Oshawa Times (1958-), 13 Jun 1967, p. 3

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am Deadens og Drive REDERICTON (CP) -- For » than 100 years the St. | River has echoed every 1g to the sounds of the an- log and pulp drive. t this year the river is si- and log drivers say the of the mammoth drives over. ason for the silence is the at the Mactaquac hydro- ric site 14 miles from here h has created a huge area ad water upriver. e area of dead water above lam means the pulp would to be towed down river would take all summer to le through. present, pulp from areas re river and its tributaries e Fredericton is be- aken to mills by rail. . the drive of wood on the weak River has begun on lule. K. Irving, president of J. ving Ltd., of Saint John, this year's drive will not large one because it had a hard winter to work in yoods. 'inest this country by GILBEy's Had Wy ace? We have the right size and type for your home. Your choice of @ new Anthes or Lennox. Installed by our own careful servicemen. Five Year Payment Plon, if you wish, LANDER- STARK # Mayor Ernest Marks of Oshawa sometimes meets the most unexpected "per- sonalities" on his official round of duties. His Wor- ship, above, shakes hands with Little Sister, a white Hungarian Kuvasz, at the |was due the Liberal By TOM MITCHELL OTTAWA (CP) --- Opposition {MPs offered Finance Minister {Sharp plenty of advice in the |Commons Monday about what his department should be doing. Mr. Sharp, however, defended |policies that are expected t ibring departmental porn |tues of $2,104,224,700 in the 1967- '68 fiscal year. | Conservative Leader Diefen- baker accused the government of letting the provinces down financially. larly noted a $6,500,000 cut in the federal ment to Saskatchewan, where his riding is located. He wondered whether the cut was related to vote patterns, a dig at the fact that the Liberals did not win a Saskatchewan seat in the last election, SAYS ECONOMY IMPROVED Economic conditions had im-| since the days when Mr, Diefen-| baker was prime minister. He) could not say whether credit! ment in Regina or the one in Ottawa but 'Saskatchewan is) now one of the 'have' prov- inces."" Sharp in his recent budget. The minister could boast about the greatest deficit in peacetime history, the high- He particu- © equalization pay- ° Mr. Sharp rejected this. | HON. MITCHELL SHARP + « « Defends Policies » establish the corporation will be summer recess, | Colin Cameron (NDP -- Na-| naimo - Cowichan - The Islands) | path of .imbecility" if it trys to buy back foreign-owned indus-| tries. He said the minister j should have invited the prov-| Paid by home-owners be made} +| Mr. Diefenbaker pointed to! jinces to place provincially-char-| deductible for income tax pur- 4\the $740,000,000 deficit forecast iby Mr. tered financial houses under federal control right after re- cent financial collapses. There had been loud complaints by vised legislation even though) the loans had not yet run their) term. He cited one case where a borrower who knew he was go- ing to have to seek more credit! { when his old note expired was] : ® persuaded to sign a new note immediately at higher interest. QUESTIONS ETHICS The move is legal but du- biously ethical, Mr. Cameron said, and if such activities be- came widespread there would be public pressure for govern- mental curbs on the banks. Mr. Sharp said the lifting of the interest ceiling was having the desired effect, stimulating competition and benefitting the public. The minister said he favored a suggestion for loans to medi- cal undergraduates which would allow them to study year-round and complete their course in four years instead of six. It was made by Dr. P. B. Rynard (PC proved greatly in Saskatchewan) reaqy for presentation after the| Simcoe East) who said a criti- cal shortage of doctors is de- veloping. But Mr. Sharp said the gov- govern-|<aid the plan will follow "the|¢™mment cannot find the money at once to do all the things it would like to do. Another suggestion, that taxes poses, was turned down by Mr. Sharp. He said it would dis- criminate against persons who rent houses or apartments. The Commons turns to de- President of District Five of the Jaycees, and assis- tant manager of the Can- adian Automotive Museum, Herb Brennan, listens to in- coming president of Osh- awa Jaycees, John Tuck, as PARLIAMENT AT-A-GLANCE THE. OSHAWA TIM ES, Tuesday, June 13, 1967 3 he talks shop with outgoing president, J erry Brooks, right. The occasion was the official induction of Mr. Tuck as Jaycee president at the annual dinner and ball. Oshawa is a member of dis- JOHN TUCK HEADS OSHAWA'S JAYCEES trict five. The new prest- dent was elected at the Jay- cees annual election of offi- cers, held May 23, and he will now officially fill the capacity as president. --Oshawa Times Photo US. Force Gives Protection To Valuable Cong Elephants F persons who had lost their sav-| < | _jest taxes and interest rates and|ings and provincial govern-| fence production department es-| By THE CANADIAN PRESS Ji | d d ded : _|the highest cost of living. ments had been "shaking in|timates today and will return] MONDAY, June 12, 1967 BAN DON, Vietnam (AP)--|Montagnard owner demande i i] "and the highest employment their boots." later to finish up finance. West Germany's President The biggest live enemy targets| $5,000 compensation. He got no- sil ' : ploy 3 in Vietnam are the elephants|where near that much, but the PLEASED TO MEET YOU, YOUR WORSHIP! annual show of the Ontario County Kennel Club in the Oshawa Civic Auditorium on Saturday. Little Sister was the star of a recent Walt Disney movie-television pro- duction called One Hundred and One Problems of Her- cules. Mrs. John Webbing, president of the Ontario County Kennel Club, is shown centre and Mrs. T. J. Grosart of Rouge Hills, the dog's owner, is on right. See story on page nine. --Oshawa Times Photo Liquor Agencies Violate Labor Act-NDP Charges TORONTO (CP)--Ken Bryden (NDP--Toronto Woodbine) told the legislature Monday night that employees of two govern- der the Labor Relations Act. He told the house that a let- ter was sent to all liquor store managers listing employees who were not members of the LCBO --LLBO Employees' Association enclosing membership cards and forms authorizing dues checkoffs. Mr. Bryden said the em- ployees are restrained under an order-in-council from being rep- resented by the Civic Service Association and prevented by the Crown Agencies Act from joining an ordinary trade union. In other developments: --The legislature gave third and final reading to 30 bills leaving only one on the order paper. The lone bill appears likely to get final approval. Eighteen of the bills received third reading. --An amendment by William Davis, Education Minister, to a private bill giving the Uni- versity of Western Ontario a new charter was attacked by Opposition Leader Richard Nixon when Mr. Davis said the amendment would strike out a clause giving students a representative on the uni- versity's board of governors. --Horace Racine (L--Ottawa that Quebec's adoption rate climbed by 40 per cent after a program of incentives was introduced last year. --Municipal Affairs Minister Spooner said the welfare costs of municipalities will be re- duced by up to 25 per cent this year as a result of the province's new Family Bene- fits Act. --Mr. Spooner said a new board of review to be formed in the social services depart- ment will hear appeals on al- lowance and benefit eligibility. He said the board will be set up to conform to the Canada Assistance Act with Ottawa sharing welfare costs with the provinces and municipalities. --Stephen Lewis (NDP--Scar- borough West) said regula- tions under the Family Bene- fits Act defeat a basic intent of the act. He said a clause setting a limit of $2,200 on the combined income of a hus- band and wife is contrary to the act which stipulates that allowances should be based solely on the basis of need. --Mr. Spooner said a commit-! tee including members of the departments of agriculture, economics and development, the government, will be formed to co-ordinate govern- ment programs for elderly re- sidents in Ontario. Health Minister Matthew Dymond said five men and two women have been ap- pointed to a committee which will award accreditation to centres for disturbed children. Accreditted centres may re- ceive Ontario government awards. --Mr. Dymond said a task force studying ambulance services in the province will probably recommend their consolidation. Energy Minister Simonett said an offer of financial help from the province most likely would not improve the case for a natural gas pipeline through Northern Ontario south of the present route of Trans Canada Pipe Lines Ltd. Benefits Act Self-Defeating TORONTO (CP)--The legisla- and the highest standard of liv- ing," Mr. Sharp shot back. Mr. Sharp said Mr. Diefen- baker had a "'singularly short"| memory about the financial crisis Canada went through Conservatives had been quick! to attack the government for high spending. But at the same time advocated programs that would make even heavier de- mands on the public. The Canada Development Corp., to channel Canadian sav-| ings into the country's industry, also came in for comment. WOULD SHELVE IT Marcel Lambert (PC -- Ed- monton West) said it showed in the latest throne speech for the fifth time, each without action, was siphoning off $800,000,000 a year that might have been available for such a plan and this was too much competition for the dwindling amounts avail- able to taxpayers and investors. Mr. Sharp said the bill to under his Conservative govern-|to overcome this reticence about ment in 1963. It was "'probably|offending one province if it is| the most unnecessary" foreignito develop a real Canadian na-| exchange crisis in history. |tion, Mr. Cameron added. |the government make the plan But Mr. Sharp had feared ad- verse reaction from one prov- ince--a reference to Quebec ob- jections to federal actions in fields of provincial jurisdiction. The government would have BRINGS UP DISPUTE Mr. Sharp brought up another jurisdictional conflict on the federal plan to insure deposits in chartered banks. Some critics had suggested applicable to provincially-char- tered near - banks, Mr. Sharp said. If it had done this there would have been a_jurisdic- tional clash with Quebec and the whole issues would have been stalemated. | As it was, all provinces but safeguards would be extended through nine provinces, Mr. Cameron said he had heard about chartered banks pressing borrowers to accept in- terest rates above the old six- per-cent ceiling lifted by re- LIVERPOOL, England (Reut- ers)--Would you call a scuffer if you saw a tatty-cad chucking alley-apples at a jigger-rabbit? If you're an animal « lover, you probably would. Because a scuffer would be a Liverpool policeman, to stop the young women -- tatty-cad -- in question flinging stones--alley- apples--at a poor alley-cat-- jigger-rabbit. But then you'd have to know scouse -- the Liverpudlian lan- guage. To help the puzzled visitor from outer England and the rest of the world, Austrian-born humorist - musician Fritz 'Scouse' Dictionary Explains Liverpool's Special Language also derived from a local name for food: Paddy-wack is pea soup. One of the most colorful com- plete sets of phrases in scouse| relates to English money. | A halfpenny is known as an) "og" or "meg"; one penny is) "two meg"; threepence "joey"| --but a silver threepenny bit was known as a "'tiddler" and a modern octagonal threepenny piece is a "dodger."' Sixpence is a "'sprowser," a shilling "ocker," and a pound note "a bar." Cockneys also call a pound note "'a bar." Alberta Roundup Takes One Week ENCHANT, Alta. (CP)--Ev- ery spring, some 200 cattle-own- ers in southwestern Alberta turn their animals loose on the Lomond Grazing Association's 90,000-acre lease, 40 miles north- east of Lethbridge, and forget about them for seven months. Then the fun begins. In one hectic week, more than 6,000 cattle are rounded up, sorted out and returned to their farms for the winter. To the inexperienced eye, the task looks virtually impossible. But out of the milling mass of beef and choking clouds of dust, jeven the smallest bawling calf eventually finds its way home. Archie Miller, who fits the ac- cepted version of the typical cowpoke. Perched high on: a corral fence, a well-worn broad- brimmed hat surmounting his craggy features, he wears roundel spurs and blue jeans and carries a coiled lariat. The roundup, largest in Al- berta, is a community project with about 30 hands a day tak- ing time out from other farm work to search for their partic- ular brand. Every coulee and thicket of brush in the area is combed for stragglers. Heinrich Luebke was wel- comed to the capital by the Governor - General and the prime minister. Cabinet approval was an- nounced for new 25-year con- tracts for export of Alberta natural gas to California and Montana. Four Quebec Liberal MPs elected in May byelections were sworn in and seated in the Commons. As the House discussed fi- nance department estimates, Opposition Leader Diefen- baker charged that the gov- ernment had failed the proy- inces financially. NDP member Colin Cam- eron said some banks are pressing borrowers into pay- ing higher interest rates even before lifting of the interest ceiling. p.m. to resume debate on departmental estimates. The Senate sits at 3 p.m. HOUSING IS SHORT BANGKOK (AP)--The Bank the Viet Cong sometimes use tojindemnity was considerable. transport armaments and food. The Viet Cong frequently load But there are so few of the)as much as an 81-millimetre lumbering beasts and they are| so valuable to the primitive Montagnards who train them that severe restrictions have been placed on killing them. In this tiny riverside village, known half a century ago as the elephant centre of Indochina and still inhabited by a mixed population of Laotians, Thais, Vietnamese, China, Rhade and M'nuongs, a U.S. Special Forces team watches over the ele- phants roaming the lightly jun- gled terrain of the central pla- teau. | "'No one shoots up an elephant unless we personally give them the okay,"' commented the team Mothers Like This Quick Way to Relieve Diarrhea it's natural for Mother to worry when annoying Diarrhea upsets someone in of Thailand, concerned over in-/the family. All rs well again when she-- creasing rents and a housing|ot perhaps Grandma--remembers Dr. shortage, has recommended that the U.S. government build Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry. It brings such quick, soothing relief.| Gentle, pleasant to take, reliably effective barracks for its military per-|for children or adulte. | sonnel in Thailand. Small two- bedroom houses in Bangkok rent for $250 a month up and two bedroom apartments for Simple Diarrhea is one of the most prevalent ailments, often striking sud- denly with nausea, cramps and Intestinal upsets. That's why Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry should be In your home, ready to give quick relief. 65-7 mortar and 100 rounds of am- munition on each beast. But the Viet Cong apparently own none of the animals and use the ele- phants found in villages scat- tered across the southern cen- tral plateau. 154" ment liquor agencies are being} East) urged the province to| education, university affairs,/and the government should| Quebec had agreed to bring the| Overseer of the south lease at COMMANCES, ; js forced to join a '"company| give grants to parents adopt-| health, labor and social serv-|shelve it for good. provincially - chartered houses|Enchant--there's another at Lo-| TUESDAY, June 13 In 1966, armed U.S. helicop- consecutive union" by methods illegal un-| ing foster children. He said) ices, plus three from outside} The Canada Pension Plan now\under the federal plan and its|mond, 20 miles northwest--is) The Commons meets at 2:30 {ters killed an elephant. The quarterly DIVIDEND 11%4¢ a shore-- payable July 15, 1967 to shareholders of record June 30, 1967 GUARANTY TRUST Company of Canada A.B. RAMSAY \ General Manager 7, Oshawa Riding Other ear + catching phrases| among the several hundred| phrases--many basically pho-| netic twistings of expressions | known elsewhere in Britain--in-| clude "bap oggie" an empty! ture was told Monday night that regulations under Ontario's new Family Benefits Act have defeated a basic intent of the act. : Stephen Lewis (NDP -- Scar- Spiegl has compiled a compre- hensive "scouse" dictionary. The book explains that the term "'scouse" has been ex- tended from meaning. a meat stew favored by seamen, to em- PROGRESSIVE 'Hot Line' Co-operation - Hope For Vietnam Solution OIL LIMITED NG STREET WEST OSHAWA NITURE »PLIANCES 723-3343 _ anger by limiti WASHINGTON (CP) -- The U.S. is masking carefully any official hopes that "hot-line"' co- operation with Moscow last week in avoiding major war in the Middle East might lead to a Vietnam solution. New. approaches by the U.S. to that stubborn Asian conflict are being proposed, however. State Secretary Dean Rusk Sat- urday discounted prospects that Washington. and Moscow now can work together fruitfully on Vietnam because "there are dif- ferent parties concerned, differ- ent issues, different parts of the world." "Our problem in Vietnam is Hanoi," Rusk said. He was stressing the U.S. offi- cial line that North Vietnam is the culprit in that war and is too independent to be substan- tially influenced by Russia even if Moscow should be disposed to have another crack at. pro- moting negotiations. Mike Mansfield of Montana, the Senate majority leader, was one of the figures last week urg- ing that the Middle East experi- ence might mean hope for Viet- nam. : "We are veering in the direc- tion of two- power concerts," said Mansfield. "We might see a new approach to Vietnam." MUST LICK WOUNDS Skeptics say the Soviet has some gaping wounds first. Its Middle East a have collapsed. It invi verbal encouyaégement. In the past Moscow has sig- nalled fuffdamental reappraisals of policy with periods of caution and silence. That seems the case now, least somewhat cleared the cli- mate here, shaking up the pro- longed and gloomy preoccupa- tion with Vietnam. Columnist Joseph Kraft says President Johnson has scored a "striking political success' do- mestically by avoiding another military entanglement. Thus the president "has far more room for manoeuvre on Vietnam." James Reston of the New York Times says the U.S., star- tled by the dangers of war in Asia and the Middle East, "'now is in a mood to think beyond Vietnam and the Sinai Desert to a general settlement of all the problems of the last war and the post-war period and the question it is exploring now very quietly is whether the Soviet Union also is of the same mind." : "The evidence so far is not very favorable,"' Reston adds. REAL EFFORT NEEDED Another Times commentator, C. L. Sulzberger, whose support for the American role in Viet- nam has been much stronger than that of The Times' edi- torial policy, says 'the time has come for decisive efforts to end the Vietnam war." / He proposes a seven-point for- mula starting with an announce- ment that President Johnson in two weeks will be going to Gen- eva to remain as long as neces- sary to discuss with "any or all other powers or movements con- cerned with producing a Viet- nam settlement." Some observers claim to de- tect signs the U.S. bombing of the North may 'be eased or even halted if only because it hasn't seemed to soften up the North Others, however, see the Mid-|and worth-while targets have die East crisis as having atibeen used up. pra "t. borough West) said one clause in the act sets a limit of $2,200 on the combined income of a husband and wife for the couple to qualify for aid under the act. He said the act itself stipu- lates that allowances should be based solely on the basis of need, not means. Mr. Lewis pointed out that under the federal government's new minimum-income plan for pensioners a married couple can get $2,560 a year--'nearly $300 more than the ceiling under the Family Benefits Act regula- tions." He termed the income-limit brace the peculiar parlance of Liverpool. Full term for the meat-and- vegetable stew used to be "lob- scouse" -- possibly taken from an old German sailors' dish known as Labskaus. The dish, probably first sold in Liverpool three centuries ago, is no longer on restaurant menus here--but the local Irish stew is reckoned to be a close approximation, The most common form of personal address between one "scouser"--inhabitant of Liver- regulation 'positively diaboli pool--and another is "wack"--!purely local origins. house and "'nudger'" a_ sand- which made from a long bread roll. WIND HAS DROPPED |when the 'bora' blows to keep jthe Triestini from being swept off the sidewalks may soon be) |a thing of the past. The howling | |wind from the north which hits highs of around 105 m.p.h. has jlost velocity, frequency and du- jration, Scientists are as puzzled |by its disappearance as by its! cal" and a'product of "perverse logic." ; | He said he had heard of cases| where as a result of the Family | Benefits Act and other 'pro-| gressive" legislation some fam- ilies were receiving less than they did before. Recalling a prediction by! Social Services Minister Yar-| emko that under the new act allowances would jump by a total of $20,000,000, Mr. Lewis said he could not find "anyone| whose allowances have in-| creased enormously." CALL OR SEE | DIXON'S | OIL FURNACES SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS 24-HOUR SERVICE 313 ALBERT ST. 723-4663 3rd Instalment of Realty AFTER INTERIM tax bil levy have been mailed and become due as follows: CITY OF OSHAWA -- TAXES DUE NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS Realty Tax Due Is for the bolance of the 1967 COLOR OF INK LAST DAY TO WARDS PRINT ON BILLS AVOID PENALTY ff No. 4, 5 and 6 Red June 9th No, 1, 2 and 3 Green June 16th IF ANY INSTALMENT IS PAST DUE -- Please telephone the Tax Office 725-1153 for PENALTY AMOUNT to ADD when remitting by mail to City. Hall. TAXES MAY BE PAID BY MA BANK OR TRUST OFFICE IN charge OR at the City Hall. If you.are a property taxpayer ai kindly contact the Tax Office immediately, (unless your mort- | gagee or bank pays your taxes), Pay Early To Avoid Waiting In Line-Up | ON DUE Civie Administration Bldg. Cor. Centre and Athol Sts. IL, OR AT ANY CHARTERED ff OSHAWA for a small service ; ind have not received a tax bill TRIESTE, Italy (AP) -- The| street-corner lifelines strung up| DATES Cc. L, COX, Tax Collector CONSERVATIVE MEETING Thursday, June 22nd af 8 PM. @ FLEETWOOD ROOM @ GENOSHA HOTEL Purpose The Election of Delegates and Alternates Regarding Centennial Leadership Convention!

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