Oshawa Times (1958-), 16 May 1963, p. 2

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ice a RRA AP nce Besa Be Ya, as ls Sa a, « eu" ids Mews ay Dig Ses one ' Se i A i 2 'THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, May 16, 1963 GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN BUS OPERATION DEFICIT $35,415 FOR 1962 © Speaking of AUSTERITY YEAR (and who isn't 7): The bus division of the PUC had a deficit of $35,415.35 in 1962. This is to be compared with $28,553.89 in 1961 and Parliament Meets To Begin Work On Economic Program 3:30 p.m.--Chief Justice Rob- ert Taschereau, administrator of Canada, reads the Speech from the Throne. Attention for the first week or dustrial expansion fund and an economic council ts set econo- mic targets. Finance Miistern Walter Gordon is expected to bring down a budget about mid- also has the opportunity of mov- ing a motion of non-confidence. The government's program has already been well-publicized during the election campaign. OTTAWA (CP) -- Parliament, testing ground of the new Lib- eral government's 60 days of decision, met today to begin work on a' program heavily $19,646.05 in 1960, the year the PUC took over from the Oshawa Street Railway (CNR), The PUC will ask City Council, which represents the taxpayers, to pick up this deficit tab next Tuesday. The interesting thing about the new hike is that it has resulted despite an increase in passengers carried -- there were 3,135,986 in 1962 as compared with 2,984,931, thanks to such things as im- proved service and an in- crease in bus miles operated by 23,000 last year. Total expenditures in 1962 were $397,848.49 as compared with revenue of $362,433.17 -- (revenue was up by $12,000), PUC Manager Bruce An- nand reported. If passenger volume is up together with revenue, then what is the real reason for the continuing upswing in deficits ? The PUC says it caused mostly by such things as increasing labor costs, including "generous" fringe benefits (Pension Plan and sick-leave, not enjoyed by personnel under the previous management), The bulk of the bus division personnel is composed of 36 "No. 1 first-class operators" whose pay- scale currently is $2.16 an hour. The PUC now has in operation a new fleet of 21 buses, total indebtedness for which was $249,495.06 at the end of December, 1962 -- $21,340.97 was paid off on this amount in 1962 and $16,065.65 in 1961. Debenture repayments are heavy, but so was the annual repair bill for the broken-down old buses. They balance pretty well, The story of large on the Canadian scene, mostly because bus transportation, while essential to many, is unpopular with the majority who use automobiles exclusively. There were some bitter disputes locally in the 1959 bus plebiscite campaign as to whether or not a city-owned bus service could pay its own way financially. was BRUCE ANNAND hy bus deficits is commonplace today weighted with economic meas- ures, Before getting down to work in the first session since the April 8 election which brought the Liberals to power, a round of traditional formalities was observed, The schedule for today's open- ing went this way: ' 10 a.m, EDT--Three new sen- ators, including Speaker Maur- ice Bourget (L--Quebec), take the oath before the Senate. 10:30 a.m.--Commons meets, elects a speaker, Senate, Com- mons adjourn, 2:45 pm. -- again, 3 p.m.--Commons summoned to Senate, | Kent Steel Pickets Restricted HAMILTON (CP)--Pickets at Steel Products Li have been restricted to two by }a court interim injunction is }sued Wednesday. The restraining measures against the 45 striking employ- ees of Local 288 International |Molders' and Allied Workers' /Union (CLC) will remain in ef-| | fect until Saturay, after which the €ompany could apply for an extension of the injunction. company officials earlier in the day they meet in Toronto today to nego- tiate a settlement of the strike. Police and strkers clashed Tuesday when pickets tried to will] so centres on the throne speech 'outlining the legislative pro- gram, Today's formalities are followed by addresses Friday by two freshmen MPs--Pauline Jewett (Northumberland) and Auguste Choquette (Lotbiniere) |--moving and seconding the tra- | ditional address in reply. GETS CHANCE MONDAY Opposition leader Diefenbaker bent on a comeback to office, gets his first crack at the gov- ;ernment's program Monday, He June, The government is well along the road to setting up a royal commission on biculturalism as a forum for defining problems and recommending solutions in relations between French and English. * On the social welfare front, work is being done on legisla. ., | tion to establish a contributory Over the period of its life.) portable pension plan, desig- Parliament is to consider meas-| nated as a priority measure for ures for low interest loans for) the opening session. municipal development, an in '10 SET ZONE Economic measures and efforts towards easing what Mr. Pear- son has called the. strains on Confederation are the key- stones, A new department of indus- try is promised. So is legisla. tion to create two agriculture ministers--one for the east and one for the west, sme me: Seek Showdown In Socred Rift By KEN KELLY OTTAWA (CP)--An. effort to bring a final showdown in So- cial Credit's internal struggle and to point the party in a new direction is to be made at aj special national council meet- ing. A reliable informant said Wednesday night that national leader Robert, Thomspon has re. |quested that national president |Martin Kellen of Regina call a |special session of the national }council, governing body of the jorganization between conven- tions. The showdown is to be pegged to the resignation of Dr. Guy Marcoux, MP for Quebec-Mont- morency who quit the Quebec wing of the party last weekend and gave up his post as party Union representatives an d! whip. He plans to sit in Parlia- announced| ment as an independent Social Credit MP, : His resignation was regarded here as an episode in the un- easy double leadership of Mr. Thompson and deputy leader The government also is mov. ing toward establishing a 12 mile coastal fishing zone to pro- tect fisheries and has promised an independent commission to drew the map of electoral dis- tricts. A federal - provincial confer. ence to work out a program of fisheries development and es- tablishment of a capital fund for the Atlantic Development Board also are expected to be part of its program. The governing Liberals are under one obvious handicap, With 192 members they are four short of a majority in the 265. seat chamber. Progressive Con. servatives have 95, Social Credit 23 and New Democrats 17, There is one independent So- ized statement over the names of six Social Credit MPs was sent to Governor-General Van- jer promising support for a Lib. eral government. The six later repudiated the statement. Mr, Thompson named Dr.) Marcoux to investigate the ac. tion of the six. Later, he said four had acted "in good faith" in signing. Three men were dis- ciplined and the matter was de. clared closed by Mr, Caouette. Then Dr. Marcoux turned in his resignation at a closed meet- ing of the Quebec wing last weekend, He said later the cau- cus dealt too lightly with the men responsible for the pledge of support to the Liberals, Three--he declined to name them--remained on the Quebec executive and he did not want to be associated with them. Meanwhiie, Mr, Caouette said ] of the six MPs was taken to forestall an at- tempt to keep the Conserva- tives in power through Social Credit and New. Democratic Party support. coux, Some of the issues which di. in the open. The government is going ahead with plans to ac- quire nuclear weapons, a ques- tion whiclt divided the parties in the last Parliament. the unueua ine unusual step step from 1948 until 1957--were on hand for the opening, Mr. St. Laurent as a guest and not: a participant. cial Credit MP, Dr. Guy Mar- vide the parties already are out Two former prime ministers|Proval of an inter-allied NATO --Mr. Diefenbaker and Louis St. nuclear force at the alliance's Laurent, Liberal prime minister | @'n Donald K. Slayton, co-ordin- ator of astronaut affairs, and astronaut Walter M. Schirra, Jr., left, smoke cigars at Mer- CONCENTRATING ON COOPER he circles the earth in hie Faith 7 space capsule, --(AP Wirephoto) cury Control Center at Cape Canaveral Wednesday as they watch reports on progress of astronaut Gordon Cooper as France Expected To Approve Plan | OTTAWA (CP)--France is ex.; pected to go along with ap.| min here next | week, diplomatic sources here | Say, This force will comprise units jalready in being: several Amer-| jican Polaris missile submar. isterial ister meeting FRIDAY Another great attraction THE PROPHETS division in Europe will be the fourth largest nuclear force in the world until the West Ger-| man force is completed in early | 1965. The French "force de frappe" will have only about one-quar- ter the firepower of the Cana. dian air division, It will have some 50 Mirage The average taxpayer will not quibble too much if our bus-operation deficits are small; if they show a tendency to Merease annually, as has been the case in Oshawa, to a point where they reach a sizeable sum, the taxpayer is bound to ask some searching questions and that is likely what will happen in the near future. This is especially true of thousands who never use the bus 'service. The PUC is doing a good administrative job, but big deficits can be disturbing things, especially in an Austerity Year. HARRY JERMYN PREPARES FOR OFFICE Harry W. Jermyn, appointed Deputy Magistrate, has been busy getting accustomed to courtroom life this week by sitting in with Magistrates Frank S, Ebbs and Crawford Guest, ' The 59-year-old District Returning Officer for Ontario riding in the last two elections will be assigned to Traffic and Magistrate's Courts in Ontario. County. He was appointed a Justice of the Peace in 1961. He is Earlier statements that the CF-104 would carry a one-meg- jaton bomb, 50 times more pow- erful than the Hiroshima bomb), have since been denied by au. thoritative sources, The size "now is estimated at a maximum ak-| of 60 kilotons. ss publicly that the DEATHS since it was started Saturday|new force will simply be an ex. were of the poison pen variety./ tension of British and American NATO) By THE CANADIAN PRESS | et from) Winnipeg--Donald G. McKen-| One letter called Negroes! nuclear power. will play stop trucks from entering the|Real Caouette, who also heads | " ines in the Mediterranean, Brit-| bombers each carrying a bomb Pan ving the skirmisy, en {hy MEOs queue wink. They| DENY CLAIM Money Raisers (i patsy comma oot oon ee te | rbc Pa ed oer mer vip ay peer eh os for) The New Democrats denied| pei Balsam and The Neth. Birechiona bomb : ' est Fish, international vice-|the national leadership at the|this and Mr, Thompson de-| Get Hate Letters sepa d Piateny prod eh ei he : a bon, president of the union, and 1961 leadership convention. scribed such a suggestion as "a pariad Peeks " ne BaD aa ae The RCAF air division by the Company President Stanley So-| In addition, Dr. Marcoux| fabrication of somebody's imag. | TORONTO (CP)--An orean- pant nk ck. porter vod wae end of this year.will have 200 bol reached a truce at an im-jvoiced, after his resignation,|ination." 'Conservative leader fear dan ar avis aia ps H oko i Son r war-| CF-104 low-level jet bombers, of |Promptu sidewalk conference. | qissatisfaction with the Quebec] John Diefenbaker declined com- for U ite af bn Beh undsjheads, = {much shorter range than the The strikers stopped work wing's manner of presenting So-|ment. So did Prime Minister] orati ni se ings ogee "lp This force will have two main| Mirage and each carrying a nu- |Monday after rejecting a com-/cial Credit to the public, par-|Pearson whose Liberals had Kin a anid Wadnneras a ntlend" Beil " pablo ia' _ Naar clear bomb. Ibe wed iy ng net tala. ticularly in the 1963 election! come to power. the Mproup bas received a nam: | weapons oy Suroeees Selous: feat te a teadua? sabe aa dtortty When the Social Credit MPs|ber of hate letters and tele-|and to co-ordinate the assign. | They seek an hourly 30-cent! from Social Credit principles met Wednesday for their regu-| phone calls. |ment of targets of various nu- increase and have been nego-|which had heen Whiea "@cnle lar pre - session caucus, Mr.| Milton Cadsby, a lawyer and/can control tiating for about a year, Basic! ately expounded ho the wentein Thompson and Mr. Caouette | chairman of the social action) Competent sources say agree- wage now is $1.60 an hour. aiaiente. , | Absented themselves for anjcommittee of Holy Blossom/ ment of the French has bee jhour, conferring, they said, on|Temple, said a handful of the|achieved by NATO's undert M E h Pl ir oo ai sien percep hinged in Mr, Thomp-' 400 letters received by the fund ing to stre | Ever since election § : actacnen ans at wath Social Credit elected! One of the six who signed the Lake Labor Talk 2" unprecedented 26 MPs from|Pledge--Robert Beaule (Quebec , uebec to Parliament, Mr.| East), -- became caucus chair-| beasts and animals." The fund| These sources say the | OTTAWA (CP)--Labor Minis-/Thomson and Mr. Caouette/man, part of a slate which one i will jter Allan MacEachen meets} have been pictured in a power MP said was submitted by Mr.| raisers, who include prominent] council, which will me Torontonians, were called Wednesday to Friday a former Whitby mayor and town councillor, boat-builder, cabinet-maker, realtor and Public School teacher. He taught School for 15 years in Northern Ontario (part of the time in Indjan Reserves) and for 10 years in Whitby. During the Second World War, he worked at General Motors (Oshawa) on airplane construction (Mosquito Bombers). LITTLE NOTES FROM HERE AND THERE William Allen, chairman of the Metropolitan Toronto Council, will be guest speaker Thursday, May 30, at the monrthly dinner-meeting of the Catholic Luncheon Club. His topic will be "Metropolitan Municipal Government" Munici- pal; heads from district areas will be present, including Pickering Village, Pickering Township, Ajax Town, Whitby Town, Whitby Township, East Whitby Township, Bowman- United States. Labor Secretary| |Willard Wirtz here Friday to jlaunch high - level efforts to |bring labor peace to the trou- jbled Great Lakes shipping in- dustry. | Their talks will be a prelude to a further meeting next Tues- \day in Washington when the !a- bor ministers will be joined by; [President Claude Jodoin of the| jCanadian Labor Congress and |AFL - CIO President George |Meany. Aim of the two-stage round of jtalks is to halt disruptions of |shipping and prevent further vi- struggle, In the April election, Social Credit strength was cut to 24 members. The four western MPs were untouched but Mr. Caouette's Quebec wing lost eight seats and gained two oth- ers for a net loss of six. The Social Credit MPs, both the defeated and elected, met in caucus Apri] 10 and 11. It was still uncertain whether the Conservatives would turn the government over to the Liber. als. Mr. Thompson has said that) Thompson -and Mr. Caouette and endorsed by the MPs. "filty, dirty, nists," INTERPRETING THE NEWS British, Belgian Relations Aided By ALAN HARVEY Canadian Press Staff Writer jQueen Astrid. Exile and con stinking Commu- _jmand for NATO and probably mer Manitoba cabinet minister. -|Killed his mother, the beloved down the aspect of a new com }make no public reference to the two French squadrons being in- | cluded TOUCHY SUBJECT Handling of the French point of view has been delicate be- cause France is embarked on formation of her own nuclear "force de frappe" and has de- clined to make it part of a NATO nuclear arm Diplomatic sources said the .|NATO inter-allied force is tail- jzie, 76, one of Canada's fore-) /most agriculturalists and a for- Montreal -- Rolande Desorm- eaux, 37, French-language ra dio and television singer and wife of Robert L'Herbier, pro-} gram director of station CFTM- TV Montreal; of cancer, | Quebec -- Adjutor Perreault,| 63, head of the fire prevention! branch of the Quebec City fire 'department Manila--Sabino (Rocky) Man- gubat, a Filipino bantamweight bexer; of injuries received in A terrific combination for a tall, cool drink villé and Darlington Township. Six hundred Oshawa peo- ple;were among the 1,011 aboard last Saturday's special ex- cursion of old No. 6167, the famous CNR steam engine, to Cobourg and back under auspices of the Oshawa Kinsmen's Club. Now that old 6167 has established her local. popularity beyond shadow of a doubt, what organization will sponsor her next fora special excursion? Remember this important fact; the chances are good that the old girl won't be around too long, what with the high cost of repair bills, etc. SGT. WARNER OF OPP TRANSFERRED Sgt. William Warner -- favorably known in Press circles as "the newspapermen's friend" -- is being transferred from the; Whitby detachment of the OPP to a new position in Niagara Falls. He was recently promoted to the rank of sergeant. He has been at Whitby six years and served with the Cobourg and Lindsay detachments before that. renee Light Trading inant aks pian! | or- » anada's needs, at|the ring olence in the long struggle be-|the meeting decided unani-| Fabiola--fabiolous. troversy stalked the family. babe for Canada's needs at | the ring tween the CLC and its former} mously not to participate in any; That's how one London news-| A shy, bespectacled youth, | 7 shit di KAA hie jaffiliate, the independent Sca-|negotiations or deals with either|paper describes Queen Fabiola,|worshipping his glamorous| The cight-squadron RCAF at \farers' International Union of|of the two major parties. now in Britain with King Bau-|father, Baudouin mounted. the} Canada, Within a few days, a notar-|douin on a four-day state visit,/throne hesitantly, Now he and| jem : > | HEAT WITH OIL - . jand it seems an appropriately|Fabiola are a popular pair, and | WEATHER FORECAST DIXON'S junrestrained .comment on anjthe once wobbly monarchy be- unusually happy occasion. come the most. cohesive factor] Warmer Weather OIL | SERVING OSHAWA OVER | D * Fri j 50 YEARS ~lonto weather office at 5 a.m.:|partly cloudy with a few scat- For, the royal visitors arejin a country in which Walloon| j}serving as a symbol of the rec-'and Fleming are divided over| Forecasts issued by the Tor-|Sudbury: Clear tonight, Friday ntain Pipe Line each| Synopsis: Fair weather pre-|tered showers. Winds light, |vails over Ontario as a large| Algoma, Cochrane, White Special Weekly Message To Members Of CHAMBERS FOOD CLUB Try TINI with Coke or ginger ale too for bracing refreshment TINI is available throughout Ontario listed under "Flavoured Wines."' » pa PARTON |THE PARKDALE WINES LTD. 24-HOUR SERVICE 313 ALBERT ST. 723-4663 Trans-Mou ahead %& On index, industrials fell .96 to 643.25, golds .16 to 88.08, base metals .79 to 216.24 and western Oils .35 to 125.40. Final volume was 3,946,000chares compared jonciliation between the ene and. religion, families of Britain and Belgium, | a : ome relations have been|A GOOD TEAM cf strained since ex-king Leopold's| French papers say Baudouin wartime surrender to the Ger-|and Fabiola.are "more a team mans. than a couple."' Yet the 34-year- Now London is seeing for it- old sate had no easy road to self the growing self-assurance| Popularity. As one of six chil-| jof_young Baudouin, who reluc-| yet ay Srunieh farsiig' the eed jtantly succeeded the father he eas ae rv | idolized, and attributing the red Dona Fabiola de Mora y| 7 ° |Aragon was known as a deeplv 4 : ; change largely to the unassum-|'*" "5: high-pressure area drifts slowly|River, Western James Bay re-|ing woman at his side |religious person. She had to eastward, There has been con-| gions: Variable cloudiness to-| 'British columnists observe|OVercome much suspicion in ar, et siderable shower activity in the night. Friday variable cloudi-|that the couple often hold hands|Belgium's anti-clerical circles. | midwestern United States. This/ ness with a few scattered show-/in public, Since their marriage|_ The success that was to be| ' is expected to spread eastward ers. Winds light. in 1960, they have grown stead-|Fabiola's was foreshadowed for} RICHARD HUDNUT es ay with 3,664,000 Tuesday. jto Ontario Friday, : Forecast Temperatures ily in the affection of a Belgian|this reporter in a conversation | Labrador, losing as much as} Lake ot pe vol Fesion, Wind- Low tonight, High Friday People that has long looked|in Madrid three years ago with / TORONTO (CP)--After indi-/1% earlier, led base metals| °°"; attly cloudy tonight with| Windsor 48 70 upon its monarchy with suspic-/La Condesa de la Valdene, bet: .cations of recovery in late after-\down with 'a loss of 1%. Geco\@ few scattered showers or|St. Thomas .. 65 jion, They have been, as a Lon-|ter known 'in the 1920s as peren- noop, igdustrials closed nearly|slipped % and Noranda and thundershowers. Friday varia-/London .... 70 |don paper notes, generally ial runner-up to Helen Wills a point lower during moder-|Craigmont both eased %. Inter- ble Slpndsness with a few scat-/ Kitchener * 70 | praised for their "'niceness, sin-|Moody in the centre court of ately light trading on theastock national Nickel: advanced %. | (°C? Ne bd Shundershow.| Wingham 70 |cerity and goodness of heart."/ Wimbledon. market Wednesday taht A little warmer. Winds) Hamilton 65 Somehow the king and queen| When she heard that Fabiola Increased weakness among 8 k E Lake # N bs nes eee j have humanized one of the most/was to marry Baudouin she steels accounted for much of Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Niag-|Toronto .... . |tigid courts in Europe. Fabiola) ..iq: "Fabiola has an exqusite- HE'S THROUGH Home Permanent i the decline with Algoma drop- 'ping %, Steel Company of Can- ada easing 4%, Dominion Bridge INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -- Par. nelli Jones smashed through still another speed ceiling as he turned a practice lap at the In- ara, Lake Ontario regions, Lon-| don,t Hamilton: Clear tonigth, becoming cloudy toward day- Peterborough .... gn ee t | Killaloe break, Friday variable cloudi-|Muskoka ... is Belgium's first queen to re-| ' Nac tk. apelin a Tady in-wait.| ess of soul. The fact that she ing |should be selected by Baudouin : instead of a film star is very The jinx that hung over the monarchy has been banished. Baudouin had a tragic child- hood, shadowed by the death of/ his grandfather Albert and by| \the motorcar accident _ that! ONLY TO = SPOT CASH | OR Nagy Motors ( TERMS "JOHN AL J. Opposite the Shopping Centre 728-5178 KING ST. W. falling % and Dominion Found- Ties: and Steel dipping \. Minus signs were scattered through most other main list groups as well. Aluminium, Walker-Gooderham and Canada Malting all lost %, Distillers Seagrams and ness with a few scattered show-| North Bay . ers. A little warmer. Winds Sudbury . light, Earlton Toronto: Mainly clear to.| Kapuskasing ... night. Friday partly cloudy with| White River. a few scattered showers. A lit-|Moosonee .... gle-lap speed of 150.729 m.p.h.|tle warmer. Timmins in qualifications for the 1962) Georgian Bay, Haliburton, Ti-|/S.S. Marie 500-mile race. 'magami regions, North Bay, thrilling to me." NOW To hove that carpet or chest- | ertield cleaned protessionally in Oshawa's Original Carpet Cleaning Centre . where fully guaranteed satisfaction is i@ Ossured, Phone 728-4681 NU-WAY RUG CO. LTD. 174 wry ST. 98% saic Reg $1.25 Size dianapolis Motor Speedway Wednesday at 153.139 miles an hour. Jones became the first driver. to demolish the once- magical barrier of 150 miles an hour when he turned in a sin TRY STUDEBAKER World's Only Convertible STATION WAGON International Utilities dipped % and narrow losses went to Calgary Power, Bank of Montreal and Alberta Gas, ' Closing at higher prices were Canada General Investments, | up %, Levy up 5%, Interprovin-| cial Pipe Line and Moore both) ahead % and Shell Oil and "OIL FURNACE? " PERRY DA¥ AR-NIGHT 723-3443 with crystal-clear waving lotion for deep take curls STORE NAME COMING 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. As a general rule, they will be print- ed on the third classified page. rt Limited Time Offer MITCHELL'S DRUGS (osHawa) LIMITED 9 SIMCOE TELEPHONE STN. 723-3431 LIST FREE DELIVERY BOLAHOOD REAL ESTATE -- MORTGAGES 725-6544

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