2 «THE OSHAWA TIMES, Saturday, Jonuery 11, 1964 GOOD EVENING -- By JACKGEARIN -- ¢ 'WELCOME JAYCEES' NATIONAL PRESIDENT MONDAY The great white father of the Jaycee movement in Can- eda will be in Oshawa Monday night, : He's Fred West, the amiable, hard-driving, 37-year-old Scot-born (Ardrossan, Ayrshire) realtor from New Westmin- ster, B.C., who just happens to be president of the group. This will be the second wa visit in seven months Fred who will sit. down dinner in the Hotel Gen- osha with his civic-minded lo- cal supporters who do so much each year to create an interest in municipal _poll- favorite pastime when he's not tied up with personal business (he is pres- ident of Fred West Realty Lid,, also agent for the Do- minion of Canada General Insurance Co, and the Lon- don and Scottish Insurance % Co,) is pen hasan g ag WEST across the land al "Won- -- derful Canada". Another fav- orite topic of his, discussed with evangelistic fervor, is: "What the Junior Chamber can Do For All Young Men". He's @ pleasant, hard-driving salesman with a fine sense of dedica- tion to his job. He's a graduate of the Royal Technical College, Glasgow, where he obtained an associateship in "Naval Architec- ture. He has served in all Marine executive capacities, in- cluding that of second-in-command on passenger liners on the West African, Atlantic and Pacific trades, \ CAHILL REPORT REACHES COUNCIL PLATEAU So the Cahill Report on the City's Board of Works Yard has finally been released to City Council after much delay? What wil) be its course now? The aldermen have a delicate and unenviable task in making a decision. Should the report be relegated to a place of obscurity in the "confidential files', away from the prying eyes of the public after its author is interviewed? Regardless of which path is followed, Council is bound to find itself well within range of heavy artillery fire from sev- eral quarters, not the least important of whom could be a few hundred taxpayers sick and tired of sitting idly on the eidelines while the Yard is treated by some elected represen- tatives as a sort of sacred and costly municipal cow which none may touch. Caution is advisable, but the public will be watching. What would irritate the situation no end would be an at- tempt to sideline the report without any reasonable explana- tion, The Yard has been a touchy, highly controversial hot po- tato for several years long predating the Cahill and Woods, Gordon Reports. Forgetting these reports temporarily, one of the things disturbs many taxpayers is the oft-repeated suggestion 'ard is actually a "welfare state" with a payroll | personne! list too lange for the work needs of the opera- | e Yard greatly overstaffed and, if so, why? If so, is really responsible? be allowed reasonable time to study the ed in the emergency ward of London's Victoria Hospital Friday for burns received in Dennis Sillet, on stretcher, and Me! Steeper were two of nine Grade 12 students treat- BURNED AT SCHOOL a chemistry class explosion, None of the students were de- tained in hospital. ; Worry CLC By STEWART MacLEOD OTTAWA (CP) -- The Cana-/mand is not to cause economic |be needed if a deficiency in' de- day it is concerned with - in-/ unemployment," creasing government reliance) on consumer taxes as a sourct/SUGGESTS TREND of revenue, These taxes, the) Mr. Bell said that any new royal commission on taxation/tax system should involve a lwas told, have no regard forjtrend back toward the. ability- the ability-to-pay concept. jto-pay basis, Persona] income Russell Bell, acting director of|taxes, the only system based on research for the 1,080,000-mem-|this principle, accounted for ber CLC, said that so long as|about 20 per cent of total reve- the government continues to col-/nue, and this meant that for the lect a greater portion of its tax-/most part Canadian taxes were take from the consumer, "'it is/not progressive. going to fall on the person least) Even the personal income able to pay." |taxes were 'not nearly as pro- The CLC delegation, headedigressive as often alleged," he by Secretary . Treasurer Don-|said, While the rates varied be- ald C. MacDonald, presented ajtween 11 and 80 per cent, the brief to the commission that/scale or rise tended to level off said the Canadian tax structure,jat high income levels, and it wherever possible, should be}was commonly believed that no built on the ability-to-pay con-|one in Canada actually paid the these days it should get around to answer- councillors 'still regard the Director of Operations of ©) with aloofness, detachment as though he were an accredited member of the municipal team with an and difficult duty to perform, There is also a ten- @ to regard such Directors as potential muni- " who would eventually take over and run singled-handed, which is absurd. the Director must establish his worth by meritor- , but one point should be remembered -- he is the as Council] is the servant of the people; of his talents, he can only succeed with the co- Council in its role of employer. 1 has a moral obligation to quickly remove of Works Yard operation from the Sacred Cow for Untouchables) category. ~ 'This can not-be done if Councillors persist in treating the problem in a lackadaisical menner, like the. proverbial getrich who buried his head in the desert sand at the approach of datiger in a pathetic attempt to pretend that there was no gz ib 3 ry i Hf | z i 8. i DR. DOHERTY IS NEW BOARD TRUSTEE So Dr. G. Brian Doherty has been appointed one of two Separate School representatives on the Board of Education? : All interested in the welfare of Education in Oshawa will wish him well because the position of trustee is a most im- portant one. » Many will recall that the 40-year-old Oshawa physician {and graduate of the McGill University's School of Medicine) will be succeeding the late Monsignor Philip Coffey whose Beath at 65 two weeks ago shocked the community. ~ Monsignor Coffey served the Board long and well, for 20 ears to be exact, during a period of rapid expansion in popu- Jation and industrial growth. LITTLE NOTES FROM HERE AND THERE . Monsignor Paul Dwyer, pastor of St. Gregory's Church, left recently on a trip to Rome, Italy -- he is not expected to return for at least three weeks. . , . lan McNab, manager ef the Special Activities Section, Public Relations Dept. of GM here, will soon depart on a 14-day business trip to Western Canada -- he THE HUSTINGS OF ON- TARIO RIDING (FEDER- AL); When Ontario Riding (Federal) Tories depart for Ottawa early next month to attend that much-publicized annual meeting of the Fed- eral PC Association, they will have two official voting delegates in their group -- W. H. J. "Bill" Thompson, the Ajax lawyer who is presi- MONSIGNOR DWYER dent of the Ontario Riding : " (Federal) Association; and William G. "Bill" Newman, former candidate in Oshawa rid- ing (Provincial), Alternate delegates will be Kay Wethereil, Ajax, and Mrs. Edith Bidell, Whitby, . . . William G. Lawson, the Pickering Village lawyer and Liberal organizer in On- and Oshawa ridings, is feeling fit again after his siege hospital last year with a heart ailment, He's back to the again, cept, and income taxes were/top rate. The top rate could be best suited to this, The brief/avoided through the use of the lalso said that not enough use is/20-per-cent dividend tax credit, ibeing made of fiscal and mone-/legal loopholes and forms of itary policies to contro] the eco-/evasion. nomic climate in Canada. | The dividend tax credit is "'ex- | In this respect, the CLC sug: cessive," he said, and it should |gested that additional powers/at least be reduced to a rate ibe given to the government sojof 10 per cent, The practice of Jit could implement tax changes|firms giving stock options in iwithout waiting for parliamen-jplace of cash also worked to- tary approval although it)ward the erosion of the tax | would have to account to Par-|base, and contributed to a less | liament later--so necessary tax| progressive structure, lchanges would not be delayed.) Mr. Bell said he doubted if Mr, Bell said that by using tax-/any government would abuse ation as an economic lever,/additional taxation powers it threatened 'inflations or reces.|had to deal with economic con- sions could be headed off. jtrol, In fact, because o [political "Rising Labor productivityjimplications "a government makes it imperative that eco-|might very well hesitate to use Inomic measures be adopted to/such power," But at least it jassure a continually rising rate| would have leewey to deal im- lof aggregate demand, A more/ mediately with any threatening effective use of tax policy willjeconomic change. a eer Wala ~ |COULD BE GRADUATED Goldwater One suggestion by the CLC was that the Carter commis- | sion investigate the feasibility of | Wants Probe / \@ graduated sales tax to replace | jthe existing flat rate of 11 per | i. cent now applied at the manu- Missile Ga jfacturers' level, Mr. Bell sug- | p |gested that a Cadillac could WASHINGTON (AP) -- Sena-/0**r, & higher rete of tax Wee tor Barry Goldwater asked Fri-isame system could be applied day for a fud-scale Senate in-lneiween other necessary and vestigation of what he called &@jiyury items. " dependability gap in U.S. long: « "it is conceivable that range aissiles. ._imany kinds of goods, because renee back down on hiSithey are more or less out of statement that "our intercontin-|ihe pric. . lental missiles are not Seoeel eee tanae of lower noes jable," the Arizona Republican |pressed a controversy that could! | Milli jdevelop the bitterness of the! ] on Fes ag toreinh oh of the "4 1960 U.S, presidential election tig Grant To Aid 2 I as -- be I will ! ibe very pleased and happy to) N S. P jadmit a. -- Rohe va el ower jis a lack of dependability I do inot believe the American ..0 OTTAWA (CP) -- A 20,000,. {ple should be lulled into a false}000 federal grant for a major ifeeling of security by numbers/hydro power development in jand statistics, . . ." |New Brunswick, designed to re- | Goldwater, asserting he prob- duce the provice's power costs ably woul "catch hell" for do+/and attract industry, was an- jing so, raised the issue at a/nounced Friday, ipress conference in Portsmouth,| The money will go towards a N.H,, Thursday while campaign-/ 100,000,000 power development ing for the Republican party's)at Mactaquac on the St. John |presidential nomination for the /Riv>", 14 mils upstream from November U.S. election, Fi vdericton, Defence Secretary Robert Mc-- When completed in 1976,. the jNama¥. promptly issued a/ 500,000 - kilowatt project would |Statement accusing the senator|double New Brunswick's elec- of damaging U.S. security with/tric power output. what McNamara called a com-| The announcement by State pletely misleading and politic-| Secretary Pickersgill, the minis- ally irresponsible reference to/ter responsible for the Atlantic the country's intercontinental/Development Board, said the ballistic missiles. cabinet had approved a recom- Goldwater said in his state-/mendation. by the board for ti-| ment Friday: "It seems strange nancial aid to the New Bruns: jto me that the secretary of de-jwick Electric Power Commis- fence would call a dependabil-| sion. Consumer Taxes ldian Labor Congress said Fri-jstagnation and a high level of Group buyers, could bear gales tax." jond trial was held in May, 1963, ~lbefore Judge McCombs, + som With Murder The CLC brief didn't think! Jury Says Man Carried Dope Near Hamilton HAMILTON (CP) -- Joseph Augello, 35, foBuffalo, Friday was 'convicted of possessing heroin for purposes of traffick- ing and remanded to Jan, 20 for sentence by Judge Theo L. McCombs, It was his third conviction on the charge, arising from an in- cident on a_ secluded West Flamboro Township sideroad in June, 1962. The ll-man, one-woman jury deliberated for 74% hours Thurs- day before convicting Augello of possessing the drug, and took about an hour Friday to convict him of the intent to traffic. The jury recommended clem- ency, and Judge McCombs said he would take this into account when passing sentence, Augello has been in jail since his spec- tacular arrest June 5, 1962, On tht date, Augello and 42- year - old Michael Tascarella, also of Buffalo, were trapped in an RCMP-provincial police "stake-out," se' up after a 15-year-old local farmhand spotted eight packages contain- ing a white powder under a tree, | The powder later proved to be pure heroin, worth at that time about $50,000, The drug to- day would be worth about $150,- 000, officers said. The two men were first con- victed in September, 1962, by Judge J. S, Latchford and sen- tenced to 15 years in jail each. They 'successfully appealed, charging that Judge Latchford had misdirected the jury, A sec- and again the two men were con- victed and sentenced to 14 years, Only Augello appealed this sentence on a technicality, Tas- carella is serving his sentence in Kingston penitentiary. 'Man Charged : this would result in a drying-up In A D th of the marRet for expensive xe ea Ss |goods, "A petson who has be-| . 5 : | SASKATOON (CP) -- Two S Camuins to aoe tee purchasing charges of capital murder were : ely to change)iaiq Friday against Francis Lit- his preference because of an in- tlcehief, 24, following the blud- crease in sales tax." | igeon slaying of his wife and Despite repeated claims be- mother-in-law in a Saskatoon fore the commission that the present rates of corporate taxes|home, the Baber of 5 are toc high, the CLC sald there] worme, 38, and her 17-year-old this. ont Cone © eee rt daughter, Mrs, Patricia Little- |chief, were clubbed to death jwith an axe. OPP Crime Report. |_ 20.204, 8 ren R ea dy By February Littlechief. appeared before |Judge H. G, H. Gilding Friday jin city police court and was re- TORONTO (CP)--An Ontario|manded to Jan. 14 for psychia- Police Commission report on or- ganized crime in the province tric examination, Litlechief was arrested will be handed to Attorney-Gen- eral Cass before the end of the month, Comifilssion Chairman Judge Bruce . Macdonald said Friday. Judge Macdonald said the commission has completed its investigation and now is docu- meuting evidence obtained in Ontario, Washington, D.C., and New York State. Tendering the report will be one of his last duties, he said, before he resigns as commis- sion chairman Jan. 31 and re- turns to ' @ bench in Windsor. Thursday on a city street 1% jhours after the bodies were dis- felty home, | Mrs. Worme's seven - year- jold son Dale was reported in serious condition with head in- juries, He was found lying in jthe living room with the two) dead women, Three other persons in the house at the time were unin: jured, Donald Worme, 4, ran to he nearby home of Mr. and Mrs, J. FE. Cumpstone scream- jcovered in pools of blood in the) INTERPRETING THE NEWS World Reviews Effect. Of Pope's Pilgrimage ; By ROD CURRIE Canadian Press Staff Writer Now that the narrow cobble streets of the Holy Land _ are} once more quiet and Pope Paul is safely back in the Vatican, it remains to assess what was accomplished by the unique pil- grimage., Certainly, on the surface, the! visit of the head of the Roman Catholic Church to a land bit- terly divided oy politics and re- ligion was a popular success far beyond expectations, It enhanced, not only in the Middle East but throughout the world, the bold new image of the Pope and his church that has been emerging since the revolution of Pope John XXII first stirred behind the Vatican's great bronze doors, In the eyes of church authori- ties, this fact alone fully justi- ties the venture, But outsiders are less likely Paul took scrupulous care to avoid local political differences in a land where the Jews call their home Israel and the Arabs call it Jewish-occupied Pales- tine; Because of his discretion, and the presence of the world press covering the visit, the ss of Israel and Jordan were restrained from making politi- cal paganda and possibly marring the effect of the tour. No doubt the most important accomplishment was the historic meeting in Jerusalem with the leader of the Eastern Orthodox church, the first of its kind in five centuries, LONG, HARD ROAD Neither Paul nor Patriarch Athenagoras is likely to be un- der any illusion that their mere exchange of the kiss of peace will resolve the profound theo- logical differences that led to» the schism 900 years ago, Paul himself said in gin | the old patriarch that the roa te Christian unity may be "leng... and sown with difficulties," : But the mere fact that the: ia, met should advance Paul's ef- "" forts to give the impression the Church is prepared to back up ~' with actions its campaign for -- union with other Christians and' brotherhood with non-Christians. A report circulating in Rome suggests that the idea of the pilgrimage was Pope John's and "" that he left a message sealed © in a wooden box for his suc-' cessor, Whatever the pilgrimage's origin, its success opens the door to other possible state visits by the man who became - the first Pope in 500 years to leave Italy, R DUES FEUD to be impressed, mainly b many people read into the visit wider political and evangelistic motives than intended and thus look for broader results. Few realists within the Church, for instance, would really expect Pope Paul's call from Bethlehem for peace and harmony among states to make much impact on entrenched na- tionalistic feelings,' Nor would the Pope hope to find church converts in Jewish Israel or pre- dominantly Moslem Jordan. MUCH IGNORANCE SEEN ° Naomi Shepherd, writing from Israel for the London New Statesman, says there is a great deal of ignorance of Christianity there and "the Christian church is associated in their minds mainly with the persecution of Jewry." She adds: "Tt will be uphill work for Israeli liberals to change this so jong as the Vatican finds it possible to the Jews and Israel, despite a OTTAWA (CP) -- Social Cre- dit Leader Robert Thompson accused Real Caouette's Rallie- ment' des Creditistes Friday of failure to keep its commitments to the Social Credit party at the last election, He denied in an_ interview paid deposits of 20 unsuccessful i tario because the Mr. Caouette's statement Wed- nesday that the former Quebec wing of the Social Credit party Social Credit candidates in On- 1 party |of ' Caouette Lied Thompson Says some of he recommedations of the royal commission on. pubii- cations which studied the per. iodicals' problems were not put into effect beforé. The govern- ment had assured him steps »» would be taken at the new ses. sion. "Canadians have to decide... whether or not they are going » to be a separate nation, If you weaken a nation's press indus- try, you weaken -the foundations had no funds, never did,"" Mr. Thompson said. Saleh a fact that religion and ism are doctrinally more closely linked in Judaism than in any other faith." ; Find Teacher Not Guilty Of Assault OTTAWA (CP) -- A 28-year- old Osgoode Township high school teacher was cleared Fri- day of charges of assaulting & 15-year-old pupil. Magistrate Austin O'Connor dismissed eit ea of Restaat causi y harm Yvon Sean-Herve Montpetit: He found that Montpetit had not intended to use excessive force when he struck Gary Al- vin Lynch of Metcalfe, @ Grade 10 student, Sept, 12. The magistrate referred to section 43 of the Criminal Code lof Canada which permits the use of "reasofiable" force in the disciplining of a student by a teacher, He said the boy had been Cc in a Sudbury, television inter- view that the national party and other provinces. The provincial organizations were not separate from the na- tional organization, Mr. Thomp- json said, He had attended ev- jery provincial convention, ex- jcept Quebec's, in the last year, |SEES DESPERATION "These are the words of a desperate man," Mr, Thompson said in reference to Mr, Caou- ette's statements, Mr, Thompson came here for a number of meetings which will determine whether Social Credit candidates will be en- tered in byelections in Montreal Laurier and Montreal St, Denis Feb, 10. The decision will be announced Monday, Looking ahead to the parlia- mentary session which opens Feb, 18, Mr. Thompson said he is encouraged by Prime Minis- ter Pearson's indication that ac- tion will be taken to protect the Canadian periodical and news- paper publishing industry from foreign competition or contrai, He said it is a shame that ing for help. WEATHER FORECAST 5:30 a.th.: Synopsis: Early morning tem- peratures dropped to near zero in several localities in southern Ontario and in the north coun- try to near 40 below zero, The sunny cold weather is expected to continue in Northern Ontario, The rest of Ontario will have increasing cloudiness today with snow later today and Sunday, day Ddecoming overcast Lake St. Clair, region Wind- sor: Variable cjoudiness today, becoming overcast in the after- noon with snow beginning by the evening. Cloudy Sunday with snow changing to flurries in the morning. Not much change. in temperature. Light winds today northeasterly 15 to 20 Sunday. Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Ni- agara, western Lake Ontario, southern Georgian Bay, Lon- don, Hamilton, Toronto: Vari- able cloudiness today becoming overcast wiih snow tonight. Cloudy Sunday with snow chang- ing to snowflurries in the after- noon, Winds westerly 15 to 20 becoming light today and eas'-| erly 15 on Sunday. | Eastern Lake Ontario, Hali-| burton: Variable cloudiness and cold today. Sunday overcast with snow changing to snowflur- ries' Jate in the day. Winds northwest 15 to 20 today east- erly 15 Sunday, Northern Georgian Bay, Al-} goma: Variable cloudiness to-| with snowflurries tonight, Sunday Snow Tonight: Cloudy Sunday Official forecasts issued by Bay, Sudbury: Mostly sunny and the Toronto weather office at/cold today and Sunday. Winds 15 to 20 today, Light on Sun- day, Observed tem Lows overnight, Dawson Victoria 41 Edmonton 1 Regina -9 Winnipeg 31 Lakehead -16 White River -41 Sault Ste. Marie ll Kapuskasing 20 North Bay -13 Sudbury "16 Earlton +16 Muskoka Windsor London Toronto Trenton Ottawa Montreal Quebec Halifax Forecast temperatures ratures Lows tonight, Highs Sunday 2 Windsor -,.... St. Thoma London . Kitchneer . Mount Fore: Wingham Hamilton St. Cathar: Toronto ' Peterborough Trenton ... sesees 25 ighs Friday -40 27 looking for trouble and | the tonaber's action had been "'rea- "lsonable under the circum- stances." However, Montpetit would have been wiser to have ltaken the boy to.the principal. Evidence was presented that the boy received two black eyes, a broken nose and a cut mouth in an alleged attack in the classroom. The magistrate found there was no. definite| proof the teacher's blow had) broken the boy's nose. Kirlines Continue To Cut Fares MONTREAL (CP) Air fares will be reduced. substan- tially April 1 for travel between Europe and "mid - Atlantic" points, ranging from as far north as Bermuda to as far south as Peru, the International Air Transport Association an-| jnounced Friday night. | The announcement, at the con-| iclusion of a five-day traffic con-| jference here, said member air- "Quebec promised to pay but "The national office had to distinguish between /them," aed He described as "straight Mr, tte's claim LOST REVENUE i An example of the problem, * he said, was the loss in 10963 of advertising revenue by three Canadian periodicals -- Chate-. laine, Maclean's and Liberty -+ magazines -- while revenues of Reader's Digest rose, The loss amounted to more than $1,000,- lacks an organization in Quebec 000. "If things continue as they are going now, We are soon go-.... 4 to have no Canadian press Mr. Thompson said Canadian publisher Roy Thomson "'low- ered the image of himself and. Canadians generail fighting for a title, som i Sy Fi does ny belong in Canadian Hite at all." He said Baron Thomson ~ « knows that in assuming British: « citizenship he automatically» drops his Canadian citizenship. » "If he had the love he fesses 'for Canada, he would" have thought of that before, If -- he wants to be a lord, let him do' ** it_as a British citizen," At the forthcoming session of * Parliament, he said, the Liber- als will have a chance to give proof "whether they have any- thing or not." The last session | did the tidying up required af- ter two elections in as many. years, now the government has " to produce. soa TIRED? .»» Preparing THIS SUNDAY ee. Let Us Do "Tite Sedolcdiedetedetet Full Course Roast Beef Dinner Dinner At Home! The Work! ! jlines also approved fare reduc- itions for travel between North |America and India, Pakistan and Ceylon. The new fare schedules would ibe implemented subject to the japproval of the governments in- ivolved. | IATA quoted this sample fare jin United States dollars. | A first class round trip be- tween Caracas, Venezuela, and London, Amsterdam, Brussels jor -Paris would cost $1,092.50 jcompared with the current $1,- 1187.50, The economy round trip jwould be $744.80, down from | .30, Killaloe ... | Muskoka .. . North Bay . Sudbury mostly sunny and continuing; cold. Winds northerly 15 to 20.) Timagami, White River, Coch-} rae, western James Bay, North) THE KEY jity gap a political issue when) It is the first major grant to jthe missile gap, so profusely|be made from the 100,000,000 jused in the 1960 campaign,/Atlantic Development Fund, jwasn't so considered by his pre-|which was established last year sent. associates. And it was/under the Liberal government's a gap, by the way, that never! legislation altering the make-up A. E. JOHNSON 0.D. 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