Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 20 Oct 1961, p. 1

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

n Humani Sunny with cloudy periods and cooler Saturday with winds nor- therly 15, ment I ¢ Your Community Chest--Inves ===" She Oshavoa Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy It is good to have a train of thought, but be sure there's also a terminal. S EIGHTEEN PAGES _ AFETY ON JOB HANGE URGED Stabbing Suspect Arrested. | Sy ST. THOMAS (CP)--A brown-\inches tall, and weighs about} haired man was arrested today|145 pounds. He was wearing a/ : Canadian Visas OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1961 @s Second Class Mail Department, Ottawo Authorized Post Office and police dug a bloodstained,|red-and-white plaid shirt and) black - handled butcher knife|dark trousers. from a pile of trash in their| Mrs. Wilson took the 10-min-/ hunt for the slayer of Mrs. Mayjute walk from her job as a Wilson, middle - aged widow) YWCA kitchen helper to her stabbed to death here Thursday|home on Hiawatha Street, five night. blocks north of Talbot 'Street, No charges were laid up to/every night. noon. "She was such a good woman, The 12 - inch knife, found by|very popular ir the neighbor- Const. William Brown in a pile of trash and branches at rear of two houses, was to be sent to the provincial crime la- boratory in Toronto. On her way home from work, /never had a wrong word about! Mrs. Wilson, about 60, was pass-| ing the house next door to her} home when her attacke r| stepped up behind her and plunged a knife into her back| with such force it protruded! through her chest. The man then wrenched the knife free and fled. Her shrill scream drew neigh- bors to the street: Mrs. Charles Roberts and Mrs. Beatrice McIntee ran to her. | "I've been stabbed," she gasped to them. "Then she went limp and we laid her down," Mrs. Roberts| said. | Police Gpief James Melville} said a man who ran into the} Western Hotel, two blocks east hood, and a person who really liked children," Mrs. McIntee said. Fellow-workers at the YWCA called her a "sweet woman who anyone."' Police were puzzled as to a motive. Robbery was ruled out --Mrs. Wilson's handbag with a small amount of money was found intact beside her body she did i.ot have much y in the house. MAY BE MANIAC The possibility the slaying was the work of a maniac was being investigated. Mrs: M. Robertson, who worked with Mrs. Wilson, said that before the slain woman left the YWCA a "funny - looking man wearing a dark red skull cap" was walking up and down outside the building. A 15-year-old boy, Tugsley, an mone: Edward told police he was For Trujillos As Riots Flare VIUDAD TRUJILLO (AP) --| Civilian defiance stiffened today} against the Dominican govern-| }ment. Three members' of the |Trujillo family were reported to |have obtained Canadian and United States visas and pre-} pared to leave the country. Large numbers of arrests and jinjuries resulting from clashes jwere reported in all maj jcities. President Joaquin | jlaguer's regime Thursday! |banned all political rallies |scheduled for the weekend. Pro-government ajor Ba-| } streets of this capital fought with rock-throwing Dom- jinicans. Police made no effort - |to intervene. Authoritative sources mean- while said three brothers of the late Generalissimo Rafael Tru- jillo have obtained U.S. and Ca- nadian transit visas. The broth- ers, Generals Hector, Jose Aris- mendi .and Pedro Trujillo, ar I "MARRIAGE ON THE ROCKS -- Actor Jose Ferrer stares into space' in Superior court civilian) in Santa Monica, Calif., while jbands dubbed "the Clubmen"| jj; estranged wife, 'singer by the opposition roamed the) Rosemary Clooney, does the and! same thing a few rows be- hind him. They were there to Tough Police Squads Patrol 'Troubled Paris | BY DAVID REID } PARIS (Reuters) -- Tough) {squads of riot police today pa-| \trolled Paris in preparation for {a scheduled mass demonstra-) jtion by Moslem women and children. | | The demonstration was or- dered by rebel Moslem leaders) jin the wake of mass protests |Tuesday and Wednesday in |which five persons were killed, ! jabout 100 injured and some 13,-} 1000 arrested. | | Another 421 Moslems were} arrested in Paris Thursday ] decide how much temporary alimony she'd get until trial of ber suit for divorce. She agreed to take $1500 a month for herself and their five chil- dren. (AP Wirephoto) Russ-China Tiff | -|night for violating a police cur-} few, but no demonstrations or clashes were reported. The arrests occurred as 1,500 Moslems were being air - lifted to Algeria in a two-day mass jexpulsion of troublemakers. The first six planeloads, con-| Probe Suggests Tougher TORONTO (CP) -- A three- man royal commission called today for greater co - ordina- tion of Ontario's industrial saf- ety measures, a stepped-up saf- ety education crive among workers, and harsher penalties for failure to put "'safety first" in industry. The report of the royal com- mission on industrial safety was released by Labor Minister Charles Daley, who promised immediate steps to implement the recommendations he finds are necessary. Besides broad measures to intensify safety consciousness in industry, the royal commission recommended specific changes in seven separate statutes, some of them described as "'ar- chaic and outmoded." The changes are designed to Quebec Party Official Quits QUEBEC (CP)--Gerald Mar-| meet present - day hazards and| Penalty Thunder Bay district court in northwestern Ontario as chair- man, with consulting geologist Dr. J. Danvers Bateman of Torento /and. Russel Harvey, representative of the Office Employees International Union (CLC) and member of the On- tario Labor Relations Board, as commission members. The 124-page report is the fruit of 17 hearings between June and December last year. Nearly 120 witnesses--ranging from engineers and business- men to union representatives and anonymous immigrant la- borers -- appeared to testify, leaving behind more than 160 briefs, memos and other exhi- bits for the commission to study. e Rocks Red Boat |taining 450 Algerian deportees,|tineau, for many years the e \flew to Algiers and Constantine| most powerful man in the Un- By THE CANADIAN PRESS ing that China is a friend of the Thursday night from Paris' |ion Nationale party behind the 4 ri An open rift over Albania is|Soviet Union and all countries Orly Airport. They were due to/jate Maurice Duplessis, has re- a condition for a coalition gov-|ipping the Soviet-Chinese boat,|of the Communist camp from|be placed in forced residence] signed as party treasurer. ernment. |but it has little or no chance of|North Korea to East Germany)in their native villages and) Newly - elected leader Daniel Today, public demonstrations) capsizing it. and from North Viet Nam to}towns in the North African ter-) Johnson announced Thursday against dictator Trujillo's heirs| 'That was the diplomatic as-|Albania. \ritory. jthat Mr. Martineau had re- showed no signs of subsiding] sessment today after the star-| Communist sources said the| signed Oct, 2, little more than a despite many arrests in all ma- tling disclosure that Chinese|remark brought scattered ap-| ¥%F* week after a UN convention-- jor cities. i Chou En-lai im 4!plause from the audience but Higher Death |the first in the party's 25-year speech to the Communist party|the clapping died away' when |historyhad decided a triumvi- were not applauding. Rate Reported Rg ee did sore ss eck ithe press conference at whic! When Chou finished speaking, | For Smokers |Mr. Thee Ethie tha $i however, he shook hands with} ts . |nouncement. The new party Khrushchev--a gesture he point-| MIAMI BEACH (AP)--Medi-|j,,der said a conclusion of the Soviet pre-| The death ry|feau. would resign iis legisla- pany |, The death rate from coronary|tiye council--upper house--seat mier's marathon speech on do-|heart disease was three times| was "irrelevant .. . and inde- mestic and foreign policy. higher rps gh middle aged and/ cent," tin' Russian jeaiar older men smoking a pack a of the stabbing scene, and ran/ working on a car near the mur- out again is being sought. jder scene and saw 'a figure Youths sitting in the mn isht, into a ditch, climb along coffee shop said the man is\it, then disappear into a back- alnong eight members of th family whose exile has been demanded by the opposition as| to enforce safety requirements already set out but, in vents) LAW Proposed cases, ignored for decades. | The report lashes out at areas To Crack Down On Kick-Backs about 27 years old, five feet 10'yard. le In Ottawa, officials of the im- migration and external affairs|had severely criticized Premier department said the Canadian|Khrushchev's condemnation of embassy in Ciudad Trujillo nor-|the tiny Communist nation in mally would issue transit visas| the Mediterranean. i without seeking prior approval{ The long-standing Soviet-Sino| from Ottawa. They were not ideological feud took a new turn Aware of any such approvallwhen Chou delivered a virtual Sought in this case. |rebuke to Khrushchev fgf bring- jing Russia's quartel Avith Al- Votes Support Squeeze On UN UNITED NATIONS Six countries, including Canada,|tion of nuclear tests. today formally called on the UN| Soviet Ambassador to ask Soviet Premier Khrush-|Tsarapkin said his country had chev to cancel his proposed 50-|been forced to resume nuclear (CP)--)a tightening vise over the ques- | congress in Moscow Thursday|the delegates saw that Khrush-| rate should look after party Si "i ter'. = vio cal researchers from two cities tion as to pave ay eae chev and other Soviet leaders! funds. edly avoided Wednesday at thelteday apieed: ther Mr. Marti- megaton nuclear bomb test. tests because the U.S. and it A resolution to that effect was|llies had "threatened the Si circulated in the UN General| Viet Union with war in retalia Assembly. jtion for the Soviet proposal to of persistent neglect and irres- ponsibility. --_-- LICENSED si n the construction: industry, Sa where some "fast - buck or fly- valor Wandiee ia p ovale by-night . builders" 'meet. their tion Trades -Council-of Ontario industry's stiff competition by today urged the establishment ignoring "even minimum _ pre- pi y ry it kick beck lav' 46 cautions against accident," the|% ®@ anu Kick~ commissioners recommended a|Protect employees, particularly system of provincial licensing,|{™igrant workers, from ex- "Tf, after years of safety leg-|Plcitation. oe islation, education, persuasion} The council told Ontario's and example, such employers|royal commission on __labor- selfishly persist in evasion of|management relations that kick- the law," they should be re-|back practices include intimida- fused further licences to oper-|tion of workers by removal of |bania into the open. ate, the report said. travelling and other expenses | Its recommendations are dra-|from the pay envelope, getting matically documented with re-|employees to sign receipts in- Chou made only a passing | |Geographical reference to Al-| in his} . The former party treasurer's day or more of cigarettes, com- Also circulated was a request oS ee ear: that the resolution--on which Denmark will be the leadoff} speaker--be given priority over, Russia wouid have to continue "until the Western powers un- derstand the necessity of ep- barking on general and com- plete disarmament." Then he Racial Policy JOHANNESBURG (Reuters)|there are quarrels in the social- Prime bania but he made his point|sPeech condemned Communist! clear when he declared that sh or which follow "'the |path of isolation." The state-| a rette smo jment was considered an attack} a ty) ini i list ¢ they should be solved a Minister Hendrik Ver-|ist camp they ue' China and Ammonis Their death pared with non-smokers, pipe or \cigar smokers, and former cig- kers. rate from name often has been mentioned during the present Salvas royal commission into gov er nment purchases while the UN was in power in Quebec from 1955 to ports from coroner's juries orjdicating payment has been other reminders of the dangers|made of monies not included in faced by industrial workers. j|the pay envelope, and forcing all The royal commission, formed|men to work more than 40 houi woerd's Nationalist party held a\b y bilateral contacts." causes was three times higher 1960 as a key man in the kick-|18 months ago, comprised a week and not paying them which have followed a more discussions on a full-scale nu- |said, there would be no need to militant foreign policy line than clear test ban treaty or mora- jtest nuclear weapons. firm mandate from South Af- torium. This seemed to go further rica's all-white electorate today to continue its policy of strict segregation of the races. Final returns from Wednes- Communist commentators § ing in r a Sate ies nat cpu. the rest of the Communist bloc. lic discussion does not contrib-| Albania, a small Adriatic na- ute to the cohesion of the so-|tion bordering on Greece and also. .- Judge P. J. McAndrew of thelextra. Why they died earlier than other men is obscure. | The researchers from Albany, N.Y., and Framingham, Mass., back system of sales commis- sions. Denmark, Norway, Iceland, Sweden, Japan and Canada--jthan Khrushchev, who indicated all in the path of fallout fromjin a Moscow speech earlier this Soviet nuclear tests--sought to}week that Soviet tests would \¥ reflect world-wide alarm about the effects of radioactivity on the health of this and future generations. VISE TIGHTENS Speeches by the Soviet Union and the United States Thursday | showed that the United Nations --and the world--was caught in| enson end with the explosion of the 50-megaton bomb at the close of this month. U.S. Ambassador Adlai Stev- served notice that his government wilt resume nu- clear tests in the atmosphere unless a treaty prohibiting tests, with effective controls, is signed promptly. LEADERSHIP FIGHT GETS HOTTER day's general election gave the Nationalists 105 seats in the 156 c more than they held in the last legislature. le measures, ' ialist camp." | member Parliament -- three|THEY SIN, RED-STYLE His address followed Khrush-|days ago. hev's denunciation of Albanian South Africa's white voters|Party leaders Tuesday for p gave an overwhelming endorse-|petuating : Jo! ment of Verwoerd's segregation|Stalin's personality--the current} which he has de-|Cardinal sin-in the Communist) HARKNESS SEES scribed as a "'granite-like'" pol-/bloc. ec i licy of white supremacy. _ oe Chou began his speech by say-| EARLY 62 VOTE the cult of Tory Tempers Fraying By THE CANADIAN PRESS With the leadership conven- tion but four days away, the candidates for Premier Frost's job as leader of the Ontario Progressive Conservative party Thursday flexed their vocal chords for a crucial stretch drive. Some tempers signs of flaring. 2 Attorney-General Kelso Rob- erts was in top form during a speech to a group of Young Conservatives in Toronto. Mr. Roberts said he expects more votes at the convention from Cochrane South than its member, Lands and Forests Minister J. W. Spooner, can de- liver to Energy Resources Min- ister Robert Macaulay. r showed ™ ie His boast came in reply to a ° statement by Mr. Spooner Wed- nesday that Northern Ontario delegates would support Mr- Macaulay as a group. The attorney - general also pooh-pooed a report that Re-| form Institutions Minister) George Wardrope, himself a} candidate for the leadership,| has indicated personal support for Education. Minister Robarts. When he was in Mr. Ward- CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 | holding portfolios, will be ex- pected to divorce themselves from their private businesses and give full time to the affairs of state." The speech was Mr. Roberts' last before the three - day con- tion opens Monday at Toronto's Varsity Arena. At Peterborough, Health Min- ister Matthew Dymond took ex- ception to a complaint by fel- low candidate Rev. ° Downer that the province's new Sales tax is a "nuisance."' Mr. Dymond recalled that Mr. Downer hadn't opposed the sales tax when it was intro- duced, that indirect provincial 9 taxes are forbidden in the Brit- ish North America Act. The health minister said, however, that he was 'most disillusioned" at the number of = people who are demanding that KELSO ROBERTS rope's home. constituency of Port Arthur last month, Mr. Roberts said, he was told by the member's organizer 'that if his minister did not run or was dropped, 1 would receive his complete support." MAY WANT MORE WORK Mr. Roberts also served no- tice that as leader he might in- sist on his cabinet buckling down a little harder. "It does seém to me that we now have reached the point," he said, "When not just a por- tion of, but all cabinet ministers the sales tax be hidden. Despite eet ony headlined Chou's speech. the constitutional barrier, he said, "I am going to take this DR. M. B. DYMOND matter up with my colleagues:"' Mr. Dymond said he person-| Mr. Allan was introduced to ally favors a tax that lets the|his audience at Sarnia by High- people know what government| ways Minister Fred Cass, who is costing them, i.e. a direct|said unlike Mr. Allan the other one. at jleadership candidates . "haven't Provincial Treasurer James|a clue about many of the mat- N. Allan was in Chatham and|ters that concern the operation Sarnia. At Chatham he told|of the Ontario government." convention delegates from Kent) He told the Lambton County County he isn't a "wonder-| delegates: }man. "The other candidates are my | "I do not believe," he said,|friends, but . . . they are not |"that any one man can alone|aware of such things as Domin- jgive the direction and leader- ion-provinci treed this province 'needs at this|operations time. ithan their own." ugoslavia, was not invited to jsend a delegation to the con- gress which opened here three said "'there is strong evidence for some lethal but non-specific factor associated with cigarette smoking." They suggested caution "in drawing therapeutic inferences from .these_ observations' -- neaning whether changing smoking habits would reduce disease or death risks. All newspapers in Red China Higher Industrial Activity Reported OTTAWA (CP) -- Industrial production broke through to record high ground in August with a big gain in mining out- put and new strength in manu- facturing and in power and gas utilities. The index of industrial pro- \duction, adjusted to offset sea- sonal variations, rose 1.6 per cent to 175.1 following a slight drop in July to 172.3, the Do- minion bureau of statistics re- Ported today. CALGARY (CP) -- De- fence Minister Harkness * predicted Thursday a fed- eral general election will be held early next year. Mr. Harkness, in an ad- dress in his Calgary North riding, did not give a date but said 'the election will | come any time after the next three or four months." lie advised the audience "to make every preparation so election plans won't be left to the last minute." | | y Strike Decision May Change Law TORONTO (CP) -- Premier ation of Labor to demai | Frost said Thursday night new!Mr. Roberts appeal the eacmet labor legislation may result} Mr. Elmore ruled Wednesday from a final court decision on|that the hotel's action in dis- whether the strike of Royal|missing 600 strikers did not York hotel employees is legal.| contravene the Labor Relations He said any legislation would|Act. He said there is no section follow the appeal pending|9f the act "specifically giving against a ruling Wednesday by|the right to strike. Toronto magistrate Thomas El-| "Perhaps the magistrate has more that the hotel manage-junwittingly done labor a serv- ment did not violate the Ontariojice," A. R. Johnstone, interna- Labor Relations Act in dismiss-'tional vice-president of the ling striking employees. striking union, told the council. "On the basis of the results,| The decision has reunited the |whatever legislation necessary] me tone id the O a re st sai e On- jwould be framed," Mr. government : should take said, immediate action to amend the The Mabe =e District Labor] act if it is faulty law. Council supported efforts to} Premier Frost sai i have Attorney-General Roberts|to strike is ~ emia en jappeal the magistrate's ruling.|right determined by case law The council backed a resolu-'over a number of years. In | | al relations and the|tion from the striking Hotel and|drawing up the labor relations of departments other|Club Employees' | b Union (CLC)\act there had been no attempt icalling for the Ontario Feder-|to codily the Common Law. No Decision Until Spring On Warheads OTTAWA (CP) -- The defence department indicated Thursday night that it will be early next spring before the government announces any decision on whether the Bomarc anti - air- craft missile will be fitted with nuclear warheads. The question of warheads for the Bomarc, the department, said in a brief statement, is not considered urgent at this time because it will be some months before the missiles are installed at North Bay and La Macaza, Que. The department expects them to be all installed by early next spring. The statement was made in reply to reporters' questions prompted by the scheduled ar- rival of the first Bomarc at North Bay. The missile -- only a test ve- hicle designed to try out the launcher system -- will be un- veiled today so that photo- graphs can be taken of it. Op- erational missiles are not scheduled to arrive at North Bay until next month, NORTH BAY (CP) -- Cana- dian customs officials jour- eyed out of town today to pass wo out-sized parcels that ar- rived Thursday night from the United States aboard transport trucks, the components of a Bo- mare B ground-to-air missile. The officials had to remove seals which enabled the anti- aircraft. weapon to cross the U.S. - Canadian border unmo- lested by customs men at Sault Ste: Marie. The Bomarc B missile, cas- ing on one truck and power plant on another, was the first 28 weapons to be shipped here from the maker, Boeing Air- plane Company of Seattle, Wash. No warheads accompanied the missile. However, Defence Minister Harkness said in Cal- gary Thursday night the Bo- marc B type will be fitted with warheads when they become operational. "No decision has yet been made on whether or not they will be equipped with atomic warheads," he said. First Bomarc B \At N. Bay Site Asked specifically whether the Bomarcs would have war- heads when they become opera- tional--a situation not foreseen for several months}-Mr. Hark- ness said: "Yes, they will." First reports yesterday said two Bomarcs had arrived in North Bay. RCAF officials later admitted they had been misled by the fact that the missile ar- rived on two trucks. The trans-continental journey ended seven miles north of here at the launching site. Construc- tion crews have been working on 28 barn-like homes for the Bomarcs for the last two years. A second 28-missile site at La Macaza, near. Mont Laurier, Que., rounds out the Canadian _ Bomare contribution to the North American air defence system. - Both missile bases will he controlled from an underground electronic centre at nearby Trout Lake. The Bomarc, powered by solid fuel, has a range of 400 miles, Sa Le Bo, MS eae

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy