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Oshawa Times (1958-), 9 Dec 1964, p. 3

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THE IVAN FRANKO, the Soviet. Union's first attempt at building a luxury liner, is in London on its maiden voy- age with 642 Soviet tourists. The captain terms it a "'class- less" ship, but there are dif- ferences in cabins and in prices. All the ship's servants are girls and women wearing blue uniforms with gold braid. --(AP Wirephoto via cable from London) Farmer OK's Cattle Test DUTTON, Ont. (CP)--A Dut- ton area cattle farmer relented Tuesday and allowed his herd to be tested for brucellosis and tuberculosis. Anthony Englehart of this area 15 miles southwest of St. Thomas maintained however that the testing was cruel and | also that it made his cattle | wild and less valuable. He consented to the test fol- | lowing an Elgin County court | hearing in St. Thomas Oct. 26. He was charged with refusing to have six cattle from his herd tested while living in a brucel- losis control area. The charge under the Animal Contagious Diseases Act was adjourned to Dec. 14. The last time he had his herd | tested for brucellosis--a disease ' inducing abortion in cows--10 of them got hurt and went wild, he said. Gas Bomb Tossed At Police Station SUTTON, Ont. (CP)--A burn- ing gasoline-filled bottle was thrown from a car and exploded with little damage to the front of the -- station here Tues- No = 'was in the station at the time. Charles Johnson of nearby Pefferlaw said he saw a burst of flame as he left a funeral ASSOCIATION'S POWER "DANGEROUS" TORONTO (CP) -- The Mc- Ruer royal commission on civil rights was given its first pos- sible example of infringement on individual liberties Tuesday by a lawyer who. complained about regulations under the Power Commission Act, an On- tario statute. Donald A. Keith, who runs a Toronto law firm, said the regulations given the Canadian Standards Association the power to inspect all electrical appliances or electrical--equip- ment advertised or offered for sale in Ontario. If the CSA refused to permit a product to be advertised or sold there was no appeal that could be made to anyone from the association's decision, Mr. Keith said the CSA was not set up by the legislature, nor was it responsible to the legislature. J. C. McRuer, former chief justice of the province, told the lawyer he had established an important point. 'This is just exactly the sort of thing we were asked to look into," he commented. Mr. Keith said neither the Power Commission Act nor the regulations pertaining to the act define what the Canadian Standards Association is. Yet the CSA 'is granted arbitrary power. parlor opposite the station, He ran to a -- <9 a ee tinguisher returned to douse the fire. Witnesses said the bottl | cagpe to have been 2 a e station window. Sutton is about 45 miles north of Toronto. Pass Bylaw On Sewers Bylaws approving storm and sanitary sewer construction totalling $97,276 were passed by city council Tuesday night. Net. cost to the city on the $84,246 contract for storm sewer work is $56,164. Work will be done on Chippewa, Seneca, Somerville streets and Taunton and Thornton roads. The $13,030 sanitary sewer job will be done under the Local Improvement Act and cost the city $9779 with abutting owners paying the rest. Work. will be done on Laval street and Cham- plain avenue. Other bylaws approved: the erection of traffic lights at Thornton road and King street west, Bond and Church streets, Simcoe and Bond streets, King and Wilson road, Park road south and Bloor street, Gibbon and Bond streets and Wilson road and Richmond street east. -- minor traffic regulation changes. -- parking regulations on 37 city streets, from Gibb "G") to Oxford ('0') streets. -- one foot reserves on 47 city streets being established as part of these- streets. -- a third time extension to IT'S DANGEROUS "dangerous delegation of authority" that could seriously affect civil rights. Mr. Keith explained later in an interview that one of his clients had been adversely affected by a CSA ruling, for. which there was no appeal. Another lawyer, John Wein- gust, recommended a bill of rights for Ontario to establish individual liberties with regard to provincial statutes. Mr. Weingust said a bill of rights should include provision for an accused person's imme- diate right to a lawyer. Police- men were. not responsible for informing a person of his right to counsel and might. not do so since they knew the lawyer might advise the person not to make any. statement. Interrogation of a suspect be a Liberty Infringement Under Commission Act man for-a brokerage house, claimed he was responsible for the establishment of the royal commission in the first place. He advocated the abolition of all closed tribunals such as the Ontario Securities Commission. He also said he was against an ombudsman because "closed. system" liable to corruption. A lawyer, Mr. Giffen the beverage room manager. it would J. Peter Giffen, suggested to Mr. McRuer the law should provide for a bail application to be made on be- half of a convicted person in custody who is appealing his conviction in writing. illustrated his argument with the case of a client convicted in Kenora for theft from his employer, owner of a hotel where he was the MONTREAL (CP) One thorny question, put to several expert witnesses, remained un- answered Tuesday when an in- quiry into Canada's worst sin- gle plane disaster ended public hearings after six sitting days. The question was: What caused a giant C-8F airliner, that appeared to be normal in all respects, to go into its fatal dive north of Montreal Nov. 29, 1963. killing 118? Experts drawn from the de- partment of transport, the Na- tional ' Research Council, the Dougias Aircraft Company and elsewhere said they were able to establish that there was nothing seriously wrong with the plane's structure, engines or flight control systems at the moment of impact. They ruled out the possibility of large-scale fire or explosion aboard the aircraft prior to im- DC-8 Jet Crash Puzzles Experts pact and said there was no reason to suspect illness, psy- chological disturbance or intox- ication on the part of the crew. The plane had been in the air five minutes--plus or minus 15 seconds--after taking off from Montreal on a flight to Toronto. STABILIZER MENTIONED A number of witnesses re- ferred to, or were asked about, the fact that the plane's hori- zontal stabilizer was found to be in a nose-down position-- that is, set in such a way as to give the aircraft a nose-down attitude of about 1.8 degrees. In this respect, the Air Can- ada disaster resembled a DC-8 crash earlier this year in Lake Pontchartain north of New Or- leans, which also occurred shortly after takeoff. Orville Dunn, 47, chief of aerodynamics in the Douglas Company's heavy transport di- TORONTO (CP)--Four ships caught in the Great Lakes by the Dee. 5 shutdown of the St. Lawrence Seaway may be forced to return to Toronto for the winter. ; Lawyers, ship agents and em- bassies of the countries in- volved were deluging the trans- port and external affairs de- partments in Ottawa Tuesday in a bid to have the seaway re- opened to free the ships, trapped outside the Iroquois lock 30 miles west of Cornwall. The vessels are the Orient Merchant of Greek registery, the Olau Gorm of Denmark, the Vanfu of Nationalist China and the Flying: Independent of the United States. All are owned or chartered in the U.S. Agents have obtained berths should take place only before his lawyer or before a magis- trate or justice of the peace, Mr. Weingust said. This would rule out any likelihood of police brutality, coercion or threats of violence. The lawyer also spoke out against compulsory breath an- alysis tests, saying they could lead to compulsory statements to police. He also argued against a section of the Liquor Control Act which allows po- licemen to search a building for liquor without a warrant. He suggested this was a Personal Grievances Anger Justice McRuer TORONTO (CP) -- Former Chief Justice J. C. McRuer eaid Tuesday he would have to be more severe with wit- nesses appearing before On- tario's royal commission on civil rights to keep them within the terms of the in- quiry. The commission bogged down Tue sday afternoon when four witnesses in a row appeared before it primarily to air personal grievances that had little or nothing to do with the terms of refer- ence of the commission. "We're worse than Commu- nists," said Lady Maude Rob- inson of Toronto, wife of the late Sir John Beverly Robin- son. She claimed that almost all of her three-acre property near Streetsville, Ont., had been taken away illegally by municipal bylaws. "Communists steal from the rich and give it to the poor," she said. "But we F. W. Webb, a customer's WHEN YOU NEED MEDICINE FAST !! have your DOCTOR phone your PRESCRIPTION to Eastview Pharmacy omens? 573 KING E. 725-3594 2 Car Delivery Shut-In Ships May Winter Here for the ships in Toronto har- bor, but. were awaiting final word on the efforts of the dip- lomatic representations to the government. Company officials said the operating costs of the. ships vary from $1,000 to $3,000 a day and the total cost of time lost in an idle winter could reach $1,560,000 -- plus expenses for berths, services, cargo and crew removal, The Flying Independent was causing the most concern since it is carrying military aid, equipment and food for foreign countries, 'THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesdey, December 9,1964 3 in concluding hearings that any) He said he and his technical interested parties are welcome) advisers will meet early in 1965, to make wiitten submissions|probably Jan. 4, to deliberate until Dec. 30. and prepare a report. 1S THE TIME TO PICK YOUR LOCATION 1-2-3 Bedroom SUITES @ PENTHOUSES Complete with Indoor Parking @ Rental or on, by appointment only. 723-1712 728-2911 The le en Luxury G@ORGIAN mansions 124 PARK ROAD NORTH; OSHAWA vision, testified that in both cases the stabilizers were set at "something approaching full nose-down position" of two de- grees. The Douglas Company subse- quently modified its C-8 sta- bilizers to give a maximum nose-down attitude of one-half degree, he s Mr. Justice George s. Chal- lies of Quebec Superior Court, who conducted the inquiry, said A. E. JOHNSON 0.0. OPTOMETRIST 14% King St. East 723-2721 NADIA G anadas a his PROUDLY EXPORTED TO MORE THAN 50 COUN ( t¢ bee 9] of ( road || TRIE DISTILLED, MAT steal from the poor and give it to the rich." One man made criminal accusations against a large number of well-known public persons, angering Mr. Mc- Ruer when he charged a Supreme Court official with forging a document. DEFENDS OFFICIAL Mr: McRuer said the man in question was one of the most highly respected offi- cers of the court and that it was a shame such a charge should be made against him. Another man broke down in high-pitched sobs as soon as he sat down before the commission. It never became exactly clear what his com- plaint was. A woman, Mrs. Pauline Shapero, a real estate agent, complained that she had no one she could go to with her charges that sly politictans were outsmarting Ontario's Municipal Act. Help A Mental Patient et the ONTARIO HOSPITAL, Whitby, Ont. HAVE A MERRY CHRISTMAS by giving on Inexpensive Gift of $2.00 or less this week. This is a request to the Citizens of Oshawa and Ontario County from. Oshawa and Ontario County Branch of the Canadian Mental Health Association. Gifts for both ladies and men are most urgently needed for these people who seem to be for- gotten. Gifts may be left at: M, Lawrence Drug Store in Port Perry; Brooklin Medical Clinic, Brooklin; Jury & Lovell Drug Store, Whitby; Hemps Drug Store in Ajax; Jury & Lovell Drug Store, Oshawa; White Cross Centre, Oshawa; McLaughlin Public Library Oshawa; & Y.W.C.A. McGregor St., Oshawa. Guild Industrial Builders on In- dustrial Park land. Price per acre was boosted from $1500 to -- establishment of Bond street (two readings) as a pub- lic highway from King street to Halliday Manor, and from Pat- ricia avenue to Ritson road. -- expropriation for easements for drai ditch (Q) dal avenue) and (Laval street extended). NEED Mortgage Money? McGILL Real Estate Broker sanitary sewer) Day or Night - 728-4285 | May I help you set your holiday table, Madam? TROUD FOOD MARKET 54 SIMCOE ST. NORTH HIGHEST QUALITY MEATS LEAN MEATY--Blade Bone Removed BLADE LEAN TENDER SHORT RIB E. J. Beauchamp Consulting Professional Engineers 257 Simcoe St. S. Civil. & Structural Engineering and Building Design. Telephone 728-7868 | BONELESS BEEF SHOULDER BONELESS BRISKET POT ROAST ECONOMY 6 & 7 RIB PRIME RIB "i J 39: 39i ROAST FRESH. PORK FRESH PORK BUTT FRESH PORK LOIN END DEVON RINDLESS BACON VeLe. sf A) SHOULDER 39! CELLO EXTRA FEATURE GOLDEN YELLOW } BANANAS Clarke's--10-oz. Tin Tomato Soup ™ b Cotte le C b TOL vine TISSUE 4u29. 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