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Oshawa Times (1958-), 20 Jun 1963, p. 2

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"2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 1963 GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN Claimed PRIVATE HOME PLAN FOR AGED PRAISED Chairman R. Cecil Bint of the five-man Committee of Management for Hillsdale Manor did not take too kindly to remarks herein of last June 6. This became apparent Monday night before City Council gave second reading to a bylaw approving a debenture of $480,000 for an annex to Hillsdale (it now goes to the Ontario Municipal Board for approval before it returns to Council for a third reading -- half the amount will be paid by the Province.) Mr. Bint was kind enough to refer to this department as "the popular columnist" as he embarked on some per- sonal views; whether such extravagant praise was de- served, or whether it was but another indication of Mr. Bint's over-generous nature is unimportant. What irked him especially was our reference to Al- derman Norman Down, his Hillsdale committee collea- gue, which read, in part: "What prompted Mr. Down's mild outburst was the fact that plans were readily advancing on Council for a proposed $480,000 annex to Hillsdale Manor. "Mr. Down didn't say that the Hillsdale annex (to house 100) was not needed. There is too much evidence to the contrary. What he said, in ALDERMAN BINT effect, was this: "The City should be looking for ways to curb spending and here was an opportunity, Why would it not be possible for the City to have some senior citizens housed in private homes instead of in the Manor? "Such a plan. had worked well in a Northern Ontario City and had saved the municipality much money. Would it not be worth a try here, especially on the eve of 1963 which . was to be a tough one financially for the City? Thus the annex could be delayed until the financial picture was: better." WAS THIS SUGGESTION 60 UNREASONABLE? Mr. Bint tried desperately Monday to create the impress- ion that the Private-Homes-For-The-Aged-Plan was unrealis- tic except in communities where there was no official home for the aged, such as Hillsdale Manor. The official records for the Department of Welfare, Queen's Park (under whose supervision Mr. Bint's committee *-operates) proves something else again. They prove that the Home Plan (inaugurated by an Qmendment to the Ontario Welfare Act in 1957) is highly leasible, practical. These records also prove that the Home Plan is working with great success today in such Ontario municipalities as Welland, Fort William, Hamilton and Toron- to where senior citizens are boarded with private families under the close supervision of the Provincial Department of Welfare and the municipalities. Mr. Bint said Monday that he would like to make some "personal" remarks on the matter. He then proceeded to read off a letter, with the help of the clerk, Some aldermen were confused. They didn't know whether the letter repre- sented Mr. Bint's 'personal views" or the official views of the committee. "Who. wrote this weeping-towel epitaph?' interrupted Mayor Lyman Gifford. "It's sniping. We know the addition is needed to Hillsdale. But look around at our debenture debt. We are not in a position to build more. I understand the home-care program is working well in Welland. We may be forced to adopt this plan.' His Worship described Mr. Bint's remarks as "dogged". He said that they had nothing to do with the bylaw. , Mr. Bint admitted authorship of the letter. Chairman Hayward Murdoch refused to include it in the Council min- utes. PLEASE BRING ON THE CRYING TOWEL To return to the letter: Mr. Bint claimed that elderly persons are "unwilling"' to accept accommodation in private homes in municipalities, which also have homes for the aged ('Medical and nursing attention of a professional nature would be practically non- existent," he added). ; Mr. Noble Drew, director of the Homes for the Aged ~branch, of the Department of Welfare, emphatically denied this statement Tuesday. The Department is ready "'to sit down with the Hillsdale Manor committee -- and has been for some. time -- with a view to setting wp a program in Oshawa whereby senior citizens could be boarded with "approved" private families "They would be specially chosen homes where elderly per- sons would be warmly received and encouraged," said Mr. Drew . Mr. Drew continued: "We sometimes refer to this as our Adopt-a-Grandparent Program -- it is especially desirable for active, elderly peo- ple who sincerely want to become part of a friendly family, even one with children. We would like to emphasize one thing -- at no time would we ever consider sending bed- ridden elderly people, or ones who require any specialized care, to private homes." ; The Department was most anxious to expand this plan which is for elderly persons who can look atter themselves but should not be alone. : Said Mr. Drew: "Is it simply not so that elderly people will not accept this Home Plan in communities where there are alreaqy homes for the aged. How about Welland, which has had 9 home for the aged for many years?" As for Mr. Bint's suggestion that there would be no games room, entertainment or adequate sanitary facilities in such privaté homes, Mr. Drew said: "Such accommodations as these undoubtedly are plentiful * in places like Hillsdale Manor, but I can take you to many of our private homes for elderly persons where the same accom- modations, the same happy atmosphere, exists -- what is more, we insist on it." * THEY AGREE ON ONE POINT Mr. Drew agreed with Mr. Bint on one point -- persons requiring special or bed care could not be properly cared for in this type of private home for the aged." So there it is Mr. Bint -- Queen's Park has left the door open for your committee to open negotiations for the estab- ment of such a system which is not only highly satisfactory, but most economical as well. Tn an Austerity Year this 1s. important. LITTLE NOTES FROM HERE AND THERE Wayne Bradford Leslie, 19, of Oshawa, had a charge of careless driving distnissed against him in Collingwood this week after his lawyer successfully pleaded that the "'S" had been left out of his name on the summons (the typewriter of F. W. Maile, JP, simply won't type a capital "S". Who was his lawyer? Terence V. Kelly, of course. . . . Alderman Cephas Gay is attending the annual convention of the Ontario Traffic Conference in Port Arthur with Robert F. Richardson, City Traffic manager, (and outgoing president of the OTC) and Sgt. Norm Smythe of the Traffic division of City Police. They should return with some new information on one-way traffic surveys in other municipalities. . . . City Clerk Roy Barrand is in Honey Harbor, Ont., for the annual convention of the Municipal Clerks' and Finance Officers' Association of Ontario. OTTAWA (CP)--Research and development in the Canadian steel industry has lagged for years but now is in 'a healthy state of infancy," the National Productivity Council has re- ported, The council's report, made public Wednesday, suggests that the research infant should be nurtured carefully by the indus- try if it intends to remain com- petitive in world and domestic markets. : Generally the industry is thriving, the report indicates. Last year steel exports ex- ceeded imports for the first time. Annual expansion of about six per cent likely would con- tinue. But industry performance since 1950 was not due to re- search and development. It was due to dynamic and_ skilled management, a 30-per-cent in- crease in Canada's population, more. steel consumption, and government tariffs, taxation in- centives and policy. "In the future, the role of Ca- nadian research and develop- ment may become more vital. 'Proposal Would Make Quebec | MONTREAL (CP)--Some in- fluential members of Quebec's unborn wing of the New Demo- cratic Party are proposing an overhaul of the constitution that would give "the state of Que- bec" virtual independence. in a working paper prepared for the provincial NDP's policy con- vention to be held later. The paper released Wednes- day was prepared by Andre| |'Heureux, joint national secre-| |tary of the NDP and the party's| key organizer in Quebec, Michel |Chartrand, former provincial |CCF leader, and Jacques-Yvan | Morin, professor of international jlaw at the University of Mont- real. The |'Heureux - Chartrand- Morin paper proposes such things as a "president'"' for Que- bec, to replace the present lieu- tenant-governor. In this connection, Mr. |'Heu- reux says that enactment of all |Quebec laws in her Majesty's jname is "old ha: and should be |done away with." All judicial matters in civil and criminal law would come under Quebec's jurisdiction. So would the appointment of judges. At present, the Criminal Code is framed by Parliament and Superior Court judges are eral government. Jurisdiction over broadcast- ing, publishing, the press, cul- tural affairs, education, rail and air transportation within Quebec and a host of other matters in/provinces do not have divorce which the federal authority now|courts. The Senate divorce com- : Nici shares responsibility would fall/mittee hears the evidence and get age former war minis- [the Senate passes approved pe-|ter, John Profumo admitted e|phers aga. nst the Canadian) in the|4ffair with play-girl Christine | Keeler and Macmillan admit- under Quebec's. control, In fiscal matters, Quebec} would have priority rights over) |"'all sources of revenues neces-| sary to the development of a | social-democratic state." | The l'Heureux - Chartrand-| |Morin paper would gran't Que-| jbec power to establish a state! |within its territory. Quebec| j;would have a voice in the fram-} jing of tariff duties and mone-) Steel Research Healthy Freer international trade, re- stricted trade blocs or w rid. wide recession cou!d cause a de- luge of steel imports if our com- petitive position should weak. en," STRESSES WORK OF FIRMS The report stresses the work of Canada's four 'integrated' steel companies--that is, those largest specialty steel producer. Together the five turn ut 90 per cent of Canada's steel. In a council survey, they were asked about plans for changes in research and development in the future. Two companies said they had such plans. Two said they didn't. Onc didn't reply, "A quickening pace of activ- ity was sensed but decisive for- mulations of research policy and objectives were not forth- coming," the report said. The study found that one Jap- anese steel producer does 10 times as much research and de. velopment as all Canadian com- panies combined. The most re- search-minded American steel companies spent five times as much on research. The Canadian companies were not doing as much out-| side research--such as in gov- ernment labs and universities--| with blast furnaces--and the}, gun shop owner, were retrac- ing the route of Sir Alexander Mackenzie, 18th century Ca- nadian explorer who blazed a trail to the Arctic Ocean, Fer- U.S. canoeists take a pause from paddling at Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., after crossing Lake Superior the hard way in 24 hours. Ben Ferrier (left), biologist from PADDLING PAIR FOLLOWS MACKENZIE nearly 6,000 miles in the past seven years, later headed for Lake Huron following a trip down the St. Mary's River. He expects to complete his Independent Ito por exist, and wasn't likely, ---- The proposals are contained) were contributing only one-fifth \"as might reasonably be ex-| 60-year-old | pected."' Co-operative research) Grand Marais, Minn., and Ken- | between the integrated compan-| neth Rusk, 45, a Madison, Wis., trip at New York City Aug. 21. --(CP Wirephoto) rier, who has paddled his aluminum canoe alone for KAPUSKASING (CP)--Eleven of 19 settlers charged with non- capital murder were committed for. trial by Magistrate W. S, Gardner Wednesday. Evidence will be heard today against the eight remaining set- tlers all involved in the northern logging violence (early this year during which three men were shot and killed. Doctor Locates Clue In Action Of Thalidomide LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- Dr. Joyce B. Boylen of Montreal told the Canadian Federation of Biological Societies annual con- ference Wednesday she has dis. ;covered what she believes is the 'first step in tracing the action of the baby-deforming drug tha- lidomide. : Dr, Boylen, employed in the research department of Frank W. Horner Limited, one of two companies which for a short | time produced the drug in Can- ada, reported on experiments | with chicken embryos. | Indications are that one of the drug's derivatives and not the | drug itself is the cause of de. formities, Dr. Boylen said. Injecting these derivatives | As tor oniversity support, only| INTERPRETING THE NEWS one of the five big steel com. | panies matched the national av-| }erage of all corporations--uni-| |versity contributions equal to| | 317 per cent of before-tax prof. its. Another steel company was jnot far below. The other three |the national average. NDP Blockade By ROD CURRIE Canadian. Press Staff Writer many political observers have| dimmed his chances. The big problem facing Con-| given a slight edge to Reginald) -- " ( |; Prime| Maudling, 46, chancellor of the fine impression when, as lord|in ¢ servatives who insist Successor For Mac . 'Problem For Tories however,|in recent byelections have|from public sale in Canada and In recent days, separately, Dr. Boylen found that deformities were produced just as if the drug itself had been used. Dr. Boylen also found what was suspected by doctors inves- tigating cases of deformities in human babies--that there is a narrow time limit during the gestation or incubation period 11 Loggers Face Trial For Murder Twenty settlers were com. mitted for trial in April by Magistrate Gardner but after an appeal by. defence counsel M. J, Haffey of Toronto the Ontario Supreme Court ordered new hearings for 19 of the men on the grounds that identification evidence had not been complete, Paul Emile Coulombe's com. mittal order was upheld. MEN COMMITTED The 11 committed Wednesday were: Jean Marié Larouche, 32, Val Rita; Francois Larouche, 57, his father; Victor Tremblay, 52, Val Rita; Gillies Murray, 28, and his brother Heribert, 25; Leonce Tremblay, 28, all of Harty; Noel Drochu, 18, Flori- ent Boucher, 43, Mattice; Ubald Germaine, 51, Lake Ste. Ther- ese; Mare D'Alaire, 20, Fau- quier; Josef Groleau, 31, Lake St. Therese. Magistrate Gardner said any evidence given at the present preliminary hearing would be considered as additional evi- dence since that already given against Coulombe would apply to the 19 other men. The shooting was at Reesd Siding, 32 miles west of here, Feb. 11 when a mob of 400 strik- ing bushworkers stormed a pulpwood stockpile area. They pushed aside 12 provincial po- lice officers and 138 of them were later convicted and fined $200 each on charges of unlaw- ful assembly, The Reesor Siding clash grew out of efforts of the Lumber and Sawmill Workers Union (CLC) members to stop independent settlers from shipping pulpwood to the strike-bound Spruce Falls Power and Paper Company here. during which the drug does most damage. Thalidomide was withdrawn | European: countries when it was Edward Heath, 46, made aj found that it caused deformities hildren whose mothers had appointed and paid by the fed-| Halts Divorce Procedures | Most spectators of the day-to-| man but his position would be|the talks, hig political star |day drama unfolding at West-| influenced by whether the pro-| Waned. | OTTAWA (CP) -- Parliament- ja foundland petitioners has' ground to a complete halt. The New Democratic Party's |divorce blockade in the Com- jmons has proved so- effective |that the Senate divorce commit- jtee has heard no petitions this) session and plans none until the deadlock is broken, | | Senator Arthur Roebuck (L-- \Ontario), committee chairman, |said in an interview Wednesday jthe blockade is a "terrible out- rage." "Residents of Quebec and Newfoundland who do not op- pose divorce on religious jgrounds are being deprived of a jright guaranteed to them at the jtime of Confederation," he said. Parliament grants divorces to |petitioners from Quebec and titions on to the Commons. The NDP blockade Commons employs procedural roadblocks and protracted dis-|te d ) |cussion of individual bills to pre-| by the security service and his ministers, vent final approval. Senator Roebuck said that as/| a result of the blockade there is|Kind of inquiry and this will |bank and to pass laws concern-|a backlog of 494 divorce peti-|help the labor party keep the jing consumer credit and trade|tions approved by the Senate Pot boiling for months. during the last two sessions of the previous Parliament. In ad- dition, solved ifself in time, or faded Newfoundland. because the two| from the\glare of publicity. | In Minister Macmillan must go--| exchequer. and soon--is lack of agreement} on a successor, |tremely popular as party chair- "|minster since the Profumo af-/ posed bill to permit peers to re-| fair burst into the open have a) nounce their titles and thus en- short list--about six contenders. | ter the Commons is passed be- But in the jockeying for posi-|fore an election. tion the odds change by. the! Jn the same position is Lord hour and no clear leader has) Home, the foreign secretary. yet emerged. Until one does, Macmillan MACLEOD TOP QONTENDER presumably can relax a bit. lain Macleod, 49, leader of the Time has always been his| House, co-chairman of the party and one of the best brains in most loyal friend and there are a few--even at this late date--|the government, has long been surrounding his firing of one-| management of the Profumo af.| third of his cabinet, the Skybolt|fair and the parfy's bad record! Profumo, that Macmillan was dilemma, the Vassall spy sen-|---- sation, record winter unemploy-| ment and other issues. | Raiding Charge Rejected By CLC TIME SOLVED THEM In eath case the problem) But the present scandal will) gj ot soon blow over. It devel-|2" Labor Congress has re- |Brotherhood of Railway, Trans- port and General Workers, it was learned Tuesday. | The decision was made by the \CLC's executive council last) There still has to be some| week and communicated to the) two unions Tuesday. | The ORT accused the brother-| : hood of stealing 600 ORT mem- Many backbenchers, resigned|bers in winning formal bargain- d he was not kept informed} to the prime minister's fate, |ing rights for 19,000 CNR em-! more than 500 new di-|feel he should go as soon as ployees. }see Macmillan through Mon. who still think he may see this}a top contender, But his close| day's. vote of confidence only if through as he did the furore|association with Macmillan in| he promised to resign. |thinking of OTTAWA (CP) -- The soa ae jected a raiding charge filed by] |the Order of Railroad Telegra-| privy seal, he was handling) Lord Hailsham, 55, was ex-|Britain's Common Market nego-) nancy. tiations. But, w) collapse of Some observers have a sev- enth man on their list--Health| Minister Enoch Powell, the un- | known quantity in the Profumo drama who was reported threat- ened to resign. Finally he a hig support to Macmil. |Jan, At the time there was specu. | | lation a deal had been made-- that the government agreed to There was talk, even before| retiring, waiting only for one man to emerge head and shoulders above all other possible successors. Now disagreement over the top can- didates may give the edge to an outsider who would be the favorite of few but acceptable! to the majority. | The fact remains, however, | that the throne is not yet va-| cant. Many will believe Mac.| millan is going only after he} has gone. taken the drug during preg-| | EYE EXAMINATIONS PHONE 723-4191 by eppointment F. R. BLACK, O.D. '136 SIMCOE ST. NORTH © DECORATE -- the way fun center. family. 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'ary policies and in various ad-| ministrative bodies at Ottawa. 'but have not been heard. | WEATHER FORECAST Forecasts issued by the Tor-| onto weather office at 5 a.m.:| Synopsis: A vigorous storm is moving eastward into southern Quebec from central Ontario. Clouds and much cooler temper- atures will settle over the lower lakes tonight. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Niagara, western Lake Ontario, southern 'Geor- gian Bay, Windsor, Hamilton, Toronto: Cloudy and much cooler tonight, partly cloudy and continuing cool Fri-| day, Winds becoming northerly 20 to 25 this afternoon. astern Lake Ontario, Hali- burton: Partly cloudy and cool Friday, Winds becoming north- ha Near 20 by evening. orthern Georgian Bay, Al- eae a, Timagami, Cochrane, Nate River, Sault 'Ste, Marie, | orth Bay, Sudbury: Partly leloudy and continuing cool Fri-| Cloudy, Cooler | During Frida London, | 1 c U Kitchener ..... Mount Forest...... Wingham .. Hamilton ... St. Catharines. Toronto Peterborough .... Trenton Killaloe Sault Ste. Marie... Kapuskasing ..... White River... Moosonee .. Timmins ..... INVEST IN IRON About $220,000,000 has been invested in Liberia to work vast iron ore deposits in the Nimba mountains. : day. Northerly winds 10 to 20) diminishing to 15 pron Hy Forecast Te Low tonight, hi Windsor .... 4a St. Thomas.. 48 70 London ...-+0ss.., 45 68 SHORGAS HEATING & APPLIANCES Industrial and Commercial The established, reliable Gas Dealer in your area. 31 CELINA ST. (Corner of Athol) 728-9441 1 Mperatures | igh Friday | 70 NOW IS THE TIME To hove that carpet or chest- erfield cleaned professionally in Oshawa's Original Carpet Cleaning Centre . . . where fully guaranteed satisfaction is assured. Phone 728-4681 prime minister who narrowly TAKE THIS SPECIAL OFFER AD TO YOUR DAIRY QUEEN = ===" time to establish himself before the general election some time before October, 1964. R, A. 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