Ss tne im of; x R, P>.4 d A cg ilbnt ADe Mae pM ng hh asi cali NW glee ic GM SOM cA Neg EMO I SGN Me ET OSD Sg CE Se Urges Duty On U.K. Tubes OTTAWA (CP) --A request for a 15-per-cent import duty on British radio and TV receiving sets and tubes was presented to the Tariff Board Monday by the Electronic Industries Associa- tion of Canada. The proposal for the new tar- iff--present radio and TV im- ports from Commonwealth countries are duty-free --was heard as the board opened a general study of the electronics industry. The association, whose mem- bers include some major Cana- dian subsidiaries of United States firms, proposed no change in the present 20-per- cent '"'most-favored nation" tar- iff that applies to imports from such countries as the United States and Japan. However, its brief proposed a number of tariff reductions on component parts used to make radio and TV sets and other electronic equipment. It said this is aimed at achieving "the lowest possible cost structure within the industry.' | | The association's brief said higher tariffs on Japanese im- ports would be 'impractical as a means of combatting this competition" since prices jsuch imports were so low. | In the first nine months jlast year, it said, imports Japanese radios represented 52 per cent of total radio sales in of of Tariff Board 'Living Costs Hit 'New Record High OTTAWA (CP)--Living costs rose to a record high in April las the consumer price index ad- |vanced to 130.3 on April 1 from /129.7 on March 1, The rise of six-tenths of a point in Canada's yardstick of prices, reported today by the Dominion Bureau of Statistics, was the sharpest monthly in- crease since the fall of 1960, The April 1 index level of 130.3 -- based on 1949 prices jequalling 100--compares with 129.1 a year earlier. The month's increase followed four! months of relative price stabil- ity during which the previous record high of 129.8 was set in December and February. Higher food and health-care costs were the main factors be- hind the latest increase. But five of the seven. component parts of the over-all price in- crease were higher food, clothing, transportation, health and personal care, and tobacco crease in industrial wages dur- ing February. The index of av- erage industrial wages and sal- aries at March 1--the latest date available--was 186.6 com- pared with 184.5 a month ear- lier and 181.1 a year earlier. The rise of nearly one point in the index of health and per- sonal care costs, to 158.1 from 157.2, resulted from higher fees for doctors, dentists and opti- cal care, and higher prices for toilet soar and men's haircuts. The clothing index rose to 113.2 from 112.9, with higher prices for men's and children's wear, shoes and piece goods. TRAVEL MORE COSTLY Price increases for auto re- pairs and higher air travel fares boosted the transportation index to 140.2 from 139.9. Higher liquor prices in Que- bec and Ontario caused the rise to 117.9 from 117.5 in the index of tobacco and alcohol costs. Housing costs remained un- jane alcohol. |HOUSING COSTS SAME There was no change in the index of housing costs, which represents 32 per cent of the} household budget covered by the consumer price index. Food prices advanced| jsharply, with the index jump-| ing to 125.8 from 124.4, with! price tags higher on most fruits and vegetables, beef, some pork items, chicken and bread. Prices were lower for of changed, with the index stay- ing at 134.0. Rents showed no change and. home - ownership costs edged higher, but there was a fractional decline in household operations costs re- sulting mainly from lower elec- tricity rates in Vancouver and} Victoria. Meanwhile, there were mixed trends in wholesale prices. The price index of 30 indus- trial raw materials declined to |249.6 from 249.9 between March }30 and April 19. In the same |Canada and imports of Japan-| jese radio and TV_ receiving} jtubes represented 15.7 per cent! lof Canadian factory shipments of competing products. "The industry fears a com- parable onslaught of television receivers in the near future.' eggs, frozen orange juice, fresh|neriod the index of Canadian tomatoes, chocolate bars and|farm products ai terminal mar- fats including butter. kets rose to 220.3 from 218.9. The rise in the over-all price|Both indexes are based on index followed a_ strong in-'1935-39 prices equalling 100. INTERPRETING THE NEWS TAKES SABIN VACCINE Dr. C. D. Farquharson, | medical officer of health in the Toronto suburb of Scar- borough, tries out cherry- Appear As Champions No U.S. Grief Of Provincial Rights Over Red Move By JOSEPH MacSWEEN HOPED FOR COALITION By THE CANADIAN PRESS Canadian Press Staff Writer | The hope has been that Boun At least two of Canada's po-|for the provinces to "carry out|pons. Canada should go on a| The gery hg is showing ee ee y Pie with litical leaders are seeking to|their responsibilities" and .had/peace offensive to help emerg-| 2° si m grie 2A yb a ag pe A Ber Sree project an electoral image of|also helped the municipalities. |ing nations achieve a democra-|OV€r iC : ae Bena discal ee Pho i. themselves as the champions of gpyymisTIC ON JOBS = OTs officials have bidicaied tion to rule the country of 2,000, provincial rights. He also told the rally, at- At. Cornwall, NDP National). ip, . 000, Prime Minister Diefenbaker,|tended by some 1,100, that the President Michael Oliver filled) on his first campaign swing| government was. forecasting" for Mr. Douglas. Speaking) through Quebec, declared itleyer decreasing unemployment|™ainly in French, he outlined) Granby Monday night that the and steadily mounting employ- Saskatchewan's medical health Progressive Conservative gov-' ment. plan. ernment had restored the prov- inces' constitutional tax rights) --with the benefits spread| across the country. Earlier, Social Credit Leader} Robert Thompson said.in Mont- real his party stands for '"'the preservation of provincial au- tonomy." He spoke at Brant- ford Monday night. For Liberal Leader Lester Pearson it was, so to speak, a day at home. He travelled by car along the north shore of Lake Huron, stopping along the way for speeches and chats with his own constituents in Al- goma East riding. flavored sabin oral poliomy- elitis vaccine. Free clinics for residents of York county opened Monday. been done, making it possible Canada to have nuclear wea- munist capture of Nam Tha, alOf the government, town only 20 miles from the} Such a solution is the pro- Red China border, should not|fessed desire of both the U.S. prevent the formation of a coali-|and the Soviet Union at the 14- tion government in the small/nation conference on Laos that Southeast Asian country. |began in Geneva nearly a year Officially, the state depart- ago. ment described the action as a} Some sources in Geneva feel violation of the cease-fire which|that Red China, also a member jis supposed to have been in ef-/of the conference, believes it |fect in Laos since a year ago. |has only to wait and in time The cease-fire has been vio-jtiny Laos will come under its} jlated frequently although not injinfluence as an inevitable event) . . | During Killing lsuch a scale. The U.S., it is re-|of history. : |should concentrate on solutions ported, recently warned pro-| Obviously repellent' to the to Canadian problems rather) MESSINA, Italy (Reuters)--|Western Premier Prince Boun|West, this idea is also sald to) than attack the Liberal party. /Three witnesses gave evidence|Oum that he was looking for|be unattractive to Russia, wor-| "At the moment, he (Mr.|Monday that a man accused| trouble by building up his mili- ried about the expansionist poli-| Diefenbaker) is the head of the|with four Capuchin friars and|tary strength in the Nam Thajcies of its giant Communist| government. and instead ofjtwo other laymen of man-area -- a step regarded as pro- partner. Bs | whacking us, he might havelslaughter and extortion was sit-|vocative. _ Critics of the U.S. find it dif-| been more effective in saying|ting at home at the time of the! ficult to reconcile the compara-| what he was going to do," said alleged killing. | tively e ] astic policy in| Only leader not on the hust-|the Liberal leader, referring to, hey were giving evidence for Laos with its tough attitude in} ings Monday was T. C. Douglas|Mr. Diefenbaker's keynote ad-iGirolamo Azzolina, 27, in con- neighboring South Viet Nam,| of the New Democratic Party.|dress in London, Ont., last Sat-|nection with the death of land-| where American soldiers and| Mr. Pearson, personally can-, vassing support for re-election 4 in he. Ontario riding he has Witnesses Say represented since -1948, took is- sue with Mr. Diefenbaker's election approach. He told an audience of about 200 in the pulp and paper town of Espa- nola that the prime minister Army Officers on the contrary, that the Com-/000 with Souvanna at the head Ship Launched In Memory Of Nild. Tragedy COLLINGWOOD, Ont. (CP)-- A 188-foot passenger - cargo vessel was launched here Mon- day, christened with a name commemorating a Newfound- land tragedy in the Second World War. The Taverner, 310 tons, was built for the department of transport to be operated in the Newfoundland and Labrador coastal area by Canadian Na- tional Railways. The ship is named after the late Capt. Benjamin Taverner, skipper of the Caribou, a 2,200- ton vessel operating between \North Sydney, N.S. and Port aux Basques, Nfld., which was torpedoed by a German subma- rine in the early dawn hours of Oct. 14, 1942. Capt. Taverner, his 16-year- old former sealing vessel set- tling fast, attempted to ram the German sub as it surfaced to watch the death of the Cari- bou but the ship went down be- fore it reached its enemy. A to- tal of 137 persons, including the captain and two of his sons who were officers on the ship, died. 101 others. dation | WASHINGTON (CP) --The U.S. space agency is aiming for a May 17 triple orbit, its sec- ond, wtih the father of four chil- dren aboard the Mercury cap- sule that will attempt to dupli- cate the John Glenn shot with a few extra experiments thrown in. An agency official said Mon- day the May 17 date "'looks good" and that navy flier Scott Carpenter is showing up fine going through the same rigid pre-flight conditioning at Cape Canaveral which Glenn __per- formed before he was sent aloft last Feb, 20. But these flight dates are only tentative. Weather, elec- tronic gremlins, human factors --almost anything can force a switch. Glenn's shot was de- layed for three months. Carpenter, 37, navy lieuten- ant-commander, will attempt to follow Glenn's triple flight around the earth in four hours, 56 minutes, at a peak altitude of 162.4 miles. | | Naval and other vessels rescued|and 20 seated passengers an jis equipped to carry a crew of The Taverner has accommo-/27. She is expected to go into for 30 berth passengers'service by mid-summer. U.S. Triple Orbit Plans For May 17 TO SWITCH OBSERVATION But he'll be asked to pay less attention to the spacecraft's performance and more atten- tion on visual observation inside and outside the craft. Along with a_ transparent sphere of water in the ship--to learn more about water storage problems in space--Carpenter will be watching behavior of man - made particles to be ejected from the craft by means of a trailing balloon. Carpenter also will be watch- ing for reappearance of the strange "fireflies'--the lumin- ous green particles which Glenn said appeared around his cap- sule as it moved into the sun-| light on each orbit. If possible, Carpenter will try to bring photographic evidence of their existence. Glenn tried to photograph them but said "it looks like there wasn't sufficient light emanating from them to register on the color film." Sci- entist John O'Keefe figures they may be flecks of paint from the spacecraft or condensation of moisture from the craft's heat exchanger. MAINLY COOL WEATHER | WEATHER FORECAST Cloudy, Cool Weather Seen Forecasts issued by the Tor- onto weather office at 5 a.m.: Synopsis: A storm centred over western Illinois will move eastward south of the Great Lakes today. Rain has already spread over Michigan and southwestern Ontario, while over the upper Great Lakes the precipitation is in the form of snow or snow and rain mixed. This precipitation combined with cool easterly winds will He was in bed in Toronto try-) ing to shake off a stomach ail-| ment and had to cancel a meet-| ing in Cornwall. The Conservative and Liberal chieftains planned to continue today on the same trails as Monday. Mr. Diefenbaker was to conclude his initial Quebec circuit with calls along the} north shore of the St. Lawrence} River at Mont-Joli, Riviere-du-| Loup, Trois - Postoles and Ri- mouski. Mr. Pearson was to) tour Manitoulin Island and spend the night in Toronto. THOMPSON FLIES WEST westwards for his first cam- paign visit to Vancouver and) Victoria, Mr. Douglas, if well,/mately 46.6 cents of every dol-|ii41 are was to speak tonight at Wel- land. Monday's campaign scene saw Mr. Diefenbaker fly from| Ottawa for a morning visit to a) veterans hospital at Ste. Anne de Bellevue. This was followed by a series of appearances at) town halls, addresses to coun- cillors and school children in, Dorion and the Eastern Town-| ships communities of Farnham and Cowansville. | In his main_ speech at Granby, which he opened and) closed by reading from a pre-| pared French text, the prime! minister said every Canadian province has benefited from the Conservatives' policy of re- storing taxation rights assumed) by the former Liberal govern- ment in wartime "The former government was in many respects making the provinces wards 'of the federal government," he said fn 1957 and 1958 the Conserv- atives' main promise had been to restore provincial constitu-| tional rights This now had ATOMIC TANKER MOSCOW (AP)--Pravda_ re- ported Soviet designers are working on plans for a 60,000-| ton atomic-powered tanker that urday. The prime minister's speech had seemed to miss the point that jobs were more important} than "personal criticism," per- sonal attack." Mr. Pearson ious election pledges to cut un- employment, reduce expendi- tures, slice taxes and balance budgets. | ATTACKS OLD PARTIES The Social Credit leader, speaking before a crowd of some 300 in the industrial city of Brantford, said Canadians ernmental system of the old| traditional parties. Approxi- lar earned went to support a debt-laden economy. Canada's major problem was} that it could not distribute its] wealth to the consumer through the existing economic system, | He told reporters in Montreal) it is 'not necessary to sell your freedom to have security." Touching on foreign policy, he said it is not necessary for| List With LLOYD || We don't just list property . . - WE Sell It REALTOR |) LLOYD REALTY (Oshawa) LTD. 101 Simcoe North -- 728-5123 OPEN EVERY EVENING Then Call Your Mover |] OSHAWA by the Board of Education on the next heating season. Tenders will close Monday, M of the Board of Education, 55 Board of Education, Oshewe, Ontario TENDERS FOR COAL AND FUEL OIL Sealed Tenders marked 'Tenders for Fuel" will be received Quantities and specifications may be obtained at the Office SCHOOLS their requirements for Fuel for oy 21st, 1962, at 4:00 P.M, 5 Rossland Rd, W., J. R, Backus, Business Administrator owner Angelo Cannada, who| had refused to pay extortion money demanded in letters. One of the witnesses, Mrs. Carmela la Rocca, who had accused the Con-|Confessed to not being able tojernment has arrested or im- servatives of not fulfilling prev-/Tead a clock, was asked by the|posed military "sanctions" on 8 suppl magistrate how she managed to|several high-ranking army offi-|Toutes for Red guerrillas in|Niagara, Lake Ontario -region give the time in the case. After a pause, she replied: | Arrested For OAS Activity PARIS (Reuters)--The gov-| | cers after exposing a rightwing} plot against president de airmen are actively assisting in| the battle against communist. USED FOR SUPPLIES | Sunday's action brought this) criticism into greater promin-| ence since Communist - held) parts of Laos are used as supply) South Viet Nam. Averell Harriman, U.S. assis- "Mr. president, I regulate my-|Gaulle's regime, pea ronpeiog | 7 State secretary for Far self by the sun."' Another witness said that the friary gardener, lo Bartolo, who is alleged to have committed} sulcide in prison during pretrial) /investigation, was a man "dedi-| goud Mr. Thompson was to wingjare half enslaved by the g0V-|.ated to work, affectionate, and Secret respectful." The four Capuchin friars on Father Carmelo (Luigi! Galizia) 83, Father Agrippino| (Antonio Jaluna) 39, Father Venanzio (Liborio Marotta) 46, vissuto) 42." The laymen are Guiseppe Sal-| emi, 35, Girolamo Azzolina, 27,) and Filippo Nicoletti, 20. sources said here Monday night. The taken cers, after sources said action was including ex-colonel one general, Antoine Ar- Army Organization, | made a_ clandestine tour of} French Army units in Ger- many. The officers were alleged to either have met Argoud for sec-| ret talks or to have been guilty| jand Father Vittorio (Ugo Bon-|of 'lack of vigilance" because} the former colonel was able to! meet commanders and other of- ficers with impunity during the tour last month. IMPORTANT MESSAGE FOR FM LISTENERS CHFI-FM has now complet: ed the installation ot a new stereo broadcasting antenna incorporating the very latest audio techniques in The new CHFI-FM antenna the finest clarity and sig North America. , Now in operation, provides nal strength tor FM-Stereo reception. It will also guarantee even better reception for FI-FM listeners with regular FM receivers. Listen to the finest sound in. the at 98.1 on your FM dial. land, Stereo or regular FM, CHURIT- FM 98.1 on your FM dial Eastern affairs, did not appear to satisfy the critics when he tion program, Asked why the Communists , a leader of the terrorist|Would share the West's desire) Timagami, to end the civil war in Laos, Harriman replied: --H's not a very attractive piece of real estate . . . It may well be that the Russians would tral for the time being." give rather unpleasant weather increasing to easterly 15 to 20 this afternoon and shifting to northerly 15 during the night. White River region: Cloudy. Intermittent snow, occasionally mixed with rain ending this evening. Partial clearing and cold tonight. Wednesday mainly sunny but cool. Winds light. Cochrane region: Mainly cloudy with scattered snowflur- ries this afternoon and evening. Wednesday clearing but contin- uing cool. Winds light. to all regions today, followed by partial clearing tonight. Wednesday will be partly cloudy and cool with clearing skies in the evening. | Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, 8, |Windsor, Hamilton, Toronto: \Cloudy with intermittent rain today. Partial clearing tonight, Wednesday parily cloudy and Be jcontinuing cool. Winds easterly| against five or six offi-/aPpeared on a television ques-|15 to 25, becoming northerly raf eben | illaloe | 'early Wednesday, decreasing to jlight by Wednesday evening. Georgian Bay, |Haliburton regions, North Bay, Sudbury: Cloudy.and -cool. In- jtermittent rain or rain and snow mixed, beginning about midday and ending early to- jlike to see that area kept neu-/night. Wednesday partly cloudy Forecast temperatures Low tonight, high We'nesd>" Windsor .. 40 St. Thomas........ 40 London ... 38 Kitchener ...+++++ Wingham .. ; Hamilton St. Catharines..... Toronto ..... pevee Peterborough | | se eeneee | 4 4 4 i Muskoka ... North Bay. Sudbury Earlton ...sessees Kapuskasing ..... White River....... Moosonee ......++ Sault Ste. Marie.. Mount Forest..... Observed Temperatures Low overnight, High Monday! Dawson ..... 38 Victoria . Edmonton .....+.+ Regina ..... Winnipeg Fort William . White River Kapuskasing ..... North Bay ........ S.S. Marie ....00.. Toronto ... Ottawa ... Montreal Quebec Blood Group Said Matching Slain Persons TORONTO (CP) -- A Detroit policeman testified Monday at the trial of a Detroit man, who is charged with the murder of Therland Crater, 43, that he found blood on handkerchiefs and nailclippings of the same lood group as that of two slain persons. Arthur Lucas, 54, of Detroit is charged with the capital murder of Crater, whose slashed body, riddled with shot- gun pellets, was found Nov. 17 in a Toronto apartment. Carol Newman, 23, with whom Crater had been living, also was found dead of throat wounds In the apartment they shared. Patrolman Harold Aflutis of the Detroit scientific bureau jsaid he tested scrapings from Lucas's fingernails for 'blood Noy. 18 and found the middle finger of the left hand reacted positively. He testified that fingernail clippings found on the floor of acar also were positive, as were an arm rest and door handle. A handkerchief found in the same place was also pos- itive and showed human blood, Group B, he said. Henry John Funk of the On- ario attorney-general's depart- rent testified blood samples rom Crater and Miss Newman elonged to Group B and that e also found blood of the same roup on a .38-calibre revolver, man's ring and two handker- hiefs. A blood-stained .38-calibre re- 'olver was found Nov. 19 on he footpath of the Burlington jkyway. The trial is continuing. Distributed from: BOSTON LOS ANGELES LONDON CHICAGO THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR WSPAPER Interesting Accurate Complete International News Coverage ee ee ee ee oe ee The Christion Science Monitor One Norwoy St., Boston 15, Moss. Send your newspaper for the time checked. Enclosed find my check er money order. [] 1 yeor $22. 0 6 months $11 [ 3 months $5.50 Nome Address Halifax .. IT STARTS ON WED., MAY 9th SKATELAND | OSHAWA ARENA ROLLER SKATING land cool. Winds light easterly, OSHAWA PUBLIC SCHOOLS REGISTRATION KINDERGARTEN & GRADE 1 PUPILS May 10th, from 1:30 day is not later than D J.ROSS BACKUS, Business Administrator Registration of Kindergarten and Grade | pupils who will be entering school for the first time in September, 1962, will be held in all schools except King Street, Ridgeway and T. R. McEwen during the afternoons of May 9th and to 4:00 p.m. For KINDERGARTEN, the Registration will be for children whose Sth Birth- ecember 31st, 1962. For GRADE |, the Registration will be accepted for children whose 6th Birth- day is not later than December 31st, 1962. Pupils now enrolled in Kindergarten do not need to register for Grade I, Birth Certificates must be presented before children will be finally admitted. If these are not presently availabi from the Registrar General Department, 70 Lombard Street, Toronto: Ont- ario, (Fee $1.00), and submitted to the Principal before June 29th, 1962. bh they The Board would appreciate as complete a registration as possible so that the adjustment of school districts may be completed as early as possible. BOARD OF EDUCATION, OSHAWA, ONTARIO C.M.ELLIOTT, Superintendent of Public Schools R. H. STROUD Chairman Id be obtained immediately Your Oshawa There When Whether you are moving need to miss a single issue if you notify us, or your car "TIMES" News, pictures, services at @ time when you addresses and we will mak Times is et your new Home. 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