Oshawa Times (1958-), 14 Jul 1965, p. 2

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¥ eS ergy rs gy OR ony THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, July 14, 1965 The Mail May Not Be Goin' Through By PAUL. DUNN ortaya (CP)--Maybe the 'can't slow the mail but, low pay to postmen can and will, say many postmen across Canada. Latter carriers and sorters in Vancouver, Toronto and Mont- ccaedinir ate pani 2 lor a $660 across - the - board annual raise or strikes and postal slow-' me hg follow. 19,500 of Canada's 22,- ital workers are members national employee or- tions. All are in pay con- tions with the government, and the outcome looks gloomy. Net waiting for the decision-- Monday--members of Federated Association of Carriers in Montreal almost unanimously Mon- to strike if the government 't acted on the $660 raise "next Monday. r Decarie, president of association's Montreal h, says such a strike be legal. 'The law says that we are not under la- law. That means we can do it we want." GIVE SUPPORT Houle, Montreal head Canadian of'the ees Association, said his 2,100 members would give "physical and financial ---" to a let- ter carriers' strike. Vancouver postmen an- iced some time ago they take strike referendums Postal Employ-|ing. if the expected raise is not ade- quate. In Toronto the threat was to implement a_ work-to- rule program, in which all reg ulations are followed to the let- ter, thereby slowing the flow of mail. : Is a postal strike legal? Canada's 140,000 class ified) civil servants, including the postal groups, work under con ditions spelled out in the Civil Service Act. It sets out penal ties for not performing duties. "There's no law that forbids civil servants to take strike ac- tio," say Rick Otto, national secretary of the Postal Employ- ees Association, "nor does any) law define the conditions under which a strike may be con- ducted." WOULD WAIT The postal organizations' na- tional leaders' are on record as} waiting for the pay announce-| ment before supporting any ac-' tion. However, many of the 11,500 members in the Postal Employ- ees' Association's 378 branches, the 7,500 members in 184 Letter Carrier branches and the 500 bers of the Canadian Raii- way Mail Clerks Federation, are apparently weary of wait- At present key letter carrier and sortation classes are paid $3,630 to $4,380 annually. Devel- opments in the next few days will tell how much more they're going to get or what they're go- ling to do about it. HERE and THERE Invited tenders close July 19 for a tank farm required at the Ajax facilities of Du- Pont of Canada, Limited. : City ambulance answered nine routine house calls yes- terday. "A pan of food left cook- on a stove at the Gren- st. home of Beniamino azzotta caught fire yes- terday doing $50 damage to the kitchen. Oshawa Fire was called and Oshawa Times, Mr. Mun- dy's wife is the former Miss Hunt of Oshawa, Her moth- er, Mrs. Frank Vice, still lives on Gladstone ave. in the city, Both Mr. Mundy and his wife received their education in Oshawa schools. Mr, Mundy later graduated in forestry from the University: of Toronto. After graduating he served a few years with the news- paper and then joined come under the commission but municipalities operate homes for the aged and other nursing homes are privately run. The OHA alsa recommends |provincial licensing of nursing) uvaxte and development of non- | profit nursing care facilities as Hospital-based facilities now!| Controls By OHSC Sought For Ont. Health Faciliti or Unt. Health ties TORONTO (CP)--All health iacuities in Ontario should be co-ordinated under the Ontario Hospital Services Commission, the Ontario Hospital Association jtold the Ontario legislature's se- iect committee on aging today. The OHA says in a brief that only through giving one agency the power to co-ordinate all the province's health facilities can progress be made in care of the aging, or any other group of hospital patients. tients. These would provide a mid-way step between hospital and home for discharged el- derly patients. Also recommended is further study of a community drug pre- scription plan tried in Owen Sound in 1963 and 1964. SUBMIT BRIEF can church dioceses submitted except in rush hours. The Anglican brief also rec- ommends cheaper drugs for older persons, more use of the elderly on community bodies and community councils on the aged to provide visiting) schemes and catering services |tire province now is due for a gc of hospitals for chronic pa- for meals. Hall Report Sparks Battle Twixt Ontario-Ottawa Grits OTTAWA (CP)--The contro- jversial report of the Hall royal icommission on health services, a top item on the agenda of the federal - provincial confer- ence here next week, sparked criticism at both national and provincial levels Tuesday. Marsh was being publicly raked over the coals by Liberal Leader Andrew Thompson of Ontario and national executives of the New Democratic Party for a reference she made to the report in night. 'Miss LaMarsh told the Cana- dian A jiation of trists the framework of the Hall report "while pleasing to many, mav have been built in a sort of never-never land which no longer exists, if it ever did ex- ist constitutionally at all." She said the report had not considered "the increasing em- phasis of late on the provinces legislating in their own spheres and a de-emphasis of programs wherein there is federal initia- tive and a sharing of costs for provincial legislation . . ." a speech Saturday} Liberal opposition leader, sent Miss LaMarsh a sharply- worded telegram saying he was sorry she had suggested a Hall- type medical care scheme may = be implemented in Can- ada. are firmly committed to this kind of program. We think it is the only way to make sure that all citizens of Canada get full coverage at a reasonable price," he said. Miss LaMarsh was believed o have sent a reply to Mr. Thompson's telegram, but it was not made public. An aide said she was unavailable for comment Tuesday. CAT LIKED TRAVEL DIJON, France (AP) -- A Dutch tourist pulled into a gas station to get his oil checked after driving 372 miles from Am- sterdam. A hitchhiking cat leaped out from under the hood. Despite battery acid burns and its bedraggled appearance, the animal was adopted by the Five southern Ontario Angli-| a brief urging subsidized pub-| lic transportatio for the elderly} "I want to make this very) Health Minister Judy La-|Clear to you: I and my party WEATHER FORECAST TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts|King issued by the weather office at 5:30 a.m.: Synopsis: A good deal of sun- shine is anticipated for the 'bet- ter part of the day. Cooler air now is moving into upper lakes regions and this will cause a secondary outburst of showers through central sections of the province today. It seems likely that late in the day and early tonight these showers will pen- etrate as far south as the Hali- burton highlands and Muskoka lakes districts and possibly into southern sections of lower lakes areas. | It would appear that the en- ifew days of relatively cool lweather and although 80-degree temperatures will be common across the lower lakes today, it |will be noticeable cooler by Thursday. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Niagara, Southern Lake Huron, Lake Ontario, Windsor, London, Toronto, Hamilton: Variable cloudiness with chance of a) shower or thundershower this} evening or tonight. Sunny with) a few cloudy intervals and| noticeable cooler Thursday.| Winds becoming northwest 15 to| 25 this afternoon. | Haliburton, Killaloe, Algoma, Sault Ste. Marie, Georgian Bay, | Northern Lake Huron, Sudbury,| North Bay: Scattered showers and chance of a thundershower| this afternoon and evening. Sunny with a few cloudy inter-| vals and cool Thursday. Winds} becoming northwesterly this| afternoon. White River, Cochrane, Tim-} agami: Mostly cloudy and cool | with a few showers today. Vari-| able cloudiness with little) change in temperature Thurs-| day. Northwest winds 15 to 25.) Forecast Temperatures \Low tonight, high Thursday: Windsor ....... ese 55 St. Thomas....... London Kitchener ....... Mount Forest.. Wingham Hamilton .... St, Catharines..... Toronto ..... Department quickly doused the blaze. A Times story yesterday s US. Receives NATO Accord PARIS (CP)--Canada joined|i several North Atlantic partners Tuesday in expressing sympa- thy and understanding of the United States position in South Viet Nam. But a spokesman said they) also stressed the need to con- tinue to seek a political solution because they fear the situation ean lead to a dangerous esca- lation of the widening conflict. The Canadian view was ex- pressed by Ambassador George tieff as the 15 - country permanent council heard rt by George Ball, U.S. tsecretary of state, on what stéps the U,S. has taken andj] the prospects immediately ahéad in American efforts to halt Communist aggression. The spokesman said that Ball, at" 'whose request the meeting|| was held, said the U.S. -- "a: difficult summer." ~ U.S. wants a political so-| but feels no progress can oe "anticipated as long as the other side--the North Vietna- mese--shows no willingness to open diplomatic negotiations. ' ie " ALLEN B. JOHNSTON BOLAHOOD BROTHERS LIMITED ore pleased to announce the appointment of Mr. Johnston to sy sous Staff. Abitibi in forestry work. 4 FO * 1ST STAR Andrew Thompson, Ontario's Dutchman. K« tk UR STAR S | SIRLOIN & WING STEAK | BONELESS RUMP & | | * 2ND STAR GRADE A LARGE |EGGS H DOZEN | { | l ANY ONE ITEM COUNTRY 4 ibs, Sausage 4 Ibs, Pork Hocks 3 Ibs. 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Moosonee .......+ By THE CANADIAN PRESS A strike by millwrights, mem- bers of the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of |America (CLC), went into ef- ifect Tuesday and 540 mill |wrights walked off the job in St. |Catharines, Peterborough, Wind- jsor, Brockville, Stratford and | Hamilton. Union officials said the strike is against firms belonging to the Ontario Association of Mill- wrights and Rigging Contrac- tors. SEEIN' GRANNY IN PAJAMMIES OTTAWA (CP) -- Five- year-old Lyn Fabian and her brothers, Serge, 6, and Mare, 4, made an on-the- Spot decision to . visit "Granny." The three youngsters were spotted Tuesday morning at a busy down- town intersection waiting for the light to change-- clad only in pyjamas. Passers-by who found them standing barefoot on the hot pavement quickly returned them to their home 10 blocks away in a taxi. Their mother, Mrs. Yvon Fabian, thought they were still playing in the backyard. "The yard has a six-foot fence and I don't see how they got out," Mrs, Fabian said. "They never did any- thing like this before. Why they've never even visited their granny on foot before. The province-wide strike in- volves demands for a 50-cent- an-hour wage increase, travel allowances and increased vaca- |tion benefits. The average wage \for union workers in Ontario is $3.55 anvhour, | In St. Catharines, 70 mill- |wrights walked offyand stopped work at McKinnon Industries |Ltd. Workers also went on strike at Cyanamid of Canada |Ltd. in Niagara Falls, and Atlas Steel Co. in Welland. A 65-member local of the un- jion stopped work in Brockville, jaffecting the nearby Du Pont |of Canada plant and the Canada |Starch Co. plant 18 miles west of Brockville. | PICKET PLANTS The union workers set 1700 other workers, plant construction, cross the lines. engaged in) refused to In Windsor, 200 members of| \Local 1293 walked off the job |Monday, and affected model changeover work at automobile plants. Millwrights were en- »,, gaged in installing new machin- lery in Windsor plants Delors 11966 model a 540 Millwrights On Strike | In6 Ontario Municipalities] In Peterborough and Strat-ijf} ford, workers employed by/if T. W. Tratner, member of the | Lackey Bros. Ltd. of Kitchener went on strike Tuesday. union's provincial committee, said the union re-{l jected a 35 - cent - an - hour in- |} as 5 ee deal from Lackey Bros. . 2 TICKETS TO. SEE THE SEE PAGE 20 FOR DETAILS What price Europe this Fall? Paris-only $40 down by BOAC Just 10% down--that's all you pay and you're on your way to one of the most exciting cities in the world. And you have 24 months to settle the balance of your $393 round-trip air fare. Other BOAC 21-Day Economy Excursion Fares: from Toronto to Edinburgh, just $32 down. To Rome, $51 down. Fares effective August 30. See your BOAC Travel Agent. up| |picket lines at both plants and| ==" BOAC BRITISH OVERSEAS AIRWAYS CORPORATION WITH AIR CANADA Oshewa's Authorized Agent FOUR SEASONS TRAVEL (OSHAWA) LIMITED 57 King St. East 728-6201-2-3 pos OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 P.M, DAVIDSON' mid-summer 31 SIMCOE ST. Sale Starts THURSDAY 9:00 A.M. e ALL SALES FINAL ® @ NO EXCHANGES ® NO REFUNDS @ MIIDSON'S SHOE STORE NORTH DOWNTOWN OSHAWA | | } | i | | |

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