2 THE CSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, July 2,1968 ~ Favreau Should Quit It All: Starr OTTAWA (Special) -- On- Riding MP Michael Starr Wednesday there is a ser- many people as to whether for- mer Justice Minister Guy Fav- reay should not have resigned from the ernment entirely. the and Mr. Favreau's r as Justice Minister, the er- atie House L r said Mr. Favreau had been found guilty of poor judgment. "How can the prime minister employ him in another depart- ment of goernment when he has been found to hae poor ? The question stand to have a minister who has poor judgment," Mr. Starr) asked, Mr. Starr said that Prime Minister Pearson, who was aware of the circumstance in the case of influence peddling was as guilty as his justice min- ister in not seeing that proper action was taken at the start, "The report speaks for it- self," Mr, Starr said,' "When the Conservative Party first brought up the matter they were charged with using smears: and innuendos. The Dorion report clearly showed there was substance to the charges comes which department can be-land the cries of smear were not legitimate." DORION WILL NOT RETREAT referred' to in the conversation|) Continued from Page One Chief Justice Dorion said Thursday his report was based on the evidence 'and if some- one else wants to interpret it in his way he is free to do so." It was. human for a witness to make a mistake in testimony he added. "Tf that's the case, this wit- ness (Mr. Favreau) could per-| haps say he was mistaken." Mr. Favreau declined the judge's invitation just as the judge had declined Mr. Pear- son's. Mr, Favreau, who resigned his justice portfolio Tuesday under the fire of the Dorion re- port but who will remain in the cabinet, said in his statement that it was "amply clear' he hiead told the inquiry March 25 that he hadn't told Mr. Pearson about Mr. Rouleau in the pre- ceding September. He said, however, that one portion of his evidence wasn't as clear as he wished it had been. PROVIDES TRANSLATION The prime minister's office provided the following transla- tion from the original French transcript, a passage also cited by Chief Justice Dorion: Ross Drouin, Conservative party counsel: "Mr. Tremblay (then immigration minister) teld us that he asked you to advise the prime minister of the fact that Mr. Rouleau could be involved, or that this affair existed?" Mr. Favreau: "I do not be- Neve that Mr. Tremblay asked me to advise the prime minis- ter, What was decided was that I should be the one to advise the prime minister, even if it was his assistant who was con- cerned. , . ." : Mr. Favreau said "assistant" --the original French word was "adjoint"-- referred to Denis, Mr. Tremblay's aide, and not to Mr. Rouleau. The statement quoted this fur- ther March 25 testimony by Mr. Favreau: "It is only on the next day (Sept. 2), upon returning from Charlottetown to Ottawa, that I found the occasion to 5 sag about it to the prime min- r." Mr. Favreau said it is appar- ent Chief Justice Dorion must have taken this exchange as in- between myself and the prime minister, There is no conflict in our respective recollections, , . . "It is possible that the com- missioner (Chief Justice Dor- ion) may, in his report, have intended to refer to some other 'secretary' or 'assistant' than A BREATH OF THE ISLES AT THE England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales were all repre- sented by these members ; of the Oshawa and District Old Country Club in the Dominion Day folk festival FOLK parade yesterday morning. The float was decorated with Union Jacks and mem- FESTIVAL bers were dressed in authen- tic native costumes. --Oshawa Times Photo Mr. Rouleau, as several others of different levels of seniority were involved." Mr. Favreau, like Mr. Pear- Death Toll Algeria: Anti-Red At Home son the previous night, also pointed to this passage in the transcript: Paul Jolin, New Democratic Party counsel: 'At that time, had you advised Mr. Pearson that Mr. Rouleau was specific- ally mentioned in the report?" Mr. Favreau: "No." | Mr. Jolin: "You did not ad-| vise him?" For July | By THE CANADIAN PRESS | At least 36 persons died in Dominion Day accidents 'in Can- ada, the highest number on rec- Mr, Favreau: "If the questionjord for a one-day holiday and is allowed, and I must report|12 more than last year's record my conversations with the/24. : prime minister... ." Traffic accidents claimed 29) lives, more than twice the 1 IS PRECISE deaths last year, and almost | Mr. Jolin: "No, it is a precise twice the 15 predicted by the |question, without particulars." |Canadian Highway Safety Coun-| Mr, Favreau: "No." cil Chief Justice Dorion, for the! By JOSEPH E, DYNAN ALGIERS (AP)--The new Al- gerian regime, in the opinion of Western diplomats here, is moving toward a more neutral position in world affairs coupled) with an anti-Communist policy at home. This can have a wide. effect on political relations among the nations of the Afro-Asian com- munity, It can lead many nations to take a new look at the Afro- Asian summit conference, now here June 29. RELEATIONS BETTER It also points to better rela- tions with Alberia's neighbors in the Arab world, Tunisia to the east and'Morocca to the west, The new regime is ctrected to tread a careful course be- tween East and West, much in the manner of President Nasser Record Set And Neutral Away From It sion as originally scheduled) of the United Arab Republic. | If Boumedienne and his col- jleagues take an actively anti- |Communist line at home, it is difficult to see how China can persist in its campaign to stage jan Afro-Asian summit confer- ence here. ; | Peking, in its fervent desire for such a conference, rushed in to recognize Boumedienne al- most from the first hour, WEATHER FORECAST time being at least, further comment. Aides to Mr, Pearson said the judge was informed in advance that the statement was being prepared and of its general con- tent. Mr. Favreau's statement was telegraphed to Chief Justice Dorion later. Officials said Mr, Pearson was aware of the statement. He spent the holiday at his resi- dence here instead of at his summer home at Harrington Lake. In the evening, he at- tended folk singing and dancing on Parliament Hill. Officials said they believe the statement will-end the cross-fire as far as the government is con- cerned, Arab Attempts Draw Praise JIDDAH (AP) -- Saudi Ara bia's King Faisal says he wel- comes recent Arab attempts to settle the civil war in Yemen and hopes 'those efforts would lead to results acceptable to our declined) A survey by The. Canadian! scheduled for Nov, 5 Press from 6 p.m. Wednesday) Cherif Belkacem, minister of '0 midnig' ursday, 10C@!ieducation and information in times, also showed four drown-jthe new regime, served notice ings and three deaths from mis-' ; "td eollaneous causes. of the switch in domestic policy Quebec led the provinces) with 10 fatalities, eight in traf-) fic. Three -persons died in one) accident. There was one drown-/ ing and a boy was smothered| under a sand pile. Alberta and Manitoba each had five highway deaths, On- tario four and one drowning.) Four of the Manitoba dead died in one accident. Saskatchewan reported four| traffic deaths. | Nova Scotia had two traffic deaths and a drowning, New Brunswick one traffic death and a drowning. In British Co- lumbia a man died after the| glider plane he was piloting) crashed, Another man died in a} fall from a bridge. | Newfoundland and Prince) Edward Island reported no ac-| cidental deaths. The survey does not include) known suicides, slayings, indus*| trial or natural deaths. in an interview with the official newspaper. Belkacem put it this way: "We have known strange pro- fessors, who, incapable of achieving the revolution in their own countries, pretend to be doing. it here, according to plans wich have nothing to do with Algeria. "We have put them aside. We do not want them as guides... they are free to go where they wish, but not to indoctrinate our youth," MANY EXPELLED Col. Houari Boumedienne's regime has expelled a number} of French, Chinese and' Egyp- tian Communists. who acted as advisers to deposed president}. Ahmed Ben Bella. On the other hand, Fidel Cas- tro in Cuba and Sikou Toure in Guinea have issed statements jattacking Boumedienne. Castro called Boumedienne a "mili- Ontario dead: tary despot, a rightist, a reac- THURSDAY | Ann Edwards, 26, of Sand- tionary and an enemy of social- ism and the Algerian revolu- cloudiness overnight, Sunny And Warm Today: Thunderstorms Tonight TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts issued by the weather office at 5.30 a.m.; Synopsis: Continued unsettled weather is expected across the north today with gradual clear- ing toward evening. Southern regions will start out mainly sunny but cloud will thicken and a few scattered thunder- showers are likely later in the day, Some cloudiness will likely linger on Saturday. but there should be a good deal of sun- shine during the day, Temper- atures Saturday will be a little lower than today's readings. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, iagara, Lake Ontario, Lake Huron, Southern Georgian Bay, London, Hamilton, Toronto: Sunny and warmer with in- creasing cloudiness this after- noon and chance of a thunder- shower this evening. Variable Saturday sunny with a few cloudy peri- \day. Winds southerly 20 today, northwest 15 Saturday, Cochrane; Cloudy with occa- sional showers and a few thun- dershowers today clearing this Winds south 20 today, north 20 Saturday. Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, high Saturday: Windsor 58 St. Thomas,...++- London «eves oeeee Kitchener ...+s000 Mount' Forest..... Wingham Hamilton \St. Catharines.... |Toronto {Peterborough .... Kingston «+++. Killaloe ,., North Bay.. Repellent May Clear Vision Of Drivers In Rainstorm By JAMES NELSON OTTAWA (CP)--With a new silicon water repellent devel- oped by a National Research Council chemist, you- may soon be able to drive full speed on a crowded highway in an other- wise blinding rainstorm with your windshield wipers turned off--and still have good visibil- ity. Dr. D. F. Stedman of NRC's division of applied chemistry originally developed the water aircraft repellent for use on windscreens as a safety mea- sure. Now, after 24 years of re- search and development, the product is stirring real interest among airlines and can be pro- duced commercially for the mo- torist. Dr. Stedman demonstrated the repellent applied to his own car. It worked in both a light, misty rain and in a torrential downpour simulated by spray- ing water under pressure from jets mounted in front of the car's hood Without the repellent on the passenger's side of his wind- shield, visibility first became blurred in the rain and t completely obscured under a heavy build-up of water. But on Dr. Stedman's treated side -of the windshield, visibil- ity remained clear. Drops of the wind- 'shield literally exploded on con- rain water hittin He first became interested in the effects of water on glass windshields and means of re- pelling rain in the 1940s after reading reports of a number of aircraft crashes in which planes struck mountain tops in heavy rain storms. Water on a slanted glass sur- face has a effect on) the line of vision ¢! it, lines, A pilot may be certain he' is clearing a mountain top when in fact the top only appears to him lower than it is. "In one test with an RCAF F-86 jet fighter, the nose of the air- craft was not visible to the through an untreated part windscreen in a heavy rain storm, but through the treated area the pilot had two miles' vision. i "This flight would have ended in disaster except for the 1- lent which allowed safe it and landing despite a torrent of rain," Dr. Stedman said in an NRC paper on use of the repel- lent for aircraft windshields. After one major airline had a landing accident in a rain- storm at a runway in Vienna recently, it asked for detailed information on the mew NRC development. Dr. Stedman calls the pro- duct SPR, for semi-permanent repellent. It is not just a new tending to deflect true sight|N version of the many earlier re- ellents he worked with, but the final result of nearly a lifetime tact with the repellent and flew off in millions of tiny particles, leaving the glass clear and \seemingly dry. The windshield wipers were not operated during the demon- stration. The repellent is a complex chemical compound with an ap- pearance similar to black shoe polish. Applied to glass and rubbed briskly, itffuses with the glass in a tough film 1-10,000,- 000th of an inch thick. It is barely visible. It can be applied without spe- cial technical skill or equip- ment, And it outlasts washing to remove sand, mud, salt, or "other indignities to which windshields are subjected," the NRC said. Dr. Stedman put an application on his car last Sep- tember and it remained effec- tive through Ottawa's rigorous Tender EAT Pork Shoulder TRUE-TRIM BEEF 12 KING ST. E. 723-3633 Friday Night and Saturday Specials of research. , All of the difficulties have been licked," said the Sussex- born chemist now tirement. "I now am satisfied with it, It's use and does all the rain repellent should do." Patents have been by Canadian P. velopment Lid, a 'which is alties under any for the product will with a share to Dr. An early version of the ght en been United States and ing Silicones in light sunny flave JORDAN BRANVIN CHILL IF DESIRED 'N OT! % hes he evening. Saturday sunny with) cloudy periods and cooler.| and dirty winter. He restored it in mid-April. | ESCORTED BUS TOURS MARITIMES --- 16 days complete) EA Cape Breton, and Nova Scotia, BEEF Departing July 10th, and Sept. $200. | tour of New Brunswick, P. 18th. LAKEHEAD -- 8 days to Manitou lin, Sault Ste. Marie, Lake Mich igan, Chicago and Detroit, De porting July 31st. New York, Worlds Fair, Wash Skyline Drive. 14th, ROAST 395 $100, | NEW ENGLAND STATES -- 14 days to Lake Placid, Cape Cod, ington, Colonial Virginie, and Deports August $235, PORK BUTT ROAST SEASONED | | 10 THE for information and complete 49: PATTIES PEOPLE itineraries, phone or write OF OSHAWA The Officers and members of Local Union 2028 International Brotherhood " ods and not quite so warm, |SUdDUTY «.ssoerees + a ee Leyaoo git Boumedienne's military re-|20 this afternoon and shifting to|Earlton' .......... lided with a motorcycle: igime ordered Prensa Latina, northwest 15 Saturday. |Sault Ste. Marie... Sevid Quesnel 13, when his|{he Cuban news agency, to close) Northern Georgian Bay, Tim-Kapiakading -... 163 Colborne St. W. bicycle was hit by a car at Con-|!ts ing office Thursday be- ee. 4 aly ms : yn ns cindy | Lindsay, Ont. 324-5836 | cause it distributed copies of/Marie, North Bay, Sudbyry:) mee . . | iston, six miles east of Sudbury. 1) Mainly cloudy witha few scat-(Timmins is Green, 14, d eq|Castro's speech. clam vetmtaine in a Toure praised Ben Bella andjtered showers and chance of aj Yemeni brethren," Faisal said in a weekend in- terview he wished the media- tion attempts had taken place Rouleau. This was not the case.|long ago so that Yemen "would : have been saved lots of pains." MAKES STATEMENT The Saudi government has Mr. Favreau's statement|backed the royalist tribes while FRED DENURE TOURS dicating he had spoken to Mr. tion," Pearson not only about the af- fair in general but also about the specific involvement of Mr. which, officials said, Mr. Pick-|President Nasser's Egyptian ersgill helped to draft, also said:|troops have been keeping the "There are obviously only twojrepublican government in of- people who can know what wasifice. t Sarnia. Roger Buhler, 42, of Essex, Ont., 10 miles southeast of Wind- sor, in a head-on auto collision! ear Essex said he hoped Algerians will avoid "Congolization' of their country. Thi points to closer relations|today northwest 20 Saturday with French-speaking states of thundershower today. Sunny, with cloudy intervals and cooler Saturday. Winds southerly 20 y. White River: ith Cloudy w LEGION of Electrical Workers, A.F.L., C.1.0. C.L.C. sincerely regret any inconvenience which may have been incurred by any person because of the brief withdrawal of "Bblack Africa" which refused|showers clearing this afternoon, | HERE and THERE Complainis from property owners downstream from the Greenwood \Conserva- tion Area in Pickering Township have led the con- servation authorities to for- bid swimming in the park. Kenneth Higgs, operations director for the Metropoli- fan Toronto and _ Region Conservation Authority, said residents had sought a court injunction forbiddfig swim- ming but the courts had ad- journed until October. "Be- ing prudent, we (The Con- servation Authority) can- celled swimming until the courts decide the matter," he said. William H. Gleed, CLU, a city insurace agent just com- pleted an intensive two-week course in the principles of life insurance agency man- agement at Farragut Hotel, Rye Beach, New Hampshire, June 14-25. Subject of the lesson-s mon which will be heard in Christian Science churches throughout the world this Sunday will be "God," with rea from "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures" by Mary Baker Eddy. Oshawa Fire Department spent a quiet Dominion Day with only one small grass fire. City ambulance an- swered 10 routine house calls. More than 8¢ members. of the Langmaid and Brooks families met at. Cartwright Wednesday Night Charles Carl Scopie, 48, wher struck by a car as he walked) across the Macdonald - Cartier Freeway just east of Toronto. | Car Inspection At Sale Sought Park recently for the an- nual clan picnic. Sports, boating and a picnic were highlights of the day's events. A 'mid-season gath- ering was planned under the direction of the follow- ing officers: President, Charles Langmaid; vice- president, Dr. George Werry, secretary and press officer, Mrs, Everett Mountjoy; treasurer, Mari- |way 2 between Kingston and lyn Langmaid. Sports com- | Gananoque were urged by | sory government inspection of jall motor vehicles with every |change in ownership and im- |proved surveillance by provin- mittee, Brooks Pearce, |coroner's jury ednesday. Hugh and Elizabeth Gan- The jury found that Percy 1, non; nominating commit- |Heaslip, 17, of Gananoque, died) tee, Wesley Yellowlees, Flo- (of injuries suffered May 17) rence and Sybil Langmaid; jwhen a defective car he was) driving went out of control at high speed on a curve 11 miles east of Kingston. table committee, William and Beverley Snowden and Gordon and Evelyn Brown. OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE FARMERS MARKET KINGSTON (CP) -- Compul-; |cial police of speeders on High- | , to attend the Afro-Asian Ses- MALE OR ASSISANT CA Male Range---$73,00 - Female Range---$65.00 - QUALIFICATIONS: Full high schoo! mentery accounting and statist | desirable. H Assistant Cashier for Tax, Treasur Mainly sunny and cooler Satur- FEMALE SHIER TYPIST $81.00------3614 hour week $81.00----361%4 hour week ! including typing, bookkeeping, ele- ical methods. revious experience y, City Clerk: and Engineers' deport- mento! accounts, receipting; perform clerical and typing duties, Re- | sponsibility of maintenance of a mortpagets request tax bills for pondence Linedex listing of mortgagors whom payment and attend to all corres- and payments relating thereto. mence July 26th, 1965 tions close July 9th, 1965, j | Personnel Officer, City Hall, Oshawe. CARNIVAL Friday, July 2nd p.m. MEMORIAL PARK, BOWMANVILLE | at 7 "Fun For All" OPEN EVERY FRIDAY FRUIT -- VEGETABLES FLOWERS -- PLANTS & FRESH EGGS BUY YOUR HOME IN... Please drive carefully in Beau Valley . . . Our children are happy here and love to play... Your children would be happy to live here too... Built by H. KASSINGER Constructio n Limited ' x Sold by SCHOFIELD-AKER 360 King West ee» 723-2265 Bus, Electric, and Water services, which took place between the hours of approx. 2:00 p.m, and 6 p.m. Tuesday, June 29. This spontaneous demonstration was directed at both the Commission and the Union negotiating committee for what the employees regarded as unreasonable delay in our current negotiations. We as Union officials accept this criticism humbly, and we expect that the Commis- sion will accept their share of the blame and the responsibility in the same man- ner. We hasten to assure all the citizens of Oshawa that had the demonstration de- veloped into a serious work stoppage that plans were being made to co-ordinate the actions of our members to ensure that essential services would be maintained in the Electric and Water departments. We are ga oe to place the interests of the public ahead of our own,:and any situ- ation which might have arisen which could have presented a threat to life or limb would have been immediately dealt with by competently manned trouble crews. This is the first situation of this nature that has developed during nineteen years of constructive labour relations between the Oshawa Public Utilities Commission and this Local Union, and we sincerely trust that both the Commission and the Union will conduct future negotiations in such 4 way that will eliminate the possi- bility of another such demonstration. The Executive Board, Local 2028 IBEW.