Oshawa Times (1958-), 20 Jul 1962, p. 20

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20 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, July 20, 1962 Mrs. Frances Frotten of East Brewster gently con- soled her daughter, Lois Ann, 20, at the Cape Cod Hospital FELL HALF A MILE Thursday. The young woman suffered only minor injuries in a half mile fall from a plane into Mystic Lake, Mar: | By JAMES NELSON OTTAWA (CP)--The Progres- sive Conservatives are unlikely to stand in the way of the early election to the Commons of the New Democratic Party leader- T. C. Douglas, if legal doubts are cleared away, a government source indicated today. The legal question concerns Erhart Regie r's resignation from the Burnaby - Coquitlam seat in British Columbia which Mr. Douglas hopes to win un- contested in a byelection. Normally resignations of MPs are sent to the Commons Speaker, but there won't be a Speaker for the newly - elected Commons until Parliament as- sembles. In view of this, Mr. Regier-- financial critic for the old CCF in the Commons since 1953-- sent his resignation to two other NDP members elected on June 18 and had two other MPs for his party send official notifica- tion of tne need for a byelection to Chief Electoral Officer Nelson stons Mills, when her para- |Castonguay. chute failed to open. | The House of Commons Act PCs Won't Block Douglas Election resignation must be the two who notify the chief electoral officer. This could be raised as a flaw in the proceedings when Parlia- ment meets. REGARDS AS LEGAL Mr. Castonguay regards the resignation as legal, but some parliamentary authorities quote British and Canadian precedents in saying that a newly-elected MP cannot resign between elec- tion day and the first meeting of the new Parliament, which is expected to assemble in late September. As far as can be learned, the Conservatives have just about decided not to put up a candi- date to oppose Mr.' Douglas. The Liberals have indicated they will not sponsor a candidate if the Conservatives do not. But Social Credit officials in B-C. have said they will contest. the byelection. The Conservative source said the government is likely to fol- low the gentleman's rule that the election of a national party leader is facilitated in a by- election when defeated, as Mr. Ae lsays that the two members to --(AP Wirephoto) lwhom a member tenders his Douglas was in Regina, in the general election. House Painting | Cost $13,000, Fraud Charged TORONTO (CP) -- A_New) . Toronto woman testified Thurs- By RICHARD O'REGAN day that when she told John| PRAGUE (AP) -- Are there Bobby, 43, her house needed|cracks in the Iron Curtain? Is painting, he painted it, then|an evolution occurring in com- , An pe nage GE GEG bog gt Ue eae EN op perp Some Changes Viewed In Communist World inist terror. So the midnight; "Let's not say that. Let's knock of the secret police -is\rather say that communism is out. The new principle is per-/hecoming more humanistic. If suasion. there is good in capitalism, we Second, people who work and}will use it--but without the 'moved in for six months and|munism? jdefrauded her of $13,000. Bobby| was committed for trial for| fraud. j Mrs, Rose August said Bobby) had no job when she met him} three years ago, but he told her! he was concerned in big busi-| ness deals involving stolen) bonds, | In August, 1959, he promised) a return of $500 in two weeks if she would give him $300, the mother of three told the court. He told her the serial numbers of bonds stolen years before in Kingston would be changed and the bonds cashed, she said. She said Bobby, told her she was now worth $50:000 but did not give her the $500. Later she advanced him an- other $700 and was persuaded to sell her 1957 model car to finance another deal. Bobby proposed marriage, she said, and the two were married in.Napanee by a magistrate, but she learned later he was already married. On a tour of Communist East Europe, you will hear many diplomats expressing the view things are changing in Russia and East Europe. These changes, they say, may be bringing communism closer to the West in thought, politics and economics. But these changes do not mean communism has aban- doned its concepts of class war and world domination, the dip- lomats stress. The West, they add, cannot let down its guard. What are the changes? First, communism has found you can- not run East Europeans by Stal- Mrs. August said she once gave Bobby $4,251 from a Buffalo bank account and sold two mortgages worth $10,440 for $4,500 and gave Bobby the money after he begged for it on his knees. He also defrauded her 70- year-old father of $3,500, she said. work and get nothing in return will revolt as they did in Hun- gary, Poland and East Berlin. So, throughout East Europe, there now are more things to buy, more to eat, better hous- ing, although still many short- ages. In fact, life often is better than in Russia itself. } Third, there is more scope) for individual expression and more personal freedom. In Yugoslavia, Hungary and Po- land, you can even criticize the regime provided you don't pro-| pose doing away with it. | | GIVE INCENTIVES Fourth, there are attempts, "|particularly in Yugoslavia, to) stimulate w.orking_ incent-) ives and to recognize that peo-| ple all won't fit into one mold. Would it be correct to say) that communism is approaching} some of the ideas and practices} of Western capitalism? I posed this question to a group of Hun- garian Communist writers, who, replied: capitalists.' In other words, the Commu- nists don't intend to allow in- dividuals to own the sources and means of production, But, as popular pressure builds up from below, they rec- ognize they may have to give people more rights and privi- leges, and they recognize that people won't work just for slo- gans or for future generations. Meanwhile, the dynamic West European Common Market soars ahead, and each of the East European countries wants to buy German, English, French and Italian goods. They need Western products to build up their own industry. "The wealth, ideas and tech- nology of the Common Market," said one Western diplomat, "are a menace to communism. Rus- sia and the East European sate ellites must keep up with it, or collapse." € al Senedt & laslions, 2 pes...... BATON'S OUTDOOR SHOP, DEPT. 470 "Featherweight" Folding Cabana Suncots With felt-filled mattress The "Cabone" is « popular 'Featherweight' design for many rea- sons . . . its comfort, convenience, durability ond storage-facility.. @ The helical held steel slots beneath the comfortable mattress lend it resilience so that it con be used to sleep an occasional guest. The rubber-tired wheels make for easy moving and aré placed strategically so that when the cot is folded flat it may be rolled easily out of the way into a cupboard for storage. 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