The Queen Mother bids farewell to Lieutenant- Governor Earl Rowe of On- tario Sunday before leaving for London on the RCAF Yukon turboprop transport. (CP Wirephoto) HERE and THERE Financial Fire completely destroyed a parked car at East Whitby Township on Saturday morn- ing. The car, a '65 model, was left standing with its lights on. According to fire officials the lights shorted out. causing the sudden blaze. The car was owned by G. Prout of Bickle dr. Another fire early Satur- day morning did an esti- mated $250 damage to a small barn on Mill st., Osh- awa. The barn was owned by John Dusik. The barn was valued at approximate- ly $1,000. City ambulance had a busy weekend answer- ing 20 routine house calls. The Victoria - Haliburton Liberal Association has join- ed the riding Progressive Conservative Association in protesting the change in electoral boundaries which will make Mariposa Town- ship part of Ontario Riding. Adelaide ave. e., between Oshawa bivd., and Wilson rd., was closed this morn- ing for two or three days for road paving, says a city en- gineering depart ment spokesman. The East Central Ontario 'Art Association held a com- bined business meeting and painting day Saturday at Burleigh Falls. Some 30 members attended, includ- ing Mrs. Laurine Sage and Peter Van Gils, of Whitby, and Mrs. Roy Stacey of Osh- awa. Another business-paint- ing day has been planned for September at secretary _ Mrs. Rose Baker's cottage and plans for a fall paint- ing weekend will be dis- cussed at that time. The 26th annual UAW Weed Drag will be held at Pigeon Lake "'Floods' Land- ing" July 3 daylight to dusk, rain or shine. UAW mem- bers and families will be hosted by the Union Rod and Gun Club in '"'the land of giant lunge, pickerel and bass." For further details contact Bob Middleton, 728- 1330 or Cecil Burtch at 725- 9612. Five Mytown Life under- writers received a national quality award Friday at. the Grandview Golf Club. The recipients are: John Wilson, CLU, ABC Company; George Jones, DEF Com- pany; William Blake, CLU, GHI Company; Gordon Green, JKL Company, and Lawrence Lake, MNO Com- pany. Permanence of life insurance "in force" is the basis of the award, not sales volume. William Mclelland, 68 Cadillac ay. n., attended the CUNA Mutual Insurance Society first Annual Inter- national Agency Conference in Madison, Wis., June 20- 22. Serving more than 21,000 credit unions with over 10 million members in every province, every state. and in 33 overseas countries is the life insurance organization of the international credit union movement. St. Joseph's High School announced that one-third of the students won first class honors on their final exam- inations. Ene Ten Haaf, grade 11, was first with 88 per cent; Betty Anne Yanch and Matthew Gimpelj, grade 10, tied for first with 89 per cent, and Nellie Ten Haaf, grade 9, placed first with 92 per cent, in their re- 'Groups Hit MONTREAL (CP)--Canada's financial institutions were criti- cized today by Revenue Minis- ter Eric Kierans of Quebec, who said they should be more competitive and require compa- nies to disclose more informa- tion to investors. "It does not seem to me that our financial institutions and structures have adapted them- selves to the changed realities of a 1965 economy operating at a $50,000,000,000 gross national product level," he told a lunch- eon of the Canadian Manufac- turers' Association. He said the eventual pros- pects of financial independence and continuous growth depend on the revival of savings. Advantages which could be gained by the increase in ac- cumulation caused by the Que- bec pension plan, he said, "'would be lost if there were not a corresponding improvement in the functionidg of the ¢apital markets."' He said statements by the Port royal commission on bank- ing and finance that the invest- ment industry "now is lange spective classes. | Raymond Floyd Gets His First | Big Golf Purse | | ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP)--Ray-| | | mond Floyd, a beefy young belter who brims with con- |be ready to join the fidence on a golf course, may likes of Arnold Palmer and Jack Nick- laus in the power brigade on the pro golf tour. Floyd, playing his third year jon the pro tour although only 22, slammed his way to. the championship in the $100,000 St. Paul Open Sunday and picked lup the biggest cheque of his jcareer, $20,000. He shot a final-round 69 on jwind-blown Keller Golf Course for a 72-hole total of 270--14 'under par and four strokes bet- \ter than Tommy Aaron and Gene Littler. Deal Refram was fourth at 275, a stroke ahead of Nicklaus and Bruce Devlin, while Palmer, Joe Campbell, Dick Sikes and Gardner Dickin- son all had 277. ~GET READY For The Spectacular ESTIVAL THURSDAY, JULY Ist, 1965 enough to allow more imper- sonal and competitive forces to work" and that financial syndi- cates are too rigid have been proved by Quebec government! experience. CAME LAST Mr. Kierans said the tradi- tional underwriters came last when Hydro - Quebec recently asked for competitive tenders on a $50,000,000 offering. "The significance of this event has not escaped the at- tention of my colleagues and Many of us believe that the un- \derlying vigor and strength of \the Canadian financial commu- |nity will support three or more competitive syndicates." He said the Quebec pension fund is a potential heavy buyer of stocks listed on the Montreal exchanges so it is interested in seeing implementation of Por- jter commission recommenda- proved. tions afforded investors be im- HELPS RECIMENT MARK ANN{VERSARY - Queen Mother Flies Home ,' Loved "Each Minute Here' By JOHN LeBLANC TORONTO (CP) -- Queen Mother Elizabeth flew back to England Sunday night ater five days of spreading the noted royal charm around Tor- onto. Her parting words were that she "enjoyed every minute of it." After a bustling day -- two church services, a couple of sessions with her Toronte Scot- tish Regiment and a visit to city hall -- she left fresh and bouncy and with smiles and waves for some 3,000 onlookers at Toronto International Air- port. Her departure on the RCAF's luxury Yukon aircraft brought an end to a series of appear- ances that brought her into touch with' many facets of Tor- onto life since her arrival Wed- nesday night to help the Tor- onto Scottish -- of which she is colonel-in-chief -- celebrate its) 59th anniversary. Besides presenting the regi- ment with new colors and see- ing to it that the old ones were laid up with ceremony, she was banqueted, visited hospitals, a museum, the legislature, a st:4 farm--she's keen on the horses --called on her old friend, former governor - general Vin- cent Massey, and was on dis- play for mile after mile of cit- izenry. GOES TO RACES She also went to the races Saturday and, perhaps for most of the ctowd of 32,000 at Wood- bine track, outshone Whistling Sea as that Calgary - owned horse brought the West its first win in the Queen's Plate, pre- mier event of Canadian thor- oughbred racing. She presented the 50 Queen's guineas--worth about $150--to owner Paul Oliv- ier. | Much of her visit was devoted to the kilted Scottish, to whom she has been colonel-in-chief since 1937 and to whom she presented their old colors in 1939 when she visited here as the Queen with King George VI. On Thursday night, she at- tended a dinner in honor of the regiment and -- in an off-the- cuff interjection in a set speech --told the guests she had been in love with Canada since the young royal couple of 1939 took Canadian hearts by storm. She presented colors to the Toronto Scottish at an outdoor ceremony Friday night, and Sunday afternoon she attended a service at Knox Presbyterian Church--the regimental church --at which the old standards were placed solemnly in the custody of the church. MEETS REGIMENT Apart from the service, she had two get - togethers with members of her regiment. She jlunched with the officers at its jarmories and met the officers' |wives, and later in the day in- WEATHER FORECAST TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts issued by the weather office at 5:30 a.m.: Synopsis: The heat wave is likely to be of brief duration as cold arctic air is. pushing south- ward across Hudson Bay and should cover most of Ontario Tuesday. In fact the initial cold thrust should cross southern Ontario today accompanied by thunderstorms. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Niagara, Lake On- tario, Haliburton, Killaloe, Windsor, London, Hamilton, Toronto: Sunny and very warm becoming partly cloudy with thunderstorms in the late afternoon clearing and turning cooler this evening. Tuesday sunny with cloudy periods and cooler. Winds. southwest 20 to 0 gusting to 50 in thunder- storms late this afternoon, be- coming light tonight and west to northwest 20. to 30 Tuesday. Georgian Bay, Timagami, North Bay, Sudbury: Variable scattered thunderstorms today, clearing and turning cooler this evening. Variable cloudiness and cooler Tuesday. Winds southwest 20 to 30 today, occas- ionally gusting to 50 in thunder- cloudiness and very warm with)s Cold Arctic Air On Way Due Here On Tuesday storms, becoming west 15 to- night and west to northwest 20 to 30 Tuesday. Algoma, Sault Ste. Marie, Cochrane, White River: Cloudy with a few sunny periods and scattered showers today and Tuesday. Gradually turning cooler. Winds west 20 to 30 to- day, northwest 20 to 30 Tues- day. Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, High Saturday: Windsor 60 St. Thomas. 60 London Kitchener Mount Forest. Wingham .... Hamilton St. Catharines. Toronto Peterborough Trenton Kingston Killaloe Muskoka Sault Ste. Marie.. Kapuskasing White River.....+. Moosonee .... Timmins spected the unit at a march- past with Toronto - born Lord Thomson of Fleet, its honorary colonel. Informality hit a new high after the Queen Mother took) the salute as the regiment ried around among the troops lwhile she walked. among them. \Eventually, the soldiers formed a ring and she circled about inside it, chatting with many of the kilties. During Sunday, too, she paid an unscheduled call at city hall, a new $28,000,000 struc- ture of unorthodox twin - tower design that has been generating firm opinions pro and con since it was conceived several years ago. . The Queen Mother apparently did not take one side or the other. Mayor Philip Givens later said she pronounced it "breathtaking" but added it must have produced contro- versy, The mayor told her' it certainly had and that the con- troversy was still going on: LIKES ART SHOW However, the Queen Mother described as a 'magnificent idea" the use of a broad prom- enade at the foot of the twin towers for outdoor art exhibits, a couple of which were on when she dropped in. She chatted with sculptor Mrs. Rae Platner about her exhibits of bronzes. Everything went without a |hitch throughout the visit -- al- {most. The Queen Mother was |waiting with an assemblage in Knox Church for the old colors to arrive and to be turned over when some bars of rock-and- roll music seeped out of the church's amplifier system. A spectator with a tr tot broke ranks and civilians scur-/spected some time stay in London as Cana- dian high commissioner. On that trip, too, she dropped in on the National Stud Farm at Oshawa operated by her host for the trip, millionaire sports- man E, P. Taylor. She in- of the country's top horseflesh, including North- ern Dancer, winner of the Ken- tucky Derby and Preakness last year. Peace Group Meets To Take Stock LONDON (Reuters) -- The Commonwealth Viet Nam peace! mission met Sunday to "take stock of the present situation" following the collapse of its plan for a round - the - world ipeace-seeking trip, The meeting among prime ministers Wilson of Britain and Williams of Trinidad and To- bago, President Nkrumah of Ghana and S. 0. Wey, repre- senting Nigerian Prime Minis- ter Balewa, lasted half an hour. Wilson intimated Saturday, after both China and Russia had refused to receive the four- country mission, that it has been shelved. It does plan to go to Geneva, however, for talks with United Nations Secretary- General U Thant. Libraries Urged For Centennial TORONTO (CP) -- The pres- ident of the University of Tor- onto made a plea Sunday that libraries be included among radio outside the church had stepped too close to the micro- phone turned on for the sound of the officer with the - color party banging on the church door with his claymore. Metropolitan Toronto police averted a mishap earlier at St. James Anglican Cathedral, where Her Majesty attended| morning service. A tube in the public address system blew out| shortly before Very Rev. W. J. |Gilling was to begin his sermon |but the police replaced it |quickly. |WEATHER IS KIND All through the trip, the sun {shone brightly .--southern On- \tario is in a dry and hot spell-- |a free hand with bright finery, ja free hand withbrightfinery. |Sunday she turned up in a l anary yellow organza for |church' and at plane time she |had a splashy outfit of printed \silk in shades of jade, pale emerald, turquoise blue and lemon, topped with a white and yellow toque. She stuck closely to this city |through most of the trip, taking only one 60-mile jaunt to Port Hope to have lunch with the re- \tired Mr. Massey, who became la close friend during his war- Now's the time to add a LENNOX cooling coil to your furnace Enjoy whole-bouse air conditioning dove ecosomical than "room" omits Put the furmace bi » fil docta diftcuers to work 366 faye a ne _ COMPLETE easy to buy, free estimate. Autbts 43 KING STREET WEST, OSHAWA 72 2 year for your comfort! ing is thrifty to. operate. Call for Wee, 5°3581 | | | HOLIDAY STORE HOURS: GOOD NEWS! WILL REM TO 6 WEDNESDAY DOWNTOWN OSHAWA STORES AIN OPEN P.M , JUNE 30th For Your Shopping Convenience ! JULY Ist projects proposed to commem- orate the centennial of Canadian Confederation in 197. Canada needs a national in- terrelated system of libraries, which would add immeasurable strength to each individual in- stitution across the country, Dr. Claude Bissel told the first gen- eral session of the annual meet- ling of the Canadian Library As- sociation. ESECORTED BUS TOURS MARITIMES -- 16 days complete tour of New Brunswick, P.E.I. Cape Breton, and Nova Scotia. Departing July 10th, and Sept. 18th. $200. LAKEHEAD -- 8 days to Manitou- lin, Sault Ste. Marie, Lake Mich- igan, Chicago and Detroit. De- parting July 31st. $100. NEW ENGLAND STATES -- 14 days to Lake Placid, Cape Cod, New York, Worlds Fair, Wash- ington, Colonial Virginia, and Skyline Drive. Departs August 14th, $235. for information and complete itineraries, phone or write FRED DENURE TOURS 165 Colborne St. W. Lindsay, Ont. 324-5836 OTTAWA (CP)--The govern- ment faces a crucial vote today over its income tax amend- ments which include a contro- versial measure affecting news- papers and magazines, The- test -comes on a move by the New Democrats to send one section of the tax bill back to the committee of the whole. The section deals with maga- zines and newspapers. The minority Liberal govern- ment may find the four oppo- sition parties united against it on the vote. The disputed section of the bill would disallow as a tax- deductible business expense the cost of advertising placed in any publication with more than 25-per-cent foreign ownership. WANTS CANADIAN OWNERS The government says the aim dian newspapers from falling into the hands of foreign own- pete ee ares a Government Faccis Big Test | In Tax Amendment Vote claim the; cost of advertising in them as @ business expense in paying income tax. Ottawa Asked To Soften Blow woman g Si pig gove' to help soften the finan to Canadian medical projects caused by grants from the Nai tute of Hlealth in the Uni States. The 'Canadian Neurological Society passed a resolution at its three - day annual aimed at "bringing the Cana- dian government's attention to a very roblem, of the clause is to protect Cana-|ciety ers and to help struggling Canadian periodicals, The legislation has been at- tacked inside and outside Par- to freedom of the press. The New Democrats, in pro- posing that the clause be exam- ined again by the Commons in committee of the whole, was obviously seeking to re-open its opposition to the special posi- tion given Time and Reader's liament as a potential threat} Digest under the measure. Both publications are classed as Canadian and thus their ad- vertisers would be able to Sausage SMALL LINK PORK \ 1.BS, 2 10: 1.00 LEAN Blade Steaks | .,. 59* SEASONED Jitmey Burgers ! u. 0° SEASONED BEEF QB. BOIX 5 scx 2009 12 KING ST. E. -- 723-3633 @ CLOSED THURSDAY, @ OPEN FRIDAY TO 9 P.M, @ OPEN SATURDAY TO 6 P.M. a WN It's the biggest fun-event of the yeor! Parades, donces, shows, floats, bands, clowns, Inter. national sporting events, displays, tournaments, with loads of room for thousonds of spectators' ot Alexandra Park , ., join the fun on July It. Everyone's Invited ! First Oshawa Winner Receives Cheque Daniel Quan, 24, of 110 Dundas Street, Whitby was the first Oshawt area resident to receive a $50.00 cash award from Smith Beverages, local bottler of Pep:i-Colo. Danie! won the prize by collecting the complete Pepsi-Cola "Come Alive' slogan im orange vinyl liners inserted under all Pepsi-Cola and Diet Pepsi-Cola bottle caps, There awe six colors in all. Daniel, a design department employee at Steinberg's is also eligible to win a 1965 Mustang in the Grand 'prize Drawing. The contest ends July 5. Photo shows Mr, Quan right, as he accepted the cheque from W. 'Bill' Smith, president of Smith Beverereq Orb~