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Oshawa Times (1958-), 8 Jul 1966, p. 3

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ALEX DEARBORN, 13 LEE MORRIS, 13 - College Hill School FANNIE HISLOP SCHOLARSHIP WINNERS... SHAWA PUBLIC SCHOOL STUDENTS KATHY GLAZIER, 12 Ridgeway Senior Dr. 8. J. Phillip School HOMELESS Mrs, Dorothy Nulsen, 70, citing her contingent of six and members of her stray -, 11 ey and eo Pac F ens as evidence. Mrs. Nul- animal iingesine Hie sit be- sen, who said she tries to mused after city inspectors find homes for her strays, condemned her apartment was cited for running an and served eviction notice. illicit kennel and ordered to Police said the abode was appear in court unfit for human habitation, (AP. Wirephoto) Relive Arbitration Possible: Wishart TORONTO (CP) General Arthur Wishart said Thursday. he hopes to decide to- day wether to appoint an arbi . 7 trator in a police wage dispute] Ontario Police. Associatioa at Pembroke which threatens to} agrees to have the dispute arbi- disrupt police services across| trated by the Ontario Police the province. Cominisaien However, Mr. Wishart said in| he contract, concluded in an interview it may be im-| tuly last year, called for wages proper to appoint an arbitrator up 46 $6 She annually. tindas ths while the matter is before the oll @oatraet thee received courts. $4800 r The Town of Pembroke has Meanwhile, 700 civilian em started an action in the Ontario invades nt the Metropolitan Tor Supreme Court against the! onto Police Commission asked Pembroke Police Commission ,,,. Sebitretion proces which last year signed @ CON-lings Thursday because they tract with the town's 18 police | wiaim the 'Toronto Police: Com officers. The town council later! mission has refused to negotiate refused to ratify the contract.) Haw contract Dennis Latten ; administrator |~ of the 2,300-member Ontario Po- lice Association, said Thursday police throughout the province are unhappy at the Pembroke council's refusal to ratify the agreement and are threatening to book off sick. Police are for- bidden to strike. WANT ARBITRATOR Mr. Wishart said he received a letter Thursday from the On- tario Police Commission re questing an arbitrator. If Mr. Wishart decides against appointing'an arbitrator because of Jegal action started by the town, Mr. Latten said the association will seek a Su preme Court writ setting aside the action Pembroke said earlier the ac tion will be withdrawn if the --} TIGER TURNED TAIL TANAH RATA, Malaysia (AP)--Postman G. Somakandan sighted a tiger on the outskirts of town and started running Looking back, he saw the tiger was running too--in the oppo- site direction ...@ Wine you won't forget! A number to remember... | TORONTO (CP)--An amend- ment to the government's con- | sumer-protection bill that would jhave partially abolished wage |assignments in Ontario was de- \feated Thursday in the legisla- ture. James Renwick (NDP -- Riv erdale) presented the same | amendment in the committee of] |the whole house--the stage be- tween the second and_ third readings of a bill--that he ear- lier in the week had withdrawn lin the standing committee- on legal bills and labor. His proposal would have done away with wage assignments aa . GILDER SCHROTCH, 14 Dr. C. F. Cannon for credit granted on goods and services but would have ex- cepted credit unions which use them exclusively to secure loans to: members. In other business; --Maximum fines of $5,000 could be imposed on stores breaking municipal earl y- closing bylaws if an amend-| ment to the Municipal Act in-| troduced Thursday is passed. | --James Renwick (NDP--Riv-} erdale) said Attorney-General Arthur Wishart had no right} to hold his job unless. he could ' substantiate his earlier claims Agriculture Ministers Propose Subsidy Hike TORONTO (CP)--Quebec will jwithdraw its subsidy on milk for manufacturing if the federal government agrees to proposals made by Ontario Agriculture Minister W. A. and Clement Vincent who holds the same portfolio in Quebec. Mr. Stewart revealed this in a statement Thursday night on his return from Ottawa. after talks with federal Agriculture |Minister J. J. Greene and Mr. | Vincent. | The two ministers, Mr. Stew- art's statement says, asked the \federal government "to guaran- |tee the farmer $3.50 a hundred- weight for 3.4 (butter content) |milk at the plant. | "Along with the federal sub- |sidy to shippers of manufactur- ling milk in the two provinces this would bring the producer ja total price of $4.25 per hun- dredweight at the plant," the statement says. SEEK SUBSIDY RAISE "In order to achieve this price to the producer, the. pro- vincial agriculture ministers asked the federal government to increase the subsidy on cheese for export to raise the domestic Stewart Attorney-| Mayor William Kutschke of|Price to 46 cents a pound andjand vegetation, and homeown- to raise the offer-to-purchase |prices on butter to 61 cents, on spray powder to 21 cents and lon rol] powder to 20 cents a pound," the statement says. Mr. Stewart said he told Mr. | |Greene "the dairy farmer is| lcaught in a worse cost-price | Squeeze now than he was when) the federal policy to achieve a |$4 price was introduced earlier this year." People Return | To Poison Town ARGYLE, Minn. (AP)--About 100 persons returned to their | homes in this northwestern Min- jnesota community Thursday night. after authorities reported an easing in danger caused by jan accidental spraying of the | village with a poisonous chem- ical. Between 300 and 350 residents} fled their homes late Wednes- |day night when it was learned that parathion--potentially a le- thal poison--had been used in an aerial spraying operation against mosquitoes instead of a milder insecticide. No ill effects from the chem- jical were reported, other than la few cases of nausea Volunteer firemen manned hoses Thursday to wash the poisonous chemical from streets jers scrubbed their property. Police Chief Dennis Rousseau said the amount of parathion present. would be fatal: if a {small child should roll into high | grass which had been sprayed BLECTROHOME 3 JEAN SIMMONS, 12 Ridgeway Senior there had been civil disorder among strikers at the Oshawa Times in February. --Agriculture Minister W. A Stewart said he and Quebec Agriculture Minister Clement Vincent have asked the fed- eral government to guarantee dairy farmers $3.50 a hun- dredweight for 3.4 butter con- tent milk at the plant. --Mr. Wishart said riot and mob control was taught mem- bers of Ontario police forces by three special agents on loan from the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation. --Provincial Treasurer James Allan said an agreement has been signed hetween Ontario and the federal government permitting the transfer of civil servants' pension credits from one jurisdiction to the other. --George Ben (I, -- Bracon dale) said the law is loaded in favor of deserted wives. He} said wives who deserted their husbands should be required, as the husbands are, to con- tribute financial support to the children. --Mr. Wishart announced ap- pointment of H. Allan Leal as chairman of the Ontario Law} Reform Commission. Mr. Leal recently resigned ul dean of Osgoode Hall Law| School GEORGE GOREGLED, 14 Ridgeway Senior Wage Assignment Changes Northern Election Victory Turned Down in House THOMPSON, Man, (CP)--Vic- tory in the North has rein- forced Premier Duff Roblin's majority in the Manitoba legis- lature. His Progressive Conservative government, badly bruised two weeks ago in winning a fourth consecutive term, retained northern Churchill constituency Thursday in deferred provincial election voting in the 57th and final seat to be decided. Gordon Beard, 44, a 300-pound Thompson businessman, suc- cessfully defended his seat against a challenge by Wilf Hud- son, 37, a nickel-mine mill mech- anic and union organizer repre- senting the New Democratic Party. The Liberals, who held on to their place as the official Op- ELAINE KHAN, 13 Ridgeway Senior THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, July 8, 1966 3~ Civil Servants Get Pension Deal OTTAWA (CP) -- Finance Minister Sharp announced Thursday in the Commons that he and James Allen, Ontaria provincial treasurer have signed an agreement permitting transfer of pension benefits for civii Servants woo Switch joDs between the two governments. The agreement, retroactive to jast Sept. 1, will enable civil servants moving from jobs with one government to another to take their pension benefit rights with them, Mr. Sharp said. CALL OR SEE' DIXON'S 0! FOR OIL. FURNACES HELEN FEDIW, 14 Cedardale School | 'Boosts Roblin's Majority -- | position despite substantial NDP jgains June 23, were left out in the cold in Hudson Bay-bor-: dered Churchill when their can- didate was disqualified on nomi- nation day. | With all seats accounted for, the standing compared with the 'previous election Dec. 14, 1962, 18; 1966 1962 | 36 | 13 7 1 57 | With the exception of two. va-; cancies, seats that had been) iheld by the NDP, the 1962! standing was unchanged at dis- solution. | RENT- 725-6553 DAY -- WEEK -- MONTH $8.00 PER DAY 725-6553 RUTHERFORD'S CAR AND TRUCK RENTALS A-CAR PLUS LOW MILEAGE CHARGE | 14 ALBERT ST, Oshawa SERVING OSHAWA OVER 5g YEARS Though the Conservatives as | the party in power must appoint | a Speaker, the Churchill victory | hoists their over-all house mar- gin to four. 24-HOUR SERVICE 313 ALBERT ST. 723-4663 The 4 C's of Saving cONFIDENCE ! CONVENIENCE ! COMFORT ! CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST . 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