ne WEATHER REPORT Cloudy and cooler with occa» sional thundershowers on Satur day, with winds northerly 15 THOUGHT FOR TODAY "There is no such thing as brain food," says a dietician. And if there were, there are quite a few people who couldn't benefit by eating it. The Oshawa Sime Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawo TWENTY-FOUR PAGES Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, FRIDAY, JULY 29, 1960 3 Youngsters Gain Freedom Mother Kept Children Indoors For 11 Years TECUMSEH (CP)--Three chil-(1950 with her six children, all by dren kept indoors by their mother | Mrs, Leach's first marriage te for 11 years entered into a|David Dickerson in Detroit. The strange new world today. couple divorced and Mrs. Leach Gordon Dickerson, 15, stepped|remarried. into daylight Thursday while his| She said the family had diffi- mother, Mrs, Shirley Leach, was| culty in finding a home, but found a flat in which three children VOL. 89--NO. 175 Car Ruled Private By Judge Judge Arthur Willmott has de-|lane, park or place or public re- cided, in a judgment which will|sort or amusement. have a sweeping influence on the| Judge Willmott toucjuden mat an intoxicated man riding a bi enforcement of the Liquor Con-|ecycle is certainly, in a "public trol Act throughout the province, place," but an intoxicated man that a private motor car is not a riding in a private motor car is public place under the meaning not intoxicated in a "public of the act place," simply because the car His judgment quashed a con- is on a public highway viction of unlawfully being intoxi-|__ cated in a public. place against ECOND APPEAL George W. Cameron, RR 1, Osh-| This is the second awa. Cameron was convicted by lowed in recent weeks dealing Not v with the meaning of a 'public BOOZE BOYCOTT ! Stout's Better i If Law Broken DUBLIN (AP) Two hun- dred angry Irishmen, stout drinkers all, today started | tomers. A pint of stout went up from a shilling sixpence (20 cents) to a shilling seven pence appeal al- ' agistrate F, 8, Ebbs January 4 ' Magistrate | 793. J AIUATY place" under the meaning of the| fighting for a lost cause. (21 cents). at a dentist's office. The boy went 10. and was fined $10 and costs. : Cameron arrested in the ig Contr) Act ck | OW hever room not a public place because not open to all of the public. Crown Attorney Alex Hall, con tacted this morning, said tha an appeal is being considered anc he had been in contact wit Attorney - General's office with about the matter that man| He sald it was the origina However he also|plan to appeal the case all the agreed with John M. Greer, soli- way to the Ontario Supreme citor Cameron, that a man Court. couldn't be convicted of being in-| Police officers, including Osh toxicated while in ajawa Chief Herbert Flintoff, saic private motor vehicle, 1e judgment wonld make The judge ccepted Mr. more difficult to enforce Greer's contention that a private-| Liquor Control act. They ly owned automobile was not a a drunk could duck public place under the act which parked car when he saw a police indicates tha 'public place' man coming and he safe means any place, building or con- arrest venience to which the public ha Judge Willmott - ordered or is permiited to have, acce $10 fire and $5.50 and includes any highway, street,|costs be returned to Cameron. 'Movie' Robbery 2nd Mail Truck (CP) took a of Sharon, building inspector for Gwillimbury Township. Cur time gangster movies grabbed t became suspicious when he $43,000 in bank deposits Thursday saw the mail truck in the grave in Ontario's second mail van pit as he drove past. . | holdup in two days. .|GOING TO TORONTO The robbers, three of four of Th h e stolen $43,000 them, missed another $42,000 in was : t by O in Mich: Michalowsky 1959 and charged with cated under Section Ontario Liquor The was 30 Constable Dec. 19 being intox 79 (2) of the Control Act heard March PRIVATE VEHICLE Judge Willmott Magistrate E was Intoxicated ed that a el appeal that the reed bs the for a senger said that into tha , | the cour QUEENSVILLE, Ont, Bandits who apparently few tips from one of those old-|Eas was a mail truck onthe Keswick road 1% miles north of this Lake Sim: coe area community, The East Gwillimbury Town- ship chief, John Hutchinson, de- scribed it as robbery right out of the movies Provincial police believe there x connection between Thurs- a similar rob sof 3 STOLEN SIGN Brantford. she he gang used a stolen high- 'pays depart sign to force the mail van driver, Clifford Mor- 35 nearby Virginia, to slow down. As he did so, a stolen yJack sedan parked on the road moved up and forced him to stop. Two men leaped out from roadside ditches. "A man came to the door of the truck and said, 'Don't try to be a hero," Morton said After taping his eyes the gang, me of them armed pulled the van into nearby gravel pit. and slashed the They fled, apparently mail bag her tying up from the Canadian Commerce at nearby hind was Bank of Keswick. The truck and the mail left in it have been impounded by the police, In Simcoe, near Brantford Constable Harold Wheeler the OPP know who pulled mail van holdup Wednesday "We just need to gather enougl evidence to make the arrests,' ne said, and added, "it wasn' wi unexpected." constable said the 'a smart bunch of birds," a monitor listening in on the po |lice radio. Only the day before |{the robbery police made a rou {tine check on two of the gang ir their car. sald and A the holdup Wednesday near of ue gang € CHECKS ALL TRUCKS Constable Wheeler that the OPP checks all mai trucks mn the area, but did not bave the hijacked one on their explainec at least ¢ a gun, a S in anot car, after a different base Morton, Police arrived about 15 minute being called on his The amount stolen in the rob- y has not yet been mined. Postal authorities re- ported the missing mail included all old-age pension cheques for nine Western. Ontario communi- |t The pensioners have been promised new cheques as soon as they report their missing. Communities involved are Wil- {sonville, Waterford, Wingham, North Lasalet, Delhi, Courtland, Tillsonburg Brownsville and Springfield bery later aiter Radio Loss Foils U.S. Space Test CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AF The United Stat launc ' unmanned Project Mercury sule est today lost radio contac ith the At booster 65 seconds after liftoff The Alas was to ro the one ton capsule 110 miles into space and 1,500 downrange to check on ability to withstand a plunge back through the earth's atmos- phere An official said that even if the Atlas failed during powered flight, there is a chance the capsule may have fallen somew! in the ocean between the e and the intended landing area 300 miles north of the West Indies The flight was to subject capsule to the worst re-e ditio an asronaut mig counte if space cabin is suddenly tisoned because of booster rocket launching. opening send a les cap bu for a severe { OTTAWA (CP)--Canada's new est provincial premiers -- botl ing Thursday with federal gov ernment officials. Each emerged from the pri vate talks with a sense of accom plishment, Premier Lesage of Quebec got: 1. Agreement in principle on a ederal - provincial deal to bring Quebec into the Trans - Highway construction program. 2. An idea of federal views on Quebec's plan to launch a hospi tal insurance plan by next Jan ( the con- en fl a uary to the Premier Robichaud ¢| Brunswick got: 1. A federal promise to start immediately on a study of the f bil of the Chignecto can » waterway that would y of Fundy and North umberland Strait Agreement to let Brunswick help make the ey {--and to help pay for it as well Agreement on the Chignecto survey was reached at a 30-min ute meeting 1 een Mr. Robich i i Works Min Walker said that ng the survey "neither |ernment obligates itself !what it will do in future." shot man an to of New hi al New 2 CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-113: FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 Ss as to is it is in from two-way radio by William Curtis being | .. taken to Toronto from the Bank bank deposits when they waylaid or Nova Scotia in Sutton, 12 miles | north of Herc, The $42,000 leftsbe-| have list because it was operating from deter- Newest Premiers In Fast Bargains Liberals--did some fast bargain. Canada | { The boycott started in Dub- lin's Stoneybatter district, along the River Liffey. The newly organized Stoneybatter | Consumers Protection Associa- tion said all its 200 founder members will refuse to pay the extra penny. "If we do not," said Aidan Malone, the association chair- man, "we will find that an- other until we will not be able to buy it at all. "The pint is the only little relaxation we have, and we must act now. Eventually we hope to spread our member- ship across the whole of Dub- line until the boycott is com- plete." Publicans seemed little wor- ried by the boycott. "They'll give up breathing first," said Joe O'Dwyer from the other side of O'Dwyer's Bar, They want the whole of Dub- | lin to boycott the bars. The call for drastic action came after a week of tension in Dublin's booze belt. The trouble started with a surprise government decision to let the bars stay open later | at night | Everybody wanted the move | until they got it. The custom- | t i i to a neighbor's home and told about himself and his two sisters. The neighbor phoned police who took the children to hospital. Hospital officials said all three, Connie, 16. Glenda, 13, and Gor- don were alert but short in sta- ture. They said the children appeared to be well-taught. They could read and had said they watched tele- vision. Young Gordon, a fan of Milwaukee Braves of the National League, knew more about base- ball than some of his questioners at the hospital, a supervisor said. Connie, who at first told offi- cials she had been born in 1942 but later said she knew she was born in 1944, was asked whether she liked her new friends at nearby Windsor's Grace Hospital. "Very much," she replied. "But I will miss my mother." Mrs. Leach told police of mov- ing to Windsor from Detroit in ers found it knocked half the fun out of life. The stuff tasted better last week when you broke the law to drink it. The barmen threatened to | | strike unless they got more | | money for late night work. It | didn't matter tuppence that | previously they'd been only | too happy to turn down the | 'ights and pull a round for the road on a voluntary basis. | The owners decided to pay | the barmen more but to pass | | the wage rise on to the cus- | Dag Hears Cabinet | apine | - CHICAGO (CP) -- Vice-Presi-| | Of Congo |d Richard M. Nixon has| | pledged to rell back the frontiers |cLZoroLpviLe LU She of world Communist aggression ongo cabinet meels w a%|hy launching a grand offensive |Hammarskjold today to urge him 2 peng i Si misery | 1 |to speed up the evacuation of Bel- and disease if he becomes pres ; |gian troops from the whole coun-|;qan+ next November. | | { 1 y pgsioni Hi by i [iY ding secessionist Ka Yn a tough. anti-Communist Vice-Premier Antoine Gizenga|SPeech Thursday night winding presided over the session in the|UP the four-day Republican con: absence of Premier Patrice Lu.[Yention, the 47-year-old Nixon mumba, who is in the United formally accepted in what he | States lining up economic aid for called "the greatest moment of the young African republic. {my life" the Republican presi: | Katanga Premier dential nomination. [Tshombe, meanwhile, was send-| He welcomed aboard his "free Moise Great Offensive Pledge By Nixon tralize all of the administration's foreign-aid programs, such as loans and grants technical as- sistance and culteral exchanges, under the president's direct con- trol. "All these must be welded to- gether into one powerful eco- nomic and ideological striking force under the direct supervi- sion and leadership of the United States." "STRATEGY OF VICTORY" At would not be enough just to hold the line against communism ~'the only answer to a strategy of victory for the Communist [ing off a three-man delegation to|world victory" ticket as a vice- [Brussels and New York to argue presidential running mate Henry | |the case for making his mineral-| Cabot Lodge, the cheif U.S. del-| rich province independent. |egate to the United Nations and| | Tshombe has stood firm|symbol of American resistance to| |against the UN sending security [Soviet Premier Khrushchev's| Ho) GIRL ON LEFT IS 16, THE OTHER 13. | t 1 MONTREAL nese ted of forces into his domain in the|cncllenge to the free world. lower Congo, where Belgian| Lodge's name was put in nom- troops now are doing police duty. (ination quickly after the final -- Ea et Hammarskjold, UN secretary- session opened by a former general, is expected to visit Elis-| China medical missionary, rep- ° abethville, Katanga's capital, be- resentative Walter Judd of Min- . fore completing his fact-finding nesota, the keynote speaker last WO 11 : Ia V o mission to the Congo, | Tuesday night, and it stayed SAR TT here 'all alone. H HOLDOUT SWITCHED 1 nc Men Ac Children Used Lodge got 1,330 out of the 1,331 votes on the first ballot. The lone In Auto Stunt holdout was Ed Maher of San (CP) -- Two Chi-y Wong was among prominent|leaders of the recently-disclosed . - Be, gio Who abstained. arre by the RCMP in members of Montreal's Chinese|Chinese immigration racket ST. JEROME, Que, (CP) --|Wiv? dust sey I'm hob" re. En J "community who recently visited i rib > {Judge J. Albert Paquin hasiplied Maher, who then changed Montreal Thursday are to appear Ottawa to discuss the Situation A four - page pamphlet being|warned a speedway operator he|his mind and switched to Lodge. in court next Wedne sday in con- wih Immigration Minister Fair- distributed by the immigration will be held in contempt of court| Nixon speaking for 50 minutes nection wii 81 alleged raske! fo clough. Separimont > Lanagim Chinose| if he aga uses juveniles i Foi from notes, and Lodge both smuggle thousa 25e AT : ' i é ays that victims o he, man obstacles" in an auto stunt|girnce he 3 : into Canada Lawyer Marcel Goboury, ap-| racket have a responsibility to|show before the courts settle the Stressed he, theme of foreign 50 pearing for the two, made agar) : pis {2 affairs in their acceptance Bruce Wong, 44, and Henry plea for moderate bail | themselves, to their families and matter. speeches Chan, 40, were arrested at their/P'®3 t: . {to their country to co - operate Judge Paquin handed down the|' Th S. itont said th travel | agent in Chinatown,| "We knew these warrants were| with police in providing informa. |ruling at a preliminary hearing| he Vice-president said the an- near St. Lawrence Boulevard,|¢oming and we had told the tion, | of a complaint laid by, the Society SWer fo communism is "victory and arraigned later on a. total iXCMP that we would surrender| Some 10,000 copies of the pam.|for the Protection of Women and|0f freedom over tyranny, of of 13 charges just as they were issued. | phtet have been. printed 1a Chi-| Children, plenty over hunger, of health Wong charged with three| "The two accused will cer-inese for distribution. English Two children, aged 8 and 10,|0ver disease in every country of counts of perjury, three of for- tainly not run away and I am|translations were made avail-| were injured July 18 in a show the world. gery and three of uttering forged prepared to personally guarantee able here Thursday to the press.|staged by track operator Gustave| Nixon's freedom offensive iramigration and citizenship doc- their presence in court for -hear-| . The pamphlet denies that the| Bouvrette at nearby Ste. Rose. [would include a large-scale gov-| uments, Chan faces two charges ing." government will deport illegal| They lay under the end of alernment reorganization to cen-| forgery and two of uttering : entrants and members of their|wooden ramp and a go-cart, a ER ENA EL forged documents. PROSECUTOR OBJECTS families. It reiterates that there|3'%-horsepower vehicle with a], -- { Special federal prosecutor is no intention of deporting any|tubular steel chassis, was sup- {Jean-Paul Cardinal objected. |Chinese in Canada who have not|posed to hurtle over them. One | "These are exiremely serious engaged in assisting other Chi-| of the go-carts, driven by a 14- harges," he said. "Wong is|{nese, apart from their own rela-| year-old, went out of control and] able on conviction to 100 years| tives, to enter Canada illegally.'injured two youngsters. {in prison and Chan to 50 years. ese -- SH "These charges were laid after ry long and costly investigation and [I am told that it is going to cost| ar 1 1 1I Y : oe + devel a fortune to untangle the web he most significan eVelop- sp 2S 2, i ment was the Quebec « Canada Pn By these Pecjle. | 4 agreement on a way for the fed- 1 I am operating on direct or ection att Oo eral government to pay its share ers from the minister of justice of a proposed 400-mile roadway and my instructions are to, de-| in Quebec, part of the nationwide mand high bail CHICAGO (CP) Opening| as a brash, inexperienced young. Trans-Canada Highway. He suggested $10,000 for Wong blows in the 1960 presidential ster who might recklessly ruin This was reached during a 40- 4nd $5,000 for Chan | election battle point to the likeli-|the country with some impulsive | minute meeting of Mr. Lesage Judge Legrand ordered a $5, hood it will be a close, bitter and act and appease Soviet Premier | 4 and Mr. Walker. After the pri- 000 property bond for Wong and|dirty tussle with issues taking a|Khrushchev at the same time. vate session, they announced! $2,500 bond for Chan. | back seat to personalities. i The Democrats are attempting| hoped to sign an ag RCMP Inspector Edwin Willes| By the time the campaign isto display the 47-year-old Nixon ment "within a very few wee sald" more arrests arc expected | °F Nov. 8, both sides undoubt- | as a pretty shady character, a A general outline of where during the course of the investi-| 241¥ will unsheathe their claws card shark whose deals leave to Quebec's 400-mile road would go| gation, but none are imminent. |2Pd reach for the jugular vein. be watched and the cruel leader | |was presented by the provincial Age, looks, religion, background, | of a politically sterile party that| | government HONG KONG ASSISTS family and character -- all these has reduced U.S. prestige in the Yesterday's arrests followed Will figure in the blood-letting in|eyes of the world. | DETAILS SECRET {months of investigation by|the struggle for the White House.| Kennedy moved in first with There was no estimate of the/RCMP and Hong Kong police] So far it seems Senator John|language a little stronger than| and Mr. Lesage said details brought to Canada to assist in|Kennedy the Democratic presi-|that used by Nixon Thursday be kept secret to avoid the inquiry and questioning of|dential candidate, has hit a little| night. At the Los Angeles Demo- on suspects, many, of whom speak|/lower than Vice-President Rich-|eratic convention earlier this highway plan, the no English ard M. Nixon. the Republican | month, Kennedy accused Nixon} tovernment pays half the| he RCMP estimates about 11.-| Presidential standard - bearer.|of following a political career on every 90 miles in.a 100- gop Chinese have entered Canada| Nixon appears to be aiming at|that showed "charity toward! siretch. On the other 10 illegally with the assistance of @ dignified, 'above-the gutter ap-|/none and malice for all." t puts up 9 per cent of racketeers since 1950. This jg/ proach to the fight, a distinct de-| Thursday night Nixon talked of | | about half the total Chinese im.| Parture from his tactics in pre. Kennedy's age and youth and of migration during the period. | vious congressional campaigning. [his "rash and impulsive" sugges- Hea Ministe Monteith | However, his lieutenants have no | tion that the U.S. ought to have| t Quebec's health insurance] OTTAWA (CP) -- The govern-|such plans. They're obviously out apologized to Russia in the U-2| 1 as said after the ment in a blunt statement of pol-[to do as effective a hatchet-job spy plane affair. | ng because Quebec still has|icy to members of Canada's Chi-|on Kennedy as possible. Kennedy, Nixon said, was fol-| | Zure out its legislation on the nese community says it fully in-| The Republicans are trying to lowing a program that would be {matter, itends to bring to justice the ring-|portray the 43-year-old Kennedy! "disastrous for America." ha ¢ COs pec Unde ederal cost mile miles Le also dropped in to oc Mr age 1 meet to fi The body of 10 - year - old Muriel Hicks is recovered from a recently - opened children's l world is a strategy of victory for the free world." It would be a strategy which would take the freedom offensive to Soviet satellites 'because the Communist dictators must not be allowed the privileged sanctuary from which to launch their guer- rilla attacks on the citadels of freedom." Nixon pledged, if elected, to "build a better America" that "will not tolerate being pushed about by anybody any place." When Soviet Premier Khrush- chev says "our children will live under communism, let us say his grandchildren will live in free- om." Holiday Weekend Generally Sunny TORONTO (CP)--Southern On- tario can expect generally sunny weather for the Civic Holiday weekend, the weather office said today. The sunshine may be inter- rupted occasionally by showers or thundershowers in the late after: noons. Temperatures are ex- pected to be near normal. More comfortable humid ity readings are expected by Sunday, the weather office added. were acceptable, They moved in after telling the landlady she had only three. The three other children, Donna 22, Carrol, 20, and Donna Veron- ica, 12, all led normal lives with outside contacts, but never men. tioned to their neighbors the fam. ily secret, They remained in the house until 1953 and were slipped by night to the family's present home in Tecumseh, a suburb of Windsor. Police said the children were allowed full freedom of the house and slept in a single bed on a top-floor landing of the two-storey frame house. When the children were taken to hospital Dr. C. J. Hemond said police who went to the home tried unsuccessfully to get the smallest girl to talk. She had told them her name but they were unable to induce her to say anything else. Glenda spoke only in whispers, hospital officials said. Const. Gus Newby of the pro- vincial police said the mother and father, Donald, an interior decorator and painter, appeared relieved when the children were found. He said the mother sald the confinement had been on her mind for some time but she did not know what to do about it. He said the children broke out and smiled when they saw him, "They were just glad to see someone «ifferent," he said, "They all wanted to talk, The only thing that was lacking was good ventilation, It was pretty stuffy up there, Mt was 90 de- grees outside. The rooms were clean, just messed the way chil. dren would mess them. CHILDREN CLEAN "The children themseives were clean and well dressed. Cup- boards in their rooms were loaded with elothes, all elean and neatly hung up. There was lots of food in the house. "There were toys all over the place, and games, a TV, radio and books, They were right up to date on everything. Connie wanted to talk about who is going to be the next president of the United States and she knew all about baseball and hockey. Cruel To Child Couple Jailed MONTREAL (CP) -- A couple from nearby Croydon were jailed Thursday night on complaints that they had kept their six-year- old son a virtual prisoner in their basement since Christmas, Mr. and Mrs. Roland Pepin, botly in their early 30s, were charged with extreme cruelty. Police said the boy was cov, ered with bruises when found and he appeared to have been beaten with a broom stick. The Pepins have four other children, two boys and two girls, They were placed in the custody of the courts. The boy, Noel, was taken to Montreal Children's Hospital after his older brothers ran away from home and told police about their brother. pond at Barrie, Ont. The girl, a non-swimmer, drowned in about five feet of water. The | CHILD'S BODY RECOVERED mishap occurred between we signs which read "Swim your own risk",