| 2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, Jancary 16, 1963 GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN. CONVENTION POLICY NEEDS REVISION Somebody is going to dream up a political slogan like this one of these days: 'Join the Oshawa Board of Education and See North America." For those who suspect that this is an exaggeration, there aré the recent parting words of Trustee Robert Stroud, 1962 chairman, who inadvertently threw the spotlight once again on the Board's convention policy (and bill). Mr. Stroud didn't actually say so, but he left the im- ptession that he thought it was too costly (without men- tioning the cost), He was careful to point out that the © three retiring Board mem- * bers (Trustees Greer, Mur- | phy and himself) didn't at- 'tend any of the 1962 con- ventions on the Board's far- flung itinerary. At, least one other trustee never attends conventions, so that it would seem that the trustees' convention cake is pretty well sliced up among eight Board members -- the total cost is approximately $6,000 annually, but it should be remembered that this figure does not repre- sent the Board's true conven- tion bill because it does not Arrow locates crewmen the German freighter Lohen- about to abandon ship after &rin capsized in the stormy Bal- VICTIM OF ANGRY SEA Tuesday. The skipper. of the ship drowned in the icy wa- tic Sea near'Kiel, Germany, ters after supervising the res- from Frankfurt) Dairy Industry Aware cue of his crew, --(AP Wirephoto via radio MD Education 'Training ' Rough, Tough Political Battle Seen By Camp OTTAW A (CP) -- Forewarn- were indications of varying ings of a rough, tough political opinion. Bae fight, with Prime Minister Dief- A resolutions committee sug- sdpaker a prime target, came gestion of a Mea | gud t before the Progressive Conserv- aid fund was. eriti 8 the opening -day sessions ative party's national ccnven tion Thursday night. Quebec. delegates. ve a The warning from the party's other which suggested a. fede new organization chief, Dalton tax cut cn personal and corpo- Camp, highlighted the day-long ration income taxes of five per theme of the Conservative brass cent on current rates, --accusations against the Lib- And the party image-tmaketi erals of unprecedented slander came in for sdne_ triti¢ism from a candidate for t and vilification of the Prime | Minister, pd of the -- boy Said Mr, Camp, 42-year-old sive Conservatives, enry Toronto advertising executive: gang late today and Satur-|Beaumont, 30, of Calgary said The party needs a "hard-nosed, ay. in an interview. the party will. tough-minded, resourceful" or: Mr. Diefenbaker left them|have to rid itself of poverty ganization with a will to win) With words which some dele-|agency tectniques of men over Liberal "plans to play|sates related to the nuclear| Senator Grosart and Mr, Camp rough." arms issue--the Canadian gov-|if it is to gain lasting success, Every major speaker--Trade|¢rnment's policies will be) But the current YPC presi+ dent, Pierre Durand of Mont- real, disagreed sharply, saying Minister Hees, Finance Minis-|""made in Canada" policies, ter Nowlan, National President) The nuclear resolution calls -- + ~----Ifor acceptance of defensivelin a report to the convention ' |atomic warheads for Canadian|that if Senator Grosart, a for Charges Dismissed 'ores in NATO and NORAD if|mer advertising executive, re- es age AA RE S prove|ceived only 99.9 per 7 "e . jfruitless by next December, It)port, Mr. Camp would get 1 In Abortion Death was only one on which there/per cent, e TORONTO (CP)--A man and Sytem Spotlight Shifts To Tory Meeting Senator G. §, Thorvaldson, re- tiring director Senator Allister Grosart, Mr. Camp and Mr. Diefenbaker himself -- tanase the Liberals with responsibility for what they saitl was a cam- paign of "'lies," "dirty stories" and "slander." DISCUSS RESOLUTIONS Today more than 1,500 dele- gates broke up into provincial caucus meetings to. discuss the convention resolutions, includ- 'ng one relating to acceptance of nuclear arms, which will be /34-year-old millinery worker jlast October. The assize court) jury deliberated three hours fol- lowing a four-day trial, Of National Problems | Changes Urged The jury also found Frederick Walch, 39, and his wife, Faith,| : : : w ' a e eat gid _ "| spotlight shifted from Parlia-|devoted a major chunk of his TORONTO (CP)--Changes in'35, not guilty of intending to po ®t Si 1g makin ] ir best! ti fe tha Dnlatlol acy chicks at 39) A ;ment Hill this week to the) speech to the Liberals, accusing sce egg sp etiaesha cai cer eee' Prosucers' Marketing a bererey training snd\ orocure an abortion on Doris} Chateau Laurier Hotel, just ajthat party of deliberate slander However, a resolution calling| Board, seek'ng a four-cent sub-| mended in the report on a study|Mori, an unmarried woman wee tne ee Gakat | we eh aohinst Prins Meet Seer for the gradual lowering of the sidy on cheddar cheese exports about to be published here. died in an apartment bathroom |th_. Partinmont, Balldteks rom » lDagey the government's support price was defeated byte at wo except the | The a Ping ben gs after an illega. operation. Progressive Conservative LOOKING HEALTHY a clos 7 S , Ss. years ago a e SU. | i ; i, yt ony eo noting. that} 4. motion asking the govern-|jhe College of General Practice pee and maniacs mingled with) Mr, Diefenbaker spent most " Ai ia Pek ste iry| ment to discontinue granting)/of Canada. It surveyed almost| ee 5 may gays " . any ag Kise surplus pro ge vce 9 sity 'eapital farm loans for dairy ex-/all aspects of the practice of! thas across the country, gath-|glad-handing with hundreds 0 PBaataderd is 5a th NG vel vijj| Dansion was tabled because del-|8§ general practitioners in On-| ere " bette out a new report| delegates. from the party's rid- ter, Wetec the lower pg 'legates feared such a moveltario and Nova Scotia. | "4 the | eltefs and policies of|ing associations, Almost invari- butter reaches its own level. | vould create a severe handicap Directed by Dr. Kenneth Clute] e Srvomiing political move-| ably, they told him how fit he Mr. Hamilton also said Tues-| for. young farmers. The motion ot tha" pial of ile gehadl 'of men looked. As if to emphasie how sORN GASER include expenses incurred by the hired-help (officials, teachers, High and Public school principals, etc.) That would make for interesting reading on a cold night-- a breakdown of the Board's total convention bill for 1962. Mr. Stroud reported that the Oshawa Board was repre- sented at the following conventions last year: OTTAWA (CP)--The political, any time, Every key spéaket LONDON, Ont. (CP) --The| Dairy Farmers of Canada ended its annual meeting here Thursday with a policy state- ment that the dairy industry has developed a "growing awareness" that the problems it faces must be tackled on a national, rather than regional, basis The organization, representing 300,000 Canadian dairymen, for- | mally accepted in the statement the responsibility for "an. im- price of 64 cents a pound would, . But delegates approved a mo- Woman Convicted | Of Manslaughter | TORONTC (CP)--A 34-year-| With Parliament American Association of School Administrators, Atlantic City, February 17-22; Canadian Conference on Education, Montreal, March 4-8; Associated High Schools Boards. of On- tario Convention in Kingston, May 19-21; The Canadian Educa- tion Association Convention in Edmonton, September 19-21; The halted until Canadian School Trustees' Association Convention in Calgary, September 23-25; The Public School Trustees' Association Convention in Sarnia, September 29-October 3. The Associa- tion of School Business Officials in Dallas, Texas, October 6- 10. The Urban and Rural School Trustees' Association, Niag- ara Falls, Ont., June 3-5. Trustees do work hard on occasion (as do City council- lors). No suggestion is intended that they should be stripped of their convention travel rights, but the Board's present pol- icy represents nothing more than another expensive frill, one of questionable merit in the education system of today. How much useful information is actually garnered on these long treks to Edmonton, Calgary, Dallas and Atlantic City? Did anyone ever hear of a trustee presenting the Board with his or her report on, say, the Association of School Business Officials Convention in Dallas, Texas, or the Canadian Education Association Convention in Edmonton ? The public is not fed up with the principle of trustees' conventions, but it is opposed to the frequency of far-off conventions (of the type so popular with the Oshawa Board) which eat up valuable tax dollars. The 1962 policy allowed each trustee two conventions in ' the Province and two outside annually, The outside -- On- tario ones are not exactly "'junkets,"' but they are an unnec- essary Board luxury in a City of this size. Such suggestions will stir up protests (or be quietly ig- nored) but the day has arrived for a drastic over-haul and revision of the Board's current convention policy affecting trustees and hired-help alike. Such action would not go down too well with the travel agents (who do a lush trade with the Board), but it would be welcomed by the people, who pay the bills -- the taxpayers. All they ask is "fewer conventions and not so far away." PARKING AUTHORITY SPEAKER DUE The Oshawa C of C has lined up a special speaker for its Transportation Committee Luncheon at the Hotel Genosha, January 25. He is Fred Weber, general manager, the Parking Author- ity, Kitchener, Ontario. In this regard, it is interesting to note that Sudbury, Hamilton, Ottawa and Toronto have established Parking Authorities, to name a few. The Chamber has recommended to City Council that Osh- awa establish a P-A, but Council has declinéd to take action on the recommendation at least until the Transportation Study Report has been completed. CAR MUSEUM TO OPEN IN SPRING Dear Jack: You recently referred to the new location of the Oshawa Chamber of Commerce secretariat as being in "the building of the Chamber's new Antique Auto Museum." To help further the establishment and development of an Historical Automotive Museum, the Oshawa C of C is renting Space for its office and Visitors Information Centre in the building that will be the site of the Oshawa Automotive Museum (99 Simcoe street south). The museum will have historic and antique automobiles, but it is not intended to be an antique car museum. It will have exhibits of associated automotive parts, as well as his- toric automobiles, It will reflect the growth and will preserve for posterity the historic development of the automotive industry over the past 50 to 60 years, particularly as it de- veloped in Oshawa; making our community the automotive production centre of Canada today. The museum will be opened this Spring. Sincerely, DOUGLAS A. FISHER, General Manager, Oshawa C. of C. "THE PROSPECTS FOR TOMORROW" "I am pleased to be with you tonight because it is always & pleasure to come to Oshawa. Some may wonder why it is a pleasure for a Liberal leader to come into a riding that has not been noted as a Liberal stronghold in recent years. My answer is that past designations do not interest me half as much as the prospects for tomorrow. . . . Oshawa is an old Indian word meaning 'the crossing of a stream'. In a word, Oshawa means 'ford'. Everyone in Canada knows, however, that Oshawa really doesn't mean 'ford' at all, it means Gen- tral Motors. If the people of Oshawa can change 'ford' into General Motors I have no doubt that politically they can, and will, change NDP into Liberal." John Wintermeyer, Provincial Liberal Leader, at OCCI, | $210,000 budget approved Thurs- day he doesn't agree with sug- gestions that Canada should subsidize exports. mediate step-up in producer- sponsored advertising' to sell lthe industry's products to the | consumer. In line with its enhanced awareness, the convention urged the. formation of a na- tional dairy authority with the jpower to deal with "matters affecting the welfare of Cana- |dian dairy producers." TO em Up to $114,500 of a six-month day is to be channeled into an advertising campaign to sell producers on a new voluntary deduction system designed to fi- nence promotion of their prod- ucts. Under the new system, al! producers are asked for an ini- tial contribution of one-quarter | of one per cent of all milk and jcream income for each month of the year, instead of just one, starting June 1. | Resolutions at the closing ses- |sion ranged from the federal }government's butter support price to a cheddar cheese ex- | port subsidy. MAY LOWER SUPPORTS Agriculture Minister Hamil-| But they told the commission |ton told delegates at the open- Thursday that they recognize jing session Tuesday 'some re-\ that competition is a two-way jduction" in the butter supportistreet. So they have offered to WEATHER FORECAST Colder Weather Returns Tonight Forecasts issued by the Tor- Light snow, clearing by after- onto weather office at 4:30 a.m.|noon. Turning colder again to- Synopsis: Snow is forecast for|day. Winds light increasing to most of the province today. In/northerly up to 20 by afternoon. Northern Ontario falls of three Forecast Temperatures to six inches may occur but nO | Low tonight, high Saturday more 'than an.inch or two is| Windsor ...... ees te jexpected in Southern Ontario. |st. Thomas....... 10 | Much colder weather is push-| London jing southward again behind the|Kitchener ...... storm covering all séctions of|Mount Forest..... Ontario tonight and Saturday. | Wingham ........ Lake St. Clair, Windsor:|Hamilton .... Mainly cloudy and milder to-|St. Catharines..., day. Chance of a brief period| Toronto of light snow. Partly cloudy and| Peterborough colder tonight and Saturday Trenton with an occasional snowflurry.| Killaloe .. Winds light today, northwest to| Muskoka northerly 20 Saturday. Paste Bay Lake Erie, Niagara, western Penton . Lake Ontario regions, Hamilton, | -- eels Toronto: Mostly cloudy and epee ' milder with a period of light 4 yeh ag |snow sometime today. Clearing Sault Ste Mace and turning colder tonight. ins wre. ABA EICs 6 6 | Winds light today, northwest to aa hone ae eed " -10 northerly 20 Saturday. 1 served Temperatures a yerni i Ss Lake Huron, southern Georg-|; coe oe PA lee the question of just how free free enterprise should be in the This applies especially tered banks and "near banks"--the trust and loan companies and credit un- ions, among others. The banks claim they are under too many legal restrictions to compete freely. The banks want two kinds of freedom--the abolition of | statutory six-per-cent ceiling on | bank lending rates and the right 'to make mortgage loans. 18 18 15 15 12 15 18 5 9 : 7 Dawson . jian Bay regions, London: Victoria .......... | Mostly cloudy and milder today | j, pore ves jwith a period of light snow. |Reging {Variable cloudiness and much winnipeg ee colder tonight and Saturday sau't Ste. Marie... |with snowflurries near Lake white River.. Huron and Georgian Bay. Kapuskasing ..... Winds light today, northwest to! North : DE AE northerly 20 Saturday. |Sudbury ..... Eastern Lake Ontario, Hali-| Muskoka .. burton regions: Mostly cloudy | Muskoka jand not as cold today. Some Windsor . 25 -28 -27 -2 7 0 -l -1 -1 15 day. Quebec .. Northern Georgian Bay, Tim-! Halifax .. agami regions, North Bay, Sud-| oe per the loans dairy surpluses wanted present de Free Enterprise Probed OTTAWA (CP)--The Porterjopen to the near-banks certain) the -- royal commission on banking] lending fields that, by law, have|Consider ical t ! and finance has been faced with|in effect been private preseryes|0ne year of rotating intemmship of the banks for decades. One of these is the legal priv- competition between the char-|production or manufacture, An-| cial the - so-called) other is'the right to make loans) lems. on the security of oil or other minerals still in the ground, | | willing to accept. REQUIRES EXPERTISE T. A, Boyles, deputy. general the| Manager of the Bank of Nova} Scotia, agreed under commis- sion questioning that these lend- ing fields look easy. But he said they require:a lot of expertise and the near-banks may be "reluctant'"' to enter. As a three-day hearing of the banks neared a close, Commis- sioner W. Thomas Brown of Vancouver raised this point: Most near- banks --such as trust companies--now are lim- 'shareholders' equity." Mean- while, the banks are running at about 17 times their capital and jtotal equity. Se Broa ike Senator Flays Noel Dorion For Remarks OTTAWA Jacques Flynn hit back Thurs- day night at his former cabinet jcolleague, Noel Dorion, for jmakng "false _ statements" jabout Prime Minister Diefen- baker, The senator, chairman of the Progressive Conservative party's Quebec organization, told a press conference that Mr, | Dorion's recent criticisms of the |Prime Minister were the exact |Opposite of what Mr. Dorion ; used to say when he was in the cabinet, Senator Flynn, former mines } (minister, and Mr. Dorion, for-| | mer secretary of state, were! both defeated in election last June. Mr. Dorion said in an inter- view published Mo nday by {Montreal Le Devoir that Mr. Diefenbaker does not have con- fidence in his French-speaking cabinet lieutenants and consid- ers French-speaking Canadians as just another ethnic minority that ultimately should disappear in a Canadian the federal bury: Light snow this morning, mostly ending and clearing this' afternoon. Turning colder. {Winds southerly 15 shifting to |northerly up to 20 this after- noon. HEATING & APPLIANCES SHORGAS | APPROVED The near-banks may not be "melting pot."| hygiene at the University of Toronto, the report will be pub- lished Saturday by the Univer- |sity of Toronto. Press. Somt details were made public Thurs- day. The present system of med- ical education is obsolete in some aspects, said the report. More than four-fifths of the On- tario practitioners and between ;one-half and Nova _ Scotia medical training plus to be inadequate. The report, said the system| 5 and Steele, 34, from her every Friday, 8 p.m, sharp, Freeze out, | Canadian financial community.|ilege to make loans on the secu-| does not 'prepare the student for|°@™nings as a prostitute. to|rity of goods in the process of| proper handling of patients' so-| and psychological prob- three-quarters of ay: practitioners INTERPRETING THE NEWS y resuming) well he felt, the Prime Minister old woman was convicted)Monday, observers at the Con-|dawdled for an hour in the cor- Thursday of manslaughter injservative convention are keep-|ridors on his way out of the the stabbing death of a manjing a close ear on its vibrations,| building in the late afternoon. jwho had been living off her/trying to detect any new trend, The outcome of the current Jearnings as a_ prostitute. jin government thinking. jconvention will undoubtedly Mrs, Mary Harting, 26, was| Opening day emphasis was on|have a bearing on the shape of convicted after the assize court|the need for a strong party or-|another political get - together ljury deliberated 3% hours, Mr.|Sanization for the next federal] scheduled for the same hotel \Justice George A. Gale post-\eléction, which could come atinext month, "pope neon COMING EVENTS a BINGO | Admission BSe. Tea, entige and cookies | stabbed Stevie in sell-dfence| G.M. | HARMAN _ PARK | Plant Protection | ASSICIATIRY | 'ST. JOHN'S HALL Defence lawyer James Deane jtold the jury there was no doubt) \that the attractive defendant had supported her four-year-old eucure, Park Clubhouse, | | By ALAN HARVEY Canadian Press Staff Writer | Hugh Gaitskell's illness has jtransformed the British politi- }cal outlook, By the most optimistic reck- ited by law to taking on liabil-|oning, it seems likely that the/Sketch, says Brown 'has been ities that are mo more than 124|Labor party will. have to get/in too many rows, dropped too| times their capital and other/along for many months without|many clangers, for the taste of the leadership of the man whose political rating is among the highest in Britain. The timing could hardly have _If there is to be free competi-/been more unfortunate, Before! politics. He is the darling of the tion, should the 12% limit be/entering hospital, Gaitskell ap-jleft wing and his witty pariia- removed from the near-banks? peared to stand at least an even) mentary chance of winning the next elec- |tion and with it the premier- | ship. Public opinion polls showed |him to be more popular than |Prime Minister Macmillan, | whose Conservative government lhas lost favor in recent months, When Gaitskell was elected Labor leader in December, 1955, there was some discontent in j left-wing circles. Cloth-cap so- (CP) -- Senator|cialists regarded him as '"'an-|ar intellectual," a a cold other flippin' lacklustre personality, \fish, WON HIS SPURS But the dapper, unassuming \Gaitskell won his spurs the hard way. Today his authority is unquestioned and he has #on a wide measure of acceptance outside party ranks With Gaitskell, Labor might well be favorites to win the next election, The voting deadline is still some 20 fathoms away, with the coming autumn seen las the most likely time. Without Gaitskell, Labor pros- pects might be dimmed. There is no 1eady-made suc- cessor in sight and little time jin which a_ substitute could |prove himself. George Brown, the burly, forthright deputy leader, only narrowly defeated Harold Wil- | OSHAWA"S ORIGINAL CARPET CENTRE at Nu-Way, carpet and broad- loom has been a specialty for 18 years .., . with thousands of yards on display to select from, Gaitskell's Ills Felt By Britain after Steele had struck her. | FRIDAY, JAN. 18TH 7:45 P.M, 20 Games $8 and $10 5 -- $40 jackpots Share The Wealth DURHAM COUNTY BEEF PRODUCERS MEETING MONDAY, JAN. 21 1:30 P.M, TOWNSHIP HALL BETHANY Guest Speaker, E, A. STARR Ontorio Livestock Branch, Toronto, St, Gregory's Auditorium FRI, JAN. 18 8:30 to 1 P.M, Charles Cochrane's Orchestra | $3 per couple Tickets at door BINGO ORANGE TEMPLE SATURDAY, JAN, 19th 7:30 P.M. 20 Games -- $8 Share the Wealth 4 -- $40 Jackpots to go 1 -- $150 Jack $150 Jackpot to go | All commercial and purebred Children Under 16 Not Admitted, _ beef producers welcome, MONSTER BINGO Over $500 in Prizes SATURDAY, JAN. 19TH AT 8:00 P.M. ST. GREGORY'S AUDITORIUM SIMCOE STREET NORTH ADMISSION 50 CENTS : CHILDREN UNDER 16 NOT ADMITTED ONTARIO REGIMENT ASSOCIATION DANCE SATURDAY, JANUARY. 19th at the OSHAWA ARMORIES TO JACK SHEARER AND HIS ORCHESTRA $2.00 A COUPLE PUBLIC WELCOME _ 'NOTICE--ST. JOHN AMBULANCE HOME NURSING COURSE COMMENCING MONDAY, JAN. 21st --7:30 P.M. at the {son in a recent ballot for the No. 2 spot. Brown is an out-} | spoken man, disliked in the left |wing of the party. "TOO MANY CLANGERS" One London paper, The Daily jmost Labor MPs." Wilson, at 46 two years younger than Brown, once was the boy wonder of British speeches draw full jhouses, But moderate minded | Socialists distrust him as an op- portunist. | Other prospects include Pat- jrick Gordon Walker; an intel- lectual who was Commonwealth relations secretary when Labor was in power; shadow chan- cellor James Callaghan; and |lawyer Sir Frank Soskice, whose name comes up when- ever compromise candidates e mentioned. PREMIUMS AS LOW AS 25.00 PER YEAR @ Budget Terms Available @ Easy Monthly Payments . Schofield-Aker Limited 360 KING WEST Cochrane, White River, Al- Industrial and | oma regions, Sault Ste. Marie: Commercial The established, reliable Gos Dealer in your area. 31 CELINA ST. (Corner of Athol) 728-9441 January 15, 1963. ST. GREGORY'S AUDITORIUM SIMCOE STREET NORTH MIXED CLASSES, FEE $3.00 , CLEANERS end LAUNDERERS OSHAWA - PORT HOPE WHITBY - COBOURG BOWMANVILLE - SCARBORO Curtains, Drapes, Blankets, Rugs QSHAWA'S ONLY UNIONIZED SHOP 723-4631 $0 MILL PHONE 728-4681 NU-WAY RUG CO. LTD. 174 MARY ST. PHONE 723-2265 @ Don Ellison @ Gerry Osborne @ Ralph Schotield @ Reg Aker GOOD FOOD Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner BUSINESS MEN'S LUNCH 12-2 P.M Hotel Lancaster BACKS DE GAULLE | should not be tied to the apron SOUTHAMPTON, England Strings of the United States." (Reuters)--Field Marshal Vis.| He told reporters he is against | S Britain entering the Common | count Montgomery said Thurs-| Market--not for economical but| Way he thinks President de/for politica! reasons. "The Gaulle is "absolutely right" in| United States should not push| his | ation that '"France) countries ground," he said. | For. further information call St. John Ambulance 723-7977 i| © AMPLE FREB PARKING