q ee | | | Robert Anderson, 17-year- old Pasadena, Calif. high school student made these pictures of a man identified THESE PICTURES TRIGGERED A CONFESSION "theft a school photography class who confessed to as Luis G. Macias of Los assignment, hailed a patrol from auto" after seeing the Angeles taking a coat from a parked car in downtown Los Angeles. Anderson, on Officers arrested Macias, (AP Wirephoto) Body Of Returns To Native Province By JAMES NELSON Quebec (CP)--The body of Gen. Georges P. Vanier, Can- ada's 19th Governor - General and commander-in-chief, has returned to the bosom of his church and province. A funeral mass, to be con- celebrated today by 13 priests, including Maurice Cardinal Roy, Archbishop of Quebec, has been arranged in the same new style of the Roman Catholic Church as that adopted by spe- cial permission Wednesday in Federal Government Argues | | car and gave police his film. peitures. | ° | Anglican Bishop Georges P. Vanier sini On Head OTTAWA (CP) -- Rt. Rev. E. S. Reed, Anglican bishop of Ottawa, was struck on the head Notre Dame Basilica of Ot-|famed Royal 22nd Regiment--|P¥. 8 erg ape goon tawa. : the Van Doos, which Gen.|ccling © CS Ae eee The Vatican council recently |Vanier helped found in the Pate ae the requiem approved a new form of rites|World War -- will preside with aii for Governor - General for the dead in which the ac-|two bishops and other priests| es : : cent is placed on joy in the im-|drawn mainly from among mil-|, °°. ishop said Jater in an mortality of the soul and the/itary chaplains. jinterview, he had iad a slight resurrection of the body, rather! Gen. Vanier's body in its|Meadache after being hit but than on sorrow. Black vest-lsimple wooden coffin covered|WaS not injured. : ments of the principal clergy|by the red and white maple| 'Fortunately, I guess I've got give way to creamy white in/leaf flag, was brought Wednes-|@ hard head," he added. the new form. |day night from Ottawa to Que-| He said he did not know how Cardinal Roy, an old and in-jbec City--Gen, Vanier's home |big the piece of plaster was. It timate friend of Gen. Vanier|of affection, though he resided/fell during the concluding min- and closely associated with the|in Montreal during his brief pe-|utes of the service conducted by - ----iriods of civilian life. Paul-Emile Cardinal Leger of After today's service in Notre|Montreal, 10 Roman Catholic Dame Basilica, the body will|bishops and Gen. Vanier's son, rest in the church's crypt until|Georges, a Trappist monk. Parliament Resumes THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, March 9, 1967 3 PLANNED OLD DECOR PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) --/cemetery she had taken them from a in Putney Vt., to Police stopped. a car when they|decorate her room at college. three inside.|The police escorted her and the Marathon Sessions ~ [tsi *sisen thurs OTTAWA (CP) -- After ad- journing Monday out of respect for Governor - General Vanier, Parliament resumes its mara- thon session today with several thorny issues unresolved. The government had hoped the session could be prorogued by Friday, but lengthy discus- sion on unification of the armed forces and the revised Bank Act have pushed the target date to Thursday, March 23, when a brief Easter recess will start. This leaves only 11 sitting days for Parliament to dispose of about 15 government bills still in the legislative pipeline and to complete quiries by committees. special in- The Commons meets at 2:30 p.m. EST for its 222nd sitting jday in the 1966-67 session, 26 days short of the record set in 1964-65. The Senate assembles at 3 p.m. and Parliamentary committees on defence, divorce laws and Mr. Justice Leo Land-| jreville resume hearings at 3:30 p.m, | A government spokesman isaid the first item for debate in PARLIAMENT AT - A - GLANCE By THE CANADIAN PRESS WEDNESDAY, March 8 A state funeral with full military honors was held for Governor - General Georges Vanier at Notre Dame Basil- ca. The Ottawa local of the Canadian Union of Postal Em- ployees complained to Prime Minister Pearson that mem- bers were not given time off to watch the funeral. The bureau of statistics reported a slightly. higher consumer price index but lower food prices for Febru- | ary. THURSDAY, March 9 The Commons meets at 2:30 p.m. to give third reading to amendments to the Income Tax Act and to continue de- bate on federal - provincial fiscal arrangements. The Sen- | ate meets at 3 p.m. a place for it is prepared next|~ B.C. Had No Say Over Land ----zyir0 0" Boos memona Need Confede By STUART LAKE OTTAWA (CP) -- The federal government argued Wednesday that British Columbia up to the time of union with Canada in 1871 had no jurisdiction over lands under its territorial sea or the continental shelf off its coasts. Cc. F. J. Carson, head of a five-member battery of lawyers appearing for the federal gov- ernment, made the assertion as the Supreme Court of Canada opened hearings into a govern- ment - ordered reference into ownership of mineral rights off the B.C. coast. Prepared to argue against Ot- tawa are lawyers representing Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, Postal Unions To Merge OTTAWA (CP) -- Two na-| tional postal unions with a com- bined membership of more than 20,000 announced Wednesday a program of co- operation in- tended to lead the merger of the organizations. William Kay and Roger De- carie, presidents of the 11,000- member Canadian Union of Postal Workers and _ 10,000- member Letter Carriers Union of Canada, respectively, said} minated in signing a document} setting out two main points: | 1. That the unions agree to apply for joint certification to the newly-created public serv-| postal council representing all| Chief justice Robert Tascher- |church and a benediction be- stowed. postal employees. 2. It is the intention of the |try pending appointment of a unions to open immediate, de- | tailed, merger talks with the} hope of creating a combined} postal union to council as the bargaining agent | for postal employees. Under the new collective bar- | gaining legislation concerning | the federal public service, the new board will certify as bar- gaining agents those unions that can show they represent a ma- jority of employees in an occu- pational category, The 115,000- member Public Service Alli- ance of Canada represents sev- eral hundred postal employees, mainly railway mail clerks. The merger proposals men- tion June, 1968, to August, 1969, as a tentative deadline for a founding convention of the new organization. AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION CENTRE Of all Transmission 1038 Simcoe St N. 728-7339 Repairs Could've Been Avoided by Preven- 75% /° tive Maintenance Every 25,000 Miles. : sive stone garrison which over- New Brunswick, Ontario and jooks this ancient walled city. ae Wdward leland is rep-| Gen. Vanier conducted the 4 ' Queen in 1964 to the dedication a Ss resented at the hearings buti>+ the chapel, a small chamber ka not present any arguments.| aller than many an average anitoba and Alberta served Canadian family 'living room, sented. of the old fortification. Quebec had refused from. the start to appear and Saskat- When they visited, it there chewan with no seacoast also|W8S room for only themselves is taking no part in the legal and one or two aides. attle. The Queen, to whom, and to At stake are the untold riches|WHose ancestors, Georges Phil- lying beneath ocean beds off provincial coasts. Both Ottawa and the provinces have been issuing exploration permits, in some cases for the same areas. PROVINCES PROTESTED The government's decision to ask the high court for its opinion was made in late 1964 despite|Vanier's bier in the protests from the provinces, ias Vanier devoted his life in military,- diplomatic and- civil- ian service, accompanied her faithful servant in_ spirit through her gift of a four-foot wreath of carnations in red and white, the national colors of Canada. The wreath, placed at Gen. Senate chamber at Ottawa Monday by because Confederation is in} need of a tonic. Conservative Association of Victoria and Haliburton, Mr. Robarts said the proposed con- ference, "free of the rigidity and formality of the familiar fed- eral - provincial meetings, will ration Tonic, In Lindsay i LINDSAY, Ont. (CP)--Prem-|ible elements in this province | notice they, will not be repre- nestled close to the stone walls|ier John Robarts said Wednes-|to undermine the confidence of| day he called for a Confedera-|our citizens in segments of the) tion of Tomorrow conference|financial community." The premier, who earlier in \the day attended the funeral of Speaking to the Progressive| Governor-General Vanier in Ot- tawa, told the meeting Ontario} has already surpassed th opening the 1963 election cam paign at Lindsay. growth promises he made in| defining more clearly the pow- ers of the Bank of Canada. It| will be followed by the contro-| versial and bulky Bank Act,| which eliminates the six - per-| cent ceiling on ,interest rates and limits foreign. ownership of| Canadian banks. | LIBERALS AT ODDS | Liberal MPs and senators are |divided on the details of the! foreign - ownership sections, es- pecially as they affect the American - owned Mercantile the House today will be a hill;duce several major amend- ments, The Landreville committee is hearing evidence by the Ontario Supreme Court judge before de- ciding whether he should be re- moved from the bench for mis-| conduct in a $117,000 stock mar-| ket. deal. Mv J Other committees are com-| The cabinet and caucus of |pleting inquiries into divorce) laws, prison conditions, auto safety, living costs, broadcast- ing and immigration policies and civil service pensions. Bank of Canada. A rare Friday morning meeting of the caucus| has been called to thrash out differences, Main point at issue is an am- endment backed by Finance Minister Sharp and passed by the Commons finance commit- tee, which would give Mercan- tile nearly six years to sell 75 per cent of its shares to Cana- dian investors, All other banks €xp0G7 ------ Four Seasons Travel Are exclusive agents for CANA- DIANA Village, ONLY accommo- dotion--Annex to EXPO grounds. (250 yards). $6:00 per person -- on porty of 4. Py Also inquire about our Bus Tours, Phone 576-3131 75 KING ST. EAST @ OUR 20th YEAR IN OSHAWA e@ FACTORY _ CLEARANCE Furs! Many ai Half Price and Less (across from Genosha Hotel) would be limited immediately to foreign ownership of 10 per cent or less. |LEADS DISSIDENTS Economic nationalists -in the |government, led by Walter Gor- don without portfolio, Kave ar- jgued privately that the 10-per- jcent limit should apply to Mer-| peaue and that the transition {period should be shortened. | ( Another pending major bill implements a new five-year | tax-sharing agreement with the| |Provinces, giving have-not prov- | jinces higher equalization pay-| 'ments. All provinces. get four | extra percentage points of the personal income tax yield. Sev-| eral provinces have criticized| the arrangements for being too) stingy. | The Senate was expected to} jdebate bills providing for re-| search grants for industry and for the addition of $250,000,000 to the $50,000,000 fund created last | year to assist development of jdepressed rural areas. The Commons defence com-| mittee was slated to resume its lively hearings on the contro- versial unification bill, with Conservatives planning to intro-| GUARANTY | TRUST | 32 KING ST. E. | Open To Serve You Mon. - Thurs. $ te 5 Friday & to 9 Saturday $ te t Always fun to be with, intelligent to talk to, Sally is a man's kind of girl. She delights in the tingling taste of Jordan Valley Crackling Rosé, and adores its high-spirited gaiety. So will you. , Try Jordan Valley Crackling Rosé anytime. You'll enjoy it. | Enjoy JORDAN WINES Anywhere...anytime Jordan Vatiley Crackling Rosé Jordan Valley Pink Champagne Refreshing, lively, lightly bubbled Busy with bubbles, pert and pink | | enable all Canadians to discuss areas of agreement and those of disagreement." He said the conference would "take advantage of the good will flowing through our) which consider the question a/Chief Justice Robert Tascher-| (1 intr, | Ae 'y as part of our centen- political one. eau, rested at the foot of the! oi) chcervances." | Opening the federal case Wed- coffin in the black-draped fun- The premier also said his | nesday, Mr. Carson said two|¢@l coach during a 64-hour areas are under question--the land under the three-mile terri- torial sea off Canada, and the land under the continental sheif| which stretches seaward from the three-mile limit. reign state prior to union with Canada, It had been a British colony and the extent of its government and the British. the funeral of Vanier, Because of Governor-General eau, administrator of the coun- jurisdiction|bec and Royal 22nd Regiment were subject to the control of homecoming for the old soldier who lost his right leg above the The British had rights in the;knee in the First World War the executives of their unions territorial seas and had never |and served with equal distinc- held meetings recently that cul-|transferred these rights to the tion in non-fighting capacities colony, jin the Second. the| Wednesday night for the arrival court held only a short after- of the coffin and a brief cere- noon sitting but will return to;mony in which the body was ice staff relations board as alits normal two sittings today. {taken into the safekeeping of trip by train here Wednesday. Chief Justice Taschereau, ad- ministrator of the government pending appointment of a suc- cessor to Gen. Vanier as the Queen's | i with Prime Minister Pearson| He said B.C. was not a sove-;and other top Ottawa dignit- aries, are to attend today's ser- vice. representative, along} But it was essentially a Que- Crowds flocked to the Basilica new governor-general, is not on the bench for the reference.) Seven justices, headed by Mr.) replace the) Justice J. R. Cartwright, are| hearing the reference although it is the practice for the full nine-man court to hear consti-| tutional issues. ' LEWIS OPTICAL Established for over 30 years 1014 King Street West 725-0444 Should a "non-swinger" | visit swinging Britain? | es YS Very defititely! Becanse Britatn is just as lively or leisurely as you care to make jt. It's simply a matter of choice. Some of our passengers fly to Britain for a swinging vacation. 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