2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesd ay, June 6, 1961 Canadian Tariff Plan By FORBES RHUDE dian Press Busi Editor VANCOUVER (CP)--The Ca- nadian tariff system is anti- quated, says Dr. R. V. Yohe, president of B. F. Goodrich Canada Ltd., Kitchener. Speaking to the annual meet- ing of the Canadian Manufactu- cers' Association, Dr. Yohe, who described himself "as an Amer- ican with nearly three years so- journ in Canada," urged a com- plete reappraisal of the tariff system. A hearty "Amen" came from L. D. Smithers, "an American from Missouri," president of Dow Chemical of Canada Ltd. Sarnia, and a fellow panelist at Termed 'Antiquated' compunctions about competing with Canadian - manufactured The most intensive price competition for products of Canadian manufacture is Jot ut they don't want so much higher tariffs as a readjustment. of ta- riffs to give added protection where it may be necessary in the face of developing condi- tions. Dr. Yohe's comment was an aside from his main address in which he exhorted Canadian in- dustrialists to seek out markets and "sell Canadian.' ' QUESTIONS CONCEPTS Dr. Yohe called into question] some concepts of American competiiton. He said: "While about 70 per cent of Canada's imports come from the United States these goods do not necessarily -- in fact, a large portion do not -- compete products. from the United States, from overseas. ever put a manufacturing oper ation in Canada now employed be working?" URGES SELLING Discussed the Divorce Tangle Doubts Value Again OTTAWA (CP) -- A behind- scenes movement has Of Psychiatry "Would B. F. Goodrich spend millions of dollars to build a new tire plant in Canada if it could import such tires and still {sell them competitively in Can- {ada with tires from any coun- try? Would we, in fact, have in the first place? If we had not, where would the some 2,000 employees started on Parliament Hill in another effort to find a proce- dural solution to the parlia- mentary divorce tangle, Robert McCleave (PC -- Hal ifax), chairman of the Com- mons committee which consid- ers divorce applications from Quebec and Newfoundland, said the proposal is being discussed by the committee he heads and the Senate divorce committee headed by Senator Arthur Roe- buck (L--Ontario). Mr. McCleave declined to make known the exact nature of the proposal under discus- sion. It is believed the proposal in- volves a method to put divorce proceedings from the two prov- inces entirely within the juris- diction of the Senate. The prov- MONTREAL (CP)--A United States psychiatrist today asked 3,000 of his colleagues whether much of their work is of any permanent value to their pa- tients. DR. Jules H. Masserman, pro- fessor of neurology and psychia- try at Northwestern University in Chicago, indicated the ans- wer may be "no" and said' a psychiatrist has to be more than a "sterile surgeon of the mind." He told an opening session of the third World Congress of Psychiatry that objective, com- prehensive studies had "indi- cated rather clearly that pati- ents treated by any of our cur- rent rituals may show ti ary spurts of improvement, but retain no discernible advantage after five years over those diag: ment" a patient's normal recov ery. This recovery came about through physical convalescence, social rehabilitation and the re- storation of philosophic and re- ligious faiths 'outside our of- fices, clinics and hospitals." TALLY-HO ROOM AIR CONDITIONED A Good Place to Meet ond Relax HOTEL LANCASTER Did You Know ... ACCIDENT JAMS RIVER A 17-barge moved out of the present lock (1) at Wheeler Dam on | the Tennessee River Friday and passed through the upper gates (2) when the landward wall (3) started slipping to- ward the shore, into the area tow had en | over a guidewall (7). The guidewall was used to guide towboats into the lock. As the landward wall continued to slip, the gates sprung farther open and three sections of the wall toppled into the lock. --(AP Wirephoto) of construction for a new and larger lock (4). The construc- tion area had been drained dry by a cofferdam (5). The slippage caused the lower gates (6) to spring apart, al- | lowing the water, which was at the 50-foot level, to flow | Death Penalty Bill Step Nearer Approval By ROBERT RICE . Canadian Press Staff Writer . OTTAWA (CP) -- The Com- mons moved a step closer Mon-| day night to approving a fun- damental and far reaching change in Canada's criminal laws dealing with murder and ice Minister Fulton introducedthe death penalty to life im- an amendment originally pro-|prisonment. posed by the Liberals to specify| The bill does not change the that murder of a prison or po- method of carrying out the lice officer would be a capital death penalty--hanging. offence. Judy LaMarsh (L -- Niagara For non-capital murders and |Falls) introduced a private bill for capital murders committed of her own Monday aimed at {replacing the gallows with a le- a session Monday on world trade. Canadian manufacturers have indicated in representation to the federal g ov e r n ment that Trade Minister Hees, . who led off a session on world trade, also urged indusigialists to "sell Canadian," and said that while some companies have good records in seeking export with Canadian manufacturing. "Who competes with Canadian manufactures? Obviously it is those who have no subsidiaries in Canada and who have no 'Inevita By KEN SMITH Canadian Press Staff Writer MONTREAL (CP) -- A study of eight husbands who killed their wives shows the slayings were inevitable and came after the couple had made the same mistakes repeatedly, a Mont- real psychiatrist said today. Dr. Bruno Cormier, associate psychiatrist at Royal Victoria Hospital, told the third World Congress of Psychiatry that the killings became necessary psy- chologically because the hus- band was unable to make a final separation any other way. He said his studies of the un- identified husbands were con- ducted two to eight years after the slaying. The husbands were serving terms varying from a few years to life. In no case was the slaying motivated by material gain or other similar considerations. It was the result of a deep-seated | conflict between the individuals. | A similar pattern emerged in |every case, | Husband and wife were strongly attracted to each other from their first meeting and felt from the start that "they were in some way interlocked." | ® hd hd |vantage of opportunities. - | The manufacturers gave Mr, : Hees a good reception but their trade, others are not taking ad- speakers indicated that in addi- tion to "'exhorting" the govern- ble' rage Canadian industry. Ian F. McRae, chairman o consci- General Electric Co. Ltd., de- |knowledge, sometimes |ous, of the growing danger of scribed Canada as the |living together, the husbands|est dumping receiver of goods |are unable to make a final sep-|in the world." He approved the (aration, even when they become | association's efforts to get tax {aware of tehir overt aggres-|relief on goods sold outside the sion against the wife and have country. threatened to kill her." Tr = They tried to dismiss the] | threats as part of their strategy) Ch g S {to get their way in the mar- an es een riage. I C di |IS ONE OF SERIES In ala lan | 'The final crisis that led to Lhe! i . |killings would appear to an on- C looker as only another one in| onstitution a long series. But for the hus-| x - i s band it acquired a "special sig-| MONTREAL (CP)--Canada's nificance." constitution and the philosophy The murder occurred "at a of education were in ihe spot- point of intense' emotion and a light Monday at deliberations of feeling that to continue is in- ite Conference of learned so- Suuceivaple and to give up im- Prof. Frank Scott, dean of After the slayings the hus- McGill University's law faculty, bands went through a period otjsald hat Canada his on the depression and preoccupation Jorge ? "hi aprean ing const with their own death to atone ona change and must pre. for guilt feelings. pare for it by defining the kind But while serving their sen- of federal system she wants. tences, the husbands began to| Addressing the Royal Society see themselves and their vic-|°f, Canada, he said this change tims in a new light. They --the transfer from Britain to gained some understanding. of Canada of power to amend the ment should adopt tax and other| fl measures which would encou-| { "great- |U.S. | cision. inces do not have their own di- vorce courts. nostically matched but left un- treated." BEY The explanation, he said, is 'eithers that psychiatry's "vaunted therapies" have no lasting effect or that they pa. Anti-Red rallel "and only slightly aug- In the main Dining Room of the GENOSHA HOTEL you con have o Full-course Dinner for ONLY 95c¢, ---------- Law Passed | By U.S. Court WASHINGTON (AP) -- The| Supreme Court Monday handed down two judgments ex- pected to restrict activities of the American Communist party. By identical 5-to-4 votes, the court upheld constitutionality - of: 1. The 1950 Subversive Activ- ities Control Act under which the U.S. Communist party has been ordered to register with the justice department as a tool of Moscow, list its officers and members and give an annual fi- nancial accounting. 2. The "knowing member- ship" clause of the 1940 Smith Anti Communist Act. This makes it a crime fo be a Com- munist with awareness the party advocates overthrow of the government by force and violence. with CANADA'S FIRST NAME IN FORMAL RENTALS Dinalfoils eo 15 Formal & Business Suit Styles e A Complete Line of Accessories. o Children's Sizes 2 te Men's Size 55. Men's Weer Led. 74 Simcoe N. RA 3.3611 "The House for Communist party headquar- ters in New York said the party will "fight vigorously for its le- gal rights and existence," but it did not make clear what it plans to do in the face of the de- Party General-Secretary Gus) ONTARIO Hall said in a statement the Su-| preme Court's decision endan- gers "the very foundation and The Annual Meeting of the COUNTY TUBERCULOSIS & HEALTH British North America Act-- the death penalty. by juveniles under 18, the pen- (should be preceded by more MPs wrapped up detailed alty would be life imprisonment. t measure j inds sed | © ) TLV : ublic discussion of th sy of periment mest) en ur nds wd er? 0112" Vil ie ih dst, Parr Te So capite murder, punishable new measure provides that the chance of getting before the taliation. cae a reets | adopted. by death at the gallows, and presiding judge must ask the|COMmOns at His session. lof ha Swportant pete | Prof. David Lawson of the non-capital murder, for which jury whether it wants to recom-| Miss LaMarsh had tried un-| ages is that in spite of, the | University of British Columbia, the punishment is to be life im-|mend mercy. The question is to successfully earlier in the de-| . SY ASSOCIATION will be held in PARISH HALL, ST. GEORGE'S ANGLICAN CHURCH fabric of democracy in our country." He said the ruling opens the door to a "Fascist re: vival" in the U.S. | Tory Million thal gas chamber. It goes to the! Disputes developed and the a of a long list of private marriage 'became permeated jealousy and re- what led to the killing. Vancouver, said moral aims prisonment. the bill to another sitting. The measure has provoked a solemn and soul-searching de- bate among MPs over the death penalty, a recurring issue be- fore parliamentarians in recent years. For a cold-blooded killing -- planned and deliberate murder, or a slaying committed during] a crime of violence--the charge | under the proposed legislation would be "capital" murder and the penalty would be death. In a last-minute change, Just- Ibe asked after the jury has re-|bat But they left final reading of turned a guilty verdict and after hav the judge has said he must pro- nounce the death penalty. the jury by the judge in his di- e on the government bill to e it changed to abolish hang- ing and substitute a gas cham- {ber as the form of execution. Before turning to the death g : enalty bill, MPs on opposition this question of clemency put to) De hae peppered 9 pro Min- ] : » @"lister Fleming with taunts and rection before the jury retired| 2 11enges aimed at drawing The Liberals sought to have to consider its verdict. However, |, ft t the Liberal amendment was EG the date of the budget. fated by a vote of 58 0 17. |; {he 'budget has not yet been ", , . the date of presentation During debate on the amend-|set," said Mr. Fleming. Later, ment, Mr. Fulton said a recom-|he added: mendation of clemency by a| "I hope to be in a position jury does not necessarily mean |to bring down the budget before an automatic commutation ofthe end of this month." a Delay Granted In Brandon Trial BRANDON (CP) -- A delay was granted the defence Mon- day in the trial of Toronto busi- nessmen Hugh Paton and D. Hubert Cox, charged with con- spiracy to steal $460,000, but the question of moving the trial from Brandon to Winnipeg was not settled. Mr. Justice A. M. Monnin set the hearing on the change of venue for Thursday in Winni- eg. Whatever the decision on the location, the trial appears likely defence motion to have the committal quashed was missed at the outset Monday. Mr. Justice Monnin ruled the defence had not had sufficient] dered a delay until the next reg-| ular criminal assize or '"'to such t lother date as may be set." to start early in September. A| dis-|ban and Russian flags and little Red Farmers should take precedence over in- |tellectual aims in education but By JACK BEST | "the opposite view appears to Canadian Press Staff Wriier be widely held among educa- HAVANA (AP)--This city un-|'Io7StS corked a big, noisy welcome HAS MORAL CRISIS Monday night for 300 Russian Speaking at a session of the farm technicians who sailed| Canadian Association of Profes- into Havana harbor at sunset|sors of Education, he said the aboard the Soviet liner Gruzia. moral crisis in contemporary so- Thousands of flag-waving Cu-|ciety makes it urgent to give |bans turned out to greet the|first place to education's moral {youthful Russians, brought here|dimension. Ito help bolster Cuba's agricul'| In a Royal Society symposium tural economy. on population and civilization, The Avenida del Puerto, Prof. T. W. M. Cameron of Mec- which feeds into Havana's dock|Gill University said the diet of area, was teeming with people. two-thirds of mankind will verge |The area directly in back of the on malnutrition or even starva- |docks, where the technicians tion unless the world can make were formally welcomed, was|use of all its potential food re- |also jammed. Hawkers sold Cu-|sources. At the session of the Associa- |red buttons engraved with the|tion of Canadian Laws Teach- {hammer and sickle. ers, Prof. W. H. Charles of Dal- Havana newspapers had been|housie University, Halifax, said time to prepare its case and or-| running front - page stories on| Canadian law schools should try {the arrival for days to promote (to provide their students with {the turn-out. {more experience in problem- | The pier where the vessel|solving. The lawyer's role in Dollar Votes' OTTAWA (CP)--J. W. Pick-| ersgill (L--Bonavista - Twillin- CENTRE STREET, OSHAWA TUESDAY, JUNE 13th, 1961 Pay tal gate) contended Monday that at 7:45 p.m. for the p the Conservative majority of 500 votes in the May 29 federal byelection in Esquimalt-Saanich will cost Canadian taxpayers $1,000,000 a vote. He told the Commons that the es my properly come of the election of the Executive Council ei before the g the fi report, nd such other business ANY INTERESTED PERSONS ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO BE PRESENT. ' riding's Progressive Conserva- tive Association inserted an ad-| vertisement in the Victoria Col- onist during the campaign say- ing, in part, that the govern ment's new shipbuilding subsi- dies would total $500,000,000. Mr. Pickersgill said this came shortly after Transport Minister Balcer, when announcing the subsidies, refused to give Par- liament any estimate of the amount 'involved but said it would be covered in depart- mental estimates later. He asked if Finance Minister Fleming would say whether the McLAUGHLIN COAL and SUPPLIES LTD. -- OSHAWA'S Paton, 40, and Cox, 45, presi-|docked was dominated by huge society was basically that of a(ad was correct. i dent amd vice-president respec-|letters painted on an adjacent problem-solver. | Mr. Fleming made no imme- tively of Great West Saddlery |shed spelling out Fidel and Ni- ------ -- |diate reply. # SUNNY, WEATHER FORECAST "+ |between Jan. 1, 1956 and Nov. | ARM, SETTLED WEATHER 1 Sunny, Cooler New Party Should Be Scattered Cloud Richest Forecasts issued by the weather office at 5 a.m. EDT: Synopsis: Cooler air moved south of Toronto during the night and by mid-day will prob- ably cover all of southwestern Ontario. Skies are clear through most of Ontario and fair wea- ther is likely to continue for the next two days. Temperatures dropped below the freezing point at some places in Northern On- tario last night. Lake Erie region, Windsor: Sunny and a little cooler today. Wednesday sunny with a few cloudy intervals. Winds north- east 10 to 15. Niagara, Lake Huron, Lake Ontario regions, Toronto, Ham- ilton, London: Sunny and cooler today. Wednesday sunny with a few cloudy intervals. Winds light easterly. Georgian Bay, Haliburton, Ti- magami regions, North Bay, Sudbury: Sunny and cool today. Wednesday sunny with a few cloudy, intervals. Winds north- east 1Atoday, southeast 15 Wed- nesday. Altoma, Sault Ste. Marie,| , . White River, Cochrane regions:| TORONTO (CP)--If ils plans Sunny with a few cloudy inter- do not miscarry, the New Party vals today and Wednesday. Con- will likely be the richest party tinuing cool, winds light. i N : : a Marine forecasts valid until in Canadian history, Energy i {Minister Robert Macaulay of 11 a.m. Wednesday: | i 2 3 .|Ontario said Monday night. Lake Huron, Georgian Bay: He told a meeting of the Northeast winds 20 knots be- Eroadvi Ri coming easterly 15 tonight. prot "(TIEN YOuE Clear becoming cloudy Wednies: |. tion the New Party is afraid day morning with a few t- ; Sa Rarning 8¢a% ito let union members individu- Lakes Erie and: Ontario: ally request wage check-offs for Northeast winds 15 to 20 Sis pola press because under : aes | 8 J re- bevomisg 15 fonight, ge Josived would be small Jd that eir pretence to spea olitic- Low tonight, high Wednesday ally for union eas ne Windsor 5: {be publicly exposed as false." St. Thomas 53 5 | "It's going to be the same old London .... |CCF party, with the same lead- Kitchener sees |ers, cliches and platforms," said Wingham . {Mr. Macaulay, He felt the Hamilton |close relations of some unions {St. Catharines ... 5 and the New' Party, whereby {Toronto '.,..... . «some union leaders would be Peterborough ... turned into politicians, "would Trenton ee compromise the traditional re- |Killaloe . . lationship between government Muskoka ....:.. iand labor." "production costs become Company Limited, the parent firm of Brandon Packers, were arrested in January in Toronto. They are accused of conspiring Cubans boarded the vessel for a| {to steal from the Brandon firm 30, 1960. (kita. | A few hours after the Rus- isians disembarked, 1,000 young |voyage to the Soviet Union, where they will study farm techniques. Farm Eq OTTAWA (CP)~If Canadian too high, Cockshutt Farm Equip- ment Limited might have to move its operations to another country, company official J. V. Adams, told the Commons ag- riculture committee Monday. Import competition is "'ex- treme," the Brantford company said in a brief ot the commit. tee, which is studying farm ma- chinery prices. The brief denied flatly that prices are too high. It asked anti-dumping tariff aid for the farm machinery industry. Mr. Adams, Cockshutt manager of farm research, presented the brief. The brief proposed income tax relief for Canadian manufactur- ers on their domestic sales. But Mr. Adams amended this, say- ing it would be preferable to provide the incentive through income tax rules applying to farmers. He suggested that farmers be allowed an accelerated income tax depreciation on purchases of Canadian-made machines. PROPOSES CHANGE The brief also proposed amendment of the Farm Im- provement Loans Act '"'to pro- vide for some financial encour- agement to farmers to purchase Canadian made machines." Under the act the government guarantees bank loans for farm- ers' equipment purchases. Mr. Adams said he knows of uipment |Firm May Move no other government which helps finance the sale of im- ported goods. C. A. Milligan (PC -- Prince Edward-Lennox) said this was "a splendid suggestion." But George Muir (PC -- Lis- gar) said it would be unwise to tell a farmer that money he borrowed had to be spent on Canadian made goods. He might prefer an imported ma- chine. Jack H. Horner (PC--Acadia) suggested that the farm mach- inery industry is charging "as much as the market will bear." And Harold Danforth (PC -- Kent, Ont.) argued there is "a double mark-up". in machinery pricing--one for the company and a second mark-up for the dealer. BASED ON MARKET Mr. Adams said Cockshutt prices are based on competitive market pressures. Dealers were allowed a 20-per-cent discount below the suggested retail price. He said it is not fair to say the company charges what the market will bear. That implied high profits and exploitation of the consumer. Prices were set by market competition. "Our profits clearly indicate the viciousness of the situa- tion." Mr. Adams said Cockshutt was forced to import a 35- horsepower diesel traitor made in Italy when it found it would cost $400 to 500 more to make lit in Canada. | W. H. McMillan (I--Welland) also objected to the govern- ment's handling of the subsidy estimate. "Where are the rights of {members of Parliament?" he asked. 'No wonder we are in a financial mess in this country." The Liberals raised this issue Monday, June 5, 1961 --among others -- as they The Commons completed de- launched a day-long grievance tailed study of a government debate in an attempt to get Mr. {bill defining capital and non-|Fleming to announce definitely {capital murder but deferred| when the budget will be brought | Parliament 'At-A-Glanc | By THE CANADIAN PRESS ts Fil final approval until later. down. Finance Minister Fleming stood off three hours of grilling NOON SPECIALS by the Liberal opposition with- out revealing the dai: of his PLATE LUNCH SNACK ROOM .... 8% BUSINESS MEN'S LUNCH, DINING budget speech Judy LaMarsh (I. -- Niagara Falls) introduced a bill propos- ing thiit the gas' chamber re- place the gallows for execution criminals. Justice Minister Fulton said | a jury recommendation for mercy does not make cabinet commutation of a death sen- tence automatic. H. J. Robichaud (I--Glouces- ter) asked the federal govern- ment to pay $3,250,000 towards flood relief in New Brunswick. Tuesday, June 6 EVENING DINNER-- 3 up COURSE . » HOTEL LANCASTER HEADQUARTERS We Handle Only The Best In . . . BRICK © MARBO STONE LATH e PLASTERING MATERIALS MORTAR MIX e CEMENT SHINGLES © ROOFING PAPER FOUNDATION COATING SEWER PIPE ® FIELD TILE OUTSIDE SHEATHING © NAILS DONNACONNA BOARD, ETC. PROMPT FREE DELIVERY !! Call Us "First" For All Your Building Needs ! 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