2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, November 3, 1964 t BRIEFS ON CITY COUNCIL Council approved constfuction of a $78,000, 92-foot box culvert to carry Olive avenue across Harmony Creek. This will make Olive an arterial street be- tween Harmony and Grand- view. City's share is $44,250; Department of Highways will add $19,750 and the rest wil be made up in a winter works' sub- sidy. DomTar Chemicals Limited was lowest of three bidders for supplies of coarse and fine salt. Prices: -- coarse, $11,252 per ton; fine salt $9.707 per ton. The city ordered 2500 tons of the coarse and 187,5.tons of the fine salt. Barclay Transport was low bidder (two tenders) for supply and delivery of 5000 tons of screened sand. Price is $2.22 per ton, for an $11,100 order. Council received and filed a County of Peel request for en- dorsation of a resolution calling on municipalities to bring jail employees' benefits in line with those of other municipal employ- ees. Ontario County's Labor Re- lations committee has the reso- lution under study, council was told. Council will take no action on mending certain alterations on assessment rolls on appeal re; sults, Council backed planning board's recommendation that Sunset drive not be extended east of Simcoe street porth. Glen Stewart Ratepayers Association members will advised that Montcalm avenue will be opened from Stevenson road to Durham street. Property owners at 19 Sim- coe street north (the old A. and P. Store) will be given permission to maintain . an existing encroachment and in- crease it by one and three- quarter inches by refacing the building. Owners will have to enter into an encroachment agreement with the city and pay an annual fee of $34. Owner of the property at 10 Bond street west will be grant- ed permission to maintain an existing encroachment of first and second storey cornices over city property for one foot, nine inches -- and to increase the existing encroachment of the front wall from six to seven inches to permit refacing of the front wall to 10 feet above ground level. Owner will have to enter into an Encroachment agreement and pay the city an annual fee of $44. A seven foot diameter storm sewer, estimated cost $80,000, will be constructed on Park road south, from Gaspe avenue to Lake Ontario. An existing ditch belstreet west, has asked council in city boundaries, He says each of the Ontario County fire de- partments bordering on 401 cov- ers its own section of the high- way, providing fire protection for all sections of the highway in the county. Council backed the traffic 'committee's recommendation that no traffic signs be put up|, on private driveways entering city streets systems, in. particu. lar the road from a lakeside metina to Harbor road. Council will not change its| mind on its decision not to put stop signs up at Cartier and Cabot, and Cartier and Durham streets. Glen Stewart Ratepay- ers Association members, who made the request, will be told the traffic committee will re- view the request three months after Montcalm is opened. These traffic recommenda- tions were approved by council: Bond street east, from Patricia avenue to Ritson road, be made one-way westbound; stop signs be erected. on Arthur at Drew street, giving Drew street traf- fic the right-of-way; Dean av enue be made a through 'street from Ritson road to Wilson road; the parking bylaw be| Voters of tiny northern New amended to prohibit parking on Patk road north's west side, |-Hampshire village of Dixville from Buena Vista to Anderson; Notch display 8-0 clean sweep CLEAN SWEEP for Republican Barry Gold- water in first-in-nation mid- night presidential election. avenue. Other recommendations ap- proved call for: installation of | a flashing advance-green signal for. westbound traffic at Park jroad south and Bloor street; four pedestrian signal-heads at the same intersection; and pro- hibition of parking on the circle at the north end of LaSalle Court. Dominion Tire Store, Bond | } OTTAWA (CP) -- Prime Min- ister Pearson said Monday that for a time extension on the/|the government plans to pub- premises, until their new store at King west and Park road is mittee. Harvey E. Beadle, secretary- treasurer of the Oshawa Minor Hockey Association, has asked council to reconsider ice rental charges at the Children's Arena. To the property committee. Council endorsed a Kitchener resolution calling on the On- tario government to instruct the Education "'to formulate a sin- gle, unified policy on the estab- lishment of school safety patrols in the province'. . A. Stephenson and Sons Limited, Willowdale, have a plied for rezoning of three Park | road south properties and a) Burk street property, from) |residentia] to commercial. They want to use the land as part of a planned King street shop- ping centre. To planning board. | Jess Hann and Son, Bess-| borough drive, think there is a need for "a small notion of tuck shop operation' in the area of their apartment buildings on Marland avenue. They are pre- pared to convert a store-room in one of their buildings. Miss Isabel Vigna, Marland avenue, wants to operate such a store. was asa ha- Sara "Sopectathy "to "eh » Council will inform the De- partment of Transport sale of airport lands, which the Board of Roman Catholic Separate School Trustees offered to buy, would "not be in the best interests of the city." Airport committee chairman Ald. John Dyer said airport development could be interrupted. Council turned down an appli- cation from Armand Bouffard for a garage licence to operate body shop and used car lot at the northwest corner of King Both uests went to the plan- board. S. W. Cummings, Prince street, has asked for rezoning of a Cordova road property to R5, to allow car parking. To plan- ning board. - Council will allow Consumer's Gas, Eastern avenue, Toronto, to drill on city-owned land on Mill street, east of the creek. Purpose -- to open a well to! log, analyze and deepen, if re-| quired, "to obtain geoglogical information relative to explora- tion for storage of natural gas and - or oil and gas produc- tion." * ; Riznek Construction Limited lawyer Ralph Jones will be al- | and Thornton road. Zoning does not permit this use, council was told Glen Stewart Ratepayers As- sociation members have been informed of council's policy on lowed to return to planning board on rezoning of property on the northwest corner of King street east and Townline road north. Council has refused com- |lish a white paper on the con- |stitutional question in Decem- BNA White Paper Soon Says Mike is 'absolutely nothing' in the formula that "directly or indi- rectly, explicitly or implicitly, provides for the granting of a special status, within the Cana- dian federation, to one or ,the finished. To the property com-/ ber. : : | He said in a statement that | the white paper will be issued with a view to assisting Par- liament and-the proyincial leg- islatures in their consideration | of the formula under which the | constitution would be brought | other of the provinces." Scarboro Bans Strike Paper jun under the jurisdiction of the Ca-| nadian Parliament. | Any changes in the British |North America Act now must be given final approval in the British Parliament before be- coming law. Mr. Pearson and the provincial premiers agreed jenforce a township bylaw that} a formula earlier last month der which future amendments could be made without refer- ence to Westminster. The formula has come under criticism in Parliament, parti- cularly {rom Conservative and New Democratic Party spokes- men, during the present debate on interim supply. There has been no indication of when the formula will come before the Commons, but it is unlikely to be dealt with until the white pa- per is available in early De- cember. 2 Mr. Pearson's statement said the white paper "'will relate the history of federal - provincial negotiations which have taken place, beginning in 1927, on this subject. It will also outline the main considerations underlying the approach which finally pro- duced a solution unanimously acceptable to the federal and provincial governments."" Besides assisting legislators, it said, "it should also be of permanent interest to students of Canadian history and consti- tutional law." In an apparent reference to some Opposition statements made in the House, the prime yminister's statement said there on Boxes TORONTO (CP) -- Scarbor- ough Township council, on a resolution proposed by a coun- cijlor who is a striking news- fer printer, voted Monday to | lin effect prohibits newspaper lboxes on streets controlled by the township, | The bylaw for the suburban itownship..in the east end of Toronto says no person shall place or maintain "any obstruc- tion or encumbrance, whether permanent or temporary, on a| highway..." | | The council voted 7-1 in favor) lof its enforcement, although a lbylaw permitting newspaper boxes is being prepared by the township }egal department and will be ready for presentation to council' in about two weeks, Solicitor Hollis Beckett said after the council meeting. The printers, members of 'Lo- cal 91 of the International Typo- graphical Union (CLC), have been on strike against the three Toronto daily newspapers--The Telegram, The Star, and The} Globe and Mail--since July 9.| The newspapers have continued! to publish. A delegation of 125 printers jled' by Robert McWhinnie, a jstriking compositor, attended the council meeting and ap-| plauded when the resolution. in- troduced by Councillor Karl Town has never voted for a Democrat, (L to R) Laraine Jolin, George Whittan, Alex- ander French, Frank Nash, Cora Whitten, Gertrude Nash and Neil Tillotson: One voted absentee, (AP Wirephoto) -- Si ith Ail ili Ei, ih linn Bin iin i Et DESPITE THE STRIKE GM St DETROIT (AP)--Boom year 1964 of the U.S. auto industry now boasts record nine-month earnings from all its Big Three. General Motors, biggest of the trio, made it complete Monday--reporting a $1,360,000,- 000 profit and announcing a $569,000,000 dividend payment. The GM dividend, a $2-a- share payment to 1,150,000 com- mon - shareholders, is $1.35 above the usual GM quarterly payment, Earlier, both Ford and Chrys- ler had reported record nine- month earnings. General Motors made its pro- Author To Pay Killers $10,000 NEW YORK (AP)--A free- LUNG BUSTING TORONTO (CP) -- Some interns at a Toronto hospital must hide their cigarettes in the women's washrooms to keep a lung-cancer expert on the staff from flushing them down the toilet, a group of ConsefVatives was told Mon- | day. The. medical sub - commit- tee of the Ontario Young Pro- gressive Conservative Associ- ation's policy research com- mittee was told by Dr. Phyl- lis Hanley that the doctor grabs the cigarettes out of the mouths and pockets of other doctors and-interns and flushes them away. She said some interns give their cigarettes to nurses who leave- the packages in the women's washrooms "where he has not investigated." He objects to interns setting a wrong example by smoking | just before they go into a ward or by leaving a ward | and coming back smelling of cigarettes, she said. IN HOSPITAL WASHROOMS DOCS HUNTED In a report to the party's annual meeting here, Dr. Hanley said the government is obliged to deal with the health problem caused by cig- arette-smoking. She suggested tobacco ad- vertising could be controlled just as liquor advertising is. However, she advised against raising cigarette taxes. "Higher taxes causing shorter (cigarette) butts could decrease purchases while in- creasing tar intake and lung disease," Dr. Hanley said. "After. removal of govern- ment support, tobacco farm- ers would probably grow a | cheaper grade of tobacco con- taining more tar." She also suggested that smoking could be combatted by making smokers pay more for hospital and medical in- surance, This could be based on the "higher health costs incurred by smokers in rela- lance journalist who spent much time investigating the murder of three civil rights workers in Mississippi last summer says he knows who the killers are, and expects to pay them $10,000. in the next few months for infor- mation for a book. William Bradford Huie, a na- tive southerner who wrote arti- cles for the New York Herald Tribune on the disappearance of Michael Schwerner and An- drew Goodman, both white, and James Chaney, a Negro, said in Big Dividend ock: A Flavoured Wine "SERVE COLD ON THE ROCKS OR WITH YOUR FAVOURITE MIX" maker was getting up headway again in production following its crippling United Auto Workers union strike. } For the first time since the| strike began Sept. 25, all five | of GM's Hagens lend divi-| sions were turning~eut cars| Monday, the company said. CALLS OFF STRIKE The UAW called off its U.S.-) wide strike Oct. 5, following | agreement on a national con-) ONTARIO RIDING pate, among the company's 130 P=C ASSOCIATION putes among the company's 130 (FEDERAL) mae ANNUAL MEETING As of today, only 12 local set- at the tlements were outstanding. GM makes the Pontiac, Oldsmobile, PORT PERRY MASONIC HALL Cadillac, Chevrolet and Buick on THURSDAY NOV. 5,-8 P.M. Ford, which faces a Friday strike threat by the UAW, had Special Guests MIKE STARR yet to complete 20 agreements M.P. Ontario Riding among 90 bargaining units, Ford and the UAW have settled-na- Gordon Fairweather M.P, ROYAL, N.B. tionally. General Motors' nine - month profit of $1,360,000,000, from rec- ord sales, was the equivalent of $4.75 a share, up 25 per cent rom the $1,086,000,000, or $3.79 a share, of the same period last year. Sales for the first nine months | this -year rose '13 per cent to) $13,160,000,000 as against $11,- 680,000,000 last year. Ford -last week reported rec- ord nine - month earnings of | $403,800,000, or $3.65 a share, as compared with $346,900,000 or $3.14 a share a-year earlier, For transportation te Port Perry--phone: Chrysler's earnings for the same period were $125,800,000, or $5.55 a share, compared with| $107,000,000 or $2.72 a share. For the third quarter of 1964 GM earned $222,000,000, or 77 an interview he is not planning) to name the killers because it) isn't penmitted by law. "These murderers know they ra tg be indicted and never e tried," Huie said, '"TheY|cents a share, as against $208,- know that because they have!q99.999 or 72 'sala aa for the right to be indicted, tried|the third quarter last year. and convicted by a Neshoba| ---- County jury. 728-7518 Ed, Ryzek 668-8805 EVERYBODY WELCOME OSHAWA George Martin "These men know that the community is never going to convict them, because that) community generally blames} the victims of that murder) more than they blame the mur- derers: ... "Their attitude is that outsid- ers came in and got what they deserved... ." tion to. their much shorter taxable life span." The FBI was reported to have paid $25,000 to an informant to learn where the bodies were. Pope Told | Striptease Frosh Fined $20 Apiece HAMILTON (CP)--A spokes- |man for McMaster University |said Monday six students have | been fined $20 for their part in | smuggling a strip-tease artist jinto a men's residence during 'Go Home' Before Trip aris.' x _ BOMBAY (AP) -- A month} in advance of the arrival of| The six students, who were Pope Paul VI, posters plastered |not identified, were fined by the Pope go back home." |jplaced on one-year probation religious extremists are oppos-|These students were not resi- ing the visit of the Roman/|dents of Whidden -:all where the Catholic Pontiff and the inter-|incident took place. national eucharistic congress, | It was announced Wed- which he will attend. |Ciigday that three other students They could make trouble. | w pysnasied the stripper into Officially India; with only \the 6,500,000 Catholics among its esidence, were fined $50 jeach. 480,000,000 people, welcomes the | congress. | Prime Minister Lal Bahadur | SULLIVAN'S AWARDS TV impresario Ed Sullivan on Bombay walls demand: "Mr. |student council and were also) Small but fanatic groups of|with Dean of Men Ivor Wynne. | |Huie said the money went to jone or two of the men involved in the conspiracy, Be, 918 SIMCOE ATCH TOMORROW'S FOR 3-DAY SHOW AT PARKWAY NORTH PAPER Mallette was carried. | WEATHER FORECAST | Shastri, a member of the Hindu velopment. Two Hooded Men Heist $30,000 QUEBEC (CP)--Two hooded men robbed a branch of the Imperial Bank of Commerce of plan trees on boulevards. Dr. R. D. Guselle, Connaught street, will be told council is unable to sell the lane between Masson and Mary streets which \\ abuts his property. Property ? committee chairman Ald. John Dyer said the lane is a mess and "it seems too bad all the abutting owners can't get to- gether, We should give it tojan estimated $30,000 Monda them. jafter spending part of the ni Council approved a recom- (hidden in the building. mendation that the city solici-| Police said they made. their tor be empowered to proceed appearance after employees had with the purchase of the Tenic|opened thé vault to start the Sala property on the basis of a day's business. It was believed $1200 offer for the land and /|they entered through a ventil- quit-claim deeds on other par-|ating shaft sometime 'during cels of land acquired along'the night: Bond street. The Sala property| They fled in a waiting car. was expropriated during the) Bond street extension. | 4 A $22,39.75 payment in lieu of RED TO BLUE a five percent conveyance on| HAVANT, England (CP)-- the 20-lot subdivision adjacent to | Britain's only red police station Verbena Court and Jupier street | lamp has finally given way to in Beau Valley will be accept-/the traditional blue used by all ed from H. Kassinger Construc-|other stations. It was taken tion Limited. down when Havant police Fire Chief Ray Hobbs has re-| moved to new quarters, The red ported that the city fire depart- lamp will go to the Hampshire ment covers Highway 401 with-|police museum at Winchester. ght | | Showers Today | majority, said Sunday he will attend. Shastri told a public meeting "the essence of Hin- has been decorated for his serv- ices to entertainment by the) U.S., France, Israel and Italy. | duism lies in its respect for all religions." And Swami R. Ananda, sec- retary of the All-India Associa- tion of Hindu Holy Men, said | | | | | Cloudy Tomorrow TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts; Timagami, Cochrane, western issued by the weather office at|James Bay regions, North Bay, 5:30 a.m.: |Sudbury: Sunny clouding over Synopsis: Cloudiness, which|this afternoon. Occasional driz- |edged into the more western re-|zle tonight. Mainly cloudy Wed- gions of the province during the |nesday with not much change in ht, is expected to thicken and|temperature. Light winds. | | y| ead nig |spread eastward today. A few) ; 1 ( showers are likely to develop|Cloudy with occasional drizzle as the day progresses, Mainly|today, Mainly cloudy Wednes- lcloudy weather is forecast for|day. Little change in tempera- | Wednesday with little change in ture. Light winds, |temperature. | - Lake St |southern Lake Huron regions, | Windsor, London; Mainly cloudy with a few scattered showers jtoday. Variable cloudiness Wed- jnesday. Not much change in jtemperature, Light winds Western Lake Ontario, Niag- ara, northern Lake Huron, Georgian Bay regions, Hamil- < Forecast Temperatures Erie,| windsor St. Thomas London ... Kitchener ... {Mount Forest |Wingham .. {Hamilton .... \St Catharines |Toronto ... Kingston .... Clair, Lake Algoma, White River regions: | - ton, Toronto:- Becoming cloudy JAPANESE WORKING HERE TO HAVE SPECIAL SKILLS TORONTO. (CP)--Labor and business leaders offered diver- gent views Monday on a plan to bring 15,000 skilled workers from. Japan and Hong: Kong to Ontario. Stanley Randall, minister of economic develop- ment, said in Hong Kong that the province is considering such a plan. An official of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce said in an interview as, fa- vors immigration ong work- ers who have a special skill or training. He said any plan that would raise the level of techni- cal achievement in Canada fs "welcome. David Archer, president of the Ontario Federation of La- Ontario's| this morning with a few brief showers this afternoon and eve- ning. Mainly cloudy Wednesday. Not much change in tempera- ture. Light winds. Eastern Lake Ontario, Hali- burton, Killaloe: Sunny with cloudy periods today. Mainly cloudy tonight and Wednesday. Not much change in tempera- ture. Light winds. | |bor, said governments are not, spending enough time and money on training and retrain- ing of workers, He said the On- jtario government would be} Peterborough Trenton ..... Killaloe Muskoka .. Sudbury . ° Earlton .....+. eee Sault Ste. Marie... Kapuskasing White River,. Moosonee . THAME ss ceceus ; wiser. to train its own workers | than to bring in new ones, Leonard Coulson, Ontario re- gional employment officer, said| Ontario is suffering from a| shortage of "highly skilled) workers." He said a_ great| shortage exists in the machine trades, A. A. Cummings,-presidént of | the Canadian Manufacturing | Association, said he sees no ob- jection to importing. skilled la- | bor as long as-no jobs would jbe taken away from Ontario citizens, | WATCH) TOMORROW'S 'PAPER FOR 3-DAY SHOW AT PARKWAY 918 SIMCOE NORTH the Pope "will be our most hon- ored guest." In the opposition's front ranks is the Maharashtra (Bombay) state branch of the Hindu Ma- \hasabha, a right-wing group j}banned in India for years .after |one of its members assassin- HOUSEHOLDERS Save On am 16 Ph: 668-3341| jated the Indian independence |leader, Mohandas K, Gandhi, in ! A slogan which has been heard from coast to coast during the past few years on The Salva- tion Army's Radio Programme -- 'This is m Story" -- states in a few words the "Army's"' approach to problems relating to human need,' -- Serving, "with heart to Cod and hand to man." It is considered that devotion to high principles of service and sympathy for-those in difficulty and need are necessary requite- ments for those working in the delicate and sensitive field of welfare. The Salvation Army zealously guards its privilege of participating . in the life of a community and seriously ac- cepts respinsibility to serve all segments of DX Fuel Oil $50 to $5000' without endorsers or bankable security SUPERIOR FINANCE 17 Simcoe Street North--725-6541 Daily to 5:30 p.m. Friday to 8:00 p.m. Other evenings by appointment 31 SUPERIOR OFFICES IN ONTARIO society. The year 1962 was a year of excep- tional demand with emergency Family Wel- . fare topping the list. The seasonal work short- age was responsible for this, However, many other requests were satisfied. Furniture was supplied in a number of cases, and assistance with housing was given in a few instances. Fuel was supplied by direct purchase from local merchants, also clothing and good used articles brought in by interest- ed persons, were also distributed, Assistant was given with Rvdro and gas ac- counts, and also in many instances with medicines. During the year arrange- ments were made for admissions to the Salvation Army Home for unmarried mothers. In a number of instances assistance was given to the Court and Penal authorities; transients. were given meals and for some overnight accom- modation was provided. A few stranded people were asgisted with transporta- tion. Christmas Cheer was given to a number of needriies MAJOR F, LEWIS In a more positive direction, young people were given training periods at ° Summer Camps where, under experienced leadership, the needs of mind and soul and body were adequately met. This type of work goes on at the local Citadel the year round with special emphasis on the Boys' Band, the Singing roae i orps Cadet training, and the Scout and Guide, Brownie and ub units, . : In. most cases considerable expense 'is involved, but there are also many instances wheré it is a matter of 'the cup of water' -- advice, encourage- ment, and spiritual help being the kind of assistance that is most needed. We can well expect that in all of these there shall be due reward, the most satisfying being the knowledge that someone has been given a helping hand and their burden lightened by sympathetic intervention and understanding. GREATER OSHAWA COMMUNITY CHEST HAROLD E, PIERSON, Pres. ROBERT J, BRANCH, Executive Secretary 11 ONTARIO STREET PHONE 728-0203 A)