'dsoooooootlonttut monogamoumsnn .Duplessis Conservative leader. the Soviet “ova-M want. . mums [)0qu OFFER permanent grain supply for the Captivated by the Duplesala pacific seaboard. can"? he 1:"? 2mg“ “3"”? James A. Richardson. a Win- fn?fefie21el:ction caoulfl "it"s 3”“ “Wm”- “‘d C" contest Chicoutimi for the Un- nadian deliveries would be ton Natlonale party Mr. Duples— cheaper than the cost of moving '“ had farmed "0m 3 fusmn Soviet wheat from the Ukraine. The Guardian. Charlottetown. Fri. May 18, MI. I: WE PROMISED YOU v .EK' tenna attached to her collar. Maude doesn‘t mind pulling the rig but she can't watch what's on the TV. Lunceford Owens Luncelord of Craw- Ini-dvilic. Georgia. drives his ole Maude all rigged up with battery-Operated TV with an- A MULE WITH A TV operates the farm and likes to watch TV so e decided on the idea to help him en- joy his plowing. not the Conservatives and l'Ac- tlon Liberale Nationale. e says . Duplessis or- dered sitting of the committee on public accounts after the Union Nationaie swept out decaying 40 — year - old Liberal government. then closed t e committee inquiry after getting a look at the books. The inference is that this was done to avoi scandal over the practices of meat. At his trial. Mr. testified he had been commissions system had been running for years. “And it's still going on,” he claims. He says similar systems ex- ist elsewhere. "Perhaps we talk too much about it in Quebec.'l know it’s done in Ontario and New Bruins- wick but they don't say any- thing about it." Mr. Talbot turned down the roads portfolio in 1944. bringing a “now we have heard every- “ from Mr. Dupie-ssis. who then insisted he take the job. ' The following 16 years saw ‘new highways built into the Ohibougamau mining region and the bustling Saguenay, before linked to Quebec City by rail and rough secondary roads. The new Chicoutimi route through Laurentide Provincial Park cuts 100 miles off the dis- tance and is called Bouelv-ard Talbot. ' Mr, Talbot has been re-elected seven times since 1938. and in 1962 survived a determined Lib- ,erai attack by 192 votes. ‘ wice was president of the 'Canadian Good Roads Associas 3 tion. The Canadian executives who. were to leave for Stockholm t0- iday after a two-week tour of Russia‘ had extensive talks with Soviet trade officials. Foreign Trade Minister Niko- elai Patolichev told them Russia twas dissatisfied with existing .Soviet - Canadian trade. which totalled only about 55.000000 ‘ l11962. the year before the big wheat deal. 5 House Briefs Gilbert Rondeau tCreditlste~ Sheffordl complained Nicholas Mandziuk (PC—Marquette) in-‘ suited MP5 Tuesday by refci- ‘ ring to a maple leaf fl dew sign as a rag but did not have 3 the courage to let the word ap- { pear in Hansard. the Commons 3 atenograiphic record. The word rag had been replaced by flag Mr. Rondau said. raising a question of privilege. In 19% it cost $05,000 to train an RCAF pilot compared With $32,000 in 1943 and 554.000 in 1953, Defence Minister Holly/c: informed S t a n l e y Knowles (NDP J Winnipeg North Cen- tre). The federal government does not intend to appoint a commis- sioner for amateur sport. Rou ert Beau-1e (Creditisle—Quebec East was told in a written re-i ply on behalf of Health Mints ; ter Judy La-Marsh. Works Minister Deschatelets‘ said construction of the young. .offenders penal institution at‘ FOUND GUILTY ON 13 CHARGES Antonio Talbot Denies Getting Penny From Gov'ig made by a royal recommend By GERRY MCNEIL igm'ernment QUEBEC l(‘Pl—“inlonio "ral- commission that hot reluctantly became Quebecijudicial action. roads minister in 1044 he commission did not say guided the department throughiagainst whom. and Mr. Talbot expenditures of more than $1.-i feels he was singled out because 000.000.000 before the Union Na-i he is a sitting member. a for- tionaie government was dc- mer cabinet minister and in- feated in 1960. .terim leader of the Union Na- Never. he said in a rccentTtionale in 1961. interview. did a single penny go Four other into his own pocket. JIAgislative councillor Gerald Some other roads ministerslMartineau. the former party had retired as millionaires. he‘treasurer. and fomer LA said. But “you can see I‘m Joseph-Damase Begin. retired not.‘ organizer. also were charged. "1 never was paid for a con- interviewed at his home. Mr. tract. never for any work I did‘ Talbot, 62. showed the strain of for any y." irecent months. Though he said Mr. Talbot gave the lnterviewihe is in good health. he chain- while the court considered 13i5moked and anguiSb crossed a charges of defrauding. Quebec , face as he defended his charac- ot’ a total of $47,000 while a tel" ' ‘ I member of the late Mauricel He and his family live com- Duplessis' Union Nationale gov-i forIaPIy but not ostentatious” ernment. The charges involved l on his $12,000 salary as a mem- payment of unearned commis—l bet 811d 00 his Income from a sions on government contracts.“’elIfSIfibllShed law office in to persons named by Mr. Tal-‘ Chét‘oullml- men. including oi. in a judgment Wednesday. Mr. Talbot was found guilty of the 13 charges and fined a max- imum of $100 on each of the charges. During the trial. one witness from Ohicoutimi. the riding Mr. Talbot has represented in the legislature since 1938. testified he receive 7.365 in cheques from a company for which he had never worked. NEVER QUESTlONED He said he never questioned the s "1 must have come from above he testified. adding that “in the ource. told myself the cheques Saguenay. ‘above' means Que- her City." Mr. Talbot. testified he was told by his late deputy minister. Arthur Berger-on. that the com- missions were iiicluded in the sales price to the government. if the government didn't use them. price wouldn't be lowered—the company getting the contract would merely ap- point lts own agent. or take the commission as profit. This system was roundly con- demned last summer in a re- p rt on administrative prac- tices of the old Union Nationan IMPERIAL OIL APPOINTMENT Donald G.’1'waitshas been appoint- ed assistant manager of Imperial oil’s Atlantic marketing region. s don who has the com - modicum-i3 “mm, 0ntario,joincd lmpcial’sodvcrtisingdomtin . Tom in 1953. Ho maintaina- Moltlm Opuunmt 1111961 and wash! Ontario manor h*' r i 1concert pianist then. were mar- .ri. ' Paris in 1949. Their l daughters Marie. 13 and Claude. are honey blonde. attractive and resemble their mo when the summons was served last October. and news of the charges flashed across Quebec. they were preparing for a dinner party at The Citadel. a residence here where the Gov- ernor - General usually spends some time each year. They went—Governor-General Georges Vanier. then ambassa- dor to France. was a member of their wedding party in 1949-— and they have fond memories of the night. B there have n painful momenta since. Born May 29. 1901, at littll St. Pierre de Montmagny north- east of Quebec City. his first political influence wa s his mother—a maverick Conserva~ itive in a Liberal family. i The next was Maurice Dupleo- 'sis. whom he met while a young lawyer practising in Chicoutim! to handle Wheat Soles To Russians May Be Annual _ MOSCOW tReutet'sl—A visit- rhg group of Canadian business— men ' sis is considering bu in 500.- 000 tons of Canadian wheat an- nually. Charles manager of tihe Royal Bank of Canada. said the 40-man Cna- din group gathered tiks between the Russians and the Canadian Wheat already are going on in Ottawa. The deal. worth up to an es- timated 340.000.0110 a year. would involve about 18,000,000 bushels a year. it was envis- aged as a permanent trade tea— 3, (The Canadian trade depart- ment said in Ottawa that no ne- gotiations are under way wi tihe Russins on further wheat sales. He said the plan for con- tinuing sales was made public not when Russia signed the $500.000.000 dler; for the period ending July to) Neapole said there were indi- cations Soviet purchasees of Canadian wheat to offset local; ishortages might rise to $1.000.-' '000.000 over a two-year period. including the $500.000.000 deal‘ -negotiated last autumn. e and his wife (icncviccc. a in the early 19305. He recallai Key to the proposed annual GRL‘iNULfili?’ lN Plant 6 to 8-week Pest control flight with Your Potatoes. . . Use Di-Systonl It Itllls aphids, loafhoppors, flu tactical Get “built-in" crop protection right from the start. DiSyston is granular . . . easy _ _ and apply. On contact with moisture, its activo ingredient is released slowly, giving afiectivo protection for 6 to 8 weeks after omorgonce. Di-Syston is systemic . . . goes into the sap stream . . . gives young plants better and longer protec- tion against aphids, flea beetles. and leafboppers. they carry. Yet it’s harmless to predators. And it can’t: be washed 08' by 112;; umlloathovirus Uoo Di-Syoton . . . it works! CHIMAono LIMITED Rus- ' B. Neapoie. general l wheat or- ‘ 'Springhili, N.S. is to begin in‘ the late summer, and its esti- mated cost will be close to $7.— 000.000. He told Robert C. ;Coates (PC—Cumberland the : initial estimated cost was 54,.: 500.000. based on preliminary, .plans and when site conditions‘ . were unknown. ! Fisheries Minister Robichaud i I said investigation by field offi- lcers has disclosed that lobstci l trap losses in the Northumben land Strait because of ice was i not as serious as first believed. ‘ {ENGLISH EMU I SETS RECORD i TWYCROSS. E n gl 3 n d (APl ._ The excessive egg- 1 g E i a 3 “She must world record." said Reg 1 Bloom. Emma's keeper in g Twycross Zoo. Since January she has laid 30 eggs. An emu's nor< l mal output. according to the Encyclopedia Britannica, is only nine to 13 eggs 8 year. mma's partner in the population explOsion is an eager emu named Edgar. His eagerness evaporates. however, when it comes to emu incubation. normally a male chore. Edgar will have none of it. mi SECTICIDE AND HERE THEY ARE THE VERY NEWEST IN MENS‘ SUITS AND SPORT COATS Regulars Shorts Tolls Stouts in sizes up to 50 MEN. YOUR SUITING PROB- LEMS ARE OVER. We have just received a shipment of better qual- ity suits and sport coats of fins 100% wool worsted fabrics. Made especially for HOOLEY’S by Savilie Row and Shifter-Hill- ma-ii these are names you know—— makers of quality apparel you can trust. We take great: pride to offer you our enlarged selection of fine men's fashions tailored to your personal needs at prices you can afford. Come to Hooley's today. You'll be amazed at the fine quality of these suits and at the very reas- enable V. prices. 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