REPORT FROM PARLIAMENT New Defence Plan Means More Jobs By MICHAEL STARR, MP Minister of Labor The Defence production shar: ing arrangement with the Unit. ed States announced in Parlia- {ment on Monday by the Prime Minister will mean, of course, many thousands of jobs for Ca- nadians and for that reason is certainly commendable, One aspect of the arrange. ment calls for the United States to spend $200,000,000 on F-104.G supersonic aircraft which will be manufactured in Montreal The Prime Minister told the House the arrangement would enable Canada to "make a sig- nificant contribution to the col- lective strength of NATN." Work is going on apace on Par. liament Hill on the remodelling of the West Block, traditionally ! lhome of the Secretary of Stat Departnient, Fisheries and oth- ers, and currently used for of- fices for Members of Parlia- ment who have overflowed froin the House of Commons. Public Works have the West | Block completely fenced in and {power shovels and pneumatic {drills are hard at work The fence was put up the day Presi-| dent Kennedy arrived in Otta- wa -- and since that time the 2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturdey, June 17, 1961 GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN Elegance IS A MATTER OF TASTE! Those who apprec- iate fine living . . . | who have fine car- I peting . . . will want the very finest in rug cleaning. These people call . NU-WAY RUG CO. 174 MARY ST, RA 8.4681 Member of The National Institute of Rug Cleaning. FLY-IN BREAKFAST A COLORFUL SHOW Don't panic tomorrow morning if a deafening sound from overhead awakens you. ! Don't blame it on that party of the night before. Just run to the window and glance skyward. Chances are that you will see an impressive sight--a great armada of light aireraft bound for a single destina- tion, Oshawa Airport. dustrial Day", Thursday, June 22nd. | Ajax has certainly come a long way in the 20 years since its founding as part of the De-| fence Industries complex at! that time; and its citizens, old| and new, have a great deal to! The West Block once noused the office of Sir John A. Mac- Donald and a back entrance is still pointed out as a means of egress by which "Old Tomor- row" used to dodge people he did not wish to see. The new West Block will have offices for MP's; a new, large cafeteria to supplement the cafeteria in the Centre Block, which no longer can take care of the patrons, which include parliamentary staff as well as MP's. The West Block will be joined to the Centre Block by a tun- nel, now in process of being mined and blasted out. MP's situated close to these opera- tions are getting used to being jolted every little while by an- other rumbling blast from the tunnel area. Then they go back to work. You get to expecl al most anything on Parliament Hill, One of the more interesting of the 25 pieces of new legisla- tion which the Government nas| brought down since November 17th is the amended War Vet.| erans' Allowance Act, intro. duced by the Minister of Veter- ans Affairs, Mr. Churchill. The Minister of Veterans Af-| fairs pointed to the recent 20 percent increase in veterans' Tomorrow is the day for a big event in the world of Ontario's "Sunday fliers" (the men and women who i follow the sport just for the fun of it). This is the sixth annual | Fly-in Breakfast of the Ontario County Flying Club, modestly described by Secretary - Manager " George Slocombe as "The largest annual gathering of small aircraft in all Canada--only Texas can beat it for size." a feature of the program for Industrial Day consisted in opening two new i buildings -- more evidence of Ajax's constant drive towards greater progress: ' Wanted - Immediately ADVERTISING SALESMAN and COPYWRITER There is an opening now in the advertising department of the Oshawa Times. Previous selling or copy writing experience ic essen- tial, Write, giving qualifications and ex- perience and other pertinent details in first pile of rubble inside the fence|pensions and added thai the letter to George Wilson, Advertisting mana- has been growing. same increase would be applied er The plan calls for completeito War Veterans' Allowances, | ger. interior demolition of the build-| The Minister concluded with! ling, with the exterior walls be- this statement: ing preserved. "The rather substantial Mr. Slocombe can point with justifiable pride to certain achievements of last year's Fly-in Break- fast: GEORGE SLOCOMBE It attracted 270 small aircraft, bearing 650 guests, from such points as Windsor, Sarnia, Montreal, Ot- tawa and London. There were also more than 275 non-flying guests (including the Hon, Michael Starr, Dr. Matthew B. Dy- mond and T. D. "Tommy" Thomas). 6 Be More than 900 breakfasts were served (1800 eggs, 120 pounds of bacon, 75 loaves of bread, 20 gallons of orange juice. Oldest guest to fly in last year was H. 8S. Bruton, Kenned Spea ks To The West Block is, of course, crease in the rates and income 61, of Kingston, one of Canada's veteran flying enthus- a historical and traditional|ceiling is expected at the pres- iasts. S A ® | P 1 building, like its companion|ent time to cost about $17,000, EXPENSIVE PENNIES Paille | times their face value. The | Winnipeg department swore. coins, uncirculated pennies | Mr. Paille operates a coin from 1937 to 1940, were given | shop across the street from a downtown | the store. --(CP Wirephoto) Coin collector Phil shows some of at least 1,000 | pennies for which he paid several dozen shoppers 50 | in change at ils mr -- AN URGENT APPEAL... Citizens of Oshawa! COUNCIL'S SUMMER POLICY City Council will vote on at least two important | items Monday: Approval of a plan to get the proposed low-rent housing project under way, Approval of a bylaw to transfer certain city lands to the Oshawa Harbor Commission (several complex details of which have not been settled), Council will then bow from the public limelight for the Summer months (barring an emergency). No open meetings have been scheduled until September, but committee meetings will continue and the press will likely be invited to the majority, if not all, of them, Queen Elizabeth is doing it. | Princess Margaret is doing Hon. David Bathurst, . son of Viscount Bledisloe, is do- | ing it, The Queen showed up at | Ascot wearing the outfit she wore during her state visit to Rome earlier this spring. Fashion writers have often contended the royal ladies never, but never, wear the | same clothes twice at big | public functions. But at the Ascot opening | Princess Margaret wore the | | same pink satin coat she had | on at a Buckingham Palace | | garden party over a year ago. | The next day she sported the | | brilliant yellow coat she chose | for her honeymoon in the | | spring of 1960. Viscount Bledisloe's son | turned up in an old Edward- ian frock 'coat. "I dug it out of a box in the attic," he told surprised fashion reporters. If You Have Not Yet Sent In Your Questionnaire Re Traffic Study You Are Requested To Do So At Once!! IF YOU HAVE MISLAID YOUR CARD -- PLEASE TELEPHONE RA. 8-4685 at i od A 0 Ley ' Cet) 4 ALLAN .i i : piece, the East Block, which|{000 on an annual basis." 1 Also Sn display n 180 was a homemade Jegel sits across the Parliamentary) I am looking forward to tak- Plane built at : cost of § --it could stay aloft or lawn and houses External Af-|ing part in the celebration of four hours on 4% gallons of gas. : ; fairs as well as the Prime Min-| Ajax Old Home Week by speak- By HAROLD MORRISON since his back strain was dis-| Kennedy bore down hardest jste;'s offices. ing to Ajax Rotary Club on "In- Canadian Press Stott Writer [cite June &. [0% 107 lon tefm, Sipe of bist -- A SHINGTON rn = Pres seated on a stiff-backed, cush-/the heaviest opposition' in the| LIGHTER SID i en "h Sines ¥ useq iy Sen joned chair. Throughout the Congress accustomed to approv- Site es To yore bore 2 speech his body was tilted|ing the foreign aid program oe as 0 Ap} Friday t slightly to the left. year by year. Of this, Kennedy| bd public audience Tigay 0 DPré-| vn the speech, he called on|said: 0 ore T1C 5 {Jeo his foreign al gram Americans to fight communism| "Under our new approach, we from being Watere own bYlyy destroying its breeding will be asking less - developed . Congress, d he d int grounds with long-range foreign nations to undertake a yeh Tr T mi Tr | At his side as he drove into|giq greater effort in the way of in- O £2 eo a special hotel laneway was Ca- geeking to rally public sup- ternal reform and self-help. We |nadian-born John Kenneth Gal-\nort for his five-year, $8,800,-(will be asking the other indus- TORONTO (CP) -- Two braith, U.S. ambassador to In-l00p000 program, Kennedy trialized nations to undertake aj 'policemen were posted out- dia. The two conversed in the; gad those who want to haltimuch greater effort of economic| gije Premier Frost's office | it. back seat of the closed limou-|ihe spread of communism "to/aid. We will be asking top-flight! = Friday after the appearance Meanwhile, many taxpayers are wondering out loud sine beloge Kenedy got ip | channel their energies helind/personne! in America) Susiness at the legislature buildings whether Council's Summer schedule is advisable (with | He used crutches to walk fromjour new foreign aid program--anc pro: € s sions '9 Pt of a man who recently threw i [the car up a specially-built ramp to help prevent the social in- their careers to devote their| yp. ope through the prem- the emphasis on committee meetings and the absence of linto a hotel where he was en-| justice and e c on omic chaosjtalents to his cause. hos y uy p regular meetings), whether it puts too much of a curb |(hysiastically greeted by more which invite subversion and re-| "But unless this is a long: At the time. the 'man. said on the flow of important news from City Hall. than 1000 delegates to an na- volt -- to encourage the socialiterm effort with long-term au-| "op 00 bioke at an outer Press coverage of committee meetings is severely |itonal conference on interna- and economic reform and de- thority, we ca : ho }. convince Hi Ni Decimse Te restricted until such matters reach open Council level. {tional economic and social de-| velopment that can sta ilize hs se Ine 1y Lvs s 4 Ne sori. wasn't allowed to speak to i § i velopment. II was his firstnew nations and weak govern- other nalions th: are | 'Mr. Frost. No cha i There is also 3 cosy angle to committee meetings -- | speech outside the White Houselments." 'ous about this program. i HY hg eC aries er Councillors can call them often, or not at all, and there [22 -- - a e was take . is no penalty for missing them. A penalty of $10 can be Tena hossial, iors aides levied for each open Council meeting missed over three. invited the man to discuss Some councillors will work just as hard during the issue Friday. The man Summer in the tranquility of the committee room, but was told the premier would is such a policy advisable for a growing city of 60,000, fend a message on his be- a city with pressing municipal problems ? Noting was thrown. The cancellation of open meetings for two months ol' ROCKIN' CHAIR is tantamount to boarding up the Council Chamber for OCR Bl the same period. Wi Lb] op nf 3 : Christina Broughton of ; After all, Oshawa isn't a tank town, even if the Peace River, gy her trains still run down the main street. first plane ride this week at the age of 102, Now she is planning a second flight. "I just sat here and it didn't. disturb me', Mrs. Broughton said of her trip to Vancouver where she has come to live with a daugh- ter. RABBI NORDEN IS CITY VISITOR » atte oe oy ¥ # gant fof, {lov / p Seventy-five members of the Ontario Regiment will leave here July 15 for 7 days camp at Niagara-on- the-Lake. They will take two tanks for manoeuvres, as will the Governor General's Horse Guards, Toronto . , . Rabbi Martin Norden of New York City visited here \ relminise Coming Soon this week--he was rabbi for the Oshawa Jewish Con- gregation for more than eight years before his de- parture last year . .. Dr. W. C. Sands of Oshawa has left for two U.S. conventions next week -- Lions Interna- "I thought I was home in my rocking chair." Mrs. Broughton said she is planning another flight to visit other relatives. AND A NEW CARD WILL a BE DELIVERED TO YOU! Christine Thomas MAYOR OF THE CITY OF OSHAWA. GOOD NEWS LONDON (AP) -- Be really {| fashionable: Wear your old clothes. | Britain's fashion - conscious | | Royal Family has made it of- | ficial. At, of all places, the | ultra - fashionable Royal As- 55 b { cot races. seans 60 i 60 tional in Atlantic City (he is a delegate from the Oshawa Club) and The American Geriatric Society. Dr. Sands is physician at the Hillsdale Manor Home for the Aged. -- SHOWERS A PRATT FINE WEEKEND, THUNDER NEXT WEEK WEATHER FORECAST rT Pleasant, Warm During Weekend afternoon and to 25 early Sun- day. Fair. Lake Huron, Georgian Bay: West to southwest winds 15 knots, increasing to 20 to 25 this weather will continue over most|afternoon and 25 to 30 early parts of Ontario today. Scat. Sunday. Fair today, showers tered showers in Northern On-|Sunday. : I tario are forecast to spread into Forecast temperatures Judy Lewis, daughter of Lor-| i | Central Ontario today, heralding Low tonight and high Sunday: ©!la Young and Tom Lewis, has the approach of another spell Windsor HB # gs been signed to star as secretary] Homes situated in the finest residential areas ! 8 ; : DE p= _-- «+ . . with all the luxury features so h cool weather, St. Thomas ....... 60 85 in Warner Brothers' TV series a wie poaXULY. 30 much.in oy Lake 1 Nia Londo, gs 77 Sunset Strip 2 . demand by today's busy executives. Homes hi e Brie, 2 e ] , N Loncon a, with impressive exteriors and breathtaking in- | terior designs . . . with beautiful i |Windsor, London, Toronto, Ha-| landscapes . . . 2, 3, or ol ig {milton: Sunny and warmer to. day. Sunday mainly sunny, windy and continuing warm with chance of evening show- ers. Winds southwest near 20 to-| day, southwest near 25 Sunday. Georgian Bay, Haliburton, Al- goma regions, North Bay, Sault |Ste. Marie, sudbury: Sunny | {and warmer today. Sunday var- |iable cloudiness windy and con- {tinuing warm with scattered | [showers and thunderstorm s.| {Winds southwest 20 to 25 today, | westerly 20 Sunday Timagami, Cochrane, White | SAM NOT AFTER COYNE'S JOB There is no truth in that widely-circulated report that Chairman Sam Jackson, Jr., of the Oshawa Harbor Commission was in Ottawa this week to apply for James E. Coyne's job as governor of the Bank of Canada. | Sponsored by . + « OSHAWA B'NAI B'RITH & kitchener 55 OSHAWA LIONS CLUB {Wingham .. {Hamilton .. |St.. Catharines .... 'Toronto ........ « 60 | Peterborough ..... 55 {Trenton . 60 | Killaloe .:- +. 55 {Muskoka .. 5 {North Bay Sam was down there with the Commission (and two officials of the National Proprietary Corp. Ltd.) to con- fer with Gordon W. Stead, Deputy Minister of Transport 1nd Donartment of Tranenart officials. No decisions were reached, Mr, Jackson said, but the development of the Oshawa harbor and NPCL's pro- posed warehousing and merchandising mart were dis- cussed, The Federal Department will send a committee to Oshawa in July to confer with the Commission and the NPCL again. The only news expected from the NPCL in the near future will be the identity of a new director, a Toronto corporation lawyer, next week, This is what has been promised by Dr. Allen C. Wilson, the president. RE-SALE EXECUTIVE HOMES Earton .......o40s 55 Kapuskasing . 50 White River . 50 Moosonee ... 50 S$.S. Marie ....:... 55 Forecasts issued by the Tor- onto weather office at 5 a.m, EDT: Synopsis: Pleasant warm DAUGHTER ON TV NO DRIVING TREND SEEN AS YET Are motorists driving more carefully in that area patrolled by the Whitby OPP (Scarborough on the west to Darlington on the east and as far north as Sunderland)? It may be so, but you can't prove it by statistics, at least not yet. The question is asked because of what happened last Tuesday in the Whitby Traffic Court (where Whitby OPP cases are heard): There were only 11 cases on the list--only 15, in all, were dealt with, The court, which sits every second Tuesday, heard 29 cases at the previous session. It has heard as many as 48 at one session. Last Tuesday marked a low-record for the past four or five years for the court, but an OPP spokesman at- / ] A E tached no significance to it. River Fegrons Variable Slouait "It's just one of those things that cafi't be explain a CORY aI ed," he said. "I think it would be dangerous to attribute [thunderstorms today. Winds . . it to any new trend on the part of the drivers just yet. | westerly 20 to 25 today, north. | ° Most of these charges were laid four weeks previously (West to northerly 20 to 25 Sun-| and don't forget this--about 90 percent of these cases [927 are settled out of court." : Marine forecasts valid until 11 From now on the number of cases will increase, am. EDT Sunday he said. They usually do in the Summer as the traffic wiike aXe Omg: incregges. Sai f ; RR 115 knots, increasing to 20 fps' Homes Complete With... ® PATIOS ® CARPORTS ® GARAGES * REC. ROOMS Meticulously Cared For Homes from 17,500 to 27,500 CL LLL HII. CANADA'S FIRST NAME IN FORMAL RENTALS @ 15 Formal & Business Suit Styles A Complete Line of Accessories. Children's Sizes 2 to Men's Size 55 Availabe af: BLACK'S:: 74 Simcoe N RA 3.3611 "The House of Styles tor Men & Boys" RE-SALE HOMES OUR SPECIALTY ! Over the past years we have paid particular attention to the field of "Re-Sale Homes", so much so that we have won the Oshawa & District Real Estate Board's Photo Co-op Award for 2 consecutive years . . . 1959 & 1960. This record shows customer satisfaction . . « which we continuously strive for. "OSHAWA'S BUSIEST REAL ESTATE FIRM' LLOYD REALTY (OSHAWA) LTD., Realtors [2] :J HA 101 SIMCOE ST. NORTH DIAL RA 8.5123 in Air-Conditioned Comfort