THOUGHT FOR TODAY An economist says that people these days give security a pri- ority far above that of taking risks, but there's an exception --when they are driving cars. dhe Oshawa Tunes as Second Cass Mail Department, TWENTY PAGES OSHAWA, MONDAY, MAY 30, 1960 Pout Office ony Na No Move Yet On Teamsters | 01d Farmer "ATT | Behind Scenes Bludgeoned | | CINCINNATI (AP)--The po- VOL. 89--No. 124 2 Thugs Tie Boys Rob Home Two armed men entered adownstairs bedroom. The mask- house in Oshawa Saturday night,led men ripped up a sheet, tied bound the occupants aftér strik-|their hands and feet up and left = ing one of them and left with/them face downwards on the °° $450 in cash tbed. They heard the men - Z 45 p.m. rang| sacking the upstairs rooms and | us Az 1 yan Be S00 bel van depart after being in the house lice detective's loud voice was even heard up in the city hall press room, shouting: OTTAWA (CP)--Top Canadian x arold Reddick, for approximately 20 minutes. Soest owned Vivid dance] At 1 am. Oshawa Police De- hall. Randy Reddick, 13, who was partment received a call from at home with a 12-year-old George L. Roberts, principal of friend, John Devere, 15 Chester|the O'Neill Collegiate and Voca- road, Stony Creek, answered the tional Institute, whose home is door. |close to the Reddick family's. Two masked men who appefr- Boys CALLED OUT ed to De in their early twenties Mr Roberts told police that brushed past the boy and asked two boys on an upstairs veran- for his father, then ordered the|dah had called to him that the two boys to stand in a comer. [house had been entered by two Miss Winota Chaplin, who lives)men who had ripped off the in the house and who was up-|telephone and asking him to call stairs in her room, heard the|the police, noise and went to the top of the, Miss Chaplin was in a hys- stairs to see what was happen-|terical condition when the police ing, One of the men ran up thelarrived and was bleeding from a stairs towards her and Miss|cut near her left eye and an- Chaplin, thinking it was a game, other, on the bridge of her nose. Is tried to tear off the white hand-|She was taken by the police to| TO TIE UP TWO BOYS AND WO MRS. REDDICK HOLDS TORN CLOTH USED BY THE ROBBERS | By Robbers COOKSVILLE (CP)--An |elderly farmer, harassed for three years by intruders seeking| rumored wealth cached in his| isolated house, big, was found bludgeoned to death Sunday. | His shotgun and watchdog were | out of reach in his most desperate | hour, , | Peter Carberry, 84, was bat-| |tered from behind with a blunt | instrument and left to die on his | "Hit him with' your night | stick, and if that doesn't work, | hit him with a broom or a | tennis racquet!" Reporter Bob Ryan, thinking | of police brutality or the pros- pect that a prisoner might | have gone berserk, hotfooted downstairs to detective head- quarters after he heard the of- ficer's shout Sunday. He bumped into three officers beating a retreat. Their foe: A Bat that had slipped through an open win- i |kitchen floor while the killer ran-| dow. MAN sacked the 10-room house near | this town 15 miles west of Tor- onto, An empty cash Every drawer was opened. table near the body. Police said they did not know | box was on a Ryan and the officers went into another office until the bat left Action Hinted {Labor - Congress officials kept mum about the expulsion of the | Teamsters union---set for last Sat- {urday amid reports of behind- | the-scenes moves to keep the 40,- |000-member union within the Con- {gress fold. | All key officers of the 1,150,000- ster-BRC fight involves new the CPR's service at Van- ver. ) The CLC tossed out the 10,000- cou {member CLC--which voted at its |biernial convention last month in Montreal to oust the Teamsters |automatically May 28 for raiding |a rival union--were out of Ottawa when the Saturday deadline was reached. "Sorry, no comment," said Wil- {liam Dodge, CLC executive-vice- |president when asked today |about the Teamster situation. | | The senior executive of the Con- |gress. central body of Canada's Union last month--also for raid- a rival union. Raiding is the on term for dn unauthorized kerchief that was masking his|the Oshawa General Hospital and face. released after treatment. " When Mr. and Mrs. Reddic STRUCK IN FACE |returned home at 1.30 a.m, they The man struck her in the| discovered that in addition to face twice with the butt end of Miss Chaplin's belongings, a his gun. He took her wrist watch, quantity of silver, six crystal approximately $450 from her| glasses and four rings were miss- and two dark, green alli- ing suitcases before tying her| (Oshawa Police Department |organized labor, is to meet here Tucsday, followed by a three-day |executive council, inner cabinet [of the CLC. There were reports that both sides -- including the powerful United States wing of the Interna- tional Brotherhood of Teamsters headed by James Hoffa -- were trying to mend the breach, which would toss a large group of work- ers outside the Congress. Ore labo: observer said some CLC officers would "dearly love" to keep the Teamsters in the Con- gress. However, any move that hinted of a backdown on the CLC's part would likely bring protests from Frank H. Hall of Montreal, a CLC| vice-president and head of the Brotherhood of Railway Clerks which brought the raiding charges against the Teamsters in he first place. how much the killer got. They | were searching for the murder| weapon, A shotgun Carberry twice used | to drive away trespassers was! |found upstairs on his bed. The| |dog, a German shepherd, was 50 yards away nursing her pups in |an outbuilding. The body was dis- covered by Joseph McFaul, a neighbor who had called to drive |Carberry to church. Rhee Flight Questioned By Koreans HONOLULU (AP) Tight- lipped Syngman Rhee stayed in seclusion today while South Kor- ean officials castigated the de- deposed leader for leaving his homeland. | The former president and his wite moved into the beach home of Wilbur Choy, a close friend and prominent Honolulu archi- tect. They declined all requests for interviews. The Rhees arrived from Seoul Sunday after a sudden and se- cretive departure. In the South Korean capital, the National A sum- ey President Hugh heng ain Rhee was Miowed to leave. : former national - man declared Rhee ----T aped to € |avoid criticism "for his misrule Hit-Run Car DISASTER TALES Kills Two Old Ceremonies {has notified 'the Toronto, Whitby| Pedestrians In Quake Areas Miss Chaplin, her faceland Ajax police departments and CORNWALL Tw i from the blows, and the|the Whitby detachment of the Were run down and ki 3 % two boys were forced into alOPP, car Sunday night as they walk TORONTO (CP)--A spokesman the International Brotherhood said today "nothing has changed" in the union's dis- pute with the Canadian Labor Congress. The union was to be tossed out of the CLC automatically Satur- day unless it gave its word to obey the CLC constitutional rule against raiding fons. 'eamsters were SANTIAGO, Chile (Reuters) -- The region is known as 'the Summoned by tom-toms echoing Switzerland of South America" through earthquake-rocked val- ; k ..RUMORS OF WEALTH leys, Andean Indians clad in because of its lakes and ous Carerty, Whose. vis. it. weris white tunics marched grimly tains. Now some mountains have ov il 5 hospital, lived alone around an albino cow. [disappeared a> op ers have for the last three years. Reports emerged. £ oIy : spread that he kept large sums {scene. ' tian ; ney were seeking to propitiate A | { Killed were William Upper and Be hd ne Rabi Rivers have changed eourses. lof money hidden in the musty [Allan Tyo, both 30 and from gc "owe of the chain of deadly| Some lakes have been raised, |; co ANKARA, Turkey (AP) -- Na-| himself through a closed glass the wrong side of the road and| co ° emerging now as Chile) lantastic speed. Waves more than chow their faces at a window. mik Gedik, generally known 8s| window to a paved eolirtyard [hit them from behind. Tyo was surveys the damage. |20 feet high rolled inland at the "evil genius' ousted hurled 40 feet. The 137,000 members of the|places for more than a mile ------ [along a road near the hamlet of Glen. Walter, four miles east of Tough Minist | Cornwall. natural disasters which have hit [others have sunk. Whole towns| Noionio cid they doubted he Police said the men were walk-| Chile, |and villages have been erased. |. ui" pave 1 his door fo ing west facing oncoming traffic my. yy 4iane' story is one of the| Along the coast the sea rushed|sirangers after dark, He would behind ) came| Police said parts of the car caifquenches tribes were called fevellisg hamlets and fishing vil. here said Were left at the scene, includingito the ceremonies honoring ages. Fs 'of Men: {0 rear-view mirror and pieces of |Hpeng Chao~ the god of justice NEED NEW CHARTS here. The vehicle sped from the when the car rounded a curve on many eyewitness accounts of dis- Out and then slammed back athave made night callers first deres, detained in the first wave| chrome. and retribution, by three days of Ships captaing. sail between British Debate arrests after the army coup| New York state police were | tom-tom signals. sof 3 len Friday, had been released. a nervous breakdown." c crowd of 1,000 from his office bridge is a border - crossing | Andes by the earthquakes. the national police brutal campaign to re demonstrators in strong-arm rule, | Y ARMY CADET the war college re- got up from his cot midnight, of an army cadet who was guarding him, and threw Death Rate High In U.S. Traffic (AP)--The United States Memorial Day weekend moved into #s most dangerous) hours today--the time when mil- Hons of motorists will take to the roads for the tiresome trip home The death rate this holiday was | § moving at a faster rate than dur- ing the same three-day holiday in| & 1958 when 371 persons died in traffic accidents and a record was| set. Statistics showed more than | four persons were dying every hour this holiday. At 8 am. EDT| today the traffic death toll had reached 248. i The national Safety Council has| estimated that this holiday pe- riod would result in 375 deaths in traffic accidents. Lonely Senator Seeks Indians WOOD MOUNTAIN, Sask. (CP) tor Gladstone said. ~Senator Many Guns met Hard-/some in Ottawa alone to-Shoot-At Sunday. No blood was WANTS ACT CHANGED spilled. They got together at an elec-|Of Chief Sitting Bull, who brought sary." tion rally, meeting on a Progres-|the Sioux to!from the United States in 1876, present their views on the en-|He said his people franchisement of Saskatchewan's|!o vote" only after the Indian Act|Notukeu is sive Conservative platform Indians. Nore 4 | treaty rights are not affected by Senator Many Guns is James the exercise of the franchise, Gladstone of Cardstone, Alta. first man of Indian descent ap- pointed to the Senate, Hard-to-|" Shoot-At is John Okute-Sica of |i Wood Mountain, a community|® near the Saskatchewan-Montana border. Their grandfathers stole th horses from each other 85 years fe € ago. "I'm looking forward to day the Indians elect a few i A "oa vote in the June 8 Saskatchewan mem to Parliament," Sena- general election, he said. It will/the last CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3.2211 lye ri st I |return. Thank you for your sup-| early May against POT." diverted | # | daughter-in-law of President the laws will be |have a chance to vote in the and Social Credit three. province, Saskatchewan to urge Indians to of cast ballots, |the franchise.' Puerto Monit and Ancud, in Chiloes Island where 500 persons were engulfed in the first tidal wave, say maritime charts will aiding in the investigation in the, The ceremonies pak place at provisional ier, .|evert an American vehicle was|the foot of Villarrica vol cano, one| ae Gunsel tol 5 cheers involved. The Cornwall-Massenalof the two wrenched up in the of the past 12 years." at point. TOPOGRAPHY CHANGED | The map of southern Chile has been altered by the week of Flood Toll quakes, tidal waves and erup- {tions which killed an estimated | 6,000 persons. 166 Dead An area of some 40,000 square 90 Missi {have to be redrawn. miles has sunk, altering the geo- MANILA (AP)--The toll from Pattern Of Oil Hunt Indefinit graphy of the region between un nn e 111 e |Chillan, 188 miles from here, and {weekend floods reached 166 dead land 90 missing today as the wat-| | eit, oy OTTAWA (CP)--A day of de-| The applications already filed the uninhabited, glatiericovered cision that could set the pattern give the holders a priority until | ' i: for oil development in the Arctic|June 24 on permits in their area. islands is about a month away. If they don't pick up ther per- At this time, however, federal |Mits, other companies can apply |ers receded from Manila's metro- politcan area, uncovering bodies in mud and silt. | Navy frogmen explored still {swollen streams in search of vic- |officials say they are still in the [for the permits until July 1. It time of the torrents of water Sat- : "We a vw demands that Rhee be dark moned home immediately and the Hugh government resign. TO RETURN, EVENTUALLY Rhee' in a brief airport inter- view said he would go back, but gave no dates. the 10th day of battered South DEAD Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt, Jr., Theodore Roosevelt, died at her home in Oyster Bay, N.V., t hel The Hapdong news agency said bed- (1,500 university students demon- strated in Taegu, South Korea's third largest city, to back their sum- LONDON (Reuters) -- Prime| Minister Macmillan said today Soviet Premier Khrushchev made '""a very high claim" in | denying Russia engaged in es- | pionage. Macmillan was opening a de- bate in the House of Commons on the abortive summit confer- ence in Paris. He said there was little value in speculating about Khrush- chev's action at the conference. "Some say Mr. Khrushchey was influenced by China, others that it was a matter of personal pique or anger." he said. "Some say it was a matter of Soviet internal power and it is dlternatively argued that the U-2 |was the sole cause of the break- down." SERIOUS INCIDENT Macmillan said that whatever may have been the state of the Soviet knowledge or suspicion about the U.S. U2 spy plane flights over Russia before one was forced down May 1, he could understand that the incident it- self was bound to be regarded seriously by the Soviet authori- ties. However, Russia could have played down the U-2 incident if it had wanted to Macmillan said that he had Summit Fiasco ted at the meet. ing that nearly all intelligence "or it you like to call it espion. age," was in a sense an infringe- ment or national sovereignty. Yet Khrushchev claimed 'his hands were clean and his heart was pure" in regard to spying. "I must honestly say this is a very high claim for the head of any great power to make today about the intelligence which im the unhappy state of the modern world is regarded as necessary to preserve national safety." MATTER OF TACTICS It had been argued that Presi. dent Eisenhower might have made his declaration that the spy flights would be discontinued a few days earlier. He thought that a matter more of tactics than of substance. "However, all this examination of the causes of failure, the at- tempt to peer into motives, seems to me rather idle. The question was: "Where do we go from here?" "Above all, we must not let our basic policy become influ- enced by day-to-day turns and twists in the battle of words. "We must follow a consistent path and not lurch desperately from side to side, following now one policy and now another." last night of natural causess She was 70. 1s At Ottawa "I'm lone-|gave Senator-Many-Guns, on be- {half of the Wood Mountain Sioux |Indians, a war club "to use in the Mr Okute-Sicz is a descendant |big council at Ottawa, if neces- Indians to Canadal changed to guarantee that uency. About 3,000 persons invaded| the pinic grounds near here for "We Canadian Indians are not/the affair. et ready for the franchise, not Martin Pederson, provine ntil changes are made in the|Progressive Conservative lead the first time Indians willlof the The erowd arrived at the pienic tourin g|grounds in 850 cars. Six quarters | beef were devoured long be- said "a great many|fore many had a chance to get ung Indian men welcome thelinto the lineup. A hundred pounds ght to vote. When others under-|of Leans were eaten and it, they will also welcome| About 12,000 Indians in Sask- atcheyan are reported eligible to] After hard-to-8hoot-At spoke he|vote. i Senator 'Gladstone, Emil Mazey, secretary-4reas- Taitao Peninsula, the south 0 S T th D ize of Won't be until around mid-july| Py en ay a ® Se Iwaie gmighesd 10) the government will ve OSLO, Norway (AP)--Defence plore the petroleum wealth of the full picture of the extent of oil Minister Nils Handal said today Of Horror === exe ms 1a Lend 3 lane tog For RTT ; Companies with priority ap- ¢iS G. Powers, the Uni ates Applications have poe filed | plications are expected to wait|Pilot now held by the Russians " with the government Oa ooo | until the last minute before com-|0n a charge of spying, visited a urday which followed heavy| For hile tion permits soe a "the Mitting themselves on an explor-| Norwegian airfield with an Amer- southwest monsoon rains pulled Twi od Ry un. (ation permit. For ome thing, a(ican air force team in 1958. |into the capital area by Pacific SAN' ' oi : [Arctic nope ago a € UD-|gizeable deposit is required when| As far as the Norwegian gov- [storm Lucille, SANTIAGO, Chile (AP)--New|dersea polar Bills i the permit is taken out. ernment knows, the high-flying Mass graves were dug in squat: earth tremors during 'the week- But one senior official here Companies that do decide to|American jet returned to its base ter areas along river beds where!" Davi arer Concepeion, sireedy said "it's anyone's guess as take the jump have been warned without violating the air space of [the floods swept away hundreds one of . HaWE victims of ti e how many permits actually of two major requirements: a any country, Handal told parlia- |of flimsy shacks. Most of the dead Quakes Which ave devastated be taken oR. co ____ [healthy bankroll and a carefully- ment. He was replying to ques- [weze shl/dnen oF vid people wap. "Today Vig [omen Affairs Minister Al nL nian ig ed |ped in the shacks and shanties. : Re i A E 5 {Others were electrocuted by Boros, for : the Charge Payoft |vin Hamilton some time ago de-|that Power was heading for the wires ripped loose by the Mon- eTican Sou Y. wh scribed exploration risks > the base at Bodo, in northern Nor- |soon's wind and rain, oNsanss Lie Tn panic wien - {8 as 'very great." It was way, on the May Day flight About 5,000 persons were left/more earth shoc : i Concer. To Policeman hon doubt . . . Tue of We nore across the Soviet Union that led homeless. Despite continuing rain thn Ne vals through Satur plore." in Wor €X:lto his capture. and snarled communications lines "176 Was 0 'epORtl 4 ORONTO. (CP). A former i ; ; TT which hampered co - ordination, Of new casualties, but the ity TO te provincial police a snore Seteiled picue 3 : relief operations were in full already was mourning more than, ti gambling squad = was ar Wane in Sure for a 0k © d -(AP Wirephoto) swing today. i, pers ns Kine. last wea | rested and charged Saturday with {eek by heen os ian FER Rol A he modern city ,000, | £01 oron - 4 |completely rebuilt after a deva- Soling payoffs fom oy gan [9% ie Detence Desesren Board's {stating earthquake in 1939, 4d i | e nn om Cn, Tet 3. Wis, 2,3 Enis. ! 8 | Ernesto Rodriquez, editor of |g. "civ years, was arrested in| the Concepcion newspaper Lapis Belleville, Ont. apartment | ou a Patria, said the weekend trem-| or charged with obtaining ors "set the builfings in the money for himself with the intent | downtown area sawaying back|iy interfere with the administra-| a ana forth, and many of the tion of justice. | ussian homes that withstood the earlier Wright had been transferred to shocks just crumbled. f Belleville a few months ago. He » Tear of being trapped in fall-\wag hrought back to Toronto by| ing buildings sent most residents| police, | ms 1& rushing onto the streets and| The charges date back for four| Toe rail i barben as P2TkS, whére they huddled in months but it is understood the| MOSCOW (AP)--Defence Min- e rally and barbecue was |ierror, investigation is continuing. |ister Rodion Malinovsky declared : staged in support of Boyd Ander- today he has ordered Soviet "will be free|son, Conservative candidate in [ y ' i | Willow Bunch onstit rocket forces to strike at the iid T takeoff base of any foreign plane: LA E NEWS FLASHES yiclatng Set aie Te Delt |marshal told a conference of| | Communist labor "shock work. . ers" that this was a "lawful de-| ial Couple Trussed By Robbers cision" because the foreign plane] | described the rally as the 'big. MONTREAL (CP) -- Two men broke into the home of a "might be armed with a hydro. |; Senator Gladstone said the fed-|gest of the current election cam-| Notre Dame de Grace district couple today, trussed them to |gen bomb. ra! government plans changes in|paign."" He predicted the Con-| their bed, threatened them with a knife and iron bar, and | Premier Khrushchev and other |: ie indian Act before the next|servatives wili unseat the CCF| robbed them of about $1,000. The intruders looted a trunk [top leaders heard Malinovsky de- :deral election. and form the next Saskatchewan|. In Which Mr. Martel kept the receipts from'his pastry shop. [liver his hard - hitting speech, Indian rights under present government, but it "will not be' mes « a. . {which he described = not a not be affected if they|a majority government." Third Crash Victim Dies [eat Dut. vaingh Ser . ) ROT A y R . . i: . | counires. § ODVH y aim There Tere Ie oouseTvalives - KINGSTON (CP) -- Kieran Norris, 22-year old Brookside |at allies of the United States in 55 'seats. "the Liberzls 14 truck driver, died in hospital today, the third victim of a | which are based such American AH it ha gg) collision near here Victoria Day. Martin A. Dillon, |aircraft as the U-2 spy plane shot 53, and his wife Nora, 56, of Ottawa were killed instantly in % hy vod hy the accident. Son, Seep in Soviet territory - qe The Russian defence minister is Relief Planes Reach Peru said Soviet defensive rockets| "c' UAWA, is shown at left, TRENTON, Ont. (CP) -- Two RCAF North Star aircraft (could hit a target higher than| With George Burt, Canadian carrying Red Cross relief supplies to earthquake-stricken Chile |any airplane could fly. Director of the union. They at- had reached Lima, Peru, by mid-morning today. The planes "There is no plane with such a| tended a special meeting of carried a five-ton oad of clothing, quilts, and antibiotics, worth almost $24,000. | igh ceiling as to be unreachable| Local 222, UAW, at OCVI audi- dor our rockets," he d ori Sunday aftern The weil vedic wl 2d di br abide hab rhc, wd ea ods th mis meeting was called by Walter Reuther, president of the union, "to state the position of the in- ternational union on the matter of the recent investigations." Mr. Mazey was chai of the committee that in- UAW OFFICIALS AT OSHAWA MEETING vestigations into charges that some UAW officials had met with Communist officials dure ing the 1955-56 General Motors strike. A report of the Sunday meeting is carried on page 9 of this paper ~Oshawa Times Photo, &