2. THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturdey, June 15, 1963 GOOD EVENING} By JACK GEARIN "COL. 6AM". DUE AT ROBARTS BANQUET Col. R. S. McLaughlin will be among the head-table guests at next Thursday's banquet in the Hotel Genosha for Premier John Robarts. , The announcement was made by George Martin of the Progressive Conservative Association of Oshawa, who are sponsoring the banquet. ; Mr. Martin stressed that the banquet will be "'non- political" and that citizens of all "political creeds and colors'. have been invited to attend. Details will be announced Monday of the motor caval- cade which is being arranged to meet Mr. Robarts and his party -- its travel route will follow some of the main streets so that people will have an opportunity to see the Premier. Mr. Robarts spends most of the time during the week at Queen's Park in Toronto, Delay Ruling In Priest Vs. YARMOUTH, N.S. (CP)--De- cision was reserved until June 19 by Magistrate H. B. Dickey here Friday after hearing a charge ef threatening. violence laid by two members of the Jehovah Witnesses sect against Rev. Adolph LeBlanc, Roman Pees priest at Wedgeport, S William and Kathleen Balaski jof Yarmouth, testified they were threatened with violence Jan, 4 unless they stopped calling on members the parish of Wedgeport. #| Father LeBlanc said that after receiving a telephone call from a lady who had just been visited by Mr. and Mrs. Bal- aski, he and four other men had gone to a lower Wedgeport home, ; The priest testified that he had told Mr. and Mrs, Balaski he respected their legal right to be there but that he did not want them to interfere with his parishioners. Father LeBlanc admitted hav- ing said that if the visitors did not leave, the men might give 'Quebec Queries Witnesses Feud COroner's Act | MONTREAL (CP)--The Que- |bee Coroners Act has become a eontroversial subject in the province as a result of the ter- rorist activities of Le Front de) Liberation Quebecois. Main factors in the contro- versy have been: (1) The detention of 16 ma- terial witnesses for more than a week on coroner's warrants to guarantee their appearance at an inquest. (2) The right of witnesses to} representation by counsel at the! inquest; (3) The right of those de- tained to see their lawyers, and (4) Whether the Coroners Act contravenes the federal Bill of Rights. Opposition Leader Daniel) Johnson amnounced Friday that! he would ask the Quebec Legis- lature to establish a_ special committee to revise the act 'in |the light of the needs of the hour, the fundamental rights of jthe human individual and the jrequirements." lof Rights and the Quebec Coro- Quebec Bill To Drop Vote Age Gets 3rd Pass Justice Minister Lionel Chevy- Bast rier said there is no contradic, QUEBEC (CP) -- A revised tion between the Canadian Bill electoral bill reducing the vote ' ing age in provincial electiéns gh - -- jto 18 and providing limits and Rg a je Bi Rights ap-|partial government payment .of os eer Ph ederal! laws, election campaigning expenses . " ore there was no contra-|was approved in third read'ng oi ke dak a ce the legislative assembly Fri- : sion to day, refer the Corcners Act to the Th ; i oe f e new bill also provides that «When. the ingen reagan eA Lee eae > -opened|a candidate's party and also oo Trahan, 'mane OF ae Mae eliminate 'as. identitication at ; -jtion slips as identific: yers representing material wit-| polls in the Montreal oc Ga nesses complained they had not'bec City urban areas. ys Permitted to, see their) Jt must now be approved by chen . jthe legislative council -- Que- : Tuesday 10 lawyers represent-|bec's upper house--and be given ing the material witnesses jroyal assent before becomng walked out of the courtroom in Jaw, It will then take effect next hog when Mr. Trahan ruled'Jan. 1 that he would not allow them, i ill limi to speak or question witnesses, | ae vegisates we Liat By He ; jvincial political parties to Ro es eee the witnesses) spending up to 50 cents for each ' . ae jvoter in province - wide cam- ing an earlier decision. 'paigning. To qualify as a pro- Two lawyers were expelled | vincial party, the political orga- from the inquest Wednesday for|nization must run candidates in LAPALME CONCURS |.attempting to give advice to one! at least 57 of 95 constituencies. jthem "a licking." He denied,| Earlier in the present legisla- of the witnesses. A graduated scale is provided |however, statements of Mr. and/ture session Attorney - General but he returns to his London Mrs.' Balaski that unless they|Georges Lapalme replied "I be- DECLINES INTERVIEWS 'for allowable expenses of indi- ee i home each weekend to be i with his wife, Norah, and pti i 0, and COL. McLAUGHLIN two children, Robin, 10, a Timothy, 7. . "BOB" STROUD ATTENDS (LIBERAL) COLLEGE Who says political winds are not blowing locally? As an indication: Robert Stroud, Liberal candidate in Oshawa riding in the next Provincial election and 1962 chairman of the Oshawa Board of Education has been in Toronto since last evening off an important assignment. He is attending the Campaign College sponsored by his Party's Provincial unit for candidates and their workers. Mr. Stroud, who served two years as a school trustee before he resigned from public life last December, was accompanied by several of the Party's faithful, including Lawyers Ralph Jones and Bruce Mackey of Oshawa; Ontario riding (Provin- cial) delegates included Geoffrey Schilling, John Wootton, Whitby; Frank Godley, Port Perry, and Frank Ross of Bea- verton. The College closes its present session tonight. Prime purpose of the Campaign College is to study the strategy of past campaigns and to make plans for the future. VON RICHTOFTEN RELICS ON DISPLAY With all of those First World War pilots on hand today at the Oshawa Airport it seems like a good time to mention the fact: Pieces of red fabrit from the plane of the Baron von Richtoften, Germany's top fighter-pilot of the First World War, are displayed in the Officers' and Sergeants' Messes at the Armories. They were donated many years ago by the late Capt. Stearne Tighe Edwards (DFC and Bar) of Carleton Place, Qnt,, who was on the flight with Capt. Roy Brown when Baron von Richtoften was shot down. Capt. Edwards was a brother of Mrs. Robert B. Smith of Oshawa whose husband is better known as "Colonel 'Bob' Smith", former OC of the Ontario Regiment. ROSSLYN RE-ZONING APPLICATION UP AGAIN The next scene in a three-year-old drama to have a Ross- land road west area re-zoned from R-IA (top quality residen- tial) to C-1 (to allow for an extension to the east of Rosslyn Plaza) will be enacted next Tuesday night before the City Planning Board. This is a drama that has stirred up strong protests from many residents adjacent to the Plaza who have stoutly op- posed the re-zoning application from the start. The residents claim that such re-zoning would downgrade the values of their properties (mostly in the $16,000 to $19,000 class) -- the Plaza would construct five additional stores and 85 parking spaces to the east. More than 125 area residents, including some vociferous housewives, turned up in Council Chamber April 18, 1960, when the application was first heard -- Council rejected it, 98, but only after some spirited debate. Rosslyn Estates Ltd., undeterred by his reverse, appealed to the Ontario Municipal Board for a hearing -- this was granted after more than one year's elapse and the Board also ruled against the application by Rosslyn Estates Ltd. The Rosslyn Plaza recently asked Council for a re-hear- ing and the latter referred the matter to the Planning Board. MAYOR DUE AT WARDENS, REEVES PICNIC Mayor Lyman Gifford this week declined "with genuine regret' an important invitation -- to attend a banquet next "Phursday, June 20, for Premier John Robarts of Ontario who will be making his first visit to Oshawa since he took over ag PM. Po His Worship was all ready to turn up as a head-table guest at this important Tory social pow-wow. He wanted to Personally greet the 46-year-old Alberta-born PC leader; then he made an important discovery -- he had previously prom- ised to attend the annual picnic of reeves and wardens at Fern Cottage, north of Atherley, the same day. «. As much as Mr. Gifford wanted to do all within his power to roll out the red welcome carpet for Mr. Robarts, the Warden's Picnic would take precedence over all other social engagements, as it had almost annually since away Back in 1938 when he was elected Warden of Ontario County (the youngest incumbent to ever hold the office). . In expressing regrets to a PC organizer, Mr. Gifford (a Liberal) said with a wry smile: » "I'm sorry I can't attend that dinner, because I feel that { could add something to it, because of my political back- ground." His Worship was not perturbed this week when informed that William Rutherford of the Oshawa and District Labor €ouncil had referred to him as a potential figure skater for "the proposed community centre" because of Mr. Gifford's @lleged remarks about providing work for men on relief. » "Tell Bill that I will meet him anytime, anywhere, in a fair and square figure skating contest providing he is willing to atch my $25 bet with his as a prize for the winner," said AMERICAN NAZIS PICKET WHITE HOUSE Members of the American Nazi Party carry out their own demonstration Friday under close police surveil- | lance. The swastika-wearing marchers showed up at the White House about the time Negro demonstrators were scheduled to arrive. Police hustled off the Nazis to the left they would be beaten up. Commons Give Industry Bill next block up Pennsylvania avenue where they were per- mitted to march in a tight circle. (AP WIREPHOTO) | Ship Still Empty After Court Rule | CHICAGO (AP)--The Cana- jdian freighter Howard L. Shaw |remained idle and empty Fri- \day despite a U.S. federal court jorder aimed at putting grain in jthe vessel's hold. Judge James sued a permanent injunction Thursday directing Local 418 of the Grain Elevator Workers Un- ion to refrain from refusing to jload the ship. The injunction had been re-jjob but were not pouring any designer. jquested by the U.S. National |Labor Relations Board and the justice department, The ship jhas been tied up since April 22. | Negro Youths Beat, Knife White Man DETROIT (AP) -- A white man was Stabbed and beaten by | The grain workers have re- jfused to load the vessel because jher crew is made up of mem- bers of the Canadian Maritime Union. Previously they had been members of the CMU's rival, ion which the local supports. | The Continental Grain Com- jpany where the Howard L. | Shaw is awaiting her cargo re- iported the loaders were on the grain into the vessel. |INTEND TO COMPLY | Jack Connor, president of Lo- jcal 418, said "'we, as a union, intend to comply with it." But, he told a reporter, the union has not yet received a copy of the order. Members of the local in the past have refused as individuals to load the freighter, Connor |said, Thus, there was no sure| | 'First Readi | First heading | OTTAWA (CP) -- The Com. mons Friday gave first reading |to a government bill to set up a \departmemt of industry and an jarea development agency. FLQ Members Will Face | Life Terms The move came after several Progressive Conservative speak- | MONTREAL (CP) --Charges\ers again hammered at the ar- laid Friday as a result of FLQ|gument that the new depart- terrorist activity: ment means unnecessary and Non-capitai murder and: con-|costly duplication of the work spiracy to cause the death April/of the trade department. B. Parsons is-\the Seafarers International Un-|20 of army night watchman Wil-| The bill provides for a depart-/rest. lfred Vincent O'Neill. Penalty: |ment that would incorporate the |Life imprisonment-- |present defence production de- | Georges Schoeters. 33, Bel.|Pattment and branches of the i : |trade department. gian-born economics student. --_---- Gabriel Hudon, 20, industrial USE MORE FUEL Raymond Villeveuve, 19, stu-) Under - inflated tires wear dent. }more quickly, cause a braking Jacques Giroux, 19, student, |effect and use more fuel, says Yves Labonte, 18, clerk, |the Ontario Safety League. : 3 Coroner Trahan has declined Vidual candidates depending on ate ae ee wf Mr: ito be interviewed by reporters|Population and county, The S = ~~ er the act , Ould) due to the pressure of work | scale allowed expenses of up to soph "a spol tea com-| arising out of the inquest. 50 cents a voter for a candidate. | "Premiér Jean Lesage in the|, But retired corcner Richard Beyond this, the government Duckett, Montreal district|will pay up to 15 cents a voter legislature last week referred to t than 20 \for any candidate polling a min. iticis .|coroner for more than ears, |! " criticism in Montreal and Tor. v jimum of 20 per cent of the vote onto newspapers of the fact the|S@id lawyers representing ma-|!mun detentions were by coroner's|tetial witnesses at an inquest)in his riding. warrants, He said criticism was|4e Present "'only by tolerance"| over the fact persons were held|° the coroner. jin existence in England for sey- without charge and that their) However, he said, in major|eral centuries. In medieval names had not been disclosed at/cases the Crown attorney for|days, the coroner was respon- the time. |the 'district usually questions|sible to the king for the life of Those being held, Mr. Lesage| Witnesses because of his knowl-/royal subjects. said, "had the right to habeas|edge acquired in the investiga-| Present-day coroners in Que- corpus if they believed the po-'tion of a case. \bec--as in all other Canadian lice acted illegally; they didn't) The provincial attomey-gen-|provinces--are obliged to deter- even ask -for it because they eral was not bound by the deci-'mine the cause of all violent doubtless: realized the futility."|sion of the coroner's jury. The! qgeaths. There was even criticism, he/attorney-general could 'proceed| -------- said, that police had not identi-| with a case by "preferred in-| lfied persons they intended. to ar-jdictment," disregarding the CONTACT findings of the 'coroner's jury.| Mr. Duckett said material! CONSULTATION by APPOINTMENT Payment plan includes ene month witnesses may be detained: in-) trial period, definitely to appear at a coro-! | PHONE 723-4191 ner's inquest by oral or written) F. R. BLACK | "But what law requires it? |Isn't it obvious that when they must fight a revolutionary and janarchist movement it is time tor the police to use all their powers, even the exceptional ones which democracy permits to be used in all countries where it is put in danger?" {to detain material witnesses | In the House of Commons,/stemmed from English law. in ail provinces. The authority of the coroner Conspiracy to cause an ex- plosion endangering. persons or property; intent to cause an ex- INTERPRETING THE NEWS -|There was no such thing in French law. | Mr. Duckett said the Quebec coroner's warrants, The law 0.D, governing coroners was similar} 136 SIMCOE ST. NORTH plosion endangering persons or |property; intent to cuse an ex- |plosion endangering - persons or| |property, Maximum penalty: | |Life imprisonment-- =a Schoeters, 12 charges; Hudon,| Soviets Cautious Coroners Act stems from law SERVICE STATIONS ja group of Negro youths on the! way of telling how they would 19 . jlawn of a high school Friday, oct to the injunction as indi- police reported. viduals . |_ Police said the man, Anthony) Gonnor said 35 members of 'Duva, 42, quoted the youths as| ; lsaying "that's for Louisiana" the local work for Continental. and:"that's for Alabama" while|_,.2¢ NURB had declared pick. charges; Villeneuve, charges; Giroux, one (conspiracy); | | Alain Gabriel, two charges. | Alain Brouillard, two charges. | | Eugenio Pilote, 20, newspaper proof-reader, one charge (con- charge| | } To JFK's Speech By CARMAN CUMMING |cal may well-have had a signifi. Canadian Press Staff Writer cant effect on his thinking. President Kennedy's foreign) But the new approach appears OPEN THIS SUNDAY 7:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. hi ; leting by Local 418 constituted they were punching him. 'a secondary boycott, illegal un-| \der U.S, labor law. Judge Par-} }3ons did not rule om the boycott | Duva, who had gone to the |school to pick up two daughters, was reported in '"'temporarily jserious" condition at Receiving Hospital from a stab wound in| _ § piracy). policy speech earlier this week Jeanne Schoeters, 25-year-old|is being regarded thoughtfully | ex-ray technician and wife of|in all corners of the world as issue, saying this WaS a QUES-|C aorces Schoeters, two charges.|a possible milestone in the cold tion for the NLRB to determine. | Mario Bachand, 20, student,| war. to reflect an extension rather than a change of direction in his policy. Kennedy always has tended to avoid the wholesale attacks on the Communist world that R. J. TUMEY'S SHELL STATION 962 SIMCOE ST. NORTH the back. Duva, a tool and die worker, EXPORT MORE WOOL and father of five children, said, Australia exported $711,760,- ia group of about 10 youths set/000 worth of wool for the first jupon him as he walked toward|10 months of the 1962-63 finan- the front door of Chadsey High|cial year--an increase of $1,- | School. | 120,000. WEATHER FORECAST | Partly Cloudy, Scattered Rain 45 50 45 45 Forecasts issued by the wea-|Peterborough ...... ther office in Toronto at 5 a.m.: |Trenton Synopsis: Skies cleared over Killaloe . most of Ontario during the|Muskoka .. night. However, cloud is ex.|North Bay .. lpeeted to develop today and|Sudbury -. there may be isolated showers, |Harlton ...... * Lake Erie, Lake St. Clair, Ni-/pault Ste. Marie ... #0 lagara, Lake Ontario, Lake Hu-|wiite td ae lron, Windsor, London, Hamil-|;;ute Xiver . jton, Toronto: Clear tonight. |Sunday partly cloudy with! |widely scattered showers. Winds) Observed Temperatures |light. ; Low overnight, High Friday: Georgian Bay, Haliburton, Al- Hewson 35 goma, Timagami, North Bay,|. 0 "Orn sp Sudbury, Sault Ste, Marie: Victoria lSunny with cloudy periods. Sun-/Edmonton:..... jday partly cloudy with widely | Regina Nee iscattered showers, not much|Winnipeg .. change in temperature, winds Lakehead ..... light. White River White River: Sunday partly Sault Ste. Marie ... cloudy, not much change in| Kapuskasing ltemperature. Winds becoming North Bay «...+.... © northwest 15 Sunday. SUGDUTY seeceeeeees Cochrane: Some scattered Muskoka .. \showers this afternoon and to- hoor cing . night. Sunday partly cloudy and London «++ cooler. Winds becoming north.-|Torento .. west 15 Sunday. | Forecast temperatures | Low tonight, High Sunday Windsor 7 St. Thomas two charges. When he delivered the speech Richard Bizier, 18, student,|in Washington Monday, aspects two charges. |dealing with the cold war were Roger Tetreault, 22, unem-|somewhat overshadowed by the |ployed newspaper reporter, two} announcement of plans for nu- charges. clear test ban talks in Moscow Francois Gagnon, 19, student,)and for a U.S. moratorium on three charges (two conspiracy),| testing. Pierre Schneider, 22, office) But reaction in the Commun. boy, one. charge (conspiracy). |ist and neutral world--and in Denis Lamoureux, 20, student,)some parts of the West--has lone charge (conspiracy). concentrated on his appeal to Conspiracy to commit mis-| Americans to search their souls chief endangering life; commit-| about their own attitude towards ting mischief endangering life.!the Communists. Maximum penalty: Life impris-| In effect, Kennedy asked onment-- i Americans to move away from | Schoeters, 12 charges; Hudon,|the rigidity of thought concern- \20 charges; Giroux, two ing communism that has marked charges; Villeneuve, 14 charges; |U.S. society in the post-war Gabriel, two charges; Brouil-| years, lard, two charges; Pilote, two)" charges; Jeanne Schoeters, two SEE WHOLE PICTURE charges; Bachand, two charges;| He urged them "'not to fall |Bizier, two charges; Tetreault,|into the same trap as the Sovi- two charges; Schneider, twolets, not to see only a distorted icharges; Lamoureux, one|and desperate view of the other charge (conspiracy). S08 Conspiracy to cause bodily) And he said "no government |harm through criminal negli-|or social system is so evil that igence; causing bodily harm|its people must be considered to \through criminal negligence.|be lacking in virtue." |Maximum penalty: 10 years) This last statement inevitably | prison-- has been linked with the state. | Bachand, two charges; Gag-;ment by Pope John, in the non, two charges; Schneider,|Pacem in Terris encyclical is- two .charges; Iamoureux, two! sued not long before his death,| that "one must never confuse error and the person who errs. " charges. Gilles Pruneau, 20, clerk, two charges, | encycli- GETS SCOUT BADGE BONN (Reuters) -- Chancel- lor Konrad Adenauer, was pre- and the peace-on-earth e@ Commercie!l and Industrial Sites : Kennedy is a Roman Catholic! ALEX NATHAN'S SUNOCO STATION 215 KING ST. WEST Wie COOPER'S TEXACO STATION 56 BRUCE STREET T. GOCH SUPERTEST STATION 437 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH WINDER'S ESSO STATION KING and RITSON ROAD SOUTH KEMP'S ESSO STATION 288 BLOOR ST. WEST George Brown's SUPERTEST Station 334 PARK ROAD SOUTH CLINTON'S TEXACO STATION WENTWORTH AND CEDAR McLELLAN'S WHITE ROSE STATION 38 PRINCE STREET DOVE'S FINA STATION 792 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH SHELL -- HANDY-ANDY COR. KING ST. W: and STEVENSON RD. marked so many U.S. political speeches before he took office. |His criticisms have been worded carefully and aimed carefully, He has expected the same ap- proach from members of his administration. | SOVIETS RECIPROCATE This has evoked a similar pattern on the Russian side. The main Soviet propaganda barrage now is directed at "re- actionary" and "militaristic" elements in the U.S, rather than jat the administration itself. | The Sovet reaction to Ken. | Bedy speech has been one of |Cautious approval, One commen- | tator said that 'for the first time} |in 20 years of cold war a presi- ident of the United States has |publicly spoken . out for | jnecessity of a fundamental re- }assessment. of Soviet-American irelations. . . ." n the West, Britain's Man- | chester Guardian said the |great state papers of American history. A typical neutralist reaction ;Was expressed at the United) |Nations by Zenon Rossides of} |Cyprus, who called it a 'histor. | ic" move for heart-searching in a mutual re-examination of at- titudes between the U.S. and Russia. Public Notice }sented with a neckerchief and) |badge by a party of U.S. and |German Boy Scouts he received| at his Rhineside office here Fri- day. The American scouts are| the sons of U.S. troops stationed | @ Leaseback @ Development REALTOR OSHAWA DISCOUNT HOUSE 187 King St. E. 728-9474 in Germany, } DRUG STORES | Will Be Closed r. Gifford. sicsnsieadiineclossioeele dallas {London » REDS SUPPORT JFK | "GENEVA (AP)--Soviet dele-| gate Semyon K. Tsarapkin told the disarmament confer- ence here Friday President ennedy's plea for lessening internationa] tension has "the tion and support of Union." It was the Soviet comment yet | full the Soviet ELECTED BY ILO |Kitchener Ms OTTAWA (OP) -- Kalmen|Mount Forest ..++++ Kaplansky, director of the in-|Wingham ..--++,+++ ternational affairs department|Hamilton .. of the Canadian Labor congress, S!. 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