British PMs' Conference Biggest Ever LONDON (CP)--The_biggest- ever conference of Common- wealth prime ministers, in point of numbers, will be held here June 17-25, it wae announced] Thursday. White -- supremacist Rhode- sia, British immigration, in-)- creased trade and the final shape of the new Common- wealth secretariat will be among topics discussed at the meeting, the first presided over by Britain's Labor prime minister, Harold Wilson. Another. newly-rivived topic is the concept of a Common- wealth parliamentary assem- bly, now being considered by Commonwealth Relations Sec- retary Arthur Bottomley. Gambia, West African country of 300,000 population, became a fully-fledged member of the Commonwealth last month and her prime minister, David Ja- ware, will bring the numer of premiers and presidents around the conference table at Marl- borough House to 21 for the first time. Rhodesia, where a minority of whites rule an overwhelming majority of Negroes, was. the toughest issue in the prime| ; ministers' meeting last July) § and is likely to present equally-| © knotty problems for the June| > conference. The prime minis- ters are dead set against Rho-| | desia attaining independence in| © present conditions | 3 Wilson, since winning power) ; from the Conservatives last Oc-| i tober, has met with some 10 of the Commonwealth prime min- isters. He visited Prime Min- ister Pearson in Ottawa in De- cember and conferred with him again when the Canadian leader| came to the funeral of Sir Win- ston Churchill in January. A ovreliminary meeting of senior Commonwealth officials,| Arnold Smith representing Can-| ada, has aiready laid the foun-| dations for a Commonwealth secretariat July. The task of selecting a sec- retary-general now is under way with Smith, assistant un- dersecretary in the external af-| OTTAWA (CP)--The Canada fairs department, being one of|Pension Plan inched through the figures prominently men-|its 13th day of debate Thurs- tioned. It is understood that/day. some countries have submitted; As the 125-clause bill came the names of candidates. |within a few paragraphs of approval, its progress bogged PC S down in details and personality enators Block 'Code' ock 'Code clashes The whole evening sit- ting amounted to a_ running OTTAWA (CP) -- Conserva- tive senators took steps Thurs- Dark glasses covering a blackened eye, Tammy Grimes, musical comedy star, shows bandaged face as approved last TAMMY GRIMES CHOPP battle between Jack Horner (PC--Acadia) and Health Min- ister Judy LaMarsh. day to block passage of the government's federal labor code bill in its present form. One affected the minimum earnings at age 65 under which full pension benefits continue to The day's accomplishment amounted to five clauses ap- proved at the afternoon sitting. Senators Jacques Flynn (PCibe available. Another con- --Quebec) moved an amend-|cerned the mechanics of pen- ment to the bill that would|sion application for recipients exempt from its provisions a\of disability pensions and three large number of the 500,000\others outlined the rules for payment of benefits to orphans and the children of disabled contributors. The key opposition complaint was over minimum earnings. Dr. C. J. M. Willoughby (PC-- Kamloops) moved to amend the bill so that persons who apply for pension at 65 rather than 70 could earn' $1,800 an- nually instead of $900 without losing pension benefits. He said the effect was to discourage people from contin- uing work after 65. This would employees coming under . the code's jurisdiction. The Conservative amendment would exempt grain elevator operators, railway workers, truckers on interprovincial longshoremen and crew mem- bers of civil aircraft. The labor code would provide for an eight-hour day, 40-hour week; a minimum wage of $1.25 an hour and eight paid statutory holidays. It also re- stricts overtime work to eight hours or less a week. i eas ED B and hand in-her New York apartment today. She says slashes were inflicted by white racists in two attacks Y Plan' Debate Becomes LaMarsh- Horner Tiff lead to mental and physical decline. "We are putting these people in the position where they have to discontinue 'their work at a time when they should be en- gaged in some part-time activ- ity. If these people could be convinced to carry on some form of mental and _ physical activity they would be very much less of a burden on the welfare of our country," Miss LaMarsh disagreed with the 70-year-old medical doctor. She said no one was forced to take the pension at 65. Dr. Willoughby suggested the minister did not know human nature. People would take out of the pension what they could as soon as they could because it was money from their own contributions. The .amendment was defeated 85 to 62. The first clash came between Mr. Horner and Revenue Min- ister Benson over what the op- position member said were am- higuous legal points in the bill. Mr. Horner wanted to know the effect of the section on sharecroppers. '"'It--is now we must make things abundantly clear. We do not want to pro- vide extra jobs for lawyers all) across Canada." | | The minister, after asking} Mr, Horner to lower the vol-| 'ROUND THE WORLD IN A GLANCE Irish Indians, Constitutional Capers, Carrier Cavorting Burt, Mackachen IRISH INDIANS! BRANTFORD (CP) -- 'Tis an ould saying, bejab- bers, that everyone is Irish on St. Patrick's Day--and even the Six Nations Indi- ans are getting in on the act this year. Plans were announced here Thursday for Chief Melvin Hill to lead a delega- tion from the Six Nations Iroquois Confederacy next Wednesday in Detroit's St. Patrick's Day parade j An invitation to the In- dians came from a for- | mer Michigan congress- man, Harold M, Ryan. NO EXTRA POWER OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Mip- ister Pearson maintained Thursday that Quebec has no greater veto powers than any other province in constitutional matters within provincial juris- diction. However, he gave no direct reply to Opposition Leader Diefenbaker's request for a statement on whether the veto also will apply to matters with- in federal jurisdiction. Heward Grafftey (PC-- Brome - Missisquoi) asked Mr Pearson in the Commons jtenced to 40 years jand fined $20,000 of income-tax evasion charges. The silver - haired Stratton, retired to his farm in Cantrell, Ill., since an unsuccessful 1960 bid for a_ third consecutive trm, could have been sen- in prison accused in a four-count indictment. of evad- ing payment of nearly $41,000 on allegedly unreported income of $83,000 from 1957 to 1960, during his second term CHEATER'S REVENGE WASHINGTON (AP) -- The U.S. Air Force said Thursday that early in its investigation of Stratton was cheating at the Air Force Acad-| emy some cadets were moved to Lowry Air Force Base to pro- tect them from possible violence for identifying cheaters, It said the move was a '"'pre- cautionary measure, on the ba- sis of rumors that there might be violence committed against those identifying cheaters." These rumors "proved to be unfounded, and the cadets were returned to the Air Force Acad- emy the following day," the air force said. $3 MILLION PROBLEM WASHINGTON (CP)--A' huge tax lien of $3,178,712 has been whether it is the federal gov- ernment's policy to give Que- bec a veto on Canadian consti- tutional development. EX-GOVERNOR ACQUITTED CHICAGO (AP)--William G. Stratton, who was governor of Illinois for eight years, was acquitted by a jury Thursday F, R. BLACK ©. o. OPTOMETRIST 136 Simcoe St. North PHO'IE 723-4191 filed against Canadian Roy M. | | | | Hazael of Kingsville, Ont., by) the United States Internal Rev-! enue Service. Spokesman James Golato said Thursday the lien ties up any property that Hazael may have in the U.S. and is a civil action only. The lien follows investigations by the govern-! ment agency into reports of! securities fraud under the 15-| per-cent equalization tax on for-| eign issues. It became law last| September. The tax lien was filed in} county courts in New York! City, Cléveland and Detroit.) Hazael is understood to be no} longer in the U.S. | PACT PRECEDENT? | TORONTO (CP)--D. S. Wood, | \executive vice-president of the| |\Canadian Automotive Parts Manufacturers' Association, said Thursday the Jan. 15 tariff agreement with the United! States on automotive parts may} set a precedent for other indus- tries, | Mr. Wood told the Canada-Is-| rael Chamber of Commerce the} pact may show the way for for- mation of a north-south com- mon market in North America. "The key to the new plan is} freer trade--not free trade," he) said. | FINAL FUR 75 KING ST. CLEARANCE E., OSHAWA LONDON (CP) -- Nomina- tions closed today for the first of two byelections that may provide a clue in Britain's big- gest guessing game--the timing of the next general election. Few political' observers se- riously expect Prime Minister Wilson to call a general elec- tion soon. Nevertheless a cer- tain tenseness is in the air be- cause of the heavy economic difficulties facing Wilson's La- bor government and his minute margin in the House of Com- mons, The three main political parties are mounting a tre- mendous battle in the two by- elections. The first will be held March 23 in Saffron Walden, an Essex constituency north of London, and the second in Rox- burgh, Selkirk and Peebles, a Scottish border riding, the fol- lowing day. Labor fervently hopes that the voters of Saffron Walden will go the socialist way at last after sending R. A. (Rab) But- ler, Conservative former for- eign secretary, to Parliament in eveny election for 35 years. Butler, a brilliant if enigmatic minister, retired from the House last month, accepting a life peerage and becoming mas- ter of Trinity College, Cam- bridge, after being passed over twice for the Conservative party General Election Expectations Up Some observers estimate his "personal vote" in the constitu- ency may have been as high. as 4,000 and Labor hopes that many of these voters will be lost to the Tories now that But- ler is off the scene. Butler won the constituency with a 5,000-vote majority in the Oct. 15 general election, It is freely surmised that Wil- kson arranged to have the Saf- fron Walden poll held one day ahead of the Scottish byelection in the hopes that a Labor gain there would improve socialist chances in Roxburgh. The Scottish poll was made necessary by the death ot Cmdr. C. E. M. Donaldson, for- mer Canadian Navy man, raised in British Columbia, who held the seat since 1951 and was returned in the last general election with a sharply reduce: majority. LIBERAL THREAT No fewer than 34 politicians are campaigning for the three candidates in Roxburgh, a sprawling riding where sheep outnumber constituents, and the chief threat to the Tory candi- date, R. L. McEwen, 38-year- old barrister, comes from Lib- eral D. M. S. Steel, 26-year-old television interviewer who fought Donaldson in the general election. leadership. RACISTS on Broadway because of her associations with Sammy Davis, negro en- tertainer, (AP Wirephoto) By THE CANADIAN PRESS While the Newfoundland gov- 'ernment announced plans for a lcampaign Thursday, the Nova that a section of the Collection Act is giving the province ad- verse publicity. Newfoundland _ legislature Smallwood Pays For Fame 'Scotia Could Do Without $250,000 world-wide promotional [Scotia administration was told Premier Smallwood told be ad- ume of his booming rural voice, said that crop sharing would be considered rent -- not earned income -- provided the farmer took no vart management. Mr. Horner monopolized most of the evening attacking the government for' making no provisions for integrating the federal plan and 5,000 private pension plans. Mr. Benson and Miss La- Marsh both told Mr. Horner repeatedly that the federal gov- ernment has no power to direct how private plans should inte- grate, * When Miss LaMarsh rose at in farm) vertisements will be placed in Neading newspapers in the \United States, the United King- dom, Belgium, France, Switzer- land, West Germany, Italy and Japan: in an all-out drive to at- tract industry to the province. Meanwhile, Peter M. Nichol- son, Liberal leader in the Nova Scotia legislature, urged the vovernment to amend the Col- lection Act by removing the provision--unique to Nova Sco- ltia--that a debtor be jailed for lfailing to comploy with a court lorder to pay money owed. | Producing a clipping from a Toronto newspaper about debtor being jailed in Nova Sco- tia, Mr. Nicholson said the col- lection law is giving the prov- ince a lot of bad publicity. Among the highlights from other provincial legislatures: Prince Edward Island--The 1965-66 budget was introduced one point to repeat her exas- perated '"no,". Mr. Horner shouted: 'This is the answer I was afraid of. Let that be howl : hai ahi " showing no tax c a . jee parent iP coun: » rent surplus of $93,347 and an "Just open' the windows," lover - all deficit. Provincial said a voice from the Liberal|-preasurer M. Alban Farmer es- side. \timated the province will spend During the course of theja total of $41,286,668 while re- night, Miss LaMarsh rematked|ceiving $28,711,691 in ordinary that Eldon Woolliams (PC ee ee capital receipts 0 sa ow er a -- New Brunswick--The corpo- Supreme Court of Canada Prac-| ations committee gave ap- tice, "pretends to be a lawW-|proval to a Medical Act amend- yer." Mr. Woolliams said Miss|ment changing the time limit on LaMarsh, also a lawyer, should|the | wong pre Mien ; jagains ctors ve menAmaPG, Det mpenks io the| or malpractice. Under the pro- Commons "as a lady." |posed law, action would have be William Skoreyko (PC--jbe taken within two years from Edmonton East) said that/the time the professional serv- throughout the pensions debate,jices of a doctor ended. The Miss LaMarsh's acid remarks|present act provides that such 'would not be tolerated if she|suits may be taken within one yas not a lady." vear from the time the alleged ETS aaa AREER --lincident is discovered even through: the professional serv- ices might have ended several years before, Manitoba -- Opposition Leader Gil Molgat called on the administration to broaden the terms of a judiciai inquiry into the $125,000,000 Grand Rapids power development. The provin- cial government established a judicial inquiry last year to in- vestigate claims that the firm holding the water haulage con- tract made excessive profits. Saskatchewan--R. A. Walker (CCF--Hanley) said the prov- ince's Liberal government made an improper proposal to a ce- ment company ty _ promising NEED... FUEL OIL ? PERRY Day or Night 723-3443 Discuss Labor OTTAWA (CP)--Labor Min- ister MacEachen said Thurs- day he is to meet George Burt of the United Auto Workers (CLC) next week for discus- sions. The minister gave the information in reply to a Com- mons question by Wallace Nes- bitt (PC -- Oxford), who asked whether the government had plans to help workers in the Canadian auto parts industry 'put out of work by the hun- dreds as a result of the govern- ment's recent automobile deal with the United States." * Mr. MacEachen said he would discuss the. matter with Mr. Burt, 'including the whole question of labor dislocation and labor improvement." ae THE DAY IN OTTAWA By THE CANADIAN PRESS THURSDAY, March ll, 1965 The Commons continued de- tailed study of the Canada Pension Plan. A Conservative amendment to raise the amount a pen- sioner could earn and still draw benefits was defeated 85 to 62. It was. proposed by Dr. C. J. M. Willoughby (Kamloops), who said the government should encourage people to stay active after 65. Health Minister Judy. La- Marsh said no one is forced to retire at 65 under the plan. They would be encouraged to keep working because of a chance for better benefits with a later retirement. Jack Horner (PC--Acadia) wondered how the federal plan would be meshed with the 5,000 private plans now in operation. Revenue Minister Benson said in many cases the Can- ada plan will be a floor on which other plans would be stacked. The Senate studied the fed- eral labor code setting hours of work and minimum pay rates for some 500,000 work- ers, Senator Jacques Flynn (PC -- Quebec) moved an amendment that would ex- empt many of these workers from the code's provisions. FRIDAY, March 12 The Commons meets at il GEOLOGISTS CONVINCED THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, Merch 12, 1965 3 ~ TIMMINS (CP)--Two geolo- gists testified at a royal com- mission hearing Thursday that samples of earth and sludge taken from the drill site on the property of Windfall Oils and Mines Limited were worthless, The hearing, which later ad- journed until Tuesday, heard Patrick Weenan, an employee for Conwest Explorations Lim- ited, testify that he flew to the Windfall property July 6 and took a sample of sludge and had it assayed, Slusge is the mud-like material which is de- posited around a drill hole as the bit enters the earth. He said he received the re- port from a laboratory in Kirk- land Lake the morning after Windfall stock began its rise on the Toronto Stock Exchange. The commission has been set up to investigate the circum- stances surrounding the rise of the stock on rumors that ore had been found. The property is located near the site of a cop- per-zinc discovery by Texas Gulf Sulphur valued at about $2,000,000,000. Shares of Windfall stock in- creased in price to $5.60 from Windfall Land Worth Nothing 56 cents and fell to 80 cents be- tween July 6 and July 31. Fe The report, Mr. Heenan re- ° ceived, he said, revealed that the sludge contained no silver, a trace of copper, one one-hun- dredth per cent zonc, and about 17 cents worth of gold. "This indicated to me that there were no values in that part of the drill hole that this isludge represented." No nagging backache! | used to be bothered by backaches and tired feeling. When she learned that irritation of the urinary tract can result in backache and tired feeling, took Kidn » 81 Dodd's stimulate the kidneys to help the condition causing the backache and ired Fasting: Soon she felt better rd » If too. You can depend a.m, to continue the p debate. The Senate stands ad- tax concessions without con- sulting the legislature. He said Premier Thatcher gave Canada Cement Company Limited a committment that it would re- ceive a tax concession if agreed immediately to expand its plant at Floral, near Sask- atoon. Alberta -- Debate was ad- journed after Donald §, Flem- ing (SC--Calgary West) moved sory inspection system for all motor vehicles. ister Leslie Peterson accepted a suggestion from opposition -- Vancouver East) that the Workmen's Compensation Act be amended to permit the cabi- net to boost pensions to widows and children of workers, Mr. Peterson said he would recom- mend the idea to the cabinet. Quebec Stalls College' Try OTTAWA (CP) -- Quebec op- position members stalled Com- mons action Thursday on a bill incorporating the Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada. They feared the organization --a merger of two existing or- ganizations -- might become an agency for federal government intervention in the provincial field of education. The association combines the present Canadian Universities Foundation and the National Conference of Canadian Uni- versities and Colleges. They act as an agent for the federal government in the dis- tribution of federal grants of $2 per capita to the universities and colleges in all provinces except Quebec. SHOULD ASK PROVINCES Gilles Gregoire (Creditiste-- Lapointe) said provincial gov- ernments should be asked whether they agree with the new association being formed. In any case, he added, the as- sociation might become a tool by which the federal govern- ment would interfere with edu- cation rights in Quebec. Remi Paul (Ind. -- Berthier- Maskin on ge - Delanaudiere), said the bill violates the con- a resolution ealling on the gov- ernment to set up a compul- British Columbia--Labor Min- member A!ex MacDonald (NDP journed until March 16. Bell Tolls For The MP OTTAWA (CP)--Members of Parliament are called into ses- sion, adjourn their meetings, go to meals and are summoned to vote by the clanging sound of bells in the corridors of the Par- 'Nament Buildings. In addition, since 1960 some of them have had a variety of buzzer signals to listen for when then are out of the Commons chamber, Because these buzzer signals are given only for Liberal and Progressive Conservative MPs, t& formal protest has been lodged with Commons Speaker Alan Macnaughton by Gerard (Perron (Creditiste--Beauce). The other parties--Creditiste, Social Credit and New Demo- \crat--deserve equal right to have their lives governed by the buzzer as well as the bell, Mr. Perron argues. FIVE-MINUTE WALK The buzzer system is used to warn Liberal and Progressive Conservative MPs with offices in the West Block of the Parlia- ment Buildings that their pres- ence is needed in the Commons chamber, a_ five-minute walk awy in the Centre Block. It comes into play when the party whip figures too few of his members are present in the chamber or when someone calls a snap vote in committee of the whole. RON GAMBELL ONTARIO MOTOR SALES APPOINTMENTS The management of Ontario Motor Sales is proud to announce the addition of Mr. Ron Gambell and Mr. Al Marlow to the new and used car sales staff. AL MARLO Both men offer you years of experience and are ready and able to serve you at the "Big Lot". 140 Bond St. West ONTARIO MOTOR SALES 725-6501 stitution. REED'S WEEK-END CASH, CARRY Flower Special ROSES 97«< A BUNCH REED"S Florists i Downtown Drive-In Simeoe & Bond 163 Bloor W. | OSHAWA | At sea and ashore! Lan RUMS NAVY RUM (Dark) PALM BREEZE (Very Light) WHITE CAP (White) 4'/2% On Savings DID YOU GET THIS CARD? If Not -- Just Clip This One And Bring It With You When You Open Your New Account. 4% On Chequing Accounts Accounts 534% On Guaranteed Investment Certs say Osa LY SSS LONGER HOURS Monday - Thursda 9: 00'. Y Friday - 9:00 - 9:00 Saturday - 9:00 - 6:00