'THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, December 11, 1964 38--Coming Events NO UAW BINGO Saturday, Dec. 12 Bingos discontinued until the end of the Strike. Hold Tickets Until Later Dote BINGO ORANGE TEMPLE SATURDAY, DeC. 12th 7:30 P.M. 20 Games -- $8 Share the Wealth 4 -- $40 Jackpots to go 1 -- $150 Jackpot to go Children Under 16 Not Admitted SPECIAL INVITATION by Rev. A. Cwiklinski toa Church Dedication 3 p.m., Sun., Dec. 13th ST. JOSEPH'S POLISH NATIONAL CHURCH (formerly Holy Trinity Church) Cabbage roll dinner to follow EVERYONE WELCOME SUNNYSIDE PARK MONSTER BINGO TO-NIGHT CLUB CAMELOT King St. E.--one block east of city limits. opposite "'Bad Boys" $1200 in Prizes Early Bird games ot 7:45 Jackpot Nos. 52 and 56 Admission 1.00 THORNTON'S COMMUNITY HALL MODERN and SQUARE DANCE Saturday, December 12 ot 9 P.M. Off King St. West 1 block Thornton's Rd. North (the old schoolhouse) ADMISSION $1 YWCA NOEL BAKE SALE AND TEA In aid of YWCA World Ser- vice Fund, Soturdoy, Dec. 12, 1964; 2:30-4:30 P.M. Afternoon tea 50¢, Children's Refreshments 25c. ST. JOHN'S PARISH BINGO Corner Bloor E. & Simcoe Every Friday at 7:45 P.M. HERE'S WHERE 'a TO FIND GIFTS FOR EVERYONE ! ristma t Spotter Trees and Trim For the Home For Him ~ |For the Family SCOTCH PINE Christmas trees, fresh cut, No. 1 Grade, Reasonable prices. Apply 200 Court Street. CHOICE pruned Christmas Trees. Harmony Road pavement. Turn left, 2nd farm, north side. CHRISTMAS TREES! 97¢ up. Chinn's, corner of Park Road South at Hiil- side. Pine spruce. One or.1,000, 723-7088 Free delivery. Scott's Farm, Scotch and Spruce North, to the end of BETTER CHRISTMAS PROGRAMMES T.V. Towers $50. up OSHAWA T.V. SUPPLY LTD. 361 GIBBONS 728-8180 BILL LEASK BEAUTIFUL expertly trimmed and shaped Pine and Spruce trees, freshly cut. Delivery. 144 Annis. 725-3710. CHRISTMAS TREES SCOTCH PINE Corner Brock S, & Victoria Street, Whitby ST. JOHN'S ANGLICAN MEN'S CLUB CHRISTMAS TREES FOR SALE No, 1 Pruned Scotch Pines. Good color, Apply to: MRS, SADIE HAMILTON Orono, Ontario Phone No. | Ring 16 YULETIDE GIFT & TRIM SHOP YOUR "ONE STOP Features: No. 1 top quolity trees, gift wrap, table centres, door knockers, | fancy candles, garlands, | indoor-outdoor lights,. out- 1 door figures, Santas, bulbs, "bells, etc. Shop today! RUNDLE GARDEN CENTRE LTD. 1015 KING E. 725-6551 Shop in Warmth! | selection For a complete OF... * CHRISTMAS TREES (will spray) * LIGHTS REFLECT A MOMENT! WOULDN'T A MIRROR MAKE A GREAT GIFT 4 DAD been asking for @ BLACK & DECKER FINISHING SANDER ONLY 21.95 at MILLWORK AND BUILDING SUPPLY 1279 Simcoe N. 728-6291 POOL TABLES 11 models NO MONEY DOWN MAJOR POOL EQUIPMENT CORP. CANADA LTD. 690 Drake St., Oshawa 725-9151 After hours 725-3661 POLISHED PLATE GLASS MIRRORS | With silver backing that's Guar- onteed for 5 -years. -- Oval and Rectangular $ SAVINGS $ on auto repairs, parts, accessories, speed = and custom equipment. 24 hr. towing "DOC'S" 1600 KING E, 728-7781 (10% off with this coupes} -- Plain and Ornate -- Wall and Full Length |-- Montie and Vanity | [JUST IN TIME FOR GIFTING... CHRISTMAS SHOP" | 25% OFF ODD SIZES For the Finest in Mirrors See... THIS YEAR GIVE HIM FLYING TRAINING For private pilots. This is a | Goyernment approved school. Aircraft rentals also available J. V. AVIATION LIMITED Hanger 2, Oshawa Municipal Airport, Stevenson Rd. N. 728-3191 6 months payments deferred} with up to 4 years to pay. VERN GLASS For Him or Her Simcoe N, & Wayne Sts. Telephone 728-6214 This Year Give The Gift That Keeps FOR THE MOTORIST Give a gift wrapped Ontario Motor League Membership For 'information Call 728-8334 For Anyone On Giving... An Indoor and Outdoor * DECORATIONS * FLOWERING HOUSE PLANTS Mums, Poinsettos, Cyclamens 2 Locations to... J. A. Janssen & Sons LTD. 843 King W. 728-9429 Al Preston's Sunoco Simcoe St. North 20 Games $10 and $15 Jackpot 53 Nos. $130. Jackpots and Share the Wealth THE NDP monthly meeting will be held | tat the Genosha Hotel Sunday, December | Paper Strike | Partly Settled MONTREAL (CP)--The man- agement of La Presse and its employees represented by Con- federation of National Trade Union (CNTU) affiliates settled terms of a new contract Thurs-| day night. However, agreement) has yet to be reached with the striking" printers. La Presse has not published! since June 3 when members of} the International Typographical Union (CLC) went on strike. Journalists, office employees| and tradesmen, all CNTU affil-| jates, and La Presse manage-) ment agreed to a compromise proposal put forward Thursday by Premier Jean Lesage. Union spokesmen said it calls) for a three-per-cent wage in-| crease in 1965, three-per-cent in| 1966 and 414-per-cent in 1967 as| well as 3.7 per cent of salary paid in months worked in 1964 and fully paid 1964 and 1965 va-| cations. The journalists voted to ac-| cept the settlement and return to work Dec. 17 on the condi- tion the striking printers settle with management. Romeo Mathieu, chief negoti- ator for the printers, said the typographers have not yet taken any decision on returning to work. The mediator of the conflict, Mr. Justice Roger Oui- met, met with La Presse man- agement earlier in the day. NAMED BOARD CHAIRMAN TORONTO (CP) -- Bruce J Legg, district solicitor of the department of veterans af- fairs, has been appointed chair- man of the Ontario Workmen's Compensation Board, Premier John Robarts announced Thurs- day. Mr. Legge succeeds Eu- gene Sparrow, 67, retiring at the end of the year because of poor health.. Mr. Sparrow re- HOT COFFEE TO EACH CUSTOMER 5000 TREES ON LOT Pruned Scotch Pines Also Spruce & Balsam 6 ft. - 7 ft. - 8 ft. SPECIAL... 97c - 1.50 - 2.00 Sprayed any color For Nominal Charge. CHRISTMAS TREE LAND Oshawa Garden Centre OPEN EVENINGS 1259 Simcoe St. N. 723-1161 | OSHAWA | TIMES SUBSCRIPTION If you have friends or rela- tives who are living out-of- town, send the Oshawa Times, a year-round gift that is sure to be a daily reminder of your thought- fulness. * 7 CALL THE| CIRCULATION! DEPARTMENT| | KING ST, EAST| 123-3474 BE DIFFERENT Mr. Business Man and Home Owner Hand Paintings of SANTA REINDEER, SNOWMEN ETC., ON YOUR WINDOWS SEE OUR EXCLUSIVE DISPLAY AT J.A. Janssen and Sons Ltd. Rundle Garden Centre Sherwin Wms. Paint Co. You Name it,-- We~Paint It BERT BOKKERS STUDIOS ORDER 3 DAYS TO WEEK, IN ADVANCE For the Children Christmas. Perfect gifts. 723-2593. 131 Albert St. 728-4061 PONIES for sale. Will hold wntil Will be pleased to give you | further details and act upon your instructions, |Holiday Food WHITE ROCK capons, 6 Ibs, and up.| |fresh killed, oven ready, delivered,| |$2.50 each. Telephorie 725-8304: | | weontsialt | LIKE ARMCHAIR SHOPPING ? Phone 668-3311 For details on Gift Packs of SELECT APPLES | RED WING ORCHARDS ORDER YOUR CHRISTMAS FOWL Litz Processing Plant Specia! rates for Banquets, Bowling Alleys 11.7 Bloor St. E. 723-4722 CHRISTMAS FOWL Capons. and Turkeys dressed ond delivered. FRANK HOAG Rossland Road West Diol 725-6837 GIFTS FOR THE HOBBYIST Model Automobile, Air plane, Boat Kits. The Big- gest Selection in town. POLLARD Radio & Television Service 153 Simcoe S.. 723-9512 New and Used PORTABLE' AND STANDARD TYPEWRITERS One year guarantee on all machines Jenkins Business Machines (Sales & Service) OPEN EVENINGS 128-7783 INDIA HANDICRAFTS For your Christmas gift sel ections, moy we suggest this yeor' a -handcrafted gift from India, On disploy are brass and wood coffee tables, Rosewood and Ivory carvings, silver jewellery, silks, evening purses, vases, condleholders, rose bowls and many other beautiful and exclusive pieces For Appointment PHONE 725-2987 Give * ** That Lasting Gift "A Gift Certificate" For A PORTRAIT IN OIL Sittings Arranged at your Convenience, Call CLARK STUDIO 325 BROCK NORTH WHITBY 668-4497 RELIGIOUS CHRISTMAS GIFTS ASSORTED ROSARIES ST. JOSEPH'S MISSALS $5 to $18 CERAMIC STATUES $2.25 to $13 Lovely assortment of Crucifix and Nativity Sets PARKVIEW VARIETY STORE 98 OLIVE AVE Mrs. V. Bachand, owner Open. daily 'til 10 p.m 725-8232 SKATES NEW and USED SOLD and EXCHANGED Also BICYCLES and TRICYCLES Apply DRAYTON CYCLE 204 Bond St, E. SOMETHING . . . THE WHOLE FAMILY WILL LOVE BABY BUDGIES Wonderful assortment of rare species and colors. MRS. T. BROAD 114 Elgin East 723-9767 SURE TO PLEASE! A Gift Certificate "from LLOYD ELLIS SHOES 49 King St. W., Bowmanville 623-5941 Shoes, Slippers for the Family Use Our Convenient Layaway Plan ELMER'S "The Christmas Store with Gifts Galore' Got gift problems? Drop into Elmer's Bargain House and. see the large selection of gift ideas for the whole family. ° ELMER'S BARGAIN HOUSE STORE HOURS: 12 noon to 9 p.m. Sat..9 a.m, to 6 p.m. Closed all day Monday 253 BLOOR ST. E. FROM... SANTA'S PACK FOR ALL THE FAMILY SLIPPERS * Busy feet will appre- ciate these warm house slippers Christmas morn and every morn. * Complete range of sizes, styles and colors. BIGGEST SELECTION IN TOWN! BURNS co, LTD. 1 KING W. 725-4611 "Use our lay awoy"' \For Holiday Fun GIVE * * * your Party Clothes "THE FESTIVE LOOK" Vadiant Cleaners Oshawa 'Shopping Centre 725-1023 Pick-up & Delivery SMITH BEVERAGES LIMITED Auithiorized Bottlers for PEPSI-COLA CANADA LTD, and Crush International Limited 750 Farewell Wt, Oshawa 723-1011 TELEPHONE The Safe Way lo Celebrate | THE HOLIDAY SEASON Ride with MERCURY TAXI 725°477)\ 14 ALBERT ST, Oshawa's Mast Modern Tax! For Her. JUICE EXTRACTOR SALI makes all See 'her work and compare, Also blenders and coffee grinders, Buy now The Sunshing Shop 24 Prince Oshawe "STAR LINE" ELNA SEWING MACHINES are here! up to $100 off on all '64 models by your Elna dealer Oshawa Sewing Centre 329 Simeoe § 728-2391 Free demanstration Save! Street, x By BRENDA LARGE OTTAWA (CP) -- A human rights group has urged the fed- eral government to reveal se- curity procedures now being followed in government depart- ments. It also asked the government to appoint a royal commission to explore the whole field of security arrangements in Can- ada in, relation to individual rights. Professor Donald Rowat, head of the political science de- partment of Carleton Univer- sity, made the recommenda- tions Thursday at a_ public meeting on human rights. They came out of a discus- sion group at the meeting deal- ing with the implications of government security and se- dividual. The group, which formed part of a two - day seminar here arranged by the Canadian and Ottawa citizenship coun- cils, also raised a number of related questions,/ | "We wonder whether the jnumber of posts designated as sensitive is too large," said Professor Rowat. | NEED DEFINITION | The grounds for suspicion also needed to be more clearly 'defined. 'Is a person to be sus- jpected of being a Communist} |because his grandparents are| Communists?" He said members of his dis- cussion group felt there is too imuch secrecy about security |procedures now being: followed. "We need a_ government statement immediately, outlin- ing what the existing pro- jcedures are, and what the pro- visions are for appeal if a per- 'son is designated as a poor security risk." | Earlier, Liberal MP Pauline Jewett voiced concern about security measures in the fed- eral government and civil serv-| , ice | "Voluntary groups should) press for information on the way security investigations are now being conducted, and. on \what appeal procedures exist," she said. Members of the discussion |group on secrecy wondered |whether members. of --- Parlia- jment were given security rat- jings by the RCMP. SUSPECTS FILES KEPT Progressive Conservative MP |Gordon Fairweather told the |meeting he did not know, but |said he rather suspected that he and his colleagues, as well crecy on the rights of the in-| | day. Group Wants To Know Security Procedures as other Canadians, did have their own personal dossiers in the RCMP's secret files. Both Miss Jewett and Mr. Fairweather were taking part in a panel discussion on human Tights, Mr. Fairweather said a new national revenue department ruling allows department offi- cials to investigate the private business dealings and corres- pondence of a taxpayer with- out the taxpayer's presence. He believed this was a violation of individual rights. Another panel member, prominent Ottawa builder Wil- liam Teron, charged that "vast economic ghettos" were pres- ent in every North American city, and were a constant vio- lation of the principles of hu- man rights. ; Mr. Teron also criticized the National Housing Act as being discriminatory legislation. Less than four per cent of those applying for home-build- ing loans under the provisions Renfrew OK's Sunday Sports RENFREW, Ont. (CP)--Vot-" ers in this Ottawa Valley town gave their approval to a Sun-. day sport bylaw in municipal, voting Thursday. Z With two of the 18 polis to report, the bylaw had a strong lead with 1,422 votes in favor of : Sunday sport and only 762 ~ against, ; In another referendum voters approved a suggestion that the Ontario government - 1 a greater share < ahoaiien costs. The vote was 1,720 for to of the act had yearly salaries of under $4,000 a year. 357 opposed with two polls to come. : WINNIPEG (CP) -- The in- dustrial inquiry commission into CNR "run - throughs" will cover three areas of investiga- tion, including the entire ques- tion of policy and principle, Commissioner Mr. Justice Samuel Freedman said Thurs- The commission set Wednes- day, Jan. 13 as the date for its first public hearing in Winni- peg. Other sittings were tenta- tively scheduled in Saskatoon, Wainwright, Alta., Nakina, Ont. }and Moncton, N.B. The commission met for the first time Thursday to fix dates and procedures, No briefs or evidence were taken. Mr. Justice Freedman, a member of the Manitoba Court of Appeal, said in an opening statement that the first area the one-man commission will study is the factual situation |pertaining to the run-throughs at Nakina and Wainwright' in- stituted Oct. 25. He said the events which fol- lowed--about 1,800 CNR operat- ing employees booked off work in protest--were the immediate mission. }IS SECOND PHASE arising from the run-throughs. justification in the eyes of the railway for running through the terminals of Nakina and Wain- right, the obligation, if any, of the railway to its employees who may be adversely affected by such run-throughs, how that obligation should be fairly dis- ; ELMORE PHILPOTT "Tory In H VANCOUVER (CP)--Elmore |Philpott, after a lifetime in poli- tics and journalism devoted to human progress and human un- derstanding, is dead. He died in hospital here Wed- Inesday night, a man who in public life had sought strong igovernment, and who in his |writings could speak of meet- ings with world statesmen. He was the kind of compli- cated individual once described as "a socialist in his head, a liberal in his. heart and a con- servative in his bones." Mr. Philpott, 68, had been in failing health for several months. A resident of Pentic- ton, B.C., in recent years, he entered hospital there and had been transferred to a veterans' hospital here a week ago. He had battled physical diffi- culty ever since one of three iwounds from the First World War, complicated by arthritis, |forced him to use two canes in | walking. | WAS COLUMNIST Mr. Philpott was a syndicated \columnist and wrote on local, inational and international af- \fairs, travelling widely to five 'continents. He was an expert jon China and India, and num- |bered the late prime minister | Montreal To Outdo Paris: MONTREAL (CP)--A struc ture standing taller than the | Riffel Tower is bajng put on the |drawing board for the 1967 |Montreal world's fair Pahis is co-operating finan posed $20,000,000 project. Joint financing plans were outlined Thursday night by Montreal Mayor Jean Drapeau, a recent visitor to Paris The tower Mayor Drapeau envisages would--at 1,066. feet-- top the Eiffel tower by 66 feet. If plans go through, only the Empire State Building in New York city will have a_height edge in global comparison. The Manhattan building rises to 1,472 feet, including a 222-foot television tower. Tower plans have been ap- proved in principle by the Paris ONLY 11 SHOPPING DAYS TILL CHRISTMAS city council and the equivalent of $60,000 voted for studies. Montreal's council will be asked to take similar action to- night. signed his job as vice-president! of the Imperial Varnish and} Color Company in 1948 to be- come chairman of the board. OEE ROWE. HORE The idea of the tower is based on the concept of sym- . Prominent Journalist cially with Montreal in the 'ed is Bones' Nehru and former British prime minister Clement Attlee among his friends. He was a Liberal member of Parliament from 1953 to 1957 for Vancouver South, but his ac- tivity and influence in politics went back more than 20 years before he sat in Ottawa. Born in Toronto in 1896, Mr. Philpott was educated at Ham- ilton Collegiate and the Univer- sity of Toronto, where he was an outstanding athlete. He left school to enlist in the army and won his commission at the Battle of the Somme. He was awarded the Military Cross and Bar. MOVED BY POVERTY He is said to have been pro- foundly affected by the poverty he saw as a struggling business magazine publisher in Toronto from 1922 to 1924. Through his work as a journalist with the Montreal Witness and Toronto Globe in the late 1920s and early 1930s he developed strong left - of - centfe political convic- tions. He contested with Mitchell Hepburn the leadership of the Ontario Liberal party in 1930, quit the Liberals for the CCF and helped draft the Regina Manifesto in 1933, and later left the CCF when he felt the party was not in a position to correct \the circumstances of the de- | pression. | He moved to the West Coast in 1937, first to Victoria and later to Vancouver, where he lived until his retirement in {1961 Reaten three times in contests for a provincial or federal seat, he won election to the Com- nfons on his fourth try in 1953. cause for creation of the com- Mr. Justice Freedman. said the second phase of the inquiry concerns the industrial situation This phase would embrace the changed, and the rights and in- terests of third parties such as the towns of Nakina and Wain- wright. The run-throughs would have had train crews work straight through from Hornepayne to Armstrong in Northern Ontario and from Edmonton to Biggar, Sask., in Western Canada. Crew changes at the midway "DP" Term Sparks Wildcat ST. CATHARINES (CP) Production was halted at Port Weller Drydocks Limited Thursday by a wildcat strike prompted by a foreman's call- ing a German-born shop stew- ard a "DP" and threatening to fire him. More than 500 of the com- pany's 650 - man work force, members of Local 680, Interna- tional Brotherhood. of Boiler- makers and Shipbuilders ¢CLC) followed the lead of 100 welders who walked off the job when the foreman refused to apolo- gize. Strikers said the foreman's comments came about because of the shop steward's persistent comments: about money. Jan Furst, general manager of the company, said the strike in- volved ccomplaints about the distribution of overtime work. Mr. Furst said the strike, could last two days because of the difficulty in reaching union officers, "We have been trying to find a solution to the overtime is- sue for some time, and we .." he said, "But they should go back to work so we can dis- cuss it." agree with the men's grievance 3 Areas Of "Run-Throughs' In CNR Commission Inquiry points of Nakina and Wain- wright would have been elimi- nated. The railway delayed the run- through program Oct. 27 after the federal government set up the inquiry commission. Spokesmen for the employees accused the CNR of instituting the new work rules without consultation. The commission is tentatively ------ to sit in Nakina Feb, ' Burials For Congo Victims AVONMORE, Ont. (CP) -- Fu- neral and memorial services for two brothers--one a Protes- tant missionary killed by Con- golese rebels two weeks ago-- will be held here this weekend, The funeral will be held Dec, 12, Saturday, for Archie Mc- Millan, 58, of Cornwall who died Thursday. A memorial service will be held the following day for his brother Hector, who had served for more than 20 years with the Unevangelized Fields Mission in The Congo. DECLINES GRANT STORNOWAY (Reuters) -- The Canadian government has declined to give a grant toward a swimming pool on this rocky Outer Hebrides island off the Scottish coast in memory of explorer Sir Alexander Mace kenzie, a local council spokes- man announced Thursday. The island is celebrating the bi- centenary of the Stornoway- born Canadian explorer. NOW IS THE TIME TO PICK YOUR LOCATION 1-2-3 Bedroom SUITES @ PENTHOUSES Complete with Indoor Parking © Rental Information by appointment only. 723-1712 728-2911 Living The Ultimate ,in Luxury 124 PARK ROAD Ge@ORGIAN mansions NORTH; OSHAWA DINE FOR $1.09 After 5 p.m. every night in De- cember Zeller's offer you @ full course menu , , . delicious main course, choice of beverage, dessert and all the trimmings .. . for 1.09, He was defeated in Vancouver South in 1957 and again in 1958. Take @ shopping break and ect ,.. OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE at "the skillet' ZELLER'S bolizing the presence o° the greatest French city in Mont- [real the world's second-largest French city, At sea and ashore! RUMS NAVY RUM ( PALM BREEZE (Very Light) Dark) WHITE CAP (White)