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Oshawa Times (1958-), 3 Sep 1965, p. 2

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Sepiamber 3; 1948 THe GsHiAWA Tis, Fidey, \Canadians [Did Government Pressure Need Worry Make CNR Change Tune? About Crime .....","","" MONTREAL (CP) --- 'Faved with the increase in crime, s0- ciety is justified in being wor- ried," Claude Wagner, Quebec justice minister, said Thursday. Mr, Wagner told delegates at the fifth International (rimino- logical Congress here that crime rates were Increasing rapidly everywhere in the world, As an example, he said, "Can- ada's population increased by 3.9 per cent between 1961 and 1963 and crime' increased by 32,3 per cent, 'In the United States, from 1958 to 1962, while the popula-|\ing 7 tion had increased by seven per! - 'Lesage Trip All-Important In Cause Of Federal Grits cent, the crime rate rose 27 per cent,"" During the same years in England, based on the num- ber of vusations, crime | creased by 43 per cent, the min ter said, This skyrocketing crime rate prompted him to . suggest the United Nations set up a study he By BEN WARD did the CNR suddenly yield Wednesday in its dispute with hotel employ- ees over adoption of the new federal minimum wage? Although everybody con- nected with the situation is close-mouthed on the subject, most observers here believe some sort of government pres- sure was involved, Announcement of the CNR- union agreement Wednesday night came as a complete sur: prise, It arrived just six hours after the windup of a lengthy cabinet meeting at which the matter was discussed, Following the cahinet meet- abor Minister MacKachen By STEWART MacLEOD that the CNR adopt the mini- mum wage for its Chateau Lau- jrier staff here or face a strike as the|on Labor Day, jand Transport Minister Pickers- gill brushed aside -- reporetrs' questions, } ' | Cove of the dispute w . ; |CNR's insistence that its hotels| Both the CNR and the union |do not come under the new fed-|had their heels dug in solidly | eral Labor Code that establishes! @% late as Wednesday noon.: At the $1.25 hourly minimum, the same time, reports of a con- RULED CNR COVERED iflict between the labor and) | 'The labor department had|transport ministers were gath:| 'ruled that CNR hotels were un-| ering steam. ider the code, even though all) On Wednesday the two min lother hotels in the country are|isteré emerged arm-in- arm) subject only fo provincial labor|from cabinet, obviously for the) llaw. The CNR. said it had re-|benefit of photographers and | ceived legal opinions to the con-| reporters who were walling to | trary, question them on the reported This conflict came to a head Split, The ministers wouldn't) |when the Canadian Brotherhood talk about it. of Railway, Transport and Gen. One reliable informant sald| leral Workers (CLC) demanded| Thursday there was a compro: | {mise reached between the two} positions, But he wouldn't dis- cuss it in detail, News of the. agreement came, in a joint statement from the) CNR and the union. It men-| tioned acceptance of the $1,25- an-hour demand but made no reference to the federal Labor) (slightest suggestion of him re- WiLL BE CROWDED UU The world's population is ex pected to reach 6,800,000,000 by|years, : v mre os : the year 2000, an increase of nore than 150 per cent in 30 Code, 'Hospital Rapped For Refusing Aid TORONTO (CP) -- Alderman project on 'world-wide organ-| gppawa (CP) -- When Que-| ceiving an unsympathetic hear ) ized crime," PI kk Jean Lesage eyes ing could harm the federal Lib- The UN should "by its re-| west on a 19-day speaking tour\@ral party, particularly if an searchers, its surveyors, by!jater this month the interest lection is called, using the great resources which) shown by his western audiences) aReN'T SYMPATHETIC it has and the many listening) .i1) be exceeded only by the in-!" ,., posts at its disposition in almost) terest among federal Liberals The West has always been RUN OVER BY FREIGHT -- BUT HE'S OKAY John Houweling Jr, 9 re- rted in. good condition hursday after he was struck and thrown under a freight train Wednesday 'INDUSTRIAL DEATH' every country of the world, {TY} here, to track down world-wide or- ganized crime, "I think that the UN could be of great service to the ad- %\ministrators of justice in all its "ng tween the rails- where lay safely as the train con- tinued over him. afternoon, The senior Hou- weling (right) watched help- lessly from a picket line 100 feet away, John Jr, was tossed $2 feet , landed be- (AP) Union Expulsion Recourse Sought TORONTO (CP) -- Expulsion of a worker from a trade union is "a sentence of industrial death," &. E. Dinsdale of Tor- onte Thursday told the labor re- lations section of the Canadian Bar Association. | There is a need for legislation giving workers the right to work until they have exhausted appeal procedures, he added. "Often any resort to the courts is very hollow for a man who finds himself in this posi- tion, Legislation gives page efter page to outlining protec: tion of a worker against his em- ployer but nothing about the protection against damage by a union." | Few workers can wait the months involved in processing eppeals while sitting unem- loyed and many have little owledge of what recourse is Hospital Inquests 'Fired At : a at an TORONTO (CP) -- Coroners' want to make a martyr Of @M inquests into Ontario hospital enemy and because rank an jdeaths were criticized at the file members abhor it as much) Canadian Bar Association con- he | member countries by undertak- ing a study, a great-fact-finding inventory of crimina! potential throughout the world, , ." Mr, Wagner then turned to the existence of international 'criminal rings right in his own |back yard, the province of Que- | bec Investigations, he said, have disclosed that members of a certain criminal ring 'were able to make off with approx- arson, false lently. "In the field of false bank- ruptcies, for example, on the interprovincial and_ interna- tional level, we devoted our at- tention to the sale of bank- ruptey stock by manufacturers' as a management dismissal, | vention Thursday as being un- "Not every grievance: can be) {air to doctors and not serving taken to arbitration. At somé)the public interest, point someone must exercise) 'Toronto pathologist Roderick judgment, If it is done in good) Ross said in a panel discussion| left alone." Prof, R. G. Herbert of the|fear of misadventure" of British Columbia and J. G.| sential that fear of a public in- Petrie of Fredericton, the two/quiry should not cloud the judg-| remaining panelists, both felt)ment of an operating surgeon. current legislation was ade-| "I seriously doubt whether | quate, the public. is well served by However, Mr, Petrie sug-|those coroners' inquests where gested appeal procedures|a" individual physician or a against expulsion from a union| hospital is, in fact, on trial," should be shortened, Dr. Ross said. He added a public review| He criticized the type of in- board established by the United) quest which does not permit the Auto Workers union to hear|Parties involved to have law- open to them, he added. E. B. Jolliffe of Toronto, a labor lawyer, suggested a dan- ger always exists that a person who holds power over another! may abuse the privilege but the| courts have provided adequate) protection, | | (rs RARE Expulsion is extremely because union leaders would no grieved employees' appeals|yers for cross-examination of might improve the public image| Witnesses. { of many unions, PE However, he agreed with Mr. -- ble weg at Dinsdale that workers should be into hospital Sot the tal allowed to continue on the job! pels J : while exhausting appeal proce- pa near ge rage ef at the dis- dures, Legislation allowing pun-|° tt of the ey po pont itive damages against wrongful | 14 i . eager = nee | at expulsion would help eliminate|,.. SRS GS OR INGivICUaL Bre est served if the hearing is rare|arbitrary actions by union lead: tiers, HERE and THERE It was a big week for G, Cannato, of Malvern. On Thursday he celebrated his birthday, On Friday he was married and later on in the day was the winner of the new car, the major prize at the Bowmanville Kinsmen Club carnival Mrs, Barbara Bould, RR 2, Newca tle, was treated Tuesday morning at the o wmanville Memorial Hos- pital for minor injuries after her car went out of control and struck an obstruction on Highway 2, a short distance east of Bowmanville The Bowmanville Town Council will hold its first reguiar meeting of the fall season next Tuesday night. Mrs, Jim Newman, Silver st., Bowmanville, has rea- son to believe in the honesty of her fellow citizens. On Monday she lost $149. in cash. All but $2 of the money was recovered by Ben King, Elgin st., and Bill Roberts, Division st., who found it blowing up the street, Rey. M. L. Connolly, as- sistant parish priest of St, Joseph's Roman Catholic Church, Bowmanville, was honored Sunday night with two presentations prior to his departure to assume other duties. He is return- ing te the Diocese of Cal- gary. Bowmanville Legion Ban- tams lost the first game of their playoff series to Mil- ton by a score of 5 to 3 The return game is this Sat- urday at Bowmanville, Da, J. Clare Rennie, a native of Blackwater, has been appointed head of the department of animal hus- bandny at the University of Guelph. Dr, Rennie, who is highly recarded internation ally as a practical livestock > man and a selentist, suc ceeds Professor George Raithby, Birthday congratulations are being extended today to Joseph Williamson of 337 Buena Vista Oshawa Fire Department spent a quiet night with only a false alarm and a small bonfire blaze to deal with, City ambulance answer- ed two routine calls Members of the Bowman ville detachment of the OPP set up road blocks during the night following the re- port of a mail truck robbery in Peterborough area. The road blocks were discontinu- ed this morning Thomas H, Hammond, of 26 Eastlawn st, Oshawa, was taken to Oshawa Gen eral Hospital with cut lips yesterday after his car had been involved in a collision at Ritson rd. s. and Currie ave. Driver of the other car involved was Clifford R, Me- Knight, of 538 Cubert. st NEW FOUNTAINS PLAY conducted under circumstances where he has a right to coun- sel, than at a. very public in- quest where he does not have such rights,"' he said. Mr, Justice Daiton C. Wells of the Ontario Appeal Court} jsaid that often a coroner's in-| quest is a one-sided story. Toronto lawyer W. Glen How said that inquests are needed jas 'there are some things that jneed to be brought to light.) | But, he added, any party in an inquest who can indicate se-) rious possible damage resulting from it should be allowed coun-} isel and the right of cross. | examination | Mr, How charged that in mal- {practice suits "'you have a con-| spiracy of silence among the} fmedical profession," --_saying| that in 90 years in Ontario) courts there have been only 13 successful malpractice sults, He said this would indicate either' Ontario doctors never made mistakes or there is in-| adequate inquiry Into their ac- tivities Dr. Ross replied that doctors are not permitted to make mis- takes | | j 'Dire Charges Deaths Result | LINDSAY (CP)--David Kend- ricks, 33, of Lindsay was REGINA (CP)--This year the| charged Thursday with dangers| legislative buildings have three|ous and drunk driving in con-| new fountains outside. They join/nection with a traffic accident} ja fourth, originally from Lon-| Saturday in which two others idon's Trafalgar Square, which! were killed. was donated by the National) Killed were Roland Hunt, 32, Gallery of Canada in 1963, The; an engineer with radio station} English fountain commem-|CKLY, Lindsay, and his wife orates the foundation of the) Shirley, 26. jRoyal Northwest Mounted Po-| The Hunts' five children were! jlice headquarters here in 1882.) injured, = AN ANNOUNCEMENT There IS a DALE CARNEGIE COURSE Starting seen in Oshewe with the possibility ef twe alesse: errenged te eecommedete shift worker An Invitation You ere invited te ettend without obligation @ free infermetion meeting YWCA--Adeleide House Tuesday --- Sept. 7 --- 8:00 p.m Telephone 728-5032 for a reservation where you wit hear whet @ Dele Cernegie course een de fer you. agents faith union judgment should belthat inquests into hospital} deaths "create an overlay of} : : among) faculty of law at the University) hospital patients, It is most es-| | And if-a general election should) It is unlikely that any provin- cial premier has aroused more federal interest in taking a trip. come along, Mr, Lesage's trip will have some Liberals here holding their breaths, A highly successful tour by the Quebec premier could be a big help to the Pearson govern- ment, say sources within the Liberal party. On the other hand, if he runs into any ¢.ffi- culties the federal party is bound to feel electoral reper: cussions, Generally, there is optimism imately $700,000 in a period of|here about the trip, Mr. Lesage|eral Liberal party. An enthusi-| eight to 10 months by practising|is going west to talk to audi-|astic reception in the western) bankruptcies andj ences about Quebec, to explain) provinces would be bound to in- by borrowing money fraudu-| the province's position and am-|crease the chances of him bitions and to create generally a better climate of understand- ing. Most federal Liberals see great advantage in such a tour, providing it turns out to be a success, Those who have reser vations about Mr. Lesage's travelogue say that even the Navareleracesiare -that-great new_go-go whisky from Seagram at your nearest whiskotheque considered as relatively unsym- Benjamin Grys, a member of pathetic foward Quebec's aspi-\ine board of governors of Run- rations, nymede Hospital, said Wednes-| It is expected here that Mr.'day night the hospital refused to Lesage will present a far dif-igive first aid to a woman and ferent picture to his audiences|two children injured in front of than the tough-talking premier|the hospital in a traffic accident! {who attends federal-provincial! Saturday, conferences, With no scarcity of/ Mr. Grys said the woman gallic charm, the fluently bi-\and two children waited in the| lingual Mr. Lesage is thought|street for about 20 minutes for| | likely to present his province's|an ambulance to take them to! side of the argument in frank,|another hospital, jreasoned and pro - Canadian' = me jterms, | Federal observers also see) the trip as yardstick for meas-| uring Mr, Lesage's future po-| tential as a leader of the fed- CALL... DIXON'S FOR OIL FURNACES FUEL OIL AND HEATING SERVICE SERVING THE PUBLIC OVER 50 YEARS 313 ALBERT ST, OSHAWA 723-4663 ;someday moving back into na- tional politics, Because of all these factors, one high-ranking Liberal says Mr, Lesage's trip may be the) most closely-followed domestic! expedition by one man in a dec-| lade » +» feeling like a bright, shiny penny in any one of "Highland Lassie's" myriad of blouses, Ruffles and bows, jumper blouses, inners, outers . .. all kinds! Sizes 4 to 6X from $2.00 7 to 12, from $3,00 FASHIONS SINCE 1867 BELIEVE ine rr

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