WEATHER REPORT Cloudy with sunny periods and a few scattered showers or snowflurries, eontinuing eool THOUGHT FOR TODAY No one has a better command of language than the one who keeps his mouth shut. ! Fhe Oshawa Times Authorized es Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa TWENTY PAGES Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1960 WORK SAFETY INQUIRY ORDERED FOR ONTARIO BE Probe Charges gies Men Exploited TORONTO (CP) -- Establish-| He said a special cabinet com- : ment of a royal commission to mittee has been set up to investi- | § investigate the adequacy of alllgate this matter. "Unscrupulous | : : : : workers safety regulations in On- employers" were reported to be 3 7 tario was announced today by exploiting new Canadian laborers % [Premier Frost. in the construction field and the :| He told the legislature the in-|committee would consider "cor- vestigation had been ordered in|rective and educational measures line with the recommendations of |to meet the situation." a cor; 's y W i i . more-militant offshoot, the Pan- weeks ago. 3 Be Spr ig which ured As the first step, special ma- Africanist Congress, w as an-| Thousands of Negroes who % in which five Toronto construc- terial was being prepared for pro- nounced in Parliament by Jus-| burned their passes at the height| tion men died after being trapped @ (tice Minister Francois Erasmus. of the campaign of defiance have| i : |by fire. It came as security police car- applied for new ones. They must Mr. Frost named Judge P, J. ried out co-ordinated raids in have these "internal passports' 7 P McAndrew of Thunder Bay dis- widely co-ordinated raids in|to_move around or work. | 0% : trict to head the commission. : : widely scattered parts of the| The Associated Press reported | Other members are J. Danvers|5uéd in various languages. |country, arresting more' than 100| that most Negroes now appear to| | Bateman, a consulting geologist,| Mr. Frost said consideration men and women of all races. The be back at work in disregard of and Russell Harvey, a special un-| Was also being given to the estab- roundup was the second under the campaign of the now-out-| ion representative serving on the|lishment of a training program emergency regulations pro-lawed militant leaders to keep| ; {Ontario labor relations board. |Within the labor department to claimed March 30. In the first/them at home. go ; | The commission would study| 'create and maintain" rescue or- i | cate h raid, 258 persons were arrested. But the calm that prevailed | : | |every provincial code which cov-|ganizations for emergency action The main centres of today's Was uneasy. VOL. 89--NO. 83 * African Negro Bodies Banned . CAPETOWN (CP) -- The South blunied the Negro stay-home pro- . |African government today out-|tests, it has called up more mil- | |lawed the country's two main Ne- itary reservists. gro organizations: while police| The work situation was more| swooped down on more OPPOD- peariy normal today than at any| ents of repressive racial laws. time since Negro demonstrations The ban on the powerful Afri- against carrying ide nt ification can National Congress and its|passes flared into violence three |vincial distribution "to acquaint {newcomers with their rights as {workers and employers with their duties under various provincial {laws." The material would be is- % FRENCH FARMERS BATTLE POLICE men were hurt and about a dozen demonstrators injured. Sens is 60 miles south of Paris. Police use tear gas and clubs | onstrations against President to battle [farmers in Sens, | de Gaulle's price freeze on France, who were staging dem- | their products. A dozen police- Grim Poison Weapons | lers any aspect of job safety. |in accidents such as the Toronto Race Urged For U.S. CLEVELAND (AP)--An army|tists painted a grim picture of the chemical warfare expert says the "threat" to the U.S, and its United States should push to de-|allies arising from possible chem- velop chemical weapons even jcal and germ warfare--and the more potent than "kill in a min- need for assuring strong defences ute" nerve gases already pos-'and countfer-measures. sessed by the U.S. and Russia. RUSSIA MAY BE AHEAD Hinting that some such effort] Their remarks were - under- may already be under way, but|scored by the statement of Maj.- that an adequate program would Gen. Marshall Stubbs, the army's require vigorous public support,ichief chemical officer, that Dr. William H. Summerson, a 'there is some evidence that the deputy commander of the Chem- Communist bloc may surpass us jeal Corps' Research and Devel-/in this field." opment Command, asserted: | "If the Communists succeed in|yided "It is to our national interest attaining a superiority in . | to uncover as - yet - unrevealed| chemical and biological icological secrets at least as/which we cannot match or which gl a potential enemy na-/we cannot defend inst," said tion can do so, and preferably Stubbs, "our nuclear strength|pe possible to "blanket" before he does." could be of academic value." [tire Soviet Union. Summerson made the state-| He said progress is being made, He and the others ments at a symposium wherein in developing protective masks|that the same could he and other government scien-|and clothing for civilians butla reverse Russian attac making fallout shelters agents.' CANSICKEN MILLIONS ing--that the U.S. germ weapons there was . . few |jefence. < "more thought must be given to imper- SEVERAL EVADE NET i But police found that several vious to chemical and biological persons they wanted had disap- indicated | be a true in arrests were Capetown, Johan-| URGENT CALLUP | nesburg, Durban, land , Pretoria, Many of those Mr. Frost also announced that| Port Elizabeth Breaking into a play, the South| African Broadcasting Corporation| {taken into custody were ordered Thursday night read a long list| out of their beds before dawn and driven off to local police stations peared from their homes Erasmus told Parliament with only the Despite the fact that the govern- to have son told reporters that with sufficient planes and prope; | 1 conditions i woud Br antford Sant | Payroll Boy Loses Life Tired Flood In Rouge River PICKERING (Staff) swollen waters of the Rouge claimed the life of a three- year-old boy on Thursday. Kirk Martin, only child of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Martin of Morgan's Park wandered from the yard of a neighbor where he had been playing with another small boy. He had been left in the care of Howard Mann, 55. a neighbor, while his parents were at work. The two boys were gether a few minutes before little Kirk was missed, at 10:45 a.m. Police were notified at noon. "The boy was with me when 1 visted a friend, Thomas Cor- mier," Mr. Mann said. *'we plan- ned to drive to the store for groceries. Kirk was playing with Michael Cormier in the yard We came out to pick up the boy Kirk to take them with us and was nowhere to be seen " - SEARCH FAILS Search of the homes in Mor- KIRK MARTIN gan"s Park failed and other neighbors joined in the search Fred McDonald, 50, in com- pany with Dennis Mann, a scout troop leader, found tracks lead- ing to the river Following foot- prints through unc owth they reached the river bank There were marks which indicated that the child had crossed a stranded cake of ice and had sat down on the river bank. Marks ind icated that the hoy had attempt ed to regain his footing on fhe seen 1o- keeping small children away from the danger of flood waters. Nor- mally the river is only a few inches deep where the boy fell in. He had no chance to save himself." Morgan's Park is a small group of summer cottages situated on the east bank of the Rouge River a little way south of Highway 101 edy points up the special need for|, Workers Eye Soggy Dikes CHICAGO (CP)--Weary flood fighters maintained their watch and worked on weakened dikes along the surging Mississippi and Missouri rivers today, but ap- peared more hopeful than they have in days. However, officials expressed concern of possible break- throughs in some of the earthen dikes which have been pounded|factory and he believed the two|(Reuters)--The gove |by the swollen rivers for more were workmen until they pulled introduced a bill aimed at out-| DIFFERENT HANDLING | {than a week in areas from |Quiney, - Ill., into the Hannibal, Mo., district The Mississippi is dropping steadily north of Quincy, but downstream the crest is yet to come, and workers are bolstering the soggy flood walls on the Illinois and Missouri sides of the big river. No serious damage is expected in the St. Louis area. BIG DAMAGE BILL - The floods along both big rivers in the last two weeks have caused an estimated $18,000,000 in damage. The Red Cross estimate the floods have affected 31,000 persons and have {und that in- 5. The worst of the flooding in the eastern part of the United States imeanwhile appears over, bank and had slipped backward into the fas! ing river cur rent. The water is five feet deep at this peint Dragging operat flow ms be were gun as soon as equipment could be brought. Police Chief Reginald Parker said, "We had everything ready| to work with, We had wonderful| dd 4 4 hk co-operation from the residents, Core 3 Smid Se ars J ailable police officers were there ¥ € and later off-duty officers were called." At 4 pm, Lynde and James Glendinning were ing the mouth of the river Ferguson's Beach and they the body floating towards face upwards Chief Parker CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPIT! 211 Toronto Lawyer Found TORONTO (CP) Chief deputy Fire his TORONTO (CP) session of the 26th Ontario legi next Tuesday. He also anno work load, the. next session saw Nov. 20 and end around mid-T them Plane Sabotage Suspec THE HAGUE (Reuters) ordered police to investigate sabotage of a KLM airliner 1958, killing 99 persons. Th meantime suspended its investi said, "This trag- Condemnation By U.K. LONDON (AP) -- The Ho a resolution - condemning Sout asking the government to take 0g Lewis lawyer who was convicted of contempt of court in the Supreme ago, Premier wealth prime minister's confers Shot Duncan, veteran Toronto was found shot to death ide, He was found dead in the rtment store Fall Session For Legislature Frost said today the first slature is expected to prorogue mced that, to spread out the will start this fall, probably Jecember ted -- Dutch air officials today the possibility of attempted which crashed off Ireland in e aeronautical inquiry board gation into the crash House use of Commons today passed h African racial policies and up the issue at the Common- F h Hijacked BRANTFORD (CP)--Benjamin McLaughlin, an office manager who picks up his company's pay- roll alone every Thursday, was hijacked by two men Thursday and robbed of $6,400, The money was the weekly wages of 150 employees of Kitchen Overall and Shirt Com- pany. Police said McLaughlin was driving into the company park- ing lot when a man walked up on each side of his car. They wore khaki overalls, painters' caps and |dark glasses and held handker- chiefs to their noses, McLaughlin said later there was work going on around the guns and bundled him back into the car. One drove and the other held |the manager. Viscount Returns Bomb Call Hoax TORONTO (CP)--A Trans-Can- ada Air Lines Viscount was or- dered back to Malton airport Thursday night when airline offi- cials received an anonymous tele phone call about 20 minutes after take-off that there was a bomb aboard. Airlines officials said later the some call was a hoax. The aircraft, bound for Mont- ated more than 1,000,000 real, had 44 passengers aboard. the It was brought out at the con-/ban on the ANC and the Pan-Ai- ference--staged at the American ricanist movement would remain Chemical Society's national mete- in force until April 6 next year. already has Legislation empowering the gov- which could ernment to outlaw the organiza- 5 "'sicken" up to 75 per cent of the|tions was passed by Parliament y population in a 34,000,000-square-|earlier this week, mile area with only 450 pounds of two Senate representatives of Ne- |virus or bacterial material|gro interests opposing the bill. | dropped from a B-52 bomber, pro- no medical ment now appears of reservists and ordered them to report for duty immediately. | The Witwatersrand Rifles In- antry Regiment, one of the most recently mobilized, was posted at| an airport east of Johannesburg, presumably to be flown to any trouble spot on quick notice With most of their leaders jailed, the Negroes so far were accepting with outward docility the revivalvof the pass law, which as suspended temporarily after, the bloody demonstrations {March 21. of SATELLITE VIEW The U.S. National Aerenaut- ics and Space Administration released this photo today in Washington a view of the Mediterranean area made by the wide angle camera in the United States' meteorological satellite Tiros I. It was made on the satellite's 14th orbit of the earth at 6:10 a.m., EST, April 2 from 450 miles altitude. The view looks northwest to- wards the Alps, covered by a heavy cloud layer in the centre of the photograph. To the left | of centre the Italian peninsula | is visible. Farther to the left | are the islands of Corsica and Sardinia. --NASA Photo via AP he government was giving "spe-| ial consideration" to recent charges that immigrant laborers! | were being exploited, particularly| {in the Toronto area. tunnel tragedy. The royal commission had been instructed to cover every aspect of job safety and was empowered to summon witnesses and take evidence under oath, Arrested Twice Now Heads Home SYDNEY, N.S. (CP) -- Steel- worker John Allan Morrison, yanked from a new life in On- Police and -troops met no re- |sistance in their raid Thursday jon the big Negro townships of |Nyanga, near Capetown, which] | has been a hard core of defiance, | |HOLD 162° of 1,525 | The raiders rounded up 1,525, Jpersons in the settlements of Ny-! "Wes East, but' Taylor May Get Scots Breweries released all but 162 after screen- ing. Bi of Yeapous scene of acting for a British firm in seek- bloody clashes Monday. ling to acquire control of three Col. I. P. Terblanche, deputy breweries in Scotland in a police commissioner of Capetown, |£3,500,000 deal. said the Negroes in the settle-| He said in a statement he has TORONTO (CP) -- Financier were. seizetl E. P. Taylor said today he is | EDINBURGH (CP) -- Toronto |financier E. P. Taylor is seeking |to take over three of Scotland's tario by a legal paper, headed back home today after being ar- rested twice in the last nine days. The 33 . year - old bachelor's "terrible nightmare" began 14 years ago when he was convicted here of operating a still: He was released while lawyers filed an appeal which was eventually dis- missed. But, he said, he never was told the result of the appeal [leading breweries in a £3,500,000 |deal, it was reported here Thurs- day night. The boards of the three com- Iments had been "livin, "> |panies said in a joint statement and he began a new life in Ham- ilton, The past rushed back March 28 when he was served a warrant by RCMP in Hamilton. He started all my life. I'm so happy I can't speak. "Now I can go back where 1 belong--to my friends and job in Hamilton . . . the past is dead sad, buried and I ean forget it Morrison must officers month. months ~ | Best Man' Sickness "has been referred to a commit- publications A 8 Tv; Ein 2 reignino direct personal interest of terror," an a e cleanup| Northern Breweries of Great Brit-|, « " nl raids were being carried out to|ain Limited--the holding com. S312 Tesicmalle ud wi give protection to law-abiding Ne- pany negotiating the purchase--|cy 1 ders in the companies drew wide attention. groes. |and is acting solely in his official | onan, The National Parole Board in : |that they consider, the. offers) serve the six-month sentence originally imposed. The case Contrived? LONDON (APjiedeéfemy Fry, counci in this] The outlawed ANC claims to|capacity as a vice-chairman of _. granted Morrison a parole Thurs- represent 8,500,000 of the 9,000, Sap ay : The brewers are William Mur. on LEP pela Gi who was sup) to be best man 000 Negroes in .the country | pany. ray and Company Limited of| ry ¥ Jal, (at the Princess Margaret wed- : | Edinburgh, George Younger and|RCMP arrested him on a war-\ding, has not got jaundice after a large proportion of the beer , Ts lon which London newspaper you drunk in Scotland. Pig aoa had Deel iread--and there is no other rea- It is understood a new com-|, and the 'provincial {son, Fry insists, why he had to | BE : | London newspaper reports on George Younger and Son. provincial charge and Morrison | pry'g case of jaundice, a story uced Ime ; All members of the boards|/Was freed. {which most of the London press la wing "undesirable newspa-| The setup would be different have said they will accept the Nova Scotia's Deputy Attorney- pers, magazines, books, movies, V field "It is a very good offer. It is Where there has been an excise but it seems to be building up. He Under the present bill, reading|"'¢'% . a bit early to say what the effect|act charge." is being given the normal treat- and other materials would be Locally - published books, pe-|of the takeover will be, but I'm| The husky steelworker had|ment for jaundice." country's multi-racial population; to a board of appeal which would} The bill has not been published have the final decision. | yet but authoritative sources say, A first offence in both fields;| . [Son Limited of Alloa and John |Tant for the same charge, issued all but his doctor says it's on Censorship Move " A liquor| pany to be called Caledonian law. The federal charge was pro- i is carrying with thinly-disguised {for other reading material, films, offer for their own holdings. The General John A. Y. MacDonald skepticism. phonograph records considered "undesirable" if they|riodicals and films hitherto have sure that after everything has|tears in his eyes as he boarded Fry is spending the time in bed endangered the safety of the|been free of censorship. |settled down the companies will|a train and headed westward. lal his spacious home at Wide- it provides that no one may sources say, would be punishable | print, show or sell any "undesir-| with a maximum £100 fine, three! ! Fowler and Company Limited, |under the Nova Scotia Liquoritne way, They have 200 pubs, employ al- Act. He's feeling "awful," "lousy", By South Africa Y ou ric |drop out as best man for the |Brewers will be formed to con-| "": ' {wedding next month. CAPETOWN, South Africajon the authority of the attorney-\{;o1 the three firms. It will be cessed first. Then the attorney-| and other ; shareholders will be canvassed said: Fry's physici ! 3 l recor z £ ass : ysician, Dr. H. Gordon entertainment. The bill, however, (records and entail Alby letter, { "It has not been our practice|Neill, told reporters that his pa- state, had the effect of disturb-| While newspaper cases would co-ordinate their energies and VERY HAPPY |combe Manor near Bath, 108 ing the peace or offended the be handled by the courts, those cut down on spending. "I've never been so happy in|miles west of London. able" newspapers. Enforcement|months in jail or both. Subse-|# would be left up to the courts,|quent offences could draw fines & {most 1,000 workers and produce| pp ovINCE DROPS CHARGE | Very seedy indeed"--it depends he government has|general. {headed by the present director of Seueral's department dropped the Te le Simmer SF Lav) tee and may be amended. [would have jurisdiction Chairman J. P. Younger said/to prefer a Liquor Act charge|tient 'has not got jaundice yet, feelings of any section of the|in the other field could be taken| BS i with prosecution instituted onlylof £200, a year in jail or both. Final Evidence Given [ TORONTO (CP) -- Witnesses presented the last evidence Thursday in the investigation of Ontario Labor Minister Daley's purchase of propert formerly owned by the N ra Parks Commission. Mr. Daley is NPC chairman. The legislature's eommittee on privileges and elections. heard {Arthur Schmon, St. Catharines business executive, outline de- tails of the sale of his property {to Mr, Daley three years after buying it from the NPC in 1945 Mr. Schmon said he purchased the remainder of the 42 acre Brodrick farm and the 17 - acre Warren farm after the NPC re- moved strips of land it wanted for park purposes along the Ni- agara River He. wanted the property for a fruit farm but later discovered income tax regulations would not |aliow him to deduct its losses against his income | Mr, Schmon said he bought the |land for $10,366 on April 18, 1945 LATE NEWS FLASHES Niagara Parks Case He sold the 40-acre section to] Charles K. Bradley, a St. Cath-|& Mr. Daley in April, 1948. arines realtor, testified that as He had first made inquiries|far back as 1946 Mr. Daley had| about the land through W. B.|approached him to find a suitabl Rollason, then a NPC commis- summer property. He had not|§ sioner and a St. Catharines real-/found him a place because he|§ tor. When he sold the property understood Mr. Daley wanted to i te Mr. Daley he used Mr. Rolla-|locate nearer Toronto, in his rid-| son as an agent, paying him aling of Lincoln, gE regular commission. Maxim Gray, NPC general} Les Rowntree (PC -- Toronto|manager, said the general park| York West) asked Mr. Schmon if {policy is not to sell land acquired |# he had had any communication for park purposes. However, the with any member of the Daley Brodrick and Warren farms were): family agreeing to the eevntuall.,nsidered surplus land, not suit-| i sale of the property to Mr. Daley. [apie for park development. 'I categorically and unequivoe:| The NPC received two offers to ally never talked to them wuntil|pyrchase, Mr, Schmon's was ac-| 1948," Mr. Schmon said, under|cepted because the other prin-| oath. "I knew him (Mr. Daley), |cipal only wanted to buy one of of course. But I never spoke t0|the properties. him about the property until after speaking with Mr. Rollason|NO TENDERS who said Mr. Daley was inter-| He said the commission as aj ested in acquiring a property." |whole decided to sell the prop- The labor minister bought the|erties. Tenders were not called farm and equipment for $15,196. | because it was general knowledge Mr. Schmon said it was a "fair|in the Niagara area that the NPC ce." |considered the land surplus. | A ACTORS' LEADERS IN DISPUTE | ment to end the month-long strike. In right foreground is John Dales, Executive Secre- tary of the Guild. ~AP Wirephote wood tonight after they and other negotiators for the actors left a four-hour session with producers' representatives. The | meeting ended without agree- Actors Charlton Heston (cen- tre foreground) and James Garner (left background) dis- cuss the Screen Actors Guild strike with newsmen in Holly-