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Oshawa Times (1958-), 27 Nov 1961, p. 10

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DEATHS By THE 'CANADIAN. PRESS | Yankton, $.D.--Fred H. Mon-| fore, 72, editor and publisher of the Yankton Daily Press and _|NDP Pension Plan! Hit By Pearson yr | OTTAWA (CP) --Libera 1, He predicted that Prime Min- : Leader Pearson said Saturday |ister Diefenbaker will call the one sodas chsaeainl the New Democratic Party hasjelection next May or June if P : oe ei a ta | : : ;: and one-time general secretary been "not very responsible' in\the unemployment situation im- ; tniat ; x : of the World Zionist Organiza- |pledging a $75-a-month old age|proves during the winter. If the tion pension. 'situation was as bad or worse) Gone. nae | "That would be fine if we than last winter, the voting PR once Abi mene ated g lcould do it," he told a small/probably would be delayed until' ranking Repub cen pagers informal meeting at Manitowan- next September or October. United States Senate armed ing, a tiny Manitoulin Island vil-| «We have a very, very good|services committee and a mem- |lage in his Algoma East riding. 'chance of getting a clear ma-jber of the Senate foreign rela- | But Mr. Pearson said a $20- jority,' Mr. Pearson told Lib-.tions committee. Ousted Member Knocks On Door WHITEHORSE, Y.T. (CP)--| Three times he knocked and An ousted member of the Yukon|called out. Then he entered territorial council made a third|through the spectators' en- Gramatic attempt in Whitehorse|trance as the council was in Saturday to take his seat in the|committee. council chamber. Again Nor-| On orders from Chairman man S. Chamberlist was pre-|George Shaw, two RCMP offi- vented from doing so when his|cers who had been acting as way was blocked by two RCMP| masters - at - arms barred the officers. way to the chamber area with Mr. Chamberlist, whose seat|their backs. ; of Whitehorse East had been| Mr. Shaw said he was acting jon instructions of Speaker John Livesey and with the agreement jof council. Mr. Chamberlist charged that ja-month increase in the present eral supporters. The public had) Montreal--Jack Mackell, 66, declared vacant Tuesday by the! j$55_ pension along with the/come to realize that under Con- father of former National council Speaker, knocked on the NDP's proposal to make it pay- servative government the coun-/Hockey League player Fleming doors of the council chamber. able to all those 65 and over--try "has stopped moving\Mackell and a player himself|Then he declared in a voice au- oan' a THREE DI persons died early Sunday, Dead are Mrs. Loma Sigures, 55, her daughter, Beverley This is the burned-out inter- ior ofa home at Sault Ste Marie, Ont., in which three ED IN THIS p jinstead of at age 70--would cost/ahead;" the 1945 - 57 years with Stanley Cup champions Ot- jan extra $400,000,000 to $500,000,- of Liberal administration now\tawa Senators in 1920-21 and 000 a year. looked "'pretty good" to the 1921-22: of a heart attack while, This huge expenditure would electorate. watching a football game on te- pppoe lige oo a bay ey Again condemning the levision. boric y a pe kot ' re Sai enbaker government's "nega-, Toronto -- Harold A. Living- be Sent a if : Soho ee ele tive' attitude toward possible ston, 67, retired construction} lccald total $1000 poet nagnetag British membership in the Eu-/company executive who played) [haps $1.200,000,000'-- 'by next f0Pean Common Market, Mr.|football with Hamilton Tigers in| ech al ' *'! Pearson said a good opportunity|1913; of a heart attack while) aa : ' has been lost to advance toward This was one of several points an Atlantic free trade area. jmade by Mr. Pearson in stres- a ey. ae sing the economic situation in Hor pagel ig R a celts sarc i a ae a lot of domestic problems. Some es casei pene ; steps would have to be taken to rent on Manitoulin, largest of nei) Canadian industries which the world's fresh - water is- oo. be hurt , ™ Dief- game on television. 4 | Ann, 6, and Mrs. Sigures' | mother, Mrs. Helena James, | 77. Terry Sigures, 3, is in fair | M. (Bill) Mott, 68, former Lib- eral member of Parliament for New Westminster. | Huntingdon, Que. -- Adam L. Sellar, 63, publisher of the condition in hospital with ex- tensive burns --(CP Wirephoto) Education Meet Suggests Changes WINDSOR, Ont. (CP) -- The: The group studying religious first. Ontario conference on ed- instruction came up with no ucation ended here Saturday,concrete suggestions. Group with a teview of more than 150'members, split into two fac- recommendations made by the tions, did go on record as fav- 1,000 delegates coring instruction but they were Although the conference as a poles apart on the specifics of whole took no official'action on'such a program the suggestions, many of the A statement from the group points raised are expected to,said? "The majority . be- be brought to the attention of lieves religious education should the Ontario government be part of our school system, Recommendations will be both elementary and secondary, compiled and forwarded to the|while the minority . vigorously 15 organizations that sponsored'disagreed with a program for the conference. It will be up to| religious education in public them 'to use their influence! schools." on the government to effect' Minority spokesman Ben Kay- changes fetz of Toronto said his fac- Almost every aspect of the tion does not want religion re- province's educational system moved from public schools, *'but was examined in detail by 33 we don't want religious instruc- studybgroups that met simul- tion given as a course, like taneously during the three-day mathematics." gathering. Mrs. Dorothy Ivay of Ottawa Among the problems debated said that a survey of eastern were the financing of education' Ontario showed about 20 per and religious instruction in the cent of the children in that re- school gion would receive no religious Several study groups recom- education if it weren't for the mended that surveys be made school instruction given of grant structures. Concern' A proposal by Dr. Kenneth was expressed that the mount-|Prueter, superintendent of Eto- ing costs of education would|bicoke township public schools, prove too heavy a burden for for the creation of a noh-gov- the municipal taxpayer. More/ernment institute for curriculum, provincial aid to municipalities;research in Ontario, was sup- was urged. ported by many study groups watching a Hamilton foot ball)at New Westminster, B.C. -- w.| dible within the chamber: the action was dictatorial and "Open the door of this House Sid he would be back today. in the name of the elected mem-| The councillor's seat was de- ber of Whitehorse East." clared vacant following a eset anerree speaker's ruling e oy gee ; berlist could not hold the seat weekly Huntingdon Gleaner. : . 7 , while a firm in which he had Toronto -- Frederick Albert!,, interest accepted a subcon- Waghorne, 73, former president)+,.6t on a council works pro- of the Ontario Lacrosse Associ- ject ation and the Toronto Hockey : eague, Toronto--William Arthur Ly- diatt, 81 founder of the maga- Of 1,129 Norwegian students zine Marketing, who received Studying outside their country the Award of Merit from the in 1960, there were 400 in West Association of Canadian Adver-|Germany, 300 in England and tisers in 1941. '200 in the U.S. MOST IN GERMANY iands. ; "Tt would be the kind of job I'd like to take on,' Mr. Pear- son said. Greek Ship Freed Off Pancake Shoal SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont (CP)--The Japan-bound Greek freighter Anvrakikos, stranded on Pancake shoal in Lake Su- nerior's Whitefish Bay since Thursday, was freed Sunday after cargo was removed Three tugs and two scows un- 4 loaded the ship after efforts to| % tow it off the rocks failed. Then! the Anvarakikos was towed here for examination. The ship had put out from Duluth, Minn., laden with scrap iron. ' ~ land Spencer had gone hunting Mongoose Lake, 72 miles\ROOED BY CURLERS north of the Soo Returning to the mainland at Hardman said he was about Espanola Saturday night, Mr 100 yards away when there was Pearson was met by mixed ap- ~, sa an explosion and the cabin he Plause and booing when he ar- SAULT STE. MARIE, Mich. ana Spencer occupied became Tived at a banquet of celebrat- (AP)--The heroic rescue efforts a flaming inferno inside. Spen- {08 curlers attending a Royal of Alvyn D. Hardman, 19-year-' oer had been attempting to kin- Canadian Legion district bon- old student at the Soo branch . spiel. of Michigan Tech, have proved in vain. The friend whose life Hardman tried to save at the risk of his own -died Saturday night. Hardman is confined by sev- ere arm and hand burns to a hospital in neighboring . Sault Ste. Marie, Ont. His friend, 21-|, year-old John Spencer of Hes- jpeller, Ont., died in the same on Heroism Fails To Save Life Truly as Ca dle a wood stove fire with gas- oline. Hardman dashed into the However, he made a non-pol burning cabin and hauled out itica! speech and was applauded Spencer, whose clothing was loudly at the end burning off. Then he dashed a Mr. Pearson arrived back in mile and a half to an Algoma the capital by train todap. He Central Railway section repair 'S Scheduled to fly to Regina p and asked that an_air- Tuesday to address the Saskat- ine be summoned by tele: chewan Liberal Federation. : At a party luncheon in Little Current he said that the econ- wood of the sugar maple omic situation -- especially un- hospital is valued for makingj;employment -- will likely be the Hardman, home in.Hespeler floors that take a high polish main political issue in the next for the Thanksgiving holidays, and resist wear general federal election. com PA CANADIAN OIL nadian as its name! n 1 tr mW Teas MAKERS OF WHITE ROSE GASOLINES e MOTOR OILS, © NORM ADVERTISI If They're Going To Congregate In Your Kitchen, Make Space For Them! Ask BROWN'S how your kitchen can be expanded and modernized without upsetting your budget. If you need special millwork (cabinets, counters, built- ins) they'll make them to order in their own mill- work shop. MATERIALS TO MODERNIZE A KITCHEN CAN COST AS LITTLE AS 4.00 A MONTH! 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