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Oshawa Times (1958-), 15 Jul 1966, p. 3

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rider Brian high, wide Saskatoon Claypool flies Brief House Session 'Waterfront Bill Passes Before Commons Recess a | -bill-simed--at sett, By GERARD MeNEILL OTTAWA (CP) -- The 27th Parliament passed one last bill, on which 11 votes were called. and then recessed early today until Oct, 5. The three recorded and eight standing votes on a government ment.-of the last and thorniest issues of the Quebec dock strike left veteran observers searching for a prec-! }sion Plan. edent. A stubborn opposition said the government was trying to get advance approval of any recom- mendations Commissioner Lau- rent Picard may make in an in- airy q were affected by the strike-- Montreal, Trois - Rivieres and Quebec City. The day also was highlighted by Health Minister Eachen's announcement of a 2 ¥ x age pensions for won't qualify for benefits from the contributory Canada Pen- It will guarantee them a minimum income of $105 a month, The announcement was. met by criticism from Conservative suppier and NDP spokesmen who have Record U.S. Raids Hit North Vietnam SAIGON (AP)--U.S. jets flew| In a fourth encounter, two Mac- supplement to oldithe. atic those who|™en's Association and the Ship- into automation proce-|been seeking a straight $25) dure« in the three ports that|monthly increase for all pen-) sioners. WILL BE BINDING Under the terms of the water-| front bill, Dr. Picard's recom- mendations will be binding on International Longshore- ping Federatjon of Canada, the parties involved in the 39-day strike that ended June 14. THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, July 18, 1966 3 Sharp Tells Committee sufficient to jnance Minister Sharp | Thursday. | Pressures on the economy are even stronger than indicated in late March when he brought down his budget in the Com- rain investmen +h ™ rest + 4 this 5 Fi conceded ronetrurn < | mons, Mr. Sharp told the Sen-, Of Strains On Economy OTTAWA (CP)--Last March's|aimed at reducing inflationary, jbudget measures may not be| |refundable tax on corporation pressures were' a five-per-cent profits $59,085 and-are- duction in capital cost allow- ances, The government hoped to crop $300,000,000 from indus- trial-anad-government consiruc: tion plans totalling $10,000,000,- The committee quickly com- | ft resulted in a 40-cent hourly | 2!€ committee on banking and pleted its study of changes to wage increase this year and next for the longshoremen, but the thorniest issue was that of| automation on the docks. | Conservatives and New Dem-| Locrats joined in strong opposi- |tion to the bill. They. said the |government was forcing com- pulsory arbitration on the ILA as a result of a deal made by Labor Minister Nicholson with the shipping federation. Mr. Nicholson said strikers jand shippers were aware that binding legislation would back a record 114 missions against|MiG 17s made a firing pass at|the inquiry. The ILA has said North Viet Nam Thursday.|a flight of F-105 air force Thun-|it would co-operate with the in- Communist MiGs clashed with)/derchiefs and then flew without] quiry and respect the results. ithe American raiders four|scoring hits, a U.S. spokesman times. U.S. Air Force and navy jets also dodged surface-to-air mis- siles and reported knocking out a major bridge on the railroad line connecting Hanoi with B | China. PARTING COMPANY and free as he bids fare- well to his unco-operative mount in the boys' steer riding contest al the Cal- | gary Stampede Thursday (CP Wirephoto) May Stall Legislation OTTAWA (CP)--By recessing Parliament until Oct. 5 the gov ernment may. have placed itself in a tight spot in getting vital legislation approved on time In addition to several meas- ures needing approval before next spring, there is a major item--Finance Minister Sharp's amendments to the Bank Act which has a Jan, 1, 1967, date tag on it. When MPs return from their constituencies they will have only 56 sitting days--assuming they depart the weekend before Christmas--to work before the end of the year. About 17% of those will be used to consider departmental estimates. An undermined number will be spent on interim supply bills, which will provide an opportunity to debate the Munsinger report which is ex- pected before then. The Bank Act amendments,| which include proposals for a higher ceiling on interest rates and greater competition in the banking field, are bound to con- sume considerable time. NO DEADLINE SET There is no dealine set for passage of the government's medicare bill, but Prime Minis- ter Pearson has said it will be presented for debate on second reading soon after the MPs re turn Health Minister MacKachen wanis it; approved quickly so Police Shot On Patrol PHILADELPHIA (AP)--One policeman was killed and an other seriously wounded when they stopped an auto during a routine patrol in south Philadel Phia today Other policemen converged on the area and threw up a drag het for three men seen fleeing oH foot At least one man was ar rested when he climbed to a roof and then jumped and of- ficers caught him Lieut. James Agnew said the shooting occurred when patrol men Michael! Robinson and George Jacobs stopped an auto "either for a traffic violation or because they were suspicious of | Hd Robinson was shot in the side; Jacobs was shot in the chest, and killed, said Agnew. alker's Special the provinces can move into action to have it set up by July 1 next year The Conservatives are press ing for detailed study of the plan in a committee. Even with- out a committee hearing the debate in the Commons is ex- pected to last several days. The government also is to propose legislation to amend the The the contro CBC's Broadcasting Act versy surrounding In two encounters with MiGs near Hanoi, U.S. Air Force fighters shot down two late- model MiG 21s. The kills were announced within a few hours of the action, but the navy dis- closed today that three F-8 Cru- saders were attacked by two MiG 17s 26 miles southeast of Hanoi One MiG and one Crusader said today. The Thunderchiefs were attacking a missile site about 40 miles northwest of Hanoi. DESTROYED BRIDGE Air force F-105 pilots reported destroying the Dap Cau railway- highway bridge 19 miles north- east of Hanoi. The spokesman said aerial photographs showed the two centre spans of the six span steel bridge were dropped into the Cau river. In South Viet Nam, ground ac tion continued generally light except in the northern prov- inces, where U.S,. marines jwere damaged but neither plane|clashed several times with Com- | went down, a spokesman said.imunist forces. Wilson Ponder Tough Tactics To Save Country's Economy LONDON (AP)--Prime Min-} to keep on deposit with the program This Hour Has Seven jster Wilson's cabinet is debat- Rank of England Days may provoke extended debate on this. Government informants say ing a wage freeze, higher sales taxes and cuts in defence spend- ing as it casts about for the By turning now to tactics he so bitterly criticized the Tories there has been little discussion! next step in its campaign to halt for using five years ago, Wilson about a date for concluding the | Britain's galloping inflation and tacitly admits his government's session but agree the pressure will be on MPs before Christ- mas. 1,500 WRESTLING WINS, THEN TED HAS FIRST LOSS OTTAWA (CP) -- A 210- pound welder claimed Thurs- day that he pinned Terrible Ted, the wrestling bear, Wed- nesday night and is entitled to the $3,000 prize money John Szigeti, a 36-year-old native of Hungary, said he pinned the 692 - pound bear in 4% minutes at an open-air show in Lansdowne Park. He said he is suing the promoters and the bear's owner for the listed prize money In the office of his lawyer, T. T. Metrick, Mr. Szigeti said he put the bear down, lay on top of its stomach and pinned its shoulders to the canvas The bear's owner ran over, he said, and kicked him in the right elbow to break the hold Worse still, he said, when he got up to take on the bear again, the owner ran over and took off Terrible Ted's muz- zle | The bear snarled, showed | tired. Mr. Metrick said he is pre- paring a writ which would | ask the Ontario Supreme | Court to award the prize | money to his client | If the case is successful, a big hole will be knocked in Terrible Ted's wrestling rec- ord. So far, according to owner Gene DuBois of King City, Ont:,. the record is 1,500 | wins and no losses, Washington Seeks Cut In | Foreign Investment Flow WASHINGTON (AP)--United States businessmen are invest ing in foreign enterprises at an increasingly rapid pace despite the hard-line talk in some coun tries notably Canada and France--of regulations on for- eign investment One US ment official find even country commerce depart said it's hard to one non-Communist which actually discour ages U.S. investments although many want it on their terms This year, foreign affiliates of U.S. firms anticipate spending $8,800,000,000 for new plant and equipment, 24 per cent above last year's total This rapid growth of foreign investment, revealed in a com- merce department survey taken early this year, has been of more concern to the Johnson administration than to foreign governments. As part of the administra- CANADIAN RYE Fr noha WALEHE A BOWE Un tion's program to end the defi jeit in the U.S. balance of pay- ments, American firms have been urged to cut back volun tarily on the dollars they send overseas and to borrow money for foreign expansion from for eign sources RATE 18 LOWER The flow of dollars abroad for investment during the first annual rate of $2,500,000,000 compared with a flow of $3,400 000,000 last year In Canada, there's more talk against American ownership of Canadian industry. One sugges- tion calls for a tax on acquisi tions by U.S. firms. At last count--the U.S. com- merce department survey early this year American firms planned to invest more than $2,000,000,000 in plant and equip- ment in Canada this year, up from $1,840,000,000 last year. WHISKY FH, Ww ALEVE, CaraRDA Old Canadian Rye Whisky | tion increase sales abroad. By resorting to such classic weapons against consumer) spending, the Labor government may be forced to cut back some of its cherished social pro- grams. It will also risk factory shutdowns and considerable un- employment, thereby giving Britons a distasteful dose of aus- terity after a long period of ris- ing wages and heavy buying of attempt to reorganize the econ omy without a measure of un- employment has failed. Wilson told the House of Com- mons the next turn of the screw will be applied before Parlia ment adjourns for the summer early in August WITHDRAWS OFFER Northern and Central Gas Co David Lewis (NDP --. York South) sparked the first vote with an amendment that would have sent the bill to the Com- mons standing committee on labor and employment, where he said, all sides could give their: version QUESTIONS BACKGROUND Mr. Lewis referred to' Dr Picard's "'management back ground" and said the Commons should not approve anything until it has some idea what he will recommend Robert McCleave (PC--Hali- fax) said the commissioner could force dockworkers to use camels and elephants to unload ships or wear bikinis in winter The government benches voted down the amendment. A | second recorded vote on the bill approval in principle The opposition then forced eight standing votes on every clause and stage of the bill It was given third reading on a final recorded vote, then went to the Senate, which passsed it in 15 minutes 'Save Airmen', Says PC Head CALGARY (CP) Opposi- tion Leader Diefenbaker said Thursday Canadian envoy Ches- ter Ronning should go to Hanoi immediately in an effort to head joff North Vietnamese threats to 'execute captured American pi- lots Mr. Diefenbaker made it everything from cars to pack- Ltd. has decided not to make an clear at a press conference he age vacations, Wilson, a former Oxford eco nomics. professor, apparently believes any or all of these hard offer to acquire the shares of Quebec Natural Gas Corp. and discussion between the com- | panies have been terminated, it his teeth and Mr. Szigeti re- | steps may be necessary to save| Was announced Tuesday in Tor-|lic trials would expect American retalia- {tion to follow if North Viet Nam carried out its threats. "The very suggestion of pub- and executions of the ailing pound from devalua-|onto. Northern and Central said|American airmen could bring In the last 18 months, wages have risen 15 per cent, retail prices five per cent but production only two per cent June 13 it was considering a bec Natural. Tuesday's. an nouncement didn't give any rea sons for the decision. However, disastrous consequences not only to North Viet Nam but the rest of the world." Mr. Ronning, 72, a retired dip- Wilson decreed a nationwide, negotiations apparently got|lomal, has been in Hanoi twice financial squeeze. Thursday "by| bogged down on the question of this year to meet with North raising the Bank of England's 'basic interest rate to seven per cent from six per cent. He tight ened credit further by doubling to two per cent the portion of their assets banks are required Australian Visit For Judy LaMarsh CANBERRA (Reuters) Ca nadian State Secretary Judy LaMarsh will arrive in Sydney next Friday as the guest of the Australian. government, acting Prime Minister John. McEwen announced today. She will have informal discus sions with Australian ministers, particularly) on cultural mat ters price | Vietnamese leaders. Served Daily 11:30 - Continental French Buffet 4 IGHLY RECOMMENDED Che Rih Room Will Be Closed Sundays For The Summer GENOSHA HOTEL 2 p.m, -- 5 to 8 p.m. Top M LEN BISSEL MLS LISTING SALESMAN Guide Realty Ltd, L.S. Sal For The Month of June MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE -- For -- RESULTS The Oshawa and District REAL ESTATE BOARD 172 KING ST. EAST MLS SELLING SALESMAN PAT YEO WALTER FRANK REAL ESTATE LTD. 725-6914 commerce, | Intended checks on expansion jmay not greatly modify con- struction spending, he said. "Do you mean that physical expansion may be down and that dollar expansion may be up?"' asked Senator Wallace McCutcheon (PC--Ontario): | "It is possible,""" Mr, Sharp | replied. But he added that with the Income Tax Act after ex- amining Mr. Sharp. The bill incorporating the changes was passed by the Commons Wednesday and now returns to the Senate for final reading. Mr. Sharp said analyses show construction to be most respon- sible for inflationary pres- sures 5% months to go in the year it. - lis a difficult prediction to make. | The main budget measures British uta | List Shows Drop LONDON (AP)--Britain last year had two fewer murders) than the year before despite the} abolition of capital punishment, | Home Secretary Roy Jenkins announced Thursday night. | There were 153 murders in| 1965 and 155 in 1964 Parliament) abolished hanging as the pun-| ishment for murder in the mid-| die of 1965, but no executions took place earlier in the year) because the abolition was ex-! pected j OSHAWA TIMES PICTURE RE-PRINTS Availoble At NU-WAY PHOTO SERVICE 251 King St. E., Oshawa 8 x 10 -- 1.50 each 5x 7 -- 1.25 each 20% Discount on Orders of 3 or More Pictures The government knew the measures were having an effect |because companies were mak- ing strong representations, com- plaining the curbs were "'inter- fering with their programs." 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