§ THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tharsdey, May 23, 1963 Protection Sought From Bureaucrats OTTAWA (CP)--The govern- when Parliament was dissolved ment suggested Wednesday thati/for the April 8 federal election. Parliament itself make the de-| Douglas Fisher (NDP -- Port cision on whether to establish|Arthur) has proposed a resolu- special machinery to protect the/tion this session to create the of- little man from bureaucrats. |fice of parliamentary counsel Warm Weather Needed For Way Sought To Allow Spring Crops Blind To Read Paper LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- Al- though an extended period of| ' By GERRY McNEIL ther h an : = ge ed coggel -- : A QUEBEC (CP) Electronic of up to 120 words a minute. between 1952 and 1961, early vegetable crops in south-,aldes now help the deaf to hear) Such a machine would cost' Mr. Lawton also suggested jing the blind to read at speeds States. He said 7,500 went south |}western Ontario, agriculture and the dumb to speak. ($50,000, however, compared/that engineers take part more Justice Minister Chevrier said)who would examine grievances|representatives from Norfolk to| Widespread efforts are betng| With the present cost of $500 for|in politics, particularly at the in the Commons its rules com-jof Canadian citizens "which|Fssex. counties agreed Wednes-\made to create a device that) Machines like the Optophone, decision-making levels when en- mittee might study suggestions|arise in their relations with the of creating a parliamentatyjadministration of the federal commissioner or ombudsman,|state in Canada," and report on such as some other countries/them to the Commons. have, The ombudsman is an official) ASKS VIEWS appointed by a legislature to in-/ Lawyer Andrew Brewin (NDP vestigate complaints from the|-~Toronte Greenwood), long ac- public of cases of alleged high- tive in civil liberties groups, lhandedness by government offi-/asked Mr. Chevrier for the new leials, Sweden has two of them,|/sovernment's views on the sub- jone dealing in civil and the/ject. lother in military law. "It seems to me that this is a A bill along these lines was|Matter for Parliament to deter- lintroduced last session by Art|mine, rather than the minister \Smith, Conservative MP for|of justice," Mr, Chevrier said. Calgary South who did not| It might be referred to the seek re-election. The --__--|{s to be set up this session under the chairmanship of Commons speaker Alan Macnaughton. "If that would be agreeable, that perhaps would be an excel- | | A Few Strong | | Ind tri ] f bri the matt nt gi , | ustTlals Ito the attention of the House," e \Mr, Chevrier added. ' Hike Market | In addition to Mr. Fishers bill died|CoOmmittee on procedure which! day that warm weather is! needed soon to help bring riong! spring crops. Knneth Hunter of the On- tario agriculture department's fruit and vegetable inspection jservice at Leamington, Essex} County, said the blossom sea-| son is nearly over in most fruit jerops and, barring serious lfrost, yields should be normal! jexcept -in peaches. | | Peach orchards were dam- jaged heavily by cold winter |nights in January and February 'and Mr, Hunter and other fruit lexperts estimate it will be late) June before it is.known how se- }Hously yields will be affected. Warm weather is needed es- | pecially for corn crops. Roy |Richards, agricultural represen- tative in Norfolk, said corn planting is almost. completed, |but the corn is not germinating as fast as last year because of cool weather and frequent show- ldevice, since 1919 can't réad|@@y. It ends Friday. will allow the blind to "'read"| ordinary newspapers, mail and|CUTS NUMBER Tonal morse cuts down the, books quickly and easily. cautions Dumber of sounds to 63 distinct Dr. R. A. Beddoes, a cautious) gnes and is a promising substt-| 99-year-old electrical engineer, described some of the problems 'Ute sigh rot acco codes of the involved to delegates Wednes-|9'™P¢ Machines, day at the Engineering Institute) Dr. Beddoes, a native of Lon- of Canada convention. don, England, and a professor He said simple devices to/at UBC for six years now, hopes translate letters into sounds for|t® give tonal morse the acid test the blind have been known since|With blind persons later this 1914. However, they turn out a Year. complex variety of signals that) A dozen other technical pa- make fast reading impossible. jPers were presented as the con-' A 78-year-old English woman/Vention, with about 600 dele- using the Optophone, the oldest\Sates, got bunder way Wednes- jeFgy resources requiring engin. eering know-how were involved senwies CLEANERS and LAUNDERERS OSHAWA - PORT WHITBY - Co BOWMANVILLE - SCARSORO Curtains, Dropes, Blenkets, Rugs OSHAWA'S ONLY UNIONIZED SHOP 723-4631 50 MAL more than five pages daily with! Outgoing President F. L. Law- it before tiring. She is eonsid- ton of Montreal urged forma. ered an expert, tion of a national science pro- ; : gram to cut the flow of Cana- PRODUCES SOUNDS 'dian engineers to the United The Optophone produces three; Se --_ distinct sounds for each letter and requires "a vast' number of decisions" by the reader, Dr. : jresolution, Social Credit Leader Z TORONTO (CP) -- A few 8€| Robert Thompson has intro-| A. Taylor, Oxford repre- MEET MAYOR WHITTON lected strong industrials held) guced a bill to create the office| ntative, said continued cold, t stoc , t highe , wet weather can set corn crops mayor, Dr. Charlotte Whitton, husband during conversation nde aie ron age gla | 'lof parliamentary commissioner, | . \ground during. light tradi back sériously. secretary - general of NATO at 'dinner given by Prime before dinner in Chateau Wednesday. . Ben $n} rpc of Mel Chamberlain, summer as- 'and Canadian Prime Minister Minister Wednesday night. Laurier. Abitibi, Algoma Steel and|""y>, "RM dy SESS 1. Leet sistant representative in Huron Lester Pearson greet Ottawa's Mrs. Stikker stands beside her Canada Packers A all jumped|, ohn R, oy porns ee ri County, said: "If farmers can't pean saa a a point, the latter hitting a new|/@5 Proposed a O provide) get it planted soon, it won't be | for 'review of administrative! " allow fast reading. |just to be always prepared for) 1963 § « |mature 'by fall. be ween jlats pend po Mac ahead ped powers and to relieve om! He also noted slow growth of "Spelled speech" uses a pho- He suggested a propane-injec. | during the entife session but their mis-application,' which he| oat, barley, hay and pasture|toclectric letter recognizer to tion system hooked to the car's|featured a small turnover. says embodies principles advo-|crops. a translate print into sounds like throttle. When the accelerator! Rising 1% were Canadian Tire,\°#ed by the Canadian Bar As-| Meck the same conditions ex-|those of - alphabet and is the pedal is stepped on hard, a|Building Products, Pembina and|Sociation. d elsewhere in the regio est to learn, all valve wotild allow propane into|/Canada Packers B, and Bank of the manifold to keep the engine|Montreal, Shell Oil, Investors g and provide the|Syndicate A and Moore all ive car could|gained smaller fractions. ers. D Beddoes said. He has ben working at the University of British Columbia for the last three years on tonal morse and '"'spélled speech") systems that cut down the num- ber of sounds, clarify them and) Dr. Dirk U. Stikker, centre, EXCLUSIVE HAIR STYLING 2 MEN --AP Wirephoto Buzz-Bomb Motor Efficient Heater MONTREAL (CP)--A couple) well on lower-gradé gas if the|from knockin of ways for Canadians to save|fight amoynts of propane sro) esuse py . a neon on gas~the car-type as| squirted fito the fuel system. [keep running on lower-grade BB gig My x. led lesen well as natural gas--were de-| Mr Panar, associate profes- are csderted frat thar wine lect dropped a point. Tereatee scribed Tuesday in papers at|sor of mechanical engineering --o a in int ¥, H : test Canadian conference on athe "Universi of ater, Sa Cat, °4ner I Canada Ce toed eee fuel technology. said in his paper that propane ame : r 'sah a ede is vollna On_ index industrials rose a Lorant B, Geller and George| gas appears to have the desira- cnet, a 10-per-cent saving on point to 644.73, base metals Lee of the federal mines depart.|ble properties of raising 2480-| 10) would save Canadians as algained .05 to 216.50 and west- ment told how they took the/line's resistance to "'knocking"',| 51914 $129,000,000 a year. ern oils climbed .18 to 126.89. buzz out of the buzz-bomb mo.|or premature burning, without)" |, propane gas botties| GMs eased .25 to 87.87. Final : , Volume was 2,927,000 shares } ) tor and thereby turned it into.a/the disadvantages of the con.) %! : Se haben small, imm ensely-efficient fur-| ventional anti-knocking agents|Were already readily available) irinaned with 2,004,000 Tues- ; a at hardware stores to fuel home hace. Estimated savings on fuel} like pene) ae |blow-torches and camp stoves. costs are 45 per cent. Lead or any other metallic) peace could be adapted to fit The furnace burns natural gas| Mixture in fuels tends eventu-|§ 44°, aimple $4aiea fystem in: ps : A jally to build up deposits on en-| --. : pene speculatives, Lake Dufault ad and several hundred units are|_. side cars. ? eady 1 tion. With the/2ime Parts. Propane did not. | ; vanced 45 cents to $7.30 on &@ already in operation. A cat running steadily under) 70Pane is a by-product of al-|turnover of 31,050 shares in late help of the mines department, | t pity y |réeady . existing refining pr0-| setig a noiseless version was deével-|light loads didn't need high-0c-! cagses and there Js a surplus of : oped and the Canadian-devel-|tane premium gasoline which it. | oped furnace is looked on now|contained heavy lead doses. It|, He suggested that the prob.| _ BUILD GIANT RADIO as a hot item for export. |neéded them only when there|lem of storage of highly-ledded| MANILA (AP) -- The United Professor David Panar of the|were sudden sufges'ef power or| fuels in are places would be rig tego a -- ons University of Alberta, Edmon.|load, as pulling away from a/lessened if lower-grade gaso- radio. transmitter complex ton, reported research work that|stop-light or climbing a hill injlin, which keeps better, were|for the Voice of Ametica under indicates cats running on pre-jhigh gears. Cars cartied..pre-|stored along with bottled pro-jan agreement signed with the mium gasoline ¢an run just as'mium-grade fuels at all times'!pane. -- 'Philippines government. 2 LOCATIONS IGAWILSON FDS ay. Senior base metals had mostly fractional changes and among 55 PC. Laaully ue MIX-N-MATCH ENSEMBLE HERE'S b DELIGHTFUL MIXTURE OF FLORALS AND PASTELS -- FASHIONED YOURS FOR ONLY shiome § 49 95 i a ina Oc oitagage tay, all ROOM KiTcHEN $1.00 WEEKLY ae OisHTO a Vi y PATEL 2 PRINTED 2 PASTEL fgets nate CHING FLANNELETTE 12 WASH CLOTH: BUANKET 8 PRINTED 6 PASTEL , LLL: raat MGT 4 : 4, Aa OG . WAS OVARY Acs aes YX Og" 7 Sh Ay 4 59 CHEMI Suit yourself With or without... Dow's always right. It's brewed to suit the ale drinker's taste. Blended to bring out the natural ale flavour. Trust your taste. And if you're really serious about it, ask for a Dow. viv 9 OW the crowning achievement in ale BREWERY (ONTARIO) LIMITED, TORONTO MEL 3 WAYS TO BUY! COME IN.. EASY TERMS -- 1.00 WEEKLY CREDIT JEWELLERS LTD. 2 KING ST, WEST r DEALER'S NAME AND ADDRESS PUEASESENDWE.==S~S*S*~*«wa NK) ee EASE SEND ME AGREE TO PAY $1.0 DOWN AND $1.9° A WEEK UNTIL PAID ecccencace Peeee ee eee ee PHONE 723-7022 il cccccecesgeeseseereneae Qmecceccece