THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, Merch 22, 1966 ~ OVER AND UNDER FOR TIMMY Hamilton, Ont. community centre. For an hour every Friday the children, _ be- tween the ages of one and four, get swimming _ les- One-year-old Tammy Rot- man (top) learns to float with mother's help while 2- year-old Patti Elford learns to swim under-water at a US. Ta WASHINGTON (CP)--An in- crease in U.S. tax rates this year is considered inevitable by many observers as the Ameri- can economic book picks up fresh inflationary features un-| mese war. The current debate is prim- arily about the timing and x Rate Boost Seen As Inevitable part of the restraining packagejthat still stands publicly, what-| including tighter credit and fur-/ever contingency plans are ther reduced federal spending |afoot, said: in the vast Johnson anti-poverty; 'We have seen too many ex- and other domestic: programs. |pansions turned into recessions Meanwhile, the president and|by slamming down too hard on der the stimulus of the Vietna-|his advisers continue to argue |the brakes, We have seen far that both guns and butter are too much unemployment and possible. under - employment and too | Treasury Secretary Henryj;much idle productive capacity to countenance Motorist Night Sh AYLMER, Ont. (CP)--An Ayl- mer man told police Monday he! saw.Georgia Jackson about 8:30 p.m. on the day of her dis- appearance--about two hours later than the last reported! sighting of her. This left police with an un- explained interval in the where- abouts of the slain waitress after she had been seen in a} 'CBS Holds -- 'Modest Lead In Ratings By CYNTHIA LOWRY NEW YORK (AP) -- If you haven't been following The John Forsythe Show lately } | come as a surprise to learn that | debonaire Maj. Foster and his | devoted sergeant have run away | from that girls school the major inherited, to seek adventure and laughs in the cold war. The two merry air force men, |called back to the colors, were (CP Wirephoto) |" London Monday night on the sons from their mothers under the direction of the centre's supervisor Two Skippers Suspended By Transport Inquiry MONTREAL (CP)--A depart-| Pilot Louis Bender, who was ment of transport inquiry, con-|aboard the Sunek,- had his li- ducted by Mr. Justice Francois;cence suspended for nine Chevalier into last fall's colli-;months, and Jean Bernier, pilot sion between an ore carrier and|aboard the Lawrencecliffe Hall, |) a freighter loaded with grain on/lost his for six months. the St. Lawrence River, has or- | Teacher Charged | verge of test-flying a super- }secret plane. They were beset, |not only by a dopey double for Sergeant Robbins wno kept say- ing '"'nyet'" and cailing people In Fraud Case | "comrade," but also by a sec- DETROIT (AP)--A 32-year-| 0d double--or would he be a old junior high school teacher| triple?--who squinted like Char- was arrested and charged Mon-| lie Chan and had trouble pro- day with: posing under another | nouncing the letter L as in "rots man's name and reputation. of ruck. Andrei Pickett, teacher of| The sudden shift of locale English and social science at|from a giggly girls school to Pelham junior high school, was|judo chops in hotel corridors held for examination April 6. |was accomplished without so Police and school authorities} much as a farewell to Head- whether a tax rise should beiFowler, in a Feb. 17 statement'far too long it may} | Former vice-president Rich- jard M. Nixon, likely candidate Saw Georgia e Disappeared store about 6:30 p.m. on her; who discovered the body in a way home from work Feb. 18.| tangled woodlot last Wednesday. Terry Robinson, who said he| Council made no mention of had known Georgia for three or|police handling of the search. four years, told police she|Police Chief Harold Henderson waved to him as he stopped his|had been criticized by Georgia's ear at a traffic light. He said | family and others for being lax jhe was not positive about the|/about finding her. time, but estimated it at 8:30 p.m The Ontario Police Commis- Twenty-nine days later, the |sion has opened an investiga- body of the 20-year-old girl was/|tion into alleged laxity on the found in a farm woodlot four!part of the Aylmer police. miles northeast of her home in| Attorney General Arthur this town near St. Thomas. She) Wishart said Monday in Toronto nad been beaten and sexually|he received a complaint from assaulted. a member of the legislature WE ' MENTS shortly after the 20-year-old re it Gos 3 girl disappeared that Aylmer to account|°.. ' lfor her movements from the|Police were not pressing the |time she left work at about 6:10 hunt, jp.m. until Mr. Robinson saw t p Mr. Wishart said he informed rer. A salesgirl said Georgia|Commissioner Eric Silk of the made a purchase between 6:30) Provincial police who in turn of- and 7 p.m, fered help to the Aylmer police. More than 100 persons have) At that time, Mr. Wishart been questioned since the girl's|Said, Chief Harold Henderson of body was found last Wednesday.|Aylmer denied any laxity in in- Town council Monday night/Vestigating the girl's disappear- offered a $1,000 reward for in-|4nce. |formation leading to the arrest; Mr. j}and conviction of her killer. An;normal circumstances the pro- earlier $500 it had offered was|vincial police do not assist mu- jallocated to the man who found|nicipal forces until asked. He jthe body. said the Aylmer force asked for | The latter will go to Lawrencejhelp March 2 and received it |Kelly, of nearby Talbotville,|immediately. Wishart said that under| needless and drastic cutbacks in private demand--thus deliber- ately creating idle reserves of manpower and capacity." Defence Secretary Robert Mc- Namara, also seeking to keep the economic situation cooled psychologically, has argued that the demands of the Vietnamese war comparatively are less than 'that of the Korean campaign. The counter-contention is that Korea came during a period of economic slack and Viet Nam has pushed demand close to or even past supply, with conse- quent infiationary hazards. | The argument has direct ;meaning for Canada, tightly crease mood at a time when even. Dr. Walter W. Heller, chairman of the presidential economic advisers for 1961-64, urges swift planning of tem- porary tax increases because the 'fine mist of incipient in- = may be turning into light rain." For example, Congress might balk at this stage and urge in- stead further pruning of the president's domestic program. Or, as argued, too severe a psychological damper might gg to mild recession. It might among a public treated to tax cuts only two years ago. backfire poiiticaily But pressures are mounting for the economy and for the international U.S. dollar drain in these areas: Rising imports, labor's intentions to seek wage increases beyond voluntary guide lines set by the govein- ment; more signs of commodity price increases; and shortages of material from textiles to metals. At least some Democrats, speaking through the Joint Eco- nomic Council of Congress, have said evidence increases daily of a need for a general tax in- crease before the year ends. Republicans agree, but prefer cuts in federal spending. ' jtied to the U.S. economy. for the Republican presidential nomination in 1968, has said: "Johnson inflation will be the major domestic issue in the 1966 (November congressional elec- tion) campaign. "His irresponsible refusal to face up to the danger of eco- nomic escalation at home at a time when we have military escalation abroad will cost his |party scores ... of seats." | | Assorted difficulties face PRE TAX 54 Church St. SALE NU-WAY Rug Centre CONTINUES 728-4201 Johnson in gauging the tax-in- 2, "! es -- TH > HEAD OFFICE M. G. SOWTEN, CLU, Branch Manager, Suite 308, Times Bldg., 86 King St., E., OSHAWA An Equitable policy is your easiest and cheapest way to provide for the inescapable costs you, or your family, must face on your death or retirement, x gs ae sansa INSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA WATERLOO, ONTARIO | t | NOW: A unique opportunity to save on specially-equipped Big FORDS and FALCONS / The seven- month-old Law- rencecliffe Hall was en route \from Port Cartier, Que., to |Ohio, with a load of iron ore said Pickett, a teacher since|mistress Elsa Lanchester and| October, 1964, masqueraded un-| gym teacher Ann b, Davis. But der the name of Jacob Cook, a|that old laugh track followed; dered the suspension of the two ships' captains and the river pi- lots aboard the ships at the time of the accident. The collision between the ore pellets when she was rammed Chicago social workers. | Pickett was charged specific-| \them clear across the ocean. | It appears to be a last-ditch |by the Sunek, bound from Mont- carrier Lawrencecliffe Hall and|real to Le Havre with a load the freighter Sunek occurred | of grain. or. a ee ta te | Mr. Justice Chevalier found ithat both ships were on their song Ec City. Nel creme side of the channel when The inquiry, ithe accident occurred. Both which closed} ; ..|Ships were moving at.an ex- here Saturday, ordered the SUS: | cessive speed, considering the pension of certificates for the A : Set hg four principals for periods rang- visibility and weather condi ing from four to nine months. | : z Mr. Justice Chevalier declined} The inquiry found that the to assess costs to the individ-|Sunek followed "an erratic and uals and found neither shipping dangerous course, first by pass- ally with fraudulently accepting | effort to salvage a comedy se- $8,900 in salary since he wasjries that never has achieved hired: as a teacher, | good health, by cashing in on The _ six-foot-four, Alabama-|the current comedy spy kick. born defendant, described by| Monday night's episode was school superiors as a "'satisfac-| embarrassingly feeble. It was tory" teacher, allegedly used) accompanied by constant refer- Jacob Cook's university records} ences to Moscow and Peking by in getting the teaching post. |these low comedy spy types, Pickett and Cook attended! poor taste in a period of inter- high school together, police} national tension. said. | The repairs have had little ef- frow since the show will not be | back next season. company at fault. He recommended, however, ) that any ship of a certain ton- nage should be equipped with VHF (very high frequency) ra- ing outside of the channel, then trying to re-enter it too fast." She also contributed to the ac- cident, the judgment said, by Auto Dealers | Profits Grow CBS maintained its modest; lead in the national A. C. Niel- sen ratings covering the two- jnot immediately reducing her ships should be confined to a|speed when it was found that mandatory speed limit when| sounding devices 'were in op- meeting or passing one another. tating condition. He ordered that Captain De-| The inquiry found that the vona Larossee of the Lawrence-|Lawrencecliffe Hall had been cliffe Hall lose his certificate| directed on a course which was for four months and Captain) "irregular, and on the false as- Harold Syversen of the Sunek sumption. that the Sunek was had his picked up for six outside the channel, and north months. lof the northern buoy." dio-telephones and that large Railways, 2 Union Groups Pick Aides For Conciliation By BEN WARD {dle the CBRT dispute is ex- OTTAWA (CP)--The railways| pected shortly. and two of the three union) : groups involved in contract) In. all agpitrgen ee hase talks on behalf of non-operating "¢SS Was made in the initia railway workers have nomi-)round of talks but negotiations nated representatives to concili-| stalled on the major monetary ation boards that will seek to! items, ; = A deadlock in negotia-) qy,, non-ops how get an ayer- A. G. Cooper, Halifax lawyer|48¢ $2.21 an hour. Their new and a veteran of conciliation| demands include wage increases board work for the railways,/ranging from 54 cents to more has been named as the employ- than $1 an hour ers' representative on both) a boards. The railways are saying they H. S. oe) npaedy) a for-| can't meet union wage demands mer union official now on a re-' hee : ie search assignment with : au Of med bt cul rate royal commission on bilingual-| "ga imposed by Ottawa since| ism and biculturalism in Ot-| : | | TORONTO (CP)--The profits week period ending March 6. of Canadian auto dealers in-/CBS ran up an average rating creased, by $3 a car during | f 20.8, followed by NBC with 1965, says the annual report of| 19.6 and ABC, 18.8, the Federation of Automobile| , The 10 most popular shows Dealers Association of Canada.|@uring the period were, in the The federation report adds, | following order: NBC's" Bon-| however, that dealers' profits) 428, CBS' Cinderella, Lucy dropped $23 an auto in the last Show, Beverly Hillbillies, Green three months of the year. Acres, Andy Griffith Show, Figures show dealers ABC's Thursday night episode netting a before-taxes profit o $96 an auto at year-end, com- pared with $93 at the end of 1964. A. E. Kress, federation execu- tive vice-president, said Monday! in an interview that the profit! drop in the final quarter is not! 4 disturbing because it happens to Recommended tonight: some degree every year. Carol plus Two, CBS, 8:30-| He said sales always start off|9:30 EST, special variety hour with a rush and then gradually|Starring Carol Burnett and decline when customers turn|8uest stars Lucille Ball and their attention to other products|Z€T9 Mostel. at Christmas. RS Mr. Kress said Canada's 4,900| _WOODS WORTH MUCH World production of all forest new-car dealers had estimated : sales of $4,257,169,932 in 1965, up Products in 1964 was valued at $38,400,000,000. from $3,474,248,682 in 1964. hig of Batman, CBS' Gomer Pyle, ABC's Bewitched and CBS' Ed | Sullivan Show, cial broadeast of a Rodgers and! Hammerstein musical written for television. BOXER DIES SYDNEY, Australia (AP)-- Patrick Casey, a 21-year-old boxer, died in a hospital Mon- day night from brain injuries suffered in a fight last Wednes- day. The younger brother of Australian heavyweight cham-| pion Fred Casey, he had been in a coma for five days. ~ (FREE PARKING where Broadway meets Times Squore NEW YORK CITY FREE PARKING available in tawa, has been selected by the! unions in each case. This week the two men are trying to reach agreement on a chairman. There are 17 separate unions involved in the bargaining on behalf of about 103,000 non-oper- ating employees, those who do not actually. run the. trains. Although for years the unions put up a united front, this time they have divided into three groups. SIX STAY Six of them representing 55,- 000 workers have remained in| the joint negotiating committee. Another 10, bargaining for 28,000 shop workers, have formed a shopcrafts group. The Canadian Brotherhood of Railway, Trans- port and General Workers (CLC) has gone it alone on be- half of about 20,009 workers. So far conciliation board ma- chinery has been set in motion for the first two groups. A re- Quest for another board to han- the heart of the theatrical ond entertainment district «+-close to shopping, sight-seeing and business appointments. You'll enjoy 'the convenience and hos- pitality of the Paramount «+. 700 newly refurbished rooms, all with private bath, TV, and air condi- tioning. SPECIAL FAMILY PLAN RATES Free parking Available INTERIOR DECORATOR FURNITURE DRAPERIES BROADLOOM 15 King Street East CUSTOM MADE DRAPES Phone 725-2686 From $10 single, $13 double Telephonen. Circle 6-5500 or Teletype 212 640-4481 MEW YORK St. West of Bway, Times Square | Cinderella was a repeat spe-} CUSTOM 500 Sedan Special luxury equipment! 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