Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 27 Jul 1960, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY On a per ounce basis, undoubt- edly the highest-priced piece of apparel is the modern girls swim suit. he Oshawa Times Authorized as Second Class Mail WEATHER REPORT Sunny Thursday with little change in temperature and light winds Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy VOL. 89--NO. 173 OSHAWA, WEDNESDAY, JULY 27, 1960 Post Office Department, A Ottawa THIRTY-TWO PAGES " pp " FACING TOUGH 16 Dreary Hours Then Sparks Fly : |General Roberts of Ontario says DIVORCE CASE LAWYER CHARGE Move Follows | Photo Incident OTTAWA (CP) vorce action two years ago. He Attorney- also acted for the plaintiffs, the MRS. HALLAS AND BOBBY OTTAWA (CP)--Sixteen hours pension payable to everyone at? of parliamentary tedium finally age 70, and the Liberals advo- snapped in the Commons Tues-|cated pension increases in co- day night as manoeuvring by operation with the provinces plus both sides produced cries of op- a national contributory pension 4 position closure and government scheme. 1# | filibuster. Compiicating the situation was} f This novel, paradoxical twist to|the House rule requiging the gov- # the usual pattern of Commons ernment to make supply motions |# disputes came in the late stages only on Mondays and Tuesdays. ot the night sitting, when the The rest of the week, it can bring } House appeared almost ready to|departmental estimates before wind up two days of dull, com-|the House withou{ such a motion. mittee-stage debate on the com-|Thus, Tuesday night was the § ; plexities of the government's pro- week's last chance for a debate © posed anti combines amend-| on the pension amendment, ments, | Mr. Pickersgill - implied that {| The opposition had fired its|the government supporters were last of 19 attempted amendments debating the combines legislation | to the government bill. The goV-|tsrough the final two hours of {ernment had introduced an 11th-|the night sitting to avoid having | Foster Parents And Child Sought WINNIPEG (CP)--A Winnipeg beds and a chesterfield in the hid-| man who took his family into hid- ing place. During the interview, ing to avoid surrendering a five- they frequently glanced out a year-old ward to the Children's/ window to watch passing cars. | Aid Soclety says he is prepared 'The police are trying to trace ¢o remain hidden "as long as theghe taxi that brought Bobby out," food holds out." Mr. Hallas said. Ken Hallas made the statement] The Children's in an interview Tuesday night asked police Tuesda with a Tribune reporter at the cate the family. family's hiding place in Winnipeg. The society said that under Mr. and Mrs. Hallas, a Prot-|provincial law it had no choice Aid Society | y to help lo-| 'WILL IT WORK \WITH PEOPLE? TOKYO (AP) -- Japanese wrestlers have been out-star- ing lions to improve their "fighting spirit" for the Olympic games starting in Rome next month. Coach Yushu Kitano led team members to Tokyo's Ueno Zoo today for -a stare- them-down session. The lions looked across the wire screen at the glaring athletes and disappeared into their den. The venture was termed a success. "KILLER OF EIGHT? Emmett Spencer of Sandy Hook, Ky., tells Miami detec- tives the vague tale of killing death of a Navy yard employe in Key West. He led the police to the body of Leon C. Ham- mell in a wooded section of Big Coppitt Key. (AP Wirephoto) at least eight persons. Spencer is being held on a charge of | TIGER, TIGER Beasts Escape estant couple, have cared for the hut to take the boy from his tem-| young ward, Bobby, since he was| porary home and place him in a| Hide Months old. Because Bubiv's Roman Catholic home. mother was Roman Catholie,| pjice were asked by the socl- Manitoba law required that he be ety to help locate the family, placed with a Catholic family. [which includes the Hallas' 10- The Hallas', who have a 10-year-old son Twnmy and two in- year-old son of their own and also! fants they are carying for under are caring for two infant Chil-|an arrangement with the society. dren's Aid wards, disappeared - --- -- from their north-end home Tues- day in a surprise move shortly 20 T k C before a society official was to an als Q Premiers Argue Joint Projects OTTAWA (CP) -- Ontario and|governments to levy taxation for in basic disagree-{the money that they spend," he ment with most other provinces, said. "We in Ontario are pre- uebec are As Truck Flips MERRITT, B.C. (CP) -- Bush-|mals and smashed timbers. land bordering the quiet little| Cages holding a baby lion, two community of Merritt was hyenas and a mountain lion re- plunged into jungle-like atmos- mained intact. phere Tuesday when a circus| Three of the animals were re- truck upset in & ditch, freeing|captured within minutes. A short two tigers, two lions and - a time later Wilkinson and several leopard. circled the { hour amendment designed to pro- to yote against the mnon-confi- tect export companies from con-\dence motions and thus appear- | © § 4 spiracy convictions, The Liberals ing to vote against higher old age 71 |accepted the move. The CCF | pensions. / |& "made its objections clear. - "*|' Then government backbench- | u ers, who had spoken little in the | early going, took the floor and| West Indies read extensively from evidence |presented when the bill was be- fore the House banking commit- tee for a month, Two of them Rebel Plot spoke before J. W. Pickersgill| (L--Bonavista - Twillingate) de-| U d manded: "Are we going to have this | ncovere | Parliament turned into a farce?" NEW YORK (AP)--An anti lcouLD HAVE WOUND UP {white Negro Nationalist group | Backgrounding his interjection that plotted rebellion in the West was the fact that, under House|Indies with money from hold-ups wound up the combines bill in Io New York has been uncov- rules, the government could have! #76 here. committee and used the fast two| District Attorney Frank §. Ho- hours of the night sitting to call|82n disclosed the group's exist. a supply motion standing over| ence Tuesday with the arrest of |from last Tuesday {a city patrolman described as 4 : |the undercover security chief of { In non-confidence amendments the terrorist cult. [to pat motion, the So had "yy ean said the self - labelled joa ed or-a §75-a-mon y oa age First Africa Corps, an arm of a militant, marijuana smoking sect in Jamaica called the Ras- tafarians, had conducted its con- spiracies for two years. Their goal was overthrow of British rule in Jamaica and the| return of Negroes to Africa. At least six holdups were staged here, Hogan said, to get money to smuggle arms and ammunition to the Jamaican in-| surrectionists. | other circus hands : |a charge of obstructing, pervert-|attorney-general said, in the di- : |ing and defeating the course of |vorces of Donell versus Donell, : | justice will be laid against a Tor-|Lumley versus Lumley and Pas- ; |onto lawyer today in connection|zat versus Paszat, all from the | with three Ontario divorce cases. Toronto aiea, ? Mr. Roberts, attending the| Decree absolute has been Dominion-provincial fiscal con-|granted in two of the cases but : |fence here, said Tuesday night|Mr. Roberts said the case of : [the charge will be laid against|Donell versus Donell will be in. Theodore Nasimok. He is the law-| vestigated because only a decree |yer who handled the divorce case |uisi was granted. |of 29 - year - old Toronto school | The Ontario divorce investiga. |teacher, Mrs. Eleanor Cass. |tion began after the CBC-TV pro- | The announcement came after | gram Close-Up in May featured | [the attorney-general held a meet- Toronto model Joan Johnson, |ing here with Elliot Pepper, | claiming she was paid divorce |Queen's proctor for divorce cases, |co-respondent in 120 cases for |and Inspector Herbert Purdy of $100 a case. Later she said her : [the provincial police criminal in-|story was a hoax. [tice is guilty of an indictable of- murder in connection with the | | | vestigation bureau. | Both men drove to Ottawa Tuesday night at the request of | |Mr. Roberts to report the latest {information in Ontario's divorce {investigation UNDER CRIMINAL CODE The charge will be laid under {Section 119 of the Criminal Code| {which states that anyone who {willfully attempts to obstruct, pre- | {vent or defeat the course of jus- |fence and liable to two years' im- prisonment, . Mr. Roberts said the lawyer represented Mrs, Cass in a di- SOUGHT PICTURES The attorney-general's depart. ment dug through divorce files at Toronto's Osgoode Hall in search of a picture of the model in con- nection with diverce actions. They came up with the photo- graph of Miss Cass attached to three divorce records. The de- partment later said the photo- graphs were used without her knowledge. Mr. Pepper said Mrs. Cass told him that a lawyer who repre. sented her in her own divorce ac- tion two years ago had asked for |her photograph. BRUSSELS (CP)--Mutual irsl- tation showed up at a meeting of Dag Hammarskjold with Bel- gian authorities today on the Congo. Belgians were angry because the United Nations secretary-gen- eral, who had three days of talks with Congo Premier Patrice Lu-| mumba in New York, chose to allot them only a few hours. "Mr. Hammarskjold seems to want to avoid hearing our prob- lems," a Belgian official said. "He was due to leave tonight. Now he takes off at 3 this after- noon, though he arrived here one | hour late." pick up the boy. Mr. Hallas, a city parks board employee, said in the Interview: "Wa are more than ever deter- mined to keep Bobby. "I am prepared to stay in hid- ing as long as the food holds out and I am on holidays." He said he is on vacation until on whether joint Dominion-prov-/pared to assume responsibility] The policeman, 29-year-old Nel incial cost - sharing projects| for our people for raising the'J. Agard, is accused of taking |should be continued--and if so, money that we spend. We have past a 8 ioe holdup Jest) 7 DN (0 ., |for how long. |at no time asked the federal|Marc . Six other men also [ SUDBURY (CP)---Twenty rail Eight of B. provinces are in|government to vassume the re-|have been way tank cars containing oil andj, oo" of continuing and exteud- sponsibility of levying taxes and the fund-raising holdups gas were derailed and burst into} nts| paying money over to us." |started last January. Upset, Blaze | | lopard was cut | with rifles as it tried to aftack|a good kick James Wilkinson, 26-year-old cir-| turned around." The two tigers and a lon were rounded up pind. progded "LEOPARD" SPRINGS back into cagess with sharpenedi «The jeopard sprang at me and|in the Congo, Hammarskijold had arrested for roles in|Poles. The other two big cats had |; fe 20, Har jo which|to be shot. [| A |leopard, Beauty, in a gully. Stopping over on his way to a working visit of four or five days Dag And Belgians Both Irritated That, by the radio account of his interpretation, includes both mineral - rich Katanga province, which hag proclaimed itself inde- pendent, "and the two military bases which Belgium continues to occupy under a treaty signed shorfly before she gave the [over colony independence June The secretary-general himself seemed put out at the govern. ment's assignment of a guard of honor of Belgian troops to salute him on his arrival. His smile faded and he looked annoyed as he stepped from the Belgian - airliner that bore him from New York, Il backwards to avoid him,"|talk- with Foreign Minister | | Wilkinson said. "'He was about a|Pierre Wigny, Premier Gaston down foot from me Ww e when I gave him Eyskens and other members of in the mouth and he|the cabinet, and finally King Leo-| Premiers Holdin Closed Session g ada Highway, hospital insurance, line. 1 ] municipal winter works and Lands and forests department hters, aiding in checking] Other programs. decided to let the fire] But Ontario and Quebec are f out before they begin|opposed to continuing them indef- the track. There were|initely. no injuries. Premier Frost, who wants a Four engines . were derailed. 50 - 50 split of the income, cor- One landed on its side while the poration and inheritance tax others stayed upright. fields with the federal govern- Cause of the derailment has/ ment, told the Dominion - prov- not yet been determined. incial fiscal conference at its out- adoption of Bobby. Passenger and freight trains set that he is prepared to step The couple slept in sleeping have been detoured through|out of the joint projects. bags while the children occupied' North Bay. "The soundest principle is for Aug. 3, "WON'T GIVE UP" If Mrs. Hallas, pale but appar- ently calm, said she "would not be surprised if we still lose plear Bobby. But we won't give up until the bitter end." Mr. Hallas said he has a secret rendezvous planned today with lawyer Sydney Schwartz when he will sign a formal application for Strong Parley Place For Quebec Premier OTTAWA (CP) -- Jean Lesage, |ing it possible for Canada to|port, cautious but real, from po- in office as Quebec premier only amend its own constitution with- litical adversaries as well, 22 days, has jostled his way up out the necessity of submitting] Ontario's Premier Lesiie to a strong and dominant posi- changes to the British Parlia-- Frost, a Conservative, went tion around the Dominion - prov-/ment. along with Mr. Lesage on his Sictal, Conference table talks en. 2 Examining the possibility of three points. f oh iy "embodying a declaration of hu-| Premier T. C. Douglas, CCF tered the final phase today Mr.|man rights in the Canadian con- premier of Saskatchewan, re- "|is anxious to get into some of| cus worker from Texas who said | Two circus workers then fired the animal "was more scared at the animal, killing it. than I was." The lioness, with a bullet hole RCMP and district hunters shot| through her right front paw and Sheilah, an old lioness, after she | buckshot pellets in her face and roamed the bush for six hours./ nose from being shot while try- Sheilah had given the circus 22 ing to attack one of the escaped flames early today about 50 miles|in8 such sharing arrangemer t south of here on the CNR'S main 88 now exist for the Trans-Can- AGREES IN PRINCIPLE Premier Lesage of Quebec Rirliner's Landing agreed with Mr. Frost in princi-| ple, saying: | "Experience shows that often, these joint programs do not per-| mit the provinces to use their |own revenues as they wish, nor| to take local conditions suf-| | ficiently into account. | "These programs now are suf-| 'Mi ] | 1racie ficiently well established on the| |provincial scale to enable the MONTREAL (CP) -- A Pan- | federal government to cease tak-|American World Airways Boeing ling part in them and to vacate 707 jet airliner on a transatlantic these fields." (flight from London to Chicago |= But since the joint projects) made what was termed a "mirac-| Three men were injured in the] ar¢ operating, and there is no ulous' landing Tuesday night on truck accident, which occurred immediate sign of throwing the an airstrip owned by Canadairion a six-mile-long 'hill mals in the L.G. Kelly and Mil-| and district hunters who killed it ler Brothers Circus, which moved with rifle shots. into. Merritt, 150 miles northeast| Circus Manager Glen Jarmes of Vancouver, and set up its show said damage to the vehicle and while the hunt was in progress. value of 'the dead animals to- talled about $30,000. THREE HURT Jiated abou! wd where | whole burden back on the prov-|Limited at Cartierville district in driver Earl C. Nichols of Cold- inces, Mr. Lesage said, Quebec north-end Montreal. |water, Mich., said his transmis. | The giant airliner with 93 pas-| sion broke down. FE sengers aboard was scheduled to] The tractor-trailer overturned land at Montreal airport in sub- in a mass of broken cages, ani- i Highway. urban Dorval. | Ra 4 "The citizens of Quebec con-| Captain Fred Ralph brought the tribute through their federal | plane down on a strip 3,000 feet| taxes to the financing of many shorter than the one at Dorval. | joint programs applied in the|The landing was made without| rest of the country without de-|incident and no injuries were re- riving any benefit," he said. |ported. them, particularly hospital insur ance and the Trans Canada Ike Warns Patience Ia me bo stitution and applying to both ceived the Quebec proposals Canada's 10 provincial premiers federal and provincial jurisdic-| warmly. + : to have scored gains on some of| or. ao | Social Credit Premier W. A. f! his proposals 3. Studying the possibility, at a Bennett of Br itish Columbia The gains are not at the dol Quebec called interprovincial stepped along with the proposals lars - and - cents level--some-| conference, of seiting up a per-fon constitution amendment and thing that may not be resolved manent council of the provinces the declaration of rights. He took until later conferences are held and thrashing out issues com-|a guarded attitude on the inter- --but in a sensitive area of Can. Mon to all the provincial admin- provincial conference suggestion adian life -- national autonomy istrations -- with federal repre- saying he would go only if fed- and unity. sentatives attending as obser-| eral representatives attended. GETTING TOGETHER suggestions STRADDLES GULF ' And these gain » not in the focussed attention firmly on Que-| And on the more immediate rea'm of things achieved or com- bec and its new liberal premier |a@nd practical . question of tax- lete in getting Canadians) , nonce tree sharing, Premier Lesage strad- Petey ty of the Arion ry ACROSS FENCES dled a gulf that until now seemed gether for three things ; The position Mr. Lesage took|impossible to bridge -- the gulf 1. Resuming talks doned in 1950 -- aimed at mak- CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 three racial lines bu! fences Quebec that none of the prov- as well |ince's tax rights can ever Not too surprisingly, the sup-/leased to the federal govern- port was warmest from politically, ment and the stand of most other friendly quarters. Premier Jos-|Canadian provinces, exactly op- |eph Smallwood of Newfoundland, posite. la diehard grit, s he had| Mr. Lesage avoided all waited 12 years to hear a speech that would offend other prov- of the importance Mr. Lesage inces. Yet his government will | made at the conference Monday. remain outside federal - provin- | Liberal Premier Louis Robichaud cial tax agreements, he told a {of New Brunswick sounded a|press conference. His govern similar note ment will continue levying direct But Mr. Lesage received sup'taxes. political talk aban- seemed to cut across not only between the traditional stand of! be | Wears Thin | CHICAGO (CP) President Eisenhower has hinted at the pos- sibility of shifting the cold war| to Russia's own doorstep by stir-| ring up new thoughts of freedom among Soviet satellite states. Mixing politics with diplomacy, the 69-year-old American leader| addressed the Republican con- vention Tuesday night and noted the Russians had boasted of shooting down the RB-47 plane in! cold blood; had wrecked the sum- mit conference and threatened the U.S. with missiles. Intimating an end of American patience with Khrushchev's tac- tics, Eisenhower indicated he will plan new moves after consulting with congressional leaders of the| Democratic and Republican par- ties and added: | 'High in our thinking about the future of the world must be the {fact that millions of people are | crushed under the heavy heel of | Communist imperialism. The con- | science of America can never be | completely . clear until the pre- cious right of freedom of choice is exiended to all people evéry- where." i | LATE NEWS FLASHES | | J Find Campsite Used By Women OTTAWA (CP) -- RCMP search parties have found one of the campsites used by two women geographers missing since early this month in the Great Bear Lake region of the Northwest. Territories. An RCMP spokesman reiterated today there is every reason to believe that Joan Goodfellow, 27, of Plaster Rock, N.B., and Anne Marie Kroeger, 36, of Montreal, were drowned, Two Armed Men Rob Mail Truck SIMCOE (CP) -- Two armed men held up a mail truck near this Brantford area town today and escaped with 16 bags of first class mail. Driver Harold Bennett of Brant- ford was tied up and dumped into the rear of the truck which was abandoned in a lonely gravel pit. Civil Service Salary Increases OTTAWA (CP) -- Salary increases ranging from $150 to $620 2 year were announced today for 12,000 trades and main- tenance class federal civil servants. The civil service com- mission said the increases will be retroactive to July 1. Pope Announces Major Reform VATICAN CITY (AP) -- Pope John, in a major liturgical reform for the Roman Catholic church, today announced that a new code of rubrics (rules for the Roman Wegviary and mass) will become effective Jan. 1, <{ | | | Flames and smoke roar from shop buildings at the Tennessee | state prison at Nashville. Guards shot three prisoners Tuesday for hampering firemen cubs, including some of the ani-| tigers, was surrounded by RCMP| old. PONE Seoms." ode of the min). OTTAWA (CP) - The Domin isters told reporters, "that the|ion-provincial fiscal conference {UN Secretary - general has fi-met in closed session at 10 a.m. {nally understood that some prob-|today, and Prime Minister Dief- {Tems can be solved better later|(enbaker said a communique |and that there are still urgent likely would be issued at the end | tasks to tackle." of the day. | The Belgian radio reported] Mr. Diefenbaker conferred for Hammarskjold had notified Brus-/20 minutes before the meeting sels he interprets the Security with Finance Minister Fleming | Council decision for intervention and other members of the fed- in the Congo as meaning UN eral cabinet attending the confer- |troops must occupy the whole ence. They left the meeting smil- {Congo territory. ing. PRISON FIRE ROARS but none was hurt seriously. | were gutted by flames and ane Warden Lynn Bomar said fire Stheér was damaged. Gov. Bue 4 . : ord Ellinton ordered a gets was set deliberately by friends tough policy for prisoners fol- of maximum security prisoners | ; lowing the fire. on hunger strike, Two shops (AP Wirephoto) | | { 3 § i

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