2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, February 10, 1965 FIGHTS (Story continued from Page 1) was being chased around centre ice by Lemieux when he suddenly turned and started in at his pursuer with all the fury of a tiger. Pete Fritsch, who replaced Jean Guy Ruest in goal for Hamilton at the start of the second period, seeing his teammate in trouble rushed out to centre ice, made sure nobody was looking in his direction and helped Le- mieux batter Buchar. Dennis Gibson, not to be outdone by his Hamilton counterpart, came to the aid Sn -- Ww) y Brian Watts. Oe 20 minutes of brawl- ing, order was restored by Referee Nadin and 13 play- ers were ordered to the pen- alty box. Orr, Jim Booth, Bob Mar- shall, Jim Whittaker and Gibson, all from Oshawa, and Don Giesebrecht, Brian Watts, Cates, Fritsch and Lemieux from Hamilton re- ceived five-minute majors for fighting. Buchar and Loveless each received double majors and game misconduct penalties. Speck also received a major and a game misconduct. Loveless' double major came as a result of a fight with Marshall and for leav- ing the Hamilton bench when. the fight started. So ended the second period with 13 minor penalties, 20 major penalties, two mis- conduct penalties and four game misconduct penalties having been handed out. Most of the third period, dull in comparison with the other two, was played by Hamilton who had only five men and with only four minor penalties handed out. The strange thing about the game was the fact that at the start, there were only about 800 people there but at the end there were over 1,800. By RONALD LEBEL OTTAWA (CP) -- After 98 years of squabbles over the issue, Canadians will inaugur- ate their national flag Monday' with a minimum of fuss. The maple leaf flag will be lhoisted atop the Peace Tower on Parliament Hill at the stroke of noon at the command of Governor - General Vanier. Minutes before, the Canadian); Red Ensign will be lowered for the last time and consigned to official oblivion. Similar flag-raising ceremon- ies are being planned by at least six provinces--Nova Sco- tia, New Brunswick, Quebec, Ontario, Saskatchewan and Al- berta. The red-and-white flag, still unfamiliar to most Cana- dians, will replace the Red En- sign atop all federal buildings and embassies abroad at noon local time. Two features of the Ottawa ceremony were announced Tuesday: Prime Minister Pearson will speak and Opposition Leader > apenas has agreed to at- tend. FOUGHT BITTERLY The two party leaders and their respective forces fought Little Fuss Likely After Flag Hassle narcotics case closely and that he knew Mr. Favreau would not interfere with the judge hearing Rivard's extradition case. The witness said Mr. Favreau met Bob Kennedy in Toronto in bitterly 'over the fiag issue for) April seven months last year, but the controversy has cooled off considerably since Parliament adjourned Dec. 21 The great Canadian flag de- bate, an intermittent affair since Confederation in 1867, blew up into a political crisis last May 17 when Mr, Pearson told the Royal Canadian Legion the time had to come to scrap the Red Ensign and replace it with a 'distinctive' maple leaf flag. A government resolution for a three - leaf design with blue bands at each side stalemated the Commons all summer and the issue was referred to a special committee Sept. 10. Six weeks later. after con- sulting historians and heraldic experts, the committee. recom- mended by a vote of 10 to 4 that Canada adopt a_ national flag with a big red_ stylized maple leaf on a white square and red panels on each side. The Commons approved the maple leaf flag by a vote of 163 to 78 in the wee hours of Dec. 15. Queen Elizabeth approved the design on Christmas Eve. The Queen signed the official proclamation Jan. 28 and it be- comes effective Monday. NEW YORK (AP)--Navy div- ers searched 75 feet beneath the Atlantic today for clues to the puzzle of why a giant airliner plunged into the sea and killed 84 persons including three Cana- dians. Ten bodies and some debris HERE - THERE Congratulations are ex- tended to Miss Flossie Coyte of 27 Erie street, Oshawa, and Mrs. Muriel Shackelton of 89 High street, Bowman- ville, who are celebrating their birthdays today. The current issue of The Ontario Gazette carries the information that letters pa- tent of incorporation have been granted to two Oshawa firms. They are: The Alger Press Limited and Park oy Towers (Oshawa) lim- swering the riddle. were recovered by night- fail Tuesday in the hunt for the Eastern Air Lines plane that crashed Monday night eight miles off Jones Beach. The Canadians were steward- ess Judith Durkin, 23, whose parents live in Ottawa; Serge Ledoux, 24, and Louis Martel, 39, both of St, Hyacinthe, Que., who were en route to Richmond, Va., to service an organ re- cently installed in a church there. Martel and his nephew, Ledoux, were tonal specialists with a pipe organ company in St, Hyacinthe. Aviation experts and investi- gators feel recovery of the fuse- lage is the main hope for an- WEATHER FORECAST Cold With Snow, Thursday Clear TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts issued by the weather office at 6:30 a.m.: Synopsis: The freezing rain will give way to a warmer rain as far north as Timmins this as the storm centre moves to a position near Kap- uskasing by this evening. Rain over the southern regions will taper off to showers this after- noon followed by a few snow- flurries late today as colder air sweeps into rear of this storm. The freezing rain and rain in Northern Ontario will change to snow this evening and to- night. Thursday will give im- proving weather to all regions with gradually clearing skies and colder, more seasonable temperatures. Lake Erie, Lake St. Clair, Southern Lake Huron, Niagara, Lake Ontario, Windsor, Lon- don, Hamilton, Toronto: A few snowflurries late today and early tonight. Turning colder to- night. Thursday sunny with cloudy periods and seasonable temneratures. Winds shifting to northwest 25 this evening and early tonight and decreasing to light Thursday morning. Northern Lake Huron, South- ern Georgian Bay: Snow or snowflurries late today 'and ending Thursday morning. Gradual clearing Thursday aft- ernoon. Colder tonight and Thursday. Winds _ becoming northwest 25 to 30 late today and light Thursday. Haliburton, Killaloe: Snow or snowflffries tonight. Thursday cloudy and colder clearing by |- late afternoon. Winds becoming northwest 25 tonight and light on Thursday. Northern Georgian Bay, Al- goma, North Bay, Sudbury: Snow late today and _ tonight. Thursday cloudy with snowflur- ries ending by midday. Colder tonight and Thursday. Winds becoming northwest 30 tonight, decreasing to light by Thurs- day afternoon. Timagami, Southern Coch- rane, Southern White River: Snow early tonight: Tursday cloudy and colder with snow- flurries ending in the after- noon. Winds becoming north- west 30 late today decreasing to light by Thursday evening. Divers used sonar detection equipment to locate the main settion of Eastern's four-en- gined, propeller - driven craft. Once the hulk is found, Civil Aeronautics Board officials feel it can be brought up with giant grappling hooks. CHECK POSSIBILITIES Investigators checked many possibilities of why the plane crashed, including the theory of a controi-malfunction. The contro] malfunction the- ory was based mainly on the testimony of the pilot of another plane which said the Eastern airliner had failed to pull out of a "very steep turn" just before the crash. Investigators took the flight recorder of the other jet--a metal foil tape which records speed, altitude, vertical velocity and heading -- and sent it to Washington for study. This could indicate an interest by investigators that Eastern's pilot, Capt. Frederick Carson, might have banked sharply to avoid what he considered a near collision. Sheiks, 'Camels ----|to a Senator Gelinas Deep Clues Sought To Crash Mystery "We called him Bob like we cailed the president Jack," Mr. Letendre said. TELLS OF LAST RITES The commission also heard today Rev. Gaston Perron, 33, a Roman Catholic priest 'who administered the last rites Dec. 7 to Ovide Gagnon. Father Perron said Gagnon was dead when he reached his house. Gagnon was said by Mrs. Ri- vard to have loaned her $26,000 cash in June as part of the in- tended bail for Rivard. Chief Justice Frederic Dorion reserved decision on the pleas of Ross Drouin, Conservative party counsel, and Yves For- tier, counsel for Mr. Lamon- tagne, that Denis be examined about the Stonehill case. Mr. Drouin said he wants to ask Denis whether requests were made for money at meet- ings last April and July among Stonehill, Vancouver publicity man Al Williamson, Hal Dor- nan, the prime minister's speech-writer, and Denis about Stonehill's bid to se & in Can- ada. REFERRED TO SENATOR? He also wanted to ask Denis whether Stonehill was referred "to make arrangements as they are com- monly called." Senator Louis P. Gelinas, Lib- eral party treasurer in Quebec, has testified he doesn't know Denis. He also described as a "perfect stranger" to him seif- styled Liberal organizer Guy Masson. Masson has testified he tried to make an appointment with Senator Gelinas to advise him $60,000 was available for Liberal party campaign funds provided the extradition to the United States of Lucien Rivard was blocked. Mr. Lamontagne, acting for the U.S. government in the Ri- vard extradition, testified Denis offered him $20,000 to agree to the release on bail of Rivard, wanted as a key figure in a huge, Mafia - run_ narcoiics smuggling conspiracy. Mr. Fortier, backing Mr. Drouin's demand that the com- mission test Denis' credibility by examing him on the Stone- hill case, called for Mr. Dornan, Mr. Williamson and _ Stonehill also to be summoned to testify. Prime Minister Pearson has said Mr. Dornan acted with "perfect propriety" in introduc- ing Denis to Stonehill and Wil- liamson. t SHOULD BE ASKED Mr. Fortier said Denis should be asked about reports that he ~|said "How much is in it for me --for us?" in discussing the Stonehill case. Greet Queen EL OBEID, Sudan (Reuters) Thousands of nomadic sheiks and tribesmen mounted on ca- mels and horses roared a wel- come as they trotted past Queen Elizabeth today in one of the most colorful tribal gath- erings seen here for -- years, From dawn they had been | pouring into this town, 250 miles west of Khartoum, hand when Prince Philip flew in from the} capital. He said the latter question re- RIVARD PLANNED TO SKIP (Story continued from Page 1) ferred to the Liberal campaign fund. He argued that the com- 'mission should try to find out whether there was a "pattern" to Denis' actions as executive assistant to Mr. Tremblay. "It is important to know whether Denis was in the habit of diong this," Mr. Fortier said. Mr. Drouin said Stonehill, who has been expelled from Canada, appeared on a televi- sion program recently, spoke of $25,000 or $50,000 and said he had seen Senator Gelinas. (A transcript of the CBC in- terview contains no mention by Mr. Stonehill of any amount of money in the context of his ref- erence to Senator Gelinas. SHOWS REPLY ' (The transcript shows that when the interviewer asked him if he had met Senator Gelinas, Mr. Stonehill replied: ("Er ... yes. I met him. Through a mutual friend on an- other occasion, and I must say that in fairness to Senator Gel- inas he never inferred anything improper. I merely explained to him that I wanted to become a resident of Canada, and I asked if there was anything that he could do in my behalf, to hasten action on this. And Mr. Gelinas said that he would look into the matter, and to best of my knowledge, he's never--I don't He's never approached me, he's never called me, he never said anything."') Mr. Drouin and Mr. Fortier both argued that the commis- sion in fairness to Denis should take up these widely circulated reports on the Stonehill case. RCMP counsel Norman Math- ews opposed the application of Mr. Drouin, arguing the inquiry would lose sight of its main purpose -- the bribery allega- tions in the Rivard case and the allegations in the Rivard case and the handling of RCMP reports of the investigation of | them. Opposition also was registered by Commission Counsel Andre Desjardins, Francois Chapados, counsel for Masson; Jules Des- chenes, counsel for the federal government; and Guy Guerin, counsel for Denis. RESERVES DECISION know what happened about it.| By THE CANADIAN PRESS Premier Ross Thatcher of Saskatchewan said Tuesday his government was _ considering ordering an investigation into missing government documents that could "make the Dorion inquiry look pretty pale." Five legislatures were in ses- sion across the country Tues- day, with a sixth, Nova Sco- tia's, due to open today. The Saskatchewan Tiberal premier, prior to moving ad- journment on the throne speech, accused the former CCF government of having stolen government documents, some of which dealt with ex- pense accounts, loans rejected under the industrial develop- ment fund and a_ bankruptcy file on a wool plant. Mr. Thatcher said 19 of 24 cabinet drawers had been "cleaned up" and accused the CCF of clearing out the files to "destroy incriminating evi- dence." WOULD LOOK PALE "In the days to come, if we find the files, I think it would make the Dorion inquiry look pretty pale," Mr. Thatcher said, referring to the current inquiry being held by Mr. Jus- tice Dorion into allegations of bribery in connection with/a Montreal narcotics case. In other legislature business: Vietoria -- Frank Calder (NDP -- Atlin), lone Indian member of the British Colum- bia legislature, asked the pro- vincial education department to sponsor a study into how best to preserve British Columbia's native Indian languages. Scandal In Saskatchewan: Thatcher Threatens Probe into Air Canada's decision to shift its maintenance base to Montreal from Winnipeg. Halifax--The Nova Scotia legislature meets today with Premier Robert Stanfield's Conservatives out - numbering the opposition Liberals 39-4. Liberal house leader Peter Nicholson says he plans to ac- cuse the government of patron- age in the awarding of con- struction contracts. St. John's--Liberal Premier Joseph Smallwood read to the Newfoundland a let- ter 2 the D s-a-day output ofa i F © posed $50,000,000 pulp mill on Lake M in Labrador. Mr. Smallwood said progress on plans for the proposed mill has been temporarily slowed pending completion of a study of ice conditions in the area. cemceeniematae 7 Mortgage Dene | McGILL "ste Day or Night - 728.4285 womans Quebec City--A bill abolish- ing the veto power of the legis- lature council, Quebec's upper house, and replacing it with de- laying powers, received second reading Tuesday. Premier Jean Lesage read to the assembly a sharply-worded letter, addressed to Prime Min- ister Pearson, saying Quebec can accept neither the principle nor the commissioner of the Thompson inquiry into Air Can- ada's Winnipeg m ain tenance base. The commission, under Win- nipeg barrister D. A. Thomp- son, was set up by the federal government last June to look Zurich $43 down, The low- on air fares It doesn't cost a penny extra to fly the finest! Here's the low down payment on a BOAC 21-Day Economy Excursion Fare from Toronto to London this Spring--only $34. With up to 24 months to pay the balance of the $339.50 air fare! Other 21-Day BOAC bargains: See your BOAC Travel Agent. BRITISH OVERSEAS AIRWAYS CORPORATION WITH AIR CANADA | down Rome $50 down. TAKES GOOD CARE OF You OSHAWA, STORE. Chief Justice Dorion said he will reserve decision until he examines the transcript of arguments. 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