Redistribution Bill Gets OK OTTAWA (CP) -- The gov- ernment's redistribution biil, I ions. which will pave the way for|ginal bill said the prim wholesale changes in Canada's|ister and leader of the Opposi- rev pal -- pate given rere would each appoint a mem- a rea in the|ber to the four-member boards. Commons Monday. ane bill had been before the certain the prime minister has for ae A) Ae eeed on no thought of a winter cam- pc se te pes gw paign. General speculation here|iast week when. the measure ya a an election is likely next breezed through to its final Mr. Pearson's Hamilton sTRSC. : speech was one that the Liberai| Under the bill, 10 representa- leader wanted to make for some|tion commissions will be set up time, complaining that the stall-|--one in each province. They ing of government business in|Would redraw the riding boun- Parliament is straight obstruc-|4aries in such a way that the tion by Mr. Diefenbaker, the|Mumber of electors would be within 25 per cent of an aver- spokesman said. age obtained by considering the number of voters and the num- ber of seats in the province. This 25-per-cent tolerance fig- ure was one of the contentious points, The bill originally said 20 per cent, some members sug- gested 30 per cent and the Commons compromised at 25 per cent. The other contentious point Railway Bill iMod }) {\, ae Dief-Biting' Not A Warm-Up For Election Diefenbaker. Finance Minister Gordon, Trade Minister Sharp, Labor Minister MacEachen and Agriculture Minister Hays have all joined in. Mr. Gordon put it suceinctly this weekend, saying: "As far as we are concerned the sooner we get rid of-him the better." The spokesman said he is experience, when he is being fired upon it gives him a cer- tain amount of bounce." Prime Minister Pearson set the new tone of Liberal attack when, speaking to a district Liberal rally in Hamilton on the eve of two recent federal by- elections, he called Mr. Diefen- baker "the great rejecter'" of anything and everything the government proposes. Liberals subsequently re- tained the New Brunswick seat of Westmorland but were crush- ingly defeated in Ontario's Wa- terloo South. Many of the Waterloo South Liberals had attended the Ham- ilton rally. But the Hamilton speech prompted Liberal cabinet min- isters and MPs to regard it as open season for criticism of Mr. OTTAWA (CP)--Liberal polit- ical campaigners, from Prime Minister Pearson down through the ranks of his cabinet and party followers, have recently mounted a heavy barrage of biting criticism directed per- sonally at Opposition Leader Diefenbaker. Aut a spokesman for Mr. Pearson said Monday this isn't to be interpreted as setting the stage for a general election. Nor, the spokesman insisted, is it by pre-arrangement that Lib- erals should direct the fire at Mr. Diefenbaker, In fact, the spokesman added, the Liberals see some danger in making Mr. Diefenbaker and his leadership of the Conserva- tive opposition a key issue. "As we all know from past POST-K STRUGGLE Youth Plays Part In -- Power Moves At Kremlin first secretary of the party in the Ukraine, Shelest's back- ground suggests sympathy for The New Democratic Party objected to this and the later accepted an amendment that the speaker name the two members. The third member, the chainman, will be aj by the chief justice in each province and Nelson Caston- guay, federal representation commissioner, will sit on each commission as the fourth mem- ber. ; Before the measure was given final approval Monday, several opposition members rose with some final words of advice to the proposed commis- sions, William H. A, Thomas (PC-- Middtesex West) said that if the adopt ea i SCENE base camp from the crash scene today. --(AP Wirephoto) Ontario commission will a "practical and non - disrup- tive" approach, the province's ridings could escape with "very minor adjustments." It is im- portant, he said, that ridings corresponding roughly to county boundaries. be maintained as much as possible. VICTIM BROUGHT FROM CRASH The body of one of 29 vic- of a Bonanza airliner on a Nev., is carried from a heli- tims of Monday night's crash mountain near Las Vegas, copter which brought it to a BRIEFS FROM CITY COUNCIL probably played a_ significant role in unseating Nikita Khrush- chev as premier and first sec- By WILLIAM L. RYAN AP News Analyst City Motion Is Rescin City Council Monday night rescinded part of a six-week- old motion which raised ice- time rates at the Children's and North Oshawa arenas from $7.50 and $8 to $10 an hour. Only Ald. Finley Dafoe objected. The rates applied only to per- sons 18 and under, and skating clubs. These rate changes were part of a large list approved by council on Oct, 5. Ald. John Dyer, chairman of the parks, property and recrea- tion committee, said last night the choice was between "senti- ment and sanity." Prior to the council fight, Ivan L, Locke, assistant secre- tary-treasurer of the Oshawa Minor Hockey Association ap- pealed to council' to restore the skating club members use the ded > recommendation to take no ac- tion on the OMHA's objection to the ice rental increase was defeated. On the rescinding motion, the three members of the. parks committee (Ald. John Dyer, Alice Reardon and Hayward Murdoch) who had voted in committee for no change, voted for rescinding. Said Ald. John Brady: "There was no dissent before, when we passed the new rates. But I don't think we realized the hardship here." "They are a non-profit group even though they are paying for it," added Ald. Gordon Attersley. Ald, Robert. Wilson -- said: "Don't put a burden on the children when they (OMHA) hardly make ends meet now." But Ald. Dyer objected. "When our Parks Commissioner arenas in leagues staffed by some 350 volunteers. Mr. Locke said the whole is non-profit, funds are by the "hat-in-hand" brought it. (financial picture) to our attention, there was nothing else we could do. "There is nothing wrong with the recommendation. It is either plus a few exhibition| sentiment or sanity, If we erred, it was probably on the side of This year's deficit will jump|leniency. ogres to over $13,000, esti- 7 Mr. Locke. He said in-| obligation to run the arena in a|ihe east "We should stand up to our Greased salaries is part Of the/sensible manner. We are not reason "and we feel this in-|going to come close to clearing crease is being passed on to/the debt." Mr. Locke reminded that the/time rates at the new Ald. Walter Branch said ice- Civic city absorbs the $200,000 cost of| Auditorium may have to be re- the summer playground pro-jexamined. Rates for similar . "We feel these similar|uses have been set at $12 there. costs should be absorbed in the But Mayor Lyman Gifford When the city fathers next meet as a council, results of the 1965-66 election will be known. Next regular meeting falls on Dec. 7, which is Election Night. The council meeting will be held Tuesday, Dec. 8, The Board of Education has applied to council for approval to proceed with plans for con- struction of a six-classroom ad- dition to Ridgeway Senior Pub- lic School. Cost, $150,000. To fi- nance and assessment. Council approved the B of E's transfer of $25,000 from the R. S. McLaughlin Collegiate capital fund to the Central Collegiate capital fund. "'For the purchase of additional playfield, made necessary by the addition to the Suggestions on the installation and payment of sanitary sewers in the Laval-Champlain area were received from K. Neilson, 486 Champlain avenue. Referred to the public works committee. Three Willowdale avenue resi- dents have requested a meeting with il on grade levels on works committee, North Shore Realty Company Limited wants to know if land on ide of Simcoe street north, held for the extension of Sunset avenue, will be offered for sale, and the price. To the property committee. St. Andrew's United Church, Bruce and Simcoe streets, wants to know if the city will asphalt adjacent boulevards. To the their properties. To the public) Active Realty Limited has' re- quested acceptance of a cash payment in lieu of a five per cent conveyance on the William Ridgley: proposed subdivision plan on Wilson road north. To the planning board, A 25 signature petition from Richmond street east home- owners has been received, pro- testing the change of street name to Ridley avenue. This section of Richmond was left by itself following the rerouting involved in making Bond street a one-way artery. To the plan- ning board. Council backed a_ planning board recommendation of no action on a request from Lloyd Metcalf Real Estate Limited that R2B areas be deleted from the Zoning Bylaw. The Oshawa and District Real Estate Board will be asked 'to consider add- ing this paragraph to all offers to purchase: Zoning--All land within the corporate limits of the city of Oshawa is zoned in specific categories.. Reference should be made to the city hall to determine the zoning of this property and any adjacent areas, Council backed planning |board's approval of the William Ridgley proposed plan of sub- division on Wilson road north, along with the conditions set forth. Council also backed the board on the Riznek Construction Lim- ited application for rezoning (to commercial) of property on the northwest corner of King street east and Townline road north. Dr. and Mrs. R. D. Guselle The new changes at the top of the post-Khrushchey regime suggest a power struggle be- tween liberals and conserva- tives over the course of the So- viet economy. Clash and com- promise seem to have played a part. Younger - generation bureau- crats are making their influence strongly felt. There are signs the younger men eventually will emerge with the lion's share of political authority, but the struggle is not over. The younger men seem im- patient to remove some of.the restraints on Soviet economic development, even to the point of experimenting with capital- istic methods. This could lead one day to an upsunge in East-West trade, more ec ic independence for Eastern Europe and aggra- vation of the dispute with the Chinese Communists. The Communist party central committee made these appoint- ments Monday: Alexander N. Shelepin, 46, and Pyotr Y. Shelest, 56, to full membership in the party's ruling presidium, and Pyotr N. Demichev, 46, to alternate pres- idium membership. The com- mittee dropped Vasily P. Poly- akov, 58, a Khrushchey farm expert, from the secretariat, and dismissed ailing Frol R. Kozlov from the presidium, thus eliminating one conservative voice from the top of the ap- paratus. RISE PREDICTABLE Shelepin's rise was predict- able. As former chairman of the state security committee and chairman of the party and state control committee, Shelepin retary of the party. : a deputy premier, now may be moving close to the top rung of party leader- ship, possibly eventually as dep- uty to First Party Secretary Leonid I. Brezhnev. Shelepin's rise and the ad- vancement of Demichev to al- ternate presidium membership can encourage new generation leaders anxious to build the con- sumer economy despite resist- ance from hard-line conserva- tives and the military. Shelepin, who was the young- est member of the secretariat, rose through the Young Com- munist League. He was its first secretary--its chief--from 1952 to 1958, before becoming chair- man of the state security ap- paratus and the party contro! Demichev is closely associ- ated with the chemical indus- for sharply stepped. up con- sumer production. generation leaders, like presid- jum member Dmitry Polyansky, 47, an able administrator with wide experience. Polyansky and BOLSTER LEADERSHIP party leadership in its direction of the Soviet economy. Both Shelepin and Polyansky prob- ably support Brezhnev and the new premier, Alexei N. Kosy- gin. Their influence could be de- cisive. epin and Demichey are bal- anced by elevation of Shelest, 56, to the presidium. t try, a hope of the younger men This divided authority and spread confusion. the military's idea of continued priority for heavy industrial de- velopment. ee Probably Shelest was sup- ported for advancement from alternate member status in the presidium by Nikolai V. Pod- gorny, 59, an influential Ukrain- ian who is a member both of the presidium and the secre- tariat. Podgorny seems to be a pro-heavy industry conservative who, with Shelest, might oppose sharp shifts in the development of the economy. Dismissal of Polyakov from the secretariat probably is at- tributable to Khrushchev's farm failures and the party's anxiety to make a fresh start in attack- ing agricultural problems. It is noteworthy that the central committee annulled Khrush- chev's reorganization which di- vided the party apparatus into farm and industry specialists. Gets Shunted |, OTTAWA (CP)--A_ weighty piece of legislation that would revolutionize the Canadian rail- way industry has been side- tracked again by other pres- sures on Parliament. Bill C-120, a 14,000-word pack- age implementing the report of the 1961 MacPherson royal com- mission on transportation, was introduced in the Commons two months ago but hasn't pro- Douglas Fisher (NDP--Port rthur) objected to statements by Transport Minister Pickers- gill last Friday that the dual ridings of Halifax and Queens are not likely to be maintained even though an amendment was passed clearing the way for the maintenance of such ridings. Mr. Fisher said there is a better case for having a dual riding' for twin cities such as Fort William and Port Arthur than for single-city constituen- cies. gressed past the routine first- reading : stage. This is the third session in which the railway bill has suf- fered such a fate. The former Conservative government had similar legislation waiting dur- ing the 1962-63 session in which the government was beaten on a vote of confidence and forced into an election. The Liberal government had its legislation in the works a These appointments seem to enhance the positions of younger Shelepin are men to watch. The moves can strengthen the But the appointments of Shel- A metallurgist who has been whatsoever" "No Meddling With Pearson | Film" OTTAWA (CP) -- State Sec- retary Lamontagne said Mon- day there "was no interference by the govern- ment in the question of whether or not excerpts from a film about Prime Minister Pearson year ago but time again ran out. An indication of how long the bill has been ready is that one section lists its effective date -coming soon watch for it ! as July 1, 1964. It lays down a new policy of freeing the railways from all but the most essential federal regulation and tossing them into a sink-or-swim fight with truck, plane and pipeline competition. A sliding scale of subsidies, beginning at nearly $100,000,000 a year, would help the railways ease out of money-losing pas- senger and branch-line services. would be used on a Toronto CBC program. Mr. Lamontagne, who reports 0 Parliament for the CBC, was replying to Clifford Smallwood ITALIAN MIXER KING _ EDINBURGH (AP)--An Ital- ian barman, Angel Antonetti, who works in Buenos Aires, has ADHESIVE CONTACT DECORATING PLASTIC Wonderful for Walls (PC--Battle River - Camrose), who asked in the Commons have asked council to take an- other look at their request to won the world cocktail cham- pionship of the International promised to fight. this. "I hope this is not a pressure pattern winter, too." public works committee. 'Ald. Dafoe replied: "There is on septic tanks, 52 housing ientetenanen eee @ limit to what should be push- ed on the ta ag A current parks committee to be used at the Auditorium. If we lower rates there, where will it end? In deficit." Ditch Is Seen "Watery An eight-foot deep, water- filled hole left by a construction crew on the south boundary of Kingside Park could be a wa- tery grave for small children, council candidate Ernest Whit- ing told city council Monday night. Appearing for area residents, Mr. Whiting complained of un- safe conditions surrounding a water course and a storm sewer set-up which increases water flow at certain times of the year. Mayor Lyman Gifford prom- ised to have snow fencing in place today, "to corral the pool" and to block the sewer pipe opening. Mr. Whiting said three small children were found inside the four-foot sewer opening Sunday. He also said the water be- comes a cesspool in the summer Penal Reform Inquiries May Be Merged OTTAWA (CP)--Justice Min- ister Favreau was urged Mon- day to merge his proposed two committees on penal reform into a single, broad inquiry by a parliamentary committee, The appeal came from -six New Democratic MPs who ar- gued in a letter to Mr. Favreau that the two - committee ap- proach raises the danger that the two inquiries will go off in different directions and prove meaningless. Mr. Favreau announced plans to establish the two inquiries earlier this month after com- . ing under fire from the same MPs over penitentiary condi/ tions. "Your proposals that a par- liamentary committee exajpine the material .and physical ton- ditions in penitentiaries while another committee, non - par- Hiamentary in nature, examines the questions of rehabilitation, reformation, probation, parole and other correctional problems Grave' time and children sometimes drink the water. He said sam- ples have been sent to Toronto for analysis. The mayor promised to see that the construction company jre-piles equipment at the site. \Mr. Whiting was fearful that leaning piles might tip over on the children He said children, students at |T. R. McEwen and Gertrude |Colpus schools, cut-through the |park on their way to school and jthe conditions there present a jreal danger to them. He said |'gushing water" is taking part lof the park with it. | Mr. Whiting appeared for G. |Lavender, 570 Dean avenue, |who wrote a letter of petition to council containing 62 signatures. Council's Public Works com- mittee will follow up the com- plaint. seems to be a case.of the right hand not knowing what the left hand is doing," the letter said. The document was signed by Harold Winch (Vancouver East), David Orlikow (Winni- peg North), Arnold Peters (Ti- miskaming), Reid Scott (Tor- onto Danforth), Dr. Howe. (Hamilton South) Frank Howard (Skeena). William and Quints Born To Portuguese Negress LOURENCO MARQUES (AP) The birth of quintuplets to Clara Matangua was reported today by Dr. Julio Fernandes. He said he delivered the four boys and a girl Monday in Zavala hospital in Hambane district of Mozambique, a Portuguese -col- ony. The doctor said the birth was normal and all five of the babies had a good chance of survival. Mrs. Matangua, a Negro, and jher husband, Felizberto, have two other sons. COMPANY'S FIRST The inaugural broadcast by the 38-year-old National Broad- jcasting Company took place in New York's old Waldorf-Astoria hotel in 1926. Council endorsed a Chatham resolution calling on the On- tario government to pass legis- lation to permit municipalities to declare hospitals, homes and institutions "where municipal electors are confined" as polling places. And that, when a patient is unable to walk, that a DRO and poll clerk go to the patient to receive his ballot. Park Glen Towers Limited has applied for rezoning of lands it holds in the Oxford-Glen Malaga boundary to a zoning allowing 10-storey buildings. To .the board. planning RCAF Jet Overshoots Runway TORONTO (CP) -- A Royal Canadian Air Force 133 jet trainer plane was in collision with a cement truck Monday when the plane overshot a run- way at Downsview airport and ran onto a nearby street while attempting a landing. A spokesman at the RCAF station in north Toronto said no one was injured in the accident. The spokesman said the jet, flown by Fit. Lt, R. K. Johnson and first pilot Fit. Lt. J. G. Keith, both of St, Hubert, Que., was on a communications flight from St, Hubert to Traux Air Force base in Madison, Wis., and was stopping at Downsview for refuelling. He said the plane overshot the runway, ran onto Wilson Heights Bivd., and struck a cement truck. The driver of the truck apparently saw what was about to happen, stopped the truck and ran to a nearby ditch. | | | Ge EXCELSIOR LIFE apartment have the lane between Mary and Masson streets closed and the land conveyed to abutting owners. To the property com- mittee. Lebopal Realty Limited wants to trade an 80-foot wide strip of land for the proposed Gibb street 'extension, in ex- change for a Frontenac avenue piece of land abutting LRL lands. Application is made for rezoning of the lands. To the planning board. Accounts for the month end- ing Nov. 16, and totalling $6,355,- 197, were passed by council last night. Council backed a_ property committee recommendation that land fronting on King street west (held by the city for the extension of Fernhill boulevard from King to Bond) be closed and offered for sale to the ad- joining owners. Gordon Chariton, 522 Ritson road south, was granted a catering vehicle licence. Oshawa will to these training programs for Municipal Construction Inspec- tors and Surveyors: one inspec- tor to the junior course; three inspectors io the senior soils course; three inspectors to the senior concrete course; three inspectors to the senior asphalt course; and two instrument men to the surveying course. Dominion Rubber Company will be permitted to occupy its 48 Bond street building on an extension -- from March 1, 1965 to May 31, 1985. The city bought the property at the northeast corner of Bond and Church streets for Church street widen- ing. The company is building a new King street west store. The city will apply to run a Sanitary and storm sewer pro- gram -- with city staff -- from Dec. 15 this year to April 30, 1965, under the 1964-65 winter works incentive program. send personnel) Study Plan On Pump Stations Pumping stations may be just around the corner for residential developments unable to be ser- viced by gravity sewers. Council has not approved a pumping station for the south- end Beach Acres Development Limited, emphasized Ald, John Dyer Monday night. But the city fathers did back a planning board recommenda- tion that if a pumping station is built in the area 1) it sould be located to serve not only the 40 lots in question but all the undeveloped land between Bonnie Brae Point and Evangeline drive. 2) the cost of the pumping station would be borne pro- portionately by area owners, W. T. Lamson of Terace Park Construction has, asked council to release 40 lots in the approximately 120 - lot develop-|t ment from subdivision control "so I can get started this fall". The city also wants a new subdivision agreement with the owner paying 'those service costs now required for any cur- rent subdivision". Mr. Lamson last night de- scribed the area pumping sta- tion as "good thinking'. He es- timated there are about 600 to 700 lots which could be ser- viced in the area. He repeated his claim that he has been "'pushed from pillar to post for over eight years" by the city. (When his subdivision went back under control, Mr. Lam- son was then liable for service costs for which he was not re- sponsible previously. | (One of his plans called for development of 26 half-acre lots Peace of Mind is a priceless "extra" dividend ; when you invest in adequate PERMANENT PERSONAL POLICIES of Life Insurance. ; units. put.in curbs, gutters, pavement f. and sanitary city would install and pay for the storm sewers. Bint has said the division of costs in the subdivision is the oa stumbling block. He says often to present a new develop- ment plan.) IS are getting been telling you what we want for two years"', city install the pumping station and owners. He estimated the cost of a pumping station at "less than $20,000". is not true to assume the plan- ning board favors a pumping station. The board is recom- mending that if ; then it serve thé whole area. and where is the big question," he said. committee member, said "'it is Lamson's responsibility to con- area to see if they agree, Then I presume we would okay it. There are specifics to be added. We want the best equipment. We are worried about perform- ance and maintenance.9' Recently, he offered to sewers if the (Public Works chairman Cecil r, Lamson has been asked WORRIED Last night, Ald. Bint said "we closer; we have r ti) Mr. Lamson suggested the then assess the cost to Ald. Dyer reminded that "'it of no interference or any ac- tion by top management of the CBC. of a day in the prime minis- ter's life, was made under con- tract for the CBC, which later This Hour took its cameras to a Toronto Film Society showing film as it was screened, and later asked some viewers their opinion of the work. late last week saying the planned segment would not be shown on the television pro- gram, whether the government inter- ered to prohibit the showing of part of the film on the televi- sion' program This Hour has has Seven Days Sunday. Mr. Lamontagne said he knew The film Mr. Pearson, a study efused to show it on the air. f the film, took shots af the A CBC statement was issued Bartenders Association. The drink, titled Mar Del Plata, contains gin, French vermouth, a dash of Grand Marnier and a twist of lemon peel. SACRED COWS LOOSE _NEW DELHI (AP)--City of- ficials in India's. capital have started a drive to round up hun- dreds of straying sacred cows roaming the streets and to care for them in cattle pounds, Available At SWAN'S HARDWARE OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE phere is one "They are coming, but when Ald. Cliff Pilkey, public works act other (land) owners in the "This is a general statement. NOTICE TO LUTHERANS in Oshawa District If you desire Information about the new Canada Synod Luth- eran Church to be estabilshed in Oshawa... Contact REV. 'H. FISCHER 177 Rossland Rd. E. PHONE 725-2755 termp I put less money into financing and more into berets First -- before you shop around -- arrange with Royal Bank to finance in advance with a low-cost ing power, bargaining power in your pocket. (With the money lan loan MAKE GOT A CHILLY ROOM? ADDING A ROOM? YOUR COMFORT COMPLETE WITH ELECTRIC HEAT VISIT YOUR ELECTRIC HEATING INFORMATION CENTRE HYDRO ONTARIO 61 Temp B. Church Street, Markham. 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