Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 24 Jul 1962, p. 2

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*~ 2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, July 24, 1962 HONOLULU (CP) -- Federal aviation officials could offer no explanation today why a crippled Canadian airliner, a second away from safety, sud- denly plunged into a mass of airport construction equipment Sunday night, killing 27 of the 40 persons aboard. Eleven of the dead were Ca- nadians including seven crew members, Many of the surviv- 'lors were thrown clear of the burning wreckage. None was badly injured. The pilot who was killed, Capt, W. T. (Wally) Jennings, 45, from the Vancouver suburb of Richmond, had radioed min- utes after leaving Honolulu on a flight to the Fiji Islands that he had trouble with the No. 1 engine and was returning. He feathered the defective en- gine and began dumping fuel. He had been airborne about 40 minuts when he hit the run- Way. LOOKED ROUTINE An eyewitness member of the emergency firefighting crew standing by said it appeared to be a routine emergency land- ing when the Canadian Pacific Airlines' Empress of Lima, a British-built turbo-prop Britan- nia, approached the runway at International Airport. "They missed the runway by 2,000 feet," said Booker T. Wil- son, fire chief at Hickham Air Force Base that borders Inter- national Airport. "The plane was making a perfect approach to runwway 8. Then it banked to the left and crashed. It disintegrated on im- pact." The Federal Aviation Agency said the cause of the sudden veering to disaster was a mys- tery. BODIES BADLY BURNED KILLED IN HONOLULU No Explanation For Plane Crash Some of the bodies were so| making a familiarization flight; First Officer C. J. Norton; Sec- ond Officer G, E. Farr and navigators Ron G. Hill and R. C. McLennan, all of the Greater Vancouver area. A Windsor, Ont., couple and their infant son were killed. They were Mr. and Mrs. David S, Drake and their son, Alan, 2, who friends said were on their way to New Zealand as immi- grants, The other Canadian pas- senger among the dead was Jules McKie of Vancouver, RETURNING HOME A retired New Zealand cus- toms official, who couldn't stand the hustle and bustle of Toronto, died in the fiery crash. J. S. Stringer ha dleft New Zea- land for the first time with his wife to visit their son in Wes- ton, Ont., a Toronto surburb. They planned to return by ship {in November but Stringer could jnot stand Toronto, relatives |said, and decided to fly home. He left his wife behind. Prme Minister Keith Holy-| 2 oake sent a message f condol- ence to the Canadian govern. ment and people. The Canadian survivors were| William O'Connell, 44, who was aboard doing his job as inspec- to. for the department of trans- port, and stewardesses Andrea Johnson, Ursual Heubner and Nancy Chalmers and purser Harry Soukop, all of Vancouver. "After about 15 minutes air-| 4 borne the captain gave a mes-| .1W0 of 13 persons who sur- | sage that he had to cut one| Vived the ill-fated crash of a | engine, | Canadian Pacific Airlines "I remember approaching. It Britannia last night at Hono- looked like the plane was 25| lulu International Airport -- to 30 feet above the ground. The| Which killed 27 fellow passen- pilot did not let her down. 1| 8¢"S and crewmen -- relive Iney, Australis, eas SURVIVORS OF CRASH survivors were in the tail | section of the plane. Three stewardesses also survived. Soukop and the stewardesses are all based at Vanccuver. --(AP Wirephoto) the mysterious crash at Tri- pler Army Hospital. Frederick Manuel of Melbourne, Aus- tralia, right, gestures as he talks with Harry Soukop, | purser on Flight 301. All 13 | had a hunch it seemed light.) ~~ Then we went up. Britons Awaiting Mac's Next Move LNDON (CP) Brilain's| support for these two groups are leaning forward in antici-|has apparently worried Macmil- pation of Prime Minister Mac-|lan. : : millan's next move in his cam-| The Daily Mail says the paign to restore' the Conserva-|board will be able to study con- tive Party in the nation's favor-|ditions in an industry and then He extended his weekend stay| decide whether a wage increase at his country home at Cheq-/is justified ie uers to work on a major speech| "Even more important, t he is to deliver Thursday when|board will be able to examine a Labor Opposition motion, call-| Pay and conditions in special- ing for his resignation and for|ized trades and professions an immediate general election,|Where the weekly wage cannot will be debated in the Commons.|be related to productivity. Economic measures appeal-- arte ee ing bi omg Py ha Grong sa . predominate. This would be the) B U second stage in his search for rewels, non a new Conservative image .ince a ' recent byelection evidence Didn t Meet showed public disapproval of his acs Sag iggorcc The first nage came two weeks ago when he| Aft M purged me cabinet and brought er ove in several younger men. sesh i The dismissal of Selwyn Lloyd A ey as yoy bP gg as Chancellor of the Exchequer| Brewery Workers Union (CLC) has led to belief that Macmillan negotiators Monday after labor will steer a new path in finan-| Sunday night gave its executive cial matters, ; \the green light for strike action _The Daily Mail, a Conserva-| to speed up negotiation on tive newspaper, predicts aiwages and a new contract. wages board will advise on pay| No strike deadline was set by policy and give the "hardest- the 1,000-member Toronto local hit white-collar employees a@)of the International Union of better. deal"' The newspaper) United Brewery, Flour, Cereal, was the first to predict the July Soft Drink and Distillery Work 13 cabinet shuffle. lers of America who could dry The board is expected to|up the province in hours if they change the controversial "pay-| strike. pause" plank in _the govern-| Strike action in Ontario is for ment's policy, which has kept|bidden under Ontario law until wage increases for some groups|seven days after a conciliation down to 2% per cent. Nurses|board submits a report. and parole officers have been} Louis Fine, chief conciliation hardest hit and recent public| officer of the Ontario depart- |ment of labor said Monday he 'had no comment about the Heav Water |strike vote taken by the brew- y ers union local, M = |NO TALKS SCHEDULED ay ssist | The prospect of a heer drought in the province drew closer when neither side in the .|dispute suggested a date for Mr. and Mrs. David S&S. This is a wedding photo taken "IT thought he was going to in 1958. Drake, of Windsor, Ont., kill- ed in Honolulu plane crash. --(CP Wirephoto) badly burned that agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation were called to help with the identification. But one doctor said. some of the victims may never be positively identified. Among the dead also were Aus- Insurance Fund Back From Brink OTTAWA (CP) -- The gov-jemployment, insurance pro- ernment insurance fund turned| gram. : back from the brink of bank-| This committee of inquiry, ruptcy in June. jheaded by Toronto insurance After dipping to a record low executive Ernest C. Gill, is ex- of $19,851,162 at May 31, the| pected to deliver its report to fund showed a normal summer|the government next month. recovery last month and held! pise FORESEEN $28,643,838 at June 30. __| The financial comeback in the | The figures were obtainedifund between May and June Monday from the unemploy-/had been expected. Summer job | ment insurance commission oNn|openings reduce the number of the eve of the annual watchdog claims. session of the non-governmen-| Contributions from employees| tal unemployment insurance ad-|and employers amounted to visory committee- $23,021,429 in June. The govern- This labor-management com-|ment, paying 20 cents for every | mittee scrutinizes the state of|$1 from employee-employer con- the fund up to each March 31,|tributions, added another $4,- | end of the fiscal year, and re-|415,616. ports its findings to Labor Min- Revenue from other sources ister Starr. brought the total net revenue i é for. June to $27,501,857. WARNED YEARLY _| Ordinary benefit payments to- In recent years, the commit-|talled $17,847,141. The tag end tee has warned the governmentiof seasonal benefit payments, that the fund was in peril,|paid over the winter months of chiefly under pressure of eX-/high seasonal unemployment, tralians, New Zealanders, Brit- ons and Americans. Capt. Jennings, a veteran of CPA, had survived a Canso crash were killed in Prince Rupert, B.C., harbor in May, 1953. in which two persons Also killed were Capt, A. land. It gave me the impression} Be that we were too far down the! runway, that he (the pilot) was| too late. He went to raise her,| and it folded." | LEAVE BY DOOR Manuel said he and Soukop, For Div the purser, both were in first-| OTTAWA (CP) -- Procedures class compartments and man-|have been tightened for taking aged to get through a door.| some evidence on parliamen- Soukop said: \tary divorce applications by "Everything appeared to be Quebec and Newfoundland resi- normal as usual. .. . The pas-| dents. sengers were well-behaved. . . The change will . | sounder basis for laying perjury } provide a hange In Procedure "I just cannot judge what! charges if that course is indi- pong It is the biggest) cated, authorities say. Twenty-two Canadian Pacific} Pinte Me ene Miah gga psig flew here to conduct possibility hinge et casks an investigation. Also aboard|\: > i |was W. Lavery, an inspector oe follow several RCMP in jthe Canadian department of me : transportation. Hits Spectators lane iniveatigntnry representing; e U.S. Civil Aeronautics Board PETERBOROUGH (CP) --\also arrived, and two CAB.| Panic surged through a crowd|men were on the scene. during a regatta on the Hia-| Canadian Pacific said the| watha Indian reservation on/deaths were the first in the ait-| Rice Lake, 15 miles south of|Jines' operation since August, | here, when a power boat tossed/1956, when 15 died in the crash| its driver and mounted the/of a DC-6 at Cold Lake, Alaska. OTTAWA (CP) -- Prime Min- docks. Three of the scattering)The airline said it had flown|ister Diefenbaker, his ankle spectators were hurt. {3,000,000,000 passenger miles/tightly strapped because of a Gordon Belfry, 9, son of Mr.|without a fatal accident since|fracture, planned to carry on and Mrs. John Belfry of Keene; |then until 11:19 p.m. Hawaii|business as usual today from Ralph Loucks, 17, son of Hia-jtime Sunday (4:19 a.m. EDTjhis official Ottawa residence, 24) watha Chief Ralph Loucks, and|Monday) when the Britannia/Sussex Street. Giguere of White Rock, B.C., a check pilot on a routine exam. ination flight; First Officer D. A. Eldred of Ladner, B.C., Wild Speedboat Works A vestigations made recently into Dief Broke Ankle, | orce Evidence divorce applications. {private investigators was given) This is because the former! by declaration, practice was regarded by legal| Wrong information in an affi- authorities as less certain/davit is equivalent to perjury, ground for perjury charges. (an official said Monday. That was not the case where wron NEED AFFIDAVIT : information was given by te The change is technical.| joration Henceforth, evidence that di- Th hh 'b ainied at vorce documents have been| "U¢ change Js aimed a tater served on respondent and co-|COming a statutory omission respondent in divorce actions| Which may be rectified by leg- will be given to the Senate qi-|islation later, officials said. vorce committee by affidavit. | There have been cases where _Previously, this testimony by) Citimed that he or she Was never notified of the divorce ac- tion. The question of redress contained legal problems, com- plicated by the possibility that marriages might have occurred! after the divorce. | s Usual members will shuttle between) the prime minister's East Block office and his residence, 1% miles east of Parliament Hill on the Ottawa River bank. EXAMINES ANKLE Dr. J. C. Samis of Ottawa, The Senate divorce commit- tee has notified all lawyers in volved in new applications to Parliament, which handles di- vorces from Quebec and New foundland which lack their own divorce courts, oa The change won't affect the 327 cases left on the docket at Cancer Fight MOSCOW (AP) -- Heavy wa- ter--a potential source of H- bomb explosives--may_ provide resumption of negotiations. Peter O'Dowd, business agent of the Brewery Workers Toronto local said talks have not broken down, but none are scheduled. a new weapon in the war against cancer, a team of American atomic scientists sug- Industry last week offered the union workers a three-year con- a six-cent-hourly wage | COUNSEL NOTIFIED | Keith Horsburgh, 30, of Mont-|was wrecked. The cabinet probably Will' wno examined the break, de- dissolution of the last Parlia- gested today. Experiments with cancerous mice suggest, the report indi- cated, that this form of water might be used in combination with known anti-cancer drugs to enhance the action of the |drugs and thus provide a one- two punch against certain can- cers. The work was described to the eighth International Cancer congress by researcher Asher J. Finkel and two associates, all of the U.S. Atomic Energy Com- mission's Argonne National Laboratory near Chicago. Heavy water -- technically while laid off, : ment of unemployment insur- ance premiums, tract, increase every year, a $10 weekly increase in sick pay benefits and payment of the full cost of a private medical care plan in plants where it has not been fully paid by the employer. Also offered was a maximum wage guarantee of $55 weekly including pay She union, seeking a 10-cent- an-hour wage increase and a reduction in the present 40-hour work week, said it considered the comparison to other industries. pay offer inadequate in known as deuterium oxide--is one of the wonder products of the atomic age. Like regular' tap water, it consists of hydro-| gen and oxygen, but its hydro- }gen atoms are twice as heavy as those of ordinary hydrogen and are called deuterium atoms. | Procurable from ordinary wa.! ter by special processes for con-| centrating the heavyweight hy-| drogen atoms, heavy water was| one of the things that made the! original A-bomb possible be-' cause it can be used to promote | nuclear chain reactions. | tended seasonal benefits for'cost another $862,040. real were injured, none wintertime jobless. Total benefits amounted to/Seriously. Today's meeting, however,|$18,709,181, leaving $28,643,838} The boat ran out of control will be held in the shadow of\as a balance in the fund. Ajin a 40-horsepower race Sunday the forthcoming report from alyear earlier, the fund held|when driver Allan Grant, 43, of special committee set up by $110,270,000. At its peak in 1956,|Peterborough was tossed out Prime Minister Diefenbaker to\the fund held more than $925,-|after turning the outer buoy of look into all aspects of the un- 000,000. |the mile-long course. A\RCAF Albatross from the Air| hold its scheduled meeting there Wednesday. Mr. Diefenbaker, 66, broke his ankle when he was about to) return to the city Monday from) a weekend at the prime minis- ter's summer home 20 miles north of the 'capital--his first holiday of sorts since the June 18 general election- He went for a stroll around ace the old frame two-storey build- A ' 'jing, set in an open space high -- hee pe Sunday _when|on'a wooded hil! at the south- Ine n'a outboard maoy feu cast ond of Harrington, Lake are toned Monday: on, ay egrighhet tte S Meal de unchartered isiand in Georgian! side orch Bay. B P ' David Souls, 18, and Dorothy! BREAKS FIBULA 2 Teon-Aigers Located On | Tiny Island HONEY HARBOR, Ont. (CP) Two Port Credit teen - ag scribed it as a "small undis- placed fracture of the lower end|fused to sanction passage, an of the left fibula." jother manifestation of their op- ment. The CCF-NDP group re- Indicating the results justified) Lb raemor further exploration, the scien-| By describing it as "undis-| position to parliamentary di- placed," it was understood | vorces. The group accused the there was no splintering of the/ government of having failed to bone. carry out an undertaking to Mr. Diefenbaker's staff said|find some way around the con- the ankle was not put in a cast,|sideration of divorces by the and that the prime minister] Commons. | was not confined to his bed. | More than 300 additional di-| The Sussex Street residence|vorce applications are expected) has a small elevator which Mr.|for the new Parliament's first) Diefenbaker may use between|session, which Prime Minister} his ground floor study and his} Diefenbaker has said will con-) bedroom. vene in September. INTERPRETING THE NEWS Kench, 15, were both in good) The fracture occurred in the condition despite wet, unseason-|left ankle, in the fibula -- the| ably cool weather. bone on the outer side. | They had taken the 16-horse-| It was examined by X-ray in| power boat to go about seven|a doctor's office in Ottawa, and) miles from a 35-ton cruiser| strapped tightly. He was told to owned by the boy's father to ajstay off it for a week. | shore at Whalen's Landing for! A spokesman for the prime; provisions. On their way back) ministe i ; they ran out of gasoline about! ree oer Wee the fracture was disabling and| 7 \dusk and were blown onto the|Mr, Diefenbaker would have to island, Whey were |stay home, it was to be spotted by aninegs as usual." Cabinet ministers "busi-| Force rescue co-ordination cen-| - ang atatl) tre at Trenton. Honey Harbor is miles north of Barrie. | ot ® Method Cited -- | | Aged Seen Curb On JFK's Power | report in which Dr. J, R, Ander- the Peterborough Board of! qa rdens LEARN ... living in Broemor means, living convenient to 5 schools, (2. public. 1 senior public, 1 High and 1 Separate School), LIVE... living In Braemor means, living emongst the friendliest City Passes Bylaw people, _ in individually designed On Sales Of Meat | PRAY ... in Braemor gardens, you I are close to churches of virtually PETERBOROUGH (CP) all denominations. City council Monday passed aj} play . In Braemor, (a com- bylaw requiring inspection of al)|} munity designed with your children meat sold within the city. The bylaw is the result of a tists said the beneficial effects | jnoted apparently resulted from, |ordinary hydrogen atoms in the cancer tissue being replaced by Edw heavyweights. | in mind) there is no through traf- \I fic, lots of sun and fun, other children to play with and Braemor I] is within a stone throw from pa {f and playgrounds. Exclusive Realtor HARRY MILLEN REAL ESTATE 11 ONTARIO ST. 728-1679 son, medical officer of health, recommended prohibiting the sale of meat unless it has been inspected by authorized person- nel of the federal government, | the . provincial government or| Health. erful figures as Judge Howard) |W. Smith, 80-year-old chairman lof the House of Representatives rules committee, and 75-year-old | Harry . Byrd, chairman of the| senate finance committee. Tt is noted that the chairmen} }of committees derive their jobs | Ameri-|largely from jong service, thus | |putting a premium on seniority By ALAN HARVEY Canadian Press Staff Writer A picture is being built up in Britain and Europe of President Kennedy as a young man in a hurry thwarted by a handful of old men determined to keep things as they are. This may surprise BUEHLERSs net Tender EAT'N Sh TRUE-TRIM BEEF |t's THUNDERSTORMS FOR WEDNESDAY WEATHER FORECAST More Showers For Wednesday Official forecasts issued by the weather office at 5 a.m.: 8: : Skies cleared over- night in southern Ontario as the disturbance which brought the rainy weather moved on to the east. Sunshine should push afternoon temperatures into the 70s for a pleasant summer day. A new disturbance over north- western Ontario is moving southeastward and _ threatens showers and a few thunder- storms Wednesday. Winds light today southwest 15 tonight. Northern Georgian Bay, Tim- agami, Algoma, North Bay, Sudbury: Mainly cloudy Wed-| nesday. Showers or thunder- showers late today and tonight. A few scattered showers Wed- nesday. Winds light becoming northerly 10 to 20 Wednesday: White River, Cochrane: Show- ers and scattered thunder- more showers and _ thunder- storms for most parts of On- tario during the next 36 hours. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Ni- agara, Lake Huron, Lake On- tario, Southern Georgian Bay, Haliburton, Windsor, London, Hamilton, Toronto: Sunny and a|St. Thomas.. 60 80 | little warmer today. Consider-|London ....... 58 80 able cloudiness with scatterediKitchener «+.»y.+0+ 58 80 storms today and tonight. Wed- nesday mainly cloudy with a few scattered showers. Forecast temperatures j Low overnight, High Wednesday ° 60 80 | Wingham «serssees Hamilton ..-++++++ St. Catharines. \Earlton .... Kapuskasing Moosonee Timmins .... |Sault Ste. Marie... |Mount Forest..... 51 50 49 54 49 47 Victoria ...seeees Lakehead ... Sault Ste. Marie . Kapuskasing .... -- 47 + OL 39 54 a BS «+ 0 56 Sudbury ..... Muskoka Windsor . Toronto . Ottawa .... . Montreal ssresses 1, Observed Temperatures: Low overnight, High Monday 73 78 81 81 71 74 68 68 70 61 74 63 62 67 | | Youth Dies After | Struck By Auto | PORT ARTHUR, Ont. (CP)-- Samuel Longpeter, 16, of Long-| lac, Ont., died in hospital Mon- day after an automobile day | him and another youth Sunday as they battled with fists on a highway near their homes. ~ | Longpeter and Allan Toweg-| ishig, 18, fought in the middle! of the highway at 2 a.m. A car | driven by Donald Edwin George | Tompkins, 19, of Stevens, Ont.,! | struck them. Longpeter, flown here with) | severe head injuries and a frac- \tured arm, died without regain- jing consciousness. Towegishig, ;was reported in good condition} jin Geraldton, Ont., with a frac- jtured left arm. Baan Amat carAtas _ | Ontario's |cans. However they feel about | specific issues, they are seldom 'inclined to question the basic tenets of the American political To Create News Jobs system; however passionately concerned about medical care TORONTO (CP) -- Citizens in| for the aged, they are unlikely Ontario can create 60,000 new|to garnish cocktail party chat- jobs in the province by reducing|ter with references to "our the amount they spend on im-|crisis of institutions." ported goods by less than a half,| Perfidious Europeans, on the says Premier Robarts. other hand, have fewer inhibi. Speaking over an Ontario net-|tions, and Washington corre- work of CBC radio stations, Mr.|spondents are cabling some Robarts said Monday the ave-|sharp-edged stories about the} rage Canadian spends $236 al difficulties confronting a hustl-| year on imported goods. This|ing, progressive president who compares with $50 a person in|still wears a crusader's halo. Britain and West Germany and) The defeat ofKennedy's Med.| $32 in the United States. ical Care Bill has led to pointed | "It is a general belief that|mention that the president, de-| $10,000 worth of business creates spite his drive, and determina- one job in Ontario industry," he!tion, has succeeded so far in said. pushing through only 20 of 285 Using this as a yardstick,)new bills 'since he took office. | §,000,000 citizens : would give local manufacturers OLD-FASHIONED SETUP and safe seats. | A British newspaper, The Ob- | server, draws this conclusion: men's ideas; in America the young are nominally in control but the old men still stand in their way." GROWING! Come and see our 1962 "Dream Homes" now under construction. DRIVE UP TONIGHT Salesmen On Location 7-9 P.M. Daily 'A PLEASANT PLACE TO LIVE' OSHAWA BLVD. N, 12 KING E, -- 723-3633 MEAT SPECIALS WED. ONLY! | SHOULDER PORK CHOP 39° LB ; BLADE STEAKS -. 69° BY THE PIECE BOLOGNA JUST GUESSING $600,000,000 worth of extra busi-| LONDON (CP)--Three boys/ness a year if they spent $100| jin juvenile court were asked to|Jess on imported items. | jtranslate their school's motto:| Mr. Robarts said the Canadian| |"'Auspice Deo." One said: "All's|content of "most of our. manu-| well that ends well." Another|factured products is far too! offered: "It's never too late,to}low" and the reduction of $100) mend," and the third tried/a person in foreign buying is al "Peckham Road School.' The} "minimum initial target to keep) itranslation: -"With God's Help."| our economy expanding." ' Implicit in nearly all accounts is a feeling that there is some-| thing old-fashioned about a leg- | (Just East of Simcoe) ON ROSSLAND 3 1,00 islative setup which places the | president at the mercy of a few) elderly members belonging in| this case to his own Democratic) party, : Singled out as particular vil- SCHOFIELD-AKER LIMITED 360 KING WEST 723-2265 SHOP FIRST || AND SAVE AT BUEHLER'S lains of the piece are such pow- =

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