--se 6 ec@e 12. THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, Mey 31, 1963 Chamber Seeks New Tax Collection Canadian Pr TORONTO (CP)--The Ontario Chamber of Commerce recom- mends that the province nego- tiate with the federal govern- ment and other provincial gov- erfiments with a view to sim- plification of federal-provincial tax collections. Thursday by the chamber's an- nual meeting said: "Tt is undesirable for two or more levels of government to, occupy the same tax field; the ultimate aim should be with- drawal of provincial govern ments from the direct tax fields of individual income taxation, corporation income taxation and death duties." . The chamber stated that busi- ness corporations, individuals and estates should be relieved of the necessity of filing returns to. each province--that there should be only one assessment and onl gg per should be in increased. / communities elsewhere. stated, Ottawa fought suc which the require sputed assess- ments. The statement w , yg declaration on tax transit system versity. Northern Ontario chambers got over-all delegate support to overthrow the committee's rec- ommendation for deletion of a policy statement regarding grants to mining municipalities. The retained statement asks the provincial government to re- view its policy with respect to payments made by mining mu- A policy statement edopted|nicipalities, with a view to hav- ing the payments substantially A Sudbury spokesman said northern municipalities are de- nied taxes on mining properties within their borders and have problems not understood by "If the Ontario chamber {is not interested in this sort of thing, that amounts to cutting out northern municipalities," he sfully for retention of anoth¢r statement Setup a metropolitan area be relieved of payment of gasoline or diesel fuel tax and be charged a nom- inal license fee of $2 a year a bus. Prof. Leonard advised against' "the scatter - gun method of needling the government on ev- ery detail." The chamber approved a statement that the short-term fi- nancial problems of the St. Law- rence Seaway should be met without either reimposing tolls on the Welland Canal or in- creasing tolls on St. Lawrence canals, A statement from Stratford and Waterloo, which was ap- proved, asks that recent Onta- rio legislation to amend the Fa Products Act (Bill 106) be 'not implemented until the chamber and other interested organizations have rtun- ity to make representations. The statement describes the bill's purpose as providing for the control and regulation in any or all respects of the mar- keting within Ontario of farm products. T. H., Ainlay of Kitchener, chairman of the chamber's agri- .|cultural committee, described the legislation "as the most un- within an urkan mubicipality or|democratic thing to come out Rising Md Cost In New Zealand By J./C. GRAHAM Canadian /Press Correspondent WELLINGTON (CP) -- New Zealand is making still another bid to check the ever-rising cost of its 'free' medical services. The latest report is from a committee set up last year to tions, payable by the public. refused to impose a This proposal has been fre- quently advanced as the best means of impressing on the public the need for economy in use, of medicines, but has been rejected by successive govern- ments, The present government small of Queen's Park in a long time." A Belleville statement, also approved, asks the Ontario gov- ernment to withdraw another regulation, pending further study. This one 'requires filing y. In the motor-vehicle field ap- proval was given to a recom- mendation from Fort William and Port Arthur that solid white lines be painted on the edges of paved highways to indicate how close a motorist can keep to the right-hand side. Another statement asks for legislation requiring all new mo- tor vehicles, built for use on On- of rates by the trucking indus-| investigate the cost of "free" pharmaceutical services, which drugs and medici! scribed by a doctor are plied without cost to thé patignt. The cost of this scheme" has been the most rapidly 'rising part of the entire social security expenditure. Last year the bill was $23,000,000 for a population of less than 2,500,000, for the pharmaceutical service alone. The committee reported that on the whole the pharmaceuti- cal scheme has adequately met the needs of the community, but it says that criticisms can- not be ignored. a6 It quotes the evidence of a doctor who said that services "can. be too good, so that many a patient does not value the medicinal agents or realize the d s of their casual pt- ance." Another doctor said that a great many patients had ceased to treat the simplest condition at home, but relied on free medical services, He said a number of patients went from doctor to doctor, at public ex- pense. One patient said he was the 13th doctor he had con- sulted, Despite improvements in pub- lic health, the committee found, the average New Zealander is visiting his doctor more often and taking more drugs than ever before. It blames the rising pre- steps to economize in prescrib- ing. It recommends the reten- tion of existing restraints on quantity and frequency of drugs issued to patients, and arrange- ments for advising doctors on avoidance of wasteful practices. ganda to counter the impression with the general public that a prescription should be issued after every consultation with a trary to all past experience if the proposals impose more than a temporary check on the re- morselessly rising cost of socialjgunshot wound in the leg near security. public grumbles at the high tax- ation needed to maintain the welfare state; every social security "benefit" charge on prescriptions as reper to be be cently as last year.The action|PY the manufacturer with sea P belts as standard equipment. would be highly unpopular po- td A A Belleville proposal to estab- litically and is hardly conceiv- lish A id if ta able in the present election! 5" Province-wide uniform s : oar dard closing hours for stores Aiea was defeated, Failing such action, the com-| Sarnia, urging public meet- mittee gives main weight toljings of public bodies, said a 1961 amendment to the Munici- pal Act is being used by some school boards to hold their meetings in private. Approval was given to its suggestion that all regular meetings of publicly- elected bodies be held in public, and that an appropriate amend- ment be made to the municipal act. Boy, 13, Admits Lying About Gunshot Wound STURGEON FALLS, Ont. (CP)--A 18-year-old boy said Thursday he lied about the manner in which he suffered a It also calls for greater propa- doctor. It emphasizes: "'A doc- tor's advice is often more useful than a drug." The proposals have been duly hailed by the government as valuable and calculated to im- prove the efficiency of' the scheme, Yet {it will be running con- here Saturday. Cpl. Don Holmes of the pro- vincial police said the boy ad- mitted shooting himself as he crouched in a field on his fa- ther's farm three miles west of here. The boy admitted fabri- Although the New Zealand it also regards cost of the scheme on increased) prescriptions ahd on more} costly remedies replacing) cheaper ones. | However, the major economy| measure recommended by the committee is most unlikely to be adopted. The committee says the only step likely to have an immediate effect on rising costs would be the imposition of a percentage charge on prescrip- Gordon Calm Over Quebec Tax Threat OTTAWA (CP) -- Heward most jealously, and a great out- ery arises at any suggestion to make real economies by reduc- ing services, 2 Ratepayers | Try To Oust PS. Trustee vetting 'a tte Bais" sutures when two: shots were fired, one BELLEVILLE (CP) -- A m0-| 4.) 4 tina to upmost. a Deseronto|seuxing his boot and another, school board trustee was for-| US ie: | As a result of the earlier mal, Qe, Msay | sory, poke set up ready Deseronto ratepayers Donald| Pumped the pond dry and used cating another story to draw at- tention to himself. The boy said earlier he had seen two men in the same field the Thursday before the shoot- ing. He said one man was dig- ging in the middle of a pond. The second man grabbed him and told him to leave the field and keep quiet qbout what he saw, he said. i Grafftey (PC -- Brome-Missis-|Armitage and James Graham|™2snetic instruments to. search natn ttna tenn emasiy ity ae a OO" 'YOU FORGOT Lifeguard Joe Schwartz stops Anthony Gibson as the 13-month-old boy leaves a tra!' OO eS ems Slaughter Cattle Draw Better Prices | TORONTO (CP)--Trading on slaughter cattle was active with all classes and grades selling at stronger to higher prices at the Ontario public stockyards this week . Veal calf prices were lower. Hog prices were higher and , |iaanb prices were steady. Cattle receipts were estimated at about 9,700 head, about 1,900 head more than last week and about 100 head more than the same week in 1962. Western cat- tle receipts numbered 437 head, an increase over last week of 147 head. Western stock calf re- ™ \ccipts were 99 head as com- g\pared to 74 head last week. § |More than five loads of slaugh- '\ter cattle were shipped East. Seventy-five veal calves were sold for slaughter in the United States. Slaughter cattle: Choice steers closed at $24-24.50 with fancy feedlot steers 25-25.50; good 23-24; medium 21-23; com- mon 16-20.50; good heifers 21.50- 22.50 with choice 22.50 - 23.50; medium 19.50 -21.50; common 16-i9; choice fed yearlings 23-25 with odd top to 26; good 21-23; good cows 18-19 with light heif- ery cows to 20; medium 16.50- 17.50; canners and cutters 12- + \16; good heavy bologna bulls 19- 19.50 with sales to 19.75; com- mon and medium 15-18.50. Replacement cattle: Good ~ \stockers 24-27 with sales to 27.50 and good stock calves to 30; common and medium stockers and stock calves 20-23. A Hogs:Grade A 27.20-29.70; _lheavy sows 18.55-18.70 with light '!sows gaining\a $2 premium; stags 15.50 on basis. Sheep and lambs: A few feedlot lambs at 7}, common and medium feedio ETHIN f clothing as he heads for the pool at a Philadelphia recreation centre. t --AP- Wirephoto TORONTO death by a Moslem fanatic while on missionary service in Somalia, East Africa. Just one year earlier, in 1959, as a third-year student at Tor- purpose to remain faithful unto} quered death for me." | Rev. Douglas Percy,. the col-) of Mr. Grove: "This kind of| spirit--of faithfulness even unto] death--is what we try to instill in our students." | For 70 years the college has produced missionaries and pas-| the graduates work mostly in Asia, Africa and South Amer;) ica, | Mervi graduate to be martyred but) others have lived closé to death in the mission field. Minnie Brimstone, who died) recently aged 90, was a mis-) sionary in China during the/ Boxer Rebellion. She used to recall travelling by river, lying) flat in the bottom of a boat as) rebel shots whistled overhead. ISN'T SEMINARY Dr. R. A. Killen, vice-presi- dent of TBC, says one of the college's main purposes~is: the preparation of young*people for the mission field, 'We offer a) Bible-centred study in which the students intensively study the English Bible itself." He says that unlike a semin- ary the TBC does not require a BA or its equivalent as a prerequisite for study. which requires three years of study after grade 13; and, be- ONCE WAS RICH spring lambs 30-33; good light| sheep. 8-10;. common sheep 3-7.} | Quebec |make the trip but have been Mayors To Visit City Of London By ROD CURRE LONDON (CP)--Preparations are nearing completion for the first visit of a group of Cana- dian mayors as guests of Sir Ralph Perring, lord mayor of the City of London. So far seven mayors have accepted the invitation for the visit June 4-7, And Controller Ada Pritchard of Hamilton, Ont., will represent Hamilton's mayor, who is unable to make the trip. Besides the receptions and luncheons, the visiting mayors have been invited to make' sug- gestions as to any particular places they would like to visit. . 'Most of them have said any- thing we arrange will be fine with them," a spokesman for the Corporation of London said recently, "Actually they seem a bit shy but we wish they would make some suggestions and we'd see what we can do." Mayor P. Horace Boivin of Granby, Que., noted for its fine zoo, will visit various zoos and also will be guest of the Zoologi- cal Society at luncheon, A FOOTBALL FAN Mayor A. Walter Gaudet of Charlottetown will travel to Windsor to place flowers at the tomb in St. George Chapel] of Queen Charlotte, who gave her name to the Prince Edward Island capital. Mayor C. H. Day of Kam- loops; B.C., a Leicester man, will visit there and also has put in a bid for tickets to the Foot- ball Association cup final. Others who have accepted are William T, Walker, Frederic- ton; Mrs. Beth Wood, New West- dressed weight|minster, B.C.; William G. |Rathie, Vancouver, and Donald Summerville, Toronto. The men "Wil be accompanied by their s20 - 25;|wives and Mrs. Wood and Con- troller Pritchard will be ac- companied by their husbands. The mayors of Montreal and said they could not Christian Killed Because Of Faith (CP) -- Because;diploma courses, two degrees: of his Christian faith, Rev.jof: Religious Education which) Merlin Grove was stabbed to requires Grade 13 plus three} Haiti, today an impoverished|invited to send representatives. Caribbean republic, was once| Mayor Charlotte Whitton of Ot- the mot proutie ofthe New ay 6 teen isin er, ha World colonies, supplying Eu-lreturn, Sir Ralph and other rope with all:its sugar. London officials will be her guests in Ottawa later this sum- mer. Mayor John Lloyd of Halifax, recently elected Liberal mem- ber of: Parliament, will not be attending. A reply still is awaited from Regina. MEET JUNE 4 Mr. Pritchard has expressed interest in facilities for senior citizens and will be taken on a tour of old people's accommo- dations. The mayors are not travelling together and will meet at a luncheon at Mansion House, the lord mayor's residence, June 4. There also will be a reception and dance for some 800 persons at the Guildhall the following day and a farewell luncheon June 7. The guests will attend a ballet at Covent Garden and go for a cruise on the River Thames. The City spokesman said it is hoped similar visits by mayors from Australia and New Zea- land will be arranged later to encourage Commonwealth rela- tions and return hospitality. Lord. mayors of London--a new one is elected each year-- visited Canada in 1951, 1955, 1957 and 1958 and Australia and Bishop Denies Texas Miracle . CORPUS CH Tex. (AP) A Roman Catholic bishop says reports that an image of the Virgin Mary appeared on a farm near Alice, Tex., are un- founded, Most Rev. M. S. Garriga, bishop of the Corpus Christi di- ocese, added that subsequent re- ports of. miraculous cures from visits to the farm have no med- ical foundation. Mrs. Tony Botello Sr., 35, re-| ported seeing the vision April 17 on an old wooden cistern. Since then, as many as 5,000 persons a day have visited the farm, Owner Jack Butler charges $1 a car. In a prepared statement, Bishop Garriga says: ay years or Grade 12 plus four." | About 30 per graduates take further academ- "A Bible college- does} nto Bible College, Mr. Grove|much better in seminary than cot. written: 'It is my solejeven a very bright high school ic training. trained young person graduate,'"'. says Dr. Killen. death, to the One who con-| There are seven faculty mem- representing the Presby-/ and Anglican) lege's director of missions, SAYS|\Churches and 24 denominations| are represented among the 180) students. About 50. per cent of; bers terian, Baptist the students are girls. DO PRACTICAL STUDY tors--3,000 of them--who have) The core of the curriculum mostly served abroad. Todaylis the Bible and students® also study church history, system- cent of TBC} (NOT EXACTLY ag | ILLUSTRATED) : Now on handle. No, 65401-3161, @ BUDGET TERMS ,DOMINION T atic theology, He brew and Grove is the only|Greek, philosophy and practical theology. 48 BOND WEST (Corner of Church) SEE THE NEW, 1963, POWER LAWN display at your Dominion Tire, | Store, You'll find a mower to' suit--youf : every requirement. Quality construction | cc dollar savings!! BUDGET PRICED 4 CYCLE 20" ROTARY MOWERS -- Rugged 4 cycle 2/2 h.p. engine. Recoil starter. Cutting height from 1" - 3', 7" wheels front and back, stag- gered to help prevent scalping. 4 position throttle -- start, stop, run, choke --- chrome 8.95 @ NO RED TAPE @ WE DO OUR OWN FINANCING IRE STORES 725-6511 New Zealand in 1951 and 1961. ti Mac, Kennedy . Send Appeal -- On Inspection © ramen, Mas 'enn Minister Macmi nig ported ready Thu to dis- patch a proposal to Soviet Pre- mier Khrushchev for a wand explosions of scientists to discuss § test ban treaty, The message to Khrushchéy which Kennedy, Macmillan and their disarmament experts have worked out constitutes the lat- est of a series of efforts to break the deadlock in test ban nego- tiations which have been down at Geneva since earlier this year. The immediate point of chak lenge in the new proposal, in formants said, is Khrushchev's insistence that on-site inpec- lions in Russia are not neces- sary because means exist to de- tect nuclear explosions from out- side the territory of any coun- r y. Rusk told reporters Wednes- day "we don't think so." \CAN EXPLORE "Rut we think this is some ing which can be explored sci- ifically and technically to get a positive result," he said. t is understood that Kennedy and 'Macmillan would be willing to have the scientific meeting in Moscow or anywhere else able to Khrushchev. But U.S. of- ficials had no real hope that Khrushchev would agree to have the meeting at all because they believe at the moment the Russians are not interested in trying to revive active test ban negotiations. Rusk said one reason for this could be that the Russians are planning a new round of tests in their nuclear weapons devel- opment program. . quoi asked Finance Ministerhad an injunction served {0 2 box the boy said one sf Walter Gordon Thursday if he|against Trustee M. F. Detior|'"6, Mite Thence, tee Ans considers the tax-sharing ulti-\last week, alleging Mr. Detlor's|_ ; eh thought the incident matum by Quebec Premier\appointment to the board was|™8ht have some connection ginning this fall, the Bachelor "We offer, in addition 'to the Bachelor of Theology, Mild, cool, even-burning Jean Lesage as a minimum or Ga negotiable demand. Mr. Gordon replied: "When the minister of finance has a statement to make on tax-shar-| ing, he will make it in his own good time." t Mr. Lesage reiterated Wed- nesday night that the federal + government has until April 1, 1964, to turn over to the prov- inces a larger slice of direct taxes, with the slaying of Lionel Sa- bourin, 55, om his farm April 18 three miles from the scene of Saturday's shooting. improper, _ Minutes of the April 5 meet- ing which approved his appoint- ment was the only evidence presented to Judge Smith. Counsel for both parties will _ written arguments by une 4. 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