Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 15 Mar 1966, p. 2

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

~ i 2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, March 15, 1966 par eens Rob TORONTO (CP\ -- Premier John Robarts introduced gov- ernment bills into the Ontario trol over the expanded Ontario Securities Commission and "all those government agencies that work in co-operation with the ITS NAME? FINANCIAL ANND: COMMERCIAL AFFAIRS 'Churchmen New Department Of "Force" | WASHINGTON (AP) -- Four churchmen and political scient- | ist Hans J. Morgenthau said to- iday U.S. foreign policy has un- | dergone a "momentous change" and now is aimed at stopping communism: by force through- out the world. This policy is mum amount of publicity to the government while ignor- ing the Opposition Liberal and New Democratic parties. | arts Creates Deplae Use IMMIGRATION REPORT GIVEN Immigration Minister seph Sedgwick. The report Legislature Monday creating a new cabinet portfolio and changing.the name of an exist- ing one. Mr. Robarts described the new department of financial and commercial affairs as de- signed to take over much of the attorney - general's department work load and assume full con- HEES STATEMENT OTTAWA (CP) -- Text of statement in the Commons Monday by George Hees (PC --Northumberiland) on the Munsinger affair: Mr. Speaker, I rise on a question of personal privilege. On several occasions in the last 10 days I have publicly stated that I did not know a person by the name of Olga Munsinger. A person by that name now is reported to have said that she lunched with me twice, seven or eight years ago. She may be right. Although I still do not recall knowing any person by that name, I have examined the pictures of that person in the Saturday newspapers and I believe that I recognize the woman pic- tured there. I make this state- ment, Mr. Speaker, to prevent anyone from being misled by my previous statements, made = Marchand is seen on his proposes methods of narrow- # way. to the Commons Mon- ing sharply the eligibility of % day night where he would sponsored immigrants to a table a report on immigra- Canada. (See story on page * tion by Toronto lawyer Jo- 3.). (CP Wirephoto) MUNSINGER - COMMONS CONTINUED FROM P. 1 Pa * Mr. Fulton put another ques-|statements amounted to charg-, ion: If the Munsinger case was|ing privy councillors indiscrimi-| @uch a threat to national. se-|nately of wrongdoing and trea- Qurity, why did the Pearson | son." : | government w&it nearly three 'I don't say everythigg I did ears before unveiling it? was right," Mr. Diefenbaker . Mr. Cardin said he had no in-|told the Commons. "But I do tention of blurting out the name|say everything I did was hon- Munsinger in the House March /est." 4 or of discussing the case at} Mr. Cardin said he didn't his press conference Thursday, |think it "the right thing to do" e had done so under great/to mention names in the Com- rovocation by the Conserva-|mons at this time. The judicial ves. inquiry could go into that. « Mr. Fulton, Mr. Nielsen and| Besides, he added, the Oppo- -- Lewis (NDP York/sition leader had seen the file uth) took exception to various|in question and could tell his aspects of the terms of refer-|colleagues who was not in- nee for the Pigeon may, (valves, @hey called for an all-party! Naan rae committee to change the|'SHOULD GIVE NAMES' rms, saying they should refer| Erik Nielsen (PC -- Yukon)) directly to all allegations by said this defied the basic prin- Mr. Cardin. ciple of justice -- an accuser #® Mr. Pearson rejected these | Should name persons and back lemands and called for an end|uP his charges. | to the emergency debate, tech-| Some 30 to 50 former Con- ically a series of questions of|servative ministers were being} privilege by Conservative front-|asked to prove their innocence | *enchers. It was urgent for Par-|the way the present terms of; Jiament to return to the nation's | inquiry were drawn up, he said. business. | Mr. Hees denied that anything * Michael Starr, Conservative|untoward had ever happened} House leader, shot back: "The|between himself and Gerda me minister has lost the con-|Munsinger. | fidence of this House as far as| He admitted Mrs. Munsinger I'm concerned and any sugges- mgjeht be right when she said | 'tion he has to make has no/|sht had two luncheon dates with merit." |him while he was a cabinet min- | * Referring to Mr. Cardin' sjister. "Although I still do not | press conference statements, /recall any person by that name, | Mr. Diefenbaker said: I have examined the pictures of "There never was a question that | of security in this matter.' Mr.|newspapers and I bel'eve that I Cardin, by refusing to name/recognize the woman pictured names, had made a blanket con-/there."' "'demnation of the Diefenbaker; In any case, Mr. E cabinet. \ Seeectae s added, | charges made the only issue arising from the} without the benefit of informa- tion now available. | STRESSES SECURITY Mr. Speaker, I should like to make a further point abun- dantly clear. The real and only issue which arises from the the minister of justice both in- | side and outside this House, | is the security of the nation. That is the overriding con- sideration, and I hasten to as- sure the House that at no time | has my personal conduct jeop- ardized security. I defy the prime minister and the minis- | ter of justice to say that I ever did anything to jeopar- | dize or affect the security of my country. I hallenge them now to stand up and say that I did. Subject always to the na- | tion's security and welfare, | who my acquaintances are or | may have been, or who the | acquaintances of any honora- | ble member of this House are or may. have been is not a public issue. Mr. Speaker, Canadians everywhere have viewed the recent debate in this House with grave concern. that this statement will assist in restoring public respect for and confidence in this House and its members. | WEATHER FORECAST last week by | loved it. I hope | Mr. Robarts gave no indica- tion as to who would head the new cabinet department which brings the total.number of min- istries to 21, He said the department was needed because multitudes of new business ventures had put an increasing demand on the financial services "so necessary to maintain. and develop these business opportunities." Besides giving up control over the Ontario Securities Commis- sion to the new ministry, the attorney-general will relinquish the office of the superintendent of insurance and registrar of loan and trust companies and) the registration and examina-} branch which deals with} the licensing of real estate bro-| ers, used car dealers, mort- gage brokers and _ collection agencies. financial and commercial. com- munity." Mr. Robarts' other bill changes the name of the attor- ney - general's department to that of ministry of justice and attorney-general. In other business: 1, Attorney-General Arthur Wishart said a review of Stephen Truscott's 1959 mur- der conviction in the rape and murder of a 12-year-year-old girl would be the responsibil- ity of the federal justice min- ister because the conviction, disputed in a book published this week, was upheld by the Supreme Court of Canada. Truscott was 14 at the time of his trial. 2, Education Minister William Davis said in answering a question that "no one is com- 'pletely satisfied with the pres- NS gente ent arrangement" of recruit- ing teachers but added that) PREFER OLDER NAME | he could not specify the cost} TRCHESTER, England (CP) to taxpayers of newspaper ad-| A Northamptonshire parish vertising by local school} councillor urged his colleagues boards. to "go modern" and vote for/| 3. Elmer Sopha (L--Sudbury) | Beatle Drive for the name of a charged the government was|new street. The planning com-! using its news service ex-| mittee frowned on the sugges- clusively as a ..edium of|tion and eventually settled on propaganda, giving the maxi-| Roman Way. | tion Satchmo Tells Philip | "We Cats Here Dig You' | | --| | LOS ANGELES (AP)--Louis|crowd of 1,100 contributed $250,-) |Armstrong said it in song: {000 to the charity fund. "Hello, Philip... well, hello,| Wherever he went in his 65-) Philip." hour Southern California visit-- Parodying his famous Hello,|airports, a polo game, a uni-| Dolly singing, Satchmo ad-|versity--Philip was a hit. Hun-| \libbed at a Variety Clubs ban-|dreds pressed around for a' |quet Monday night: |glimpse and he shook thousands! "We cats over here dig you|of hands. . give my regards to the) He was missues."" speaker, Prince Philip, husband of the} Receiving an honorary doctor laughed, Jauded and|of laws degree Monday at the Queen, laughed, app |University of California at Los |Angeles, he told an audience of 8,000: | "T have accumulated quite a long list of degrees in recent years. I hardly need add that; they are all honorary--some- thing described as getting your a deft and witty Today, the prince, 44, flies to Chicago, continuing a charity) tour that has raised $520,000. That total, announced at the banquet, came from his appear- ances in Miami, Houston and here. More stops remain, giving doomed to failure,. they added. "What in the past we said we were doing or would do but nev- er did," the panelists said in a paper prepared for the opening of the national inter-religious conference on peace, 'we now are... putting into practice: to stop the further expansion of communism ah a global scale by force of arms." Besides Morgenthau, who is from the University of Chicago, the other panelists were: Presi- dent Stewart Herman of the Lutheran School of Theology, Rock Island, Ill.; Rabbi Robert J. Marx, director, Chicago Fed- eration of the Union of Amer- ican Hebrew Congregations; Rey. John L. MeKenzie of: the LANDREVILLE HEARING CONTINUED FROM P. 1 'Things were being done very | informally," Mr. Clark con- ceded, He replied "I can't say" when Mr. Morrow asked if it were not a fact that the Landreville shares resulted from a meeting of directors Jan 17, 1957. It was at this meeting that the direc- tors authorized sale of 14,000 shares at $2.50 to Continental Investments, a Vancouver finan- ciai house. According {o evidence at Far-| ris' perjury trial, the judge's! block came out of this lot. The} evidence was that Convesto-- the nominee name under which Continental held the stock -- wrote to the judge at Farris' di- rector and put through a paper transaction under which he emerged with 7,500 shares with- jout putting up any. money. | John McGraw, head of Con- tinental, is to testify wh linquiry moves te Toronto next) month, Mr. Clark told the commis-) |sioner he himself does not know | jwhether the Landreville block) came out of the Convesto ac-| count, He thought. Continental) was getting the shares cheaply | because the firm could be help- | ino," he added. duced by the commission law- yer, he advised Farris he would continue an active interest in |NONG and was keeping the op- ition letter "actively in my | files." Mr. Morrow suggested this let- |ter represented the only offer of He said the stock offer PE bere ese aay peng aad been made in the first place'be-| My. Clark said an executive cause he and Farris hoped to|optained from Trans - Canada interest the then mayor 'in join- | pipe Lines Ltd. had been given ing the company as an execu-)a favorable stock deal. How- tive and they felt it wouldjever he had forgotten the "make sense" to extend to him| terms, the same kind of stock deal! Gnder questioning by the com- Gucr Ekeculives were geiiing. | mjccj i He didn't know who made the|pe knew of no favors by Mayor overtures, | Landreville to his company. The before the franchise passed the city council. "I would think the answer is When Mr.-Landreville was of- fered the Supreme Court ap- pointment in September, 1956, Mr. Clark said, the mayor whether he should refuse the bench offer in view of his possi- ble prospects with NONG and bird in the hand" because of the en the} company's then-certain outlook. | He quoted the mayor as say- |ing: "If I accept, what happens |tp, to my option?" : Mr, Clark said he replied that it was a firm commitment and "we'll see it through." ;mayor had been co-operative, |but always with the best inter- lests of the community in mind, | "In all your dealings with Mr. jasked him and_ his partner |Landreville, did you ever sug- |gest anything improper to him, jor he to you, so far as accepting any benefit was concerned?' jwas told he should take "the|asked J, J. Robinette of Toronto, counsel for the judge. "No,"' Mr. Clark answered. Mr. Farris' evidence later in e week will be his first public jtestimony dealing with the 'NONG stock manoeuverings, He 'did not take the stand at his 'perjury trial, at which he was | After the mayor went to the|sentenced to nine months defi- court, according to a letter pro- | nite and three months Indefinite. ful to NONG when it would | later be mar a Hl University of Chicago Divinity] orany saber ecdip tiene wid School; and President Howard "Tt never entered my mind Schomer of the Chicago Theo- where they (the shares) were | logical Seminary. going," he told Mr. Morrow. | More than 500 religious and QUERIES PHONE CALL lay leaders are aitending the "Didn't you get a phone call three-day conference, sponsored from Farris saying he wanted by leaders of the Roman Catho-|these shares?" he was asked lic, Unitarian, Jewish, Episco- "T don't remember.' : pal (Anglican), Methodist and) Ye also could not Greek Orthodox faiths. whether there had been any dis- OVERSTEPS LIMITS cussion with Mayor Landreville | . 3 eka about the option up to the time The panel said: 'There are the offer was made -- which recall DON'T Served Daily 11:30 - Che Rih Room NOW. OPEN SUNDAY 4 TO 7:30 P.M. Continental French Buffet GENOSHA HOTEL ema te FORGET 2 p.m. -- 5 to 8 p.m. narrow limits, defined by the in-' would cover the critical period terest at stake and the power available, within which a for- eign policy has a chance to be} successful, and a foreign policy| which would oppose Communist revolution and subversion! throughout the world oversteps those limits." | Your Clothes @ Will Look Like New @ Will Feel Like New] When Cleaned By RINKERS "The Best In Town' Phone 725-1191 education by degrees." promise of fulfilling a goal of $1,000,000 for the clubs' interna- tional work for underprivileged children, He still ig to visit Chi- cago and New York and then {Toronto March 20-21. and Ottawa |March 22-23. ' Hollywood--for a change itself jcelebrity-struck -- poured forth |the cream of its talent at the | banquet. | The black-tie and mink-clad! Mainly Cloudy Forecast Little Change In Weather, TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts| person in the Saturday |issued by the weather office at} Low tonight, high Wednesday: 5.30 a.m. Synopsis: Cloud will cover the region Wednesday. | Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Niagara, Lake Ontario, Lake Forecast Temperatures Windsor St. Thomas.. London Kitchener .,.. Mount Forest., 50 45 45 45 38 "This is fascism at its worst." | charges was one of national se-/Huron, Haliburton, Killaloe,| Wingham 'MOVE WAS POLITICAL' If the Liberals had known about the Munsinger affair, and| if it was a question involving |*" national security, why had they} been sitting on it for. so long? | Health Week Strictly for political reasons, Mr. Diefenbaker said, "to use » on some future occasion." | Officially 0 ws Mr. Pearson should have fired | * ~~. Cardin within minutes of earing about the justice minis-|aret Rideout, 'ter's press conference, Mr./sercetary to the Diefenbaker said. Mr. Cardin's|health and welfare, sc tes z --!/ Canada's Health Week oven at my personal con uct jeop- ardized that security." min "ter coclared pala HERE AND THERE a Parliament Hill c. *mony | In a statement mar'ing the special week, March 1. to 19 at the Oshawa General Hos- saath ob - Ped with i i ' . thea azards associated wi pital. during the week end traffic, home accidents, lung and forty-one patients. were .| he appreciably reduced or elim- admitted and 347 discharg- | inated. 94 minor operations as pvell | League of Canada, sponsors of as 86 eye, ear, nose and Health Week, for making the lures for the protection of per- dred and sixty-eight treat- | sonal and community health. ments and examinations (j= onan were applied. The. physio- Greeting Cards Toys + therapy department gave Hobby Kits 556 visits. The occupation- Special go ogg al therapy department han- at Newtons Monday. Fifty births were reported |Prime Minister Pearson said ing Mar. 12. Three hundred | cancer and heart disease can ed. Ninety-eight major and | He commended the Health ; | Canadian public aware of meas- throat operations. Two hun- were given. Twenty-six casts 30% OFF 723 treatments and made rarest Fie dled 221 cases. 23 ATHOL ST. WEST, OSHAWA PREECE E ERE RPE eee eee he eeeee Why Pay More. a -- a SAVE!! C ae ON PREMIUM QUALITY gal. FUEL OIL Phone 668-3341 DX FUEL OIL Serving Oshawa -- Whitby & Ajox Districts dhnaltilantinall curity "and I hasten to assure | | Hami ithe House that at no time has!don, Hamilton, Toronto, North] St: Catharines..... Georgian Bay, Windsor, Lon- Bay, Sudbury: Mainly and little change in tempera- tire, Winde east 15 Algoma, Sault Ste. Marie, White River: Cloudy with inter- mittent light snow and contin- uing cool. Winds east 15. Timagami, Cochrane, Western OTTAWA (CP)--Mrs Marg-| James Bay: Cloudy and little] ¢. om , ' au parliementary|change in temperature. of|southeast 15. Winds Ottawa: Sunny. and not quite so cold. Winds light. pelieennanmiensamiesn. Hamilton ..... toes cloudy| Toronto | Peterborough . | Kingston .... Trenton .. Killaloe , Muskoka North Bay.. Sudbury .... jariton eee It Ste. Marie... Kapuskasing .. White River... Moosonee 'Timmins . NOTICE T WOMEN and O ALL EX-SERVICE MEN DEPENDENTS All ex-service personnel invited to take W. R. LEGION HALL, To give skilled advice on Veteran's. Allowance Treatment or Hospital Ca "Royal Canadian Legion, Street, Oshawa, who will FREE LEGION SERVICE Assistant Secretary, Service Bureau, Txzento Thursday, March 17th From 2:p.m. to Completion of Business one with questions on War Disability Pension, War (Burnt Out to MR. C. A, BRISEBOIS, Business M and their dependents are advantage of a BUCK BRANCH NO. 43 Veteran's Benefits. Any- Pension) : re is urged to call or write snoger of Branch 43, 90 Centre arrange an appointment. INTERIOR DECORATOR FURNITURE DRAPERIES BROADLOOM 15 King Street East CUSTOM MADE DRAPES Phone 725-2686 ae) White Label RUM. MT} I HH WOOD': ail WN aa LD NAVY & ONT GIVE UP THE SHIP Now's the time to stow-away your favorite Wood's Rums. It's a rich cargol PUT ABOARD WOOD'S RUMS

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy