6 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, May 15, 1967 HON. LIONEL CHEV- RIER, Canada's commis- sioner, - general for visits of heads of state during Expo's 183-day run, takes care of visitors to Canada. Though he has a staff of 86, there'll be no vacation for the busy Mr. Chevrier until after the October closing date. --CP Wirephoto Pilkey Claims Wages Chasing Prices Trend Clifford Pilkey, president of the Oshawa and District Labor : Council, told a group of Local ' 218 of the Canadian Union of Public Employees members that wages are not the cause of higher prices but rather that * wages are chasing prices. He said Oshawa people are " limited by the cost-of-living stan- dard and that all money earned, follows the price increases. He . called for government legisla- cope with the rising cost of liv- ing. Mr. Pilkey, Oshawa riding New Democratic Party candi- date, also suggested the need for workers to participate at the political level, saying that sec- tions of the Labor Relations Act have detrimental effects on col- lective bargaining programs. Mr. Pilkey also called for a government sponsored automo- bile insurance program and greater assistance to municipal governments by the senior levels + tion to institute measures to of government. New Brunswick To Vote 746 Offices To Fill FREDERICTON (CP) -- New Brunswickers vote June 12 to choose at least 746 persons to fill public office. This will mark the first occa- sion in which the provincial electorate has been called upon to make such a wide selection of favorites at one election. It is the first election being carried out under the provisions of the new Municipalities Act, which specifies that candidates for school boards and municipal councils are to be named at the same election. Municipal electoral officer J. Donald Whalen says that resi- local school board and voters living in incorporated cities, towns and villages will name a mayor and eight aldermen. The city of Saint John will elect a mayor and 12 aldermen while Fredericton, Edmundston, Campbellton, Bathurst and Moncton will vote for the mayor and eight aldermanic candi- dates. More than 300,000 people will be eligible to vote. Procedures for conducting a province-wide enumeration of voters have been outlined for deputy muni- cipal electoral officers and the enumerations are expected to get under way shortly. Nomina- dents in all areas of the prov- ince will name trustees to the tion day for all offices is May UNOFFICIAL ROYALTY GREETER MONTREAL (CP) -- On the highly - polished desk of the Montreal office of Lionel Chev- rier stands a brand-new copy of the 1967 parliamentary guide. But if the white-haired, 64- year-old former Liberal cabinet minister has any plans for re- entering the political arena af- ter he spends his six-month stint as his country's unofficial greeter of royalty and heads of state, he's not saying. In an interview Friday, he said of his after-expo plans: "I think I would like to go back to private life in Montreal --but anything could happen." Mr. Chevrier went to London in 1964 as high commissioner for Canada and returned to Montreal April 4 to take over his new post as ambassador and commissioner-general . for visits of heads of state. His official duty is to greet the 60-odd heads of state slated to arrive during Expo's 183-day run, meeting them at the air- port or-train terminal, ensuring that they are accommodated, their luggage seen to, and in his capacity as "unofficial wel- , comer". seeing that things in general go smoothly while they are here. WELCOME UNOFFICIAL "I give the unofficial welcome to Canada," he said. "Royalty is officially greeted. in Ottawa by the Governor-General and heads of state by the prime minister." Mr. Chevrier directs a staff of 80 in the task of settling such details as visiting dignitaries' diets and blood groups. A giant board on one wall of the im- promptu 'war room" in his of- AT BIG EXPO FAR/ Surprises Dime a Dozen fice suite lists times and places where each visitor should be and when. In 28 years in and out of. the House of Commons, Mr. Chev- rier represented Stormont, a constituency in his birth-place of Cornwall, and Montreal-Lau- rier, was transport minister between 1945 and 1954, became president of the St. Lawrence Seaway Authority between 1954 and 1957 and was justice min- ister for a year in 1963-64. Proud of his part im helping to bring about the $1,000,000,000 seaway, he admits to having had doubts about both the seaway" and Expo. ' "There were a lot of crepe- hangers up in Ottawa at these times and many of us were apprehensive about the fate of both ventures but they both are tremendously successful. By CY FOX MONTREAL (CP)--At Expo 67 surprises are a dime a dozen --including cows that turn out to be dummies. The double-takes are at the Western Canada pavilion, where what seem to be the heads of live cows mooning around a pen are in fact mechanically-mani- pulated and stuffed. Pavilion manager William Thorsell of Edmonton said Fri- day night one recent visitor looked into the pen, popped over to the' grain-and-grass exhibit next door and came back with a fistful of food' for what he thought were hungry cattle. The pavilion -- which is an Expo showcase for British Co- lumbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba--has been aver- aging between 7,000 and 8,000: visitors a day, with as many as 10,000 on Saturdays and Sun- days. It's full of vivid simulations of real Western phenomena, includ- ing a compartment elevator that gives off all the noises and movements of an elevator plunging down a mine shaft. Mr. Thorsell said some visit- ors are afraid to enter the "ele- vator," or refuse to do so on grounds they might be hurt by the blasting they assume to be going on in the "mine" below. The "mine shaft" into which visitors are taken after their simulated descent is in actual- ity a surface - level corridor which ultimately leads to the site of the "'cow-pen." One visitor threatened to tell Chevrier Vague About Future At Big Fair In Montreal the SPCA about the pavilion's keeping cows 3,000 feet below ground, the pavilion manager said. The Western structure's top, 40 feet off the ground, is open so as to accommodate 30-foot fir trees that make up part of one exhibit. Don't Neglect Slipping FALSE TEETH Do false teeth drop, slip or wobble when you talk, eat, laugh or sneeze? Don't be annoyed and embarrassed by such handicaps. 'ASTEETH, an alkaline (non-acid) powder to sprin- kle on your plates, keeps false teeth more firmly set. Gives confident feel- ing of security and added comfort. No gummy, gooey, pasty taste or feel- ing. Get FASTE! today at drug counters everywhere. wi |trustees of grieving Aberfan's By JOSEPH MacSWEEN ABERFAN, Wales (CP)--The disaster fund have taken steps to 'develop the momentum" of the mammoth collection. G. H. B, Davis, a law lec- turer at London colleges, was appointed Friday night as sec- retary-treasurer of the $5,250,- 000 fund just when Aberfan parents were undergoing new tribulations. The fund has been invested, bringing an interest of $6,000 a week. Davis, 54, will be expected to hasten a decision on the ulti- 'mate use of the fund and speed up the rate of payments to fam- ilies of victims of the disaster in which 144 persons, including 116 children, died under a col- liery's sliding slag heap Oct. 21. The National Coal Board, which administers Britain's na- tionalized coal industry, ad- mitted blame in a 76-day judi- cial inquiry that ended late last month but a report is not ex- pected for months. One bereaved mother summed up feelings here when she told a reporter Monday she dreaded the day when the NCB would make compensation offers. This would seem to be placing a monetary value on the lives of children. Parents would re-live the agony of that black Friday, Oct. 21. OFFER PAYMENTS As it happened, offers of £500 $1,500 for each child list were made by the NCB in letters re- ceived by the parents Wednes- Aberfan's Fund Weekly overseas countries amounting : to just over. £70,000--more than I intended receiving in a total contribution." $6,000 Interest Weekly | He estimated contributions \from Canada at about £6,700. your kiddies, and that's impos-|the Canadian people for the|There were also other contribu- sible," said one. : jway they responded," the\tions outside the fund. "All this is breaking down the) resistance built up against our ee , grief in the last months, eapes! 'A Division of the S. S. Kresge Compeny Limited cially among the mothers." | CAMERA DEPT CREATE JEALOUSIES > ® mayor declared in an interview. "T've had contributions from 42 So far only £150,000 has been paid out of the fund and some critics have said the vast pile of money could be Aberfan's second disaster. It might cause jealousies and ill-feeling here and in neighboring Merthyr Vale--the two villages have a population of about 4,000. Mayor Stanley Davies of Merthyr Tydfil, the borough in which this valley neighborhood is located, pointed out that the disposition of disaster funds is usually clearcut since bread- winners, such as miners, have been killed, and dependents and children are in need. Quick to Start... Quiet on the go! But children comprised by far the greater number of victims here, calling for prudence on the part of the 15-member fund management. | One project for which there seems general acceptance is a community centre that would be an example for all Wales and perhaps Britain. The mayor also hopes to see a children's hospital. But he stresses that the people will decide. : PRAISES CANADIANS | Davies, who initiated the fund, was staggered by the AND MARINA King St. E. at Townline -- 723-0211 Operote it with your finger-tips: Finger-tip Starting, Finger- tip Handling, Finger-tip Bag Attachment, Fingert-tip Height Adjustment. 6 response. Money is still coming DEPT in 3% months after official nf closure of the campaign. ai "T have great admiration for day and Thursday through law- yers of the Parents' and Resi- dents' Association, who advised acceptance. os Nalotara ] ii One mother was quoted as saying the offer constitutes "'in- sult and injury." It was "ob- viously based on a House of Lords appeal decision in which a little boy was assessed at £500. In that case, a court's award of £1,000 was reduced by the Lords." Chris Sullivan, spokesman for the parents' association, said a meeting will be held next week with solicitors present to discuss the offer. ; Villagers were generally sur- prised that the NCB made an offer before a report by the tri- bunal, headed by Lord Justice Edmund Davies, who was born in a neighboring town. "We cannot say we want so- and-so amount for our children 27. --you'd be putting a price on} j Centennial in history. Your firm's or seventy years . of the local success story. 1867 ll 1967 a note to | Times advertisers The Times', Ontario and Durham Counties | Edition of Tuesday, June 20th, promises to be one of the finest | Local stories, local pictures . . . special features of past, present and future | . . . all will be there in this special edition. history . . . be it seven months . . forms an integral part Right now isthe time toplan - .. early reservation of space is advised. © Call our Display Advertising Department 723-3474. ..wewill-be happy to assist in the preparation of your advertisement. FREE ROLL OF FILM! BLACK -&- WHITE OR COLOUR: FOR EACH ROLL LEFT FOR DEVELOPING & PRINTING ate 2 620, 120, 127, 126, 35mm YOU NEED NEVER BUY ANOTHER FILM! SIMPLY LEAVE YOUR NEXT FILM BLACK -&- WHITE OR COLOUR AT K mart"s CAMERA DEPART- MENT FOR DEVELOPING & PRINTING. YOU WILL GET A FREE ROLL OF THE SAME SIZE. eeeeee0e50 e FAST, EFFICIENT SERVICE ! FINEST QUALITY PRINTS ! SATISFACTION GUARANTEED! @eeeee#ee?e® FREE! SAME SIZE OF FILM WITH EACH ORDER! 4 Volkswogen Custom costs $1,798. Maximum Suggested Retail Pricel. F.0,8. Port of Entry Charles Haws keeps the Volkswagen just for the fun of it. but after awhile, | found it was really fun to drive...well anyway, 1 got lucky and started making more money than | ever dreamed I'd make, and | figured that every- bodyis entitled to one big luxury in his life. Mine was the Rolls Royce. But | never did get rid of the Volks- wagen. And I'll tell you why. | still get a lot of fun out of driving it... Charlie Haws lives in Toronto at 7292 Topping. He's in the real estate business. And obviously, he's good at it. One day we passed his garage and this is what we saw. We were curious as to why a man who could afford a Rolls would have o Volkswagen. Instead of just guessing, we went right up and rang Charlie's door bell. "Sir, we said, 'would you mind telling us why you own a Volks- wagen as well as a Rolls Royce?" From here on we'll quote Charlie. "| bought a Volkswagen when | started in business several years go, and | have nothing but good things to say about it. | guess | bought it for economical reasons, you might say it keeps me young ... besides, these two cars make a * great balance in my life. The Rolls reminds me how far|'ve come, and just as important, the Volkswagen reminds me of how | got there. | think that's healthy...." That's Charlie Haw's story. Moral: Buy a Volks- wogen. It will help you save up fora Rolls Royce. THIS WEEK ONLY FLASH CUBES Pkg. of 3 POLAROID SWINGER FILM bg Ohe Oshawa Sines | SABYAN MOTOR SALES LTD., 334 Ritson Road South, Tel. 723-3461 Self-Ri On Px NEW YORK (AP)- managing editor an lawyer, after studyir versy about a free fair trial, have callec restraint on the par courts and law er machinery in giving dicial information. In a book, Crime a ity: The Impact of Ne Administration of Ju authors assert that | stimulated by the Le Oswald case and tl retrial and acquittal « muel Sheppard for m not be solved by impo on the press to prever tion of material preju: defendant. They say that until t resolved the press '"'s untarily adopt codes and conduct." Authors of the book, by the Twentieth Cent are Alfred Friendly, managing editor of he ton Post now doing s signments in Europe, ald L. Goldfarb, W trial lawyer. The Twentieth Cent is a philanthropic foun research and public on current economic ¢ questions. RECOMMEND REST! A report issued last the American Bar Ass Committee on Fair ' Free Press recomment ing newspaper access criminal case news ar ing the restraints with of contempt of court. Calling the press " of public scrutiny," and Goldfarb write: "Laws and regulati would make news cove lous would gravely re potential of the press t the step-by-step marct defendant along the justice. To safeguard fair 1 authors suggest: --"The courts have had the power to co conduct of attorneys They should apply th: --"The bar associati have ample authority; trol the conduct of th bers. --"District attorney: should be concerned treatment of defend ready have the powe force proper deport their subordinates. --"The major probl ling for the most « and drastic remedia is obviously in th stations. The task manding silence fro! patrolman and detec manly eager to see h organization's name to a piece of news ir good work in arre suspect, is exceeding cult but not impossib! The authors give thi to the press: "When all else is dc complete respect for fendant's right to a f. and the press neverthel lishes information that erately partisan, preju content, timing and volu devoid of redeeming | then the press should no to be excempt from c proceedings. "Tf all the participant judicial process beha' maximum care for def rights, the public | against press irresponsil that score will be ir Health Insura Seen For Dent TORONTO (CP)--A le the medical profession t tists Saturday their wo eventually be covered b: insurance. Dr. Robert B. Kerr, ver, president of the Ro lege of Physicians and § of Canada, said the s health insurance has in so much that "it has de beyond the ability of the ual to cope with it finan He told the annual c tion of the Royal College tists that economic p1 are changing the positior doctor in society. "At one time we wer position to make our ow sions and almost entir rected our own affair said. "Our role is being i ingly changed from that cision-maker to one of only. . . . It is occur medicine and may well : in your profession as v No mistake with | Cresta Roja is a deliciously m dry red tabi madi French |