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Oshawa Times (1958-), 6 Jan 1964, p. 4

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was strewn for the railroad track after this freight.train, near Blackfalds, pants, all teen-agers, ear collided with a CNR Alte, Saturday. Its four « occu- killed. * Wreckage several bandred feet along FATAL LEVEL CROSSING CRASH were (CP Wirephoto) CMA Suggests Sales Taxes Be All Pooled OTTAWA (CP) -- The Cana- dian Manufacturers' Associa- tion suggested today that the federal. sales and excise taxes and provincial retail sales taxes be grouped into one sales tax, applied as goods reach the final consumer. » Services would be taxed at the same rate as goods, The association said in a brief to the Carter royal commission on taxation that Canada should derive a greater proportion of Wts revenue from sales taxes-- 'as opposed to corporation and personal income taxes -- and this could best be done through a new national sales tax. Such a move would provide a broader base for indirect taxes, The existing federal sales tax, at the manufacturers' vel, has too narrow a base, and it is dif: ' A national sales tax at the re- tail level, would eliminate tax -- taxes Pom in- rkups--and also eo ofeaiin ite in: mai ate in- equities between the taxe threat- ment on domestic and imported goods. Under the association's "proposals, special excise 'faxes would should be tax-free, the commis- sion was told. Ideally, corporation taxes should be eliminated. This, said l/the brief, would solve the prob- lem of double taxation -- taxes paid by the corporation on pro- fit and personal taxes paid by shareholders when the profit is distributed. "Tf, however, by reason of revenue needs, it is not imme- diately possible to provide this complete relief from double tax- aton, it is recommended that corporation taxes should bye eliminated in respect of profits paid in the form of dividends to Canadian resident sharehold- ers, or as an alternative, no per- sonal income tax should be: pay- able on dividends received by Canadian resident share- holders." Both corporation and personal income taxes are too high for the good of the country, the brief said. About 60 per cent of government revenue now was collected through these two taxes with the other 40 per cent coming through indirect taxes, "In the association's view, the proportions should be reversed in the production of goods) Tt was also recommended that the Canadian ownership of in- dustry be directly encouraged, rather than discouraging foreign investors "whose operations have contributed greatly to the development of the Canadian economy." Strike Threat At Hospitals In Windsor TORONTO (CP) -- Power house engineers and building maintenance staff at Windsor's four 'general hospitals have threatened to strike if a meet- ing with an Ontario department of labor conciliation officer to- day fails to settle a contract dis- pute, The employees, members of BOBBY DEFEATS HOSPITAL BAR MANITOUWADGE, Ont. (CP) -- Because Bobby Bi- loski is only 10, he turned away at Manitou- wade Hospital when he went to visit his two - year - old brother Glen, who has pneu- monia. However, his sister, Ethel, 14, was allowed in. So Bobby began trudging home alone. He stopped to watch a snow blower. Curious, he moved as close as he could to it, and--whoosh---the ma- chine sucked him in. Bobby suffered a broken leg, cuts and bruises. He's in a bed beside his brother. :Long Effort "Won By Union " The United Steelworkers of CB have been trying to jonize the employees of Port e) Nicholson File Company for years. " They finally did it. Bob Nichol, USWA Secretary, "said Friday: that the 224 "ers had been officially certified, wand that their first contract 'would be forthcoming. "This was is fifth attempt," he continued. "We reosived al- "most unanimous support. And, e@ddiy enough, much of that sup- cited as a driving force in the eg ag stages. new Local, as yet with- out a number, has already gen Joseph "Joe" Gabovic as its 'president. Executive and griev- ance committees have also been 'established, Niagara Jam -Halts Traffic NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP) «A S0-foot high ice jam in the oe ome River .o 'major. traffic s. in een Victoria Park ees as sight- ---- flocked to see the spec- etacie, ~ But the river level, which had "Fisen 40 feet Thursday, dropped Sunday. "~ The ice jam, which extends «for two miles from the base of "the Horseshoe Falls to the Whirlpool Rapids Bridge, w: ~ereated by mild temperatures "that loosened ice --'.. in eLake Erie and dumped them "into the on River. ~ _ Although the ice bridge spans «the Canadain and United States "shores, the water is running wfreely beneath the mass. Police estimated 8,000 cars en- toria Park dur- - TAGON, * 'The ~ has Fong no dam. --age or interruptions to Ontario ~Hydro-Electric facilities below ~The falls. COMMON TONGUES Words of Latin origin are eas-| "fly assimilated into Swahili be- cause its syllabic has much in common. with Latin, which becomes Kilatin in Swahili. { Magnate In Own Kitchen NEWPORT BEACH, Calif. (AP)--Police today investigated the slaying of multi-millionaire William W. Bartholomae,' seek- ing to unravel the chain of events that left him stabbed to death in the blood + spattered work-|Kitchen of his luxurious bay- front home. Booked on suspicion of mur- dering the 70-year-old yachts- man was his brother's wife, Carmen Gallardo Bartholomae, 25, a former Spanish dancer. In hospital with a severely cut --_ on bs ly sister, Mi- nola Galla & Bartholomae, whore attle, oll an dmining fortune was es- timated at found Sunday with two stab -| wounds in his abdomen. On the floor beside him was police she had fainted. cho.|KNIFE ON FLOOR Between them lay the biood- butcher knife. Police said Carmen gave this account: When Bartholomae, wearing a bathrobe and pyjamas, entered the kitchen, Carmen was stand- ing at the kitchen sink prepar- ing breakf She said r remembers hold- ing two knives and seeing Bar- tholomae "tumbling" before she fainted. She remembers nothing more until she awoke later in hospital, Adding to the mystery was a/ coroner's report which said that/ Bartholomae, in addition to Stab wounds, had numerou! scratches, "possibly from fin- gernails," on his neck, face, arms hands and chest. erase TO-NIGHT $11,000,000 = was his sister-in-law, who later told smeared blade of an eight-inch Slain the Canadian Union of Operat- ing Engineers (Ind.), voted 28- to-1 for a strike within 48 hours if necessary to enforce their de- mands for premium pay for Sunday work, The hospitals -- Hotel Dieu, Metropolitan, Grace and the IODE Memorial -- were ex- pected to continue operation with the help of supervisory per- sonnel. The union demands the' hospi- tals recognize the principle of paying time-and-a-half for Sun- day work, The hospitals claimed the practice of premium pay on Sundays had not been estab- lished in Ontario hospitals. The existing rate for engineers in all but one of the hospitals is $2.48 an hour. A special committee, ap- pointed by Premier John Ro- barts last year to consider the question of compulsory arbitra- tion in hospital disputes, will hold a hearing in Windsor Jan. 16. The union said it would not withhold strike action pending) the outcome of the hearing. a a a Caution Keynote Of PM's OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Min- ister Pearson said Sunday East- The of the nuclear test ban treaty last August and other developments had given the West a chance to work out with more chances of success than previously some of the dis- putes with the Communist world. "Whether we can do that suc- cessfully, or not is too early to say," he told interviewer Charles Lynch, chief of Southam News Services. Mr, Lynch had asked if the current thaw in the cold war had been overrated, Mr, Pearson recalled with a ismile that Soviet Foreign Min. ister Andrei Gromyko ap- lauded one of his many United ations speeches for the first time last September. SEES MORE TROUBLE Turning to Canada's relations with the United States, the prime minister said: 'We're going to have our troubles." eer in discussions with the "What we can do in govern- they become crises." border, and other factors. He said it would be a crease, but not in the way le- sired by Canadians. The question of investment had created re serious prob- lems"' last year in Canada-U.S. relations. "They 'didn't like some of the provisions of our budget, they But he said his government is trying to anticipate problems and maintain a frienlly atmos- ment--and this is the sort of glib phrase we all use now--is to keep the dialogue going be- tween the two governments, try to meet our problems before Canada-U.S. relations in 1963 had been difficult because of hew taxes on both sides of the mis- take for Canada to treat Ameri- can investors unfairly. The de- gree of American control over Canadian industry would de- didn't quarrel with our objec- tive, but the: ---- m methods|~ Doug eden adopted to paling that ob-/C jecti tainly didn't like some of the they did in their tax changes." To Birth Of Jesus Christ What is time? What vyalue does it have in history? Can you tell These were some of the ques- tions directed to the Bowman- pte A meeting by Reverend John' Verbrugge of the Bowman: Outlook reled with some of th By 'the same token, we cer- Time Related BOWMANVILLE ., (Staff) -- time? ville Rotary Club at its regular ville Christian Reform Church. "Let us start with the ques- tion, can you tell time' Rev, Verbru: igge said. "We have just entered a new year, and one week before that we celebrated Christmas. Some will now say, 'What has Christ- mas to do with the New Year", I. will tell you. "Let us go back 1964 years, what happened then? Jesus Christ was born and from the: on time as we know it has ex- isted, Therefore you can't un- derstand time unless you relate it to Him, 'In history time is also mea- sured from the birth of Jesus Christ. "Even our caalendar bear wit- ness to God. Every one of them has the year 1964 on them, tell- ing us that 1964 years ago Christ was born."' MAILER MARRIES NEW YORK (AP) -- Author Norman Mailer, best known for his war novel, The Naked and the Dead, has taken his fourth wife, blonde actress Beverly Bentley. The civil ceremony was performed in Mailer's = Orono Youths Await Ruling i ge out tat doen' pay ey BO' Two Orono youl objec-| Tuesday 'uar-| get eta stopped at the premises of Charles Morton, forced the lock off a gas tank car up. Mr. Morton copied . their license number and informed the police. The next night Wannan and Cobbledick had tried the same tactics but had been scared off by Mr. Morton, The court was also told that into a gas station, attendent to fill it up and had then driven off without paying. also been charged with creating a disturbance in Orono on No- vember 15, when the two were fighting and swearing at each other on the main street, Cobbledick was also charged with drinking under age. The court was told that Wan- nan had just been released, from parole after serving 12 months for theft. been drinking Dec. 2 and hadi Wannan and Cobbledick have| CLAIM VIOLATIONS BERLIN (Reuters) -- Neues Deutschland, East Germany's main Communist newspaper, to- day accused Western allied troops of breaking traffic rules 25 times last week on patrol drives through East Berl said that such "gross viola- tions" endangered public sequr- ity and order, An Allied spokes- man in West Berlin denied the report, in, It} wc A | ome o | ADULT FEATURE TUAKS -- 1:80-3:40-5:40-7:20-9:90 Lost Complete Show &:18 Brooklyn home Friday, Mailer, 40, recently was divorced from Jeanne Campbell, daughter of the Duke of Argyll. NOW FANE WOW!IT'S BACK "IRMA LA DOUCE" JACK LEMON SHIRLEY MocLAINE Q aAomivrance een oar een It's Hilarious! "THE MOUSE THAT ROARED" in COLOR with PETER SELLERS JEAN SEBERG | F BILIMOREDS sHOw STARTS 6:45 P.M, CROSBY FINED Minola, through an inter- preter, said she cut her hand when she picked up the knife after entering the kitchen and finding Bartholomae and her sister on the floor, She said she had left the|-- roorfr"to attend to Carmen's three-months-old son. Carmen was also in hospital under police guard in order that she could continue nursing her infant. rtholomae, president of the Bartholomae Oj] Company of nearby Fullerton, settled a di- vorce suit last February with his former wife for an estimated PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (AP) Lindsay Crosby, 25, son of crooner Bing Crosby, was fined $250 Friday after pleading guilty to a charge of reckless driving. The plea was entered by his lawyer. Now Many Wear FALSE TEETH With More Comfort FASTEETH, © pleasant alkaline oe) apory holds ~- --_ ore firmly.To eat and talk in Somfort. Bt ay mprinkle a stele FAS. on your plates. gummy, ¢ Checks ity taste or feeling. Spinks ode edor" iam'e breath). Get 'ASTEETH drug counter? "How come?" said the coed. Student: "Well, Re sien anon this end buy us th if there ore any struggling young FRONT-END ALIGNMENT... ALL CARS on JOHN BEAN "Visualiner" SPECIAL 95 MOST CARS PHONE 728-6221 for eppointment aut, GENERAL TIRE OF OSHAWA 534 RITSON RD. S. PHONE 728-6221 BOB EAKINS 8 P.M. Simcoe St. United Church WEEK OF PRAYER DR. E. CROSSLEY HUNTER Theme:-- q To-morrow night -- "WONDER, LOVE and PRAISE" "TAKE HEED" students on a "biesed" allowance ® reading this, this message is for you. You can stort saving on your dry cleaning budget, when you muri stort letting us give your clothes expert care. Becouse we " pea 5 thot woy longer. read they'll fast longer, too, OSHAWA DISCOUNT HOUSE CREAR a iy i. 6t ieee OUT OF BUSINESS MON. - TUES. - WED. GE JANUARY 6 th--7th--Sth WATCH WEDNESDAY'S ADVERTISEMENT Spectacular Bargains FOR THURSDAY 10:00 A.M. OPENING ON OUR STAGE IN PERSON ROYAL THEATRE - BOWMANVILLE -- Phone 623-5589 Today, Tues. and Wed. starting at 7 and 9:30 p.m, ELLIOT FORBES Gn Announcement As Sponsors of the regular Dale Carnegie Course in Effectve Speaking -- Confidence Building -- and Human Relations Training in Bowmanville we have prevailed upon Mr, Frank Ward, Manoging Director of Carnegie Courses in Ontario, to conduct the Course for us in such @ way es to let people see for themselves whet:the Dale Carnegie Course cen do to help people to be more succeséful in life, before enrolling for it. Briefly, this is how it is going to work; The first 3 Sessions of the Dale Carn. egie Course will be free and without obligoton.to takethe sions will start Thursday night, Janua' secutive Thursday nights. Thos who he Course. These ses- 9, at 7:30 p.m) 'and run fer 3 con- ide to take the Carnegie Course will register and complete the Course starting with Session 4 on January 23. @ AN INVITATION ® You ate cordially invited to teke these free, no-obligetion eeesions, but to get in on thin exceptionally generous offer ACT FAST. Use eny one of the following phone numbers te get your name en the list of these whe taking edventege of this unusual offer. 123-4873 Cordially ae Alt prea rs Bd of the Dale ae arene Course will be held in The Flying

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