; ats SEE HERE MR. "See here, Mr. Callaghan," head?" Replied the five-foot, CALLAGHAN! OTTAWA (Special) -- A back- and allowance increase for MPs, cratic member for Timmins '|ployees, are used, in the Professional Firefighters' "S| Association for eight years prior to his election to parliament in 1957, "T participated to a great ex tent in negotiations and arbitra. tion and I found that indepen. dent arbitration boards, when considering pay and remunera- tion of service personnel, considering the three main fact- work and the gross product,"" Mr, Martin explains. is that service much as production workers, living or the gross national pro- duct." DOES RESEARCH His research 'into parliamen- tary pay reveals that from con federation in 1867 to 1873 the indemity for MPs was $1,600 a from 1873 to 1901 and then raised $1,500, In 1906 it went up to $2,500 and in 1920 to $4,000 This figure was unchanged for 25 years until 1945 when pariia- ment held three sessions and members were paid for each Sione, for a total of $12,000, In Vote To Fill Seat Left Sunday at Kinsmen. Stadium bencher member of parliamnet is striking back at public cri- ticism of the $8,000 a year pay Murdo Martin, the New Demo- argues that the $18,000 total is fully justified if arbitration board procedures for deciding increases for public service om- The Timmins' MP was active ar- rived at their final figures after ors of cost of living, hours of national "The thinking of these boards personnel, as are entitled to share in any gen- eral increase in the standard of year, It was reduced to $1,000 Pay increase Defended that same year, the $2,000 a year expense allowance was first introduced, From. 1949 to 1953 there were two sessions each year which meant $8,000 plus the $2,000 aliowance, In 1954 the figures of $8,000. and $2,000 were established as an- nual figures, regardless of the number of parliamentary ses- sions, Mr; Martin finds the cost of living has risen 76 per cent be- tween 1945 and 1962 and 32 per cent between 1949 and 1952, Ap- plying these increases to the $2,000 expense allowance estab- lished in 1945 and the $8,000 in. demnity established in 1949, he calculates that the total pay and expense should be $14,080. He then compares the number of sitting days for the first five years and the last five years of the $10,000 gross income period, The total for the first five, from 1949 to 1953, was 586 days, For the last five, from 1958 to 1962, was 676 sitting days of pariia- ment, This is an average in. crease of 15.8 per cent which, applied to the indemnity total, brings the figure to $16,304. Finally, Mr. Martin uses the gross national product, which rose from $16.5 billion in 1945 to an estimated $40 billion in 1962, Basing the figures on the GNP only, he comes up with a total of $24,300, "My experience leads me to believe an independent arbitra- tion board in all probability would arrive at some figure be- tween the $14,080, which is based on the cost of living in- dex only, and the figure of $24, 300, which is based solely on the gross national product." Mr, Martin claims, 'In view of this, the actual figure of $18,000 ap- pears to be quite in line wich modern practices of indepen- dent arbitration boards," The Timmins' MP has sent copies of his calculations to all members of parliament. While he says he personally has re- ceived very little criticism from his constituents about the raise, Albert Purdy, 52, of Rock- ton, Ont., 10 miles southeast of Galt, has a houseful of guns so many he has lost count of a A HOUSEFUL OF GUNS Henry, forerunner of the fam- ous Winchesters, while he points to a 16th-century flint- lock pistol on the wall. At them, His collection ranges from 15th-century muskets to modern. automatic _ pistols, Here he holds a model 1860 right are "pepperboxes"'--re- volving pistols with six bar. rels. Behind him are old Brit. ish Army flintlocks, Permission Is Denied Permission to change a non- conforming use to yet another non-conforming use was de- nied two owners of an auto trim shop on Simcoe street north by: the Committee of Ad- justment Wednesday night. The owners' application ask- Oshawa, died General Hospital today. OBITUARIES MRS, ELIZA TISE LANDER Mrs, Eliza Tise Lander, a resident of Hillsdale Manor, in the Oshawa awa, April 24, 1876, and was a member of Harmony United Church, She js survived by one son,! Fred of Oshawa, and four daughters, all of Oshawa, as follows: Mrs, Will Found Mrs, Lander,. the former Eliza Tise Brent, was 88, City Women Injured Three women received minor injuries in an accident involving two cars and a truck at 10:45 a.m, today, on Highway 28, just north of Lakefield. (Doris); Mrs, Chris Deutinger (Zella); Mrs, Don Harris) (Helen); and Mrs, Harold Win-| ter (Catharine), | She formerly resided at 929 King street east. She was predeceased by her husband, Oliver, November 2, Taken to St. Joseph's General Hospital with bruises were oc- cupants of one car, Mrs. Gladys Rose of Oshawa, and Miss Ann Owens of Whitby, Their condi» two-inch Willie Callaghan: against Oshawa All-Stars at there has been considerable pro-jeq for permission to convert} 1952. Mrs. Lander is resting at the/tion was described as "good", eays Aberdcen's six-foot, two- inch goalie, Tubby Ogston, "That's to leave room for my "How come there's so much halo!" Callaghan will play for wasted space above your Toronto City Soccer Club next CAPSULE NEWS Educational TV 3 p.m, in a benefit game for the Oshawa Civic Auditorium Fund drive, been successfully in Vancouver be- eration has carried out fore, REPORTS FAILURES LONDON (AP)--The British magazine Flight International reported Wednesday: the Soviet Union is believed to have had "and (AP)--Citizens test in some newspapers, He By Profumo 3 feels the MPs should have his STRATFORD ON AVON. Eng. {acts at hand to counteract any , of Shake.|Complaints they receive, speare's home district voted to-| cn : . | |day to fill John Profumo's seat ® jin the House of Commons, The High Scores jresult was awaited as an indi-| 5 For Bridge jeation of how badly the Profumo scandal has hurt Prime Minis- High scores for August 8 of Duplicate Bridge. Club ter Macmillan's Conservative party, Defeat of the Conservative GM the building to sheet metal fabrication and storage use, and to enlarge it. The area is RIB with some C2 across the road Committee Chairman Louis Hyman, QC, quoted from the Planning Act to show. that changes of use and extensions could be granted if the new use would be similar to original use (at zoning bylaw time) or if the new use would be compat- McIntosh Anderson Funeral | Home, 152 King street east) where service will be held in the chapel, Saturday, August 17 at 2 p.m, Rev. N, T. Holmes will officiate, Interment will follow jin Union Cemetery, Oshawa, |MRS, BLANCHE STEVENSON! Funeral services were held) early in August in Nottingham, }England, for Mrs, Blanche Ste- venson, a long time resident Mrs. Lander was born in Osh. Vacancies In House Criticized The driver of the other car, Mrs, Evelyn Huddart, of RR 2, Lakefield, was treated by a doctor at her home, near which the accident occurred, The truck driver, Cecil G. Kranz, of Pembroke, was not injured. Both cars and the truck were heading north, Apparently the car driven by Mrs, Huddart stopped to turn into the driveway of her home and a pile-up developed with the six failures in attempts to send|candidate, journalist Angus)were: ible to uses permitted by the ; of Oshawa, Mrs, Stevenson died/truck at the rear of it, Exten- zoning bylaw, in Nottingham on July 31, fol-/sive damage resulted to the car Workshop Open TORONTO (CP) -- Educationjthe falls, The company uses Minister Davis Wednesday offi-/the flares on Hs boats and cially opened a workshop on ed-jdredges during bad weather, tional television at the Ryer- ane ou institute of Technology here CHEQUES BILINGUAL The workshop, being attended] OTTAWA (CP)---Members of dy 50 teachers from British Co-|Parliament and their staff in Jumbia, Manitoba, Quebec and/the House of Commons now be- Ontario, is sponsored by the On-/ing paid with bilingual cheques, tario Teachers' Federation, Mr,|for the first time in the history Davis said earlier this week his|o f the Canadian Parliament @epartment hopes to institute a/The decision to issue bilingua province-wide program of edu eques was announced in the cational television within a year.jspring of 1962 by former fi- j axance minister Donald Fleming EXPECT ACTION It was to take effect when the TORONTO (CP) -- Attorney-|oovernment's su of unilin- page Cass mrs a 1 cheques was exhausted y he expected soon the y of English < only renewed probe of Northern) 'or MPs finally ran out Ontario Natural Gas Company) Wednesday deals in the | ence he has received from British Columbia investigators. Three Ontario cabinet ministers re- signed as a result of stock deal disclosures five years ago, The probe was reopened last year)Ca when new evidence was discov-/iz ered on the West Coast b FLARE CAUSES CONCERN NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP))¢¢ A faulty flare tossed into the! o¢ Niagara River Tv dlamed for a report had crashed over ehoe Falls, After a vigil on the river ba the falls police We notified by an emp) Canadian Dred Company that he threw it into the PETITION GROWS calling for legalized lotteries in Canada has almost 500,000 sig fi ) » five private bills drafted on at the next ses iament, PLAN OPERATION NANAIMO, B.C, (CP)--Six © year-old Andrew Guest of Nan 0, born hout one thumb, y a rare operation vee of the ve Operation cy Dock) the remova are then grated r aboveiof the missi rockets to Venus, Mars and the/Maude, would indicate that Pro-| Wo pag souTH EDMONTON (CP)--<A petition) s/ord o/ TOs to the dollar came s for power fa finger which isje moon in the last year, The mag-/fumo's affair with call girl azine said the Russians gave|Christine Keeler was too much details of 19 flights during 1962,/for even the Conservative faith- but it is suspected there were/ful to stomach. six failures unreported, Stratford and its rural SUT-| ig, 108: Mr. and Mrs. R roundings are a traditional Tory Davis. 100: Mire. 8 Sherid SIGN TREATY istronghold. Heavy Consevative|\'s peti ee eae WASHINGTON (AP)--Japan,|abstentions would be regarded and J, Patterson, 9544. the worki's only atom-bombed/as a danger sign EAST-WEST nation, signed the limited nu-| Maude, 50, is little known to) Mrs. R. Drew and Mrs. R clear test-ban treaty Wednes-!the local folk, His Labor oppon.|Barrand, 103; Mr, and Mrs, P beg on the 18th anniversary Olent is 40 ~ year - old Andrew) Sullivan, 9914; Mrs, A. Neil its Surrender in the Second) Faulds, a bearded actor enjoy-/and Mrs, I, Kewin, 9314; Mrs World War, Pakistan, Algerialing considerable popularity in/J. Timmins and' Mrs, H. Hart, jand Burma, also affixed theit/this town with its long theatri-/92%4; R. Normoyle and A. Neil, jsignatures at the. state departs| na} tradition 901 ment to the pact prohibiting nu- ' ? TN on en On ta 4 clear tests in the atmosphere,/PREDICT MAUDE WIN ight. Anye "¢ t ted i ." nm space and under the sea, but) Pollsters predicted Maud Bs He HASH Mores TAs | »ridge discussion, please be Mrs. M, R, Clarke and §S. Sheridan, 116 pts.; jus and L. Peel, 107; Mrs, E @ | MONEY SINKS RIO DE | not under ground, They brought! woulq defeat Faulds by 4,000 to ' ok to about 60 the number of treaty!5 000 votes. Profumo's | there at 7.15 when Mrs. M 1g majority in a two-man} an) bridge players are invited jrace was 14,129, Maude hasito attend the GM Duplicate for i four " : the month of August. (AP)--Br: "a | the 1959 general election, } Ys p> pa. age shire the cruzeiro, pl d to a ree Profumo received 26,146 votes, MARKET PRI more. than $00 cruzeiros to buy)? es le his a opposition, J, a U.S, dollar on free exchange, Stretton, got 12,017. s last vear [Publisher Derick Mirfin, is ex-/cream and butter print prices The official bank rate for the/Pected to run third were unchanged today, sruziro is 600-620 to the dollar.| | ' ' ae Dm: tic clashes during the cam.jto firm with offerings barely DIES IN HOSPITAL hign. All candidates eC Country dealers are quoted by Vries, 23, of Kettleby, Ont. died/scandal. the federal department of agri. lowing an accident Saturday|David (Screaming Lord) Sutch, delivered Toronto, in fibre when he touched an 8.000-volt/a pop: singer running as "na./cases: A large 45; A medium avestrough at a Holland Matsh/and farmer Miles Blair oppos-/20 market. d mstruction site, An' inquest/ing British participatior the Wholesale to retail carton ast wWin-lClarke wi ses ehdiioce jClarke will conduct a forum participants, ning bo) opponents In low Wednesday. It teoki°? 68.5 per cent of the vote, The previous low of 850 The Liberal party candidate), TORONTO (CP) -- Churning There have been few drama-| The egg market was steady c have/adequate for a fair demand. TORONTO (CP)--Anthony De/Steered clear of the Profumo n hospital here Wednesday fol.) The other two in the race are/Culture on Canada grade eggs, line with a section ofjtional teen - age candidat be held: Buropean Common Market. jeggs, average weighted price as P. Versil- |Wadsworth and Mrs. R, Mor- "We would be stretching it considerably if we allowed this application," said Mr, Hyman. Original use was a truck, stor- age garage. He noted the auto trim use was never approved but "'ap- parently the city did not choose to prosecute," "Logically, this should be C2," claimed Mr. Hyman in suggesting the owners ask city jcouncil for rezoning, He added that the whole idea of non-con-) forming use restrictions is to} | William Reid Construction Limited will be allowed to put up a 48-foot high Marland ave- nue apartment building, This is three feet above the maxi- mum allowed in an R3 area, However, the committee learn ed that the city planning board has already recommended to city council that. the height) limit be raised to 50 feet, H. Jordan, Taylor avenue, was refused permission to build) ju carport up beside his house.| |The committee suggested put- jung it to the rear to avoid an effect on the view jadverse ling. The total effect is to en- jelection talk for almost a year."'| When 200,000 people have no)jowing a prolonged illness, She representation in the Ontario|was in her 80th year, Legislature, then this leads us| The former Blanche Clemens to suspect the Premier will calljwas born in England, She spent one (an election) soon, said Lib./her early life there. but lived eral Party spokesman James/many years in Oshawa, where Moore at the Toronto. head:|she married Hect quarters Tuesday, jon deed . a it arring predecease er oe, ag Means as, eT Lo" Surviving are a stepdaughter, tario House. | Mrs, John P. Kelly (Dorothy), Whirs tek bie ae sister Mrs, Ida Spray and a talk: for nae ign 1, {Orother, Bert, in England. al Pret pi i ecg "iThere are: five grandchildren, Stupid politics and very annoy- four living in Cobourg, Ontario and one in British Columbia, | JOHN RAYMOND WALLS John Raymond Walls. died Sunday, August 11, in the Osh- awa General Hospital. He was 73. courage cynicism and this is bad thing from everybody's point of view, regardless of what your political views are." Mr. Moore sympathized with Robert Stroud who withdrew Tuesday as Liberal nominee in Oshawa Riding. "It certainly is a problem for businessmen," he said. "When is the big question, However, we have managed to attract good candidates despite -- this a a i, Funeral service was held in the Armstrong Funeral. Home, Wednesday, August 14, at 2 p.m., with Rev, A. W. Magee officiating, Interment followed in Mount Lawn Cemetery, Russell Lockwood and C. L. Bowen bearers. Pallbearers were Roy Mor- Mr. Stroud claimed Tuesday he was "given every assur- ance, both inside and outside from the windows of the house next door, Construction of the} garage wouid have left the side-| iation width Other iast night: allowed Olive applications A, Marano, » 140; A small 25; B and C grades | avenue, permission to change aj' jnon-conforming use; S. Yese-j jnak, Albert street, extension to} ja non-conforming use; L. Orton, yard one foot short of the regu), phy, William Mitchell, William Jordan, E, A, Linton, Eugeéne Varty and David Pitman, the party, that an election would e held not later than last March," A, B. Campion, Chief Informa- ion Officer at Conservative Headquarters in Toronto, said there are over 200 candidates from all parties in the field now and "I haven't heard any com- plain they can't run, i "One guy (Liberal candi-| "KINDNESS REACH OF ALL" GERROW or Stevenson|---- were honorary pall-) in which Mrs. Rose and Miss Ownes were trevelling. | All vehicles landed in a ditch, ithe cars on the east side and jthe truck on the west side of ithe highway, IN ACCIDENT After being struck by a car on Olive avenue, Oshawa, short. ly before 7 o'clock Wednesday night, Mrs. Elvera Caruso and jher three-year-old son, Frank, were taken to Oshawa General Hospital, but were allowed home after theatment. The car was driven by Stefan Jankewych, 42, of 511 Dieppe avenue, Oshawa, Mrs. Caruso and Frank were running across the road from behind a parked car when they were struck. EYE EXAMINATIONS PHONE 723-4191 by eppointment JF. R. BLACK, O.D. 136 SIMCOE ST. NORTH | NEW HOME | SPECIALISTS HYMAN | --------|of Aug. 14: A large 52.0; A me-|Lansdowne drive, garage to ex-)date Stroud) down there run- : dium 46.8; A small 33.9, jeeed eight per cent building|Ring Scared is pretty funny." Butter prices: Canada firsticoverage; W. F. Mercer, grade: Ontario tenderable 51-52; [Charles street, extension to a non-tenderable 50, in light trad.|n02-conforming use; McGibbon ing; western 50% ~ 51% (nom./and Bastedo, for 118 Simcoe inal). jnorth, addition to have insuffi- i cient front yard setback. ° FUNERAL SS CHAPEL TRADES ACCEPTED 390 King W. 728-6226 | 728-6286 323 King St. W. -- teaggess OSHAWA WINS Oshawa Ladies won the Rob-| ert Simpson trophy at Agincourt! yesterday with a score of 49.) BISHOPS MEET Duncan, Suffrazan Bishop of South Florida (lef), Rt. Rev. Paul K. Ueda, Bishop of Hok- kaido, Japan, and Rt. Rev. T. Talking shop during a tea Break in today's session of the Angiican World Congress in Toronto are Rt. Rev. J. L. IN TORONTO H. McCrea, Suffragan Bishop of Dallas, Texas. Tea was served on the back campus of the University of Toronto. In the background fs Soldiers Tower, war memorial. tower which is part of Hart House, the students' union, Cannes Swamped, Five Boys Drowned SYDNEY, Australia (Reut- jers}--Five boys from an Out- ward Bound movement camp were drowned today when a fleet of canoes sank on Hume weir near Albury, New South Wales, police reported. Police said 12 persons were a wind sprang up. The boats were swamped, England, gives courses in "ad venture training" to youths as a means of "building their char acters." : on the weir in six canoes when! The Outward Bound Trast,| industries in newly independent which has-its headquarters in|African coastal nations. FALSE ALARM Oshawa firefighters were call- ed out to a false alarm in Glen- dale avenue about 6.30 Wednes- day night. SPUR FISHING LA ROCHELLE, France (AP) | |Two fishing boats loaded with | |scientific equipment are work ing the African coast to survey | fishing resources between Da-/ kar and Pointe Noire, Gabon.| plus four, The Oshawa rink! was skipped by Mrs. R, Norris; | vice, Mrs, May Price and lead Mrs. J, Anderson, GOOD FOOD $:30 P.M. to 8 P.M, Hotel Lancaster MARTEN i i i q i ! i \ i he aim is to spur the fishing TARGET. DAY WED. AVE BI, 1Od DIXON'S OIL FURNACES SERVING OSHAWA OVER SO YEARS 24-HOUR SERVICE 313 ALBERT ST. 723-4663 AUGUST FUR SALE ' Now In Progress! ! 'S FURS 900,000 OSRAWA CIVIC AUDITORIUM TELEPHONE 728-9485 To have thot carpet or chest- ertield cleaned professionally in UNEQUALLED PRICE REDUCTIONS ON NEW 1964 COATS, JACKETS AND STOLES!! Oshowo's Original Corpet fi Cleaning Centre . where §/ tully queronteed satisfaction is essured. Phone 728-4681 NU-WAY RUG CO. LTD. 174 MARY ST. TS KING STREET EAST @ Easy Budget Terms!! @ Opposite Notel Genosha