night' until they get ac- flows north to the Arctic Ocean. llast five yeas, In that period, then. The Conservatives and opposition doubts about The spokesman said records : i K had | 5 " @S'been in power since 1957, They of water levels on northern riv-|haq had five years in which to} ers have been kept only in the| sot their programs into action} count the possibilities of another vote in a year or so. | For one thing, Mr. Diefen-| baker staged a stronger cam-) jpaign this year than in 1962 and spring water levels had reached them were colored by that fact.|i8 generally conceded to have |considerable heights but there had been no serious flooding of settlements. Furthermore, the 1962 election represented a setback for the Conservatives who were re- |held back the anti-Conservative tide to a greater extent than even the Liberals thought possi-| The Hay River rises near the quced to 116 members from 208) Ple. } northern end of the B.C.-Alberta)in 1958 while the Liberals found! beet Ae ae north to Great/new hope of a return to power|to the new parliamentary ses-|Premier Slave Lake. e town of Haylin their gain from 49 seats to|sion with obvious relish and has|May Day parade, a sure sign) River is on an island at the river's mouth, 500 miles north- west of Edmonton. 100 He has been looking forward set his sights on a return to! This tended to give impetus to| power | The spokesman said the Hay River broke up earlier than usual this year and carried a huge volume of ice into the still- frozen mouth of the riv ; ing a jam and flooding | munity. RANKS SECOND The Mackenzie River, second in size in North America to the Mississippi, flows out of -- the lake west of Hay River and bends northward to its conflu- than 100 promotions in the 'last to x ence with the Liard hakeup TORONTO (CP)--An organiz- ational shakeup of the provin- cial police has resulted in more month, Commissioner Eric Silk In OPP "" Outlined By Silk | |and the appointmentt of a per- {sonnel director to head a new personnel branch. Mr. Silk--first commissioner receive the rank of deputy minister, aimedd at making the The Liard rises in northern told a press conference Thurs-| opp directly hedpnnble te the British Columbia and _ flows northeastward to join the Mac- kenzie at Fort Simpson, 625 miles northwest of Edmonton Fort Simpson is on an island at b the junction. The spokesman said that dur- ing the spring thaw ice jams {occur nearly every year around Fort Simpson but evidently the }movement of ice down the Liard this year was greater than the later-melting MacKenzie could handle. WEATHER FORECA day. He said the reorganization, which started with Mr. Silk's appointment May 3--a few days efore Mr. Justice W. D. Roach's report on his one-man royal commission into organ- ized crime in Ontario was ta- bled in the legislature--includes a completely new system of pro- motion. The program also includes re- shaping of training programs ST Showers Warm §S Tonight aturday legislature and improving liai- son .with the attorney-general's department -- said 62 officers have been appointed to posts ranging from chief inspector to corporal. Ten sergeants and 46 corpor- als have also been appointed, he said, TO INCREASE FORCE Mr. Silk said a trial recruit- ment campaign in the Kitche- ner-Owen Sound area prodyced 50 new officers. The campaign /is aimed at increasing the 2,500- {member force by 500 men th"s year and 1,500 in the next few | years. | Earlier, Attorney - General | Cass told the conference that in order to perpetuate the high qita'ity of the OPP, closer at- tention must be paid to the chain of command and_ there must be improved knowledge of Forecasts issued by the Tor-/Sault Ste. Marie: Clouding over, the force's activities in the field, onto, weather office at 5 a.m.iwith a few showers Saturday. EDT: Synopsis: A few showers. are Winds northwesterly forecast for later today as a weak disturbance crosses_south- ern Ontario. Warm! rtly cloudy to sunny weather is fore- cast for. Northern Ontario today with a change to cooler weather and scattered showers or snow- flurries Saturday. '| Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Lake Huron, southern Georgian Bay regions, Windsor, London: Saturday 10 Warm today, cooler Saturday. Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, High Saturday Windsor 48 8 St. Thomas . London Kitchener Wingham . Mount Forest ..... Hamilton St. Catharines Clouding over with'a few scat-:Toronto tered showers this afternoon and evening. Saturday partly cloudy and continuing warm . Winds southerly 10 to 20. ; Niagara, Lake Ontario, Hali- burton regions, Hamilton, Tor- jonto: Warmer today, clouding jover towards evening with a few iscattered showers late today and tonight. Saturday partly cloudy and continuing warm |Winds southerly 10 to 20. Northern Georgian Bay, Tim jagami, Cohcrane regions, North Bay, Sudbury: Mostly sunny jthis afternoon, Clouding over jagain with a few showers Satur iday. Winds west to northwest 20 | Saturday Cooler Saturday. | Algoma, White River regions HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS 24-HOUR SERVICE 313 ALBERT ST. 723-4663 Peterborough °. Trenton Killaloe ... Muskoka North Bay .. Sudbury .. Karlton Kapuskasing White River .. Moosonee S.S. Marie ~sssscess Timmins ....... 'eee to 20 finer administration and diffu- sion of duties. } Mr. Silk said he had discussed recruitment, a shorter work | week, traffic problems and spe- cial courses during visits to 27 of the OPP's 235 detachments. "Tt learn and understand their problems and they learn some- | thing of mine," he said. Mr. Silk said a series of | courses in supervisory and com- mand work will begin soon at the OPP College here. Among major appointments was the promotion of Inspector | Jack Whitty, recently districct inspector at Chatham and Perth to chief inspector of the traffic) division. Ups US. Budget |the fact that Soviet actions in Berlin and Cuba have forced a sharp rise in U.S. defence costs. One U.S. military authority re- cently informed Congress the budget rise beeause of Berlin and Cuba could be estimated at about $10,000,000,000 a year. It.is unlikely, therefore, that /Soviet pressure in the Carib- bean will be reduced. It is more likely that Castro By HAROLD MORRISON Canadian Press Staff Writer Fidel Castro has been ac- corded the full "red carpet" treatment in Moscow, including a public place beside Soviet Khrushchev in. the of his ascendency in the Com-) munist world. | Many thoughtful. Americans tend to dismiss the importance of this public acclaim, suggest-|has been brought to Moscow, ing it is merely another Soviet/not so much to placate him as gesture to placate the bearded/ty confer with him in planning Cuban leader, whose muclear\new moves in the Caribbean missiles had been taken away,/and Latin America. Despite the and to make sure he doesn'timuch - publicized U.S. - sup- fall into the embrace of Chi- ported Alliance for Progress, na's Mao Tse-tung. _ |the Latin region still is loaded There even are suggestions) with poverty and ignorance and in U.S. quarters that when the} ripe for new revolutions. warm reception for Castro is) Thus the Kremlin appears to over, the Cuban premier willlpe publicizing Castro before the return to Cuba with little in the|Communist world as an indica- way of increased Soviet aid.\\ion of his leadership' stature-- The argument is that mainte-|and possibly to impress on nance of a Soviet base in Cuba other Latin Americans. the is costing the Kremlin, about|nower this man holds in the $1,000,000 a day and the Rus-/Communist camp. It may be an sians probably are anxious to/example to others how. they, see this cost shige rather'to9, might succeed in Castro's than increased. / path, The view, however, overlooks WERE AT CONVENTIONS WINNIPEG (GP)--More than, 39,000 delegates attended. 226 conventions in Manitoba. in 1962. Morley Decker, assistant direc- tor of the Manitoba Travel and Convention Association, said the conventions helped add nearly) $3,000,000 to the province's econ-| omy. SMOOTH... SPIRITED! DAN Z JOR ES OSHAWA'S ORIGINAL CARPET CENTRE | ot 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. a flavon. nod Wud os Serve cold- on the rocks or with your favourite mixer Switch to Z/VG | Jefferson Thorne and supplied false records to obtain a teach- ing post at Winchendon, Mass., High School. Demara once posed as a Ca- nadian navy doctor and per- formed surgery in Korea, He was a guard in the Texas prison system, taught in Maine and lived for a time in a religious community. |quorum to study pensions cases jin French, Mr. Teillet dismissed Mr. /Churchill's further complaint that dropping Mr. MacKay meant loss of representation for |veterans of the First World War. There were five commis- sioners. who were veterans of both the First and Second World| Wars, Mr. Teillet said. | Mr. Churchill said he will raise the issue as a subject of questioning the new government in the Commons, and will press) for an intensive investigation by the standing committee on vet- erans' affairs. The committee is one that is required by the rules to be set up each session. | "OIL FURNACE? PERRY DAY OR NIGHT 723-3443 SAIL WHITE EMPRESS NEWEST, LARGEST $5 IE SS MORTGAGES. Ample Funds for Ist MORTGAGES 2nd MORTGAGES We Also Purchase Ist and 2nd Mortgages N.H.A, LOANS ARRANGED You Will Find OUR SERVICE 1S FASTER OUR COST IS LOWER SCHOFIELD-AKER ' 'Limited _ 723-2265 -- 728.3376 After' Hours 728-3376 Hm RUGS Multi colar foorn back RUGS COMING e y ton; Ont., couple, Mr. and Mrs.| G. L. Shaver, began picketing Queen's Park Thursday in an attempt to get government help) in obtaining & drainage ditch) permit for their Halton County peat farm. The Shavers say they will ve a Jose the farm through foreclo-! 52% Simeee N. @ Commercial ond Industrio! Sites @ Leaseback @ Development Paul Ristow REALTOR 728-9474 EVENTS Now On Classified Page In order to facilitate easier reading for all the vital statistics, The Coming Events will be moved over to the same page as the births, deaths, in memoriams, and obituaries. 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