2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Pridey, Mey 11, 1962 Farm Plans Emerging As Campaign Issues By THE CANADIAN PRESS A Liberal government, says party leader Lester Pearson, would give Canadians a na- tional nutrition program and an equal deal for Eastern and Western farmers. He told a rally in the south- ern Ontario farm centre of St. Thomas Thursday night the program would include nation- wide provision uf milk to school children at low cost. : More than a thousand miles to the West in the Manitoba rural community of Neepawa, Prime Minister Diefenbaker described the Liberal farm plat- form as 'pie in the sky." The Progressive Conservative leader declared that a vote cast June 18 for the Liberals would mean a vote in favor of can- celling acreage payments of $40,000,000 a year. CHAMPIONS CARE PLAN While New Democratic Party Leader T. C. Douglas took a day off from campaigning in Re- gina, NDP National President Michael Oliver championed the party's medical care program. He said in Montreal the NDP {s the only party serious about a medical insurance plan that would be nation-wide in scope but administered by the prov- inces. Social Credit Leader Rob- ert Thompson disagreed. He told a Regina nominating meet- ing "'let us not accept socialized medicine as the only way out until we are certain that essen- tial services cannot be provided in other ways." Today the campaign fight con- tinued to be focused on the Prairies. headed for Lethbridge and Medicine Hat, Alta., Mr. Doug- las for Saskatoon and MR. Thompson for Winnipeg. The Liberal leader planned a tour through Quetkec's Eastern Townships with an evening rally in Sherbrooke. WINDS UP TOUR Thursday, Mr. Pearson wound up a two-day southern Ontario campaign stretch with a 125- mile whistle - stop drive from Hamilton through Caledonia, Cayuga, Port Dover, Simcoe, Delhi, Norwich and Tillsonburg. "We will apply to agriculture in Central and Eastern Canada the same consideration, the same attention, that has always been given to the grain growing part of our ecunomy," he said in St. Thomas. The Liberal party would not only continue a subsidy to re- duce the selling price of butter but would expand markets for all kinds of dairy produce. A proposed national nutrition pro- gram would include, in co-op- eration with the dairy industry and provinces, a school milk should be scrapped because political expediency." quoted former CCF-NDP House leader Hazen Argue, now a Lib- eral candidate, as saying the acreate payment was "peanuts and a pittance" and added that Mr. Argue now was accepted "into the highest . councils of the Liberal party." Mr. Diefenbaker also spoke to a Neepawa high school and took a dose of sabin oral polio vaccine as part of a local im- munization program. It, was on the health qu tha NDP and_ social spokesmen. took issue. National NDP President Oli- ver said the fate of the Sas- katchewan medical care plan may determine whether a Can- ada - wide medical insurance scheme is adopted, NO ONE FORCED "The plan deesn't force any- one to do anything against his will," he told a Montreal party meeting, "and doctor - patient estion credit they are based on '"haphazard| | The prime minister also ; scheme. jrelationships will not only be Mr. Pearson likened his party|Protected but reinforced be- to a detergent -- ready to clean|cause the patient will not be up Canada after five years ofjoppressed by excessive costs of Conservative rule. |treatment. : Mr. Diefenbaker flew from} Mr. Thompson's " Toronto to Brandon and Nee-|that "no thinking Canadian de- view was) pawa, Man., where he defended his government's farm _ pro- gram. 'HAS MORE MONEY' "Every man in this audience has more money in his pocket tonight than when we came into office in 1957," he told some 3,000 persons in an old airport jnies that health is our most im portant asset, but it is not nec- essary to abdicate freedom to safeguard it" "Surely we are not yet tired or lazy enough in Canada to take the easy way out and let the government handle every- thing from~ bottle - warming to that last spade nat at the grave- Mr. Diefenbaker hangar. He quoted Mr. Pearson as saying that acreage payments side," -he told his Regina audi- ence. Russians Grain From China WASHINGTON (CP) -- Con- gressman Michael Feighan speculated Thursday that the Soviet Union may be using Communist China as a front in the purchase of Canadian grain "to rescue the Russian empire from economic collapse." The Ohio Democrat told the House of Representatives he had been told by officials that some Canadian grain shipments designated for China had been delivered to Albania and East Germany 'and that the Chinese have been "changing cargo des- tinations in mid-ocean." An embassy official con- firmed that Feighan had made inquiries and had been told what already had been made public by Canadian government officials--that the Chinese had diverted some of the wheat and barley to Albania and East Germany. A properly - designed health insurance plan could work, and there was no reason for anyone to go without health care under the right program, regardless of his ability to pay. Tax obli- gations could also be kept to a minimum. STATES LABOR PLATFORM | In Ottawa, the Social Credit May Get Firefighters are shown pour- ing water on the smoking de- bris of the Maumee Chemical Co., after an explosion and fire that killed at least threé persons and injured more BLAST KILLS THREE than 30. The explosior spray- ed debris over a five-block area and shattered windows in downtown Toledo, a half mile dway. --(AP) Wirephoto) | NELSON, B.C. (CP) -- Nine has asked for further informa- tion on the volume and valuejits labor platform. of grain shipments to China| If elected, the party would set from Canadian east and west/up a labor-management °7-'~ | coasts. The congressman will bejory council. Fact-finding, con- given any information that is in|ciliation and mediation '> the public domain, the official|would be provided to solve any added. |disputes which fell under fed-| LAND IN EUROPE? eral jurisdiction. | Feighan said he is certain) "Disputes which mieht her~|] shipments of grain ordered by|the national economy or se Communist China from easternicurity, or which crea Canadian ports land in Europe.|emergency threatening the life "It would be typical of the|well-being or safety of anv Russians in this situation to|ment of the Canadian public, seek camouflage for (theirjwill be referred to a crop) failures and to use the|tribunal whose decisions will be Red Chinese as a front in secur-|final . . . ing food from the free world to|/mal procedures fail." keep their empire together,"" he} The booklet voiced opposition said. jto outside control of Canadian A_ state department official/unions and suggested the "flow said he had heard views similar|of union dues" across the bor to those expressed by Feighanjder could be more profitably voiced in other quarters but|spent in promoting "the real in- these are not accepted by the|terests of organized labor in party issued a booklet stating) } enes A The official said Feighan also state department. Canada." HAUS AMAT tah b Wilts Vata ate but onlv when nor-| 5 Sons of Freedom Doukhobors charged with conspiracy to place bombs around a power pylon, destruction of which caused industrial disruption in British Columbia's East Koote- nay, were sentenced Thursday to 15 years. Six of the Freedomites also received an additional 15 years concurrent for actually placing dynamite bombs around the 300- foot, 300-ton power pylon of the ,.|Consolidated Mining and Smelt- ing Company. The massive pylon was top- pled March 6, putting many op. erations out of action and about ,000 men out of work. When the nine were found guilty earlier this week they re- fused to stand when Mr. Jus- tice Alan Maclean ordered them to before he remanded them for sentence. Thursday there were no chairs for the prisoners to sit on. Mr. Justice Maclean told the men he had no allusions that anything he said would help. "You've demonstrated by| Nine Freedomites Jailed 15 Years Bill Arishenkoof who with his brother John was found guilty of both charges, told the jury the bombing was not done for hate or revenge against Canada or Canadians. "We did this by our great be- lief in our' prophesy which states we will leave Canada through Canadian jails." A total of 192 Freedomites, in- cluding 72 members of the radi- cal sect's fraternal council, have been charged since Nov. 3. A total of 104 have been con- victed on various terrorist charges. By JACK BEST TORONTO (CP)--The Cana- idan Hospita! Association placed itself squarely in oppo- sition Thursday to moves aimed at downgrading or abolishing hospital schools of nursing. "Since hospitals are the larg- est single employer of graduate nurses, they must continue to play a large part in the field of nursing education," it told the royal commission on health services. Association In Favor Of Hospital Schools The association thus took strong issue with Canada's pro- fessional nursing organizations, which have been advocating a gradual shift away from hospi- tal schools. Some provincial groups have even called for their eventual abolition. The nursing organizations say student nurses should be taught in institutions whose primary function is education. They par- ticularly. want to see more nurses go to university. WELLAND (CP) -- Attorney- General Roberts repeated Thursday night his belief that normal judicial procedure is su perior to "any repressive sys- tem which permits punishment on suspicion or belief rather than upon proper proof of guilt." Mr. Roberts, criticized in re- cent months for statements which opposition politicians took to be allusions to the current jroyal. commission on organized lerime, was speaking at an inter- national meeting of judges and police from Erie and Niagara counties in Ontario and New York state. As in a previous speech on the subject, he made no reference to the royal commission being conducted by Mr. Justice Wil- frid Roach. Mr. Roberts said: "It has always been my view that the way to deal with crime is to ferret out the perpetrators when a crime has been com- mitted, bring them into our courts and have them disposed of by our courts in line with the well-known rules of evidence and proofs that are required. BELIEVES IS BETTER ".. . We all know that there) is a high price to be paid for liberty. We know that our sys- tem means that a number of guilty people will go free even though standing trial. Yet we} believe this system to be far better in the public interest! than any repressive system) Roberts Backing Judicial Method some doubt about federal laws on bingos and lotteries. Speaking of recent manoeu- vres in the United States to make wire-tapping legal for ob- taining evidence, Mr. Roberts said he "would be very much against any action which would tend to interfere with that old adage that 'a man's home is his castle'."' OPPOSES INTERFERENCE He said he would oppose any interference with an __ fidivi- dual's right to privacy, includ- ing privacy on the telephone, "unless and until it was proved that it was essential for the public good." "Nothing that I have seen or read or heard up to the present time has convinced me" that wire-tapping serves the public good. Reviewing Canada's Criminal Code and in particular its sec- tions on gambling, Mr. Roberts said some 'laws "'are very def- initely not acceptable to the public in my opinion in their present form." "I refer particularly to the requirements and prohibitions relating to bingos, lotteries, raf fles, etc. for charitable and re- ligious purposes," he said. It was a crime "most days of the year' to engage in such pastimes, but proper during fall fairs or exhibitions. of telephones and _ indicated .|when graduate nurses are not The issue was thrashed oul Thursday in a spirited exchange between Commissioner Alice Girard, a past president of the Canadian Nurses Association, and officials of the hospital as- sociation. STAND TOGETHER The Canadian Hospital Asso- ciation was backed up by the Ontario Hospital Association. Both organizations presented briefs to the royal commission héaded by Saskatchewan's Chief Justice Emmett Hall. The porfession wants to get away from using nurses to "fill in the gaps" on hospital staffs available for duty, said Miss Girard, newly-appointed dean of nursing at the University of Montreal. If the student is at the hospi- tal, she is "inevitably acces- sible" to fill such gaps. Mother Maille, Quebec pro- vincial superior of the Religious Hospitallers of St. Joseph and a director of the CHA, replied that student nurses generally are used only to the extent nec- essary for their: training. The present system was "not only producing nurses but good nurses,"' Miss Girard said the public "doesn't feel we are producing good nurses any more." Chairman Hall interjected that no one has told the com- mission that A-1 nurses are not being pro duced in Canada. Those trained in this country were "welcome in any part of the world." RED KNIGHT FO David Barker of Lake- view, Ont., is shown with the bright red T-33 jet trainer he will fly this summer as Red Knight. He will perform solo aerobatics during detionstra- tions by the Golden Hawks, the RCAF precision ~ flying team that will appear at air shows across Canada. --(CP Wirephoto by National Defence) Mrs. J. A. Aylen of Ottawa, honorary vice-president of the} hospital association, said too much publicity has been given to the alleged 'drudgery' en- dured by student nurses. | In its formal submission the hospital association said: "Even if the theoretical aspects of nursing education are taken) from the hospital, the nurse! must still obtain her clinical) training and practical experi-| ence on the wards of the hos- pital." io The Ontario Hospital Associa- tion touched on the same point, saying: "We do believe practi- cal experience in the actual hospital environment continues to be a most important ingre- APPRAISAL Lloyd A. P. Bolahood F.R.1. 728-5123 Lloyd Realty (Oshaws) Ltd. | 101 Simcoe North dient." { which permits punishment on suspicion or belief rather than) upon proper proof of guilt. "To my way of thinking, it is} essential that we maintain these principles of liberty which we) have inherited and that we pay} the price of liberty... ." The attorney - general also) came out against wiretapping) INTERPRETING THE NEWS | By CARMAN CUMMING Canadian Press Staff Writer OAS Steps Up Death Schedule Tunisia and Morocco more than 40,000 tough rebel troops have ee b LER _RETAILERS TO THRIFTY CANADIANS OPEN TONIGHT UNTIL 9:00 P.M. LADIES' APRONS GIFT ELEC. APPLIANCES PRACTICAL & SURE TO PLEASE The cold-blooded shooting of|been held in check, waiting for) Moslem women in the streets|the self - determination refer- marks possibly the lowest pointjendum this summer that will yet reached in the almost eight/almst certainly make Algeria years of savage conflict be-| Algerian. tween European and Moslem iniqygiypEN CURFEWS | Algeria. 1 4 sige | Until then, France is charged In the words of one Moslem'_. Se ae ' | nationalist: "This can't go on ae order in the) eternally." The French in recent weeks|| 9tY cottons, nylon and polished The arrest three weeks ago} , ; f | ch ave cracked down with a se- Thursday of terrorist leader Ra- ries of anti-terrorist' measures, | oul Salan was widely hailed as); ; H | Fae: aa Te te k including tighter curfews,| a "crippling blow" to his Secret) -.arches, deportation and or-| 4\your actions that you're not fit a\for society." WOMEN SHOUT A few Freedomite women In the gallery shouted after the sentencing but there was no demonstration. Halt Picketing Choose from our wide assorte ment of ladies' aprons in both half and cobbler styles. A wide choice of fabrics, too -- drip- cottons. Mony prints and pate terns from which to choose. An Army Organization. ideal gift for a child to give LITTLE CHANGE IN TEMPERATURE WEATHER FORECAST Wingham .... Hamilton .... St. Cloudy Weather, Possible Official forecasts issued by the Toronto public weather of- fice at 5 A.M.: Synopsis: Skies are cloudy today over much of Ontario. Latest weather charts indicate very little chance for showers before Saturday and then mainly in southwestern regions of Ontario. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Huron regions, Windsor, Lon- don: Mainly cloudy with little change in temperature today and Saturday. A few showers and possibly a thunderstorm late tonight and Saturday. Winds easterly 15. Western Lake Ontario, Niag- ara regions, Hamilton, Toronto: Cloudy with sunny intervals to- day. Cloudy tonight and Satur- day, chance of a few showers): Saturday, little change in tem- perature. Winds light today easterly 15 Saturday. Eastern Lake Ontario, Geor- gian Bay, Haliburton, Timag:- ami regions, North Bay, Sud- bury: Variable cloudiness to- day, mainly cloudy tonight and Saturday. Little change in tem- perature, winds light. Algoma, White River regions, Sault Ste. Marie: Cloudy with little change' in temperatyre to- day and Saturday..A few show- On Lakes Ships MONTREAL (CP) -- An in- junction was issued Thursday in Superior Court preventing the Seafarers' International Union (Ind.) from picketing vessels operated by Upper Lakes Ship- ping Limited. The order is valid until next Wednesday. Eariler Thursday the union was blamed for tying up 2,000,- 000 bushels of grain in Trois- Rivieres, Que., a St. Lawrence River port 85 miles downstream from Montreal. Four employees of a grain Salan himself said the under- ground movement was collaps- jing around him. | But since then the terrorism wounded last week alone. CALLED MADMEN Salan also warned that his followers were '"'hotheads'" and "madmen" interestec only in earlier arrest of his second-in- jcommand, Edmond Jouhaud, \removed a restraining influence jfrom the Secret Army. The dangerous aim of the ter- jhas intensified, if anything, with) 181 persons killed and 220) killing. It appears possible that} Salan's capture, along with the} Rai ers likely tonight or Saturday. Winds light. | Gochrane region: Partly Peterborough . Trenton Killaloe . Muskoka .. North Bay. Sudbury ... Earlton .. Kapuskasing White River.. Moosonee ... seeee elevator firm in Trois-Rivieres|rorists is to prod the Moslem |ders to:shoot Secret Army men} on sight. They also are reported! recruiting and training 2,000) Moslem police for anti-terrorist} duty. But Moslem dissatisfaction) with the measures was sharply} outlined Wednesday when the premier of the Algerian provi-| sional government, Ben Youssef, Ben Khedda, charged that the) "mass murders" were continu-| jing "with more or less open} compilcity of certain French military authorities." Ben Khedda ordered Moslems to continue to observe the cease-fire, but added grimly that "the anger of our masses is rising. This situation cannot) quit their jobs in fear after one|population into retaliation that! of them was beaten with a base-|will bring the eight of the| long continue." ball bat and the others threat-|French Army dewn upon them! ened, Mr. Justice J. P. Chat-jand destroy the cease - fire bonneau was told. agreement reached at Evian J. B. Vaillancourt, superin-|March 18. | tendent of the elevator, testi-, So far, with few exceptions,| fied he was forced to stay away | the 9,000,000 Moslems have kept) from work "to save my skin."'|to their own districts and Sault Ste. Marie. The case is continuing. lavoided clashes. In neighboring Mother. 7-99 + 44-99 IT'S A BIG JOB -- bein (or more!) of these quality appliances complete with automatic features . .. and to express your love and appreciation. And such good values ! @ STEAM-&-DRY IRON: chromium-plated; thermos- statically 11 99 a controlled .. e@ "FRYMASTER": complete with ovenglass cover; auto- matic signal g a Mother. 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