Oshawa Times (1958-), 16 Mar 1964, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, March 16, 1964 GOOD EVENING -- By JACK GEARIN -- Ont. Hints Assault On Child Beaters EAST END FIRE HALL STILL AN URGENT NEED Each year at this time, City Council's Traffic and Public Safety committee wrestles with a pressing recommendation: Should money be set aside in the next budget for an east end fire station to service that populous, fast-growing area now dependent on the Simcoe street headquarters station 2% miles distant? Regardless of how sympa- thetic the committee may be, the recommendation is never implemented by Coun- cil -- there simply isn't enough money in the bud- get, regardless of the re- commendations' merit. How could thete be when there is so much needless waste in the municipal ad- ministration, such as in the Board of Works Yard? (why use three men on a road job when six or seven are available?) Then there is the Education bill tax bite, which many think excessive, Such fire services must be curtailed at least until we a get our municipal house in order, Fire Chief Ray Hobbs has been asking for this east end hall since 1957, when the City bought a site for it atop Hart's Hill on the north side of King street east. The cost would be great ($45,000 for a hall and an annual payroll in excess of $190,000), but what'would this be in terms of human lives lost, or property destroyed in the event of a major fire. There is another disturbing thing about Chief Hobbs' request -- he says it is sometimes difficult to get his equip- ment up Hart's Hill when road conditions are icy. The Traffic committee must again make a decision on TORONTO (CP) -- The officejervision of the Children's Aid of Ontario's supervising coroner/|Society. is considering setting up a cen-|, A psychiatrist and a radiolog- tral registry to help curb the |isi in Toronto said in inter- 'phenomenon known as "the bat-|views they both believe a tre- tered child syndrome." jmendous number of children "We are inquiring into the|Suffer broken bones and other possibility of a central registry|Permanent deformities through INTERPRETING THE NEWS House Body Heads For Press Gallery Inquiry OTTAWA (CP)--The Parlia-|privileges committee but . the mentary Press Gallery, i att committee now ap- ifire for several years by MPsipears to be on the point of in the Commons privileges com-| aking up the matter. mittee, seems headed for alpRacTICE OUTLINED searching investigation by the) Committee members and. a where all cases of unexplained|the brutality of parents. Many suffer to a lesser extent without death or injury to children can be recorded and filed for quick reference," Jack Mills, execu-|!*, 3 tive officer in the office of Sup-| 'There may be no clue in the ervising Coroner Dr. Harvey|utward behavior of a person B, Cotnam, said in an inter-|to indicate whether he or she view. jis prem! sie sort of thing," " ; said Dr. ward Rosen, direc- citant tonae ggg Del im tor of the child and adolescent light cases of cruelty to chi}.| Unit of Toronto Psychiatrie Hos-' dren and preventing, in particu-| Pital. ' ; .| Dr. John Munn, director of lar, cone of 'battered child syn jthe Hospital for Sick Children's drome', . lradiology department, said Syndrome means all. the|/x.ray photographs are often the symptoms of a disease. And the! oniy evidence of injury. knowledge that such symptoms! pr Cotnam disclosed that are common enough in the case/cases of young children being of child-beating to merit classi-\hattered to death in secret by a a PR gl iy se A ag or custodian are being ment, ' : reported to his office at the even neighbors knowing about it, they said, common usage only within the rate of one a month. In Janu- Commons committee on pro-lnumber of other MPs and sen- cedure. The committee's main task is to review the rules under which the House of Commons operates and to make any recommendations on them, or other matters, to strengthen Parliament and make it more effective, | Under this general directive, .|the procedures committee pre- jsided over by speaker Alan |Macngaghton is examining the facilities provided by Parlia- |ment for the press to use in | reporting Parliamentary and jgovernment news, | The main criticism of the | gallery has involved the man- jner in which it exercises con- jators with an interest in the jcommittee's work have been supplied with a memorandum which outlines practice in the British Parliament, based on an on-the-spot study on behalf of the committee, . : On membership accreditation in Britain, the memorandum says the press gallery execu- tive there "has consistently re- fused to take any responsibilit; for deciding who is to be a mitted to the gallery." "Gallery members are firm in the view that it is not up {to them to decide who their colleagues should be. Accredi- tation of gallery members is jentirely a decision the |trol over who may hold gallery|Speaker, exercised through the last five years. __lary, there were three such cases Yet, Dr. Cotnam recently saidjin 10 days. for every child who dies of ne- iglect, malnutrition or beating jin Ontario, there are 100 others jwho are mistreated without it lcoming to the attention of the |authorities. |CITES CASE | The coroner's office cited the Abandoned ase of a woman. tee ot § Children ent Ontario cities in unexplained | ST. THOMAS (CP) -- An Ot- circumstances -- two of 'suffo-\tawa couple charged with aban- cation and the third of an over-|doning their three children were dose of sleeping pills. |brought here under guard Sun- At the time of the discovery|day after they were arrested by of the case, a fourth child of|Windsor police earlier in the |the woman was in a Northern/day. jOntario hospital suffering from| Delbert Frederick Vernon Cot- an overdose of headache tab-/ell, 24, and his wife, Hildegarde Charge Pair jmembership--and with it access|Sergeant (at arms) who issues |to certain physica; facilities in|passes annually to all members 'the Parliament building suchof the press gallery. as press rooms, desks, and) «phe sergeant may consult space in the gallery overlooking | with the secretary of the gal- e jthe Commons chamber. \lery but the final decision is Oe , | The gallery has confined ac- up to him and the Speaker. ae creditation to full-time, salaried Any pressure from ministers IMMIGRANT FROM E. GERMANY correspondents of Newspapers, fr he aceredlalon Of pare magazines and broadcastingyjar newspapermen is also adult East Berliner to come |outlets. Anyone else, such as &/firmty resisted." to Canada since the Berlin |part - time correspondent, has! 'the memorandum also deals Wall was erected in 1961. |had to make his own arrange-iwith another aspect of parlia- --(CP Wirephoto) |ments about Parliamentary COV-| mentary reporting--the physical ----_------|/erage with the Speaker. (acilities, _A number of MPs have Ob-|" «phe physical appearance of jjected to what they regard 85'the working space provided for P M Supports Regular 'the gallery's barrier to use f|the 'press is remarkably neat grandson, Stephen, on- arri- val at Montreal International Airport from East Berlin. Mrs, Roevers is the first Mrs, Helen Roevers, 71 gets a big welcome from her daughter, Mrs. Gunter | Schwarze, and four-year-old public facilities to report Par-| and there is nothing that re- jliament. They have tried, so} sordered far without success, to change|Semples Deon wee and the gallery's practice. assorted junk that features the this request (probably by today), but what can it do? YEAR AVERAGE FIRE LOSS Here is Oshawa's 10-year week: Year 1954 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 450 431 456 549 675 589 646 740 959 920 10-year average 64.15 No, of Fires Per capita loss $280,917 fire loss, as announced last Fire loss $ 75,923 $ 75,120 $217,987 $206,823 $427,071 $ 94,094 $114,565 $685,560 $160,359 $751,654 $ 1.65 $ 1.59 $ 4.40 $3.77 $ 7.87 $ 1.63 $ 1.99 $11.13 $ 2.54 $11.44 $ 4.79 $280.917 LIQUOR LICENSING BOARD TO SIT APRIL OR MAY Remember the words of Robert S. "Bob" Smith, the part-time undertaker and dedicated organizer for the "Wets" who worked so successfully in these vineyards during the 193 Oshawa liquor plebiscite campaign? He said Oshawa could have one cocktail lounge, or five, Mepending, of course, on the Ontario Liquor Licensing Board ~~ the same rule applied to dining lounges with liquor licenses, or government store liquor outlets in annexed areas. Mr. Smith made this observation last December. It was soon after the triumphant showing here of his "Wet" forces in the November 23 plebiscite (when only 39.6 of the eligible voters turned out -- 14,344 out of 36,228). The following recom- mendations for new liquor outlets were endorsed; (1) cock- tail lounges by 62.7 per cent (2) dining lounges with liquor licenses by 64.9 per cent (3) retail outlets in annexed areas by 69.8 per cent (3) cocktail lounges by 64.9 per cent. Bridgeport, near Kitchener, had but 785 voters in its liquor plebiscite balloting -- today it has three cocktail lounges. Mr. Smith's home town of Niagara-on-the-Lake has a population of 2,500 --. today it has five licensed hotels with cocktail lounges, plus a brewer's warehouse and liquor pe as well as liquor outlets at the Canadian Legion, golf'club and Officers' Mess. ("I can prove that Niagara-on-the-Lake is one of the best behaved communities in this or any other prov- ince,"" he Said). The Ontario Liquor Licensin g Board will hold a prelimin- ary hearing in Toronto for Oshawa applicants soon after it decides on the exact date for its next regional meeting in Peterborough (late April or early May). The preliminary meeting will serve as a sort of elimin- ation tourney to cut down the things as architectural designs Applicants can only appear with permission of the Board number of applicants (such will be considered), at the Peterborough hearing --- newspaper notices of the Jater hearing must be published three weeks in advance to give ample time to all concerned (including those' who may Oppose a certain application) to appear personally. There was a bright note in Mr. Smith's observations last December on dining lounges with liquor licenses. "Better dining lounges usually follow where the liquor- with-meals plebiscite succeeds,' he said, If there is one thing needed in Oshawa it is more good dining lounges. This need was vote for the dining lounges. As an indication of Mr. stressed in the 64.9 per cent Smith's effectiveness as a lets. The mother has since spent) time in a mental hospital and) now is. at home caring for the) surviving child, under the sup-| Garland's Funera Slated Tomorrow | youngest and most . members of the federal cabinet, | home for the weekend. Services will be held in St t sent Saturday night. ] |: WEATHER FORECAST Helena Cofell, 21, were picked up by two Windsor-police offi- cers on routine patrol. Police said the couple claimed to speak only German when ar- --|rested. Identification papers were found during a_ police search, The Cofells had been sought |since Monday when the children|conventions, perhaps every two were found in an unheated cot-|years. it OTTAWA (CP) -- Funeral/den, who earlier had hired Cof+|ing a meeting of Liberal sup- services for Revenue Minister/ell as a farm hand, | John R. Garland are planned! Mr. Alden said he had given|change in the party's setup as for 11 a.m. Tuesday in North|his hired man $40 to go to Ot-ia means of getting the mass of Bay, it was announced here. |tawa last Saturday to collectiriberals more closely in touch| Mr. Garland, at 46, one of ined ~---- but had not seen! with policy-making and of de- popular|fim since. age on the farm of Ronald Al- The youngest, aged 12 days, died early Saturday aboard ajwas found lying on a pillow in a) train as it was leaving Ottawa'card board box. An 18-month-old|1,300 members of the Toronto) for North Bay. He was going/was lying on the floor, and &/and District Liberal Association} hree-year-old was in bed. The children are reported. in |Andrew's United Church in|/good condition in hospital here Jitical speech here since taking North Bay, where the body was/afier 'and malnutrition. treatment for exposure Turning onto weather office at 5:30 a.m.| move across the Great Lakes Tuesday morning. and Northern On- arrival, A few jout central |tario with its Mainly Cloudy Forecasts issued by the Tor-|creasing to southerly 20 tonight|{ill positions of responsibility) and Synopsis: Colder air will/Tuesday. | Colder; shifting to northerly 35) White River, Algoma: Becom- tonight and cover Ontario by ing cloudy this afternoon, Occa-|Fugene J. Hayes, 54, of Du| Cloudiness|<jgnal Ji |will spread in ahead of the coldjanq toni jair later today and light snow|windy and cold Tuesday. Winds|day atfer an emergency opera- }is expected overnight through-|jight northerly 35 Tuesday. ght snow this evening) ght. Variable cloudiness | Forecast Temperatures | |showers or snow flurries are)Low tonight, high Tuesday likely across southern Ontario. Windsor |Mainly cloudy, windy and colder|st) Thomas London .. Erie,| Kitchener . a2. | lis the prospect for Tuesday. Lake St. Clair, Lake Windsor: Clouding over this af- Mount Forest ternoon. A few brief showers or| Wingham |snowflurries late tonight, Tues-|Hamilton day ma jcolder. |30 Tuesday. lgian Bay, London: lover this afternoon. A few show- fers or snow flurries Tuesday clou dy windy j}eolder with occasional snow inly cloudy windy and/St. Winds northwest 20 to Toronto ' 38 | Peterborough | Lake Huron, southern Geor- Trenton Clouding Killaloe ... : 35 | eee , a Muskoka .. 8 35 | tonight,|North Bay.... 4 32 | and|SUGDUrY ....+eeeee | flur-| Earlton ries. Winds northwest. 20 to 30 Sault Ste. Marie... 2 |Tuesday. | Niagara, Lake Ontario, Hali- jburton, Hamilton, Toronto: Be- jcoming cloudy this evening |Mainly cloudy and windy Tues- |day with a few brief showers or Low overnight, high Sunday jsnowflurries in the morning Kapuskasing .... 5 White River.. ' 5 | Moosonee ... | 20 | | Observed Temperatures | Timmins sion through party activity. |tion. Hayes was chairman.of the Catharines." $6. aa. | MOSCOW (AP) -- The 'Tass| Liberal Conventions A P | TORONTO: (CP) -- Primejand power in the party," he| "'If politics and politicians ex-| Six US. Airmen |Minister Pearson gave his sup-|said, port to a new departure in Lib-| ' eral political machinery Batur-| REQUIRES Gs moe os : tidal : ° aby by eevee Sener neueee lriodic national conventions perhaps every that the involvement of the in- {dividual can be mobilized for The prime minister, address- porters, called for this major national. purpose through his |party,"" Mr. Pearson did not indicate |whether he thinks the leader- ship should be up for a vote of confidence at the suggested con- ventions, but an aide said he un- doubtedly had taken that. into |veloping what he calls the "new politics." Mr. Pearson spoke to about posal, Liberal--and Progressive Con- servative national conven- office. tions ae om held only when lisi@ New leade ia yee cag ee the last one was in 1958, when calls for dropping the luxury of|Mr. Pearson took over, and the "narrow, nasty, short - sighted|/ Previous one in 1948. : and selfish partisanship" -- de-| Mr, Pearson told the Liberal mands the personal involvement/rally that the "new politics," re- of all citizens and its expres-| jecting sectional and selfish in- jterests, would help overcome "This means, among otherjobstacles to a united Canada. things, the fullest possible} "We must first apply this new democratization of the party in|politics," he said, 'to our most the sense that authority andjimportant problem, national policy must flow upwards fromjunity and the threat to such the rank and file to those wholunity from differences between the provinces: and the federal government, and differences be- teen the French-speaking and English - speaking partnership that was the foundation of Con- \federation. . . jat its "prime minister's din-| ner." It was his first purely po-| SPORTSMAN DIES MOUNT VERNON, ll. (AP) Harradence Quits Party Leadership EDMONTON (CP) -- Milton Harradence, provincial Progres- sive Conservative leader in Al- |berta for the last 18 months, lresigned Sunday. | Dr. John Porter, president of ithe Alberta Progressive Con- servative Association, said in a prepared statement that Mr. Harradence resigned because of business and professional com- mitments. Mr. Harradence, defeated in Calgary 'West by Social Credit candidate Donald Fleming in the 1963 provincial election, suc- ceeded Ernest Watkins as party __j|leader in October, 1962. Con- | servatives failed to elect a can- didate in the election. | Before the 1963: election, Mr. | Watkins was the only Conserv- jative in the Alberta house. Quoin, Ill., outstanding figure in U.S. harness racing, died Sun- U.S. Trotting Association and president of the Harness Rac- ing Institute of America. He also was president of the Du Quoin State Fair and co-sponsor of the Hambletonian trotting stake. { MONOGRAPH ON BARD news agency reports a scholars' group in Leningrad has pre- pared a monograph on Shake- speare in connection with the} quadricentenary of his birth. It} deals with "'Shakespeare's great| and unfading popularity in Rus- sia during the past 2% cen- turies."' Sudbury Muskoka Windsor .. London . Toronto Ottawa ..... the determination and pursuit of} |ploit these difficulties for per-| }sonal or party purposes, in ad liament or out of it; if they} jseek to get party advantage out! of them, they are unworthy Ca-| two years--80\nadians and false to their trust,|Suerrilla groundfire downed a jLiberals must not, and will not,| follow this course." Summing up his 11 months in} office, Mr. Pearson said the rec-| jord on the whole has been a |good one and will get better.| |Some errors were made but) |some runs were scored, said the \former ballplayer. | Dealing with the controversial account in thinking out the pro-|Canada Pension Plan, the} 'prime minister said the govern-| ment hopes to introduce legisla- \tion on it in the Commons Tues-! j}day and plans to push on with it r is to be chosen.|as fast as was consistent with/was wounded by a land mine. Ja study by a Commons commit-| tee, j | While Quebec had contracted} out of the plan, as was her| right, he was hopeful that fol- lowing new federal - provincial talks, the measure would be| found to suit all other provin- cial governments. jin months, scored an important These efforts have been con- fined mostly to the Commons working quarters of the Ottawa Press Gallery." es Die In Vietnam SAIGON (AP) -- Communist U.S. helicopter and a_ spotter plane in separate actions in South Viet Nam during the weekend, Six American airmen Elsewhere, South Vietnamese forces, in their best operation tactical victory near the Cam- bodian border, capturing about 300 suspected Communist Viet Cong fighters, 35 of whom im- mediately asked to join govern- ment forces. This operation at Cai Cai left 17 Viet Cong killed. An. American army = srgeant R. Irwin Cruikshanks Over 5 years extensive study end practice in the residential real estate field has provided Irwin with @ solid basis upon which you may when in search of thorough, rele able and experienced assistance in buying oF selling real estate, Bolahood Broth Limited, Realtors 101 Simcoe North 728-5123 pee e Government losses. were put at four wounded, The deaths of the U.S. air- men brought to 122 the number of Americans killed in action in the Viet Nam war since 1962. Eight other Amerfcans have died in incidents not directly connected with combat. A There are 2y great whiskies ¢ Private Stock campaign director for the "Wets"' -- in:50 Ontario plebiscites of varying degrees in the past six years, his side has won 43 and lost but seven. He admitted there was "'a lot of luck" | in his Oshawa campaign strategy, that the result could easily have gone the other way. PC Says Socreds _Eye Liberal Fold | PRINCE GEORGE, B.C.) The other two -Social Credit! (CP) -- Alvin Hamilton, former|members are Horace Olson of federal minister of agriculture) Medicine Hat and Alex Patter- in the Progressive Conservative!son of Fraser Valley. administration, said Saturday) the four western Social Credit At Ottawa, Mr, Leboe denied members of Parliament -- in-| there had been any such bar- cluding Party Leader Robert) gaining involving himself or any) Thompson have discussed) of the other members mentioned! joining the Liberals. |by Mr. Hamilton. Mr. Hamilton said in an inter-| He said it was true that the view he understands Bert Leboe| Social Credit party had always| discussed the move with his| held the view that it might no| Cariboo constituency members) longer need to exist if either of at Quesnel. the old-line parties adopted So-| He said he had the report|cial Credit principles. | from a person present at 4/ In this matter, however, there| ory January or early! was no preference between the One of the conditions of- the Liberals and Conservatives and shift would be that Mr. Thomp-| there would bé no. bargaining son becaine a member of Prime} for cabinet posts in the manner Minister Pearson's cabinet, Mr.|Suggested by the former agri- Hamilton said. (culture minister. | 4 Dawson 8 53 Turning colder Tuesday, Winds victoria | becoming northwest 20 to 30 on pamonton ... Tuesday. Regina ....0. 3. Northern Georgian Bay, Tim- Winnipeg .. b | agami, Cochrane, North Bay,|Lakehead ... 30 | Sudbury: Becoming cloudy this Sault Ste. 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