Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Ottawa Journal from Ottawa, Ontario, Canada • Page 2

Location:
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Tuesday, April 11. 1967 The Ottawa Journal FORCES, RCMP TOO CHARTS 'NOT USEFUL' TO REDS 'Worthwhile' CS Pension Increases By RICHARD JACKSON of The Journal Canada's 30,000 superannuated civil servants and the 15,000 widows and orphans of retired government employees may look forward with confidence to an upward adjustment in pension rates. Parliament's special committee which has been studying the pension question has finished with outside witnesses, currently is hearing the last of evidence from the government's own treasury board and finance officials, and expects next week to begin preparing its report and recommendations. A recommendation for an increase, as it did nine years ago, would result in pension adjustments also for the armed forces and the RCMP. CONFIDENT "All of us on the says Stanley Knowles.

New Democratic MP for Winnipeg North Centre, "are confident our report will recommend worthwhile increases. Elsewhere it was learned that recommendations for "worthwhile" increases already have been filed both by Mr. Knowles and by R. A. Bell, Conservative MP for Carleton, the key members of the committee of which Ottawa East Liberal Jean Richard is chairman.

LINKED TO SERVICE The increase when the com- mittee strikes it, is expected to be on a sliding scale linked to years of service. For the longera civil servant has been retired, the committee discovered from its ex amination of statistics, the more his pension dollar has been eroded by inflation in its buying power. Further, pensions of the more-recently retired civil servants are based on their best six years of salary while those superannuated before 195. draw pensions based on 10 years. The last adjustment in government pensions for its retired employees, members of the armed forces and the RCMP.

was in 1958. Ottawa, Area Deaths MRS. MAY SEGUIN. widow of Joseph Seguiru, 414 Albert Street MRS. HONORA ARCAND, 83.

widow of John J. Arcand. Kemptville. ERWIN VANCE WEIR, 76, Pakenham. JOSEPH EDMOND Mc-FAUL, 84.

Ottawa. ALEXANDER ANGUS GRANT, 39 Second Avenue. GEORGE OUELLETTE. 74, Ottawa. Primitive man first started to bury his own dead 50,000 years ago.

For distinguished service. The whisky Direct from Canada to Europe on French Line French Line comes to ce'ebrate Expo 67. And takes yoj straight to Southampton Le Havre and vice versa. Sail the beautiful "France," longest ship afloat Sail the 'Flandre," gracious, intimate, gay. It's the life aboard the French Lire that makes the difference.

S.S. FRANCE Lv. Southampton and Le Havre, Mav 3 an'J Oct 21. Lv. Quebec.

May 13. Minimum rates: First Class from 544? 'J. Z.i Tourist Class from $240 U. S. seaso-0.

S.S. FLANDRE Lv. Southampton and Le Havre. Aug. 4 Aug.

Lv. MontrealQuebec, Aug. 12 and Aug 31-Minimum rates: First Class from $34' U. Tourist Class from $204 U. S.

'off season. SEE YOUR TRAVEL AGENT FOR DETAIL? and for information on S.S. France sa Vo and from New YorK and for various reductions. 1255 PMl-n Squire. Wite' 1 1 if- -K5fSHSBsj -1 I isro.

tist with the Imperial medal. It is light, full-flavoured, in a distinctive decanter I 4. fc SM Your Frtflck Linn Trovl 9n Todoy ALGONQUIN TRAVEL SERVICES Taken the Trouble Out of Travel 1173 Wellington "S-31 41 '1 4 7 BERNARD M. DALY, director of the Canadian Catholic Conference Information Service, who was named director of the Family Life Bureau of the CCC, which is the assembly of the Canadian Catholic hierarchy. He takes over his new duties on June 1.

Father Sees Son Killed Gilles Brazeau, five, son of Mr. and Mrs. Emile Brazeau of Masham was struck by a car and killed Monday while his father looked on. The boy was struck as he ran across the road at Rupert and Masham Roads in Ste. Cecile de Masham after disembarking from a school bus driven by his father, 38.

He was hit by a car driven by Rene Diotte. 33. also of Ste. Cecile de Masham. Mr.

Brazeau took his son to Wakefield Hos pital, but he was dead on Mr. Brazeau took the boy for a ride' with the school chil dren every afternoon and drop ped him at the same intersec tion before returning the bus to the depot From Page One Stand-Pat However, he injected an op timistic note by saying the econ omy, tightly reinecTdUring the 1966-67 freeze, likely will rise by some three per cent a year. MAY MEAN EXPANSION Some industrial spokesmen immediately noted this may mean expansion in government-controlled industries, without encouragement for a similar ex- nsion in private industry. The government bas already an-: nounced it will inject more investment in the nationalized companies. Callaghan anticipated that exports which have been rising during Vast year, will continue to eo un and that repayments of the huge loans obtained from the International Monetary Fund to deterd the pound will be repaid ahead of the year-end deadline.

In effect thV British credit squeeze Is to continue, though Callaghan hintedUhat he would I like to move towards relaxation1 at the earliest suitable moment. Asfor the wage-price freeze; of theNast half of 1966 and the current period severe re' straint, Callaghan saif he ees no reason for a "ree-for-all" after the period of restraint ends in Ju'y. P-ime Minister Wilson has already indicated wants to reta reserve powjr to prevent a sudden sharp rise in as well as pfiCSST INDUSTRY UNHAPPY Industrialists have been grumbling that the current re straint has injured their profit margins and that the Labor administration anpears to be moving more and more towards over-all so-ialism. pinning pn-. vate industry to the wall.

Cil- lagban sought to offsrt this by saying the government has no desire "to k'll tjie goose lays the golden eggs." However, he urged irdust-y to cor-' linue to exerc.s? restraint in distribution of dividends. ABOUT, lead-095 Now tut world renowned COSTAIN homes at Blackburn Hamlet 01 ORCHESTRA SUPHJES 2i frank ST. aas-ua RECORDS REFRIGERATORS TV RADIOS WASHERS STEREO ClnH Wtdnnday 1 p.m. CUMMING ELECTRICAL SALES LTD. 225 Bnk Sfrert 232 1193; From Page One I i i Martin The foufstages advanced by Mr.

Martin: 1. Some degree of physical disengagement, possibly In "the demilitarized zone Northman South Vietnam. Mr. Martin said this would mean halting the bombing of North Vietnam, no matter from what point of origin, and indicated it would also mean stop ping infiltration of South Viet nam from the north. 2.

Freezing the of military events in Vietnam at the present level. The minister said this might entail undertakings by both sides not to change the scale or pattern of current military activities in South Vietnam and a prohibition on reinforcements of troops and arms from what ever source. 3. Cessation of all active hostilities on the ground, at sea and in the air. 4.

Completion of the process of return to the 1954 ceasefire provisions that Is, withdrawal of forces to either side of the 17th parallel, repatriation of prisoners-of-war and dismantling of military bases. FOR STRANGERS ONLY MOSCOW (AP) The Soviet government won't exhibit its Marc Chagall paintings in Rus sia but. is lending eight for showing abroad, in Zurich. The U.S.S.R. has a number of early works by the Russian born master but they do not conform to the official style of socialist realism.

rt Featherstone Only Doing Job-Lawyer By The Canadian Press Bower Edward Featherstone's counsel argued today that his client was only doing his job as a government lithographer when he took possession of two confidential navy charts. In his final argument before the case goes to the jury, defence counsel John Segouln said employees of the mapping branch of the resources depart ment are required to obtain copies for accuracy checks of all charts and maps they print Featherstone, 28, has been charged under the Official Se crets Act with obtaining and retaining two copies of a con fidential chart of the Grand Banks fishing area southeast of Newfoundland. Mr. Sigouin said many civil servants in Ottawa could be subject to similar charges if his client was convicted. He argued that the charts contained little information that is not available-to the public "from other government sources.

"I suggest that these charts are not useful to the Soviet Union," he said, Patrick Galligan. special Crown prosecutor, said the resources department was not on trial for its security precautions or lack of them. He recalled the evidence that the two confidential charts printed last April were found by the RCMP in Featherstone's locker last Oct. 25. He recalled that the' RCMP found a "strange note" in.

the locker about an apparent rendezvous at a street corner in downtown Ottawa and "rather strange letters" about delivering merchandise if payment was received. The and how it arrived. It came slowly. After 6 to 18 months in the cool and dark. You can't rush a Cherry Hill Cheddar.

Time is the very foundation of a perfect cheddar. Hurry it with forced curing 's like a lot of cheddar makers do today. i and you lose out. A little flavour. Something in the texture.

So at Cherry Hill we don't fool around. We wait. Every now and then we look in on our maturing cheddars. We get rid of those that aren't going to make their potential. They'll do very well for processed cheese slices.

But an impeccable ched-dar, they'll "never be When the cheddar is ripe, we bring them out. Great round golden wheels of flawless, naturally-aged cheddar. Full-flavoured. Tangy without bitterness. Velvety on the tongue.

And slightly crumbly in texture. The impeccable cheddar. At Cherry Hill we think this is worth waiting for. But only we have to wait. And we don't charge extra for that.

nas When you go to your super market, the impeccable cheddar arrived. t's waiting for you. fox? I If fza-SPh XzsT I Vv- I I 1 ft I I 1 111 I I mm He recalled how four undercover RCMP agents followed Featherstone and Soviet Attache Eugueni Kourianov as they met at a shopping centre on a cold Sunday morning Feb. 13, 1966, and exchanged what looked like a piece of paper as they walked together for 40 minutes. PUBLIC NOTICE CARLETON EAST LIBERAL ASSOCIATION NOMINATION MEETING GLOUCESTER HIGH SCHOOL April 11, 1987 8.30 p.m.

GJJ CN now stretches your dollars all the way to Chicago with low Red, White Blue Fares and with attractive CN savings like complimentary meals when you travel by parlor or sleeping car i extra savings when you share sleeping' accommodation low fares for children big bargains for groups of ten or more adults. Go CN to Chicago for comfort and bargains I For reservations call your Authorized CN Travel Agent or Cft Passenger Sales Office. Ottawa to Chicago $19.40 One way coach travel, Red "Bargain" Days. The Impeccaole Cheddar from The Old Cherry Hill Cheese House. Mild.

Medium. Old..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Ottawa Journal
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Ottawa Journal Archive

Pages Available:
843,608
Years Available:
1885-1980