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The Oshawa Times, 11 Jul 1961, p. 2

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Z THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, July 11, 1961 'Bring On Reforms' 'Senate By JOHN E. BIRD Canadian Press Staff Writer thur Roebuck to carry out his| threat of Senate reform and tol troversial tariff legislation. | said Monday as the Senate] request that the Liberal major-| ity in the upper house drop its request for an amendment to the tariff bill. "If, by the way, the threat in- cludes a general election, well, come along with that too," Sen-| ator Roebuck said. | The Senate amendment to the| tariff bill, rejected by the Com- mons, would provide for appeals to the tariff board against cer-| tain arbitrary decisions of the national revenue minister. The prime minister told the| Commons last week that the] government would not accept the amendment. He said it was| needed to speed decisions on] whether a line of imported oods should face higher tariffs '® |e order to a a Cana. | Aseltine that the Senate take up dian production and create em- ployment. SUGGESTS NOT NEEDED TRAVELLING TROUBLE Mrs. Shirley McConnell, 24, of Toronto, Canada, smiles with her two sons in Pitts- burgh yesterday after a travelling problem got ironed out. She wanted to take her two sons, Steven, 2, left, and | came to the rescue. The mon- ma 3p Toronto on 2 bus. ey was exchanged into Amer- ut the ticket clerk would not | . A | t accept Canadian money. The | ican currency and the three police couldn't help and final- | made the trip. ly the Travellers Aid Society --(AP Wirephoto) Frost Shuns Parliament | Royal York At-A-Glance | Monday, July 10, 1961 The Liberal-dominated Senate TORONTO (CP) -- Premier; York are: Agriculture Minister postponed final decision on a Frost said Monday night he is Goodfellow, Welfare Ministe Ce- request that it back down and staying away 'from the strike-|cile, Provincial Treasurer Allan, support the government's "class bound Royal York Hotel in or-|Commerce and Development| or kind" tariff legislation with- der to remain in a position to|Minister Nickle, Travel Minis- out amending it. negotiate and settle the dispute. ter Cathcart, Lands and Forests| go... Arthur Roebuck (I-- A resident of the hotel for 20|Minister Spooner, Highways 1.00" challenged the Pro. years, Mr. Frost was away Minister Cass, Mines Minister gressive Conservative govern.) : ; Maloney and Reform Institu- Scrvative govern when the strike began April 24.2 aionicy © ; ment to "get down to cases" in| Since his return he has been|tions Minister Wardrope. {threatening Senate reform and commuting to his Queen's Park| .... core PROSECUTION to come along with a general office from his home in Lind-| : 3 .+'election if that is its plan. say, 50 miles northeast of here], Lawves David Lewis aly "The, Commons. rave. approvei " i {Monday he will apply er-| 2 Co Ss gave approva yi Jeo» irving! tO eno mission from the Ontario Labor in principle to a government ate and settle the matter," he| Relations Board to prosecute bill to amend the Income Tax said Monday night 4 the Canadian Pacific Railway in|Act and covering a variety of ; " ; connection with the strike. He tax changes announced by Fi- None of the Conservative ca- caiq he is taking the action be- nance Minister Fleming in his binet ministers has left thel aco of a letter sent 1,000 June 20 budget. Royal York since the Hotel and| i ivers by Royal York Gen- Club Employees Union (CLC)|era] Mana ger Angus Mac- Tuesday, July 11 struck. | Kinnon. The Commons meets at "They were living there when ; ) it Hii a Here vic, The letter gave strikers an ul- 11 a.m. EDT, in its 155th sit- ting this session, to continue de- »" |{timatum of either reapplying pest Hem bo move," Me. Frost for their jobs or resigning by b : tatatin ni . . v 18. Tt included forms for ate on income tax legislation; either action. Senate banking committee] Liberal members of the legis- lature, including Leader John Wintermeyer, no longer stay at] Mr. Lewis said the manage- meets to hear Bank of Canada the Royal YOR oF ment is trying to fire '"these/Governor James. E. Coyne at The five-member C group people because they are on 9:30 a.m. S has no problem. CCF. Leader|strike. That is illegal." The On- go = i" Ine Sensis meels a) Donald MacDonald and Kenneth|tario Labor Relations Act pro. > PM: in continuation of debate Bryden (CCF -- Woodbine) live hibits an employer from refus- on tariff legislation. in Toronto and the others arel/ing to employ any person for -- a pe within commuting distance. exercising any rights under the Cabinet ministers at the Royallact. WEATHER FORECAST Warm, Humid Killaloe .. White River ....... - 18.5. Marie ..ceva0e. B {Kapuskasing ..v... i | North Bay ... Sudbury . Muskoka . Windsor . London Toronto . Walter Aseltine, government LIGHTER SIDE That's The Way "a we i me a Radar Bounces JOHANNESBURG (Reut- ers)--Mrs M. E. F. Aden- | dorff recently asked the Jo- hannesburg police depart- ment to '""do something about motorists speeding past my house." The department did: | It set up a speed trap. | The first driver caught in the trap was Mrs. Aben- dorff's husband. PRINCE FOR PEACE MOSCOW (Reuters) -- A race track tout from Britain strolled through the Kremlin Monday delivering himself of a message sure to nag all good Communists. "Horse racing will stop all wars," declared 80-year-old Prince Monolulu, "because as soon as a man backs a winner he becomes a capitalist." | A crowd of several hundred Muskovites followed the prince. Prince Monolulu, in Moscow on a one-man "peace through horse racing' mission, is well known among British race track-goers for his flamboyant clothes and the way he me- anders crying "I gotta horse." | The prince, a Negro born in Ethiopia, is fast becoming fa- mous in Moscow as well. He is wearing his full regalia: Ostrich - feather headdress; cloak of blue, green and gold leader in the Senate, Monday|' 'sooner or later" on Senate re- proposed a resolution that the|form. OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis- Senate 10 ter Diefenbaker has been chal- amendment adopted last month donald, opposition leader who lented by Liberal Senator Ar- by the call a general election over con-|is needed in its original form "Come on with your reforms," dustry and provide more jobs| the 83-year-old Ontario Liberalifor Canadians. opened debate on a government| Ontario) said the Commons READY FOR BATTLE ! of course, his racing stick and his fellow senators who are ap-|: | capitalism, | ism, By HAROLD MORRISON Canadian Press Staff Writer Challenge "do not insist" on the| Liberal Senator W. Ross Mac-/; "wc lig' evidence" of tensions Senate's Liberal major- asked last week for delay in China but against leaping to any conclu-iyrged that even though the po- WASHINGTON (CP) -- State|sion that this dissension couldjitical atmosphere is not encour Secretary Dean Rusk says there|seriously ro c k the Communist zging Rusk Sees Evidence Of Soviet-China Rift cautions at. the West, two big powers of that sort are bound to have tensions and na- tional rivalries, but he didn't think the gap in Red unity was big enough to change Western .\policy. : Again calling on Russia to ac- cept the status quo in Germany and not provoke new wars, Rusk '"'an imaginative effort must be made to relieve the ten- between Russia and Communist| Rusk suggested Monday thay) sions arising from the arms ity by a vote of 37 to 21. {debating 3he Commu Tejecs : 1/tion, stood aside Monday an Senator Aseltine said the bill fet Senator Roebuck carry the ebate. Observers said the move might indicate a split in the Liberal ranks of the Senate. to speed up production by in- Senator Lionel Choquette (PC has studied the bill twice and| Senator Roebuck, former On- should be left to take respon-tario provincial attorney -gen- sibility for it. eral who was appointed to the "The prime minister has in-| Senate in 1945, said he's ready dicated he won't accept the to go back on the hustings in| Ps amendment now or in the fu-!an election fight. ture. Failure of this House to, And he said he would go out accept the considered and re- and speak in Blaine Lake, Sask., considered view of the lower|the former constituency of an- house would have the effect of other old politic ian, Senator|§ killing the bill." Ralph Horner (PC--Saskatche- After Senator Choquette had|wan), Senator Horner, 77, went spoken, the debate was ad-lo the Senate in 1933. journed by Senator David Croll The issue of the federal gen- (L -- Ontario). The Senate de-|, 2," jaction, Senator Roebuck cided by a vote of 38 to 20 to Sit! caid won't be Senate reform again & 5 hen| # 1 again at 3 p.m. EDT today when|p "n'a ployment, business the tariff bill again will be the| (2 oation and "the degreds. first item on the order Paper. lion of the Canadian dollar and The House's Liberal majority. enced cost of living." | fused a suggestion by Senator "If the vii minister oh the measure at a night sitting,|anyone else thinks they can dis- Mr. Diefenbaker has served|tract the attention of the Cana- notice on the Senate to with-|dian people by . . . an age-old- draw the amendment or a gen-|attack on the Senate from fhe|f eral election would be called real issues, they are mistaken." | § 'GET DOWN TO CASES' Senator Roebuck said to Mr. Diefenbaker that if there is any |threat of Senate reform "do not | this kind being used as '"'a club with which to beat us into sub- | mission." "I have no fear of the future & whatever it may be," he told pointed for life. £ He explained to correspond- | Referring to the bill's arbit-| dents that he would try to ap- [rary powers, Senator Roebuck proach Soviet government lead-|said he is ready to "stay here ers to interest them in his [for a lifetime rather than agree; puace plan. to the department of national "I have," revenue being given the status|: of a dictatorship." ; Senator Aseltine said that th arbitrary powers were bein, granted to the revenue minister {to decide only two statistical] : {points that wen into the over-| Dorothy Mills, 18, (above) (all decision of whether a line| and Barbara Eisert, 22, who of goods being imported should| escaped Sunday night from Imeet a higher tariff. Kingston Penitentiary, have . been recaptured near Syra- MIGHT HOLD UN il to wait for Suse. Nv. the Utheg States tariff board, Exchequer Court OPder Ppalrol. Sai oncay. and Supreme Court appeals on| The Mills girls escape, the binoculars. he intoned, 'No judaism, . social- rheumatism or commu- nism. "I only gotta horse!" The prince said he went out to the Moscow track Sunday and handed out his first tip-- a Russian horse that ran at Laurel park in the United States three years ago. "It came in third and they all laughed." the prince re- ported. BACK IN JAIL second in 12 months, was much less long-lived than her first, which lasted six weeks before her capture by police. She was serving a term for | robbery with violence. race." | As he spoke before a crowded National Press Club luncheon, the defence department dis- closed that President" Kennedy has ordered a new review of American military might in the light of moves by Soviet Pre- mier Khrushchev. SEE NO INCREASE There was no indication the review would lead to any im- mediate increase in American. military expenditures, now total- ling more than $42,000,000,000 a year, although Khrushchev has stated that Russian outlays are to be boosted. Americans view Soviet state- ments as a part of a pattern of pressure against the West in the hope of ramming through a deal on Berlin. Instead of meeting Russian | belligerency head on, Rusk ap- pears to be attempting to pur- sue a policy of trying to talk world crises to death. H 1 Wives! Get Pep, Vim; Feel Young er Thousands of worn-out one Ie Sie, © usinied, tite te Way. Try Ostrex today, At sll draggists. Elegance IS A MATTER OF TASTE! Those who apprec: iate fine living . . who have fine car- 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. | --(CP Wirephoto) | But, Monolulu added slyly, he cleaned up on another tip-- from a Russian trainer who may have felt that in his era - Russia Plans of peaceful coexistence a loyal |, | | comrade could let even a |is but a subterfuge" Sr T T k w 1d I prince in on a good thing, (Roebuck said. "It is no argu- 0 a e or | ment at all." If speed was necessary, Par- [ L] liament could increase the mem Wit out ar bership of the tariff board to oa enable it to handle the work.| TORONTO (CP) -- A United| The government was using its|States businessman said Mon-| argument to dodge the issue be. day night Canadian and U.S. | cause of the impossibility of piaipawies must wake up to the} justifying "dictatorial powers." |fact Russi 0 Co | J ying dice P |the world without firing a shot] lin a war of economic pressure. statistical detail they would never be able to move quickly ¥ {enough to meet competition. "The question of undue delay Integration Puzzles with trousers to match plus, Crash Kills Toronto Pair ORLEANS, Ont. (CP) -- A] {Toronto area couple, Mr. andy Mrs. R. Hossak of Islington, {were killed Monday night in aj (two - car head - on collision | {two miles east of here on High- |way 17. | A five - year -old boy be- lieved to be their son received | severe facial lacerations and is| [suffering shock in hospital at Ottawa, 10 miles west of here. Indi in ans | Aaron Scheinfeld accused both 0 : Woman Found |countries of outdated export | TTAWA (CP) -- Indian Sen- | i | : promotion and urged more ef-| ator James Gladstone said Mon- Ifort in the race for overseas) day rapid movement toward in-| Shot To Death markets. tegration is puzzling to many of Scheinfeld, chairman of his people. ST. GEORGES, Que. (CP)-- ith ota of Mik] "They feel as though they are (The body of a 58 - year - old| 2 kee spoke at a luncheon] caught up in a whirlwind," he|woman found shot in her bed at meeting prior to the inaugura-| said, "and some are fearful of nearby Ste. Aurelie Sunday|ion in Canada of Salespower | the results." [night was identified at a coron-|ga vices Limited. The service The Blood Indian from Al-(er's inquest Monday night as|yij he available to, business on| berta, first Canadian Indian ap-|that of Mrs. Joseph Gaboury,|a for-hire basis for temporary pointed to the Senate, said some mother of 18 children. projects. membe®s of his race are atraid| Police said a man heard two|™ Ayound the world, Mr. Schein. their treaty rights may be|Shots as he passed the woman'sico 4 said he had met swarms of whisked away or their reserva./house about 10 p.m. Sunday|cajesmen from other industrial- tions may disappear from be. Night. He picked up two friends|;;eq nations, but none from Can- neath their feet. [End pogether the Jes Sotered ada and the United States. "While I agree that we must| x io wos foam ino: He said Germany, aware of 4 Did A rifle was found in a copse les ead, he 24, in. The [beside the house. Et By. oF moot Senate, "we must at all times| The husband was taken into|o¢ ne middle East trade. In . . . LOOK FOR THIS SIGN . Before You Buy Your NEW HOME! #9 This sign Is your assurance that your home to be has been built by a professional builder, a member of the OSHAWA BUILDERS ASSOCIATION. BANFIELD CONSTRUCTION ......725-6577 GOLDELL HOMES LTD. JESS HANN & SON . .. JACKSON & SON LTD. H. KASSINGER CONST. LTD. LOUPAN DEVELOPMENTS LTD. JAMES ALLEN, BUILDER JAMES O'MALLEY, BUILDER R. JEFFERY, BUILDER 725-7272 .725-4218 .725-6343 725-9121 .. 725-8171 723-7324 725-6126 723-7122 .725-9478 .725-9991 W. ROTH, BUILDER .......... H. GRUYTERS, BUILDERS .. W. TONNA, BUILDER . .. In serious condition is Mrs. consider the feelings of these custody when he returned to the, is sanada. and th Marjorie Gorman, 60, of Baie|people and maintain a strong house shortly after midnight, Sm" orien not exmorting one. |d'Urfe, Que., the driver of the bond of trust between govern-| and is being detained here as a/tenth of what they could. second car involved in accident,/ment and Indian." {material witness. .728-5210 723-7711 Some Thunder det Halifax * ® J LJ LJ ® ® WM. RIDGLEY CONSTRUCTION LJ \a ® LJ LJ LJ Forecasts issued by the Tor- ern White River, Timagami re- onl otigions, Narth Bav, Sudbury Lew tonicht and hish : Dau ote. Mare: variravireiwindsor 65 Sam: cloudiness with scattered show- gt I os aes 50 Synopsis: The unsettleders and thundershowers today|rondon ......... 60 weather pattern over Ontario|and Wednesday, little change in |Kitchener ....... 60 has become stagnant. Warm and temperature. Winds light. Wingham ....... 60 increasingly humid weather] Northern White River, Coch-|Hamilton . re with thundershowers will occur|rane regions: Mainly cloudy Hamilton ..... "5 over most of thé province on with showers and thundershow-|St Catharines ... 60 Wednesday. ers today and Wednesday. Less Toronto 65 Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Nia-/humid and not quite so warm|Peterborough ... 60 gara, Lake Ontario, Haliburton Wednesday. Winds light. Trenton ......... 60 regions, Windsor, London, Ha- arvaq Killaloe ... + 55 milton, Toronto: Partly cloudy TORONTO (CP) -- Observed Muskoka . 60 s : : femperatures: : and warm, with increasing hu- North Bay ...... 60 midity today and Wednesday. naweon ......... Sudbury 60 Isolated showers or thunder-|yiutoria .. 63 Earlton + 60 showers both days. Winds light|1:dmonton 54 Kapuskasing .... 5 except southwest 20 each after- Regina ... 51 White River . 55 3 | Winnipeg . 82 Moosonee ....... 45 Georgian Bay, Algoma, South Lakehead ......... 58 {S.S. Marie ...... 60 Forecast Temperatures Me trp tthan af ian Min. Max. FO 3 - a # 5 3 'Parliament Session Mark On History By ROBERT RICE Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP)--In more ways| ments. : | Meanwhile, speculation t hat| than one, the fourth session of| Parliament might be dissolved| [the 24th Parliament is guaran-| this week for an early general| the government plans to drop 'Plumbers Stall | Space Program |! The Oshawa Buildeis' Assccialion LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP)--The| United States' project to put af nuclear-powered Yorke: en the a moon is being delaye y a the 20 or so government depart: Mr, Fleming announced that|plumbers' strike, an Atomic En- ergy Comm i ssion spokesman | [ for the time being a revision of|$aid Monday. the tax law governing personal teed a place in Canada's his: election got a quick knockdown corporations. tory. It will be the longest Parlia-| mentary session in history. It is also sure to be the gab- biest. And for sheer suspense, it has| few rivals in Canada's 94-year| | history. | | Right now, it is a three-ring| circus. | In the spotlight of Ottawa's) # |big top is the Coyne tight-rope 7 |act, an electrifying performance before the Senate banking and commerce committee. form. TALK ON TAXES And in the third ring, weary % IMPs are continuing their talk- Hiwwir e athon--this time on taxes. Today marks the 155th sitting 3 lof the Commons, matching a record that has stood untouched! for 58 years. And there's no sign of an im-| mediate let-up. Chances are the Hause willl still be sitting later this week.| 7 Even when it recesses for the summer, it has to retum in the fall to clean up unfinished leg- islation and wrap up study of from Conservative sources to- day. "The idea is silly," said one knowledgeable source. "With Ontario introducing a sales tax Sept. 1 and the worst drought in years in the West, it's no time for elections," said this source. | The speculation was not car- ried by The Canadian Press. TAXES DOMINATE The words of Finance Minis-| ter Fleming's 36-page measure | on income taxes dominated the| (| Then there's the Senate show(day. The tax bill changes the itself--with the Liberal majority 5 |poised to put its head in the ' [lion's mouth over Senate re- Income Tax Act to put into ef- fect the provisions of Mr. Flem- ing's June 20 budget speech. It was given second reading-- approval in principle--but op- position MPs still had plenty of questions on the details in the 40-section measure. ON A LAXATIVE MERRY-GO-ROUND? Take MR Tonight . . . Tomorrow Alright! | For over seventy years, NR . . . Nature's Remedy . . . has been giving folks pleasant, effective overnight relief. No | no sudden A de- | pendable all-vegetable laxa- | \ tive. Take NR Tablets tonight! | Helps you feel better... and look better] \ A lthe spending estimates of 11 of [REGULAR + CHOCOLATE COATED » JUNIORS | A personal corporation is one used by an individual and his relatives to hold investments jointly, paying out the profits each year as if they were divi- dends. In his budget speech, Mr. Fleming had said the legislation needs to be overhauled. i Plumbers in southern Nevada walked out June 30 in a wage |dispute. About 100 of them are employed at the Nevada test site 90 miles north of here. They turned down a management package proposal of 45 cents an| hour over two years. Employ-| ees wanted five cents more. They currently get a basic pay of $4.42, an hour. ioned Comfort on 0 ov CANADA'S FIRST NAME IN FORMAL RENTALS eo 15 Formal & Business Suit Styles e A Complete Line of Accessories. ® Children's Sizes 2 to Men's Size 55 Availabe at: BLACKS: 74 Simcoe N. 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