2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, August 5, 1960 Secrecy Rejected By Butler LONDON (Reuters)--The for- {mer butler of newly-weds Prin-| cess 'Margaret and Antony Arm- strong-Jones was quoted today as saying he was asked to sign a statement under the Official Se-| | crets Act before he left the couple's employ. Thomas Cronin said in an in- terview with The Daily Express he decided to leave his job at Kensington Palace this week be-| cause: "My face didn't fit, that's all there is to it." The silver-haired Cronin said Zon the day he left he was asked sind "VILLAGE MODEL BUILT BY SUSPECT scene of an intensive manhunt | slaying of a farmer. The sus- this model in his backyard. for a 15-year-old boy wanted | pect, believed hiding out in | CP Wirephoto in connection with the rifle- woods near the village, built This 1s "a model of the Prince Edward Island farming village of Abram's Corner, New Liberal Defence | Eastview Policy Takes Raking Mayor targets 'n On Stand Canadian Press Staff Writer |velop some time in the future." Canada and put in jeopardy OTTAWA (CP)--Defence Min-, H- said the Bomare, CF-104people living near the Bomarc ister Pearkes Thursday defused and Honest John artillerybases at North Bay and La Ma- a_jew Liberal defence policy rocket, to come into service latecaza, Que. ' before the Liberals could deton- next year, can be armed with Harold Winch, CCF military ate it. nuclear warheads. spokesman, said the Bomarc is Jt was sweet revenge for the To refuse or to neglect toa "total waste of money from 73.year-old minister who earlier have these warheads available beginning to end." this session was mocked by the when required would place anNO DEFENCE opposition for repeated test fail- intolerable handicap on Cana- "There is no defence against uge§ of the Bomarc anti-air-/dian defences, he said. dec-thermonuclear weapons and a craft missile. laration that Canada wouldwar fought with such weapons "Revenge was achieved by way never use nuclear warheadswould be suicidal. It therefore of"a newspaper account of the would bring "great comfort" tofollows that all defensive prep- Cammons speech by Paul Hell-l an enemy. arations for such a war are a yer, Liberal defence critic, be-| ACCUSES GOVERNMENT waste of time, energy and fore Mr. Hellyer had delivered Mr, Hellyer accused the gov-money. . . . i" ernment of "spending the "Let us at least not continue Mr. Hellyer didn't get the money first and making the de-fooling ourselves by talking of floor until two hours after the cision afterward." continental air defence. Let us account appeared in the Ottawa) The government had com-cut our losses, get out of North Citizen. Mr. Pearkes had the mitted Canadian taxpayers toAmerican air defence and de- newspaper on his desk and was expenditures of $120,000,000 onvote the mo. ey at present able to reply to nearly all of the Bomarc system before itwasted to trying to prevent war Mr. Hellyer's major points be- had made up its mind whetherrather than continuing to pre- fore the Liberal MP for Toronto|ty allow atomic warheads forpare for suicide." Trinity was able to utter athe missile on Canadian soil. Mr. Winch suggested that word. The government was spendingCanada be a "buffer" to pre- SINCE 1958 | $420,000,000 on the CF-104 with-vent surprise attack by Russia It was the cruelist slaughter|out having made any arrange-or the United States on each in the Commons since Jan. 20,| ments with France for storageother, The DEW radar line 1058, when Prime Minister Dief-|c! nuclear warheads for theshould be internationalized. rnbaker lit into Opposition/ plane on French bases. N Hellyer declined to say Leader Pearson for suggesting] Mr. Hellyer said Mr. Pearkes sisyrer he thinks Canadian that the Progressive Conserva-|had tried to leave the impres4£ 'y/® in Europe should not be tive government resign and thejplaced in jeopardy by not hav-:¥&Val with nuclear weapons. Liberals resume office without/ing Bomarcs and nuclear war- ¢ Lucien Cardin (L---Riche- an election. | heads for them. lieu-Vercheres) said that perso- On that occasion, Colin Cam-| Nothing could be further fromnally he believes Canada should eron, former CCF member forthe truth. The Bomarc was anhave nothing whatever to do Nanaimo, said Mr. Diefenbaker| added liability. It would be oaewith nuclear armaments. bad "Rushed with relish into the abattoir . . . to shoot one forlorn] g sitting duck already rippled with a self-inflicted wound." | Mr. Hellyer distributed ad-| vance copies of his speech Wed-| flesday night on the understand-| ing it would be released after he had spoken. He said he was| sure publication before delivery | was an accident. Valiantly, Mr. Hellyer made his speech as he had written it| though Mr. Pearkes had already heavily criticized it. | Mr. Hellyer proposed serap-| ping the Bomare, thus obviat-| ing the need for storing nuclear] warheads on Canadian ot o He also advocated cancellatioy ; 4 ia Sor of the CF-104 jet plane in favor id / f [ANSWER CRITIOIEM of a different ground - support Z 2 x " | missioners. Seplied ors, Air Division in Europe and re-|§ Bi ] s 1 placement of six destroyers un- jot Lom jl semua Wed. der construction with troop car- | terpreter for Mrs rit n By DAVE MCINTOSH cumstances which might de-of the few priority EASTVIEW (CP)--Mayor Gor- don Lavergne was expected to take the stand today for the first, time to answer criticism peppered at him for three weeks in a provincial inquiry into this town's financial affairs. Commissioners Charles W Yates and F. C. Blake an- nounced that a night sitting will be held tonight in apparent an- ticipation of the mayor's ap- pearance. The Eastview merchant, also member of the provincial legis- lature for Russell County, is the only member of council not yet heard. The commissioners today may also hear more "volunteer" wit- nesses like Mrs. Marie - Ange Pharand, who testified Thursday that she had to give one mem- ber of council a "tip" of $100 before getting a building permit from him. A CLAIMS GAVE "TIP" Mrs. Pharand, said under oath that Councillor Roger Menard withheld the building permit until she gave him the "tip." She said fie $100 was paid. him in May: and she then received a building permit approved by council a month earlier. The commissioners Thursday ___~|also heard town treasurer Mrs. change her - Adrienne Laroche earlier testimony on the amount = |of property she owned. | She had earlier testified that | she owned only her home and a women's clothing store in East- view. Thursday under questioning, she said she was also the owner of a farm, a cottage and held interests in "hunting land" at Perth, about 45 miles southwest of this com- Ottawa. She said she didn't mention them in earlier questioning be- cause "you did not ask me | about places outside the town." further| | munity within the boundaries of| to sign a declaration under the | Official Secrets Act. "They were concerned in case Bi should talk about what I heard! land saw during my 25 days. "1 flatly refused. I will never remind me of my professional bond." Cronin, one - time butler for American Ambassador John Hay Whitney, told the newspaper: "The master of the house. Mr. Tony Armstrong - Jones, never actually said he didn't like me, but I felt that was the case." INTO THE OPEN "Finally, the matter' wa brought ont into the open--it had to come sooner or later--and 1 knew I was right." Cronin said *'there were differ- ences of opinion and a number | of incidents." "I had to hand over certain keys from time to time and then I was asked for the petty cash box. "Rooms downstairs were ex- amined. And on occasions when I was wanted, fingers were snapped. "These are all things a butler of my standing is not used to and I couldn't work like that." Office Girl Hit By Shots TORONTO (CP) A man walked into a 10th floor insurance office in downtown Toronto Thursday, shot a pretty stenog-|not show in the alert grey eyes|1939. The leadership automati- rapher in the chest and stomach.|of the short, stout woman whose cally went to his son, Peter III, then turned the revolver on aim- self Horrified office workers saw the sudden outburst. Denise Morey, 18, was reported in "fairly good condition * in hos- pital. The man, identified by po-| lice as Edward Bigelli, 24, was in| serious condition with chest] wounds. Workers in the office said the man came in and asked for Miss|Doukhobor sect was in several functionary in Canada but is not Morey. The two were standing by| Russian labor camps from 1937 spiritual leader. ! ¢ |to 1947 when she was released in|-- a counter talking when the shoot. ing started. Friends of the girl said she a housewife, had recently broken up with a in another. | boy friend. CHILD GUARDED | 'BY DACHSHUND | | HONEY HARBOUR (CP)-- | A little dachshund saved the | life of his mistress' baby | Thursday by tackling a rattle- | snake as it menaced the child. | The dog was bitten, but is expected to recover after be- | ing rushed more than 30 miles to Orillia for treatment by a | veterinarian. The child's mother, Mrs E. | H. Phinn, killed the snake, a Mississauga rattler, with a re- volver. Mrs. Phinn, staying at her father's cottage in this Georg- ian Bay resort, came out of the | cottage to see the snake rat- tling angrily a few feet from where her baby sat on the grass. The dog, owned by her father | J. H. Brown, dashed between the child and the snake, bar- | ring furiously. Mrs. Phinn ran | indoors and fetched a shotgun, | but it jammed when she aimed at the snake. She went back for the revolver, but by the talk about those days. I don't) # | need the Official Secrets Act fo) By STEPHEN SCOTT | Canadian Press Staff Writer GRAND FORKS, B.C. (CP)-- Anna Markova knows peace and happiness at last, Years of privation and suffer- ing in Soviet labor camps; years that saw the death of two hus- bands, a son and a brother, are over for the 58-year-old Douk- hober grandmother: If the "sadness", tears". have left scars, sorrows and they do plack hair is turning grey. f Instead of bitterness, she speaks words of gratitude to God and the Canadian and So- viet governments for permitting her to come:to Canada earlier this year. MUST FORGIVE The Russian-speaking member of a family that has provided three spiritual leaders to the] poor health, Her second husband died in one camp, while she was Speaking through her son, farmer John J. Verigin, she said: "I believe in God and I believe in his edict that we| should forgive people who hurt) us." "She is thankful that God {helped her through her hard-| |ship," said Mr. Verigin. this is past. She was able to live through it and she has forgotten it." . Mrs. Markova hopes to spend | the rest of her life in the peace- [ful valley in British Columbia's | southeast Kootenay district, of which this predominantly Douk- hobor community is the centre. CAUGHT IN REVOLUTION Mrs. Markova and those Douk- hobors who did not move to |Canada with her grandfather, | Peter (The Lordly) Verigin, in | 1899, were caught in the turmoil that preceded and followed the Russian revolution. She said Czarist authorities | made trouble for her father be- |cause he was the son of Peter Verigin who had denounced mil- itary service, She remembers the police first arresting her father for questioning when she was nine. Her fleeting moment of happi-| ness was the two years following ANNA MARKOVA Only Gratitude After Bad Years ENGLISH COURSE ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP)--The Newfoundland government has announced an experimental edu- cation course for adult Indians of North West River, Labrador. If successful the scheme may be extended to the entire area. Signallers Get Congo Weapons By BERNARD DUFRESNE . Canadian Press Staff Writer KINGSTON, Ont. (CP)-- Can- ada's non-combatant signalmen assigned to the United Nations Congo force Thursday were is- sued automatic pistols and sub- machine-guns for personal de- fence. Browning aut om atic pistols were issued to officers and ser- geants. Corporals, lance - corpo- rals and privates received the C1 su»-machine-gun, a nine - mille- metre automatic weapon meas- * |uring 18 inches with the 10-inch stock folded. Canada is the only country in the Western Hemisphere to con- tribute troops for the United Na-| tions force sent to keep peace in the Congo. An army spokesman said the Canadian troops--193 signallers and 52 headquarters staff being assembled at Barriefield Camp here--are being armed for per- sonal defence only. | The troops will retain their| | non-combatant status and will be| (used only to provide signals com- munications between the various | peace-making military units re- cruited from nine countries in| Europe, Africa and Asia. | FIRST TIME | The spokesman said it is be- lieved this is the first time Ca- nadian soldiers are being sent to an overseas theatre of opera- tions without their rifles. Signalmen assigned to the newly - formed 57th Signals Squadron, under Maj. Robert C. Bindoff of Kingston and Ottawa, continued -to arrive in camp Thursday. Officers said that by today all the signalmen and headquarters staff, snatched from Various postings across Canada, should be on hand. Im- munization and processing of] documents has The signallers will be broken! up into 12 mobile wireless de-| tachments of about eight men each. There will be five ground-| to - air communications detach. ments set up at isolated landing | fields where there are no mod-| ern communications. In addition there will be eight cipher de-| tachments. | Most of the signalmen are bi-| lingual. The Congo is largely] French-speaking. | The UN force of 15 battalions of 600 to 900 men each is under the command of Maj.-Gen, Carl [Van Horn, a Swedish officer. His| | chief of staff is a Canadian, Lt.-| [Col. Jegn A. Berthiaume of St. Hyacinthe, Que, released from UN duties in the Middle East to join the Congo force. DRIVE TO geau Valley TONIGHT GET THE BEST For Less At MODERN UPHOLSTERING '926'2 SIMCOE ST. N. RA 8-6451 or RA 3-4131 OSHAWA ONLY 10% DOWN UP TO 2 YEARS TO PAY Dine In Good Taste AT THE GENOSHA HOTEL ---------- Our coffee shop and main din- ing room completely eir-con- ditioned. ment refused to permit them to operate as a religious commu- nity. Many were sent to forced labor camps. Mrs. Markova arrived in B.C. amid rumors that she would clear up confusion about the spiritua: leadership of the 10,000- member sect here. She immedi- ately made it clear she wanted nothing to do with the problem. Her father, Peter Verigin II, was leader here until he died in A 4 4 4 NU-WAY RUG & CARPET SALES Broadloom ' wall to wall, Rugs, Carpets, Stair Runners. who did not come to Canada from Russia. It now has been established that he died in Rus- sia in 1942 while serving in the Red Army, John Verigin, Mrs. Markova"s son by her first marriage, was brought here after she remar- ried. He adopted his grandfath- er's name. He is considered the leading orthodox Doukhobor Installation by our own mechanics 174 Mary Street RA 8-4681 Vy VV Boys Return Stolen Money TORONTO (CP) -- Two boys aged 11 and 12, who disappeared Wednesday with a druggist's $500 bank deposit, suffered an attack of conscience Thursday and re- turned all but $30 of the money. Izzie Gaynor, proprietor of Yale Drugs said he hired the boys to run 'errands and after they proved their honesty by making a $10 collection, he sent them to the bank. When they failed to re- turn, he called police. When they started flashing their money, some of their friends warned them of the- seri- ous consequences of their actions, Mr. Gaynor said, They had spent $10 and given $20 to friends. Travelling Overseas WHY NOT FLY 'The modern way to travel is by air.' For information regarding any form of travel . . . DIAL RA 3-9441 | We have @ direct Toronto telephone line for prompt Airline" Reservations MEADOWS TRAVEL SERVICE and Co., Ltd. DIAL RA 3-9441 Relax in Comfort TALLY-HO ROOM AIR CONDITIONED Hotel Lancaster Qwned and d by Thomas d 22 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH, OSHAWA riers. "SCRAP, SCRAP, SCRAP" Mr. Pearkes said "this is a program of scrap, scrap, scrap" and suggested that Mr. Hellyer scrap his speech before giving it. Mr. Pearkes sald he sympa- » thized with Mr. Hellyer, who = was a victim of an "irrespon- sible and unscrupulous newspa- per reporter" and of "scanda- Jous" use by the press of the advance copy of the speech. The minister said that if the Liberals were prepared to sacri-| fice a means to destroy hostile Stricken EARL BAILEY Artist : moc omer, oer conn 1 5d His Teeth icy throughout the country. not say that Canadi forces| Canadian Press Staff Writer will get nuclear warheads. The| LUNENBURG, N.S. (CP)-- with his teeth thar most people § can with their hands, » Vi N | 'Honor ichm by polio that struck him when - the was a child, the 56-year-old Ot Red Attack stroke of the brush with deter: The mination, United States buried with full : ; military honors Thursday the across the continent. Since sell- ussian jet fighters over 'he|has given exhibitions in Toronto, Russian a Foi than a month| Montreal, Chicago, Boston, New ies, he only member of the six-man| Tourists flock to his: home the United States. Three of his/to see him paint and to pur i are missi two|chase his oils, most of them trial, near this fishing community. pt . ai t As the coffin containing the THOUGHT OF QUITTING In Arlington National Cemetery, : . would five reconnaissance bom b e r | like to quit painting. He says the Soviets flew low and in precise|times discouraging and the price grder over the Virginia hills and|P¢ Peceives is only meagre re- to Thee. will ever let him give it up. The U.S. demanded Thursday| This becomes evident when he survived and denounced as "in-|tion is to have his own art gal- comprehensible" Russia's refusal |lery and it appears he will tions investigation of Russia's bridge, a Bermuda businessman, contention that the plane violated has promised to provide a gal- But Mr. Pearkes himself did| By IRA DRYSDALE decision on this "'d ds on cir- Earl Bailly can paint better Paralyzed from the neck down {Lunenburg artist makes each : (AP) FASHINGTON P His work hangs in art galleries pilot of the RB-47 shot down by ing his first painting at 16, he ago. | York, Washington and other cit- * Maj. Willard George Palm is grew of the aircraft returned tol here during the summer months Others are held in Moscow for depicting the rugged coastline 1 | body of the airman was lowered Yio: Fas olen said he similar to the one downed by the market for his work is some- the band played Nearer My God |Ward. But few think his pride that Russia free the flyers who | talks of the future. Earl's ambi- to allow an impartial United Na-| realize his hope. Eugene Outer- Soviet air space. |lery in Shejly Bay, Bermuda, devoted entirely to Bailly paint- ings. It would be open to the public for a fee, the money to be shared by Earl and his pro- moter. It would help boost the financial rewards, now usually between $100 and $200 for a painting that may take him a month to complete. Earl comes from two genera- tions of blacksmiths, men who pounded out the shoes for horses and the metal supports used in building wooden craft in this ship - building town. His three brothers were able to take on the tough jobs here, but all he could do was watch, BEGAN EARLY However, his father Harry, now 79, saw to it that the crippled lad's education got an early start. He placed paper on the table beforé him and put a pencil in his mouth. Earl soon larned to print his name and shortly began sketch ing figures on the paper. De- prived of the life of a fisherman or a boat builder, he threw him- self into painting with a passion, While not strictly a marine painter, most of his best works are of ships, shorelines and small dories and huts. 4 and . drawing rugged fishing in her earlier testimony. | Mr. Yates, himself partly| French, said he would have| time she got back the dog had been "bitten. Mrs. Phinn blew the rattler's head off. {granted Mrs. Laroche an inter- preter if she had needed one, b=' she could speak English flu- ently. He said that the inquiry would {supply an interpeter for any person who could not under- stand English. Mrs, Pharand, {for example had an interpreter to help her in her testimony. Bus Driver Badly Beaten By Youths HAMILTON (CP)--Bus driver Ronald Reeves, 48, beaten and robbed early Thursday by two youths, was in poor condition in hospital Thursday and still only semi-conscious. : Reeves told police he had stopped his bus at the end of his Hamilton route when the youths entered and beat him uncon- scious with iron clubs. They took $150 cash and bus tickets. Reeves flagged down passing motorist ambulance. who called ar Russian Reply 'To UK. Note LONDON (Reuters) -- Russia accused the British government | of adopting "a very strange po- | sition" over the shooting down of | an American RB-47 Teconnais-| sance plane off Russia July 1, Tass reported Thursday night. The agency gave details of Russia's reply to a British note jot July 19 over the RB-47 incid- ent. The British note rejected Rue- sia's claim that the RB-47, which took off from a British base, was over Russian territory when it was brought down. It said Rus- sia had no grounds for a protest, The Soviet reply said that the British government 'has taken up a rather strange stand." and 'gnored "accurate factual data bout the place, time and circum. tances of the violation of Soviet air space." |her first marriage at 17. When [the Communists took over, [Lenin, noting that the pacifist | Doukhobors had not opposed the revolution, alloted land for them in the Don Valley. Mrs. Markova's husband died two weeks before her son was born. For five years she lived| with her father then remarried. LABOR CAMPS The Communist government left the sect in peace until the collectivization edicts of 1929 and 1930. The Doukhobors had al-| ways worked their land on a communal basis but the govern-| Run an automotiv buting company of service station operato of hard work and can vestment you may get Factory Representative F. C. 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