2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, Mey 31, 1982 ; |lish their innocence in court. TOURISTS BUY ANYTHING A Hamilton garage operator | ever from the United King- | the bus which has logged has brought back one of the strangest tourist purchases dom--a double-decker bus. | Fred Showler is seen here with | | more than two-million miles. --(CP Wirephoto) OTTAWA (CP)--Has the gov- ernment violated its own Bill of Rights in proposing a goofball crackdown? The Liberals think so. They argued in the Commons Tues- day night that accused traffick- ers of goofball ingredients--usu- ally sedative and anti-appetite pills -- would be forced under government proposals to estab- And that, said Paul Martin (L--Essex East) and J. P. Des- chatelets (L--Montreal Maison- neuve-Rosemont), rubs against the provision in the 1960 Bill of Rights that every accused per- son must be presumed innocent until proven guilty. Justice Minister Fulton was) not in the House. He left the| capital earlier Tuesday on other, business -- a move that post-| poned debate on his own Crim- inal Code amendment setting out "capital" and '"'non-capital"| murder. | Solicitor-General Browne con-| firmed that his colleague had| checked the goofball bill and| that 'he has certified that this| doesn't interfere with the Bill! of Rights." CLAUSE SUSPENDED Mr. Deschatelets, a criminal| lawyer, was not satisfied. He suggested that the clause on prosecution of goofball traffick-| ers be suspended until Mr. Ful- ton's return. The Commons| agreed. The clause in question says Tariff Bill Under Fire OTTAWA (CP) -- The politi- cians make way for the busin-| essmen today in Parliament Hill's hottest debate of the year. The Senate banking and com-| merce committee was scheduled to hear a score of business| leaders on the government's/was not far from the position "class or kind"|of Senator William R. Brunt controversial | | New Brunswick) called the bill! a prelude to tyranny. Someday Canada may have a revenue minister who woul say, like a king of France, " am the state--the state is me.' This, Senator McGrand said, | 1 Drought Hits Red China PEKING (Reuters) -- Severe drought is again cutting into agricultural production in sev- eral areas of China, already faced with a food shortage fol- lowing last year's poor food harvests, it was disclosed Tues- ay. | The official People's Daily newspaper said 45,000 persons that where an accused pleads not guilty, the trial shall begin as if he were being tried for possession of the drugs, even though possession under the bill is not a crime. It is up to the Crown to prove the possession. Then, the bill says, the ac- cused "shall be given an oppor- tunity of establishing" that he got the drug in question from a person authorized to sell it, or that he did not possess it for the purpose of trafficking. After that, the prosecutor can try to refute that story. Paul Martineau, parliament- ary secretary to Prime Minis- 'Goofball' Legislation Against Rights Bill? dicts while keeping them in cus-for one of their colleagues, Ro- tody. muald Bourque, member Lad on Outremont - St. Jean who has SHOULD KEEP SEPARATE = |heen pressing in the Commons The narcotic and goofball bills|¢or three years for legislation form companion legislation. But|,gainst goofballs. Health Minister Monteith "Mr Bourque said "this thing stressed the need for keepingis a threat to the contamination them separate lof our youth. We should have He explained that the goofball more stringent steps." Parliament At-A-Glance distribution of the main goof- PRESS ball ingredients -- barbiturates and amphetamines, drugs al- ready on the prescription list. Usually the tablets or capsules are dropped into alcoholic drinks "to provide a kick or stimulus which the user either| By THE CANADIAN requires or finds enjoyable," Tuesday, May 30, 1961 Mr. Monteith said. "| Extension of special coal sub- But these drugs were not nar-| ventions and a $1,500,000 make- cotics. Their medical uses were work plan to provide different different--barbiturates as seda-|work for jobless miners was an- tives or for 'the relief of emo-| nounced for Nova Scotia's dwin- tional stress or strain, amphe-|dling coal industry. tamines for purposes including| Opposition spokesmen said the appetite control and relief ofgovernment move does not go hood of Carpenters and Joiners of America (CLC) and union member Bruno Gubert were ar- rested in East York after 10 carloads of men ripped hydro wires, overturned mortar boxes and swung pieces of lumber at workers on an apartment pro- {ject. | Diesinger is charged with ma- licious damage and Gubert with malicious damage and common assault. Builders' Strike In Full Swing TORONTO (CP) Roving|tering Etobicoke house before squads of housing construction|surrendering the pistol to a po- Yorkers, Which moved across|liceman. much ol etropolitan Toronto| CHARGED AFTER FRACAS Tuesday in 2n_stior, hat Henry Diesinger, 27, business, ments and! 5 i Ee on [Epariments ape) gent for the United Brother- pected to turn their attention to| western areas of Metro today.| New Toronto and the Park-| dale area escaped the union net| Tuesday which saw the first ma-| jor clashes of strike and the ar-| rest of four union members and| two contractors. [ Squads of up to 30 carloads of strikers, mainly immigrant workers, patrolled subdivisions in the hope they will be able to impose union conditions on the construction industry. An Etobicoke contractor, Gui seppe Paolini, was charged with| posssesing a weapon dangerous| to the public peace after he) brandished a shotgun at union| members who were pushing his| | BULK GARDEN SEEDS Buy quality in bulk. Get more for your money. Buy just the amount you need and get personal service to help you with your selections. | | Over 2000 Flower Seed Packages to choose from Cooper Omit ca 16 CELINA STREET RA 3-2312 workers, upsetting scaffolds and throwing away tools. i A second contractor, William | mental depression. |far enough to solve the coal- Liberals viewed the govern-/mining crisis in the Maritimes. Nedoszytko, 37, was summoned for the alleged pointing of a starter's pistol. Police said he] stopped a group of strikers en-| "Garden Supplies Since 1909" |importation of drugs was intro-| duced by Health Minister Mon-| To Secrets od |checked by the government's| LONDON (Reuters)--A Labor proposed new legislation on bar-| ment bill as a personal victory| A new federal narcotics bill |setting stiff sentences for the What Happened a: | | Mr. Monteith said the '"'goof-| {ball" problem will be effectively member of Parliament said biturates. { Tuesday it was "frightening"! Moves to spare women from | that secret documents on loan|the death penalty for premedi- {tated murder and reduce the from the United States should) have vanished and that Prime Minister Macmillan after a| month could not even say whe-| ther they had been lost, stolen| or mislaid. | On May 11, Richard Marsh] asked Macmillan whether U.S.| Navy documents on secret ex-| perimental work in underwater, warfare had been lost or stolen. Macmillan at that time said such documents were in fact missing from a naval contrac- tor's files and promised a thor- ough investigation. Macmillan told Marsh in the House of Commons Tuesday he could not give any details of the investigation. But with modern methods of espionage, he| have been sent to help farmers|ter Diefenbaker, argued that pointed out thatdocument | tariff legislation. (PC -- Ontario), deputy govern- The bill, bitterly opposed by ment leader, who told the Sen- the Liberals in the Commons|ate last month the bill had to and Senate, was given second|pass unamended -- "that is my reading in the upper house over! final word." their protests Tuesday night. Senator Brunt's remark has Chief target of the oppositio is a proposal to give Revenue Minister Nowlan the final say|elect on some factors in deciding any w s are ap- . Whether pera Jools are ap Senator Choquette said the bill kind" of goods already made in| made no sharp change in pres-| Canada. Imports directly com-| ent practice in denying appeals peting with Canadian - made|t0 the courts. The final decision goods generally face a stiffer|of the minister applied in only tariff. limited fields. Senator W. Ross Macdonald whether imported goods were pi 1 Omario) oadte ohp0Y o| custom - made or drawn from on leader, said that while he| ° . = would not bring the majority in/OpeN Sock Shelves Jvaildble 10 Yo vote the DIE Sowa at Lhe se |there were facilities in Canada| posed to the contentious clause. 10" he Production a Pscialived He hoped a compromise 5"°Y> Ep amendment could be worked bring into this Counts. 3 out in committee. le proposed. changes 00 Senator Lionel Choquette (PC not represent a Tp gepar --Ontario), sponsor of the mea-| {FE den 5 2 Srasen oa e sure on behalf of the govern- 2 Eom, a " quell ment, said much of the criti-|said. "Rather, they are in the cism had been exaggerated. PRELUDE TO TYRANNY' Senator Fred McGrand (L--|make them work better." | IC » Vo) X) -- Ms SN / tA |combat r } China. The drought area is said| years. A prime example was its to mi n| been interpreted as meaning the per said some harvesting has | government will call a general|started in some regions of Ho- ion rather than submit to|nan province, normally a ric Senate amendment to the/farm region straddling the Ya s! He would decide finallylhail and insect pests." from south and central China report crops there look in good | condition follow ing plentiful] ny sharp depar- East Germany will build two nature of a modification of those agency | rules, based on actual operating facture sewing machines; the experience and designed tolother will be a 25,000-spindle| ¢ drought in northeast/such procedure had existed for total nearly 4,000 square {use in prosecutions for posses- could easily be copied and need | not be stolen to be made im- minimum age for hanging to 16 from 18 were voted down. The Senate gave second read- ing to the government's contro- versial tariff bill. Wednesday, May 31 The Commons meets at 11 a.m. to debate third and final reading of the agricultural Lands Rehabilitation Act. The Senate meets at 3 p.m. Sure it's fine saving pennies on @ few "specials" --but wouldn't you rather SAVE IN A BIG WAY . . . on a whole cartful of your favorite foods? Then shop PROULE'S regu- larly and watch your savings add up to dollars. Yes--your savings grow ORGANIST 9 TO 12 NIGHTLY Johnny McMann HOTEL LANCASTER proper use of. "I do not seek to minimize les. Another report in the newspa-| 510 of stolen goods. Whatever the outcome, the| {Liberals will soon get a second h/chance to raise virtually the Ju/same objection. A section al-| {most identical to that in the| | goofball legislation was included /in the government's new nar- | cotics control bill, introduced in the House Tuesday. Main purpose of the narcotics bill is to implement the govern-| ment policy for treatment of ad- River. But, it said, "this year's sum- mer crops throughout the prov- ince are suffering from even greater natural calamities than in the past two years as a re- ult of drought, gales, freezing| the seriousness of what has hap-| pened, but I believe it has been due to carelessness and not to treachery," he added. The prime minister said a file was missing which contained] only one secret document. | SOVIET FAIR The Soviet Union's first trade) fair in Japan runs for three| weeks at Harumi, starting Aug. | 20. Travellers recently returned Team Medici -- Rnd, | | MORE PROGRESS BERLIN (AP) -- Communist ADN. One will manu-/meeting of the Canadian Wel- fare Council as a way of solv- {care and treatment. | cotton mill. ne Approach Asked By Welfare Board Sermany OTTAWA (CP)--A team ap-assure that children anywhere | factories in Cuba by 1963, re- proach to medicine was recom-|in Canada can find homes to ports the East German News/mended Tuesday to the annual fit their needs." William Kirk of Geneva, int r-| national director of the Interna-| ing modern-day problems of|tional Social Service described ,_|an inter-country adoption pro- In an assessment of Canada's gram that has placed 9,000 chil- {health needs a panel supported|dren in the U.S. since its incep- "= group practice by doctor |specialists as an imaginative| *lway of coping with the com- 4 plexities of modern medicine. tion in 1954. A committee dealing with| |working mothers suggested | Dr. John Hastings of the Uni-| 'maternal salaries" as an in-| {versity of Toronto's School of ducement to keep mothers from | 4 Hygiene said the pooling of taking paid employment outside | ' knowledge was the only way to the home. The mother's pay| "keep pace with medical advan-| would be scaled to the number] Zz ces. % colleagues also inspired doctors| _ to do their best work. | '| Dr. Glen Sawyer of Toronto, | '|secretary of the Ontario Med-| "ical Association, however, said] ~_|group practice would not pre-| _|serve the same doctor - patient ~ | relationship. _ 1{|BLAME SCIENCE LURE 4| While discussing a drop-off in| _ 'medical students, the panel dis- #|counted a fear of socialized /; medicine as being responsible. | "2 The lure of sciences in the space | ~|age was blamed. Students who | A close association with|of children in the home, | are you a little short this month? If you can use some extra cash right now, call SEABOARD... your lending neighbor! LOANS $50 TO $5,000 Insurance Available On Loans SPECIAL HOME OWNER PLAN Up to 60 months to pay. SEABOARD FINANCE COMPANY 29% SIMCOE ST. SOUTH RA 8-6283 Life [%] ei - =(¢i 2 R 46 SIMCOE ST [=P all 2 P-NZ4d Sa AS3ed = - oe OSHAWA 06.94 DED HERE SUMMERY WEATHER HEA WEATHER FORECAST | THEATRE GUIDE Brighter, Warmer No Rain Seen Official forecasts issued at 5 Plaza -- "The Hoodlum Priest" | 1.50, 5.40, 7.40 p.m. Last com- plete show at 9.20 p.m. Regent -- "Go Naked in the World" 1.30, 3.25, 5.20, 7.15, 9.15 p.m. Last complete show at 9.00 p.m. | knots becoming south to south- .m.: west 15 to 25 knots this after-/p ive.In-- Synopsis: There will be a gra- noon. Partly cloudy with show-! dual warming throughout the ers tonight and Thursday. { forecast district today and, Lake Ontario, Lake Erie: Thursday as warm air over|Winds west to southwest 20 to| Northwestern Ontario edges 30 knots. Partly cloudy with risk eastward. of thunderstorm tonight. Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Nia- Forecast temperatures gara, Lake Ontario, Haliburton, Low tonight, high Thursday: regions, Windsor, London, Ham-| Windsor 55 75 ilton, Toronto: Sunny and|/St. Thomas .. warmer today. Partly cloudy to- London night and Thursday, Winds Kitchener southwest 15-25. Wingham Georgian Bay, White River, Hamilton . Algoma, Cochrane. Timagami Si: Catharines . regions, North Bay, Sudbury, Lh rave Sault Ste. Marie: Sunny andi? cletboroug warmer today. Mainly cloudy i enton with scattered thunderstorms to-| oLa10€ «+: : Muskoka night and Thursday. Winds seersenne southerly 15. North Bay .evesess 50 ! SUADUTY .vesernnes Marine forecasts valid until 11 Earitor J a.m. Thursday. S.S. Marie ... ' Lake Huron, Georgian Bay: Kapuskasing . , Winds west to southwest 15/White River » "The FBI Story" and "The Atomic Submarine." Box office opens at 8.00. Show| starts at 9.10 p.m. | DRASTIC REMEDY | PITLESSIE, Scotland (AP)--| | Richard Begg, 77-year-old head| of an engineering works, is tear-| ing the roof off his factory and] {will work under the open sky. | | Under Scottish law, he says, his| property taxes will drop from] $224 a year to $28 if his building has no roof. | 75 (CABINET STYLE) STEAM BATHS Home Rentals for Vibrator Belts - Barrel Rollers SLIM-RITE CENTRE 204 King St. E. RA 8.4501 |, I might have entered medicine a ~ |decade ago now look to scien- : [tific careers. | Walter Boyd, co-ordinator of rehabilitation for the Manitoba |department of public welfare] isaid there was no shortage of) health workers. But they were | not being used effectively and| a wastage of service was par-| ticularly evident in rehabilita-| tion programs. Proposed "team attacks' on| many other welfare problems) emerged as policy in other dis-| cussion groups into which the 600 conference delegates were divided. | Topics ranged from adoptions | to needs of the aged. { i ADOPT ON WIDE SCALE Child adoptions on both an in- terprovincial and global scale were discussed at other ses- sions. Proposals for interprovin- cial adoptions were made "to GOOD FOOD NOON SPECIALS PLATE LUNCH 55 SNACK ROOM .... BUSINESS MEN'S LUNCH, DINING em ------------ EVENING DINNER-- 3 COURSE Ll HOTEL LANCASTER ur BRANDED BLADE BONES REMOVED BLADE OR SHORT RIB ROASTS 1b. 45¢ FRESH MILD SEASONED BY PIECE 1-LB. CELLO PKG.--SKINLESS WIENERS DEVON RINDLESS--1.LB. CELLO PKG. Breakfast Bacon Ih. FRESH RIB--BONE IN Plate Brisket lh. 21c PRESSWOOD'S--CRYOVAC--2-3-LB. AV. REG TO BE COOKED VLAR HAM Smoked Hams lb. 79¢ Ib. Ib. 39c bigger--faster--at SPROULE"S be- or Pinching P enn ies? PRICES all the time. Sproule's Beef is red brand Beef CANADA'S FINEST FLAVORED BEEF BONELESS CUT AND TRIMMED TO GIVE COMPLETE SATISFACTION ROUND STEAK - H or ROAST LAMB LEGS WHOLE OR HALF CHOICE IMPORTED RED BRAND or RIB STEAKS BARBECUE FEATURE 69+ 4 PORK LIVER" . 29° FRANKS SWIFT'S PREMIUM Ab. Citi Ack 45+ BARBECUE CHICKENS ARE DELICIOUSLY COOKED AT SPROULE'S Swifts Premium Table Ready Meats Take your extra savings in cash at Sproule's SAVE 24c CASH SAVE 16c CASH STOKELY'S FANCY K ' ellogg's Cereals 4 1.00 : 20-oz. for Tomato Juice Tins Special K Cereal CAMAY SOAP 10... 99¢ oho SAVE 29¢ CASH BURNS WHOLE Canned CHICKEN ° ® STORE HOURS eo Corner King and Ritson OPEN THURSDAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS TILL 10 O'CLOCK Corner Simcoe and Mill OPEN THURSDAY AND FRIDAY NIGHTS AMPLE PARKING 49¢ LB. Macaroni and cheese loaf DUTCH LOAF Veal, pork and chicken loaf 6-0Z. VUE VAC YOUR Pickle and pimento loaf CHOICE $= Sugar Pops Cornflakes 12-ox, Sugar Smacks SAVE 22¢ CASH MISS CANADA TOMATOES ».. 5 « '1 SAVE 5¢ CASH FORUNA BRAND -- CRUSHED Pineapple 5 "i TINS SAVE 15¢ CASH FORTUNA BRAND -- SLICED Pineapple 5 "7. $1 ASSORTED DELIVERY ar nooeuvery | Chocolate Bars 12/§1 POTATOES : 35- 39- LARGE SELECTION OF ® VIGORO BOXED PLANTS @® CERTIFIED SEED POTATOES @® MULTIPLIER ONIONS FOR PLANTING each 59 BORHOOD FOOD STORE r, r, ® ATTRACTIVE HEALTHY GERANIUMS .. \d YOUR NEIGH Ya Ib. Tin 1 $1