Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 15 Apr 1963, p. 1

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trson Suspected In Two Oshawa Fires--Page WEATHER REPORT Sunny with a continuing warm- ing trend across most of the province, cloudy in north. THOUGHT FOR TODAY Many a man has lectured his wife on economy and ended by giving up smoking. She Oshawa Time Price Not Over VOL. 92--NO. 88 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, APRIL 15, 1963 Authorized as Second Class Mail Ottawa end for payment MARCH PAST WINDSOR CASTLE i Aldermaston, lear di it, tici- Phas ae ede ad ra te aulere atomic pated in age coma family's Windsor Castle resi- panes og ' psa lg Bows sion. ' ab dewtied eke Sonia 5 a Geek camrying banners deniending via radio from London President Sceptical On Steel Increases ucts last Tuesday. On Thursday, NEW YORK (AP)--President W. E, Mullestien, vice-presi- ¢|connection with Kennedy was reported today to be sceptical on whether price increases announced by the Lukens Steel Company meet the " ic interest" criteria he suggested for the industry. Kennedy, anxious to head off any general increase in steel prices, held a series of tele- phone conferences Sunday after Lukens became the second com- pany in the industry to an- mounce price increases on part of its products. Wall Street Journal the industry said: Kennedy issued a statement on the|the Wheeling action. Following Sunday's phone fe by K dy from the holiday White House at Palm Beach, Fia., the Presiden- tial press secretary, Pierre Sal- inger, issued a statement on the Lukens move. The statement referring to Kennedy's plea to last Thursday, "The president's statement of Ay Ae dent amd general m ° Turn On MONTREAL (CP)--The Front de Liberation Quebec (Quebec Liberation Front) issued a state. ment today saying its next sab- "Operation Jean Lesage." tic, separatist group said Mr. Lesage "recently went to the defence of colonialism." It said the premier had thus shown '"'his true face, that of a shameless collaborator, hungry for power, and a traitor to his people. "In his honor our next at- tempt has been named: 'Opera- tion Jean Lesage'."" The statement said it has no "other legal Lukens, said the ratio of earn- ings to sales was down to 2.6 per cent in the first 12 weeks of 1963. Kennedy said last Thursday: "Selected price adjustments, up or down, as prompted by changes in supply and demand, as opposed to across-the-board increases, are not incompatible with a framework of general stability and steel price stabil- The price increase announce- ment by Wheeling, the llth largest U.S. steel producer, was made a year after the start of a series of increase announce-} Toronto Firms Have Interest In New Casino TORONTO (CP) -- Two Tor- otage attempt has been named The statement from the fana- Quebec Fanatics Lesage movements which exist due to iso approval of her very British Majesty." Such separatist groups as the Rassemblemet pour |'Indepe- dance Nationale (National Inde. pendence Rally) and the Parti Republicain du Quebec (Quebec Republican ), which urge Quebec's secession from confed- eration by legal means, have criticized the FLQ's acts of vio- lence. REGRETS INTERVIEWS The statement said no mém- ber of the FLQ has been in touch with newspapers, and ex- pressed "regret that certain persons outside the movement have given interviews in our name." The most recent such inter- view was with a Montreal news- paper which quoted a man mamed Claude as saying that CNR President Donald Gordon "must be killed.' The FLQ said its sabotage campaign is against federal symbols and institutions, adding it would never attack "places which could place innocent lives Is-|in danger: For example, hospi. ad Lorado Limited each holds 20.9 per cent of nabed in the Grand ments by a number of major companies, The $6, - a - tom in- in over-all price stabil- ity. Lukens said a big drop in profits was the cause of its S On a number of its prod- price increases. Minutemen Seek Missing Leader NORBORNE, Mo. (AP)--Re- wards up to $5,000 have been offered by the Minutemen for information on the whereabouts of John R, Harrell, founder of the anti-Communist Christian Co ive t Mo Harrell, his. wife and five of their six children have been missing since March 31 when they left their home at Louis- ville, Ill., for Springfield, Mil. Their abandoned car was found April 2 about 10 miles south of Springfield. Robert Depugh of Norborne, head of the Minutemen, said Saturday he received a letter from Harrell a few days before his disappearance. "He told me that he had been warned an attempt would be made on his life during this trip," Depugh said. "He felt that people who would attempt to kill him were either Com- munist agents or fellow travel- lers,"" Harrell had announced his in- tention to re-establish a base for his Christian Conservative Church at San Fidel, N.M. He said the move was forcer by a threat of the Internal Revenue Service to confiscate his estate hear Louisville, home of the church. The Minutemen is an anti- Communist organization which Says it is prepared to carry on guerrilla warfare in the event the United States comes under Communist domination. cneases were rescinded after Kennedy attacked the action as bad for the economy. understood today, presidential ing a study to determine what percentage of Lukens' output would be affected by the an- nounced price increases of $5 to $7 a ton. The company, the 20th larg- est steel producer in the United a At Kennedy's direction, it was aides in Washington were mak-|, concession was gramted to help the tourist trade, One of the con- which has been granted the concession for the gambling xt 10 in the Royal Lu- cayan Hotel, being developed by headed ditions under which it granted is that Canadian or American croupiers may not work in the casino. tals, schools, churches." In recent weeks, the FLQ has claimed responsibility for a exploded in. the Fed- ral Income Tax Building in three Montreal armories. Eastbound Ships In Seaway Locks CORNWALL (CP) -- Three eastbound ships entered the Iroquois Lock at the western en- trance to the international sec- tion of the St. Lawrence Sea- |way afer its 1963 season opened jat 8 a.m, today. Four other freighters, all States and the No. 3 prod of sheet steel, said the boosts would affect less than half its production. Checks of other steel com- panies following the Lukens an- nouncement brought a state- ment from the Kaiser Steel Corporation, ninth largest steel producer, that it has no plans to raise prices. Spokesmen for the United States Steel Corporation, the largest steel producer in the country, and for a number of other companies had no com- ment. The Lukens announcement said three-per-cent increases on two production items will be ef- fective on shipments made to- day and therafter, Carbon steel was increased $5 a ton and al- YOU'LL FIND INSIDE... Frenchman's Bay Youth Shot In Foot Oshawa Relief Costs Lower ...... Page Boy Scout Troop To Visit Detroit .. Page 9 Service Vote Favors Cafik ...... Page Nine 4-H Clubs Organized In County Page 9 Detroit Defeats Toronto In Third Game of Stan- ley Cup Competition Pagel0 Montreal-bound, were waiting to enter the lock. The Cove Transport was the first eastbound carrier to enter jthe waterway and was followed |by the Carol Lake and the Lake 3 Winnipeg. Pope John XXIII delivers his traditional Easter bless- ing to the thousands of peo- ple who filled St. Peter's Square in Rome's Vatican Sunday. The 81-year-old head of the Roman Catholic Church EASTER BLESSING gave his greetings from the central balcony of St. Peter's Basilica to a crowd estimated by Vatican sources at between 300,000 and 500,000 persons. --AP Wirephoto via radio from Rome Sons For SCARSDALE, N.Y, (AP) -- boys marched their sons into police headquarters of this wealthy New York city suburb Saturday and said the boys had stolen $63,100, The theft had mot been re- ported to authorities although the victim discovered his loss three days earlier, police said. The three teen-agers ad- mitted stealing the money from the home of Mario Lalli in nearby New Rochelle. Lalli de- scribes himself as a publisher. His son, William, 22, said the money was his and that he dis- covered its loss Thursday. William Lalli, a magazine dis- tributor, told police 'the stolen HALIFAX (OP)--The 800-ton sealing ship Arctic Sealer was reported to have sunk today off Canada Bay on the northern tip of Newfoundland. The 70 crew members were loy steel plates $7 a ton. apparently nescued by a sister DIEFENBAKER MEETS PEARSON Liberals Take Power OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Mi- ister Diefenbaker meets today with his successor, Lester B. Pearson, to arrange a change-~ over of power to a new Liberal government. The 67-year-old Progressive announced Ontario's Hastings South riding to the Liberals. With the service voters finally heard from, Mr. tried to phone Mr. Pearson, found the Liberal leader's line busy, and sent a telegram of congratulations, offering to meet today "'to discuss with you the date of the change of gov- ernment." The two leaders later spoke t|by telephone and arranged the time and place of the meeting-- -|3 p.m. EST in the prime minis- ter's East Block office of: Par- liament Hill. The new Liberal government likely will be sworn into office Diefebaker On Friday a document signed by six Quebec Social Crediters, promising support for a Liberal government, was made public and a copy sent to Governor- General Vanier. On Saturday two of the six, Robert Beaule (SC -- Quebec East) and Pierre-Andre Boutin (SC -- Dorchester), said they had no idea the documet would be sent to the Governor- General. But Mr. Beaule said that he and most Quebec mem- bers of the party favor support- ing the Liberals. Deputy Party Leader Real benefit and interest of the peo- ship, the Arctic Endeavor. No one was injured, , The 174-foot Arctic Sealer was built i 1944. She was the for- mer Port of Beaumont, a United States Antarctic exploration vessel. She was purchased by Shaw Steamship Company Limited of counts, this is the party lineup 70 Seamen Saved . As Sealer Sinks Halifax in 1949, and in recent years has been on loan to the federal government for hydro- graphic survey work in Arctic waters during the summer months. The Arctic Sealer, vinder Capt. Frank Shaw of Halifax, left the Gulf of St. Lawrence sealing grounds three weeks ago to take part in the hunt off the east coast of Labrador. It was not kown how many pelts the vessel car- ried when she went down, but she had a hold capacity of 30,- 000 pelts. in the new Parliament, com- pared with the outcome of the last three federal elections: LATE NEWS FLASHES 1963 1962 1958 1957 Lib 130 100 49 107 PC 94 116 208 112 sc y | eee, Jee, ae * mor (or) 6 hu Ue FALL SHORT With the Liberals falling short of a majority, Canada now will have its third minority govern- ment in less than six years. Mr. Diefenbaker was the only Conservative candidate to win a majority of the service votes cast for his constituency. The armed forces favored the Lib- erals in evéry one of the other 264 contests. The two turnovers from the ple." A Social Credit caucus was scheduled for Tuesday to dis- cuss the situation. Mr. Diefenbaker's moves Sat- service voting paralleled what happened in last year's election them Solicitor-General William when two Conservatives--one of WASHINGTON (AP) -- was ordered today. Billie Sol Estes Gets 15 Years EL PASO, Tex. (AP) -- Bankrupt promoter Billie Estes was sentenced today to 15 years in prison for mail fraud and conspiracy in manipulating worthless fertilizer tank mortgages worth $24,000,000, Worker Crushed At McIntyre Mine TIMMINS. (OP) -- A 54-year-old father of three was crushed to death today at the McIntyre Porcupine Mines Lid. Robert Stewart of nearby Schumacher was killed when he jumped from a slow - moving cage and was pinned against the timbers of the cage shaft, mine officials said today. Congressional Inquiry Into Steel A congressional inquiry into American steel prices, profits and production problems In announcing the inquiry, Senator Paul H. Douglas (Dem., Ill.), chairman of the Senate- Parents Turn In The parents of three teen-age|presents Militant ANTI-BOMB MARCHER CRACK POLICE CO Group Leads Huge Mob LONDON. (Reuters)--At least through the rear wheel of a licemen's Theft - money came from wedding he and his bride re- ceived a year ago and also from winnings at Yonkers Raceway, a harness track, The theft came to light Sat- urday after Mr. and Mrs. John J. O'Connor of Scarsdale found nearly $16,000 in the room of their son, John, 16, said Assist- amt District Attorney J, Radley Herold, HAD SECRET CACHE Herold said young O'Connor reported that he and three 15- }year-old friends heard about a secret cache in the Lalli home, went there one midnight and took it. Mr. and Mrs. O'Connor called the parents of the other three boys, Herold said. PRIEST KEEPS CONGREGATION NEW. his congre; y od the last 10 minutes of Easter service, Father O'Dowd, priest of the Roman Catholic Holy Trinity Church, finished the 11 a.m. high mass and be- Rotcig pepe eure tee joticing people ig to- wards the open doors at the tune of I Love a Lassie, rear, the priest. called, bray a had beri sy<r "I want you to stay. It's |S¢veral marchers as ey an insult to the Almighty on trudged toward London from Easter Sunday, of all Sun- |their night camp at) nearby days." Southall, Middlesex. The march- Clapping his hands, he or- dered the doors closed. Those who had tried to leave re turned to their places. Father O'Dowd finished the special service 10 min- utes later and the doors were opened. ers then surged through a police cordon near Hydr Park corner and moved toward Constitution charged with assaulting: police, Marchers were snapping . up the rom persons Parents of two of the others * your official secrets here. questioned their sons and, with the O'Connors, marched the three ten-agers to the police station. The fourth boy was not found immediately. Police recovered $56,250, Young O'Connor was held without bail on the grand lar- cency charges. The two 15-year- olds were booked as juvenile delinquents and released in the custody of their parents. Cuban Group Against Raids MIAMI, Fla. (AP)--One rev- Olutionary organization sided to- his policy on Cuba, Hit-and-run attacks by exiles, said the Triple-A Democratic National Front, 'will not pro- duce important results in the fight against communism." The exile group, headed by Dr. Auerliano Sanchez Arango, minister of state and of educa- tion under former president Carlos Prio Socarras, added: "They only produce limita- tions on other exile groups whose opinions were not taken into consideration in promoting situations contrary to common interests," Sanchez. Arango's 'statement came in the face of wi resentment among exiles over the administration's Cuba pol- icy, "Kennedy won't do anyt day with President Kennedy in| § and won't let us do anything' Browne--were ousted in favor said one exile leader. He re- House of Representatives economic committee, said it was PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 Democratic Party and the brought signs of sup- port from another quarter--the Social Credit party. urday to arrange the change of government to the Liberals fol- lowed the 1957 pattern. when the Conservatives took over from the Liberal government of Prime Minister Louis St. Lau- rent. The Conservatives took office June 21 that year--1l1 days after the election. Barring changes in any re- of Liberals. In Quebec's Pontiac - Temis- camingue riding, the 41-year-old Mines - Minister Martineau ended 16 votes behind Liberal Paul-O. Goulet. A 49-vote serv- ice vote margin for Mr. Goulet upset the 33-vote lead held by the minister in Monday's civil- spurred by price increases by the Wheeling Steel Corpora- tion and the Lukens Steel Company. Last Sounds From Stricken: Submarine PORTSMOUTH, .N.H. (AP) -- The ballast tanks as the nuclear submarine Thresher made a frantic attempt to surface after encountering some un- defined trouble drowned out a second garbled message, a U.S. navy court of inquiry was told today. sound of «air in anti-Castro raids. But Sanchez Arango declared Cubans "'should not raise grave problems for the United States government without knowing how conditions are developing in passing from one phase to the next on the intern ational |scene."" »> ferred to restrictions against 'The. United States' First Lady, Jacqueline Kennedy, chose a white lace mantilla to cover her head when she at- tended a private Easter serv- ice at the Kennedy family b a MANTIL FOR JACQUELINE home at. Palm Beachy «Fla. gloves with her pale pink' sleeveless sheath dress.' y) --AP Wirephoto &

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