/ THOUGHT FOR TODAY *. Smart husbands don't forget the applesauce when they bring home the bacon. he Oshawa Times Class Mell Post Office Mainly Goudy with occasional snow or light snowflurries and moderating temperatures to- night and Friday. 'ini ~ TWENTY-FOUR PAGES VOL, 92 -- NO. 20 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 1963 Authorized as Second Ottawa and for payment in Cath. of Postoge - Starvation Threatens Settlers KAPUSKASING, Ont. (CP)-- Settlers who cut lumber to aug- ment their income and the mer-| said. chants who supply them both appear to be caught in a squeeze as company and union remain adamant im a newsprint industry contract dispute. Spruce Falls Power and Paper Company, a major em- ployer in this lumbering com- munity in northern Ontario, says it will not negotiate until 1,000 striking members of the Lumber and Sawmill Workers Union (CLC) return to work, And Joseph Laforce, president of Local 2995, says the men will not return until a new contract is signed to replace one that ex- pired last Aug. 31. The union also wamts a similar contract for another 400 strikers of a Spruce Falls subsidiary in Long- lac, Ont., Kimberley-Clark Can- ada Limited. The union seeks a two-year contract providing for a 10-per- cent general wage increase, plus a four-per-cent increase in piece work rates. The company Says because of poor market conditions it cannot afford changes in the old contract which it wants to renew for one year, There have been frequent re- ports of trouble. Union mem- bers patrol neighboring roads on a 24-hour basis to prevent independent loggers and truck- ers from delivering pulpwood to the spruce falls plant. Loggers have complained that their] trucks were stopped and- the load dumped at the roadside. 'FACE STARVATION' Mayor Norman §. Grant, him- self, a long-time employee of Spruce Falls, said Wednesday 1,000 settlers face starvation be- cause of the strike. "These settlers are gétting so 1, they face starvation for the rest of the year, Mayor Grant Many of the settlers' families use their credit from September until their first pulpwood pay- ments come in January. The mayor has called for an immediate government imvesti- gation of the situation. Rosaire Bouchard, an inde- pendent cutter and trucker from Moonbeam, said Wednes- day about 80 strikers flagged down his truck a week ago, dragged him from the cab and dumped his nine cords of wood while four provincial policemen watched. "They told me if I kept haul- ing, neither I nor the truck P would be fit to work for the rest of the year," Bouchard said. And Fernand Lallier, 32, a cutter who 'didn't want to strike because I didn't want to cause trouble," said the words "sucker" and "scab" were painted across his home during the night. Times is a part - owner of Spruce Falls, and the news- print company had already been closing on Sundays and Mon- day's before its own strike be- The strike-bound New York! © EVEN WITH temperatures 10 and 20 degrees below zero, children just won't stay in- doors. All they need are thick coats, woolly mitts and ear- covering thats and they're away. Typical are these three North Bay, Ont., youngsters NO RELIEF SE FROM COLD SNA m™ piled up unaccustomed snow- 'three and Yugoslavia 25 in the (left to right): Debbie Follis, 12, Anna Mary Mulligan, 12, and her sister Sally, 11. --CP Wirepho'o gan because of the newspaper strike in New York. It sends 30 per cent of its newsprint production to The Times and the rest to the Wash- ington Star, the Philadelphia In- quirer and the Detroit News. Insp. Ralph Crozier, head of the reinforced provincial police detachment here, said Wednes- day his force's main job is to prevent harm to anyone. Every- thing was being 'done to main- tain law and order, although po- lice had to be careful not to in- cite tronble. desperate they are going into the bush with guns, and they will shoot amyone who tries to interfere with their cutting." Since the strike began Jan. Labor Party merchants have re- 'business off by nearly 50 cent. A 3 nea: says ers are giving him only one week of credit, and he will have to stop extending credit to the bel families who depend on' 14, the mayor said, some Kap- pinay The settlers are granted per- mits by the Ontario lands and forests department to cut 100 cords of pulp wood each to sell) to the Spruce Falls plant here. Because of heavy muskeg con- ditions in the bush, the pulp can only be hauled to the mill between Jam. 10 and March 1 To Nominate 'New Leader LONDON (Reuters)--The Op- position Labor party today op- ened nominations for candidates to succeed the late party leader Hugh Gaitskell. Wednesday night, Labor's 248 members of Parliament ac- cepted the proposals of the par- ty's "shadow cabinet" on pro- cedure for the election of a new leader in a special meet- 214,560 spending program could 7 OTTAWA (CP) -- Veterans! Minister Churchill, government|to meet to decide the govern- House leader, said today the} ment's course in the light of re- "sensible and responsible/fusal by the Liberals and New course" would be for the oppo-} Democrats to accede to the gov- sition to approve the govern-)ernment's request. ent's 1962-63 spending pro. Mr. Churchill reviewed four election-year sessions of Parlia- ent, including 1962, in support of his contention that with op- Position co-opération the $6,048,- be passed before the end of Feb- ruary. Without approval of the pro- gram, the government may be faced early in March with in- ability to pay its. debts. Negotiations aimed at getting opposition permission to waive the Commons rules to give ef- fect to a government speed-up proposal collapsed Wednesday. he collapse could lead to a crisis in Parliament and a new Meanwhile, the cabinet was pa | gram 'within the next three MIGHT CHANGE RULES weeks. One possible course at which Mr. Churchill hinted was for the government to move a formal motion to set aside the rules and attempt to get majority sup- port for it in the House. "> Alex Patterson, Social Credit House Leader, has indicated his group was p red to accept the government's proposal. The votes of the 30 Social Credit MPs plus the government's 116 in the Commons would assure Passage of a rules change motion. However, there is no limit on the amount of time opposit'#n speakers could. discuss the spending program and the Lib- eral Leader Pearson said his party intends to-give the spend- PC House Leader Asks Early OK On Spending before the June 18 federal elec- tion, was debated for two days before the election and three days in the post - election fall session. "The time which should have been used for main estimates was consumed by the opposition on supplementary esti- mates (additions to the spend- ing program), , (Churchill said: : "Twenty-seven days.were ta- ken on supplementary esti- mates, which normally are con- cluded in two or three days," he said. "No previous Parlia- ment had ever used up so many days on supplementaries."" Europe Cold Continues Full Force ROME (AP) -- Southern Eu- rope's worst winter in a decade continued full force today, leav- ing nearly 50 persons dead in Italy, Yugoslavia and Greece. ip The freeze isolated hundreds|7 of mountain communities in It-| aly and northern Greece and drifts in southern Italy as. it spread along the Mediterranean to Turkey. Italy counted 20 dead, Greece recent days of extreme cold. Hundreds of cattle and other livestock also have perished. Temperatures continued to drop throughout Italy, giving little immediate hope of relief for more than 200 isolated vil- lages in the apennine moun- tains. WILL DROP FOOD Hundreds of snowbound com- munities in sorthern Greece awaited a letup that would al- low Greek Air Force planes to drop food and medicine by para- chute. Blocked highways, closed schools and factories operating half time. were common in all three countries. rest of Europe. Britain had zero temperatures during the night as it moved into the 35th consecutive day of freezing weather. Faced by cru- cial gas, electric aad coal short- ages, Power Minister Richard Wood said troops will be used to move coal supplies if the freeze lasts much olnger. lions of Britons shivered in un- heated homes. CLC Leader To Testify At Inquiry OTTAWA (CP)--Canada's. top labor leader--President Claude Jodoin of the Canadian Labor Congress--is expected to step into the spotlight today at the federal investigation of water- front union troubles. The member CLC was subpoenaed as a witness by Mr. Justice T. Cold also gripped much of the|G. Norris to testify about. the! long-standing feuds within the ranks of organized labor over maritime unionism. ization which kicked out the Seafarers' International Union of Canada in 1960 and then launched the Canadian Mari- time Union in: 191 to try to destroy the SIU. British railways cut passef-| The battle led to what Mr. ger services to keep lines open! Jodoin termed a for emergency coal trains, Mil-| por" opponents of the SIU. SIU Pr CLAUDE JODOIN head of the 1,050,000. Mr. Jodoin leads the, organ- Ontario Cold Sets Records By THE CANADIAN PRESS Most Canadians still shivered through the worst and most pro- longed cold wave of the winter today as hope faded in areas where earlier there were pros- pects for relief. One bright spot was in south- ern Saskatchewan where chil- dren, billetted in private homes near their school for two days because. of plugged roads, be- oa to return to their own omes. set in Jan. 10, down in bush country. SONS Toronto Felt "reign of ter- on the Great Lakes against Like 57 Below itan Torénto residents 14, Hal C. Banks, _MAY BOOST EXPORT Farmers Backed an American unionist who once had Mr. Jodoin's support in a bid has denied responsibility for the sluggings, beatings and rough- house tactics that spread across the Great Lakes last summer, The CLC chief was expected for Canadian citizenship, grees below zero. car and thousands of Not surprising was that in '|Fort William and Port Arthur fuel 'companies reported -record sales since temperatures raig- ing from 10\to 35 below zero In. Hay River, N.W.T., about 600 miles north of Edmonton, two men were rescued Wednes- day after-surviving 50 - below temperatures since late Monday when their plane: was forced In Sudbury: the weather wasn't bad enough to prevent Mayor Bill Ellis from offering to provide snow-removal advice to snow-stranded cities in Brit- ain. A month-long cold speil nas paralyzed much of the country's commerce and contributed to the deaths of more thax 100 per- Temperatures in Britain have ranged from five to 20 degrees above .zero, Sudbury's average TORONTO (CP) -- a y awoke :to the winter's coldest morning.. Through a formula that, considers humidity, wind and temperature, and is known as the "wind-chill" factor me- teorologists said the nine-below temperature was equal to 57 de- The cold froze up a subway rid. ers were half an hour late for for the last several days. has been 20 below. . PREDICT RAIN, SNOW 3 Across most of the Maritimes, where relatively mild weather just above freezing--prevailed Wednesday, temperatuers wet expected today to drop abot 25 degrees. Many areas were to get rain and snow, Northern New Brunswick had eight ine ches of snow overnight aad an« other two inches were expected. In Quebec, snow began falling late Wednesday and two inches were expected. Temperatures ranged from zero to five above. Interior British Columbia was getting snow from a disturbance over the rockies in low + temperatures of five below to 25 above, as much as 15 degrees below seasonal levels. Coastal areas had normal January tems peratures of 25 to 45 degrees, The Prairies expected warmer weather after three days of bit- ter cold. However, the forecast for Calgary was for five below today. Manitoba was relatively mild with temperatures approaching zero. Overnight lows were -20 to 25 below. Roads throughout the province were coated with ice. RECORDS SET The frigid blast smashed ree- ords for Jan. 25 in southwest. ern Ontario, The mercury plunged to 15 degrees below early today in Windsor, break- ing the mark of one below set years ago. It was 14 below in Loadon, one degree lower thai the. record 13°below set in . The weatherman forec: even, more bone-chilling t ratures today, with many read ings at 15 below. Drifting snow plagued motor ists in Bruce and Huron Coun- ties and more snow with high winds were predicted for today. A Bruce County engineer said it will take at least a week to plow out more than a single lane on all roads in the county. Drifts in some areas were six feet high. The 400 employees of the atomic power station project at Point Douglas were able to re- to start testimony after the SIU concludes its cross-examination when the ground is frozen. i lection. Fi " : turn to work Wednesday for the i. ve ie ee ee first time since Saturday when work, Other shivering passen. ing. Meanwhile, most observers ry Unless the settlers can de- liver the wood, most of it al- ready cut, to the mill by March Salinger To Report On Printers Strike NEW YORK (AP)--The White House press secretary, Pierre Salinger, says he will discuss informally with President Ken- nedy today what he learned in talks with striking printers and publishers of some of this city's major newspapers, blacked out for 48 days. Salinger came to New York Wednesday and conferred sep- arately with representatives of both sides. He told reporters he did not come as an emissary of predicted a close finish in the plete' examination. On Wheat Study election with some experts giv- ing a slight edge to foreign af- fairs spokesman Harold Wilson in his race with Deputy Leader George Brown. The "shadow cabinet'"" -- the men who would form a govern- ment in the event of a Labor ele tion victory--met Wednesday to draw up proposals providing for a week-long nomination period starting Friday. Another week will be provided for the party members to record their secret ballots for the chairmanship of the "shadow cabinet"--an office which auto- matically carries the party leadership. Results of the election wiil be announced Feb. 7. the president, adding: "Though of course I would) not be here without his knowl-| edge and consent." | Most close observers agreed there was still the possibility that adarkhorse candidate _-- emerge at the last min- ute. GORDON CHURCHILL Cuban Issue Erupts With Renewed Force DisCUSS PREVIOUS CASES Mr. Churchill said in a state- ment that in two modern elec- tion-year sessions of Parliament the government's spending pro. gram was completed in 11 days in 1945 and in 21 days in 1949. In 1957, when the Conserva. tives had a minority govern- ment as they now do, 33 days were spent discussing the spend- ing program before Parliament was dissolved for the 1958 gen- eral election with approval of the program still uncompleted. Mr. Churchill said that the 1962-63 spending program, intro- duced in Parliament last spring Workers Invade University TEHRAN, Iran (AP)--About 2,000 young workers invaded Tehran University with sticks and tree branches today and beat up students posting pla. cards denouncing the govern. ment referendum this weekend. An unknown number of. stu- dents were injured, Before security forces ar- rived, the workers had driven WINDSOR, Ont. (CP)--West- ern Canada grain farmers have won support from the Canadian Federation of Agriculture for a proposed study which may lead to a contributory self-help fund to generate increased export sales of wheat. The proposal, stemming from a suggestion by the federal agriculture minister, Alvin Hamilton and endorsed as a resolution by the CFA annual meeting here, recommends that grain producers consider estab- lishing a supplementary exports credits fund to underwrite credit sales to mew foreign grain markets. Resolution sponsors made it clear Wednesday, however, that such a fund would be comple- mentary to, and not a substitute on developing new and larger Britain and Europe rises fur- ther, and if the external tariff level is kept at a reasonably low level, in the long run you (Canadian agriculture) may well gain more than you will lose." Earlier, Mr. Hamilton told delegates that federal agricul- of Elroy Robson, national vice- president of the Canadian Brotherhood of Railway, Trans- port and General Workers (CLL). Mr. Robson and the 35,000. member brotherhood have been outspoken foes of the SIU for years. gers were stranded when street.|a roadway was plowed. car trolley lines the cold at two intersections. would not start. snapped in More than .2,000 calls. from stalled motorists jammed the Ontario Motor. League switch. board, and taxi companies were unable to fill a rush of. orders Hundreds of homes in most of Sarnia Township and sections of the nearby town of Petrolia went without heat in about 10- degrees below zero weather for about an hour when a break ina 27,000-volt line caused a hydro because many of their own cars interruption. The break did not affect Sarnia. ture policy in the next few years would give emphasis to improving the net farm income in Eastern Canada. He asked the federation's sup- port for federal measures 'n this direction. In a question period following his speech, he said the general long-term agriculture outlook for Canada should be focused foreign markets. for, federal government com mitments under the Export Credits Insurance Act--which underwrites export credit sales to certain countries to a total of $400,000,000, The British high commis- sioner to Canada, Viscount Amory, told the farm organiza- tion convention that if Britain enters the European Common Market Canadian agriculture will face at least short-term loss Laos Left Wing Charges U.S. Violating Pact VIENTIANE; Laos (AP)--The left wing of Laos' shaky coali- most of the students from the|of markets. WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Cuban issue has erupted with renewed force in the Senate over reports of a new around- the-clock Soviet military build- up on Premier Fidel Castro's island. Senator Wayne Morse (Dem. Ore.) Wednesday ordered an immediate investigation. Morse said he has asked the state de. partment for a quick briefing He said it involves tanks, large amounts of ammunition, planes, torpedo boats and other Soviet weapons. The flurry was touched off by |a New York Times news serv- ice report that the Soviets are building and improving "highly sophisticated ground and air de- fences." WEAPONS ARRIVE strengthened, Soviet experts are directing Cubans in construct. ing underground depots, hang- ars and runways. It said Soviet campus. "But i itain' The workers pulled down' the ut if as a result of Britain's |entry the general .level of -pros- Placards and tore them up. perity and purchasing power in troops exclusively are working on some sites closed to Cuban military personnel, | State and defence department LATE NEWS FLASHES informants, asked about the re- ports, said military construction in Cuba is proceeding at a nor- mal pace and is defensive in JFK Asks $3,200,000,000 Cut This Year WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Kennedy urged Con- gress today to cut tax Cause it is committing: flagrant agreement." Lao also demanded the with. drawal of Air America, a char- ter company hired by the U.S. aid group. tion government demanded to- day that the U.S, Aid Mission get out of Laos at once "'be- violations of the 1962 Geneva The pro - Communist Pathet The leftists charged that Air The dispatch said large ship. ments of weapons are continu- ing to arrive, Soviet encamp- ments are being relocated and YOU'LL FIND INSIDE... Artifical. Respiration Saves Pup ...... ; Columbus Records 20 Below Zero... Page 13 473 District Pupils Write Grade 13 Exams Page 13 Heavy Docket In Traifie Court .... Page 13 { es by $3,200,000,000 this year as the first step toward an eventual 18 per cent slash in the aver- age American's tax bill, Setting forth the long-awaited de- tails of his ambitious and controversial tax program in a 12,500-word special message, Kennedy asked that the 1963 cuts be made retroactive to Jan. 1. for his Senate Latin American affairs subcommittee. His staff said it has been tentatively set for Friday. Senator Kenneth Keating (Rep. N.Y.) also told a reporter he has "confirmed by official government sources" that new buildup is under way. CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 America's planes "are illegally flying over territory. controlled by -neutralist .and. Pathet Lao forces, dropping. arms, ammu. nition, food and. men originat. ing from the United States Aid Mission and other American or-| -- ganizations." | The Pathet Lao also called on| é the International Control Com-| mission -- made up of India, Canada and Poland--to "invite both these organizations to get out of Laos and to supervise the withdrawal which should be effected as quickly as possible." "If the United States refuses} to do so," the leftists said, "it must be responsible for any.con- sequences." character. Keating claimed Cuba is 10 times stronger than it was last July 1 just before the Soviet missiles and . bombers --later withdrawn under pressure from President Kennedy were landed there. He said the weapons include MiG jet fighter planes capable of carrying nuclear weapons with a range. that could cover many areas in the United States and Latin America. "IT don't know that they have nuclear weapons," he said. "I don't know that they don't, either. I do say they are capa- ble of carrying nuclear weap- ons."' Fire Hits Algoma Building WAWA, Ont. (CP) -- Fire of undetermined origin today destroyed the interior of an electrical building at an open- pit operation of Algoma Ore properties. No estimate of damage was available, Wawa is 140 miles north of Sault Ste. Marie. ; U.K. To Keep EEC Talks Alive LONDON (AP) -- The British government announced today that it would make every effort to keep alive the Brussels negotiations on the British effort. to enter the European Common Market. Page 13 SPACE 'LIFEBOAT' DEPICTED Artist's conception depicts manned paraglider, left, be- ginning its descent to earth from an orbiting space sta- tion, top, while another para- glider undergoes inflation. The swer if a crewman in an orbite. ing space station has to re- turn home because of illness or receiving word of a tragedy in his family down. on earth. (AP. Wirephoto} paraglider emergency one- man "'lifeboat'" concept was developed by the Space-Gen- eral Corporation, El Monte, Calif. The "'lifeboat," its de- signers say, could be the an ' Ly t i