Oshawa Times (1958-), 28 Nov 1964, p. 12

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i " ge Se one Sate Sor erang prmemega pnenegaese RRTENORGE BANG AND SHE COULD , for Darlington Council Rubyanne Doll, 19, a Lans- deaf since she was five years old because of mumps. and ear infections. Two weeks ago, she got into Heiden's car and he slammed the door. Ing Mich., high school, senior, listens to James Heiden, a imeighbor, from the back seat HEAR Suddenly she could hear. Doz- tors said the air pressure dis- lodged scar tissue allowing to 'regain her hearing. (AP Wirephoto) 'of his car. Rubyanne was REPORT FROM OTTAWA 'Pension By RUSSELL C. HONEY MP for Durham Riding In iast week's report I set out details of some aspects of the Canada Pension Plan, including fiformation about combining payments under this plan with the Old Age Pension payments, gurvivors' benefits for widows and orphans and portability from sea to sea. In this report TI would like to give some par- ticulars with respect to who will be covered, the rate of con- tributions, the benefits which May be expected and so on. * The Canada Pension Plan will be compulsory for most Cana- dians, This decision was made after a great deal of study and after the government received ions to this effect from @ number of groups including Canadian Federation. of who that be covered on a com- basis, Similar requests gére received from representa- tives of fishermen and others. 60ME EXCEPTIONS . The plan covers all Canadians with some exceptions such as Members of the armed forces and RCM Police who already Biave special provisions for rel- etively early retirement made for them. Because of the ad- trative difficulties involved reaching them, certain groups of migratory workers have also been excluded from the plan. In agriculture, horti- Gulture, fishing, forestry, log- ging and lumbering, a worker who does not spend at least 25 working days a year with the ae sare or one who not earn at least $250 a year from the same employer, Will not be covered under the Dian. * The contribution rate is 1.8 r cent each from employer employee on earnings be- een $600 and $5,000 a year. Whe effect of the lower limit is Ogressive in the sense that the an with low earnings will con- bute a smaller proportion of them than wil the man with rage earnings. On earnings $300 a month (about the pres- ent average level in Canada) the e@mployee's contribution will be @qbivalent of 1.5 per cent of his total earnings. The employer of glch .a wage earner will of Course contribute 1.5 per cent. «Self employed persons will 3.6 per cent on his income ver $600 per year up to a max- frum of $5,000, Thus the self employed person making $300 Fas will contribute +3 per $5,000 CEILING No contributions are permitted above the ceiling of $5,000, This is to prevent the large income @arner from gaining an ex- cessive benefit under this plan. The 'plan is designed to look alter the reasonable needs of the average Canadian. If the large me earner, who earns over Suggests Term Be Two Years * HAMPTON (Staff) -- Mrs. Mary Budai, one of the con- testants for a seat on the Dar- lington 'Township council re- commended Friday that in fu- ture, the term of office for council should be two years. » "T think that a two-year term would be beneficial to the people. Not only would it cut election costs but more things could be accom- plished in a. two year term than in a one year term." At present Darlington Towh- ' ship holds an election a) Pilkey, Dec. 7 Benefit Details Outlined $5,000 per year, wishes to pro- vide for a larger pension he will have to purchase from a private company the amount he requires over and above that paid under the Canada Pension Plan. The amount of pension pay- able is related to the average earnings upon which a person has contributed. In calculating this average the past earnings will be revalued to their equiv- alent at the time the pension is being paid; that is in propor- tion to the changes that have taken place in the meantime in the general level of wages. In this way; the pension a Canadian has earned will be in step with improvements in pro- ductivity and in wage rates. A dollar paid into the plan by a young Canadian in 1966 will have the same purchasing pow- er when it is paid out to him by way of a pension 40 years later. In other words this provision of the plan will counteract the eroding effect of inflation. MAXIMUM BENEFIT At the outset the plan will pro- vide for maximum monthly ben- efits of $104.17. As has been mentioned, as the years go by this pension will be adjusted up- Coffin-Shaped Badges Evident SALISBURY (AP) -- Small white coffin-shaped badges are appearing on thousands of coat lapels in this capital of white supremacist Rhodesia. They bear the letters OMDB (over my dead body) and re- flect some of the white Rhodes- jian's) bitterness toward Britain, which opposes Rhodesian inde- pendence under white rule. J. G. Lewis, chairman of the "coffin committee" sponsoring the badge campaign, says the government wants to show the British' that "if they are going to land troops here they must carry a machine-gun in one hand and a coffin in the other." He said the committee was formed after British Prime Minister Harold Wilson's warn- ing that a Rhodesian unilat- eral declaration of independ- ence would be tantamount to rebellion. Prime Minister Tan Smith had threatened unilateral independence but backed away from the threat after the stern warning from the British. The badges' letters were taken from a recent statement by Smith that 'if independence means some member of the British Royal Family will have to:come out and see the Union Jack being hauled down, then as far as 1 am concerned it will be over my dead body." Britain has said it will grant independence to Rhodesia only when the country's black ma- \ BEFORE THE MAGISTRATE -Break, Enter And A police officer's suspionsjstolen from a safe taken the 'Hed to the arrest of five Toronto|same night from the Canadian men Wednesday night, and their/Legion Hall at Dunbarton. The conviction of break, enter, and|building was broken into, the Five Accused Admit theft in Magistrate's Thursday morning. Dennis Barry, 22, Reginald Cantwell, 21, Roy Farnell, 24, William Nash, 20, and Ronald Brake, 25, were all remanded in custody for two weeks to await pre-sentence reports. Constable Laurie Watson of the Pickering Township Police Department told the Court that he stopped the men on Harwood avenue "because they looked suspicious", and found $101.63 under the front seat of the car. The money, it was subse- quently established, had been Reporters Quit Council OTTAWA (CP)--The first at- tempt to produce a complete written record of a Northwest Territories Council session has ended in failure. "On the recommendation of Air Marshal Hugh Campbell of Court| court learned, and. the safe taken 75 feet away, where the dial was punched out, Two Fairport youths, Stan Ludlow, 19, and Roy Wilkinson, also 19, pleaded guilty to drink- ing under age, and Wilkinson also pleaded guilty to causing wilful damage. ' The Court was told that Wil- kinson, after a drinking bout in a Toronto hotel with Ludlow, Nov. 15, had hurled a stone through the window. of a car. He was fined $50 and costs or 15 days for this, and ordered to pay $20 in damages or face an additional 15 days. He was aiso fined the same amounts on each of two convic- tions of drinking under age, with the alternative of 15 days con- secutive on each. Ludlow was given the same options on his one conviction. A scuffle over a girl cost a Toronto youth $25 and costs or 15 days on a conviction of as- sault. Thomas Albert Joyce, 18, was also ordcrcd to pay for the repair of glasses he smashed. ped the accused on Highway 2. He found found a quantity of liquor in his car, A charge of careless driving against Garry B. Anstey of|30. Rosebank road north was 'dis-; The officer told the Court that missed. The charge was laid,|there was a large accumulation |Constable Laurie Watson said,|of loose gravel at the intersec- jafter the Anstey car left Rouge- tion, making it dangerous. This mont road and hit a tree Oct.jevidence prompted the missal. Theft ant, Harold McKiniry, had been bothering him in Pickering Vil- lage Nov. 25. McKiniry suffered facial cuts and a-bump on the head as a result of the struggle. A careless driving offence on Liverpool road, Sept. 10 cost Romeo Casey of Toronto $25 and costs or 10 days. Casey pleaded guilty to the charge, but ex- plained that the two people, lying on his fenders when he was arrested, were there to allow the bumpers to meet while his car was being pushed. Constable James Brown of Pickering Township Police De- partment told the Court it was the presence of these people that prompted the charge. A Pickering youth, Gregory Sleigh, 18, was fined $50 and costs or 15 days for having liquor in a place other than his residence. Constable Brown told the Court he found a bottle of whiskey in Sleigh's car Oct. 31. Sleigh pleaded guilty. A drunk driving charge against John McGenetry, 31, of Oshawa was reduced to impair- ed, and he was fined $100 and costs or 14 days. .Constable Brown told the Court he laid CENTRAL ONTARIO | dis- + TRUST & SAVINGS CORPORATION is openin its : HEAD OFFICE at 19 Simcoe Street North, Oshawa on Jucsday., December. 1, 1964 real ? Ottawa, an appointed member of the northern government, two| _He alleged that the complain- Watch for the Announcement the charge Nov. 1, when he stop-| | shorthand reporters were hired to produce a Hansard report of the recent winter meetings at Frobisher Bay. One of the reporters, visibly shaken by the poor acoustics of the meeting hall, the mumbling of some members and the term- inology which falls strange on southern ears, stopped halfway through the week-long session and sent this message to Coun- cil Secretary Frank Murphy: "T quit." The second reporter was un- able to make full notes of re- maining meetings, which went six hours at a stretch. | SUPPORT -- VOTE ELECT TALEWSKI FOR ALDERMAN For Sound Administration December 7, 1964 in Monday's paper and listen to Radio Station CKLB for further details The shorthand notes taken will help produce a better-than- usual record of council accom- plishments however. Plans are being made to take a complete record of the council's Febru- ary meeting here. Even Bath Towel | Special For Star HOLLYWOOD (AP) -- When you're a movie star like Sandra Dee, you just can't step out of the shower into an ordinary} |bath towel. | | "It was designed by Jean Louis," said Sandra, showing one she wears in That Funny Feeling. Just what kind of a design can even a famed designer put into a bath towel? "He can drape it," said Sandra with a smile. "If that's all you're wearing, you've got to watch how it fits." | | jority get full representation. This would mean African rule since 'blacks outnumber whites 16-1 in Rhodesia. wards to keep in step with im- provements in productivity and wage rates. The maximum pen- sion of $104.17, combined with the maximum old age pension of $75 will make an over-all maximum pension payment of $179.17 at age 70.. Proportionate- ly lower payments will prevail if the Canadian elects to take his pension at 65 or onwards, In this and last week's report I have tried to'outline some of the main: provisions of the Can- ada Pension Plan. There will, however, be many questions which will occur to a great number of readers. As I men- tioned last week, I hope to have the opportunity soon, during a parliamentary recess, to per- sonally discuss some of the fur- ther details of this important groups in Durham. legislation with individuals and) USE OUR LAY-AWAY PLAN A 10% Deposit Will Hold Any Purchase 'Til Christmas VOT JOHN W. 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KIDDIES' BROWN RUBBER SHEARLING LINED STRAPPER BOOTS sizes 7 to 12; 1 to 3 2 22 MONDAY ONLY .. . ONE PRICE ' pr. LOWER LEVEL saw, router, ; 1038 KING ST. WEST AT GARRARD RD. RES, agape oa

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