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Oshawa Times (1958-), 9 Apr 1965, p. 3

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i k. é # f 1 t a int PC Ex-Prexy Claims Many Want Fulton MONTREAL (CP) -- Egan Chambers said Thursday 'aj strong element" within the Pro- gressive Conservative party would back a bid for leadership by Davie Fulton. Liberals Expected To Win Two Non-Confidence Tests By STUART LAKE OTTAWA (CP)--Barring the unforeseen, the government is expected to breeze through two non-confidence motions sched- uled to be voted on at the end of today's Commons sitting. ust 30 minutes before the (MPs leave the chamber for the k, Mr. Chambers, past presid of the party, said Mr. Fulton's return to the federal scene would undoubtedly strengthen the party. Mr. Fulton, justice minister under the former Conservative vernment of Opposition ader John Diefenbaker, has announced he will run again as a candidate in the next federal election. He left federal politics two years ago to take over lead- ership of the British Columbia Conservative party. Floodwaters Hit Midwest CHICAGO (AP) -- Flood wa- ters churned through streets, homes and fields in Iowa and Minnesota today, leaving thou- sands homeless. Towns in Indiana, Nebraka and Ohio were recovering from the lash of tornadoes o rstrong winds. A 12-year-old boy standing| near a tree was struck and) killed by lightning in Ohio. | As rivers rose, floods drove more than 4,000 persons from their homes in Minnesota. More than 3,000 persons have been evacuated in Iowa. A portion of a dam on the Cot- tonwood River in southern Min- nesota, burst Thursday night, permitting a heavier flow of wa- ter downstream toward Man- kato. The Red Cross estimated that | about 2,000 more persons would) i .cxing them for failure to| be evacuated within the next) two days in the Mankato area.) INDIANS JUMP | PRICE OF CO. 'CORN' PRICE d break they'll vote on a Social Credit motion criticiz- ing the government for failure to bring family allowances into line with the rise in the cost of living and for not making} "debt - free capital' available through the Bank of Canada. The minority Liberal govern- ment is expected to draw the support of Conservative mem- bers against this attempt to topple them from power. Immediately after the vote the House again will cast bal- lots, this time on the Conserv- ative non - confidence motion. Moved by Opposition Leader Diefenbaker Tuesday on the first day of the throne speech debate, it charges the govern- ment with indifference and ne-| been cited as proof of Ameri- can interference in the 1963 federal-election which brought the Liberals to power. Mr. Churchill, MP for Winni- peg South Centre, wondered Thursday if the government had called off an RCMP inves- tigation into the validity of the letter. Noting that Mr. Pearson had revived the issue during his speech Tuesday, he asked if the prime' minister now had some additional information to give to the Commons. Or had the government taken the matter out of RCMP hands because it had decided it was a matter to be handled by a member of the cabinet or dis- missed as indiscretion by Mr. Butterworth? LETTER DISCREDITED The letter had been discred- ited on several counts, noted (Mr. Churchill. The first had been a vehe- ment denial by Mr. Pearson that he had ever received the The second was Mr. Butter- worth's denial of ever writing such a document. Then there was the report that the normal U.S, stationery wouldn't 'accommodate the number of lines on the alleged letter. While MPs had been willing to believe Mr. Pearson two years ago, would they be as willing two years later, Mr. Churchill wondered. And did Mr. Butterworth's denial go as far as it should? As for the size of stationery, surely the embassy here used more than one size. Had the government thought of inquir- ing whether 8% by 12% inch stationary was in stock there in 1963. It was the right size for the discredited letter. Perhaps, said Mr. Churchill, the letter had never been in- tended to reach the prime min- ister, It still would have been powerful ammunition for Lib- eral fund-raisers to use in the election to show what power- letter. ful friends the Liberals had. PETER C. NEWMAN Low in wiping out wr "in high and low places." WILL BACK GOVERNMENT Social Credit MPs have | outside the Commons they' ul cast their votes with the gov- ernment against the. Conserva- tive motion. Socreds say that until the Dorion commission brings its reports, it is too early to cast such judgment on the gov- ernment. The government the support of one of the four opposition parties to beat back attempts to defeat it on non- confidence motions. In the first such motion voted) on Wednesday the government! easily survived a New Demo- cratic motion by a count of 129 to 84. Liberals were joined |by the Creditistes, Socreds and) two independent members in defeating the NDP motion) yee + specific proposals for| "universal and comprehen- \ five medicare program for all! ithe people of Canada." The Liberals hold 129 of the 265 seats in the Commons. There are 94 Conservatives, 18 New Democrats, 13 Creditistes, nine Socreds and two independ- sents. |RANGES WIDELY TORONTO (CP)--The In- dians at Wikwemikong on Manitoulin Island aren't go- ing to sell their red corn neck- laces for a dollar a dozen anymore. They' ve found out that cus- |. tomers of Toronto handicraft shops are paying $4 for a sin- gle necklace. "We're forming our own Cco- and we're elim- inating the middleman," Mrs. Andrew Manitowabui said Thursday at the Indian Con- ference on the Family being held here at the Religious So- ciety of Friends (Quakers) House. Mrs, Arnold Hill of the Six Nations reserve at Ohsweken, | near Brantford, said the In- | operative, minister government, scene in the Commons in May,|the department of mines and 1963 when he read an alleged|technical surveys sent a tele- letter from the U.S. ambassa-|gram to Ottawa more than a dor to Canada, Walton Butter-\week ago saying that The third day of the throne; debate Thursday ranged over a wide variety of topics--but in- terest centred on Conservative|survey in the Arctic has led to House Leader Gordon Church-|"cautious optimism" ill's revival of the so - called | wreckage of one of Sir John 'Butterworth letter." Mr. Churchill, former defence) in the Diefenbaker sparked a wild in} needs only} BALL BEARS NO BURDEN, BUT" SHRUNK SKIN TORONTO (CP) Was Thomas Ball's bearskin lost, or did it shrink? No one is likely ever to know, as Ball has discontin- ued his action against the | taxidermist he claims mislaid the skin. Ball, of Bracebridge, Ont., | said in his statement of claim that in: November, 1960, he shot and killed a- record-size grizzly bear in British Colum- bia, the skin measuring 10 feet 11 inches from tip to tip. He said he had the skin sent to the Toronto firm of Oliver | paneer and Company Lim- | ited to be tanned, processed and mounted as a trophy. He claimed that subse- quently he went to the com- pany's store on numerous oc- 'GRIZZLY' CAS casions but that the company was never able to produce the skin of the bear he' shot. He said he was twice of- fered skins -much_ smaller than the skin of his bear. In its statement of defence the company denied that Ball's bearskin was lost or mislaid. It said the skin has been tanned and is ready to be delivered to him, but that | it was and is unfit for mount- | ing. Ball was claiming $7,000 general damages and $1,500 nounced today. TORONTO (CP) -- Winners) of National Newspaper Awards for work done in 1964 were an- The awards: Editorial Writing -- Claude Ryan, Montreal. Le Devoir. Spot News Reporting--Robert Reguly, Toronto Star, for a story Oct. 1 on his discovery of Hal Banks, former Seafarers International Union boss, on a yacht in Brooklyn, N.Y. Feature Writing--Peter New- man, Toronto Star, for a story Nov. ou on behind-the-scenes Court Rejects for the expenses of his trip ts B.C. In weekly court at Os- goode Hall Wednesday . Mr. | Justice Samuel Hughes granted a motion by Ball that | the action be discontinued without costs. 'Arctic Explorers' Ship May Have Been Found OTTAWA (CP) -- A special that the |Franklin's ships, lost in 1848, has been located. Federal government sources| report that Dr. E. F, Roots of} his follow it up. guarded optimism was based on In their spare time, they did intensive research and con- cluded that at least one of the Franklin ships foundered off |O'Reilly Island. |WRITE PAPER They followed up their work with a paper summarizing their research and their theories and asked what could be done to An arrangement was worked |Limited to stop a rival firm ithe Defence Production Depart- 'fence Production Department's Autair Claims MONTREAL (CP) -- Justice Rene Duranleau of Quebec Su- perior Court Thursday rejecte bid by Autair Helicopters from implementing a federal government contract Autair claims it should have received. | ¢: Mr. Justice Duranleau handed) down his decision after two days of hearings during which Autair argued it had been as- sured the $84,000 contract by ment, but had lost it to Atlantic Helicopters through '"'pernicieus political interference" within the federal treasury board. The judge ruled that, while Austair at one. stage had the De- recommendation, it did not have a contract. As for the charges of political _interfer- ence, he said Autair made many allegations without prov- ing any of them. His decision opened the way Ferreting Out 'Hal' Banks Year's Top Reporting Job |self bankrupt two months ago, jing Moscow's Red Square at a worth, criticizing the then Con- | servative government stand on nuclear arms. for its Branded as a forgery by|I dian Affairs branch of the De- partment of Citizenship and Immigration is planning to help Indians open their own retail store in Toronto. Last Bodies Out Of Mine TOKYO (Reuters) -- Rescu-| ers tonight reached the final] two bodies of 30 miners killed| in a gas explosion 1,800 feet be-| low the surface of a coal mine| off southern Japan. The rescue workers struggled to bring the two bodies to the) suraface at 7 p.m., 12 hours} after the explosion ripped) through the mine on an island| 12 miles off the Kyushu port of} Nagasaki. Forty-five men were trapped by the blast. There were 15 sur- vivors who were admitted to mine hospital suffering from burns caused by the heat of the explosion or by injuries from crashing rocks. AT-A-GLANCE By THE CANADIAN PRESS THURSDAY, April 8, The Commons ued the eight - day speech debate, the Credit group moving amendment. Tacked onto a Conservative 1965 contin- throne Social a sub- here said Thursday naval officers now stationed in Toronto--Lt.-Cmdr. results of a magnetometer sur- |vey in the area around O'Reilly mainiand Prime Minister Pearson andjabout 1,800 miles northwest of |Mr. Bufterworth, the letter has|Ottawa. Franklin and 129 men died jafter abandoning PARLIAMENT | a Rao : a Northwest Passage. never found although bits wreckage from them were dis-south end of a small unnamed 'covered at various places, sland, just off the The vessels their ' ships, the Erebus, were out for Dr. Roots to carry out a magnetometer survey this year while at work on the con- tinental polar shelf project he directs at Cambridge Bay, about 160 miles west of O'Reilly); Island. Dr. Roots' telegram reported) that his survey showed an an- omaly--in other words, a show- ing of mineral or metal -- 250) feet off the east shore of the| of island which lies one mile north Royal Canadian Navy sources\o fthe northern tip of O'Reilly became interested in B. F. Ack-|mism was erman and Lt.-Cmdr. D. J. Kiddjturned up no other anomolies|p;ench, Arabic, and several Af- thejin the area. Franklin story during eight|stamped with a mark of Crown! years of service in the Arctic|property was found on the small that two|Island. An added reason for opti- that the survey| Further, a spike amendment, it criticized the |on the navy icebreaker Labra-|island along with wood chips government for not making | |dor. land shavings. "debt-free capital" available | reece eer ne ne through the Bank of Canada. Both motions come to a vote today. Gordon Churchill (PC--Win- nipeg South Centre) ques- tioned an RCMP _investiga- tion into an alleged forged letter during the 1963 elec- tion campaign. Jack Roxburgh (L -- Nor- , folk) said Health Minister Judy LaMarsh departed from government policy in her | anti-smoking campaign. Robert Prittie (NDP--Bur- naby Richmond) urged es- CIA Nazis-Hunt -- Bill Okayed BONN (Reuters)--The West German upper house of parlia- ment today approved a bill ex- tending the hunt for Nazi mur- derers by nearly five years. The bill, already approved by the Bundestag (lower house), needs only the approval of President Heinrich Luebke be- t it of a department May | Co-operate in planning your insurance protection AUTOMOBILE © URBAN FIRE FAMILY LIABILITY ¢@ LIFE ACCIDENT AND SICKNESS AND OTHER INSURANCE NEEDS JOHN McPHERSON 110 Cabot St. Phone 728-7207 CO-OPERATORS INSURANCE and CO-OPERATORS LIFE | of consumer affairs. A. B. Patterson (SC--Fra- ser Valley) approved the throne speech forecast of an Indian claims commission. Gerard Laprise (Creditiste --Chapleau) said the govern- ment is ignoring poverty in northwest Quebec. FRIDAY, April 9 | The Commons meets at 11 a.m. EST to continue the throne speech debate. The Senate stands adjourned until May 4 fore it becomes law THE ULTIMATE IN LUXURY LIVING!! ee CEILING SS ELECTRIC _: "ee CABLE RADIANT ¥ HEATING PENTHOUSE * * } MODEL SUITE UNDERGROUND a 4 Je PARKING ; By Appointment . d Only ADULT vo BUILDING 728-2911 GeoRGian mansions 124 PARK ROAD NORTHs OSHAWA PAL ATLL: 29 ELBERT RNAP REL ALE LTS EINES lulu To The FARE INCLUDES; mission to the Jamboree LAST CHANCE ! to get aboard SLIM GORDON'S 3rd ANNUAL EASTER BUS EXCURSION WWVA JAMBOREE Wheeling West Virginia round fare, hotel accommodation, ad- After the Jamboree enjoy @ private dance in the Hotel Ballroom -- music by the Jembo: to 3:30 a.m. -- refreshment, a LAST DATE TO OBTAIN TICKETS MONDAY, APRIL 12th Tickets Available et SLIM'S RECORD CORRAL 165 Simcoe South--Oshawe Werld Famous ONLY 28-95 trip : ™ bond from 12 midnight ible. Dance tickets only $1.25, Buses leave /Good Friesy, April 16th, 7:00 p.m. -- return to Oshawa rere 12:30 Sunday night. For further information call 725 i for Atlantic to begin work on the contract to provide helicop- ter support for the ADCOM) radar line in northernQuebec. The contract was effective April but had been held up by a libenperars restraining order ob- \tained. previously by Autair. | Autair lawyer John Schlesin- |ger said he will appeal Mr. Jus- tice Duranleau's decision. ENCYCLOPAEDIA DUE The first three volumes of the Encyclopaedia Africana are ex- jpected to appear in 1970. They jwill be printed in English, rican languages. eS u W/ WISE SHOPPERS READ TIMES Classified ACTION ADS DAILY f YOU NEWSPAPER AWARD WINNERS CHARLES LYNCH events in the evolution of the) Canada Pension Plan. Staff Corresponding--Charles Lynch, chief of Southam News Services, for a series from Eu-| ropean battlefields marking the} 20th anniversary of D-Day in| June. | Spot News Photography--Pe- ter Geddes, Toronto Telegram, for a photograph Oct. 3 of Hal Banks stepping off the dock in ling resumes Tuesday. |RCMP to make an ST. JOHNS, Que. (CP)--Roch Deslauriers, only witness to ap- pear so far in the influence- peddling case against Yvon Du- former federal cabinet minister admitted before a witness last J y that he pted $10,- 000 in 1961. "If I fall, a lot of other people will fall with me," he quoted Mr. Dupuis as saying. He said the statement was made in a restaurant in nearby Iberville, but did not name the witness. Mr. Deslauriers, 31, has said he gave Mr. Dupuis $10,000 to support his unsuccessful bid in 1961 for a Quebec government charter to operate a racetrack at nearby St. Luc. Thursday was his sixth day of testimony, and he is to re- enter the witness box when Mr. Dupuis' preliminary hear- Mr. Deslauriers, a St. Johns chiropractor who declared him- said Mr. Dupuis stated that he distributed the money to Que- bec government employees through a messenger... puis, testified Thursday that the}. . . THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, April 9,1965 J Not exactly, Mr. Deslauriers replied. "I said that Mr. Dupuis very probably acted in good faith I have said this about 15 times . . .- but that if I made puzlic certain documents he would certainly be affected." The subject of Mr. Deslaur- iers' bankruptcy petition hear- ing last Feb. 19 also was brought up after Mr. told the court he wanetd to find out where "this famous $10,000" might have gone, if not to Mr. Dupuis. WAITED 244 YEARS Earlier Thursday, the chiro- practor testified he waited 24% years after giving Mr. Dupuis the money before informing any Quebec government officials of the payment. He reiterated that he gave Mr. Dupuis the money May 9, Daoust| Deslauriers Quotes Dupuis: Tf I Fall, Others Fall Too lauriers said he wrote to Mr. Pinard June 22, 1961. The letter did not mention any payment, but expressed confidence that the racetrack could be in operation by Aug. 12 of that year "if we can start work Monday." MENTIONS REQUEST The letter mentioned that Mr. Pinard personally was to "'pre- sent our request for a permit © to operate a racetrack to the cabinet." Mr. Deslauriers promised in the letter to 'retain financial control of the racetrack and "also, in order to prevent the monopoly on harness races that some people are trying to es- tablish, to have no dealings di- rectly or indirectly with any director of the (Montreal) Blue Bonnets Corporation." 1961, and said it was not until late 1963 or early 1964 that he complained to Quebec Premier Lesage, Roads Minister "Ber- ister Eric Kierans. Mr. Daoust then presented in evidence a letter that Mr. Des- nard Pinard and Revenue Min-|}/ FUEL OIL ? PERRY Day. or Night 723-3443 ASKED FOR INVESTIGATION "Mr. Dupuis said that night that he himself. has asked the investiga- tion. "He added that even if he were called to court he wouldn't need a lawyer, that he could Brooklyn, Feature Photography--Bobby| Olsen, Vancouver Times, for a) Thanksgiving Weekend picture Oct. 10 of a child at prayer. Ol- sen won the 1959 feature pho- ~~ |tography award while working for the Vancouver Province. Cartooning Ed McNally, Montreal, for a cartoon Nov, 10); |defend himself all alone." lasked by defence lawyer Ray- Mr. Deslauriers mentioned the alleged conversation when mond Daoust whether he had told four men last December that "Mr. Dupuis was correct} in this, but if I go he will go| with me.' | LEARN TO DRIVE 725-6553 RUTHERFORD 'S School Of Safe Driving 14 Albert St. Government Licenced -- Personalized Service -- Oshewe of deposed Nikita Khrushchev pearing out a window overlook- parade honoring Russian astro-} nauts. McNally won the 1961) cartooning award. Sports Writing--Bob Hanley,) Hamilton Spectator, for two! columns about football. A citation in the spot news) category for his coverage of the) Alaska earthquake March 27| was awarded to Alan Harman, | formerly of the Vancouver Province. Mr. Harman now) works for the Bangkok World. The awards will be presented at a dinner in Toronto Satur- day, April 24, given by the Tor- onto Men's Press Club which established the annual compe- tition in 1949 to reward achieve- ment and to encourage excel- lence in the newspaper work of this country. LOCAL IMPROVEMENT NOTICE 1. The Council of the Corporation - bg City of 'Oshawa intends to construct, os a locel lar base with concrete curb end gutter on is 90 cents. Thornton Road South, from 244. 80" south of the north limit Lot 16, Sheet 178 (4), Plan 357, to King Street West, and intends te specially assess a part of the cost upon the lend abutting directly on the work . The estimated cost of the work is $76,439.00 of which $56,349.92 is to be paid by the Corporation. The total estimated cost per foot frontage is $46.84. The special assessment is to be paid in ten equal annual instalments and the owner's annual rate per foot frontage 3. Application will be made by the Corporation te the Ontario Municipal Board fer ite I of the of the said work and any owner may, within twenty-one days work being undertaken. 4. ofter the first publication of this notice, file with the City Clerk-his objection to the seid The said Board may epprove of the said work being undertaken, but before doing so it may appoint e time end place when any objections te the said work will be considered. DATED et Oshewe this 9th day of April, 1965. L, R. BARRAND, Clerk, City of Oshewe. i whishiel to create the superb flavour of Adams Private Stock. 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