Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 6 Jan 1962, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY The man with both feet on the ground cannot fall very far. Oshawa Zine WEATHER REPORT Continuous snow tonight and early Sunday, tapering off to snowflurries and much colder. \ OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, JANUARY 6, 1962 Authori: Ottawa ized os Second Class Mai and for payment | Post Office Department, of Postage in Ca sh, EIGHTEEN PAGES PRIMPING BY A PRINCESS Britain's Princess Margaret | of Snowdon, after their arrival smoothes back her wind- -| at St. John's Antigua Friday A for a private visit. Crowd blown hair under the watch- P and photographers form ful eye of husband, Antony | background for the royal pair. Armstrong-Jones, the Earl | Princess and her husband left ge Navy Wont Scuttle | Contracts In Canada tee on imports and unemploy- gressional sniping against Can-/ment where Kenneth BeLieu, ada - United States production-/assistant navy secretary, was i licy has centred on|Teported to have informed the| it yy ead but the navy|Swbcommittee that Canadian plans no retreat. lyards are getting only a tiny P : fraction of navy contracts. A qualified authority said the sah save tal continue to encourage|, Sharp criticism came from defence subcontracting in Can- the subcommittee chairman, ada cespite some congressional| John Dent, Pennsylvania Demo- criticism that such a policy is|Ctat, and William Cahill, New causing unemployment in U.S.|Jersey Republican. shipyards. | They attacked General Dyna- The sniping began Friday in a)mics Corporation, a U.S, firm, closed-door hearing of a House|for subcontracting $3,000,000 of Representatives subcommit-| worth of construction in Canada. | Arctic Warning System Praised COLORADO SPRINGS (AP) | tober 1960, and the Clear in-| p+ ne taaagdgr er system stallation last July. The site at/ that blankets the Arctic. regions} ,.); oe é ,| was hailed as a major deterrent| Ylingdales will be in use by to war as it was turned over "ext year. Friday to the United States Air) More than 2,400 private con- Force, which will operate it for|/tractors, headed by Radio Cor- the North American Air De-| poration of America and West- fence Command. ern Electric, started work on| Gen. Laurence S. Kuter, com; the $1,000,000,000 project in Jan- mander of Norad, called the far-|U@Ty, 1958. flung alarm system "fantastic 10-SECOND ACTION ... a very real strengthening) 'Their huge radar antennas of our armed forces scan much of Europe, Asia "We now have a leg up on and some 2,000 miles of Arctic the enemy," Kuter declared./Jand. They are beamed con- WASHINGTON (CP) -- Con-| |real. Indications are that de- Paris 1 PARIS (Reuters) Crack French security forces today converged on Paris and other main cities in a combined se- curity manoeuvre. | The operation was ordered by the government to guard against a scheduled Commu- nist- demonstration and to re- hearse precautions against a possible revolt by right-wing extremists. Two thousand riot police and 3,000 men oi the para-military ¢\mobile gendarmerie were on standby duty on the outskirts of 4\ Paris after receiving sudden or- ders to move from their bases Friday night. Strong security forces also s|descended on the main provin- cial ciites, including Lille and Toulouse where Communist demonstrations were feared. The demonstrations For Riot By Reds Set tightened along the border with} Belgium where special branch |police reinforced customs men |checking' cars, The move came amid rumors | circulating in Paris that former |Gen. Raoul Salan, fugitive chief jot the underground right-wing |Secret Army Organization, had lleft his hideout in Algeria for Belgium. | The security measures were} jenforced as sources close to the| |government said some 2,500) |tough French riot police were] |being drafted for duty in Al-| | geria, | | The sources also reported that} main Algerian towns will be} |split into security sectors in an} Europeans from further clashes. | | The report followed another haveday of fighting between Mos-| been ordered. by the Commu-|!ems and Europeans in Algeria) i\ nists to protest against the ma- chine-gunning of their party|and 35 wounded. |headquarters in Paris two days| In addition, 18 French ago. Security measures England Thursday and arriv- ed in Antigua after brief stops At Bermuda and Trinidad. They plan to spend two to Four Children, three weeks in the Caribbean | area. --(AP Wirephoto. 83-Y ear-Old |Dead In Blaze CLONTARF, Ont. (CP)--Fire jin 'his farming community 20 miics south of Eganville Friday jnighi killed four children and |their 83-year-old great-grand- father. | The fire killed William Fel- General ee, roe hater, the grandfather of El- company of Canadair Limited!iard Felhaber, 27, who lost four of Montreal, has a $325,000,000| o¢ his five children in the blaze. aeted oe oe PO!The children ranging in age be- Dent and Cahill also attacked chese Naar eed pot 0 a the navy for subcontracting| P cy, 'al yf 6 bop set $300,000 worth of Polaris launch- tod ay ieee police said early ing tubes to Vickers of Mont-|'0day that ruins of the two- storey cement-block _ building were, still too hot early this morning to enable thent to re- cover the five bodies visible in the ruins, The parents of the children were out for the evening when pee fire broke out. Their oldest spite this criticism, the navy will push more of these orders into Vickers. Cahill said he will ask the House armed services commit- tee to make a complete investi- gation of navy contracting pro- lin which 13 persons were killed| wal \diers were killed and seven ithe biggest battles between Mos: \lem insurgents and regular | troops since the New Year wave of violence began. attempt to keep Moslems and| { also were] wounded in an ambush at Ker-| é ----.----| rata in eastern Algeria in one of b: | In the last two weeks of De-| }cember the French army said | 543 insurgents were killed, }wounded or deserted to the} | French, | West Reaction Colonial Test PATNA, India (Reuters) Prime Minister Nehru said to-| day the reaction of he gare powers to Portugal's plan to form an exile government for| Goa will be the test of their) real attitude on colonialism. Nehru made the statement in| | a speech in this northern city to the annual conference of his ruling Congress party. His speech was made in the quiet aftermath of a chaotic segsion Friday that caused a near-riot among a crowd of| about 500,000 party supporters. | The d tration was a hy-| |chid, Willard, 6, was spend jthe night at the home of his grandmother, Mrs. Florence cedure. Dent said he will decide later whether to launch a full hearing into ihe navy situation.|® n While the U.S. places orders|Muiroy, six miles away. -- in Canada, Canada also places| The fire-ravaged home is on orders in the U.S. Canadian offi-|2 backwoods wagon trail re- cials estinrated that production-/moved irom telephone contact. sharing between the two coun-|The nearest neighbor, is more tries is "running about neck and|than a mile away. neck" at the rate of about; Mrs. Felhaber who is preg- $150,000,000 a year each way. |nart. is being treated for shock ere : , ------~/a. the home of her mother. sterical expression of enthusi-| asm for Nehru but the 72-year-} old indian leader received it} with a fierce outburst of tem-| per. |. At one point he lashed out |with his fists at security guards |who prevented him from leav- (pe the platform and going | down into the seething crowd to 'calm it. Euromart Farm Talks Resumed Court Told Boy Denied Assault BRUSSELS (Reuters) -- The} European Common Market to- day resumed negotiations on a common farm policy with its LONDON, Ont, (CP) -- A de- six member states bargaining|toctive told a juvenile court haru to protect their nationa Friday of a conversation in intciests. which a 13 - year - old boy de- Ine second day of the cur-/nied harming Sylvia Finsk, 7, jterviewed the boy Nov. 24 and jtook him into custody. | Two teachers from the school the accused boy attended were \called to identify a school work FAREWELL WAVE Barbara Ettinger, Miss Hali- | the cold with fur cap and snow fax of 1962 has farewell wave | boots. However she doffed for the camerman as she per- | her coat to brighten the pic- ches atop deck railing prior to | ture when temperatures reach- sailing from New York aboard | the 40's. Barbara was leaving the liner Queen Elizabeth. | for a tour of Europe. Barbara came prepared for (CP Wirephoto) PROBE OF BAD T SPREADS Mounties Push Their Inquiry TORONTO (CP)--The RCMP |Says its investigation into the |sale of tainted meat in Ontario 1 still in full swing and may spread to other areas. RCMP Supt. F. B. Woods-| Johnson said there "has been| quite a bit of undercover work| involved and we are still at it.") There was no indication of! what areas might be involved! in further investigations. The RCMP investigation, which be- gan last August, had two men orginally and has since swelled to a seven - man operation. In Ottawa, Health Minister Monteith urged Canadians to re- main calm about the situation and said the sale of meat unfit for human consumption has been stopped. However, Mrs. Helen Morn- ingstar of Toronto, national food chairman of the Consum- ers Association of Canada, said bad meat is being sold all across the country. "Poultry is just as big a prob- lem as the tainted meat," she said. By late Friday, the RCMP had laid charges against 14 men, nine in Southern Ontario and five in the Ottawa area. Police said the two groups were apparently unconnected. Among those charged under the Food and Drug act is Or mond C. Raymond, a veterin- arian with the Brant. County health depariment. Florida City's... | Ruins Searched For Casualties | TORONTO (CP) -- Southern CRESTVIEW, Fla. (AP)--/ontario Motorists faced a sec- Rescue workers toiling aroun |ond day of nerve-wracking driv- the clock sifted through the ing conditions today as a snow- wreckage of a tornado-stricken| hearing storm spread northward city today in a grim search for|int the wake of Friday's freez- decd and injured. ling rain. Only one victim, a six-month-|, The weather office said it old girl, was known to have died| could see no relief until Sun- in the twister which spun out| day. It said a storm developing of a squall line like a yo-yo and|in Tennessee would likely add tore a three-mile-long 2ig-288/to driving miseries. path through this West aaa | Police in Southern Ontario Panhandle community. _lwere kept on the hop Friday But Capt.) J. W. Jourdan, di-|checking on an avalanche of recung a highway patrol emer-/highway mishaps. gercy team, said "there's a pos-| In Toronto, where rain turned sibility a lot of dead people will) to snow during the evening, the show up" in the flattened debris|police department had to call cf. more than 300 homes dam-|in all its motorcycles because aged by the storm. of slippery roads. , serious F; imately 63 personsj)accidents were reported. wane, mjured--five of them se-| In some sections of Western ricusly enough to be taken to|Ontario, freezing rain was fol- ' pa sti 500|lowed in the evening by fog. hospital---and an estimated 1.50" Roads in northeastern Huron | Winter Misery Hitting Traffic Northern and Central Ontario were expected to have only a light brush of snow, but with lower temperatures. Most Southern Ontario traffic was slowed to a crawl Friday by treacherous ice conditions. Plane flights in some areas were either cancelled or delayed, and power and telephone lines were occasionally out. The Windsor - Chatham-Sar- nia triangle was hardest hit by freezing rain. The Blue Water Bridge at Sarnia was often de- serted because trucks and other vehicles couldn't get a grip on its surface. No one was injured when a ru- ral school bus in Bright's Grove near Sarnia skidded into a ditch. A tractor-trailer ripped out. two steel light standards and 12 feet of steel grating on the Skyway Bridge at Burlington when it | RCMP said meat from fallen, dead, drowned, diseased or bloated animals was sold to Small packing houses which were not federally inspected and which were duped into be- lieving the meat was good by a "Brantford health department approved" stamp. Dr, John E. Stearns, Ottawa's director of food control and san- itation, said much of the public alarm which has resulted is un- necessary. Dr. A. R, Boyd, Toronto med- ical officer of health, described the bootlegged meat as distaste- ful rather than dangerous and said "we haven't had much of a problem with bad meat." RCMP said about 200,000 pounds of the meat appeared monthly on the market in Southern Ontario as rolled roasts, bologna, sausages, stew- ing meat and hamburger. By late Friday, more politi- cians than health officials were commenting on the problem, as city aldermen in Toronto, Ham- ilton and Ottawa and several provincial and federal leaders madé pronouncements, DENOUNCES PRACTICE Ontario Health Minister Dy- ~~ er Bipot of such meat is "a dreadful thing," and prom- ised to bring it up at a cabinet meeting next week. New Democratic Party Pro- vincial Leader Donald MacDon- ald said the government's fail- ure to enforce the Dead Ani- Disposal Act of 1959 close to being With five: crucial provincial byelections coming up Jan. 18, meat inspection showed signs of ee into a campaign issue, Others arrested and charged were: Charles Thompson of Brant- ford, Robert Hooten of nearby Scotland, Ont., both wholesale butchers; Edward Peconi of Ar- gyle, Ont., Nick Peconi, of Pet- erborough, a brother; Larry Fritz, of Chepstow, near Owen Sound; George Gibson and Gordon Johnson of Fergus and Allen Carey of Waterdown; Berchmans and Raymond Kipp, brothers, of Ottawa; Ger- main Menard and his two sons, Regent and Jean - Paul, of St. Onge, near Ottawa. Gibson and Johnson appeared in court in Orangeville, Ont., and were remanded to Jan. 26 on $1,000 bail. The five Ottawa - area men appeared in magistrate's court in Eastview, an Ottawa suburb, and were charged with selling meat unfit for human consump- "comes very . ; "We'll know almost instantly|stantly in ali directions from! Ibook that was entered as evi.|Were left homeless by the fun- went into a 300-foot skid. iton. They were released on when an enemy missile has which an enemy missile could been fired." \be fired. Although only two of three in-| The elaborate device at each stallations are operational, the installation can spot track an Ballistic Missile Early Warning) unidentified object the instant System was. formally accepted) jt rises above the horizon. Ra- in a brief ceremony by the air/dar echoes are analyzed by) defence command. A new unit, computers which determine the the 9th Aerospace Defence Di-| object's position and speed. Its vision, was given responsibility course is calculated, and in 10 for its operation. seconds a warning is flashed to Split - second warning of an the air defence command along) approachng missile -- or any two separate routes. airborne object -- can be given' "We relied on this system) by the installations at Thule,|against any missile attack for Greenland, and Clear, Alaska.|a year now," Gen. Kuter said. A third site is nearing comple|'We're not interested in 99-per-} tion at Fylingdales Moore, cent effectiveness. We demand Yorkshire, England complete assurance against en- Actually, the radar site at emy attack -- and I believe Thule went into operation in Oc-' we're finally getitng it." l MAKASSAR (Reuters) -- Air| eastern part of Indonesia, which; space was closed and the gen-|faces West New Guinea. Al eral mobilization of men and/naval spokesman said fleet ex- women was ordered in eastern! ercises are under way in East Indonesia Friday to prepare for|Indonesian waters. the announced invasion of Neth- with a revorted 250,000 battle- erlands New Guinea, which In- ready troops in this area on the donesia claims as West Irian. (alert for the invasion, President| __ Jakarta radio said Col. Bus-/Sukarno inspected paratroops| jiri, East Indonesian com-|at Parepare, 100 miles north of mander, ordered the mobiliza-| wakassar. tion of all persons between the ages of 16 and 45 in the area. NAMES MAIN BASE The air force announced the Sukarno has designated this close of air space over the port in the South Celebes as the main invasion springboard to CITY EMERGENCY [trom here. secause of its har! PHONE NUMBERS [con Rocimit Hendra: POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 to Pakistan, iiew in to Jakarta from Karachi on an urgent sum- mons from Sukarno Hendraningrat, former East |Indonesian. commandant, sai iThe Netherlands has 10,000 sol*) General Mobilizatio Ordered By Indonesia rent negotiations in this Belgian|found strangled in the attic of capilai ended Friday with the|an abandoned store here Nov. Marxet's chief ministers/13, swamped by technical details of} Detective Donald Andrews the fruit and vegetable trade. (was testifying at the trial of the The produce issue is one of boy, charged under the Juvenile the main hurdles the ministers|Delinquents Act with murder in will have to overcome by Jan.|the death of the girl. 13 -- deadline for the farm agreement. jtially hidden in an alcove, her This date also marks the|/head and upper body suspended scheduled start of the Market's|from an electric light cable by transition into the second of its|her own belt, knitted tightly three four-year stages of ad-|around her throat. : vauce toward full economic! Judge W. H. Fox admitted unity. jinto evidence notes the detec- Previously the transition was/tive took from memory shortly <ct for Jan. 1 but the ministers|after the boy had a conversa- fatica to meet this deadline be-|tion with his parents and his cause of inability to reach a|Minister Nov. 25. farm agreement. The trial, in its second day, ' a --__ ran into a night session before being adjourned until Monday. |DENIES TYING GIRL | According to the notes, the |boy admitted being with Sylvia. | Asked by the minister if he had |put the belt around the girl's jneck, the boy said he put the belt around her, high on the chest under the arms. ' > notes age the boy said sa pepe ava Amer}. He dragged the girl into the cor- diers and marines with Ameri ner of. the attic Where she was canmade arms: in West New\found, but did not. tie her up Guinea. by the belt. (In Melbourne, Dutch Ambas-| Det. Sgt. Len Elgie testified sador J. G. de Beus said Dutch|he and another policeman in. forces would fight in event of ce es oe ee ee ee invasion and might "in some ° s ae ask for Austral- Algeria Violence ian help, . . 3 os -- ~~ The Nether-| rakes More Lives ands wou e pleased to see a| ALGIERS (Reuters)--A new United Nations police force sent| ri Q I en'/year wave of terrorism in. Al- to the stea. ; igeria continued today with a (Australian Opposition Leader) European and a Moslem killed Arthur Calwel) has called for|and two Europeans wounded in government assurances on -AuS-! separate attacks in Algiers tralia's position in event of the} Jn Constantine Eastern Al- invasion, describing Sukarno as geria, a Evropean cafe owner Australia's enemy and a col-|was shot dead laborator with Japan in the] Today's incidents followed Second World War.) |another day of fighting between The disputed territory occu-|Moslems and Europeans Friday pies roughly half. of an island|in which 13 persons were killed north" of Australia. The other|and 35 wounded throughout the half is ruled by Australia. |North African 'grritory, ' |dence. | In the book, found by a teacher after the boy's arrest, were several drawings of peo- ple on scaffolds. The boy's home room teacher, jin evaluating the boy's intelli- |13 - year - old was slightly be- \low average. A psychiatrist said Thursday |he considered the boy was NEHRU'S IMACE Stars At NEW DELHIA (AP) -- A Hindu mystic says Prime Minister Nehru's image in Western:eyes has been ruined by India's military seizure of Goa -- and it was all the fault of the stars. Swami Ragavendra Dassji, 45, said the takeover of Goa | and two other Portuguese col- onies last month "shocked many good friends of India (and) was a warning shadow of the shape of things to come." The swami was among 700 sadhus (holy men) and pan- dits (learned men) who for the last fortnight held round- the - clock congregational prayers on the banks. of the sacred Jumna River. They have wide influence in India. The recitation of verses many thousands of times, ending Friday' night, | was aimed at averting the evil effects of a conjunction of eight planets in the sign of Capricorn. Astrologers said the planets will reach the cru- cial. period in the first week of February, and predicted above average in intelligence. |wood in Alabama. sacred | nel which apparently dipped to the ground three times. A series of squall lines blow- ing across the lower half of the Guii Coast states spawned the jtornado which pounded Crest- view and others which caused Sylvia was found lying par-|gence, said he considered the|less severe damage elsewhere lin northwest Florida and south Aiabama. Slight property dam- age was reported at Destin and Paxton in Florida and at Glen- Swami Decides Fault the danger of catastrophes around the world that would take many lives. DISCOUNTED BY NEHRU Nehru has discounted these predictions and has appealed to Indians to have faith in themselves and not indulge in star gazing But forebodings of disaster run so high in. some circles here that many families have postponed marriages, betro- thals and other' such ceremon- ies until after the period has passed. To ward off the evil of the planets' positions non - stop prayers are being organized in many Indian cities No one has yet predicted the exact nature of the feared catastrophes, except to say there will be deaths on a mass scale from such things as earthquakes, floods, epi- demics and famine. What might be considered a hopeful note is that all are agreed the February conjunc- tion will not cause an atomic war, \County were described as "treacherous" because of fog and freezing: drizzle. At London, a truck loaded with 1,250 gallons of furnace oil overturned on an_ice-covered gravel road and $2,500 worth of fuel poured from the damaged vehicle. Driver Jeffrey Clark, 36, suffered only a bruised knee. All areas bordering Lakes |Erie and Ontario could expect \the worst today, the weather of- ifice said. Most would get a ------|change from freezing rain to light snow as cold weather swung over the area, with the northbound storm moved in. Storm Lashes US. With Ice -- Snow, Tornado | CHICAGO (AP) -- The first major U.S. storm of the new jyeur buffeted an area from |Tecas to New England with snow, sleet and freezing rain to- \dey, piling up huge drifts in }Oklahoma, Kansas and Mis- suuri and glazing roads with packed snow and ice. Blasts of Canadian air that 'laccoapanied the storm spilled jinto the South as far as Florida, jspawning several t orna does. One iwister hit Crestview, Fla., killing one person, injuring at |least 60 others and leaving 1,500 homeless. The snowstorm brought near blizzard conditions Friday to jnarts of Oklahoma, Kansas and | Missouri. | Kansas City was nearly par- jalyzed by a 10-inch snowfall that} |caused huge traffic tie-ups. St, Joseph, Mo., had seven inches and Olathe and Topeka, Kan., bad six. Six-foot' drifts were| ommon in the area, where 50- 60-mule winds reduced visibility at umes to a few feet. snowbecoming heavier as the} | Seven schools in the London area were closed. $1,000 bail each and remanded until Jan. 11 A car stalled on a railroad crossing five miles south of Topeka, Kan., was ripped into three major pieces and its driver killed when it was hit by a speeding Santa Fe train Friday. The car, driven by Bernard E. Etzel, 42, of Topek;, stopped @p the tracks when te railroad guard arms FATALITY SCENE lowered in front of it and in back of it. Witnesses said that Etzel was unable to m=: > = s car due to the snow and ice on the- roadway. Visibility at the time of the accident was limited due to heav' s79w*s'l which had accumulated to six inches in the lasi i ncusS --AP Wirephoto

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