Oshawa Times (1958-), 2 Feb 1965, p. 3

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Gordon Puts ~ On Coin-Flood Fancies By JAMES NELSON OTTAWA (CP)--Invoking the old law of supply and demand, Canadian Mint will churn out special sets of uncirculated 1965 coins until all demand has been met, even if production has to run into 1966. It was decided earlier to limit production this year to 2,000,000 sets, When new coin presses are in- stalled and special factory space rented, the mint will again in- vite orders for the collectors' sets. It was swamped with or- Woman Weeps While Letter Read In Court HAMILTON (CP)--A woman sobbed openly in county court Monday as a letter from her missing husband was read aloud. William Edwards, 50, and his wife, Muriel, 47, are both charged with fraud. In the letter, Edwards wrote his wife: "I do not know what will happen, Muriel, but I do know I cannot face tomorrow and it is better if I do not wake up to face it. "I will face a far greater judge and what the decision will be, I don't know." A bench warrant was issued for Edwards's arrest and Judge John §S. Latchfor? adjourned the case until the warrant is executed. "You have no idea where he is?" the judge asked. "No," Mrs. Edward replied, as tears ran down her cheeks. PLEAD NOT GUILTY Mr. and Mrs. Edwards both pleaded not guilty to defraud- ing a 62-year-old widow of some $4,000 in funds during a three- month period last year. The husband, a former evan- gelist and used-car salesman, conducted an extensive cross- examination of the complainant Mrs. Edith Harding of Hamil- ton before court adjourned for the week end. Mrs. Harding testified she gave Edwards some $2,000 in cheques for mining stock and 'surveys near Timmins. She said that other cheques ranging from $100 to $700 were used by Edwards on horse races and he claimed he needed other funds for expenses arising from a car accident, Assistant Crown Attorney Da- vid Robinson said defence| counsel Carl Logan handed him the note at the start of court The Damper ders for 6,000,000 in. the first days of January and had to re- turn 4,000,000 to the would-be buyers. se Mr. Gordon said it would be impossibie to give priority to Canadian buyers and difficult to ration distribution of the coin sets. A spol check of the orders now on hand at the mint indi- cated the buyers are 60 per cent foreign, about the same as in past years, but there is no way of knowing how many Cana- dians are ordering them as agents for foreigners. The sets consist of one spe- cially minted and polished coin of each denomination--1, 5, 10, 25, and 50 cents, and $1. Their face value is $1.91 and they are sold by the mint at $4. MARKET VALUE HIGH The speculative market has been as high as $18 a set. It is more usually in the $10 and $12 range for previous years' sets. Selling the $1.91 sets at $4, the government makes a profit of "more than $1," Mr. Gordon said. The difference goes into the cost cf the special pressing, polishing, and handling of "un- circulated coin." Mr. Gordon said a lot of people who expected to make a big speculative profit on trad- ing in the 1965 coin sets will be disappointed by his an- nouncement, But the government should not be contributing to a wild speculation, he added. The finance minister said pol- icy on distribution of coin sets in 1966 and subsequent years will be announced later. He in- dicated in reply to a question at a press conference, however, that it 1s likely the mint will again meet all orders. The mint received orders for 6,000,000 sets at the beginning of the new year. It turned back all orders. received before Jan. 1, and the 4,000,000 in excess of the 2,000,000 it could originally handle. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., centre, leads a group of civil rights workers and Selma Negroes in prayer By REX THOMAS SELMA, Ala. (AP)--Dr. Mar- tin Luther King Jr. remained in jail to dramatize his civil rights struggle today while his followers got ready for new Liberals Bagged In Theories McCutcheon Says AURORA, Ont. (CP) -- The Liberal government is bogged down in the economic theories of the depression era and "the political morals of the prohibi- tion era,' Senator M. Wallace McCutcheon of Toronto said Monday night. In an address to the North York Progressive Conservative Association, he urged Conser- vatives to settle within the party their current squabbles over leadership and to repre- d trations to protest his arrest Most of the 250 Negroes and half a dozen white civil rights volunteers jailed with King dur- ing a massive right - to - vote march Monday went free on bonds of $00 each. A member of King's staff said Negroes would renew their demonstrations in Selma today to 'protest the arrest of the Nobel Peace-Prize Winner." The spokesman, Rev. Hosea Williams of Atlanta, said simul- taneous marches were being organized in the neighboring counties of Perry and Marengo and possibly also in Lowndes. Those rural south Alabama counties already are marked for voter registration cam- paigns patterned after the three-week drive in Selma. sent to the country a united Monday when Edwards did not appear. party prepared and equipped to govern. has already begun The right-to-vote movement in Perry BEFORE THE MAGISTRATE Two Youths Admit Break-in Of Sporting-Goods Store Two Oshawa youths, Robert Thomas Burke, 18, of 758 Ritson road south, and Allan Thomas Anthony, 18, of 128 Summer street, pleaded guilty yesterday to breaking into Bishop's Sport- ing Goods Store, 151 King street east, Jan. 6 and stealing about $500 worth of hockey equipment and some cash. They were remanded one week in custody in Oshawa Magistrate's Court in order that a pre-sentence report can be ob- tained by probation officers. Burke also pleaded guilty to breaking into the same store last Nov. 26 and stealing about $250 worth of equipment and cash. Qn this occasion, he said, he was accompanied by a juven- ile. > The pair said they entered the building by breaking a wash- room window at the rear. When two police officers an- swered a call Christmas day they found Ulysse Legere, 33, of 384 Drew street holding his wife in a headlock and "'the 'kids were crying". Constable Stanley Bosak said Legere grabbed him by the shirt, took a swing at him and grazed his left cheek. With the help of Const. Gary Patton, Legere was subdued and taken to the police station. Legere was convicted of as- saulting Const. Bosak when he appeared before Magistrate Harry Jermyn yesterday. He said he had drunk a pint and part of a quart of whiskey that day and his wife was "mad" at him for not showing up for Christmas dinner. Magistrate Jermyn sentenced him to three months in jail. Failing to remain at the scene of an accident cost Ronald Turek, 19 of 251 Huron street $100 and costs or 15 days. He pleaded guilty to charge in court yesterday. the A mother of two, who pleaded guilty to 10 charges of passing worthwhile cheques, was re- manded yesterday. until March 8 to give her an opportunity to make restitution of $415. - Mrs. Frances MacDonald of 273 Trent street, through her counsel, said she was acting under the influence of her hus- band by passing the chqques. Magistrate Jermyn satd the Court had a responsibility to the business men of this community Magistrate Jermyn sentenced Lawrence Joseph Neil, 27, of 480 Browning avenue, to 15 days in jail for driving while dis- qualified ' Neil was also fined $25 or an additional five days for failing to yield the right of way and $25 or another five days for using a stolen driver's licence. He was sentenced to 15 days concurrent for possession of the licence, Neil was the driver of a car that collided with a car driven by George Dafoe of Thomas street Jan. 26 at the intersec- tion of Jackson and Albert streets. Damage totalled $700. When congronted by police, he produced a licence issued to Wayne Howard Bruce. Bruce told police the licence was stolen from his wallet last November from the dressing room of the Port Perry arena. Neil said he was given the wallet by a man he refused to name; Two assault charges against Charles Kavanaugh, 20, of Beatty avenue were dismissed yesterday by Magistrate Jermyn. Kavanaugh was accused of assaulting his neighbors, Mr. and' Mrs. George 'Kovasshis about 11 p.m. Christmas Day. Kovasshis said Kavanaugh struck him across the face with a bottle, cutting his mouth and loosening his teeth. Kavanaugh denied striking Kovasshis. Kovasshis also said Kav- anaugh pushed his wife, knock- ing her to the sidewalk. Kavanaugh said he and a friend were returning home from Ajax when Mrs. Kovasshis, who was on her way to work, stopped her car, began yelling at them in German, then backed up into her driveway. "We only went over to the Kovasshis house to see what she was yelling about," said Kava- naugh. Kavanaugh said Kovasshis struck him over the head. He said he received three stitches to close a wound in his head. Seven days in the county jail was the sentence meted out to James Ferjo, 24, of Harris street for drunk driving. Ferjo said he "never had a drink". Magistrate Jermyn also sen- licence was suspended for three : months in December, 1962. It was reinstated Nov. 26, 1964. As a result of yesterday's conviction, Ferjo's licence was suspended for a year and his car impounded by the Court for) three months. | A drunk in charge count against John Woloschuk, 62, of 187 Danforth avenue, Toronto, was dismissed by Magistrate Jermyn and a conviction of im- paired driving registered. Woloschuk was arrested Jan. 16 after his car collided with a light standard at the intersec- tion of Simicde and Bond streets. He spent his 62nd birthday in the police station lockup. Const. Michael Michaelowsky testified Woloschuk was "in somewhat of a stupor, smelled strongly of an alcoholic bever- age, was talkative, his eyes were bloodshot and he had to be assisted from the cruiser'. Sgt. James Powell corrobor- ated the other officer's evidence as to the accused man's condi- the police station. Woloschuk said he had been to a wedding in Whitby, had two drinks before dinner and toasted the bride with a glass of wine before coming to Osh- awa. out and he lost control of the vehicle. Woloschuk said he suffered some cracked ribs and a split lip in the accident. The magistrate levied a $100 fine or 15 days in jail. A 16-year-old Oshawa youth was remanded in custody for one week yesterday on a car theft count. Gerald Williams of 124 Church street pleaded guilty to stealing a car Jan. 20 owned by Jack Hammond of Rich- tion when he was brought to|-- He said a tire on his car blew) ons - _ -- a a awe after they were arrested on charges of parading with- out a permit, More than 250 persons were arrested as County, birth place of King's wife, Coretta. An estimated 300 Negroes lined up to seek regis- tration as voters Monday while others penetrated the racial barrier at eating places in the county seat of Marion, 30 miles west of Selma. There were no arrests and no disorders. While King spent the night in jail, Williams and other civil rights leaders kept the cam- paign going at another in the almost nightly series of mass meetings. Sheriffs deputies took 474 teen-agers, mostly high school students absent from class, into custody while they were picket- ing the courthouse Monday. Many of them complied with a request from juvenile court Judge Bernard Reynolds and filled out blanks giving their names, addresses and school so they could be released. However, an undetermined number held out until late Mon- day night before signing the is ait 4 they marched to the Dallas County courthouse as part of a voter registration drive. --AP Wirephoto King Stays In Jail, Won't Pay $200. Bail were told to be in juvenile court today with their parents. King, who along with the other Negro marchers was charged with parading without 'because Selma's Public Safety Director Wilson Baker King '"'wantet-te=go to jail." Baker told the civil rights his close friend, Rev. Ralph Abernathy, could leave but then reconsidered and ordered them back into the line with the other Negroes. Baker said it would not' have been fair to put the others in thy go free. King and Abernathy had a chance to post bond of $200 fol- lowing their arraignment late Monday before City Judge Ed- par P, Russell, But the Negro minister who won the Nobel Peace Prize last year chose to remain in custody and Abernathy went back to blanks and gaining release, All jail with him. OTTAWA (CP)--Toronto law- yer Joseph Sedgwick will make a second study of immigration department procedures, but the new one on discretionary pow- ers of the immigration minis- er may delay his report on the earlier study of arrests, depor- tations and prosecution of ille- gal immigrants. The new study, announced Monday by Prime Minister Pearson, is the result of the Dec. 21 Supreme Court of Can- ada ruling that the immigration minister does not have unlim- ited powers to order deporta- tions. The inquiry is "'to deal with discretionary powers conferred by legislation on the minister of citizenship and immigration," the prime minister said, as "'the most difficult questions in im- migration policy centre of the use of these discretionary pow- ers," Mr. Sedgwick's first study of department procedures, dealing with illegal immigrants, was announced last June, and _ in- formants indicated Monday that his new task may delay his re- port. However, it was understood Mr. Sedgwick had almost com- pleted his first report when Mr. Pearson asked him by letter Hospital Union Will Take Strike Vote LONDON, Ont. (CP)--A strike vote wili be taken Thursday night by union employees at Victoria. Hospital following un- ion charges of violations of the present contract. Negotiations for a new con- tract have been under way for two months. Local 220 of the London and District Building Service Work- ers Union (CLC) has applied for the services of a conciliation of- ficer. Violations allegedly com- mitted by the hospital include: Sedgwick Will Undertake New Immigration Study Jan. 27 to make the second study. In announcing the new study after a meeting with Mr. Sedg- wick Monday, Mr. Pearson said the Supreme Court decision "gives rise to new doubts" about the extent and use of dis- cretionary powers by the min- ister. In the Dec. 21 decision, the court said Immigration Minis- ter Tremblay exceeded his pow- ers by ordering the arrest and deportation of Giuseppe and Rocco Violi, 24-year-old: Italian immigrant twins, after they had earlier been allowed to stay in the country for a fixed period of time. The six to three majority judgment granted an appeal by the brothers quashing deporta- tion orders issued against them two years earlier, and ruled they had been held illegally for deportation at Bordeaux Jail in Montreal for eight months. They had been arrested on a warrant issued by Mr. Trem- blay. CAN'T CHANGE MIND The court said that after al- lowing the brothers to remain in Canada for a fixed period, the minister could not change his mind at the end of the pe- riod and order the deportations carried out. The prime minister asked Mr. Sedgwick to examine the gen- eral effect of the court ruling and to give advice on these four questions: --Whether the present degree of ministerial discretion is necessary; --Whether, in the light of ex- perience, the exercise of dis- cretion may be subject to pressures; Whether it is practicable and reasonabic to alter the degree of discretionary power or the way in which it is ex- ercised; --Whether there is any alter- native which might provide a more satisfactory method of reaching decisions on difficult individual immigration cases. a permit, almost escaped arrest said leader at one point that he and jail and let King and Aberna- Pe lh atl att eth a a ara a i a a a ae A a 'SERIOUS SHORTCOMINGS' -- COWARD By STEWART MacLEOD | OTTAWA (CP)--The Ontario government, which has already announced its intention of enter- ing the Canada Pension Plan, proposed a series of changes Monday to correct shortcomings." "It's not a question of whether we join or not," said L. E, Coward, chairman of the Ontario pensions committee, "but whether we heartily en- dorse it." The plan, as proposed, has some wide gaps, said the On- tario brief to the parliamentary committee on the plan, and the suggested changes were de- signed to close them. The pro- vincial government said it was not prepared to accept the ar- gument that the basic principles of the plan are unchangeable. It was suggested that $25 be paid from the plan's fund to all persons receiving the $75,-a- month old-age security benefit, and that a minimum monthly' payment of $25 be established under the plan itself. Race-Fixers' Reinstatement Condemned TORONTO (CP) -- "Fixing races is the capital offence of racing," Magistrate S. Tupper Bigelow said Monday. Magistrate Bigelow, also chairman of the Ontario Racing Commission, appeared before the Ontario Legislature's stand- ing committee on government commissions. Replying to a question by El- mer Sopha (L--Sudbury), Mag- istrate Bigelow said one trainer and four of the 10 jockeys sus- pended in a 1951 race-fixing ep- isode had been reinstated. and that he disapproved, After the MPP asked: "Don't you think they have paid their debt to society?" Magistrate Bigelow said he did not think so. People who commit crimes get out of prison, sometimes on parole, he said, but a bank em- bezzler "doesn't work in a bank again." Magistrate Bigelow declined "serious |$5,00 Ontario Would Alter Canada Pension Plan The proposed 10-year transi- tional period for the plan should! be extended to 20 years, and contributions should be levied from the first dollar of earn- pate of from $600 to The Ontario brief, which was made public some time ago in Toronto, also said there didn't appear to be enough considera- tion given to the financial and economic implications .of the plan and its alternatives. John Munro (L -- Hamilton East), parliamentary secretary to Health Minister Judy La- Marsh, said it would have been helpful if Ontario had advanced its suggestions earlier, since they involve "a very notable change." Mr. Coward said that while the $25 figures had not been advanced before, Ontario has "repeatedly pointed out the the collection of pension contri- briefs suggested that pensions, ders. scheme in operation. All three briefs were con- cerned with the possible li- cations for local school in butions. They recommended that provincial government make employer's contributions on behalf of the school boards. SUGGEST PROVISION The Atlantic and Ontario on a reduced basis, be made available to those who retire be- fore 65. The Ontario brief said that there should be clear pro- vision for the inclusion in the plan of teachers in religious or- The Canadian Construction Association asked for a provi- sion in the proposed pension plan that would allow em- ployees and employers an op- portunity to "opt out" providing they already had a_ better! fel 2 ? the old 26 2-3-ounce be. reduced to match of the new 25-ouncer warehouse stocks of size. : This only applies that are chai ounce size. A Ze gs 283 Bae Ss HE Fa eg gaps in coverage and has re: peatedly said that something should be done about them." If the federal government de- cided the $25 figures should be $20 or $30, or that the transi- tional period be 18 instead of the suggested 20 years, "we will be quite, happy." They were suggestions, TEACHERS GIVE VIEWS In another submission to the committee, the Canadian Teach- ers' Federation and its affili- ated organizations presented a joint brief that asked for fur- ther examination of how the plan might affect higher edu- cation. Under the plan, contributions must start at age 18. In their brief, the teachers' organizations in the Atlantic re- gion said, "it would appear that the Canada Pension Plan is de- signed to offer security to school drop outs and to those who en- ter the labor force immediately on graduation from secondary school, and to penalize teachers and others who continue their education." Similar suggestions were made by the Ontario Teachers' Federation and by the joint brief of the teachers' organizations in the western re- gion. to comment on the alleged fix- ing of harness races at Green- wood track in Toronto last year, because it now is before the courts. Need Mortgage Money? McGILL "sv... 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INCL, YOUR WINTER BONUS GRANT The hospital 'allowed some mond street west. Magistrate Jermyn learned that Williams had left the Sal- vation Army's House of Con- cord after a three-day stay and returned home, His: father re- turned him to the home, but only stayed the night and ran away again with another youth. Williams told police they drove around the city in- the tenced Ferjo to seven days con- current on a charge of driving to see that they get their money back. cident last Oct. 7: His driver's stolen car, slept in it. behind jthe Oshawa Recreation Build: while his licence was suspended. ing on Gibb street, abandoned itjthree - Ferjo was involved in an ac-jthere and returned to the House|crease, which has been rejected of Concord. employees to revoke their union dues;" has not submitted a list of members names from whom junion dues have been deducted; jhas "willingly and knowingly" allowed employees to revoke their union dues authorizations; and has "aided and abbetted"' employees in violatng the con- tract by having the letters typed in the offices of the hos- |pital. The liospital has offered a} per - cent - wage in- HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 by the union, ! SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS Move to Winston-Muss at Lorraine ) Phone: (514) 625-0705 Another Residential Development of Winston Muss (Quebec), Lid. A Subsidiary of Winston Muss Corporation, A Publicly Owned Company Sercceas cor > In the foothills of the Laurentians, less than 30 minutes from downtown Montreal. * AE ARB IA cng gecesi Faas ge EE aE

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