Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 19 May 1962, p. 1

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oman K THOUGHT FOR TODAY One-way streets enable drivers to move more quickly from one traffic jam to another. 1 T i 9 ¢ Oshawa Time ee Injured Near Uxbridge -- P. 11 WEATHER REPORT Mainly sunny hot today and and continuing Sunday. A few scattered thunderstorms or showers Sunday evening. VOL. 91--NO. 118 ae Price Not Overs 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, MAY 19, 1962 Authorized os Second Class Ma Ottawa and for payment il Post Office Department, of Postage in Cash. TWENTY-TWO PAGES Terrorists Hit French Police With Mortars warned the territory {s on the killing: one Moslem and wound- ing another. brink of a "bloodbath." In the European working-| The Secret Army announced class quarter of Bab El Oued,|in pamphlets pinned to trees in| police found the body of a Eu-|Algiers that a had started a} ' jropean whose throat had been|"scorched earth' policy in its day, then 'fled before . deter et by the terrorist Secreticampaign to smash French mined counter-attack. |Army Organization. plans for Algerian indepen- The mobile gendarmes poured; On the body was note|dence. out of thelr headquarters andiwhich read: In Paris the Communist-led encircled the entire district) "] was a Secret Agent. I have/Trade Union Organization said after engaging Secret ArmY|peen tried . . . thank you OAS."|it had been threatened with terrorists in an exchange of) Jn Algiers there were grow-|*shock troop" action by the Se- rifle and machine-gun fire. Theling fears that Moslem national-!cret Army in a letter mailed Secret Army commandos fled|ists may launch a terror coun-|in Algiers and signed by former CP from AP-Reuters ALGIERS--Secret Army ter- rorists attacked mobile gen- darmes stationed in the Sum- mer Palace with mortar fire to-| a into a wooded heights area. There were no reports of cas-| Army. ualties on either side in the} battle. The Summer Palace once was|take "effective measures" the home of France's delegate-|against European violence and Algiers Moslem commander general to Algeria, but now|a houses detachments of the mo-|- bile gendarmes, a military-type| police force. The mortar shells were lobbed into the grounds of the palace and burst in the lush tropical gardens. Before smoke cleared away a patrol of mobile gendarmes in armored vehicles raced out of the plush palace grounds into the street. UNLEASH FIRE from a ninth-floor room of the Suddenly rifle and machine-|Statler Hilton Hotel Friday gun fire broke out from em-|night. bankments overlooking the . : | Moments after the tragedy, etect. the Fond arms s UN|police said, the woman ap- leashed a heavy return fire. Other gendarme units were}! E called into the area to throw cad <) chee Smerene Srond Ht ae {he pal-| "Police identified the woman ace unit and the Secret Army}; a Aan Patera: of War commandos exchanged fire. ee i " H " 4 jcester. She is about 30 years a. pres eg ge PF and a former mental pa- id whitewalled building in|? t age gt Roe waggle The children, Norman, 7, and white wall, was : ts ay, Oe ee pe Mc ty ieee edhaet a Marguerite, 3, died within min- Algeria. jutes after they landed on a busy * a net far from the heart SoH at the rear of the hotel. of the city on a broad, palm- linedestreet that was spel nm down mentally under the strain pleasant strolling place. jof a broken marriage. The Mother Tosses Children Out 9 Floors Up killed her two "1 iter-offensive against the Secret! co]. The Algerian provisional gov-| jernment called on Moslems to} |peared at the room clerks' desk) ~ Possible 'Korea NASHVILLE, Tenn. Teamsters President Police said Mrs. Peters broke! separated) Jean Gardes, the Secret Army chief. | The letter warned: "The comedy has gone on long enough. It is high time to use Napalm bombs and incen- diaries against you Commu- nists." | The French high commission} in Algeria announced that the} Moslem national liberation front! released 13 Europeans recently} |kidnapped in the Oran area. | | Algiers police reported that one European had been kid- napped by Moslems and an-| other . had Newspapers Friday carried |peans who disappeared in Al giers during the last few days. The death toll throughout the jterritory Friday: was 28, includ- jing 10 Moslem women. Situation Seen By Khrushchev | SOFIA, Bulgaria (AP) -- So-|cases. viet Premier Khrushchev Fri- day pictured the dispatch of United States Marines to Thail- das an unwise move that disappeared while|~ BOSTON (AP) -- A mother|nassing a Moslem district. small children, ' police said, by throwing them missing notices for seven Euro- | WATCH ORBIT PREPARATION Astronaut John Glenn, left; Nancy Lowe, secretary to the astronauts, and Dr. William Douglas, physician to the astronau O (AP) =| James R. ts, relax on the side- lines as Scott Carpenter goes through final stages of his training for Tuesday's orbital flight. This photo was re- leased by the National Aero- Senate committee the looking|thing into improper labor practices.jagainst labor leaders in this) nautics and Space Adminis- tration at Cape Canaveral to- day. --NASA Photo via AP Wirephoto James Hoffa Indicted' Taft-Hartley Law like other indictments Gibbons said, '"'the |kong River border with Laos. |Young accompanied Harkins on} Hoffa, who pleaded innocent|country,"' Friday to a charge of assau't| essence of it is anything but the of a union aide, declined to dis-|+ wath " cuss the indictment. But cee : Teamsters official in Chicago| lf convicted, Hoffa could be said Hoffa "shed no tears"|sentenced up to a year in prison when informed of his latest preyand be fined $10,000 on each of, dicament. bi ithe two counts, Hoffa, who flew to Chicago) at orjando, Fla., federal for a two scheduled talks after) aig his Washington court appear-|court has under advisement a |Hoffa was indicted by a fed-| eral court jury here Friday on lcharges of violating the Taft- iHartley labor law and collect- ling some $1,000,000 illegally. He is involved in two other court The two - count indictment; which involve d payment through an auto transport firm incorporated in Nashville, was BANGKOK , (AP) -- Monsoon. drenched U.S. Marines pre- pared today to join Thai army units in military manoeuvres near Thailand's tense border with Laos. Torrential rains lashed the group in northeast Thailand is camped 30 miles from the Me- The marines plodded through deep mud this morning. U.S. military sources said they are expected to join Thai troops in field exercises this weekend to familiarize them- selves with the surrounding flat and scrubby terrain. | Gen. Paul Harkins, comman- der of the U.S. force in Thal- land, flew to northeast J 20s} today to inspect the situation, which Soviet Premier - chev warned might explode into a shooting match like the Kor-| ean War. Harkins, as head of the U.S.| military assistance command in South Viet Nam, said 1S.| forces in Thailand are under holdfire orders. But he warned) that danger still lurks from pro-| Communist forces in Laos! whose recent offensive brought U.S. troops to Thailand to dis-| advances. | Lt. - Gen. James Richardson} and U.S. Ambassador Kenneth} the flight to Udon, 350 miles northeast of Bangkok. They ar- ranged to drive to the town of Nong Han, where the marines are camped Harkins is scheduled to re- turn to his headquarters in Sai- gon Sunday leaving Richard Growing Lists courage any further Communist) 1°") an expert in jungle warfare, in command of the U.S, military buildup in Thailand that is ex- pected to reach 5,000 men. Communist radio broadcasts claimed Royal Laotian troops attacked and drove back pro- Communist Pathet Lao rebels from an area near the royal capital of Luang Prabang earl- ier this week. But reports from Laos indi- cated a lull in military activity as attention focused on diplo- matic manoeuvres that the U.S. hopes will bring about a neutral Laos and end the need for U.S. troops in Thailand. Prince Souvanna Phouma, Hot Holiday For Monday TORONTO (CP) -- The heat wave continued throughout On- tario Friday and weathermen said today a sizzling Victoria Day holiday was in prospect. _ Temperatures were expected in the 80s and 90s in Southern Ontario as the record-breaking heat wave went into its sixth Toronto was the hottest city in Canada Friday at 94. The previous high. 93 degrees was registered in 1895. Toronto city officials agreed to open five of the six city-op- erated swimming pools today, a week early. Some schools moved their classes outside. only . cooling, - until... at least Monday hight, was ex- pected at Northern Ontario, where the centre of high pres- sure that has been responsible for the tropical weather has di- U.S. Marines To Join Thai Manoeuvres Laotian neutralist leader, headed home from Europe to- day to try once again to form a nonaligned Laotian govern- ment, which both the United States and the Soviet Union say they want. The Communists meanwhile mounted a torrent of words at the U.S. military guildup in Thailand. In Bulgaria Friday night, Khrushchev called the move un- wise and said it might lead to another Korea. But Khrushchev dodged a question about whether he thought Communist China would join in any conflict in Southeast Asia as it did in Kor- ea. Red China accused the United States of trying to engulf the whole of Southeast Asia in a "local" Korea-type of war and declared it could not ignore the dispatch of U.S. troops to Thai- land. "China absolutely cannot -per- mit the establishment of a new military bridgehead aimed against her in an area near to Chinese territory," said the Pe- king People's Daily. Queen Said Better But Stays In Room LONDON (Reuters) -- Queen Elizabeth, who has had a sore thyoat for two days, was re- coinage to be slightly better to- y. After the royal doctors, Lord Evans and Sir John Wier, aie Sas maa et he Queen's temperature was sub- siding. But she still was expected to remain in her room for the verted minor storms. weekend. The- Secret Army commandos|Peters have been launched their surprise attack|about a year. | in what seemed to be an at-| The husband, Theodore, a ance, sent Harold Gibbons, ex-|petition by Hoffa's lawyers to ecutive vice-president. of thejdismiss a federal mail fraud Teamsters, as a substitute at ajindictment based on a land de- might lead to another Korea.jrevealed in Washington at At- The marines will shoot, he said,|torney - General Kennedy. The "and those at whom they shoot|attorney-general, along with his Of Candidates tempt to lure the gendarmes|truck driver, was located in will shoot back."' lbrother President Kennedy,|scheduled Chicago press confer-|velopment deal involving al- into the ambush set up on em-|Worcester and immediately) bankments. The gendarmes|headed for Boston, about 50 came out but went into battle|miles away, to be at his wife's positions swiftly, popping down side. the lids on armored vehicles| Police said Mrs. Peters would and opening fire. |be committed to Boston State Seven terrorist plastic bombs|Hospital for observation. No exploded in a suburb today,|charge was placed against her. Coal | Mine Strike Sparks Changes MADRID (Reuters) The| miners' tempers had worn thin four-week-long coal mine strike| But the over-all reason for that sparked off what may be|the spread of the strike goes major changes in the Spanish|back to 1959 and Sapin's ef.- government's attitude towardiforts to stabilize its inflated striking began quietly in a!peseta. Wages were held down pleasant river valley in north-|as a part of the stabilization western Spain, program. There, in mountainous Astu-} est coal deposits are to bejcame to the country and cur- found. |jrency reserves soared to al- Five coalface miners who had}most $800,000,000. been working a good seam andj Many observers think jat Obnova Khrushchev told Western cor- |respondents: "T am surprised at how the! ~ Americans plunged into this net. Once you are in, you know, it is not so easy to get out. "They went into Korea very easily and nevertheless -- that lasted three years." lthen a senator, participated in an investigation of the firm by "BOOK PUBLISHED Guidance On Sex Khrushchev said in a speech} that the U.S. forces would be |driven out of Southeast Asia, al- jthough it might take 15 years. Beauty Returns To Win Title NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP) A 19-year-old Toronto model who three years ago placed fourth in the Miss Dominion of Meanwhile, a. new prosperity;|Canada beauty pageant Friday} ris province, the country's larg-|--sparked by tourist spending--| made a return trip to the event jand took the 1963 crown. Marily McFatridge, the reign- \ing Miss Toronto, will represent} the|Canada in the Miss Universe} earlier in the day) earning 8,000 pesetas ($120) a|workers felt they were not get-|and Miss World contests to be! month -- a princely sum by/ting a fair share of this pros-|held later this year. Spanish standards -- ran into' perity. Last July Miss McFatridge, a| difficulties Some of the support that the) native of Preston, Ont., took the| The seam thinned out and strike received may well have|Miss Toronto title in a field of| their earnings sagged to 3,000 been directed at overthrowing 66 entrants. Friday night she pesetas ($45) a month. The pay|the regime of head -of state faced 11 other finalists for the} | teacher at the Roedean School For Girl LONDON (AP) -- A hand- book on love-making has been issued for girl guides, liken- ing the perils of sex to the hazards of driving a car. The book warns. girls against thinking they can "'in- dulge on high-powered sex play nd then jam on _ the brakes at the last moment." In another typical analogy between sex and driving, the girls are told: "Two things are essential--some simple knowledge of the mechanism | and a thorough grasp of the | highway code." Chapters come under such headings as 'Perils of the road"' and "'Under the bonnet (British expression for hood)." The 32-page book was writ- ten by Mrs. Nancy Warner, mother of six and former ence. Guides learner' and gives these spe- cific items of advice: The sex part of married life has been likened to the icing on the cake--"You do not test the edibility of the cake just by gobbling up the icing." NIX ON MIX Mixing drinks, coupled with soft lights and sweet music, | can be fatal. "A boy knows that if he can persuade a girl to drink she will be easier game." The girls are warned against going hiking in- pro- vocative brief shorts and re- vealing blouses and then hitching lifts from male driv- ers. Discussing dignity, the book deplores party games such as the '"'drop a spoon down be- "Tf it (the indictment) is any- leged misuse of $500,000 of |Teamster union funds. Indicted with Hoffa at Nash- ville was Commercial Carriers Incorporated, a Detroit auto transport firm charged with set- ting up the Tennessee firm, {Test Fleet Corporation, and jthrowing lucratic 'Cadillac' auto hauling business its way. At the time, Commercial Car. riers had a labor contract with line Teamsters Union. The indictment charges Hoffa and the late Owen Brennan, former Teamster vice-president received $1,009,057 from Com- merical Carriers through Test Fleet, the stock of which had jbeen transferred by Commer- \cial Carriers to Mrs. Hoffa and| Mrs. Brennan under their mai-} den names. | SAYS TRY TO HIDE The indictment added Hoffa) jand Brennan later changed the jname of Test Fleet Corporation \to Hobren Corporation, a com- bination of their names, in an! \effort to conceal true owner- |ship. OTTAWA (CP)--The Progres- sive Conservative and Liberal parties have all but completed the task of lining up candidates for the June 18 Dominion elec- tion.. Official nomination day is June 4 in all but 21 of the country's 263 constituencies, two of which elect two mem- bers, but already the Liberals have named 264 candidates and the Progressive Conservatives 258. The breakdown by parties. Progressive Conservative 258, Liberal 264, Social Credit 179, New Democratic Party 178, Communist 14, independent two. Conditions Cited For Nuclear Arms NIAGARA-ON - THE-LAKE, Ont, (CP)--Canada is prepared to take nuclear weapons if world conditions deteriorate, External Affairs Minister How- ard Green said Friday. However, he added, Canada would take them unwillingly be- | Inearly 7% months of very try- District Judge William E, | cause the government is dedi- |Miller set June 7 for Hoffa and|cated to stopping the threat of jrepresentatives of Commercial|nuclear arms and wants to con- Carriers to appear here for ar-'tinue to be held in high regard |raignment. by Communist countries as a | The assault case against|Sincere seeker of disarmament |Hoffa by Samuel Baron, 59-|@nd peace. Doctor Acquitted Of Poisoning Try PORT. ORCHARD, Wash. (AP)--Dr. Robert E. Boehme, 42, a physician-surgeon in this small Puget Sound town, was acquitted Friday of charges that he tried to kill his wife by injecting poison into her arm. The jury of 11 men and one woman deliberated eight hours before finding Dr. Boehme in- nocent' of first-degree assault charges. "It's a sense of relief, after ing ordeal," Dr. Boehme said after the trial, 'although we NO PAPER ON VICTORIA DAY In observance of the Vic- toria Day holiday on Mon- day, the Oshawa Times, will not publish on that day. Regular publication of the Times will be resumed on Tuesday. Several of Mon- day's features appear in today's issue. never felt at any time the out- come was in doubt." The doctor's wife, Dorothy maintained throughout that her husband was innocent. While the court awaited the jury's return, the doctor »>r- formed a_ tonsilectomy, then mowed the lawn, His 35-yea.- old wife baked cookies. The couple also had lunch with their pastor. After the verdict, the Boeh- mes went to a church social, where Mrs. Boehme played the piano . The prosecution charged the physician with trying to murder his blonde wife last Sept. 20 because of another woman. Prosecutor Gordon Walgren attempted to prove Dr, Boehme was having an affair with his former sister-in-law, 29-year-old Mary Boehme. She is a nurse in nearby Bremerton. Dr. Boehme's lawver Rav Greenwood, contended Walgren instigated the charges because of jealousy. Walgren once was engaged by Mary Boehme. ctu led to a quarrel with the) Francisco Franco. mine manager -- and then a'. But the discontent of the strike. striking workers seems reason 3ut striking is illegal in Spain|ably straightforward. They want and the workers were dis-'a large cut of the pie. missed. ---- Suddenly, 2,200 miners in nearby La Nicolasa mine went on. strike in sympathy. Almost title. Runnér-up for the crown was Romaine Jenkinson of Edmon- ton. Marlene Leeson, 19, of Huntsville, Ont., placed third. QUESTION OF PROVINCIAL BACKING immediately, the whole of the Asturian coal region also walked out. Nearly 60,000 min- ers were idle. he strike soon spread to one of Spain's main_ industrial] areas. Around the city of Bil-| bao on the northern coast, some} Mowe g ss 2 a 48,000 shipyard and metal work-| By THE CANADIAN PRESS ers walked out. Sporadic strikes} One of the questions in the quickly through the country and|federal election campaign has the total number of strikers|been whether Premier John Ro- passed the 100,000-mark. . Be i and Premier Jean Lesage (Lib- TEMPERS WORE THIN eral) of Quebec will get into Only a few days ggg ead fight. five Page onda Fahy rg | Half of it was answered Fri- ont Oe aris o's \day night at Chatham, Ont., proved an increase in coal) h hasta lone: P: : srices to be used to add 15 per|When Mr. Robarts joined Prime , nt 40 miners' pay. But the Minister Diefenbaker on_ the nasetintions had lasted for Platform at an election rally. months -- the raise was still) 'If anyone thinks for one mo- some weeks ahead -- and the/ment that I am less than en- {thusiastic in supporting you .. . |I am here tonight to assure you | (Mr. 'Diefenbaker) and the good }people at this meeting that I am with you all the way," the |premier declared. Liberal Leader Pearson was |speaking at Rimouski, Que., on the lower St. Lawrence River but Premier Lesage remained CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 { barts (Conservative) of Ontario! City where the provincial legis- lature still is in session. The question of Mr. Lesage's participation. probably won't be answered properly unless the legislature winds up its session before voting day, June 18, The Ontario legislature isn't cur- rently sitting. DOESN'T EXPECT WIN Social Credit Leader Robert Thompson, at a party rally in London, Ont., made the rather startling state ment that he doesn't expect Social Credit to win next month's election. But he quickly qualified it by predicting that the winner will form a minority government, forcing year which will put Social Cre- dit into power. The party lost all of its 19 federal seats in the 1958 election T. C. Douglas, leader of the another vote within a} hind you bra and out through | for Girls. It was published | your knickers" variety. | for the Girl Guides Associa- | It counsels that the way to tion. | mature love is through ex- The ploring another's mind. jyear-old field director of the! |Teamsters national warehouse} division, was set for trial June 19. Hoffa's request for a jury "Tl, for trial was granted. book is called Robarts Supporting Dief ja second straight day in Re-\eering, is popular in. Quebec.|speaking to 1,000 persons gath- jgina where he is making his|Mr. Thompson plans a visit tojered in a hot, stuffy hall, he |personal bid for a House of| Unity, Sask., Monday. 'said the Liberals have been |Commons seat. | The Liberal chief devoted|"downgrading" Canada for po- | The socialist ex-premier of)Most of his Rimouski speech/litical purposes. They were con- \Saskatchewan attended a se-|Friday night to agriculture, ex-|tinuing a "tirade of abuse" lries of afternoon teas in the| Plaining the Liberal platform of/talking "'darkness and gloom." homes of supporters before at-|improved price supports and| Mr. 'Thompson injected a new tending a night rally. jeasier credit for self-help farm |topic into his campaign by lay- ' The holiday weekend will pro-|C0-operatives. He termed the|ing down proposals for a radi- vide a respite for Mr. Diefen-| second item "of prime impor-'cal change in the Senate. baker and Mr. Pearson although tance." : Le He would replace the present observers report both look fresh} He spoke to 450 in a 1,000|lifetime appointments with 10- and in no need of rest. They| Seat municipal auditorium. Ten|year terms, renewable for those plan to spend the weekend at|Mights earlier Mr. Diefertbaker's|who worked well, fire senators their Ottawa homes, picking up|Rimouski meeting drew a ca-|who did not appear for at least the campaign trail with visits|Pacity crowd in another hall of/half of the sittings and let the jto Toronto Tuesday about the same size. . Mr. Pearson said the Liberals} ate membership, which now to- \NOT TAKING BREAK would set up a research service}tals 102. The other two leaders, who|to study and forecast farm! The present system of Senate have been vote-hunting at an|markets and price conditions,|appointments 'has turned this easy pace so far. not tak-|advising farmers of the find-jonce-useful adjunct of govern- ing the break. Mr. Douglas was|ings. He also pledged a deep-|ment into an old men's home, {in Montreal today en route to a| water seaport for the area, with|sterile and without influence." nominating meeting in Quebec} winter navigation. }(Naming senators is a_ prero-| » Ore )provinces name half of the Sen-| Ses Fifty-three new . Canadian citizens, including Oshawa barber Adam Hanson shown here taking the oath of '300 miles upriver at QuebeciNew Democratic Party, spent|West Sunday. Sunday election-| At London, Mr. Diefenbaker|gative of the prime minister.)| giovience. walked out of the " : "he Oshawa Police Station court- house Friday night after re- ceiving their citizenship cer- tificates from Toronto Judge W. M. Cory. Michael Siarr, Labor Minister. in the last OATH OF ALLEGIANCE Parliament, was on hand to welcome them. A _ reception was held later in St. George's Anglican Church. (See story page 11). Oshawa Times4Photo,

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