Durham Region Newspapers banner

Oshawa Times (1958-), 22 Apr 1966, p. 15

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

KIWANIS RADIO AUCTION BIDDER GETS PRIZE A highlight of the annual Kiwanis Radio Auction is the special lucky draw prize, for which every suc- cessful bidder in the auc- tion (Kiwanis Club mem- bers and their families not eligible) has a chance, The lucky bidder in this year's auction, which netted the club a profit of $4,000.20 to carry out their community service work, Kiwanis Camp, etc., was James Elliott, of 91 Arlington ave. Above shows the presenta- tion ceremony, at the prem- ises of Home Appliances (Oshawa) Ltd, who do nated the Frifidaire dish- washer, Left-to-right are shown, Fred J. Tilk, man- ager of Home Appliances here; Kiwanian Don Ellison, chairman of the 1966 radio auction; James Elliott, the winner and Fred W. Kitchen, president of The Oshawa Kiwanis Club. Quebec Race Candidates Restricted On Expenses By REMY D'ANJOU | QUEBEC (CP) -- Candidates | for the June 5 general elections in Quebec have started boning up on the new electoral law which provides for a limit on their expenses and partial re- imbursement. | According to present esti-| mates, the elections will cost the provincial treasury between $8,000,000 and $10,000,000. The total cost on past occa- sions rarely went beyond $3,-) an increment if there are more than 10,000. The increment is equal to one- fifth of the difference between the maximum allowable expend- iture for each elector and the 15-cent flat rate. If there are between 10,000 and 20,000 electors, for whom | the maximum allowable ex-| penditure is 50 cents each, the) candidate may receive an in-| crement of one-fifth of the 35-) cent difference, er seven cents) ing. --Oshawa Times Photo Concerned that several years of fierce partisanship in Parlia- ment is creating a bad impres- sion of politics in the public mind, the two MPs decided to demonstrate their co-operation to their constituents during tie Easter recess of Parliament. While on an Air Canada jet heading for the West Coast, they agreed to make joirt visits to three federal institutions in their ridings. In two days they visited the veterans hospital in Victoria, and the Saanichton experimen- tal farm and William Head minimum security prison in Fs- quimalt-Saanich. They plan similar bi-partisan) visits in the future. "The reception was extraor- dinary," said Mr. Chatterton in an interview. "Many people said they never 2 MPs, Tory And Liberal In Bi - partisan Visits By MICHAEL GILLAN OTTAWA (CP)--David Groos is a Liberal MP, George Cat- terton a Conservative and, ac- cording to them, many of their constituents are surprised they talk to each other. In Ottawa, Mr. Groos: (Vic- toria, B.C.) and Mr. Chatterton (Esquimalt - Saanich) work closely together because their adjacent constituencies share common problems. Many of the people who .work in Victoria drive in the evening to their homes in Mr, Chatterton's rid- dreamed they would see twe MPs from opposing parties to- gether. "If the public thinks MPs never speak to one another they must think we never co- operate. In fact we very fre- quently do." frequently asked question was: "Why doesn't Parliament get down to business?" He_ attributes this impression of Parliament's work as the re- sult of fierce partisanship in re- cent years and the scandal al- legations of the last 18 months. Mr. Groos says he is uncer- tain whether their method is applicable in other ridings or areas of Canada. But he's pleased pith the results in the Victoria and Esquimalt-Saanich ridings. He said their co - operation will have a side-benefit because some constituents likely will be switched to the other's riding following the redistribution of electoral ridings. The two plan no door-to-door visits but want to visit together other federal institutions such as military bases. Mr. Groos says they might hold joint press conferences some time or ap- pear together on open - line radio programs. SEA YIELDS WEALTH Norway caught 2,048,000 tons of fish in 1965, an increase of more than 40 per cent over 1964. FIGHT Mr.-Chatterton said the mest}; MAYS EDGES CLOSER CHICAGO (AP)--Willie Mays|baseball game between hit the 508th home run of his/Francisco Giants and Chicago, major league career in the first!Cubs Thursday. Mays is only Inning of a National Longest THE OSHAWA THAGS, Pridey, April 22, 1966 15 two short of the Nationaljheld by the late Mel Ott of the League home. run record of 511;!0ld:New. York 'Giants. t 000,000. j}each. Some ---- pring ot to| xt f t ote, under an extension 0: ie vote. Gromyko May Meet Pope Paul the new law, te persons between 18 and 21, who number about 600,000. The law not only lowers the voting age to 18 but it also sets ROME (AP)--Soviet Foreign Minister Andrel Gromyko today meets Italian government lead- ers for talks expected to cover NATO, European security and a limit on the amount of money that a candidate may spend in Viet Nam. He also may meet Pope Paul. his constituency in seeking elec- tion. The limit is 60 cents for each voter up to the number of 10,- 000, plus 50 cents for each voter Z pestle 10,000 and 20,000 and Gromyko and Foreign Minis- 40 cents for each voter over 20,-| ter Amintore Fanfant scheduled 000. their first meeting for tonight. There were widespread re- GIVES AN EXAMPLE ports Gromyko would ask to If, for example, there are 25,-|meet Pope Paul, and the Vati- 000 voters in a particular con-jcan neither confirmed that a stituency, a candidate may|meeting might take place nor! spend up to $6,000 for the first|ruled it out. | 10,000, $5,000 for the next 10,000,). It would be the first meeting and $2,000 for the remaining| of a pope and a top Soviet gov- 5,000. This would come to &|ernment official. Pope John re- maximum allowable expendi-|cejyed Nikita Khrushchev's son- ture of $13,000. in-law, and daughter, Mr. and However, in the far-flung con-|Mrs, Alexei Adzhubei, in 1963) stituencies, such as Saguenay,| when Adzhubei was editor of} Duplessis, Abitibi and Iles-de-|the Soviet government news-| la-Madeleine (the Magdalen Is-| paper Izvestia. lands), where there are greater; Addressing parliament Wed- distances to cover, the law al-|nesday, Fanfani stressed his| lows an additional 10 cents for| goyvernment's loyalty to NATO each voter. : jand its understanding for the DONATION The law also provides for re-|U.§, position in Viet Nam. He imbursement at a flat rate of|said the talks with Gromyko 15 cents for each elector, nO) would not affect present Italian Sate feae sane shschees, eset leet ant. oe a URGENTLY TORONTO NEEDED by bus 10 Low Fares -- Good Any Day SUPPORT One Way 1.10 Return 2.00 TIME TABLE CHANGE Effective April 24th, 1966 BUSSES WILL RUN ON DAYLIGHT TIME Greenfield - for lazy gardeners Y OUR RESEAR ; : cH Greenfield Lawn Food does the work--you relax. Have a greener lawn faster-- longer. One application right now works for months. Try all the Greenfield products for the laziest gardening ever. CANCER Pal EDUCATION & ing a cool head. Relaxing. Watch- * ing it grow greener. To help your lawn off to the greenest start éver and to keep it that way--start now. Go to the Greenfield lazy gardeners section at your local dealer and buy a bag. Nothing on earth comes up greener than grass when it's fed Greenfield Lawn Food. Suddenly it's green. Greenfield Lawn Food starts to work the sec- ond it's on your lawn. Your lawn greens up faster--stays healthier longer. One bag of Greenfield Lawn Food feeds a lawn (5,000 square feet) for months. During the burning season when your lawn needs it most, Greenfield is still working. And what are you doing when the heat's on? Keep- CANCER WELFARE SERVICES OSHAWA -- WHITBY - TORONTO CANADIAN CANCER SOCIETY MINOR SERVICE CHANGES (Ask for Time Table No. 7) Tickets and Information. at OSHAWA: WHITBY: Mong 3 hte HARRY DONALD LTD. us Termipsl, 300 Dundes Street East, 18 Prince Street, Telephone 723-2241 Telephone 668-3675 JOHN BROUWER GARDEN CENTRE 2 Miles West of Whitby on Highway No. 2 NEAR RED WING ORCHARDS -- 668-3396 "High Quality Nursery Stock" RUNDLE GARDEN CENTRE 1015 KING ST. E., OSHAWA 725-6551 "Everything For The Garden" JOHN SWAN HARDWARE LTD. OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE. - PHONE 725-3527 COOPER-SMITH CO. "Complete Garden Supplies" 16 Celina Street -- 723-2312 or 723-1139 J. A. JANSSEN & SONS LTD. "Complete Line of GFrden Supplies" 843 KING ST. W. 728-9429 VAN BELLE GARDENS "Your Friendly Garden Centre" 5 MINUTES EAST OF OSHAWA On Highway No. 2 -- 623-5757 ONTARIO COUNTY UNIT Attention All Citizens of Oshawa ... BLITZ NIGHT Monday April 25, 5.30 to 9.30 P.M. PLACES OF BUSINESS IN DOWNTOWN AREA and also the Oshawa Shopping Centre will be canvassed by the PIYAN Chapter of HADASSAH during Business Hours Please arrange to be at home when the canvassers call. REMEMBER ! YOU can help to cure Cancer by a check-up and a cheque

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy