THOUGHT FOR TODAY The most difficult thing to un- derstand about a person with a swelled head is how so thick a skull can expand so much. The Osha Smes Clearing day sunny Authorized as Second Class Mall WEATHER REPORT this evening, Sun with a few cloudy intervals and a little colder. Price Not Over VOL. 89--NO. 66 OSHAWA, SATURDAY, MARCH 19, 1960 Post Office Department, Ottawa FORTY PAGES 10 Cents Per Copy | Mystery DRESDEN (CP)--A post mor- tem Friday night showed no in- dication of foul play in the death of Judy Yott, 13, whose frozen body was discovered under a downtown Dr e s d e n warehouse Friday. The girl, missing for 34 days from her foster home, was found dead beside an empty potato-chip bag by twc schoolboys. Police believe she died of exposure. Crown attorney Blake Ward said Friday night there was still no indication how long Judy had Shift Seen In Top Jobs At Ottawa OTTAWA (CP) -- A shift in two of Ottawa's top jobs is in the works. Laval Fortier, $19,000 - a - year deputy minister of citizenship and immigration, will be leaving that post. DELISLE QUESTIONED BY MONTREAL POLICE LIEUTENANT $1 Million Gang [Quiz Driver Smashed: Police In Killing MONTREAL (CP) -- A ot boas 7, when police broke up Of Women manhunt ended without violence/a bank robbery by four member Friday night when police arrested |of the well - orghnized gang-- dapper Michel Delisle, 29, in con- pection with a gang that has ter- rorized Montreal banks for two years. which gets its name from the . woollen hoods the members wore] OTTAWA, Il. (AP) -- Police when working. planned to question a truck driver Yvon Delisle, Michel's brother, today in connection with the slay- | J. G. Bisson, chief commis. sioner of the unemployment in. {surance commission at $16,000, is |to become consul-general at New Clouds Death Of Child been dead. He said he has made {no decision on whether to hold an |inquest. George Wellman, a barber near {the warehouse, said he saw the |body and "there were no marks {on her or signs of a struggle." "It looked as if she had just |crawled in and perished," he | said. |WAS ADOPTED | Mrs. Margaret Yott, 62, said {she and her late husband had leg- |ally adopted Judy. The girl had| been upset and highly nervous,| particularly since last summer] when she learned she was an| adopted child. i { Some children had teased her| at school, Mrs, Yott said, and al-| though Judy was well-developed| for her age and could be taken| | | | | with dolls. She was in Grade 6. Mrs. Yott said she had cared] for Judy since the child was brought to her haven for home- {less children more than 12 years ago. During the last 20 years, she has cared for more than 60 chil dren. : Mrs. Yott said it took nearly a week to convince Dresden police they should begin a search for {Judy, last seen on a Dresden street about 10 p.m., Feb. 19. She |added that when she called police ief Alvin Watson the next day, It was the ninth arrest since and Sylvio Turner are still in hos- ing of three wealthy women found Jan. 4 of men police liked to|Pital with bullet wounds suffered murdered at the dead end of a the notorious Red Hood gang,|id 8 gun-duel during the at- canyon in winter-bleak Starved which police estimate has figured | tempted robbery. Two police also Rock State Park. a more than $1,000,000 in district| Were injured and two robbers es-| State police Superintendent Wil- TE -~ the gang," jubilant police Capt.|/oaded with guns and hoods was truck similar to his was reported Roland Perron told reporters Fri- captured in east-end Montreal. seen by three persons Monday day night. Claude Delisle, another brother, afternoon in a parking lot across Delisle was questioned during and two other men were arrested|the road from a trail leadi the night and charges were ex.|that time, but a fourth escaped. St. Louis Canyon, pected to be laid this morning. Inspector Joe Bedard said Fri-| It was in a shallow cave there An eight-man holdup squad day night a sedan owned by one that the battered bodies of the swarmed into a west-end apart-|©f Michel's brothers was seen in three suburban Chicago matrons ment at 9 p.m. to surprise the/the area in which he was ar- were found Wednesday by a shirtless five-foot-four Delisle as|rested. A door-to-door search led search party. he watched television. Mjice to he pulling. i Morris said the truck driver's Wo automatic pistols were vehicle contained twine similar to 11-DAY SEARCH found beneath a pillow in the/that used to bind the wrists of Delisle has been hunted since|apartment. 'two of the victims. ng into |Orleans, La., a new job to be cre e asked me why I didn't look for her myself. Then a few days ago the police came and searched my house." Police in this ¢ Informed speculation here is| that Mr. Fortier will succeed Mr. Bisson as head of the three-man insurance commission. in several of 1 se |nierarchy, informants say the ommunity 16 orth © on the missing child on March 10. for 16 or 17, she preferred to play| fi SIREN Di "HEART MADE FROM JUNK Scrap metal, plastic and wood have been turned into a mechanical heart for a rat by 16-year-old David Randolph, a student at Our Lady of Sorrows High School in Farmington, » SOVIETS WILL ACCEPT PARTIAL NUCLEAR BAN | No Other Tests Russ Condition GENEVA (AP)--The Soviet Un- it was forwarding the Soviet pre- ion offered today to accept a par-/posal to Washington at once. tial nuclear weapons test ban on "This is obviously something the condition that all world pow-|that will have to be studied very ers agree not to carry out any carefully in Washington," a dele- | tests for the time being. Soviet delegate Semyon K. Tsar- | apkin made the proposal at a spe-! 1a] Saturday meeting of the thre2 - power nuclear test bam | talks. | He told the United States and Britain that Russia is ready to accept the Western proposal for a ban which would not cover |small underground tests regarded |as impossible to police. | The Soviet delegate hinged his |offer, however, on the Western |acceptance of a three-power mor- atorium on tests not explicitly banned by the treaty. But there would be no international control |to ensure compliance with the # | moratorium. {A TURNING POINT? However, U.S. delegate James iJ. Wadsworth told Tsarapkin: |""We have just heard a very im- portant statement, There can be |no doubt of this." | Wadsworth said the proposal marked a "serious attempt" by {the Soviet delegation to help the conference make progress. The U.S, delegation said later {gation source said. BRITISH HINT British officials have privately hinted that a partial treaty with a simultaneous moratorium might be a way out of deadlock but the suggestion hitherto did not win favor with the U.S. or the Soviet Union. Tsarapkin's offer thus might place the British delegation in an embarrassing position in the talks if the moratorium proves un acceptable to the U.S. The Brit- ish government has carefully sought to avoid any real or ap- parent difference with the U.S. ever since the negotiations started Oct. 31, 1958. The Soviet move falls in line with the Communist bloc's posi- tion at the week-old 10-power dis- armament conference also being held in Geneva, The Soviet-led bloc, obviously seeking to blame the West in advance for any fail- ure to end the arms race, has called repeatedly for a nuclear test ban agreement as a starting point for a wider disarmament treaty, surgeon, Dr. Fryfogle exam- ined the device and said it was truly a working model of an artificial heart and blood oxy- genator, Until now David has shown more interest in sports, Mich, David b » fogle, prominent Detroit heart He is of the high school AP Wirephoto only two things certain at the mo- ment are that Mr. Bisson goes to New Orleans and Mr. Fortier [leaves the immigration depart: | ment, where his relations are said |to have been none too good either | with present minister Ellen Fair- |clough or her predecessor, Lib- |eral J. W. Pickersgill. No available informant will say definitely why Mr. Bisson is going to New Orleans, where he will probably do as well financially as CUBAN COLLAPSE Tourists Havana HAVANA (AP)--Tourism, oncefor Cuba's biggest dollar earner after|available. he does now but will be in a backwater so far as the Cana- dian scene is coicerned. sugar, has plunged to a rock-bot- Avoid Hotels which such statistics are This year employees outnumber ! ly udge- packed tunnel where five of their colleagues died 30 feet under- ground in suburban North York Thursday night, The man, buried under three [feet of mud, was identified as John Correglio, 45, of Toronto. He was found slumped over the 36- linch water main the men were {welding in the six-foot-high pas- Policeman Dies, Hunt |For Suspect SUDBURY (CP) -- A province| Inching along the passage, res- wide police net has been fread |cuers say the chamber where the for a suspect in the slaying of men are trapped is clogged with --|point in Cuban-United States re- {tom level paralleling the low guests about four to one in the|Constable Charles Bibby, 26, who|sand and wet clay seeping leading hotels |died in hospital Friday of a frac-|through from the shallow Don| ations. lations On a typical day this month a Another Corpse brother Alexander, 25. All were Italian immigrants, Attorney-General Roberts Fri {day ordered a full investigation into the accident. At the same time, Reg Johnston, civil defence rescue experipsaid the men might have been saved if special re- mote - breathing apparatus had been available. HAD TO OPEN SHAFTS When firemen police and civil |tured skull affer being clubbed River. They spotted Correglio's| defence workers converged on the Police Widen Extent Of Truck Arson Probe TORONTO (CP) Toronto Township police are questioning more than 50 persons who were in the nity of a $350,000 ex- plosion and fire at Gill Interpro- vincial Lines Limited terminal The blast and resultant fire! Thursday ht destroyed nine|Mment heavy-duty highway tractors val-| "I've received two phone calls|ficials and drivers who kept ped at $40,000 each and other Warning me that I'd better see ing. equipment at the strikebound|that my fire insurance was pa -- have been threatened with sabo-|Bowers, Ontario manager, said tage if they contihued working|the company and the union have with Gill an agreement prohibiting lockouts The two firms--Muir Cartage and walkouts. The union opposes and Tomlinson Cartage -- have|the strike. been taking local shipments to > Malton warehouse for re-ship.|said there had been telephone t threats of viclence to company of- ni work- Since the walkout, Mr Bowers! "American won't go anywhere they're not wanted," executive said. vacationers just they feel | one hotel | Boobytrap Explosion Deliberate STRATFORD (CP)-Police in- jvestigating a suspected "booby- |trap" explosion in a Stratford | man's car Friday called in the| Ontario attorney-general's depart-| ment and an explosives expert Castro, as is everything else here," said another. The tourists--mostly American brought about $90,000,000 to Cuba in peak 1957, the last year FRUIT FACIAL RUSS ADVICE LONDON (AP) -- A Soviet | | |a 0] y a from the provincial crime labor- company yard in nearby Malton. UP and saying anything might "THANK GoD" latory in Toronto. 3 i : !happen if I conti ha . At Vancouver, company presi-|2 y " Squads of detectives will spend Re rs " sontnued handling dent Esmond Lando i on | The explosion rocked the car of| hree days questioning|c, ooo" ty God no one was killed or injured, Sheldon Wein, a 43-year-6ld chick ho were at work and It was hoodlumism of the worst|hatchery salesman, minutes aiter| were pickeling the WHILE FIRE FOUGHT order.' 'Ihe had climbed in to drive to wildcat strike that arney Oldfield, of Tomlinsor| He sz ; work : ) idfield, SOI e said his company would he : 3 is said he was phoned maintain operations without inter-|, After staggering back into his y night while the Gill fire|ruption. "We are very pleased home with burns to his legs, Wein | - was still being fought and warned |with the local Teamst:'s," was taken to hospital. He was re- that "the same thing could hap: said. "They have expre:sed their i€ased after treatment, with advice for Western women who want to stay lovely--plas- ter fruit on your face. The unidentified beautician, broadcasting over Moscow Ra- | dio, said there is a misconcep- tion in the West that Soviet women are against cosmetics. "Masks made from berries, count showed this box score for| leading hotels: | Capacity Guests Employees Rivera "Tourism is dependent on Fidel! Nacional Hilton C 600 700 1200 153 690 apri 400 57 130 These are hotels representing 79 138 493 an investment of millions of dol-| {lars each. Tt |are estimated at $25,000 to $100,-|c 000. A reir monthly losses All are deeply in debt. government. bank took over ation of the Riviera late last and eventually discharged American Personnel. The per: ear 1 $9,000,000 invested by an Amer- beauty expert has come out |ican syndicate has been given up| |for lost. The Nacional is also re- {ported on the rocks. {BOOM DIDN'T COME Cuba last fall anticipated its {biggest tourist season ever would | follow the October convention of {the American Society of Travel |Agents here. But anti-American during a fight Tuesday night out: body eight |side a Sudbury hotel. could free him. yo ediztely after Jus Seath po.) Some officials said the remain-| Cay ing three bodies may not i Kerio Sopa, %, lormerly of Tor- 13 rought to the surface until Mon-|%© seep 8, : An intensive search for Sopta day. Whe Nope of getting tie Ton |was concentrated in the Toronto SIX TRAPPED joe alive was lon, officidls area "Six men of 2 crew of WM rh Big JL hi fied te Kasalo, 22. of Sudbury was) 3 e crew of sev while wor asing actual bodily harm and | When fire, sparked by a short-| Rescue work centred around a [is being held without bail, |circuit in a power cable, spread|vertical shaft sunk in Hogg's Hol- | Milan Bulic, 22, of Sudbury, ar-|P0isonous fumes through thellow, about 100 feet from Yonge rested Wednesday night as a ma-| aled tunnel and cut them off Street, the city's main artery. [terial witness, has been released|from the exit shaft. About six miles from downtown on $1,000 bail, { One man escaped before the|Toronto, the tunnel runs east and Police said Sopta, who had been|fumes overcame him. A second, west from the shaft. It will carry in the Sudbury area about three/was rescued more than threeja water main connecting north- hours before they|scene they were forced to opem (the tunnel's decompression shafts to. clear the fumes. Under. pres- sure, the sand and water began | | | weeks, left the city soon after the hours later. Then, early Friday, alleged assault. ithe body of Pasquale Allegrezza, eastern suburbs with the city's main supply. remarks from Castro plus a leaf-| police and ordered the proving poli ice into the the fire marshal's of investigation st--which police say iitely arson--rocked the yards only hours after the firm had obtained an injunc- tion banning picketing by 40 em- plovees fired for a wildcat walk- out The men were members of Lo- cal 938, International Brotherhood of Teamsters (CLC). The in a statement Friday, disclaimed any connection with the explosion and fire. local, ja n to you if you handle Gill or- horror and are still carrying on ders as they have throughout the wild "I don't want to get involved in|cat strike." this thing--I want to get rid of| The Gill company hauls cargo the Gill stuff as quickly as possi-|from Toronto to Vancouver where ble and I don't want any more|its head office is located. business from them," Mr. Old-| The walkout Monday is said to field said. ] have come after several months T. L. Young, Gill plant mana- of growing concern among driv- ger, said transports would be sent|ers over layoffs and the uncer- to the two cartage firms to pick tainty of further work. up the orders and get them "off{ The union statement said: the hook." "Without the slightest sanction The drivers and loaders staged|from the union, these drivers a wildcat walkout Monday follow- staged a wildcat stoppage in the ing a layoff involving 18 of 60 hope of speeding up arrangements Toronto-area employees, T. F.lfor regular work. Deputy Police Chief E. K. An- |derson said the explosion had the appearance of a boobytrap. "We have every reason to be- lieve the blast was deliberately set," he said. | were collected by detectives from the damaged floor of the car. The blast went off under the front seat. Police gave no indication of a motive for the explosion. 'Bir Detectives Pieces of rubber and metal] fruit and vegetables are very useful and are always on hand' she said, "A vitamin mask is made of fresh cucumbers, to- matoes, raspberries, strawber- ries and in the winter from oranges and lemons', let - dropping raid and political [turmoil sent the agents home un- {convinced | Cuban labor laws prohibiting |the discharge of any employee for economy reasons made the hotel | managers' situation that much iworse. | | Charge Of Waste At Base Denied Attorney-General Roberts told the legislature Friday the blast was '"'a crime of major propor- tions." He said "no effort would] in matron LATE NEWS FLASHES WARN OF BOMB Napanee Fire Kills Two Men Dig Wreckage TELL CITY, Ind. (AP) -- Air-| crash detectives moved in a big| power shovel today to dig for the remains of a Northwest Airlines turbo-prop Electra that exploded in flight and then drilled a crater in a southern Indiana farm. | They still had no idea whether washing machines, outboard mo-| of the Ontario legislature said Friday United States military| |Northern = Ontario are material. TORONTO (CP) -- A member |buried there. Albert Wren, Liberal - Labor ment {member for Kenora, said tools,|claims. If Canada contributed some- personnel at an isolated base in|thing the matter should be invest-| burying |igated, he said, and suggested a thousands of dollars worth of new committee of the American Con- gress or the Canadian Parlia- | should check into his At Washington, the U.S. Air| A telephone call to police at noon Friday warned that a bomb NAPANEE (CP) -- Fred Neelands, a First World War was about to explode in the ware-| Veteran, and Garfield Hearns, a factory worker, died today house of the Gill firm but a search| in a fire that destroyed the brick-clad dwelling occupied by by the attorney-general's crime! Hearns in this town 25 miles west of Kingston. laboratory found nothing. Two other firms which do busi- ness with Gill said Friday they, Police Revolt In Bolivia LA PAZ, Bolivia (AP) -- A regiment of national police revolted against the government today. The government radio station called the uprising "a reactionary subversive coup" a bomb, rough air--or something|tors, skiffs paint and other mat-|Force said that worn out equip-| ¥ they want to | start digging they'll find it." else--wrecked the craft and killed|erial was being buried by bull-/ment no longer usable is being § |disposed of at a Canadian radar all 63 persons aboard late Thurs-|dozer crews at the rate of about day. Four Winnipeggers and a $35,000 a week at a radar base|Station site. former Kirkland Lake woman|operated by the U.S. between| A spokesman said the air de- were among the dead. |Sioux Lookout and Hudson. fence command, which St. 1, rthwes irlines! charge of radar sites, "denies In St. Paul, Northwest Airlines| Lt.-Col. T. E. Ashinhurst, com-|that it is burying equipmen has| § of | § CITY EMERGENCY | : 13 officials announced a plan to fly| and said loyal military forces dominate the situation ? 4 manding officer at the radar|economic value." But, he added, PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 38-2211 Queen Goes To Windsor Caste LONDON (AP) The Queen today for the first time since the birth ¢ d child and drove 30 miles straight to Windsor Castle. There she joined Prince Philip and Princess Anne. The baby, one month old Friday, was left behind in the care of his nursemaids. | f : er t relatives of the victims to a me-| Pg : morial service at the scene next|P2se, said in a telephone inter-|y week. {view later: "The claim is ridicu-|ig The cause of the crash re- lous. Why, we wouldn't use that| n Palace {mained a frustrating mystery. amount of material in 20 years, variety of equi out, including we Replying to Lt.-Col. Ashinhurst,|stoves, trucks, radar equipment, The wreckage was so shattered |le! alone each week." that for clues investigators had only fragments of airplane and Mr. Wren said: "My sources are|fu bodies. unimpeachable. There's material|said. orn out equipment of all types| disposed of in that manner Rémote radar s use a wide hich wears hing machines rniture and similar items, he 4 ; GERMAN CHANCELLOR HO nrad Adenauer, chancellor | McLaughlin, right, chairman of | the. West German republic, | y the board of regents. of the receives an honorary degree of | K of rey University of California, during | charter day ceremonies at doctor of laws from Donald | UCLA in Los Angeles. The 84 NORED year-old chancellor also was presented with a citation calle ing him "a steadfast opponent of the totalitarian state." --AP Wirephote