? On the sunniest day the grandeur of the Canadian landscape is dimmed at some point by the shadow of passing clouds . Yet the greatness of the land remains undiminished. : So it is today, Canadians have observed Dominion Day in much happier circumstances. However the gloom hanging over our national affairs in no-way de- tracts from the greatness of our country. Tomorrow, for the first time, the Canadian Red Maple Leaf Flag will fly on the nation's birthday. It will fly in communities throughout the rugged ranges of the Rockies. It will-snap briskly in the breeze over prairie sports days. It will flash brilliantly through the green forests of Ontario resort areas. It will mark Canada's beginnings at historic sites in the Maritimes, "a . And, off the Atlantic and Pacific shores, the Red Maple Leaf will billow against a background of white sails and rolling waves. 6 From ssa to'sea it will fly over a changing nation but'a changeless land -- a land of awe-inspiring beau- ty, a land with such # richness of resources that its po- - tential is barely tapped in nearly 100 years. ee unfamiliar, as an emblem 'of Canadian accomplishment in times of peace-as well'as war it has Jong had wide recognition. Although-as a flag,.the 'Red Maple Leaf may seem. : will pinpoint the vast and spectacular expanse of aland in which Canadians can -- and do -- 'take immense pride, ; Heme Ne Of Oshawa, manville, Ajax, Whitby,. Bow. wspaper Pickering and Weather Report -- day and Thursday. Continu- ing cool. Winds light, Low Sunny with cloudy periods tow "tale neighboring centres in On- tario and Durham Counties. a Og wees Bem and Renfrew as examples A condition of the grants is a routine interrogation. prime minister, would continue) participating in the action,/from mines, booby traps, snip- "Without some consideration,that the industry locating in Hit: 130 Hurt Ed Harper, Westmount public|@8 'Quebec leader and had along with advisers to the vari-|ing and several mortar bar- { for the areas I have men-|depressed areas must keep the! ' safety director, said there was|@sreed to accept another posi-/qys "South Vietnamese units,|rages, were reported as one i. tioned, if I can stop it, there|NES informed of its manpower) pERLIN (AP) -- A subway\jno immediate indication of who|tion in the cabinet, the spokesman said, He said|killed and 13 wounded, includ- Hy] will not be an adjournment forjteauirements for at least fiveltrain plowed into the rear of|set off the blast on the eve of| FIRST VICTIM their fate was not known. ..jing four helicopter men_ hit the summer recess for at least/¥&ars. another train beneath West Ber-|Dominion Day. | Mr. Favreau was the first]. The command post of one of|when the initial landings were a month," said Mr. Peters The plan also was knocked j;, today and fire department] The bomb was placed near|"victim" of the Dorion report,|the three units--presumably ajmade. Four Australians also Goernment House Leade "a - officia's said 130 persons were|the base of the building, which/tabled in the Commons at the/battalion command post--also| were wounded. George Meliraith, who earlier NO TIMES injured. There were no deaths.|has been closed since March for|start of Tuesday's sitting. The|was reported surrounded and No Viet Cong losses were re- set Tuesday as the target for It was Berlin's worst subway|renovations, broke 40 windows prime minister pledged action'under heavy attack ported from ground action, als}: adjournment, said he still hopes | disaster since 1908. At that time,}in the hall and ripped out/on all conclusions in the report Fighter planes flew 14 sorties|though helicopter crews esti- VOL. 94 -- NO. 152 10¢ Si Copy 50 Per, Week Home Delivered Ghe . OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 30, 1965 Oshawa Gunes Authorized os us Class Mall Ottewa ond payment 15. Post Office Department f heaioae in Cash, tonight, 52. High tomorrow, THIRTY-TWO" " DORION HIGHLIGHTS OTTAWA (CP)--Highlights of the findings of Chief Jus- oe ee judi- ito allegations of 'ioe peddling in the government éervice: "" Justice Minister Favreau's mt is questioned for a it. upon. himself to de- cide t prosecution in connection with bribery al- legations last September. Mr. Favreau was justified in thinking, on the basis of evidence available then but not followed up, that a charge would be difficult to prove. Conduct of then immigra- Pierre Lamontagne--who ac- cused Denis of attempting to bribe him---must be accepted in preference to those of De- nis, Andre Letendre, then and still executive assistant to Mr. Favreau, was guilty of "reprehensible" but not "mal- icious" conduct in interven- ing with Lamontagne on be- half of bail for Rivard. Guy Lord, special assistant to the justice minister at the time, acted imprudently -- but not reprehensibly in putting pressure on Mr, Lamontagne, tion minister Rene Tremblay The RCMP's _ investigation was "absolutely beyond re- methods and Commissioner proach."' George B. McClellan's meth- ods of interpreting the evi- There "cannot be any dence in conjunction with the doubt" that Raymond Denis, then executive assistant to Mr. Tremblay, offered a $20,- 000 bribe to 'obstruct the course of justice" in the case of narcotics - smuggling sus- pect Lucien Rivard. Guy Rouleau, Montreal Lib- eral MP and then parliamen- tary secretary to Prime Min- ister Pearson, committed a "reprehensible act" in trying to use his influence to get Ri- vard out of jail on bail, but his action was not criminal. There is prima facie evi- erAMRRNERANE justice minister are criticized. The RCMP's use of English- language investigators to question French-speaking per- sons is described as "extra- | ordinary," There is no doubt that Ri- vard's wife and three asso- ciates--Eddy Lechasseur, an 'importer' with a_ criminal record; Robert Gignac, a sus- CHIEF JUSTICE DORION dence of an offence under the Criminal Code. Though the in- vestigator does not say who might have committed it. -- politician at Montreal -- co On credibility, there is no spired to obstruct the course doubt statements of lawyer of justice, Filibuster May Scuttle MPs Summer Vacation OTTAWA (CP) -- This could be the Jast sitting day for the Commoas before a summer re- cess, It also could be the day that a New Democratic Party MP starts a filibuster that could keep the.House in session for a_few.more days -- or a few more weeks. Arnold Peters (NDP--Timis- kaming) said Tuesday night' he would try to block adjournment of the Commons for the sum- mer vacation unless the gov- ernment makes certain parts of Ontario eligible for funds under ' {ts newly - proposed area devel- Opment grants. He said some depressed com: munities may not qualify as depressed areas because their * true unemployment rate isn't reflected in National Employ- ment Service figures. Workers in those places didn't register with the NES because they knew no jobs were 'available He mentioned Kirkland Lake today will be the getaway day. But he conceded that Mr. i |Peters could keep MPs in Ot-|by other opposition speakers. jtawa for an extended period if} Alfred D. Hales (PC Well- he was able to persuade one orjington South) said giving grants more of his NDP colleagues to|was an unusual way to encour- join him in his threatened fili-\age industry. Grants could be! buster. used for pplitical patronage. In-| | The $50,000,000 in develop- stead, the "government should | ment grants would go to indus-/make loans to industries which ltries that locate or expand in Would be repaid with interest. | jareas designated as depressed; Max--Saltsman_(NDP___Wat-| by the federal industry depart-|erloo South) said isolating one] | ment. community as eligible for Under a present government|gtants. wasn't a good idea, \plan, industries are lured into|Larger areas, even whole prov-| lareas of Canada where unem-)inces, instead should be desig- \ployment is rampant by accel-/nated. : lerated capital cost allowances| The area grants bill is one land a remission of income tax, |of the few remaining to be Industry Minister Drury said/¢leaned up before MPs head for the program has enjoyed. sub- home. Others deal with supply- stantial success. But some in-/ing government funds for the dustries don't benefit under the/next four months and measures} plan so the government has hit/to assist laid - off auto workers upon a scheme. to give them and small auto parts firms| cash grants affected by the new Canada- In this way it hoped to bring) U.S. auto agreement. more employment and in- creased income levels to under- Ld developed areas Subway Trains ON JULY 1 i persons were killed and 21 injured, FAVREAU AND THE PRIME MINISTER PRIOR TO FATEFUL MEETING Usefulness Has By MICHAEL GILLAN jing by ministerial aides left Mr.| OTTAWA (CP) -- Guy Fav-|Favreau's honesty and integrity} reau, the political amateur who|unquestioned but criticized his was supposed to be on his way) handling of the affair. | to stardom, resigned as justice) '"!,wish to repeat that my) minister Tuesday, resignation was tendered, not} In what he later agreed was|0Ut Of a feeling of that I had) the saddest day of his two years|done anything wrong, but be- in the Commons, the 47-year-old|cause of the feeling that my Montreal lawver .nervously|usefulness as minister of justice tapped his figers on his desk|had been impaired by the situa- as Prime Minister Pearson|tion which has developed," Mr.) stood just to his right and an- Favreau said in his resignation) nounced Mr, Favreau's resigna-|letter to the prime minister. tion from the prestige - laden| Chief Justice Dorion said in justice portfolio. jhis report that Mr. Favreau Mr. Favreau told Yreporters|stould have asked his depart- later that he felt 'the general|ment officers for an opinion in- interest of the cabinet and of|Stead of personally deciding the party stand before my per-|there was' insufficient evidence sonal feelings and my pride,"|t0 lay charges against Raymond The report by Chief Justice|Denis, former executive assist- Frederic Dorion of the Quebec ptt Maa Benger tag for- Superior Court--into--allegations| me : i ¥ . TOO LITTLE PROOF of Maibery _ sol ihuence geet thw: chief justice ald, hov- ever, Mr. Favreau had insuffi- s : ol tisthe nan Bombs Begin '.<'ts "et sa Been Impaired | e e e Bay alton ge ine As Justice Minister - Favreau ister and growing involvement] Chief Justice Dorion. said Mr. of crime in politics," |Favreau should have sought the "This is only the first scene|@dvice of his legal officers be-| in the first act of the Dorion re-|Cause--quoting a 1932 British in port. There will be others," Mr,|@Wirty into cabinet powers--"no Pearson told reporters later, |™man is to be judge in a cause 2 .|in which he has an interest." Mr. Favreau's resignation| "What he was being called was considered necessary bY) upon to do was to examine the opposition spokesmen, although|conduct and steps taken by his they stressed that his popular-/own. executive assistant, his ity with opposition members|special assistant, the executive was not dimmed and his hon-\assistant to a colleague of his,| esty and integrity was unques-|and by the parliamentary sec- tioned. lretary to the prime minister." Viet Guerrillas Lay Siege. Circle Government Force By EDWIN Q. WHITE | Meanwhile, U.S. spokesmen| SAIGON (AP)--More than a/@nnounced that the first ~joint regiment of Viet Cong guerril- combat operation of the war in- las surrounded hundreds of gov-|VOlving South -- Vietnamese, ernment troops 200 miles north-| American and Australian forces east of Saigon and had them/ended today with little result. jtember in the Lucien Rivard af- | fai In Montreal | He said there was now evi-| n dence to establish a prima facie) MONTREAL (CP)--A bomb| case to lay charges, but his re: exploded behind the suburban|Port didn't specify them. =| Westmount city hall early to- he prime minister praised) day, rocked the mainly English-|M'. Favreau as a "man of un- speaking - area and shattered|impeachable integrity and un-| windows for blocks around. jsullied honor" and said he un-) Four young men were de-|derstood his reasons for want- tained in the vicinity of the|img to resign. : . blast, but a police spokesman) Mr. Pearson 'said Mr. Fave said they were picked up for|Teau, once touted as a future under heavy attack late today,| The huge three-day operation a U.S. military spokesman re-|sent more than 1,000 paratroop- orted. jers of the 173rd U.S. Airborne A U.S. Air Force light spot-|/Brigade, about 800 South Viet- ting plane flew over the areajnamese troops and about 800 and was shot down in the jun-/Australians into the jungles of| gle. The fate of the pilot and|D zone, a major Viet Cong area his observer was not known, north of Saigon. the spokesman said. | The force never got into a di- One of the three large gov-jrect fight with the Viet Cong, ernment units was reported sur-jalthough there was Viet Cong) rounded and fighting a desper-|sniping and mortar harassment,|& No government losses were American casualties, ate battle At least six Americans were reported. er rn nae Justice Minis ter Resigns, And 'That's Only First Act | 34 JOHN LEBLANC OTTAWA (CP)--Chief Justice Frederic Dorion has found criminality and ministerial bad judgment entangled in the Lu- cien Rivard affair, and the first result. is that Guy Favreau is leaving the justice ministry, But this bombshell is "'only the first scene of the first act," Prime Minister Pearson prom- ised Tuesday night as his 47- year-old chief Quebec lieutenant quit his prestige portfolio after the Dorion report roasted the minister, the RCMP and sev- eral political and non-political figures involved in efforts on behalf of narcotics suspect Ri- vard, The burly Mr. Favreau will get a new portfolio--unnamed as yet--and keep his leadership of the federal Quebec Liberals. The justice department will study possible criminal action growing out of the' findings. It was Mr, Favreau's personal de- cision not to take such action-- without the department's ad- vice--that brought judicial criti- cism down on him. After making these announce- ments, the prime minister also said the government wants to "deal with the sinister and growing involvement of crime in politics'--a statement on which he did not elaborate in talking to reporters, Chief Justice Dorion's find- ings, reporting on an inquiry springing from allegations of attempted bribery and coercion in efforts to free Rivard last July, blasted political personal- ir and Rivard associates alike. Denis, dismissed execitive as-: large. The judge also found in his 149-page report that Rivard's 32-year-old wife and three as- - sociates engaged in finding uses for a $60,000: fund had been guilty of conspiracy to obstruct justice Guy Rouleau, 41-year-old Lib- eral MP for Montreal Dollard, had been guilty of reprehensi- ble--but not criminal--conduct in trying to apply tical mus- cle to get Rivard freed. He has already lost his posts of parlia- mentary secretary to the prime minister and chairman of the. Commons Liberal caucus Andre: Letendre, 35, executive assistant to the justice minis- ter, was mauled for "reprehen- sible" through not' "malicious" conduct in putting pressure on Mr Lamontagne. For similar action, the in- quiry judge also reprimanded, though more mildly, Guy Lord, 25, former assistant to Mr. Fav- reau and now a student at Ox- ford. His action was called im- prudent--not wilfully. réprehen- sible. There were immediate oppo- sition demands in the Commons for action against Mr .Rouleau, SEE ONLY TREMBLAY He found that Raymond Continued on Page 2 folio. riding of Richelieu - Vercheres Nations. NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Cardin Likely Replacement For Favreau OTTAWA (CP) -- Works Minister Lucien Cardin was- rumored today to have an inside track to the justice port- The 46-year-old lawyer MP from the ancient Quebec has been a favorite of Prime Minister Pearson since their days together at the United TTC Approves Yonge Subway Extension TORONTO CP) -- The Toronto Transit Commission Tues- day approved an $88,973,000, 614-mile extension to the Yonge Street subway. When completed the etension will take the subway to Metropolitan Toronto's northern limits. a: . 7 . India, Pakistan Sign Formal Ceasefire NEW DELHI Reuters) -- signed a formal ceasefire agreement ending their armed struggle in the desolate Rann of Kutch border area and call- ing for the withdrawal of troops within seven days. India and Pakistan today Anne Landers--16 City News--13 Classified----26, 27, 28 Comies---24, 25 Editorial---4 chunks of masonry. There were|that warrant action and saysjagainst the Viet Cong in the|mated they killed 17 guerrillas no injuries, h 'he wants to "deal with the gin-jarea, and more were planned.\in- the initial landings, A Financial-----29 _. In THE TIMES today :.. 10,000 Expected At July 1 Folk Festival--P, 13 Audley School Pupils Honor Retiring Teacher--P. 5 Indians Take Over First In American League--P, 9 * Obits--29 Sports--8, 9, 10 Theatre--31- Whitby News--5, 6 Women's--14, 15, 16 Weather---2 al On-its Dominion Day' debut the Red Maple Leaf J | VREAU RESIGNS FROM CABINET | : \