WHITBY And DISTRICT Whitby Bureaw Office 111 Dundas St. West Manager: John Gault Tel, 668-3703 STARR ADDRESSES YPC's Mike Hits nti,Diefs Slams Buck-Passers' PORT PERRY (Staff) -- John ~ G._ Diefenbaker's detractors within the ranks of his Conser- vative Party were blasted 'here Jast_ night Mike Starr, Ontario Riding MP and former Minister of Labor in the Diefenbaker re- ently eight per cent, and will {be up to 11 per cent by the time the year is out, "They increased the oldrage pension, but raised the income tax one per cent, so the aver- age family man will be paying about $30-a-year more." Conservative philosophy is on your shoulders, He praised lished by the year-old Ontario ding Group in the provincial] § and federal elections of 1963, and commented that he had no organizations behind him when the work accom- ey jer. .|completely covered for anything SCHOOL BOARD H-Bomb All vehicl®\ employed for Whitby School Board business are now insured for every eventuality ex- cept Nuclear War. The $200,000 worth of Standard non-owner Automobile policy was upped to a more complete $300,000 coverage at the School Board meeting Wednesday, The policy formerly covered only the one non-owned bus and its driv- 'We want to make sure we're the employees or agents of the Schools might do' remarked Chairman Bill Manning, "We want a complete not a restricted policy." No Insurance If Township Area One|pl ime, addressed the 'oung Progressive tive association: Conserva- Riding He predicted that the Liberals would run up one of the biggest debts in Canadian history, He "The attempted Cabinet quoted Mr, Pearson as favor- he was first elected in 1952. "We even had trouble finding scrutineers,"" he smiled. The revised protection, mov- ed by Dr. Keith Mountjoy, re- insures the school bus, It also explained, had failed to provide for possible damage to the build- THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friddy, Jonuery 10, 1964 § Ottawa, B.C. Agree On Power Project OTTAWA (CP) -- The giant Columbia power project moved one step closer to reality Thurs- re when representatives of the governments. reached agree- ment on all outstanding ques- tions on the Canadian aspects. Final agreement with United States. negotiators on interna- tional aspects of the power com- plex could be nailed down in a new round of talks opening here Monday, External Affairs Minister Martin has said _-- that next week's bargaining session could be the last in the series begun last May after the Lib- erals took office, Negotiators for the three gov- Hits Bus penny, agent Mark Lockyer ex- ained, Come storm, fire, theft or damage in-transit, accessories of Brooklin Schools offices and classrooms are well-insured. A $3,600 | Multi-peril policy will provide insurance for School Board property in case of theft or damage on forced entry. It also insures such transportable items as typewriters, desks and books against general dam- age in buildings or in transit, The new policy upped the Meadowcrest insurance rates to $2,000 from $1,700, while Brook- lin Senior Schoo! total was in- creased from $1,000 to $1,600. The old policy, Mr, Lockyer, SPORTS BRIEFS insures private and commercial|ing on forced entry. ernments last month approved usurpment was a blemish on our leader. It would appear that the philosophy was: 'When you lose an election, get out', "No Cabinet Ministers can oust the Leader, He is chosen by delegates from across Can- ada, and only they can replace him." He slammed the defeated Conservaitve candidates, who, after the last two federal elec-) The former Labor Minister tions, blamed their personal/struck another point, He re- losses on Party leadership. ferred to the pre-election accus- "They should be asking them-jations that.the Diefenbaker ad- selves: 'What did I lack?' or/ministration was "anti-Ameri- 'Why did my people refuse|can." ing deficit financing, "And he didn't even consult his finance minister when he |made the statement, I . expect he turned to Gordon afterward jand said; 'I haven't conferred with yousyet, but that's fine." Mr. Gordon was quoted from a speech he made at Toronto to the Canadian Club: 'The red ink is going to flow." me?', But instead they blamed "Relations with the United »/cize Lester Pearson. NEWSPAPERS AND PEARSON The relationship between the Prime Minister and the major Canadian newspapers was slammed; Mr, Starr began with a recent editorial which stated that the "unemployment situa- tion was no longer a national problem." "It is down one-third-of-one- per cent from-the same month last year. Then it was called a problem by the same } Toronto paper, We were in power then. "The papers urged the people to vote Liberal," he continued. "But why don't they ever criti- NEARS CENTURY-MARK . view Lodge where he has been a resident since 1958. He spent his lifetime as a farmer in the Township of Brock and is still Nearly a century of Birth. days have been celebrated by David Tocher who was 96, Jan, 8, Mr. Tocher was helped in celebrating his birthday by vehicles of all employees, clients and agents while they are driv- ing their autos in employment of the School Board. are hit by a Hydrogen Bomb, the School Board doesn't get a in principle a plan believed to involve the purchase by the U.S. of a lange block of Colum- bia power originally allocated to B.C,, over a period of 20 odd years, It is understood the U.S. If a boiler blows in either of the two schools, a coverage of $100,000 may be collected, The quotation was decided upon af- ter Mr, Lockyer had explained the necessity of insuring the school boilers at this figure. But if any of these vehicles active and alert. the many residents of Fair- CURBS PLANNED would pay more than $400,000,- 000 in advance for that power, thus financing the construction of three storage dams in B.C. CROSS-TOWN RIVALS Henry Hoopsters Shade costing an estimated minimum of $380,000,000, Thursday's agreement was announced after two days of dis- cussions between a federal team headed by Mr. Martin and three U.S. Firms May "WINS POOL : MIAMI, Fla, (AP) -- A single bettor in the crowd of 9,582 at Tropical Park Wednesday took down the entire twin - double pool--$54,789,20, It was the big+ gest twin-double payoff of the meeting, topping the pron 'ne 1 and British Columbia|¥ required, and requested that he not be publicly identified, NORWEGIANS TO PLAY ~ OSLO (AP) -- A No curling club with and a manager will leave Canada to take part in the . Other o Norwegian Curling Association has 350 members in 15 clubs in south Norway, Canada has yang than 700,000 active mem- ers, 'SPURS. ARE OUT LONDON (CP) -- Chelsea kicked Tottenham Hotspur out of the Football Association Cup Wednesday night with a 2-0 vic- tory in a ruthless scrambling match before a hysterical crowd of 70,000. Thousands were locked out of the ground and the crowds around Stamford Bridge Stadium threw west London's traffic into chaos. B.C, delegates--Resources Min-|f- Buy Our Papers ister Ray Williston, : Attorney- Mr, Diefenbaker," he said, States have never been worse, "Any MP who is défeated/he claimed. after four or five years in} 'The Liberals used to call it Ottawa has no one to blamejanti-Americanism when _ we} but himself, except in the case|tried to put Canada first. Now|" of a nationwide sweep, ithey call it diplomacy." | No such sweep PS oc ROLE. EXPLAINED curred," . 5 Starr pointed out that he) Mr. Starr indicated that the| had won twice when "people/present Bill which would en-) ha *t win with George/|franchise persons 18-years-and-|And yet Bek" ond, lane nore "when/older would be approved gen so : . "Per! win|thus enhance the work of YPC "people said I couldn't Geers. with Diefenbaker." "When things go wrong," he suggested, " to assess ourselves. We deter- "They ] |Marsh) and (Walter)/ Gordon, but Pearson, it appears, ¢an do! critic'ze Judy oO wrong. "He is responsible for every- thing they do, his stamp of approval. "Lester Bowles the culprit, He is Pearson is to blame. the newspapers mine what the problem is. Is|~ it leadership? No. We will in-) variably find that we lost be-) CONSERVATIVE PHILOSOPHY cause we did not try hard enough to win." LIBERALS Mr. Starr once again took a slap at the present Liberal Gov- ernment. "Sixty days of decision," he wondered, "They have been in office nine months, and we _ Re-Examine Stand - Dymond Suggests in what he termed "'these try- (Le- He gives ap- hese papers. want), to save face. They do not wish) "There will be 750,000 new)to admit rad -- el peo- voters,"" he said. "The responsi-|ple wrongly, so they- must say) i start bility for educating them to the'that the government stacks up. have not seen a decision yet, |, PORT PERRY (Staff) -- The ing times, federally". fenders for 16 points. Anderson Teams Twice By KEN ZAYETTE | Roddy Barter scored the win- Henry Street High School|ning points off a foul shot and al jsqueezed out two narrow vic-/bonus try in the final minute. | jtor'es over Anderson Street} Anderson forward John Spel-| |High School in basketball action|len was fouled with three sec- jat Anderson, last week. jonds remaining, The first of two | Henry's junior club nippedifree throws missed allowing |Anderson 27-26 in the opener, |Henry the one-point verdict. The bantams took a seven-point 1-24 victory in the nightcap, SEVEN POINTS Henry Juniors ,'62 COSSA Ju-| Henry Bantams opened their Inior champs, pounced on Ander-|S¢ason on a seven-point nota- son with four quick field goals|tion. Anderson led 8-5 at the end to open the first quarter, jof the first frame and 13-9 at Mike Glanfield opened scoring the half, Both teams had diffi- jafter splitting the Anderson de-/culty moving the ball. fence. Johnston, Rixvett and) Henry surged into the lead in |Goode increased the lead to 8-0./the third quarter with a 12-point | The former champs managed/splurge. Neil Gibson, Andrew janother three points before the/Hiscox, Dave Foote, Mark) half was finished. Anderson,|Roland, Robert McGarry, Pete jbowled over by the rush, settled|Miller, George McCaffery and |for two points. Lawrence Todd were credited Anderson's defence tightened|with what was termed a team jin the third quarter, Jobn Spel-| victory. | jlen, Bill Andrews and Ron) Harry Zimmer displayed a re- |Aiken outshuffled the Henry de-|markable show of talent for the Henry)losers. Zimmer sunk an almost By THE CANADIAN PRESS Following are excerpts from editorials in representative Ca- nadian newspapers on the sug- gestions of legislative moves to prevent foreign . ownership of magazines and newspapers, Toronto Telegram -- Daily newspapers are an integral part of the democratic preess of government and are so recog- nized informally as being "the fourth estate." It is incredible that there are newspaper exec- utives who would seek out gov- ernment control or recommend control over advertising -- the financial lifeblood of newspa- pers--as was done in the O'Leary report. The Telegram strongly op- poses any such proposed legis- lation, ae The newspapers of this coun- try, and those who decide their policies, have generally proved to be responsible. If these pub- lishers, editors and owners are General Robert Bonner and Dr. Hugh L, Keenleyside, co-chair- man of the B.C, hydro and power authority, The Ottawa-B.C. agreement was descfibed as highly techni- cal and detailed, papers have been taken over. The sole intent of the pro- posed legislation is to make Sure that genuinely Canadian newspapers survive. The best Delicious . . . Southern - FRIED CHICKEN HOME DELIVERY Old English Style Fish and Chips Terrace Restaurant 120 Brock St. N., Whitby PHONE 668-9056 serosa evidence of this is that the government's move is sup- ported by some leading Cana- dian publishers, including those of The Star. Windsor Star--"We do not think Canadian magazines--or newspapers -- need protection from such competition (from across the border). If they do then there is something wrong with the Canadian product, .. . There is even some sugges- tion of action to prevent Cana- dian publications falling. under foreign control. There is no such present threat and it is something unlikely there ever will be, But Canadians, such as Lord Beaverbrook and Baron-| designate Roy Thomson have created newspaper "empires" He referred to the illtatea|{unctions and attitudes of Cana- Gordon Budget as conceived in dian Conservatism have haste, and chided the Finance/° Minister for "beating retreats after public pressure forced his hand." an 2 per "He (Gordon) materials. th the howls came he chang- . ed it all about. The tax is pres- Hogg Chosen YPC President | Norton Leaves *: PORT PERRY (Staff)--Keith) A conference, set up along Norton, the former Whitby|the lines. of the Port Hope Con- High School teacher who is/ference of pre-war days .was back at university studying|suggested as means of solving anged, a. Matt Dymond, = ~~ Whitb: Lang | instruc tario Riding "s to begin re: examining the Pe hae philosophy, and to "take a . hard look" at the Conservative of the sixties. | "We must see if we are with- jstanding the tests of time," he {continued. ""'We used to be re- iferred to as the 'Party of the -monied interests'. "There just aren't any monied interests around any more," he quipped, "We in the government jhave taken it all away from medicine, retired as president/any misunderstanding: or dis- of the Ontario Riding Young| content within the Party. Progressive Conservatives last} 'It is important that these be/have to turn out and put Mike, Four counted five. i mpossible array of long shots, |Tesponsible enough to achieve "'He cannot please everyone," the general respect and confi- in other countries, This is a different proposition he continued, referring to the Opposition Leader, "but he was chosen from delegates across the country by majority vote. "It behooves us to forget: our petty' differences and to stand a enere behind his leader. ship. not have the props cut from under him." Dr. Dymond, after congratu- lating the year-old group for their efforts in sending three Conservatives (himself, Albert Walker and Mike Starr to two governments in 1963, revealed that there would probably not be a provincial election before 1967. (Mr, joptimism fail him, you ma "He should stand or fall on! the will of the Party, and should! . +. but should Lester's | Fearson's) exuberance andlane chance to set the fine game,|have been coming along very '4 Dunnie Players On All-Star Team BY CLIFF GORDON jgames, since his regular coach It was announced this week|Bob Wright has two games to that the ninth annual All Star/sit out in his suspension, Mana- jgame for the Metro Jr, "B"\ger Davie whipped his charges |League would be held at the/through a brisk workout at the |Lakeshore Arena Wednesday Whitby arena last night with Jan, 15th, the emphasis on shooting, pas- | All proceess go to the Ontario|Sing and carrying the puck with \Sportswriters and Sportscasters|their heads up. He is determin- 'Association Fund for. Retarded|ed to get his fellows out of their \children. Tickets will be on sale Worst slump of the season. Mon- at the Whitby arena on Monday|4ay night the Duhnies will host Inight for this worthy cause and|the Brampton Seven-Ups who Whitby Dunlops have| strongly of late and were only dence of their readers, they are surely responsible enough, should the time come, to dis- pose of their papers in the same. |spirit with which they operate them. | Toronto Star--While no major lCanadian newspapers are now television stations come under fi Such media use of Canada, in blic vent anarchy in the air waves from stipulating that radio and should not foreign ownership. property e way of air channels, and thus have tobe' licensed and controlled to pre- | under foreign control, it is known that American interests have made bids to purchase several important ones, Foreign interests, over the years, have acquired control of half Can- ada's manufacturing industry, and the same thing could hap- pen in the newspaper business, SCUGOG CLEANERS & Shirt Launderers FREE Pick-up & Delivery Deily PHONE 668-4341 if nothing is done to prevent Preventive action now is very much easier than corrective action later, after a number: of jbeaten 2-1 by the front running DODGERS GAVE THRILL he| (Starr) back in Ottawa once/Made spots on the Easts team night, aired among ourselves," . jthat will be managed by Whit- : ' Neil McNeil s i ir) He was chosén the Associa-|said. "It is a healthy attitude) More, bal ara ceanateoat ape! jlast outing. NEW YORK (AP) -- When tion's first president when itito register discontent except Was formed in 1963, His office| will be assumed by Douglas! Hogg for the following year. testy 'or critical manner." accomplishmests of the YPC's|critikism of Mr. during his ice. He their role in both the federal and provincial elections, "vital) and active." "I am convinced that the next|OY'S own Ivan Davie and coach- when it is done in a morbid,|time around the Conservative|¢? by the Neil McNeil mentor, | |Party will rule Canada once|fTank Bonello. Dr. Dymond expressed pride}/MOre . . . especially when the} Mr. Norton reflected on the/in the fact that he had heard no|people of Ontario realize that/the all-star club are defence- Diefenbaker|the Liberals have just handed termedjwithin the ranks of the YPC's/Over $42,000,000 to Quebec, of | which $21.5 million has come out of our pockets." | "We blitzed. the riding, we fought the propaganda of the other parties, and we maintain- ed the mobile committee room," he recalled. At the same time he WHITBY PERSONALS CWL To Seek Speaker On at Queen's" University" Vocations was doubling the: baby-bonus. I don't think that' is too. con-) The January executive meet: structive: ing of St. John the Evangelist He calle@#for self-examination|CWL was held Tuesday eve-| among Conservatives and an in-ining in the parish hall. In the creased awareness "of our so-\absence of Mrs. Desmond New- cial and moral responsibilities."|man, President of the League, The following members of Mrs, William Allan presided, the new executive were chosen: Reports on activities in the President, Douglas Hogg; first past month were read by Mrs. vice - president, Clarence Dan O'Hagan, citizenship con- Huston; second vice - president,'vener; Mrs. S. Bronishewski, Nancy MeMillan: president, Peter Forbes. rott, social action and welfare Recording secretary, Yvonne convener; Mrs. Jack, rado Christie; membership secre-and TV convener, and Mrs. tary, Ricarda Kyte; correspond- W. O'Neil, publicity convener. ing secretary, Carolyn Saund- Plans were discussed for a ers; treasurer, Dianne Hogg; future meeting which will be! so- concerned with a speaker on vocations. publicity, Nigel Schilling; cial, Gorden McMillan. BROCK Evening Shows Start 7 and 9 | NO ELECTIONS IN "64 -- MIKE If Mike Starr's reasoning is correct there will be no federal election this year. He told Ontario Riding The Whitby players chosen to men, Wayne Mayhew and Wayne }Cheesman and forward Rickey Gay. Tan Young will share the |goal-tending duties with Duffy |Lewis of the Maroons. There jare four other players off the) YPC's last night in Port |front-running Maroons on the; Perry that a "ceremony of |All Star team: Neil Clark, Mike) marriage' between Mr. Byers, Garry Meehan and Neil) Pearson and Social Credit Cassidy. Leader Robert Thompson the underdog Los Angeles Dod- |gers stormed to victory in four jstraight games over the mighty |New York Yankees in the 1963 |World Series, it was both the upset of the year and the thrill of the year to the nation's sports writers and broadcasters. It be- came impossible to separate those two categories in the an- nual Associated Press year-erd poll because the voting revolved about the one climatic series almost to the exclusion of every- WALLPAPER, | PAINT A family surprise birthday party was arranged in honor of Mrs, Reg Foster on the occa- sion of her birthday. Numerous gifts were presented to Mrs. Foster, Among refreshments being served was a_nicely-de- on ig voy ae made by rs, Foster's daughter Mrs. Hubert Chatten, boos | Mr. and Mrs, 'ack Hoyt, Whit-| Other players on the team in- clude: Mike Brady, Jerry Mon- ahan and Walt Winnik from St Mikes: Dennis Jones and Mur-} ray Stroud of Markham; along with Dwayne Ferguson and Bob! Nelham of Schomberg. | General manager Ivan Davie} of the Whitby Dunlops is doing! a double chore for another two would keep the Liberals in power for "as long as they want", He referred to the 1963 split in the Socreds, that led to the new "'Creditistes" of Real Couette: "Neither of these groups want an election, They are afraid. of what might hap- pen. They would lose seats, so they will carry on until times are better." thing else. ASK SHIFT | ARCADIA, Calif. (AP)--Lead- | jers of striking Santa Anita Park | jemployees asked the state Wed- nesday to give Santa Anita's racing dates to another track. ;That way, a union spokesman | jsaid, the state wouldn't keep! jlosing 200,000 a day in racing| third vice-' visiting convener; Mrs. J. Par-) }convener of CWL |Feb. 11, in St. John the Evan. Saturday Matinee at 1:30 f ALSO -- CARTOON -- 3 STOOGES -- SPORT -- by and other friends of the fam-| ily were also present. DEATHS Whitby Scout Troup 4 visited | By THE CANADIAN PRESS the Oshawa Fire Department | Hamilton. Ont } Wednesday, Jan. 8. The follow-|,,temilton, Ont. -- John Fish, ing assistant Scoutmasters 2¢-leountain Ne itor of the 'weekly companied the group: Saco Eek-| ag ik : ma, Delmar Rints, Bob Daniel| Dexter, Me. -- William T.| and Ralph Newton. |Maybury, 69, a director of the! : |U.S. Trotting Association and a' Mrs. Frank Canzi, general/member of the Standard-Bred re "Night of Owners Associations, Cards" to be held Tuesday,! Brockville -- Frank Joseph |Grover, 64, who once served on jthe War Graves Commission in i ; j gelist parish hall. opened her home to her committee. jrevenue, But a Santa Anita of- ficial said union proposals re- jected by Sarta Anita also would be turned down by other ee tracks, The NDP contingent was discounted as an 'election: wanted' as well: "Their marriage with Labor is starting to weaken. "And Pearson himself is Gt sure he can win." What about Mike Starr -- does he want one?~ "After five-a n d-one-half years as a Minister in a ten- sion-filled, difficult portfolio, 1 am just beginning to live like a human again, "Who's anxious for an election?" Enjoy an Evening Out) MAKE UP YOUR OWN TABLE All Saints Anglican Church Evening Europe. Guild Present were: Mrs. Robert Mackey, Mrs. Pat McDaniel) WILL CARRY FIGHTS Mrs, Greg Carer, Mrs. Andrew). NEW YORK (AP) -- The] American Broadcasting Com- pany confirmed. Wednesday it plans to continue carrying jweekly boxing programs during the summer. Earlier reports jsaid the network was dropping were|the sport in April. Miller, Mrs. James Ledden, Mrs, Richard Sandrelli, Mrs. Jack Halligan, Mrs. William McMonagle, Mrs. Joseph Cor- rigan. Final arrangements made for this event and prizes! = will be awarded to lucky win-|fered while skiing 'in Kerby. His ners and also door prizes. Mrs, /friends wish him a. prompt re- W. McMonagle will be in charge | covery. of refreshments. Tickets may be/ obtained from the above com-| Mrs. Frank Dalby, 512 Palace street celebrated her birthday, mittee members. Thursday, Jan. 9. A surprise One-Stop DECORATING @ Wallpaper end Murals ®@ Custom Dreperies ®@ Broedicom and Rugs @ C.L.L, Points and Vernishes © Flo-Gleze Colorizer Points | DODD & SOUTER Phone 668.5862 ANNUAL GAMES NIGHT Mon., Jan. 13th 8 P.M. Parish Hall Bridge, Euchre, Conesta, ete. Refreshments Served. STOREWIDE D> Flat Wall Paint (4.95 eat. DODD &« SOUTER DECOR CENTRE LTD. 107 Byron St. S. Whitby Open Friday 'til 9 P.M, PHONE 668-5862 Michael Hutchings, 9033 Bay- party was held at her home by view Avenue is detained at his neighbors who jihome with a sprained ankle sul-|with a gift. Decor Centre Ltd. presented a 107 Byron St. S., Whitby Admission 1.00 per person