Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 22 Oct 1963, p. 2

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Former MP Gets 5 Year Jail Sentence TORONTO (CP) -- A former Liberal MP had his two - year suspended sentence increased to five years in penitentiary aa by the Ontario Appeal ourt, Q THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, October 22, 1963 GOOD EVENING | -- By JACK GEARIN $60-0P VICTORY DINNERS IMPRESSIVE AFFAIRS = Sun Valley Heights is the name of the latest of seven Fo-op homebuilding units in Oshawa and district. ™ Sun Valley held a belated victory dinner Saturday. Dief Claims Pearson Stalling Trusteeship been prime minister he would have rushed in at once with trusteeship -- without trying to find an alternative, and irres- pective of the CLC's wishes. the public trusteeship until ail efforts to gain a private settle. ment had been exhausted. And from Mr, Pearson, in an angry retort, came the charge OTTAWA (CP) -- Acknow- ledging that the situation could become dangerous, Prime Min- ister Pearson said Monday It marked the completion, more than a year ago, of their homes on Thornton's road north in East Whitby. It also reminded one and all: The other units are: Sher- There has been a sharp de- cline, in this district at least, in the co-op homebuilding of late. The total number of co-op thus completed since 1956 (the movement was actually started in the planning stage here three years before by Rev. J. E. Lawlor, then a parish priest at St. Gregory's Church) has reached 148, representing an investment of more than $1,500,000. wood Co-op Ltd. Wildwood Co-op Ltd. Lawlor Co-op Ltd., St. Gregory's Co-op Ltd., -Meandowbrook Co-op Ltd, and Dwyer Heights Co-op Ltd. Co-op victory dinners are a aaa night the government intends to "proceed without delay" in put- ting Canada's maritime unions under government - controlled trusteeship. He revealed he had phoned President Kennedy on Monday morning and obtained. the pres- ident's assurance he would do "all he could" to prevent the American labor movement from reacting in a way that would mean harassment of Canadian ships in U.S. ports. Mr. Pearson said he told President Kennedy that 'we would be in for serious trouble" unless the AFL - CIO in the United States is persuaded to - accept the Canadian legislation _ |--already passed by Parlia- . |ment, and made necessary be- cause talks on a private trus- teeship had been washed out i by the illegal walkout of Hal i |Banks' Seafarers' International Union. Pressed in the Commons for Mr. Kennedy's reply, Mr. Pear- son said: that Conservative Leader Dief- enbaker in his motion and hour- long speech was reciting "'politi- cal claptrap" and directing the official opposition in the House by "innuendo, insult and invec- tive." Mr, Pearson said Mr, Diefen- baker--the "'greatest dawdler of them all"--demonstrated "wild exaggeration" in appraising the situation. The Diefenbaker motion reads: "This government, because of its confusion, inconsistency and pusillanimous dawdling and de- lays in taking effective action has encouraged chaos approach- ing anarchy to develop on the Great Lakes, the seaway, and in several Canadian ports, thereby causing disruption in shipping and the placing in| jeopardy of essential trade al general, and n particular con- t foreign countries." |! 1i "He (Mr. Diefenbaker) would Raymond Bruneau, former have said, never mind whether there could be a better alterna- tive than public trusteeship ... . never mind what the conse- quences in relation to the United States. jected that course and we are glad we did." las: that the government has daw- died in the matter of dealing with the Norris report. of examining and exploring every alternative in the hope that it might not be necessary to take this very radical and far-reaching step. * 1 tracts for delivery of wheat to/°W, when all hope of a private MP for Glengarry - Prescott was convicted in Ottawa year of taking a $10,000 bribe. Bruneau accepted the money from a fellow Hawkesbury res- dent in return for using his in- fluence to have the federal gov- ernment purchase special prop- erty for a post office site. The stiffer penalty was handed down Monday in a judg- ment by Mr. Justice James Mc» Lennan. Both the Crown and Bruneau appealed the decision of County Court Judge Frank Costello at Ottawa in June of 1962, the Crown seeking a more severe sentence and Bruneau appeal- ing the conviction. The charge carries a maximum sentence of 4 years. Judge Costello said at the |time of sentencing it would be jan insult to members of: Parlia- ment to impose a prison term as a deterrent. He ordered Bru- neau to sign a bond to keep the "Well, this government re- Said NDP Leader T. C, Doug- ".., Ido not share the view "I think that up until now hey have taken the wise course ACT DECISIVELY' "But I urge the government rusteeship is gone, not to hes- tate any longer but to act de- | CRITICIZES US. 3 jcisively and, above all, to act/pea for two years. At one point, Mr. Diefenbaker| humanely in the interests of the| Property involved was sold to said: : workers concerned." the federal government for "Sir, there is no help from| Said H. A. Olson (SC--Medi-|$48,000. A $170,000 post office the United States in this labor|cine Hat): |subsequently was built on the begs because Mr. Kennedy| «Jf there ever was a time|Hawkesbury site. | Mr, Pearse replied later that when there was. need fee Fall Fesper ues a Se | " | : support of the government by|accept the $10,000 corruptly an 'PHONED PRESIDENT jhe had more help from Mr.| parliament it is moe eee (Mr. was not acting in his official Mr, Pearson also revealed for| Kennedy in coping with the sit-|niefenbaker) should be com.-|capacity as an MP at the time. the first time that the latest| uation than from Mr. Diefen-|mending the government rather! The appeal decision said that round of talks between the AFL-|ba er. jthan condemning them for re-|departure by an MP from the |CIO and the Canadian Labor}. The Conservative' chieftain|sisting pressure from the United/required rigorous standard of |Congress on a private trustee-|said that if the government had|States." honesty should not be tolerated. ship came after he phoned Mr.|imposed the trusteeship early in} ty an attack on Mr. Diefen-| "If, in violation of their res- Kennedy--he didn't say when) August--It had the Support Of haker, Mr. Olson said that 67 of|ponsibilities, the service of MPs' eo asked for, and received, his| Parliament--then many of to-|the 75 incidents of waterfront|can be bought," he said, "then intervention to get the talks res-|day's would have| intimidation and violence listed|justice and freedom cannot sur- vive, nor can this nation long King Hal Banks Says SIU Still In Running intr aay' aici nimidaton : "Wait till, "He is : 'g se 3 inal ° Y| The two-month delay gave op-\when M Diefenbake: OTTAWA (CP) -- "Wait till, "He is of the stuff of the Ca-\chase and finally arrived at the|the SIU walkout, the prime min- y j;wh Ir. iefenbaker was we're shook off the tree, said/pones and the Hoffas of whom|truck where hundreds of sand-|jster said. Pe ponents of the plan time to or-/prime minister, but no effort i i iche: : |ganize, |was made to enforce the law Hal C. Banks to a supporter. | the dictators throughout history|wiches were stored or the noon) . H z cs "We're not hurt yet." . are prototypes. He is alsnack--with soft drinks. The walkout was illegal and! Meanwhile, the government) "What could be more in at- The president of the Seafar-/bully, cruel, dishonest, greedy,| What-about the Norris report? |*he 2,000 - man demonstration| gave opponents of the plan time|cord with pusillanious dawdling| ers' International Union of Can-|power-hungry, contemptuous of "A kangaroo job."" on Parliament Hill Monday of? eceaniee. jthan to turn and look the other! lada stood confronting the Pat-|the law." Hadn't Mr. Justice Norris) eanwhile, government) way when these things were go- Banks and his men was "en ef-| the ; ; ' fort to bring unjustifiabl -| Pier? Rssla liament Building, cracking) His SIU is an outcast from)once represented the SIU--back) cure on the atveiaaant Tiler eel te inic me on, and allow them to take} jokes, exuding confidence andjorzanized Canadian jabor, ex.\in ear uz respect to (trusteeship) legisla-|statements . . . its record has|" Creditiste Leader Real C spreading the word personally|pelled | by bog ---- pred Bred the a 1 tion." been a syllabus of pusillanimouslette said the Diefenbaker pent \eoee ae cere auie ¢ ped ean. he hae yoreny denied| Why? "We must show that Canada,|pussy-footing for the last sev-|tion would do nothing to assist job: e i |Canadian citizenship in two ap-| 'Because the Canadian Labor eral months.' " |a quick settlement of waterfront and free and responsible trade Parliament) didn't know what(i2@ given by the justice depart-|said he was the most anti-labor!canagian government is not go-|tried to put pressure on. the the score was--just what they| ment a preliminary. report by|lawyer on the West Coast. ing to be intimidated by the il-|Canadian government to Peed senna wan CALLS read in the newspapers." pega Preparer counse!|DOES HE CARE? legal action and pressure of one|don the trusteeship plan. But|<prin al ) vis Gi Riding a white Cadillac--he|pe Jaiq ped ronty hi arges, might) Didn't Mr. Banks care aboutjwho has destroyed democratic|the government denied there|t5 dial mae or tae bir gets a new one every year--Mr.| None of that sete Monda public opinion? asked a young)government in his own union."|was any such pressure. lto France Belgium "Holland, Banks arrived in Ottawa fromlin the Ottawa sun ¥/student. |, Mr. Pearson spoke after being|cany «pysy AROUND' |Switzerland and West Germany, Montreal SIU headquarters to} No he hadn't given 4 _"Of course I care about pub-|faced in the Commons by a} nh the + afte , fi | No, given orders to\lic opinion, But how do you|Conservative mon - confidence), (rhe result was that. in the|\"¢ Post office says. "He said he regretted the ne- jcessity for this action, but he} |understood the necessity and he would do all he could to avoid any impact which would cause trouble between our two coun- \tries."" impressive, stimulating af- fairs, ' They prove beyond ques- Tron that many young people today are instilled with the true pioneer spirit, the same spirit that built empires in the face of almost impossible odds: The co-op homebuilding movement is non-denominational. It proves also that young people willing to work hard ard make sacrifices can perform miracles when united in a com- mon cause with sound leadership. There were some dear friends of the movement at the thead-table Saturday (in addition to Father Lawlor, who did 'hore than anyone locally to blaze the co-op homebuilding trail, especially in the difficult 1953-1960 era when strong leadership was an essential). Dr. Matthew B. Dymond was aitending his fifth such victory dinner ("Sir James M. Barrie once said: 'The reason birds can fly is not because they have wings, but because they have faith," he said). Michael Starr, MP, Ontario, turned up briefly, although awaited at four other banquets. Terence Kelly (who will be on Channel 6, CBC-TV "Sports Folio" next Wednesday at 6:30 p.m.) was there with such guests as: Neil Smith, Reeve of East Whitby; {August Goreski, co-op homebuilding supervisor; Rev. John Porter of Westminster United Church, representing Protestant members of Sun Valley Co-op Ltd.; and President Vincent J. Peteigney of Sun Valley Heights Co-op. "Father Lawlor said the movement was composed primarily of 'people who couldn't afford the price of service land, at jeast when they starte dout."' By buying collectively, they keep down the price of land, building materials, etc. New Provincial regulations by the Water Service branch ef the Department of Health (making sewage disposal re- strictions more severe) have slowed down the growth of the co-op movement in this. district, Father Lawlor said, but guch projects as the Land Assembly plan were almost certain to give it a boost. Septic tanks will not be permitted in many guch projects in future. Dr. Dymond said he would be glad to help such groups to solve eventually these new problems if they so desired. He said: *- "You own a part of this country, now that your project has been completed. The only thing any government owes to its citizenry is to provide opportunities, such as this, so that you can make a place for yourself in the community. I had exactly five cents in my pockets when I landed in this coun- try as a boy from overseas. The great debt I owe to Canada fs for the opportunity it gave to me to go ahead and follow the career I wanted to follow." ett HAL BANKS HEADS HO Hill Monday, gets into his white Cadillac automobile for the trip home, About 2000 SIU members marched, on the Hill REV. J. E. LAWLOR in Ottawa to protest the gov- ernment's trusteeship of mari- time unions. Hal Banks, president of the Seafarers' International Union of Canada who led his union's protest march on Parliament (CP Wirephoto) men can live." HOLD EXERCISE VANCOUVER (CP) -- Ham radio operators su 'vessfully conducted a two-hour exercise in civil defence communications in British Columbia recently. Messages were exchanged with fire marshals. Banks agreed, Your Original CARPET CENTRE Over 50 Rolls of Carpet on Display Tasley cect off Terentee PET i , NU-WAY 174 Mary Street | | | | | | N-I-R-C LICENSED CAR 7 VANDALS WRECK PARKS PROPERTY * Vandalism in City Parks is getting out of hand. . Four water fountains were smashed and 25 picnic tables damaged this Summer -- the two main entrance doors to the new Somerset Pool dressing rooms were smashed beyond repair recently. #. City Police maintain regular patrols in our parks, but they have a big area to supervise. ** Chairman Albert V. Walker of the City Property commit- tee made a strong appeal today to citizens, young and old, fo report "incidents of wilful damage to property." , 'Vandalism is costing the taxpayers unnecessary expense and offenders will be prosecuted," said Mr, Walker. 'WEATHER FORECAST Temperature Up On Wednesday 45 | i] ~*Porecasts issued by the Tor- Kitchener .. Qnto weather office at 5 a.m. « Synopsis: Rain will spread apidly northeastward across lorthern Ontario this mrning Being chiefly confined to regions north of Lake Superior and Georgian Bay. Partly cloudy §kies will continue over south- ern Ontario. Warmer weather ill return to all regions Wed- St, Catharines..... overnment trusteeship on the rei ia : g 4 tenants to call off the demon-newspaper against him? lapproaching anarchy in Cana-|S7oud with impunity and ease, patrolled Parliament } about life, you'll} But it became immediately] !*: You cannot blame them Industrial and men and reporters. lconfront the gov | government, | ij | a merry|side of the story." wceeone |President George Meany. Mr.| 31 IN t CELINA ST. of the SIU of North America came prompt and _practically| Department.) | |SIU seamen, members of Parliament with "Ask them, they'll decide," By ALAN HARVEY jand technology, on change in- by what the government calls\up as Britain's prime minister|break. in education, on demol- advance appraisal of the noofithat the Earl of Home is|BDUCATION CHANGING persal at 2:45 p.m., to the pee'-lincisive, easy to talk to. He is|day, herald a new deal for an Back and forth he went, an} As a youthful cricketer, he) One of the halls of learning ders make him seem shorter.| stride, jcarry an easy /assurance into teeth. A black snap-brimmed Se-|earldom should rise triumphantjfor Eten, it has been said, is Toronto ...-+e+e006 and a large gold wristwatch, |out even trying, in the Tory|captain of the cricket eleven lead Monday's protest by some} a. "Dm j ; ; i i 2,000 aaaere sapien federal|COme 2, Ottawa. "I'm just an) know what the Canadian public|motion--due to come to a vote ---- yoy it was taken for | ser. feels?" |tonight--charging the govern- granted that this was a govern. SHORGAS |SIU and four other' marine} f : |stration, 2 | "You're pretty young andjdian shipping by "pusillanimous bie 4 were pushed easily. HEATING & He went into the Parliament|naive, kid," said the SIU boss.|dawdling" on the trusteeship is-| ..¢cany ,2nd Paul Hall were t : "\as it turned out -- but word|the hard fact > ly sur- ; : Pe i ii quick step, continually SUT-|syroad. rapidly among his sup-|find out the bis guys hy run poo fhe oe eek Donel seameriy™ an . Commercial iso run the news-| " ; The established, relioble Gas with Us. OFFICER , He led reporters ACTIONS |Hall is president. of the Ameri-| ose by was anner from| From the New Democrats, So-|C2n SIU and also heads des| pela Shor, meres! INTERPRETING THE NEWS poh whose membership and allies in unqualified support for the gov-| Mr. Pearson said it was ob- American ports have harassed/ E 1 P U A ernment's actions in delaying|vious that had Mr. Diefenbaker' Mr, Banks was cheered wildly ' ps p =) as he instructed the SIU march- the justice of the SIU case. he told reporters who asked) Canadian Press Staff Writer {stead of tradition, on ki : ; , on kitch when the demonstrators would| It is one of life's little ironies|sink instead of stately home, aa jan illegal strike. F at a time when tradition is|ishing barriers of class, accent He cut a jaunty figure of struggling in a sea of change. |and the accident of birth, sandwich snack handed out on|precisely the man for the job, The Newsom report, pub- the lawn in bright sunshine, to|Beneath that throw-it-away pa-|lished last week,' and the Rob- ing off of six $100 bills from alunflappable, in the Macmillan|educational system that favors hefty bankroll to pay chartered|tradition. He has a way of|the privileged few at the ex- erect, quick - smiling six-foot)/excelled on a sticky wicket; in|that some now consider a lux- figure with a rugged face whose| politics, he has the same relish\uxy Britain cannot afford is |He chain - smoked filter-tipped) This said, there still seems aladult life. It is probably the top cigarettes, lit from 4 gold|piquant quality in the fact that|snob school in the country. dora was perched on the back ofjover the prostrate bodies of|like stamping a coronet on the his head and he wore a grey pin-|several untitled contenders to|baby's bottom. There was one sour note. |leadership stakes. land president of the 'Pep,' a A young man separated froM| «RGUMENT DEEP school society boasting enor- jlegislation that will impose a) put he gave the order to lieu-| Why was every Canadian|ment with encouraging chaos ment that could be - pushed For more than three hours he puiidings once--to the bathroom|"When you grow up and learn|Sue. |met with trepidation and timid- APPLIANCES rounded by a flock of aides, sea-\norters that he had gone to|this country un the (He referred to AFL - ClO] |papers. They won't print my|that way. | Deoler in your eres. Washington, a vice - president cial Crediters and Creditistes|AFL - CIO's Maritime. Trades |Canadian shipping using non- , lers to impress their individual Tradition Dies return to their ships, made idle|that a belted Earl should bob/giving slum children an equal |'King Hal" Banks -- from an) Events, of course, may show| ordering the demonstrators' dis-|trician manner, he is direct,|bins réport expected Wednes- busses from Montreal, jrising to the big occasion. |pense of the mass, barrel chest and broad shoul-/for taking tough situations in|Eton, whose black-suited boys lighter and clenched between his|the holder of an ancient Scottish|Putting your bov's name down striped suit, a boldly striped tie|win top honors, apparently with-| tome went to Eton. He was the burly Banks by a_ stout The obvious reply is that it ous prestige. All the other gesday with variable cloudiness expected in the north but mainly funny skies in the south. * Lake St. Clair, Windsor: Little ghange in temperature. Wed- nesday sunny with cloudy pe- fiods and warmer. Winds be- coming southwesterly 15 to-| night. es 'Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Ni- agara, Lake Ontario, Halibur- southern Georgian Bay, ondon, Hamilton, Toronto: Sunny with cloudy periods today and Wednesday, becoming warmer Wednesday. Winds be- ming southwesterly 15 Wed- day. «Northern Georgian Bay, Ti- agami, North Bay, Sudbury: Sue of occasional light rain this evening and tonight. Wed- ee, seteeeeees ipetay sunny with cloudy pe- USKOKA csseseres jods becoming warmer Wed- Windsor ...s..0005 ffesday. Winds London ... Wednesday. Sault Ste. southwest 20 Toronto « Algoma, Marie,| Ottawa . White River, Cochrane: Over- Sault Ste. Marie... Kapuskasing ...... White River....++. Moosonee ... Timmins .....+++ Observed Temperatures Low overnight, High Monday Dawson seccsssees Victoria .. Edmonton Regina ... Winnipeg ... Lakehead .. White River .. 8.8. Marie . Kapuskasing North Bay .. Montreal east with intermittent rain end-|Quebec .......++4. ing early tonight. Wednesday Halifax: scsscsvcose 32 wriable cloudiness and warmer. Winds westerly 15 to 2) Wednesday. | VERNON, B.C. (CP)--A win- Forecast Temperatures 'er carnival with a Mardi Gras Low tonight, high Wednesday. |/lavor will be held in this Okar.- Windsor ..+++++0+5 52 72 |agan community in February St. Thomas. 50 70 homme will be a masquerade EOndOn sooscsveeses 48 70 \parade and ball. 34 seeeeees PLAN CARNIVAL see ' steel fence shouted: 'Banks, you're a. , . damned crook." "IT agree with you," retorted Banks without breaking stride. Justice T. G. Norris of Vancou- --in the federal shipping inquiry into the Great Lakes labor war. The judge's -report laid the ba- sis for the federal trusteeship. In that report, Mr. Justice Norris had this to say about the man from the United States waterfront who came to Canada in 1949 to break one marine union and now fights to retain his grasp on another: . abe . capable, decisive, ego- cetric, intolerant and ruthless. Brantford Hits Appeal Objectives OTTAWA (CP) -- The Cana- dian Welfare Council 'reported Monday that Brantford was the first city to attain its United {Appeal objective. In a telegram received Mon- day, Brantford informed the the council] that it had received donations amounting to $208,755 in the first three weeks of its jcampaign. The city's objective 'was $208,000. This was the man that Mr.) ver singled out--with his union} would be inve.se snobbery to|0ys looked up to him. debar the Earl from the job| Now, in the hurly-burly of just because he happens to have| big-time politics, nobody doubts \blue blood. |the qualities that Lord Home | But the argument goes deeper|wili bring to Downing Street. than that. The real oddity is)The question is whether his that 10 Downing Street should/background fits the new mood. beckon a man in ermine who) symbolizes, superficially at Need Money? least, some of the trappings and| traditions that post-war Britain} @ TO REFINANCE YOUR MORTGAGE? is trying to shed. | In a ferment of self-analysis, @ TO REMODEL YOUR HOME? @ TO BUY A COTTAGE OR bie nation is questioning insti- |tutions that one would have} CAR? @ TO REPAY HIGH COST LOANS? jthought would always be Eng-; jland--the stiff upper lip, the i"old boy'? network, the theory of an educational elite trained|] Let's discuss, without obligation, your financing plens: our 10 or 15 Year long-term 2nd mortgege with iow interest end small repay- to rule nonchalantly over a {distant empire. ments may prove much easier for your budget. Pig! the Prvcceseoud lef is on -------- awe! CORONATION INVESTMENT co. LTD. @ Canadian Public Company In Oshawa Area Call SCHOFIELD-AKER . LIMITED 360 KING ST. 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