i New Rail Complex Benefits TODAY'S TOPIC *%« 3 Cited By TORONTO (CP) -- Premier Robarts, unhappy with federal- provincial fiscal arrangements, is going to ask Ottawa to give more money to the provinces. The premier told the legisla- ture Friday that "there is a great need for a change in the fiscal arrangements throughout our country as a whole." The province wouldn't ap- proach Ottawa for a handout but would ask for more mone \to_ fulfil its responsibilities an. Tax Change Need THE OSHAWA TIMES, Saturday, July 9, 1966 3 Legislature Ends Session After Longest Stint Ever By DAVID DAVIDSON TORONTO (CP) -- Lieuten- ant-Governor Eatl Rowe gave royal assent Friday to 102 bills and prorogued the longest ses- sion of the Ontario legislature in the province's history. Attorney - General Wishart said something should be done about wage assignments but he had given commitments that this would not be done until the next session of the house. The legal aid legislation pro- vides that persons unable te pay the cost of legal fees will be able to ask help from a plan to be administered by the Society of Upper Canada, the organization which governs On- -. tario lawyers. The Securities Act moved to tighten rules on insider trading and expanded Oniario" Securitie Shortly before prorogation, Premier Surpluses eninyed by the fed-| eral government should be! shared among the provinces. "We simply had to increase taxes this year." He said his worry is that the federal government "will choose to move into certain areas of expenditures" and this I must not be done until the fi-| The lieutenant-governor read nancial needs of the provinces) a five-page government - pre- and municipalities are met. pared speech - outlining what We don't want -to~see any; 224-been--2ccomplished _in_ the additional federal spending". |Session, which began Jan. 25. said the sessions should be bro- ken with winter and fall sittings. There were 195 public bills in- troduced at this session, 170 by the government. Royal assent was given to 165. Of 37 private-member bills presented, 30 received royal as- sent, CREATED OMSIP) Major legislation &pproved by der the constitution. Immediately preceding proro-| the legislature included a con- Mr. Robarts announced he MRS, MARJORIE HODGSON MRS. R. D, SINCLAIR a success, they'll have to have a bus system to the station. People from outsice of the city could then get to where they wanted, quite easily." MR. D. R. SIN- CLAIR, Oshawa: "It's a good idea. It will be better than the older stations. The in- dusiry in Oshawa _ should benefit too. They will have better shipping facilities. I'm for anything that is going to improve the city and its services," SUZANNE SZABLEWSKI MRS. CARMEL BELL ARTHUR HALCHIN LEE PAGE HOW WILL THE PRO- POSED CNR railway com- plex benefit passengers and industrial trade in Oshawa and surrounding area? Six people were asked this ques- tion during a man-on-the- street survey. They said: SUZANNE. SZABLEWSKI, Pickering: "I think that it is a good idea and that it will benefit both passengers and industry. It will make com- muting faster and cheaper seems to be dropping their passenger service and some- body has to keep it up. LEA PAGE Oshawa: "'I think that it. should be in a different place. Centrally located, this would help down-town traffic which I feel will become a real problem in a few years. More people could commute to work by train right to the centre of town." MRS, MARGORIE HODGSON, Osh- awa: "I like the idea, but I think that if it is going to be BROOME, ally can't come because of transportation." MRS. CAR- MEL BELL, Oshawa: "Although I don't use the train often myself, those that do will certainly benefit by it. It will be a big improve- ment on what we use as train stations now. I'm in favor of the whole thing." ARTHER HALCHIN, Osh- awa: "It should benefit the city all right. There is a lot of industry here: and traffic By DON MacLACHLAN CALGARY (CP)--Squads of a diss a tes GE He -- MEAS, Calgary Police Ready For Teenage Stampede Fights tentious bill to amend the Hos- pital Insurance Act, creating the Ontario Medical Services In- surance Plan. Debate lasted for several days and the opposition ham- mered at Health Minister Mat- thew Dymond, without success, to expand the scope of th¢ legis- lation. / Other priority legislation in- cluded the Consumer Protection! Act, the Securities Act and the Legal Aid Act. The government at first did gation the legislature had ap- proved a budget for the current fiscal year of more than $1,846,- 000,000. Premier Robarts, comment- ing on the Jength of the session, said he personally didn't care "how long we stay here to com- | plete the business of the house." The legislature had been in session 110 days and during would appoint a royal commis- sion to study labor law in On- tario, including injunctions. DP Leader MacDonald said theNegislature was nothing but a geptleman's club 'in which the ihterests of the farm, labor and the consumer get short pede parade Monday and later shrift,"" open the Stampede. Some 180,- 000 persons watched the parade| most of that period there had last year. j been not only regular afternoon Other weekend events include sittings but night sittings as i : -| well. , B service, Gb DASrEnE ex-| we not intend to proceed with the : w 8,000 'SONS, | ¢ eee "ace Hays' phe SET RECORD ~ consumer bill to third reading. outdoor breakfast and an exhi-|, Last year's session of 98 days|But opposition demands that it bition football game tonight be-| broke the record set in 1922/comne into force this year and tween Calgary Stampeders and|When it took 81 days to wrap/not be delayed until next year Edmonton Eskimos of the West-|UP_ the legislature's business. | apparently persuaded the gov- ern Football Conference. Both Liberal and New Demo- ernment to change its mind. More than 559,000 visitors at-|CTatic opposition parties said The bill provides for a cool-| tended the 1965 Stampede and the government should consider| ing-off period on contracts made} AN UNFORGETTABLE VACATION n GRAY ROCKS INN ST. JOVITE, P.@. OW LAC OUIMET LEARN TO GOLF WEEKS BUDGET GOLF WEEKS FAMILY ECONOMY WEEKS OUR OFF-SEASON RATES ARE REALLY Low) OTTAWA (CP)--The Canada|pension statement Assistance Plan won passage in| reading. : : the Commons Friday but the' With Mr. MacEachen's assu- debate focused on old age pen- rances that he will make an an- sions right up to the last min-|nouncement before the summer ute. recess, the bill won passage. The rangy welfare legislation) Opposition Leader Diefen- were charged with) : . ja fall sitting, breaking up house! with door-to-salesmen and re- officials hope the 600,000 HPFE | usiness into two sections. | quires stating of interest in both| Farquhar Oliver (L -- Grey|dollar and percentage amounts, | r South) said he had not decided 2 _ exactly how the problem eal! icaees ae Oe eeciiies to| be resolved but it should be con-|.)"); See P : | ; ase 4 jabolish wage assignments by! sidered. He didn't like the idea| »mending the Protection Act} ye ig ot lesion A iq.| failed in both the starding com-| : S sald ne Consid-| mittee' on legal bills and the| ered June and July just as g004| committee of the whole house-- months for dealing with legis- : . the step between second and pete affairs as February Or| third readings of a bill. Donald C. MacDonald, 'leader | of the New Democratic Party, | Beauty Pageant | will be reached this year. Rec- jord attendance was 591,695 in | 1959, when Queen Elizabeth and | Prince Phillip were here. | After the parade through the downtown area, rodeo events jopen at the Stampede grounds. Cowboy contests offer $90,000 in| |prize money and livestock judg-| ing $70,000 for top entries. | As well as broac riding, steer wrestling and brahma bull rid-| jing contests, thoroughbred rac-| ling and chuckwagon races will) |be held daily. The RCMP Mus-| jical Ride will be performed} 'each afternoon. | Hotel « golf course table wned 18 Riding airport | | Veterans Affairs Group Returns From Europe Trip ROME (CP) -- Twenty-three brain, leaving him permanently to Canadian MPs, members of the ee oe ofoggie ve 3 _| An artillery captain wi s Commess veterans affttrs com- Brigade at the time, Matheson . "Was advancing as a forward ob- after hundreds Sf! servation officer with the West miles across Italy to visit two) Nova Scotia Regiment in an at- Second World War cémeteries.|tack across the Moro River wick city police are prepared to head off a repetition of teen-age out- |breaks which marred last |year's pre-Stampede weekend. is pi ice Chi Iver said and should bring more from General Motors, is pick- Police Chief Ken Mc people to Oshawa that norm- ing up. Canadian Pacific, | keep youths occupied, The six- | ' day Stampede opens Monday. | ana a S$ | Last year hundreds of teen- |agers milled around downtown |streets. Fights broke out and War Stand ss: i s . s on third, Earlier, the health minister C t d ' : i asts began today. Among them prgees gp eae bd ng agp Yl ICIZE |was the. Alberta Derby oo of what the plan will mean in i : y rakes ' additional federal outlays on OKOTOKS, Alta. (¢ Py Gene, ot ie a apehet srentedi, ie wi tor Robert F. Kennedy indi- je Stampede salutes the pe a See. bed itici , "Friday|troleu industry this year He said his original estimate rectly criticized Canada Friday|'ro!eum istry p proval and' royal assent before ernment plans to use a capital ! nt ea i dian Petroleim Bxpaak Parliament starts a summer re-| gains tax to finance aid to pen- information about what the ao Boisied bei ioe, cbobioied ey the olf indil- cess. Health Minister Mac-) sioners whose annual income in| previncts are likely 2 do ete shaut Fs litade tn tnen| HY. Eachen Tuesday promised a Jess than $1,260 a year. He Rearing -- a wae or net acne 2 ins WILL OPEN STAMPEDE statement on. pensions once the! derstood the difference--the $75; 1zIng the ipa crams a bgp ti ny to answer that| U.S. Senator Robert F. Ken: bill goes through. old age security pension pro-|50 per cent of welfare costs. \Vnedy was to ride in the Stam- East) that the plan is only "an|who in time of crisis preserve) lold barnacle," said latest indi- their neutrality'."' | cations are the federal govern-, However, the senator said, | ment may pay out $95,000,000/the United States appreciates in the first year. He told Dr. 'the active understanding and) Rynard, a medical doctor, that)support of Canada' in Viet} §oURIS, P.E.I. (CP) -- The; Police Decisi Oo 1ce € lency on welfare payments. jvolved" in giving leadership/ hands of less than 2,500 voters. TORONTO (CP) -- Attorney-, dispute. is not settled. Police are' Dr. Rynard said: "This does and assistance in Latin Amer-| Fewer than five per cent of General Arthur Wishart has de-|"0t allowed to strike. not do anything for the kids andjica and East Africa. the island's 54,450 eligible vot- vig Mr. Wishart said Thursday |their parents in our slum areas. Such assistance would helpjers will take their turn at the layed until early next nheaeh 4 that an action started in the We've got to get those people stop countries moving "in the! polls to register their decision in| decision on whether to appoint Ontario Supreme Court by the|out of their rut, educate them, (direction of a dictatorship, ei-|the deferred election in two-| A spokesman for Mr. Wishart; Dennis Latten, administrator; Mr. MacEachen said there is) ti va}.;the Opposition Liberals the bal- said in an interview Friday the! of the OPA. has said the associ-(no upper limit on the amount Fg io Sone dt Mande ance of power. : attorney-general had hoped to atios may apply for a Supreme) Ottawa is willing to spend in} af Athariean States." | With Premier Walter. Shaw's make a decision Friday but has'Court writ setting aside the|matching provincial welfare Pa acs Lie caiacive as. | conservatives and the Liberals postponed it to study the matter) pembroke legal action if the ap- Programs. But the initiative has). sal on ; ifr how|under Alex B. Campbell dead- further. |pointment of an arbitrator is|t0 come from the provinces and/S!stance in | cemonsiraling hoW/iocked at 15 legislature seats | tion and the town police com-|the town would not stop the speech during committee stage ag SS . eT ioe cillor and assemblyman seats in mission which called for wages} court action. discussion of the Canada Assist- Aine a sede aalibe sale in at. {ne rural riding. up to $6,300 annually. The old) He said a clause in the agree-| ance Plan bill, Dr. Rynard said set hte to bring about an end|., The candidates, Conservatives contract, which expired a year/ment tying Pembroke police| he was heartened. ~|to the Viet Nam -war, | Keith MacKenzie and Peter me ago, provided for $4,800. | Salaries to provincial police sal-| ~~ ha a Aulay and Liberals Daniel J. The Ontario Police Associa-|aries would throw town esti- S "i | | Que. Society Longshoremen Lawyer Attacks have been threats by some by provincial police in the fu- members to book off sick if the: ture. The ident of the Canadian |Bar Association said Friday the i iti ; :. |press has been weakening the |its opposition to the design ofjtional Longshoremen's Associa-|PTCSs Sy hitcaniagg: E peere yh ad teense poy be tion accepted a: proposal trom|ada of the judiciary in Can added it still supports unilingual| prime Minister Pearson the : ; | highway signs in the province./night of June 13 to settle out-| John + ip cw pes The society had been opposed standing issues in the uebec| the SON ECU NE Oe cree j 8 Q Barrist@rs' Society the design which .included|dockers' strike through binding past year attacking the political jproauction, Was given by tie; Mr, Nicholson tabled a file eee a he ak ot appoint- jsociety as the reason for the! telegrams, letters and the terms) ™©"'s '9. eg e | decision .| He said the association in- ie g i of setilement for: the strike tends to brin the matter at ee | when h hi The group proposed instead which tied up the ports of|.°7°5 ' 1 g it? th The MPs are finding out by) when he was hit. |that metal tags, numbered Montreal, Trois - Rivieres and its annual meeting next mon City for 39 days until | police dogs also were available. _ | The city scheduled an open-air rere test ss 2 : OSIM " | teen dance Sunday night to Assistance Plan Passes ° T Pensions De ate causing disturbances. e Meanwhile, a. round of pre- Stampede barbecues and break- | j i of $85,000,000 in the first year for playing a neutral role in|Some $20,000,000 in oil field ted t t Senate ap-| bak ked whether the gov- of the plan's operation was world crises involving cal oO ar Ley P iectea nu is expected to get § P-ibaker asked w based on early and incomplete|United States the grounds for the first Cana vac veri tly I'd like to. . j | ij vear--' b Mr. MacEachen, answering a directly, but ; | wanton me ne tengtongrd yer eg Mig ro ge Man complaint in the Commons by Ng weg The ey and claus y, , b ; oe "ana ea 1 is é opposition again asked for the|Eachen did not reply. |P. B. Rynard (PC BIOIEDE Ds NEM. AF. FESR EM OF e Wishart Delays the plan could make an impor-|Nam. _ | political deadlock in Prince Ed- jtant contribution to solving the He said he would like to see) ward Island may be broken |problem of long-term depend-|Canada more "actively in-|Monday. The decision is in the an arbitrator in a wage dispute town may have to be settled and break the cycle of despond-|ther extreme left or extreme) member Kings Ist riding that) between Pembroke police and before arbitration can take ency and poverty which has right." |could give either the incumbent | the town council. place. hounded them for generations. 'COULD HELP OAS' regressive Conservatives or ive free institutions work" and in| ater the May 30 election, there "il would not! blocked. I am sure they are as alive ; rv "| after the May : . wir we cates between| Pembroke solicitor W. T. Hol- to the need as we are." ---- agriculture and med-|is considerably more at stake the Pembroke Police Associa-|linger said Friday he was sure After Mr. MacEachen's '°2. ald. han the hotly contested coun- tion, representing about 2,300; mates out because there was no| officers across the province,,way of knowing in advance! has objected to the delay. There, what increases would be won . eae Given Reply P Editorial Drops Gripe | "€P'Y Press Editorials . | MONTREAL (CP)--La_ Soci- By Nicholson ST. ANDREWS, N:B. (CP)-- jete St. Jean Baptiste de Quebec announced Friday it is ending) OTTAWA (CP)--The Interna- | Bruns * T i jthat many editorials have ap- reference to 'Confederation The | jegislation, Labor Minister! 4 expense of re-designing the! Nicholson told the Commons|Peared in the press during the plates, which are already in Friday | personal observation how well) At the cemetery, Matheson | "7", be issued to motorists to Quebec in Winnipeg. ; the Commonwealth War Graves! with cane in hand made ajcover the figures 66" on their jts settlement in Mr. Pearson's|,, Mt Weir said the council of Commission is maintain- brave figure as he placed alcurrent plates office early on the morning of the association recommended at travelline 2500 PELL. Voters Hold Key To Provincial Election Victory Gets Bad Start -- | MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP)--| | Thirty-two international beau-| jties flew in Friday for the an-| nual Miss Universe Pageant,| \ noticeable weary and at least |campaign here and in the sur-|one, Miss England, in tears. rounding countryside of this) Miss England wept when told| farming and fishing constitu-|her room-mate would be a girl) ency. | who does not speak her Jan-| MAY BE HEAVY mown If the Kings 1st advance poll] five . is any indication, voting will be heavy Monday, In the 12-hour poll Thursday, 141 voters cast ballots. The number represented more than five per cent of the 2,411 eligible voters. Two per cent or fewer of voters in the other four Kings County ridings voted in polls held in advance of the May 30 election. Campaigning over radio and television ended Friday night, but candidates' photographs, pamphlets and party stickers on car windows and bumpers will] remain on display today in this| town of 1,500. Both parties have re-empha-| sized the major points in their original platforms and the Con- servatives have added several planks such as new industry and increased financial assist- ance for Kings Ist. PCs MEET PLEDGE Mr. Campbell, his commit- ment to increase old-age: bene- fits now met by the PCs, has pledged to guarantee. continu- ance of the increase if the Lib- erals are elected. : Liberals held both Kings 1st seats in the last legislature. A sweep of the two seats/ would give either party a 17-15| edge in the 32-seat house. A snlit wanld continue the siaie- mate and probably force a new! election. The Conservatives, in power since 1959, held 17 seats in the! legislature. The Liberals held the other 13. Redistribution this year added two new seats. | MacDonald and Bruce Stewart, | have waged a busy door-to-door Carol Whiteman, a foot, three - inch green-| eyed beauty in a Beefeater cos- | tume 10 inches above her knees, was assigned to Miss France, Michele Boule, a blonde. "T like Miss France,"' moaned the girl from England, "but I like to talk, too. Why not Miss Scotland, or Ireland or Can-| ada?" Miss Dominion of Canada,| |Marjorie Schofield of Burling. ton, Ont., clad in a Mountie getup a foot above her knees, chuckled: "My chaperone doesn't speak English either. And my room-mate is Miss Italy." But Miss Canada learned that Miss Italy, Paola Bossalino, a 36-24-36 bundle from Rome, speaks excellent and vivacious English. WATCH FOR IT COMING SOON The Greatest Show .. Worth SEND PENS ABROAD Canada exported more than $500,000 woth of fountain pens last year. | Good Names To Remember When Buying or Selling REAL ESTATE Reg. Aker -- President Bill McFeeters -- Vice Pres, SCHOFIELD-AKER LTD. 723-2265 IT'S THE the powers ofthe | a Come: ing cemeteries for Canada's wreath at the Cross of Sacrifice Though the society announced! June 14 its March meeting that a na-| war dead in foreign lands But for at least one commit- fee member, visits to the Cas sino war cemetery and the Moro River war cemetery near Ortona brought back vivid rec- ollections of wartime experi-| ences with the First Canadian division 22 \years ago. For John Matheson, Liberal MP for Leeds, sight of the se- ried rows of headstones over- looking the Moro River recalled his own close call with death when an air burst from a Ger- man high explosive shel] drove shrapnel through his helmet into his skull and injured his on behalf of members of the) it was changing its stand on one veterans affairs committee and/issue, it said its opposition to expressed gratitude in being|the provincial government's de-! able to return' and pay a trib-|cision to replace unilingual/ ute to the 1,374 Canadians bur- signs on the Trans - Canada ied there. Highway would continue. The group came overseas to The government has an- participate in the Common-jnounced that French-language! wealth ceremonies marking the|signs on the highway between 50th anniversary of the Somme Montreal Island and the Ontario battle in the Arras-Amiens area} border will be replaced with of northern France during the signs bearing French and Eng- First World War lish markings. Canada contributes about ---- $530,000 annually to the Com- i. monwealth War Graves Com- Bankrupt Action ~~ |Fraud Charged mission which maintains war cemeteries abroad KITCHENER (CP) -- Com pany cheques totalling $15,000 Caribbean Aid Discussions 'Platitudes': Says Dr. Jagan {3277 ;o.cares,memes 0 0 : cashed before Wallitschek TORONTO (CP)--Talks now|but leave the financing of risky Brothers Construction Co. of in progress in Ottawa on Cana-/or low-yield industries, such as Kitchener declared bankruptcy dian aid to Caribbean countries| rice growing, to residents of the! a preliminary hearing was told will produce mere 'platitudes' country. Friday . : and not much_real help, Dr He compared the situation to Anton and Josef Wallitschek Cheddi Jagan, 48, leader of the) Canada's economic dependence) and their wives, Veronica and Opposition of the newly-inde-|on the United States: In Guy- Emma, are charged with con- pendent Guyana, said Friday.}ana, Canada is regarded as a spiracy to defraud creditors in Dr. Jagan, former prime min-|"sort of colony. of the United], bankruptcy-action ister of the old British. colony; States of America and at the! James Steele, manager of a of British Guiana,-was speaking; same time as a little imperial-| Toronto-Dominion Bank branch at a news conference on his ar-|istic nation," |here, testified the cheques were rival for a three-day Toronto' "Canada should be third} dated Jan. 24. The company stay during his tour of Canada.|force in the Western Hemis-| went bankrupt in February : Dr. Jagan said the Canadian] phere--like de Gaulle. in France| Alan Feldman, manager of| aid, raised to $13,100,000 from!--to offset U.S. interference." = -- | $10,000,000 a year at the current} He said the present govern talks, isn't-enough to benefit the| ment of Guyana has made the} SPEED KING people of any one Caribbean'country a "satellite of the! Amazing self-sudsing country United States." American pres CAR WASH SPONGE He said Guyana is.economic- sure on Britain brought about if Gives up to 30 Wethines ond Pole ally drained by outside inter-jthe constitutional changes inj} ishing alt in one performance ests which contro] her major re-|Brffish~Guiana that ousted his| Ask for it.et your faverite Service | |ceived complaints from a num-| tional committee be set up to| japprove_ appointments of) |judges. The recommendations| would be put to the association| as a whole next month. Mr. Weir said editorial opin- jion regarding political patron- age and appointments to the bench has been printed in news- papers in every Canadian prov- jince during the last month. The settlement has come into controversy because of a gov- ernment bill, introduced June 29, authorizing a commission of| inquiry to examine the remain- ing issues and permitting its recommendations to be incor- porated into the collective agreement The ILA and Claude Jodoin, president of the Canadian La- bor Congress, say they are op- posed to compulsory arbitration and will fight the legislation IRELAND JOINED LATE Ireland was not admitted to es United Nations until 1955. the Reliable Finance Co., Tor- onto, said his company had re- When you need "HOME-NURSING" CALL A V.0.N. Nurse 725-2211 "Home-Nursing Core for EVERYONE" ber of sub-trades contractors) that they had not been paid by the Wallitscheks. The contrac-| tors were working on an apart-| ment building being built by the construction firm with Reliable mortgage money. The hearing was Wednesday. Save $754 New 1966 Caprice Save $664 New 1966 CHEV. IMPALA adjourned to} ee rote. ATTENTION FARMERS! WHY PAY MORE? SAVE ON... PREMIUM QUALITY Gasoline - Diesel and Motor Oils Farm Tanks Avaiiable Out of Oshawa, Whitby and District CALL COLLECT DX OIL 668-3341 CHEVROLET OLDSMOBILE LTD. y sources -- bauxite and sugar-- government in the 1964 elecgion | hee ~ 300 DUNDAS ST. EAST * WHITBY *PHONE 668-3304 ,