LAXITY, DRUNKENNESS CHARGED | Institution Shoddily Built Shulman Tells Inquest dampers' where TORONTO (CP)--Dr. Morton dence, and a juditial inquiry|no fire Shulman, former chief coroner|was ordered later by Premier needed." ' of Metropolitan Toronto, testi- John Robarts. Thirdly, Mr. D. A. Dunlop of fied Wednesday night that} Dr. Shulman Wednesday|Lindsay, a retired special in- the Workmen's .Compensation|night suggested the names of|spector of hospitals and a re- Board hospital in suburban|witnesses who should be sub-|tired platoon chief of the} North York was a_ shoddily|poenaed when the hearing re-|Toronto fire department, "who | built institution with no work-|sumes: will testify that the Ontario ing fire alarms, laxity among) First, Fred Jackson,. a for-|government failed to appoint) the staff and drunkenness|mer construction man '"'whoj|fire inspectors for the hospital | among the patients. \will testify that fire dampers|as required under the Ontario Dr. Shulman was testifying at)at the hospital had not worked|Hospitals Act." an inquest into the death ofjsince the hospital was built." Fourthly, Mr. Orval Francesco Gualtieri, 36, who "who will testify that there was | Subject! 7 died in a fire at the hospital no working fire alarm or) Secondly, Mr.. Samuel Ben- |sprinkler system on the night} |nett, a building and heating in-|of the fire." | \spector of Brampton, "who will| Dr. Shulman said he would/| testify that unsafe construction|go on to name seven persons methods were used at the WCB/who had informed him they March 30. -Dr. Shulman said testimony from a former fireman, a heat: ing inspector, a construction man and from patients would |ASKS FOR INSPECTOR PARLIAMENT -AT-A-GLANCE By THE CANADIAN PRESS WEDNESDAY, April 19, 1967 Creditiste Leader Caouette promised support for the gov- ernment's move to cut. off debate on the forces unifica- tion bill next week. Conservative Walter Dins- dale accused 'the government of taking a bulldozer approach with the bill. A government bill to curb use of the drug LSD won support from both sides in the Senate. : Members of all parties in the parliamentary immigra- tion committee welcomed a ew government formula which could increase the flow of immigrants by 20 per cent. THURSDAY, April 20 The Commons meets at 2:30 p.m. to debate a government motion to end the unification 'Closer Police Surveillance | 'Lower Speed Limit Asked. PICKERING (Staff) -- Closer! Pickering Township Police |police surveillance in unmarked Sergeant Donald. Martin said cor oe 8 react hay limit that, in his opinion, the accident recommended by a coroner's|9CCcurred about 500 feet east of |jury at a hearing into the death|Station Road in the south ditch of ai G. Baker Wednesday of Base Line Road, He said the night. aS ee ; The jury algo advised that ex. toad was slush covered at the leessive speed by a 17-year-old time and that the 1966 model Oshawa youth contributed to the Car driven by Gilbert Marcell accident. , -- |Caron, 17, of 307 Wilson Road In its verdict the five-eman|North' Oshawa. had j jury advised Whitby Coroner F siti roe peheone -- A, Cuddy that Earl Baker, 43, ; ee a priest of the Mormon church|Morris vehicle driven by the and father of six from. Scar-{deceased. boro, died at about 3:15 p.m.,| Martin said that both the March 21 from a fractured skull /driver and passenger Robert and ruptured aorta. Quenneville, 23, of Bay Ridges, The jury recommended that|had a moderate smell of alcohol the speed limit on the Base Line/on their breath. He said he Road be reduced from 50 to 40|found a 12-pack of beer in the THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdoy, April 20,1967 a A Care ae a a anything to drink since 9:30 a.m.appeared that day. | ate Both Caron and Quennevillearising out of th Magise chargeg cident trate's Court veer into the ditch. She said the Baker vehicle was _ closely| following a large truck, After the accident Mr. Brasuhn turned around and called an ambu- lance. Gilbert M. Caron, testifying under the protection of the Can-| ada Evidence Act, said he was | driving west when the car in} front of him seemed to stop sud- denly. He braked, skidded and {pulled to the left when he sud-| denly saw the Baker vehicle in| front of him. He said the beer pack was not opened by him and he had nothing to drink. He said he had discovered the 12th bottle! under a safety helmet in the' car | the following Saturday. | The passenger, Robert Quen.- | neville, said he purchased the beer in Ajax but had not had| NOTICE CITIZENS OF OSHAWA and District We as fellow citizens of your community depend on your patronage for our |ivelj. hood. So please support us, by purchasing milk which is produced by your local Dairies » +. Which are -- IDEAL DAIRY 6 debate next week. The Senate mph between Ajax and Liver-|front seat of the Caron yvehicle|-- = meets at 3 p.m. i pool Road. with the bottom ripped open. Hef gree Estimates, Reasonable said only 11 full bottles were Rates, Repair Specialists. found in the vehicle. hospital, including hollow-core;would give evidence regarding doors, improper louvres, ex-|laxity within the hospital it- lcessive glass partitions, too-|self, and drunkenness among | the patients. ' | support his description of the hospital. He gave their names in his testimony. 1 Dr. Eli Cass, the coroner, ad- narrow exit doors and probably OSHAWA DAIRY s * s s ahs rare net 1 hy Nationalizing Of Casinos 2! seils\octnt after hearing Dr. Shulman's . . . . | hoe lrg aed had | HILLCREST DAIRY testimony. L til Sat f t G d t cha: g : -ons' M ing as | sonons tour snows |"HCUE oatisiacton Gained ~ na bee nts ace ser ne' QR Puan Jurors toured the hospital] ae | onsidere In B amas Wesldehce and Goth © Wess 4 HEATING THIS MESSAGE SPONSORED BY building before the hearing was} h charged with obstructing police. ' Y BdjournED. ist | Cc 00 oS TISIS ppea NASSAU, Bah 3. (CP) --| Tt issi rinds Ajax and Pickering General Mode Tonks THE MEMBERS Ontario's supervising coro-| é f : anamas -- ne Commission winds up the Hospital Pathologist Dr. E. Cass | U Installed Ae x , ordered | : ce : Prime Minister Lynden Pin-|current session of its inquiry to- ner, Dr. H. B. Cotnam, ordere | TORONTO (CP)--The rage pti ae can be seriously con-|dling told a commission inves-\day and may resume again in ; bat Plato it said that besides the ruptured April 5 that the inquest into [Municipal Association got little|sidered only after the govern-|tigating gambling here Wednes-|September. For Fast Dependable Radio Dis- aorta and fractured skull, the| patched Plumbingi The Dairy Workers Union ieri death be postponed, F A & | : : : : ne cin i ; Paras i Shulman Gatinted Ghatjeeeeene h ig vier Re siapel fea sac the Smith com-|day that his government would) The commission 'is studying a ie pong) etre : : remier John Robarts when it/mittee report on taxation. ave to si ati izing casi g i sha-lc " 8s ul | UP it go on. asked for help in fighting =] ee: Pi hav consider nationalizing|casino gambling in the Baha his ribs had been broken in| Two days later, Dr. Shulman Robarts Siabigg in thejcasino gambling in the Bahamas mas and the possibility of Amer- 0 i ? crisis in education costs, {legislature this week specu-|to exercise stricter control ofjican gangster infiltration Miree DInces, | : return, del eile ae spokesman for the association|late on when the report might cating 'onenehbns | At fesse only tourists are) The only eye witness to the or interest, sdopstsls oot ghia Mea said in an interview later. be ready. P # | ; accident, Mrs. Hildegard Januse charged in reply that the gov- But he emphasized that he #/owed to gamble in colony's| | : y ;,|. The association, composed of} The association in its brief casinos of Bay Ridges, said that while, ernment was covering UP €Vi-/municipal 'officials and elected|also asked for a royal commis-|was not interested in gambling Conmilaian Chairman Sir Ra-|2 Passenger in a, westbound car, | jcouncillors, had asked the On-|sion inquiry into highway|as an industry but as an amen-|nulph Bacon said he understood tiven by Rev. A. Brasuhn, she LTD. C d T pea government to assume 100| accidents; a federal-provincial - ee legislative changes concern-|°bserved the Caron vehicle start North America ana a arge |per cent of the cost of educa |committee to investigate rising LOTS OF WORKERS ling the island's gambling would |'©_ Pass her car and suddenly} tion, to provide more: beds for|consumer prices; federal - pro- F U K 1 d \chronically-ill persons not elig-|vincial action to control water or obde ta @ jitie for admission to homes for| pollution; full costs of hospital LONDON (CP) -- British dip-|ine aged and better car-safety |construction to be paid by lomat T. E. Rogers says Cana-|egulations. senior governments; and an ee grees' fe eh forts of some 20,000 private|fees in connection with the <l-|wide and 28 feet deep to get into | dians have such a strong sense| A. M. Campbell, mayor of the incredse from $50 in the per- l | of survival that this critical borough of Scarborough, said|missible size of prizes that can nee id ee eee ee | the delegation was told by Mr.|be offered in raffles by chari- alg / e made until the commission States' |completes its report. | DANGEROUS PASSAGE | project to land two astronauts) Several former officials testi-| Giant cruise ships have to on the moon, requires the ef-jfied they received consulting navigate a passage only 300 feet Apollo, the United --BREAR- ST. 1. 723-7071 Os period of self-doubt will be over- come and the "Canadian mir- acle" will survive. Rogers, British commercial minister at Ottawa, expressed this confidence in a special Board of Trade journal supple- ment issued today to promote British exports to Canada. Britain has made Canada its top export target in this cen- tennial year, augmenting its promotion with a plea, conveyed at the Anglo-Canadian ministe- rial talks here, that Canada relax customs regulations and give British exporters special consideration in go ve rn ment contracts. . This British view is being ex- pressed at the wind-up of the two-day talks today, informants said. The Canadian government already has taken action to re- lax anti-dumping regulations in connection with British goods but a British official said Cana- dian customs officials are not carrying the relaxation into every-day practice. Robarts that the question of| education costs and government table, religious and benevolent | groups. . , | TORONTO (CP)--Prime Min- ister Pearson says he hopes to have new broadcasting legisla- tion dealt with by Parliament before the end of the summer. He told the Canadian Associa- tion of Broadcasters Wednesday he hopes to remove "'some of the uncertainty that must now exist" in the industry. Dr. Andrew Stewart, chair- man of the Board of Broadcast Governors, had told the associ- ation's annual convention Tues- day that the board is waiting to hear what its powers will be under. expected new laws. Asked in an interview Wednes- day about the delay in naming a new chief of the Canadian Broadcasting Corp., Mr. Pear- Foot Of Snow \ said: "We want to get our | egislation in first." In New England moun: FINDING MAN By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A spring storm left up to. a foot of snow in northern New England Wednesday. The Far West also had a broad area of snow. The eastern snowfall stacked up to 12 inches in Berlin, N.H., 11 at Rumford, Me., and nine at Tuckerman in Pinkham Notch, N.H. The Portland, Me., bureau measured 15.2 inches for weather Don Jamieson, Liberal mem- ber of Parliament for the New- foundlahd constituency of Burin- Burgeo, who also was at Wed- nesday's. luncheon, said in an interview the government is having trouble finding a man | for the job. | "Who wants to be 19th man on| the totem pole?" he asked. Mr. Jamieson is president of New- | foundland Broadcasting Co. Ltd.| and a past - president of the| C.A.B. | Broadcasting Legislation By Autumn, Pearson Hopes hope that we will still be able to bring this legislation forward and have it dealt with before Parliament recesses for the summer." DEPENDS ON MPs "But that, of course, will de- pend on the way things go in the next few days or weeks," said the prime minister. He said the general principles laid down in the government white paper on broadcasting June 29, 1966, will form the basis of the new legislation. It had won "complete support" of the all-party committee of the Commons on .proadcasting. After hearing Mr. Pearson, who flew back to Ottawa in the afternoon, the C.A.B, in business sessions elected S. C. (Cam) Ritchie, president of CKLW._ra- dio and TV, Windsor, Ont., as president, succeeding J. A. Pou- liot of CFCM-CKMI-TV, Quebec City. SPECIAL WEEKLY MESSAGE TO MEMBERS RE APRIL BULLETIN Chambeun THRBUGH NOW-ATIE a) TNED FOR HI-SPEED e FOOD CLUB Ups Come April thus far. | : : ; venty-four ah to bine inches of snow fell| Mr. Pearson said at the| | The wonderful thing about Dry Rye is the fact that it makes every : ne ara amese| ae eae | eet om nn SAFETY-PRICED ZOW FOR SAVINGS!" ie ire bogie a legislation could hice been pre- 1538-- 42 292-- 88 That's how different the taste of Grand Prix is. UW, He western part of Montana. sented to Parliament before Reve: 26) ao lce oR » You'll suddenly realize that.Grand Prix is not an old whisky with S . : _Soring snow storms bit argasiOm." | a me a new slogan. If you drive at highway speeds ~ pull a trailer ~ carry heavy of Idaho, 'The snow and lower| and diversions in the govern: | 22-- 68 494-- 128 You'll know it is a new whisky with a new taste. A dry taste. A ful loads -- the HIGHWAY PATROL ST600 is the tire for you. temperatures around Ogden,|ment's legislative schedule in 3 ae rye with every shred of sweetness removed. . oe . Uiah, threatened a large part of|the House of Commons" but "if 271 sf 651 -- 8 TUR i vis tos Gand Pain ioc aise sinks temutitn eve tanto Specially designed for that extra margin of safety you a eee ee | 284-- 48 790 -- 66 unusual. need ~ and priced Jower than original equipment tires. 2 795 -- 88 , * : i ourite rye. one | Or: Grand Prix could become your favourite ry © baauedsptyreucncoternosin "But I can't understand why Cancer Campaign e a = I must serve a life sentence for Campaig Famous Quality YALDING 1 TERRY COVERS _ my crime," he added. "It's only} When a Canvasser Calls J ee nie 4 . H Thick, thirsty 'Lady Galt' terry in the most a year's sentence, but that may April 10th to 24th i , i rar) P popular colours. Fronts more Agia fh pitts GOLF BAL S 4 and rears for most cars Ss. ip ernor 'would permit him "the a REGULAR 2.25 VALUE 5 5.50 VALUE dignity of dying at home with JOIN ' ah my family." , bh ' oe Kane eight has éronea olf FOUR SEASON'S TRAVEL DT LT QQg' includes: _160 pounds from 195 as cancer | & : ravages the six-footer's right leg heir SUNTOURS EQWEACHY i, cham- and has spread to his intestines. J OM their U | a ae 2 dy, 9 oz. } TOUR to ets. Cancer Victim GRAND PRIX * THE WORLD'S FIRST DRY RYE ® Unique LOW CORD angle for hi-speed stability, NEW LOW PRICES Y plat | | 723-1 1 63 (CALVERT OF CANADA LTD., MONTREAL © TORONTO e VANCOUVER white i longer mileage Seeks Release | | i 4 ply tubeless 55.95 20.95 TE © BiG EDGE tread puls extra tuber where the wear : 6.50/7.00-13 04.49 21.95 HR isgreatest wi terminal tancer. has ap- dae * ae pap B® No limit LIFETIME GUARANTEE ec nee Ce ae AY Zonet BATED = sxe a covenant an year prison term and permit REE INSTALLAT industry safety standards him to spend his remaining time with his wife and four children. "I'm guilty,' William Kane, the 30-year-old prisoner, said. He is serving time in a prison hospital for a $30 stickup. Give. Generously HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR . SERVICE 723-4663 EXPO '67 Every Friday (7:00 p.m.), Bus leaving for 3 days. Every Mon- day for 5 days (including Upper Canada Village and Ottawa). All accommodation, transporta- tion, passes, return included. FOUR SEASON'S TRAVEL OPEN THIS SUNDAY 4:30 TO 8:00 P.M. With bar facilities. Make your reservations NOW. Phone 723-4641. with trade --F THIS WEEK'S SUPER SAVERS 88 KING ST. W. OSHAWA TELEPHONE B.EGoodrich 725-4543 \ The straight-talk tire people 526 SERVING OSHAWA OVER | 57 King St. E. 19 P.M, 50 (EARS | Phone 576-3131 ATR