12 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdey, September 20, 1962 6% Sr mew @ CHEATING LESSON Sidney Radner of Holyoake, Mass., in Vancouver Wednes- day demonstrated ways of cheating at games of chance. Here he shows one system in which finger signals tell a bridge partner what suits he holds, Mr. Radner was brought to Vancouver to testify as an expert witness at a county court trial involving a dice game the Crown says was fraudulent. --CP Photo | Burt Criticizes Law School Dean WINDSOR, Ont. (CP)-- George Burt, Canadian director of the United Auto Workers Un- fon, unleashed a barrage of cri- ticism Wednesday against I. C, Rand, Dean of the University) of Western Ontario's law school. | In an address to the Cana- dian Postal Employees Associa- tion's Convention. Mr, Burt took strong exception to comments made by Dean Rand in a speech 'Sunday at the regional social life conference here. Dean Rand told the confer- ence that labor unions. should conduct strike votes by secret ballot and said that "any insis- tence to the contrary is the re- pudiation of a democratic prin- ciple . . . an insult to the demo- cratic order of things." Dean Rand also criticised the| steps taken to authorize many strikes, saying that "the light-| ness with which many of these steps are entered upon indicates | an irresponsibility both of lead-| ership and workers." Mr. Burt said Dean Rand had| made # "sweeping indictment| of the labor movement" and| termed the retired Supreme Court of Canada judge "the big- gest moonlighter in Canada." (Moonlighter is a term used to) describe someone who holds/ more than one job.) Mr. Burt/ said Dean Rand received two-| thirds of his $20,000 salary for} life while holding down the po- sition at the university. s TORONTO (CP) -- Gambler Vincent Feeley rambled ami- ably through a long--and appar- ently legal--trial of his finan- cial transactions before the On- tario royal commission on crime Wednesday including a guaranteed loss-proof adventure in the stock market. He admitted readily to some minor league lawbreaking--in. cluding the use of bank and trust company premises for bookmaking operations -- but quickly denied more serious earlier evidence that he. "looked after security measures" (po- lice protection) for a Toronto jgambling club. The reputed kingpin of On- tario, gambling, whom the com- mission has been trying to get under questioning for months, was by turns voluble, puzzled, recollection. The commission got some in- teresting personal history off the cuff from a man who keeps no records, but little of appar- ent criminal significance in this opening round. confiding, sometimes short on) The 38 . year - old Feeley, brought from jail for his.com- mission appearance, . testified under a blanket objection to giv- ing evidence that wou! tend to incriminate him, but he did not refuse to answer any questions in the first five hours--as he did in an earlier appearange that led to a court battle to' estab- lish the authority of the com- mission to make him talk. Among his evidence in this long-delayed second encounter: 1, When he and a group of fellow gamblers bought mining stock in 1958 on a tip that it would rise, they had the tipster firm put up $20,000 to guaran- tee them against loss--and they collected the money when it fell. The company's name was kept off the commission record. 2. He rented many safety de- posit boxes under fictitious names, putting nothing in most of them but getting the use of the financial houses' coupon. clipping cubicles -- with tele- phone service -- to keep his |bookie sheets and call custom- 'ers. PRATT & LAMB an air of smartness and pleasant backgrounds fo binations in wall paint, enamel and house paint. 34 KING ST, WEST ERT Calibrated If you want colors that sing...that give your home good taste...that harmon- ize perfectly, you'll look into P&L Calibrated | Colors®. Interior color schemes can glow ith new beauty...can look alive and fresh... r your furni- ture and draperies. Select from a wide range of beautiful com- At Your Do-It-Yourself Store. EDGAR'S May We Advise You ? DECOR CENTRE PHONE 723-7351 Gambler Denies Doing Club 'Protection Job 3, He had a 50-per-cent inter- est in the gambling concession at 'Cat Cay Club in the Baha- mas this year and discussed possible lana purchases with Hon. Harold Christie, Bahamas political figuré and friend of murdered Canadian millionaire Sir Harry Oakes. COULDN'T RAISE MONEY 4. A. Quebec City club last year came to him for help in swinging 4 mortgage loan of be- tween $210,000 and $300,000. He could not raise the money. 5. He and gambling partner Joseph McDermott -- like him now awaiting appeal court de- cision on a conviction of conspir- ing to ovtain police information --made around $40,000 in the purchase and resale of a Tor- onto apartment house in 1959-- |Peeley thought he invested his share in a helicopter. 6. He kept no account books-- "You can't keep books when the police are trying to arrest- you." 7. Between 1954 and 1959, his reported income for tax pur- and then dropped to $13,397 in 1960. He designated himself on the returns first as a commis- sion agent, then gambler, then gave no occupation. 8, He admitted falsifying his address on some of his income tax returns--for "no particular reason"--but insisted he always: got the income figures correct to the best of his ability, some- times rounded out to the near- jest $1,000. | As inquiry officials had this preliminary canter with their long-sought quarry, police out- side the commission set at rest reports that two other prospec- tive witnesses had disappeared. They are gamblers Dominic Simone and Ralph Clarke. It |was a private examination of \Clarke by. commissioner Mr. |\Justice W- D. Roach in June |that prompted Feeley to seek idisqualification of the commis- poses rose from $3,640 to $21,500) sioner, a bid finally turned down Tuesday by the Supreme Court of Canada. "The gamblers have heard they made themselves scarce and they have, but we know where they are and it's in the commission's jurisdiction," said Insp. Harold Graham, chief of the Ontario Provincial Police criminal investigation branch. Feeley's own appearance, after his long series of court wrigglings to get off the com- mission's hook, was. almost to peaceful. He was smiling and affable -- particularly in the afternon after his first big non- jail lunch--and a symphony in brown suit, tie, shoes, belt and (hip-pocket) handkerchief. He toyed with shell-rimmed spectacles, scribbled calcula- tion with a pencil and occasion-' ally leaned over, elboks on the commissioner's desk and talked into Mr, Justice Roach's ear. "Don't be so confidential," the commissioner admonished him once, turning him back to the microphone. - WRITES FIRM'S NAME On the occasion when Feeley deliberately sought to be confi- dential, the commissioner per- mitted the gambler to. write down, for himself and commis- sion counsel Roland F. Wilson only, the name of the company that underwrote his stock mar- ket venture. Feeley said that making the name public might be unfair tq someone with @ Pub lic minin, company, He 'said his partners. in th ph regi eatin ge another Mebermott Feeley 'combin David Downes, a gamble and a man identified only. Lambert Albury. 4 Feeley said he and M mott put up $56,000 for the way partnership, and at firm of Davidson and Co them was opened up in name of broker A. B. n to cover possible loss. by ti The Boys' Shop THE MOST AMAZING SOLE IN NATURALIZER Black or Brown Cushioned comfort wrapped in soft scuff-proof leather HISTORY TULANE 13.99 DAVIDSON'S SHOES 31 SIMCOE ST. N. PHONE 725-3312 Sensational Value for Boys! (Consumers ('as | 48 SIMCOE SOUTH PHONE 723- GAS HEATING ends! 19584 -- 2,500 1962--118,000 Homes In Consumers' Area using Natural Gas for heating 3468 A Special for Style, Originality and Value! Sport Coat and Pants '14 NOW ... SPECIAL LOW PRICE .. . SPORT COATS G 69 DRESS PANTS... Wash and wear, shape-retaining. 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