Oshawa Times (1958-), 31 Aug 1967, p. 1

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JAY nd 2nd ee 499 eevee O09 LANTERS WITH "... 6.99 " blade; complete ... 259.00 119.99 nal; Swedish steel. le, hickory handle. actor, 12-pc. wood {r, com- "om 28.88 s, hickory handles. blade. Ame ... 949 secreses O08 Rugged grey tool! construction, 15 istmas decorations patterns, seasons @ ---- a ae con... Wee cor... 149 2-ft. sections. White ee ae CENTRE, LOWER LEVEL 3.95: " Home Newspaper \ Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman. ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties, VOL. 26--NO. 202 10 Single Co) py S5c Per Week Home Delivered She Oshawa Times OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, AUGUST 31, 1967 " Weather Report Variable cloudiness with bee normal temperatures. Authorized ax Second Class Mail Post Office Deportment Ottawa ond for payment of Postage in Cash FORTY-TWO PAGES Two '"'sidewalk engineers" take a porthole peak at the construction 'site of the $2,465,000 city hall addition. The chance to watch con- struction in progress through a porthole came through a recent city coun- ing-glass openings into a wall] surrounding the site. eral Council decided the public in walking along Centre street might like to keep informed PORTHOLES INVITE SIDE WALK SUPERVISION decision to build view- on how up. As is slow things are shaping infurcing rods. The city hall it is now, progress because of a gen- iron workers' strike Ontario against more than 20 major producers of structural struction. steel and re- project is at least a month (tj rant next ye inci whe' , Behind bechuse, Wonk can: byl deg] a year, Provincial; whether owned or rented. not be done on the site with reinforcing rods--one of the | He told a: news initial requirements in con- \ (Oshawa Times Photo) rorya HIGHLIGHTS OF SMITH REPORT ON TAXES base, including many serv- self-contained residential S!0n duties, with province to present system of value, | ' TORONTO (C P)- High- of property needed to reflect grants to school boards over should pay full municipal and Abolish hospital taxes on | lights of recommendations of current values a three-year period school taxes with l musements nd the Ontario committee on tax- : ( : on craving neat tae ae | e compensation from province ment, taxing them as' serv ation released today: Ne iat ae : : : : | witeapreall Gh ee "ee New system o regional Municipalities freed of costs ices. | Ee : : governments needed to of administering justice. Cc . yerhe ---- | Property taxes, resulting in replace existing counties and a ae ; | saving taxpayers average of - districts. _ roe OF Fone stants to: reflect LAH EHEE AOE A O0d Way OF | one-third, a 'aid Province should pay munic- true costs, raising revenues {pal and school tax on first _--_-- Greatly broadened sa _ Repeal of sales tax exemp- é ¥ | 7 ) en les tax tiois now granted schools. $2,000 of assessed value on all One uniform rate of succes- Adding capital s tax to | ices, universities, hospitals an" ] municipalities property. seek full rights in that field. a More tax room needed from sanoonion Places of worshih skbule be Ottawa or increased income Substantally Increased Government properties Gifts of more than $2,009 taxed at one-half normal and sales tax and gift tax Unconditional grants to should pay full municipal and annually should be taxed. property tax . may be required. municipalities. school taxes | -- << Province-wide reassessment Substantially Changes needed in taxes on mines and forestry industry . Flat fee of $25 for all pase Senger vehicles, RELIEF RECOMMENDED FOR PROPERTY TAXES | Shelter Exemption Grant Concessions From Ottawa _ For Home Owners In 1968 Suggested For Revenue TORONTO (CP)--The Ontar- and school taxes levied against i jover i ra government will assume all! the first $2,000 of provincially er hee aa the cine revel eomaneas : pe --_ of nnniinon jus- eq ualiz ed current assessed the position of the property tax-|taxation, which made public its ice, and give home owners and, value of every self-contained paycr were proposed today in| proposals for refor the f jtenants a basic shelter exemp-| residential property in Ontario, the report of the Ontario com- eral jax. system sat Pobeenee: mittee on taxation. | The committee explained it Ai the same time, the five-|was charged with analysing man committee warned thatOntario's existing revenue Ontario has to get more elbow|structure and incorporating any rooin from Ottawa to raisejdetailed study of the Carter revenue, or people may be fac-\re port would have unduly ing higher income and sales|delayed publication of its find- Increased Hospitals and universities Charles Mac-} ; | Naughton said today, The maximum amount of relief accorded to any single lth te . J conference! owner or occupant would be jthose two proposals of thej/half his municipal and school {Ontario committee on taxation! taxes. | will ted i > oD | wi be adopted in the 1968 tax 'pits yecommendalion ta eel: Diefenbaker Candidacy Denied By His Office By THE CANADIAN PRESS Most of the candidates for the ssive Conservative lead- e gained ink by earnest campaigning Wednesday, but John Diefenbaker made news without even trying and Otta- wa's Charlotte Whitton enliv- ened the race with her views. Mr. Diefenbaker was report- ed to have ordered 1,500 cam- paign photos and posters to be printed secretly, but his office denied the report that suggest- ed he would try to retain the leadership. campeign if people wanted her there. "Some are talking and if they want to get busy and work and nominate me, I've got my credenti Meantime, four of the nine declared candidates were actively campaigning: Premier Robert Stanfield of Nova Scotia told a Kitchener, Ont,, audience the federal gov- ernment must work out a rela- tionship between French and English-speaking Canada; Pre- Miss Whitton, fiery former) mier Duff Roblin of Manitoba mayor of Ottawa, said shelissued a call in Halifax for an would get in on the leadership /end to dissension and disunity | als and I'll|labor s s Yemen Civil War Formula erie mie com convention delegates. Mr. Johnston has complained Crowd that 84 persons who participat- First Agreement Of Summit in the party; former trade mi ister George Hees, at meetings this way/in North Bay and Chatham, Ont., dealt with dtl busi- the ahebiie oer nd cerits. Sp StaEr burned-out headquarters. minister Michael least. 50 persons were|committee's proposal for aj Mr. MacNaughton said. the there. gave his views in St. Cathar-|_ At ines, Ont., on how voting at the Sepi. 5-9 leadership convention! in Toronto should be conducted, | Wou'd hold SHAW PRAISES ROBLIN cominitment that he would sup- port the Manitoba premier at the convention. In Toronto, James Johnston, eee Sm pees dae For Extradition Hearing n-|tions with inatioral director of the party, jwas invited to air before the straiions on \tion | Falls, ed in the party's Montmorency thinkers' confer- Rap Brown KHARTOUM, Sudan (AP)--E-|United Nations in New York once tad been added to the list gypt and Saudi Arabia agreed |said the accord was acceptable | or qejegates, He said no more Wednesday night on a formula | to his side. | to get themselves out of, F than 30 : Pn ' Sources at the summit confer-|shoula be accredited. Yemen's civil war amid the|ence said Nasser's speech to| CAMDEN, In Halifax, Mr. Roblin said) philosophy to this first talk at the: Arab summit the parley called to unify policy|the party's new leader must be New Jersey meeting of a "political solu-/{o "eliminate Israeli aggres-ia man who will appeal not just night. tion" with Israel. what conference sources said) was a less belligerent stance toward Israel in a speech at a closed session. In return for the Egyptian | troop withdrawal, Saudi militar- y assistance is to be halted in the five-year-long Yemen civil war that has pitted Egypt, the! tay of the republican gov- ernment, against royalist rebels ieee by Saudi King Fais- al. Nasser and Faisal approved a plan calling for the formation of a three-power committee to supervise the phasing out of hostilities. Sudan, Iraq and Morocco were named to the committee and planned to begin work immediately after the windup of the summit meeting Friday. No date was set for the begin- ning of the withdrawal of Egyp- tian troops, who numbered about 40,000 in Yemen until a large contingent was moved out following the Middle Eats war in June, THEY'RE PALS NOW Premier Mohamed Ahmed Mahgoub of the Sudan, who served as mediator, said the dispute had been settled "in the interests of purifying the Arab atmosphere of political divi- sion." Wednesday Nasser had turned his back on Faisal at the conference's opening _ session, but the two were smiling and shaking hands when their agreement was announced today. seek "military, economic It was the first time Nasser | the |was reported to have raised the |named leader or not. |possibility of a political solu-) In North Bay, Mr. Hees said) At another \tion. | papoxy that frequently spea ; fer Nasser, reported he said: |stability is to be regained. "We have to build our military | forces to resist aggression. Pol-|tarifi protection was needed for) itics without strength will not ailing segments of the farm A reporter achieve anything. We have tojindustry which he described as , speak from a position of|being in deep trouble across the orders were strength." jhall. the Manitoba premiership afterjers and v i |sion"" was moderate in tone. He |to Conservatives but to "people. To the apparent glee of a) Abruzzo set the bail for the for- President Nasser of Egypt|told the Arabs they could either|o¢ no fixed views" in all prov- figured in both developments,|surrender or go forward united | ince: promising withdrawal of his | to forces in Yemen and taking and political solutions." Police Scatter Negro Bands MILWAUKEE police backed up Mayor Henry|rather f of tax Maicr's ben ageinst deinonstra-| Changes proposed at the provin- a show of force|Cial ievel without time for ade- poh of the administrattiin of Wednesday night, twice scatter-/ quate evaluation." Bes [ JAW ing hands ve Negro demonstra-| The government's immediate/ "It will provide the munici- @a tors who clustered in a chant- arrested and two were injured.| basic iP Tae demonstrators said' they|is the most effective way of/scores in emphatic terms the stree:s and sidewalks. NEW YORK (CP)--Hal C.{ If Ontario is successful Jn cheering crowd of 1,000 to 2,000,! mer head of the Canadian Sea- U.S. Brown . ordered Camden Con-/farers International Union then| allows for extradition for perju He also said he will resign' vention Hall cleared of report-| reversed himself in an extraor- ry but not for conspiracy. If expire photographers, then'dinary second hearing of|Banks chooses to remain, in Wednesday. In convention whether he is said: 'We built this country up! Banks' arraignment in Brook- Canada or return to Canada nearly identical proposals made and we'll burn it down.' lyn federal court. after moving back to the U.S., Tuesday by the Big Three, the NE | year without increasing sales or |personal income taxes. rs és | To announce a set of deci-|[OrM of nr gba a which the jsions for government policy |i iti a gig gga = based on the other recommen-/ WS oft Some ume, Mir. Mac: dations of the report would be| \2U80'0n sald. premature," he said. 'Another proposal that lends (AP )--Riot| "We eegnot subscribe to the|itself to early assistance to on iading ws is the province all ot taxes, ings. Already needed is a much| Provincial Treasurer Charles broader base for the province's| MacNaughton quickly five-per-cent sales tax, the com-\announced that Ontario will mittee said. It proposed extend-| adopt two of the recommenda- ing the tax to include many|tions starting with the 1968 tax services now exempt. year. > The committee, under Toron-| These will see the govern- to accountant Lancelot J.\ment take over the costs of Smith, called for a complete|administering Justice from weorganization of the province's municipalities, and provide a present system of county and|new basic shelter exemption district governments. grant They should be replaced by; Under this grant, the prov- 29 regional governments to pro-|ince will pay the municipal and mote greater efficiency in han-|schoo! taxes levied against the dling revenues and 'providing/first $2,000 of, value of ~ To Name services, it said. every self- 7 residential LJ 5 'an indoor rally|d0ing this, since it incorporates| position of the Ontario govern- | arget Firm iat Paro t neta Ghansee tn Lace fl Property, whether owned or come because it provides a a. beset = 4p 3. SMITH concern was to ease the burdenjpalities with an opportunity to of municipal taxpayers. directiy reduc. ontsl ae Get Mr. MacNaughton said the/local level." . a ion grant/c 'Ss report "under- ren ;. ent wit E |tonight--possibly * n sid ea a reduction of Properly wted YeNett te tae iekeeae PPR apy by ie figuring, save the taxpay- The grant \will be based on }Roman Catholic church. ee ; 4 P)--The Unit . ouereee one- of/existing assessment In Charlottetown, Walter! No shots. were fired in the}. Through this grant the Larehd fing atecconosnn Hs ae ale Workers Union will pense his bill, based on 1966 assess- 2 reer Shaw, P.E.I. Conservative lead-|clashes Wednesday night, but|ince would pay the municipallin the progress S. Jone of the Big Three auto-mak-| Men's. _ | PICTURE BLEAK er, had praise for Premier Rob-|debris flew as the police made| jers as a target company for aj 1° help. rec The painted a lin. But he made no firm public|their second move against the k H ld I C t d i labor contract or a strike. oe aaa me. ~ gt bleak picture of Ontario's fiscal nonstrators he union's 26- % i, r ur existing leral-provin- gt ane HOES ONE: an. S e n us 8) y utive beer costs tdi to increase its unconditional/cial tay relations continue Maicr declared a state of emer- {decide which firm will be the graits and at the same time)unchanged. lfocal. point for a settlement|®Per., its properties to taxation) It said its proposed relief for ldesigned to become a pattern | PY the municipalities. municipal taxpayers would for all 650,000 UAW workers at! Churches should pay one-half have cost $377,000,000 in 1966 if Genera lcMotwre, ford ene the normal property tax instead/they had been implemented ) f Chrysler. ' of escaping scot-free as at/fully then. Banks, bail-jumping former extraditing him, he faces a Role f Rene present, and the province! Ils proposed wider sales tax Canadian seamen's boss, will/ maximum sentence of 14 years : ' ' © | shoul:1 completely overhaul its|base would fave helped bridge |be 'held in custody until it is| if found guilty at a trial in Otta- system of making grants for!this gap, but to finance the rec- | decided whether the province of wa roads so they reflect the true ommended changes fully would Milwaukee's union's president, planned a late afternoon news conference Cheers : : ; Dae ' . to announce the target. ee ; Ontario can extradite him on, Banks already is under sen- =a ; 3 costs involved for municipali- have meant a six-per-cent sales lchages of perjury. tence of five years for conspira- Union negotiators Wednesday tie< tax instead of five, an extra | snp 58 was arrested Tues- cy in the savage beating of a unanimously commended that "The committee: warried, how-one-rent tax on gasoline and an N.J. (AP)--Mili-:day and for a while Wednesday |rival union official in 1957. He the { AW reject the companies ever. that -tax paroanie' Andes additional tax on personal from the conference tant Negro leade?f H. Rap! it appeared he would be freed) had appealed his conviction in offers. the Lrovince's "completely out- income equal to eight per cent Brown brought his black power on $25,000 bail pending extradi- Montreal in 1964 but skipped to| Union councils representing dated and inequitable' assess- of tne federal basic tax industrial | tion hearings scheduled to start the U.S. before the appeal could big three plants across the) ments would mean little. A| By 1975, assuming no new city Wednesday | Sept. 7. be heard. His $25,000 bail was country meet to ratify that! conplete reassessment of prop- expenditure programs and no U.S. Commissioner S._ T. later seized. action and to pass their deci-\erty to reflect current values new provincial revenues, Ontar- This is because the Canada-|sion on to the executive board,|¥.5 9 must io's deficit would be $1,- extradition agreement|which then will pick the target The 1,300-page report skips! 000,000,000, Current three-year contracts t midnight next, " rejecting the," point, the leader! Abruzzo made his reversal|he can be arrested again, union called them "entirely lincreased. productivity and a Of the Student Non-violent co-jafter a private session with Al Ahram, the Cairo news- drive for foreign business must ;| be pushed if Canada's economic Later, in Chatham, he said {country. LED BY DEPOE A royalist spokesman at the ' TORONTO (CP)--A group of about 50 hippies won an audi- ence before board of control at city hall Wednesday after they invaded the board's committee room and took over the may- _ or's and controllers' chairs. The board refused to hear hippie spokesman David DePoe during a morning session because he did not have a writ- ten brief prepared. However, during a lunch break Depoe wrote out a six-page brief in longhand and returned with the group of hip- pies to occupy the committee room before the board mem- bers returned, The board finally agreed to hear DePoe's brief if the hip- Pies gave back the chairs they { Hippies Win -- Present Brie Oo CLV OT Birrcet rte moreers mre enor a Canaan space agency | Antle as | warious aspects of science in Canada, the council said a occupied. But later when the board found DePoe had no extra copies of his brief to dis- tribute to all board members, they again balked at giving him an audience. After arguments among board members it was again agreed DePoe would be allowed to speak and copies of his brief, were reproduced by a secretary while the board members and hippies waited. DePoe, 23, a worker for the Company of Young Canadians, asked in his brief that the city consider closing some . other street in the midtown Yorkville coffeehouse area since so many politicians were against closing Yorkville Avenue. The hippies have staged seve ordinating Committee sais fact and fight the honky." coined for whites. pher who did not heed Brown's a 1963 royal commission into in motion. These hearings came offered" the union. He estimat Abruzzo's remarkable turna- inadequat and inequitable . lawyers for Banks and Ontario, bout continued the unusual tone when mez 1 against the fan- Kleinburg Robbery Suspects Held "We're at war, so accept thea study of legal precedent and/of the newest Banks affair tastic profi ty of the arito- a after hearing Banks' past rec-|which started Tuesday with the Piso antic " RICHMOND HILL, Ont. (CP) -- Two , 20-year old Honky is the term SNCC has | ord. disclosure in Ottawa of secret GM's top bargainer said the) youths ioday were remanded in magistrate's court after Banks is charged with perjur-|court hearings the day before syocested contract had "'the| being reed with two holdups of the Royal Bank of Can- and a photogra- ing himself in testimony before |to start extradition proceedings pighest wage increases ever, ada Kleinburs and two armed robberies of a Vaughan rvice:station, John Te:ence Bootle of Toronto also face two armed vested them in an sday, chased from thei\waterfront violence on the!after weeks of secret prepara-jeq the minimum increase in a} and E i Perkens of Schomb Great Lakes. tion, typical worker's pay would be; robbery ¢ yes in Brampton, P: i $1,700 over the proposed three apartment in nearby 'Joronio Wet NCH BAIS Oo ce rice bates co |, ihe Big Three offers included' Syace Agency Recommended that would be boosted in 1968 and 1969 at the annual rate of OTTAWA (CP) -- The Science Council of Canada, a advisory body, today rec ommended establish- In its first report on government space agency should be responsible for advancement of eral demonstrations in support rebels against a machine-like | Canadian capability in the science and technology of the of their wish to have Yorkville Avenue closed to motor traffic to provide a pedestrian mall. DePoe also asked that the city investigate alleged police brutality during the recent Yorkville demonstrations; assist the hippies in finding a house for use as a social cen- tre; provide the hippies with workshop facilities; and discuss means for establishing medical and dental clinics in the Yorkville area, MOSCOW (AP)--The_ Soviet government newspaper Izvestia took its first good measure of U.S. hippies Wetinesday--and had kind words for them. Izvestia portrayed hippies 2* and emotionless American way of life. "The ideas of businessmen are rejected by their children," it told the Soviet readers. But while the government newspaper took a sympathetic view of the hippie movement it did not endorse something of the kind for the Soviet Union. The rebellion of the hippiés was treated as if it could hap- pen only in America. §S. Kondrashov, Izvestia cor- respondent in New York, said hippies told him American soci- ety was trying to turn them into machines. "But Tet the .machines do their own jobs themselves,"' he quoted them as saying. Smog Covers Los Angeles LOS ANGELES (AP)--A brown pall of smog--tinged with a hot blue haze from thou- sands of acres of brush fires-- covered Los.' Angeles Wednes- jday for the third straight day as this mountain-ringed basin sweliered in the worst smog siege in a decade. Officials said there was no relief in sight from conditions which have caused first-stage jthan 10,000 acres of tinder-dry = brush in outlying districts, \ ( smog alerts the last two days = jand fanned flames across more |= upper atmosphere and space. 3 , i a ..In THE TIMES Today.. } é Gaels Defeat Toronte Maple Leafs In Detroit -- P. 8 E Stare Starts Major Leadership Drive ----~ Pp. 11 E Volunteer Ambulance Drivers Sought -- P. 5 ng Obituaries--20 rts--8, 9, 10 = vision---21 Ann Londers--12 Ajax News---5 City News---11 : Clossified-----18, 19, 2 Theatres--6 2 = Comics-----21 Weather--2 z Z Editorial---4 Whitby News--5 i Financial--16 Women's---12, 13 : = NI 1 ewww mms I NS a

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