ie tri obpi, inl ios 1964 GOOD EVENING -- By JACK GEARIN -- Juvenile Crime Rate Alarms Chief Justice REARDON RETURNS TO COUNCIL Alderman Alice Reardon doesn't believe in beating around the bush. : She doesn't like City Council's new 'hours of broadcasting open meetings, Termination hour is 10:30 instead of 11 p.m. Starting time is 7:30 instead of 8 p.m. . Mrs. Reardon, to be blunt about it, doesn't think most sound 'too good'? over the air, Too many are "unclear" to the listening audience, cause "contusion." "Even when you have an agenda at open meetings and attend personally, it's hard to know what's going on dur- ing the Correspondence. dis- cussions," she explained. "If Council goes on the air at 7:30 p.m, how will this pre- sent method of handling cor- respondence sound? Most items are merely referred to by number and sent to some committee, The clerk doesn't read out the letter, as in the old days, The public wouldn't have the faintest idea what this is about, It seems point- less to broadcast this portion at least," Mrs. Reardon fs right -- ALDERMAN REARDON the 'Correspondence pert of the program will undoubtedly sound like a Bingo game. In faimess to Council -- this new method of handling eorrespondence was devised last year to expedite business and results in much time-saving for councillors who are pre- eented with the agenda in book form two or three days prior to the meeting. The book contains copies of ail correspon- dence discussed -- this new system, however, deprives the listening audience of the privilege. of hearing the correspon- dence read. The public can rightfully demand respondence anytime at City Hall, but who would trouble? City Clerk Roy Barrand estimates the new system. saves on average of 40 minutes nightly. In defence of the 7:30 tart, he says correspondence is frequently cleaned up in 15 minutes, which could allow 15 minutes for the appearance and receive such cor- go to such Mre. Reatden drew solid laughs when she said: fi 33 TORONTO (CP)--Chief Jus-|which the adult population is dis- tice James C. McRuer of the|charging its responsibility," Ontario Supreme Court said} The chief justice suggested Tuesday the trend toward in-jthe average citizen is content pre juvenile crimes of vio-|to leave law enforcement to po- lence is a matter of concern for|lice officers. However, no police ay force can onementely, safeguard 73-year-old jurist noted he individual rights unless support had tried four youths, none over|by strong public opinion, age 16, for capital murder in| Chief Justice McRuer cited the last two years. other influences--television and , he said, show an in- magazines--which he said are crease of almost 300 per cent injinsidiously educating young the number of appearances injminds in the ways means juvenile courts in York Countyjof crime. A in the five years prior to 1962.) John D. Arnup, treasurer ot Chief Justice McRuer made/the Law Society, said that if le- his remarks at a ceremony|gal aid is to be expanded it will marking the opening of the On-|have to come from political ra- tario High Courts of Justice ths|ther than professional decisions, year, Attending were Supreme] 'We've been doing it for noth- and County Court judges, Metro-|ing,"" he said, "and we've gone politan Toronto magistrates, At-jabout as far as we can go." torney-General Cass and bench-| Mr. Arnup said that since the ers of the Law Society of Upper/legal ald plan was inaugurated Canada. in 1951, hundreds of thousands The increase in violent juve- of dollars worth of lawyers' nile crimes does '"'not reflect on the great body of young peoplejdirect government aid was an do reflect on the manner inibeen increased to $20,000, Student's Death Studied In Yukon WHITEHORSE, Y.T. (CP) -- Evidence aimed at establishing the identity of human remains discovered in an isolated Yukon gravel pit was presented Tues- day at the opening session of a inary hearing into a charge of capital murder against Karoly Marsi, 32. Marsi is charged in the death of Henry Meriguet, 20, a uni- versity student from Annecy, France, who disappeared in 1962 after coming to Canada to trace the footsteps of his grand- father, a participant in the famed 1898 Klondike gold rush. An RCMP dogmaster, Walter Joseph Regiting, told the hear- er 3c tracking dogs uncov- i over an area from Dawson City, scattered human remains gravel pit 230 miles south- east of Whitehorse last May.ivr 1.390 miles northwest of Edmonton, to the B.C.-Yukon border, about 500 miles south- east of Dawson City. Regina, said a fingerprint im- pression of the index finger of the partially - mummified hand matched an impression on a French national identity card is- sued to Meriguet, Meriguet, a student at the University of Grenoble, disap- peared after writing his parents that he was. returning from the north, He was last seen Aug. 30, 1062, in a car at a service station at Mile 700 on the Alaska Highway, about 10 miles from where the human remains were found, Inspector J, L. Vachon, offi- cer commanding the RCMP's Yukon subdivision, told the hearing that police began an ex- tensive search for Meriguet signet ring bearing the isle H. M. on one of the fing- ""Regiting anid the also|Police to abandon time had been given, The only] in Ontario," he said, "But they/annual $5,000 grant which had)" 0 The approach of winter forced search rily Dec, 10, 1962. The WALL TOPPLES Sherbrooke firemen pour a fire of unknown origin early water on the burning Chateau Tuesda y. The wall collapsed, Frontenac Hotel, destroyed by narrowly missing a group of | LONDON (Reuters) -- A Brit- ish firm today continued ar- rangements for a deal to sell 400 buses to Cuba despite ox- pressions of regret from the United States state department, Donald Stokes, managing di- rector of the Leyland Motor Corporation, said Tuesday lhe had asked the East German Shipping Line to transport the buses to Cuba. The United States "blacklists" any shipping line carrying cargo to or from Cuba andpre- vents the line from carrying any government-financed cargo. not have a press conference when they sold wheat to Rus- sia, I have no knowledge of hav- ing to go to America for per- mission to sell buses. We have dealt with Cuba before. "We sold to them $10,000,000 worth of buses in 1949, and/ about $6,000,000 or $7,000,000 worth in 1959. This is just a re- peat order from a traditional customer of ours, This is a pie- liminaty, They want 1,450 buses altogether. "You cannot go to war in these buses, "We could not get any British Castro Buys 400 From British Industry Meeting LA ALAN HARVEY Canadian Press Staff Writer A sense of estrangement af- flicts the Commonwealth. As new nations. join, the feeling of "olabbiness" 'diminishes, One symptom of current in- teria is the lack of interest in a meeting of Commonwealth prime ministers, These confer- ences, once regarded as a pana: cda for all problems, are usually held at 18-month intervais, but recent inquiries by Common- wealth correspondents have drawn a blank in Whitehall, The last of the dozen or so meetings held since 1944 took place in London in Septembe:, 1962, and was characterized by |some disagreements of view |point, principally between Can- jada and Britain, | Sixteen months have passed |since then and there ts little likelihood ministers will get to- igether again at least until 1965, io creating an unusually long break between conferences, | firefighters, Damage was esti- aygcen Sy Paty ie AE any mated at $300,000, 8) a n CP Wirephoto ;Commonweaith -- Ak. Buses jelection, expected to be held jsometime between May and Oc- |tober, A conference before the jelection is highly improbable jand a meeting after it might take some months to arrange. | The Commonwealth, there- jfore, is almost certain to break {what some call "the Diefen- baker rule' -- a reference to jthe part played by the former| take the buses because of the/Canadian prime minister In sug-| American embargo, |gesting that 18 months is about) U.S. Com.|the right spacing for Common- merce Secretary Luther Hodges! Wealth parleys, criticized Britain Tuesday for} Apart from electoral consid- agreeing to sell some $11,000,000 eration, a certain uneasiness worth of buses to Cuba, can be detected. Britain's de- "] don't like it a bit, but! y/cislon to seek closer links with don't know what we can do the European Common Market, about it,' he said. though ultimately nullified by "Hodges suggested Britain the French veto, caused opposi-| uel tae : ind tae Sie tion by the' former Progressive In Washington, Interest Lags In Of PMs. Australia and New Zea Jong regarded as the "loyal". members of the Com- monwealth, also took offence. New Zealand particularly, her ove ing dependence on British markets for experts ut wool, Be bagel eose, was especially ups continues to*be deeply worried about British agricultural pdll- cles which New Zealanders say end a 100-year history of ftve et of food products into Brit- ain, INFLUX NO HELP New Zealand Prime Minister Keith Holyoake, speaking of a weakening in the Common- wealth association, has said the influx of new member nations, bringing current membership the once-exclusive club to 18, has not helped. Obviously the former homo- geniety is hard to preserve. The "old Commonwealth" of Can- ada, New Zealand, Australia and Britain, with the best of intentions, may have little af. finity with some of the new Afri- can entries, What's to be done? How can the Commonwealth live up to its tradition as a "concert of convenience?" Discussing the problem in the London Times, former Canadian diplomat John W. Holmes acknowledges "pres: ent apathy," but suggsts min- isters should at least try to tackle some of the outstanding issues that make for strain, } "At any rate,"' says Holmes "it would be better to go down trying than to ruin the history lesson in the end by admitting that the Commonwealth in its latest phase was ever intended to be taken seriously." Holmes is president of the Canadian Institute of Interna. tional Affairs, Formerly a se- nior official of the external als tairs department, he attended @ 4, \ \ trade history, including the Brit- Conservative government of lish sale of certain items to Ger- Canada that was bitterly re: number of Commonwealth com ferences, many after the First World War, sented in Whitehall. only to find Germany using shipowner to ship them. We tried everybody, They would not Spanish The bus order was reported to be worth £4,000,000 ($12,000,- 00). "Tt is one of the largest orders aa ever received," Stokes said, these products to hurt Britain in the Second World War, Papers Millionaire Killed By Woman, DA Says NEWPORT BEACH, Calif,|sister was out of the room, Wik; (AP) -- Spanish-born Manolajliams said. Gallardo, unable to speak Eng-| Miss Gallardo waived prelim- lish, may have fatally stabbedjineary hearing and will be any multi - millionaire William A.jraigned in court Jan, 16, Her Bartholomae after ly/lawyer, Paul Caruso, said she. holiovin he had rags Beet would plead not guilty. sister, Coun ct) Miss Gallardo came to the ,000/ Attorney Kenneth said./United States three months ago e Soviet Un-| The district attorney's office|to help her sister care for her dropped murder charges Tues-/new-born child. eine ported to want to/day against Bartholomee's: sis-/ Charles Bartholomae, brother ter - in . law, Carmen, 25, andiog the dead man and Carmen's. booked her sister, Manola, 32./nushand was working on his. tempora: search resumed in the spring] Referring to reports that the and on May 27 the human re-|United States commerce depart- mains were located. ment expressed regret at the Marsi, a stocky, dark-haired|Cuban order, Stokes said: ht h face| y they di Play Up Sale ipbut this is an English company) LONDON (AP) Spanish|sued for export of $167,000,000 doing a deal with Cuba, We didjnewspapers gave prominence to-|worth of wheat to Russia, but - 673 ? ----------=|day to reports of the British-/only one firm deal has beea dis- /Cuban bus deal, |elosed, l The Catholic. newspaper Ya| Last week, a U.S. grain trader Q\ [exticinea the United States forjclosed a deal for $78,000 trying to halt commerce with/worth of wheat (to th iCuba while it sells wheat to the lon. Soviet Union Russia is re Ya asked; 'Is it that the|purchase more than $250,000, -| States treats Khrushchev with|000 worth of wheat from the! greater consideration because/United States, on suspicion of murder, brother's $250,000 yacht nearby: Russia is a great power?" Hodges declined to say, Bartholomae, 70, a yachtsmat/when the scuffle occurred, POs Publication of the reports and|whether the wheat involved in| who made an estimated $11,000,-| lice said, comments was possibly only|the new licences is to be sold| 000 in ranching, oi] and mining, with government approval be-jfor cash or credit and he didjdied Sunday in the kitchen of cause of the Spanish censorship, not identify the grain trader nor|his $500,000 mansion, Some observers viewed the pub-|specify the type of wheat, Williams said he died in a lications as another warning to) ----aeerneereroeeneeereroeenes |*'real, choice battle" in which the United States not to er) jhe was clawed and stabbed to Accused Pleads = ot vid on the issue of | death, rade with Cuba. : | Williams said a lie detector | Not Guilty To Murder, Robbery dogs uncovered tern men's clothing bearing French lebels, human bones and a piece of sinew. MATCHED IDENTITY CARD Constable Lloyd Eugene Dun-/man, was broug ham, a fingerprint expert from/the charge from New Westmins- the RCMP crime laboratory in'ter, B.C. Mr, Attersley doesn't complain, but for an alderman who constantly enjoys great popularity at the polis (he was first fn the last two municipal votes) he seems to get precious the way of important plums, such as the chairman- standing committee. in 1960-62 during Christine Thomas' regime -- this year he will serve on the Ubrery Board and about 12 committees in ail. Speaking of appointments on Council, Alderman Hayward Murdoch will return to an old and familiar role for him -- ecting mayor. An acting mayor, incidentally, has all the powers of a fulltime mayor when the latter is away from town or off the acene because of iliness (he can sign bylews, etc.). He has | @ven more powers than a deputy mayor. Mr. Murdoch will not automatically represent His Wor- ship on the banquet circuit or other social events -- this duty will continue to be performed by all aldermen in rotation or- der. Republicans Scramb To Avoid Party Rift WASHINGTON (CP - AP) --)tainly hope to pursue a coursejin the convention where more) The Republican party high com-|of activities that would permit/than 600 is needed to pick a mand begins four days of -- me | to eg pet influence on candidate. today aimed at smoothing the|w mig appen nationally, Or, it his strength picks on path toward the selection of ajin 1964. the second ballot, Reweay |presidential nominee. | If it-had not been a certainty/might go all the way to the | One of the main problems the|before, Romney assuredly willinomination as a compromise jparty faces is to pick a nom- be placed in nomination on thejcandidate standing somewhere inee without going through >it- first ballot at the San Francisco|petween Rockefeller and Gold- Iter fights in various forthcom-/convention next July. water, ing state primaries -- or popu-|, Since he can be expected to! "I think we will have to get| WASHINGTON (AP) -- The larity polis--that would leave'draw a number of votes from/not only Castro but communism/U.S. commerce department ithe party disunited for the No-|the other state delegations, the/out of Cuba in any way we can|Tuesday authorized the sale of governor may find himself play-|without getting embroiled injan additional $42,000,000 worth) eta Thomson To ~ Pick Title teat ven att" partoionee! Qn Jan, 17 |Tuesday led to her release and) . | TORONTO (CP) -- Publisher the arrest of her sister, Roy Thomson said at a recep- tion in his honor Tuesday he ONTARIO COUNTY FIREFIGHTERS TO MEET HERE Rev. John K. Moffat, pastor of Simcoe Street United Church, is one of Oshawa's more articulate and interesting gpeakers, which point was emphasized once again with his appearance Monday at the impressive invocation ceremony for City Council. . . . The Oshawa C of C has obtained a big- name speaker for its dinner- meeting of February 24 -- the wes wow Hon, Stanley Randall, re- " cently-appointed Minister of Economics and Develop- ment for the Province of On- tario. . . . (The Chamber ' has lined up E. B. Griffith, general manager of the Tor- ~ onto Harbor Commission, as ; guest speaker for the dinner meeting of its Transportation committee Thursday, Janu- ary 30, . . . Members of Lo- cal 465, Oshawa Firefight- ers' Association, will play the host role at the Oshawa Air- port (in the Emergency Mea- sures Building) Friday, Jan- uary 17, The special guests will be more than 40 mem- bers of the Ontario County RAY HOBBS utual Aid, a co-operative group of firefighters, volunteer and otherwise, who work to- gether in emergencies. Members of EMO will put on a dis- pley of rescue-carrying packs. Fire Chief Rae Hobbs' of Osh- ewa is co-ordinator for the group. All-Electric Homes To Get six west Sms 2 P ercent Cut |new rate .90 cents. |kilowatt hours, and 1.4 cents for jeach kilowatt hour thereafter jfor residential users. A 10-per- cent discount was allowed 'or lvember presidential election. ign wane may Sat Meee blag » in decid- |peitee Ser tuler Sneha ing who gets the nomination. ler. of New York and Senator oe could > this by throwing \Barry Goldwater of Arizona, cea gig . he Bag reer "ig the two announced candidates|sFichigan's We camara Geeks \so far, will kill each other off| Mich in the campaigning leaving the considered a substantial block of wheat to the Soviet Union and $10,500,000 worth to Soviet satellite countries, Commerce Secretary Hodges ed the new authoriza- tions at a press conference and said he is hopeful that the full war," Goldwater said, He has said before he doesn't jthink the Soviet Union would come to the defence of Cuba if |the United States Imposts a new) blockade or backed a refugee in.| ivasion, | jfield wide open to an outsider. | | "They feel this would weaken/ the party when the time comes) WEATHER FORECAST the U.S, will be sold, Licences now have been is- jto pick its candidate at the Re- ipublican convention in San |Francisco next July. } The Republican National Com-| mittee did not have the ques-| ition of party harmony on its! formal agenda, but political) lleaders from Ohio and Wiscon- isin have expressed hope that) |Goldwater and other major can- \didates would keep out of their! primaries in the interests of! avoiding a "divisive" fight. atusth 0 tie Gibad Cass ' DEMOCRATS HAPPY jand Thursday, The precipitation | The Democratic National) from this disturbance will reach iCommittee, convening here Sat-/the Windsor area early tonigh* urday, has no such worrles|in the form of wet snow and about slugging matches for the|rain or wet snow changing to |presidential nomination, since|Tain. In central and Northern |President Joh is a sure bet. The idered/Ontario precipitation will be inot likely to be publicly decided/rather disorganized and is at} before the Democratic conven-|Present producing only spotty; ition in Atlantic City, N.J., next|showers in Missouri and scat-| August is: tered light snow in Iowa and | Whom will Johnson choose as Minnesota, Present indications} this running mate? -- be serene in} central Ontario wit + good) For this spot, the stock of ella | Sargent Shriver, director of Pe agi > Bes cipitation Peace Corps and brother-inaw|in southern pet mye 2 on jot the late President Kennedy) Lake St. Clair" Lake Erie, jis soaring. jsouthern Lake Huron, Lake On- Forecasts issued by the Tor. onto weather office at 5:30 aim. Synopsis: southern Kansas will méve rorotTo <r) -- saver! NET EARNINGS r Tues- This is because Johnson hasta Niagara, Windsor, Lon-| |showered Shriver with praise--|ddnHamilton, 'Toronto: Periods| jealling him most brilliant, able/ofwet snow or snow changing! "| By THE CANADIAN PRESS $100,567, 53 cents. SET WEDDING DATE COPENHAGEN (AP) -- The of Crown Prince Con- nounced. Engagement of the 23- te " be 1.1 eset hr prince and the 17-year- . Fonmer rates|old princess was announced last for the first 60-Jan. 23. 962, |ROMNEY AVAILABLE (presidential nomination. jenaary, strategic peltticel move than @ifiurries Thursday. Turning and popular--and has sent h.m/at times to rain beginn | to deliver letters to Pope Pauljevening or early pace a and leaders of middle east|tapering off to scaitered snow-| countries. flurries Thursday. Mild turning] colder Thursday, Winds shifting} to northwest 20 Thursday. Northern Lake Huron, Geor- gian Bay, Algoma, North Bay,! Sudbury: Snow tonight tapering joff to snowflurries 'Thursday.| Turning colder Thursday, Winds} northwest 20 Thursday. Tuesday, Governor George) Pomn'v of Michigan announced te a National Press Club aud- jence an Washington that he would have a duty to accept a genuine draft for the Republican A disturbance., in) big question,/Snow. This disturbance is still) Wet Snow Tonight Colder Thursday jday. Turning colder Thursday. | Winds light, Observed Temperatures |Lows overnight, high Tuesday Dawson . 8 "16 Victoria ccccceeees 4 {Edmonton ...ces0s 22 }Regina ccssecccees Winnipeg ...cccees jLakehead . . |White River |Sault Ste. Marie... Kapuskasing ..... North Bay.......5 Sudbury . ' a Muskoka <Airport.. Windsor ee London .... Toronto .. Forecast Temperatures Lows tonight, highs Thursday Windsor ......0005 3% St. Thoma % London .. S Kitchener . Mount Fore: Wingham .. Hamilton .... St. Catharines.... Toronto Peterborough ..... Trenton . Killaloe ... Muskoka .... North Bay.... Sudbury Eariton Sault Ste. Marie... KINROSS, Scotland (AP) --| {Prime Minister Sir Alec Doug: llas - Home said Tuesday new areas of agreement with the| iSoviet Union must be sought to} jeontinue the easing of world) jtension, | Sir Alec, visiting the district jwhich elected him to Parlia-| jment last November, spoke at} ia dinner organized by the Na-| jtional Union of Farmers, | He said "we have been pro- claiming from Britain for some lyears now that nuclear arma: iments have reached such @ point of perfection and multi: 4 28 27 2 2 23 20 12 31 7 3 39 unthinkable, "The logic of this is that, w: jout dropping our, F must seek areas of agreement see eseane ith-| we the same conclusion, while Mr. Khrushchev, although not spe cific in his proposals, is, in urg-/ ing others publicly to renounce} ithe use of force as an instru-| iment of policy, clearly reveal-) ing himself as anxious to avoid war with the West." i THE KEY 35 Haliburton: Snow during the But this may be more of alnight and tapering off to snow- lcolder Thursday Evening Winds Romney said in an interview. northwest 20 Thursday evening NEED... FUEL OIL? PERRY LIST WITH PAUL RISTOW "What happens nationally has| White River, Timagami, Coch- an important bearing on whatjrane: Snow tonight changing to) 'happens to Michigan, and I cer-\scattered snowflurries Thurs-' 4 7 €eacyer 723.2443 |] 728-9474' SA Call Dey or Night « . amount desired by Russia from |? |with participating in a 1954 Se-/Bartholomae had harmed her cause of this he could not be ex- plication that war between the/said his adv iSoviet Union and the West Is/this was not correct. |with Russia and increase our! } contacts, | | "Now the United States and} iG ermany have publicly an-/ nounced that they have reached SEATTLE (AP)--John Wasy-/OUTLINE EVENTS |Jenchuk, whose extradition from} The district attorney said in- le anada was brought up In the/ vestigation geve this picture of House of Commons, Tuesday|the fatal stabbing: pleaded not guilty to changes of/ Manola had just left the kit- murder and robbery, jchen to take care of her sis- His trial was set for March/ter's three-months-old son, On " jher return, she saw her sister Wasylenchuk, 51, of Burnaby,/on the floor, Bartholomae lean near Vancouver, was charged/ing over her, She either thaught attle bank holdup in which one/sister or was about to, policeman was killed and two) A scuffle ensured. Bartholo- others were wounded mae was stabbed, Manola's left will make a definite choice of a | |title in London Jan, 17. | The new baron, named in the New Year's honors list, was speaking in the officers' mess of the Toronto Scottish Regi- ment, of w¥ich he is honorary jcolonel. Sources' said Mr, Thomson was considering the title, Lord Thomson of Mississauga, one of considerable Canadian flavor.: Wasylenchuk's court - ap-jhand was nearly severed. pointed attorney, E. W. Hors-| "She recalled. that Bartholo- will, indicated he might ask/mae fell to the floor," Williams that the trial be. held some-'said, where outside of Seattle. The lie detector test con- Wasylenchuk unsigeessfully|firmed Mrs, Bartholomae's fought an American application/story that she fainted because A. E. JOHNSON 0.D. OPTOMETRIST @ EVES EXAMINED @ PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED 14M King St. E. - 723-2721 for extradition last year. lof abdominal pains while her House of Commons protested) after FBI officers armed with an extraditioA warrant signed by Canadian authorities picked! up Wasylenchuk in New West: minster, B.C., and took across the border last month. | Opposition members in the) 7 BILLS They said that Wasylenchuk| was on parole from a life sen- tence for armed robbery, They) said federal law said that be-| tradited. But Justice Minister Chevrier isers told him that IT'S A FACT! es, Nu-Way hes ever 50 rolls of car- pet on display. No matter what type of carpet you want, you will be able to see it : < Paid with the help of a loan from SUPERIOR FINANCE THE FASTEST GROWING. ALLEANADIAN LOAN COMPANY 725-6541 17 SIMCOE ST. N, Dally to 8:90 p.m.; Wednesday to 8 p.m. Saturday to 12 noon; er evenings by appointment 25 SUPERIOR offices in Ontario | : * SS TS a eens