TIMES-GAZETTE TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising. . RA 3-3492 All Other Calls .RA 3-3474 Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETT Weather Forecast Sunny today and Sunday. Tempera- tures unchanged. Light winds, High today 30, low tonight 20. Authorized @s Second-Class Mail Pi Pest Office Department, Ottawe VOL. 85--NO. 11 OSHAWA-WHITBY, SATURDAY, JANUARY 14, 1956 Price Not Over $ Cents Per Copy FOURTEEN PAGES 9 JUNGLE VICTIMS B rm > 1s ays Husband ee NN [SNE FS mes | Claimed Own oT en a . mmm pe== Knife Death y Rp | af as... an § | LINDSAY (CP) -- A provincial | policeman testified at the prelim- | inary murder hearing of Mrs. June | Scriver Friday that her husband told him he died of a gunshot wound: aL Nes an accident. I did it my- elf. | Mrs. Scriver, 38, of Corson's | siding, is charged-in the Christmas |Day shooting of her husband, Earl, | 39. Magistrate R. I. Moore re- served decision until Jan. 14. Ee | Constable John Williams of Fene-| § lon Falls testified that as Scriver | was being taken to hospital he | told him the shooting was acci- | dental. {| Dr. Robert Jamieson of Coboconk | said the wounded man told him as | he was being treated: "I was fool- |ing around with a gun and shot myself." | EASILY DISCHARGED Constable Williams said the .410 shotgun which fired the fatal shot | could be discharged by brushing | against clothing because of a de- fective trigger. | Scriver's stepchildren, Teddy, 12, and Loretta, 15, told of a week of |threats by their father to make them leave home. Mrs. Scriver fi- nally left with the children the week before Christmas and re- turned home Dec. 21. The children harbor to Bonniebrae Point, large | father started drinking wine Christ- ice formations have developed. Mas morning and throwing things Times-Gazette Photo. about the kitchen. They said their mother came out of a bedroom with the shotgun and twice told him | to stop. Then, they said, "The gun | went off." 'Parking Summons Strike Teams To Turn Officials Outline Plans To Bed-Rock GM-Issues For Treating Sex Deviates (awaits Member fon. Oshawa Creek is carrying a | coe Street South. The entrance of | extends from the mouth to well | the creek into the harbor has | upstream. Along the foreshore of great deal of ice, as is shown in | as | ! the above picture taken on Sim- | frozen and a large stretch of ice | the lake, particularly from the Despite the slightly warmer weather during the week, the said their step-| # the ; a i : : TORONTO (CP) -- Provincial of-/in such cases, the offenders must Court Crier. called out the bame of TORONTO (CP) -- Negotiators Seaton, GM's director of labor re-|Catharines and London include: in the marathon General Motors lations, will probably return here, Full company payment of a of Canada strike will turn from/for talks with the union Monday health and welfare plan; wage in- side issues to bedrock disc efter 2d | A 5th. Sreases io brig SM Sgales to ihe dress bargaining sessions TECHNICAL evel of its auto, try competi- RE : , ! A group of techmical rts is| tors and a supp! ry boost to of the'company and a ral maike GM load + in d - Automobile Barkers sessions . Neither: sie pensions; and aisystem of. job. bid- {CIO-CCL) will be on hand in an|dicted a quick end to the strike |ding to give promotions'l on all-out effort to settle disputes that|but both indicated they expected to) the basis of seniority. have kept 17,000 workers idle for{make headway soon. There were reports that the un- 5 oh ficials Friday outlined plans for treating sex deviates and for keep- ing closer tabs on convicted sex offenders who have served prison terms. League ¢ gistrates to 'send with sex offences to hospitals for psychiatric study either before trial | get psychiatric help. In many cases | | they were released when their sen- |tences were completed, which may | Harry P. Cavers in magistrates {court Friday. There was no an- be earlier han ne eS \ he pa Eins : Ires| { - eral royal commission headed by Chief Justice J, C. McRuer of On- tario which will meet here next month to stud thye sex deviate pro- ion of d he's left the coun- try', sald crown attormey Lloyd _ Magistrate Harley' Hallett Phiey | "Gone already. I knew he had lef the city, but I didn't realize he had left the country al- ready." 119 days. | Both sides decided to spend the| wroskond - in view progress to date and consoli-| date their positions. | Frank James, a member of the| vuion's General Motors department | in Detroit who has been in on talks| here for the last two weeks, plan- ned a quick trip to Detroit for a conference with his chief, Leonard) Woodcock. He was to return here Sunday in time ta brief the union team. The company, meanwhile, plan-| ned its own meeting in Detroit. A! company spokesman said Louis G.' private huddles to re-irepresentative said. "We expect a little different at-|ion may review some of its stands|or before sentence. Meanwhile, a them titude on Monday," a company in order to give the company more|committee has been appointed to} leeway in operation. It was said tofgive 'serious consideration' to the NEED CODE CHANGES ; And a union source commented: |J€ considering a request that! noscibility of convicted sex deviates| Health Minister Phillips said h "We could get on to a much|{the annual two-week plant shut-| being held for treatment after sen-| felt a final and effective soiutiion 5 Pu better footing . that doesn't{down should be set for the last |tences expire. : {of the problem could come only Parliamentary Association. park- say it's going to end next week, [week of July and the first week| Reforms Minister Foote said that|through changes in the criminal], i 8 Mr. Cavers, Liberal member of Parliament for Lincoln is enroute e to Jamacia to attend an executive meeting of the Commonwealth ic Last Rites Follow Ruca Massacre QUITO, Ecuador (CP) -- The bodies of five American mission- aries, massacred by savage Indian tribesmen they had hoped to con- vert to Christianity, were buried in Ecuador's jungle Friday near the stripped skeleton of their plane. The search for the missing men came to a grim close when rescue parties found the fifth body in the remote Curaray river valley. The others had been located over the last few days by air and ground | searchers combing the jumgle ha- bitat of the primitive Auca Indians. The ground search party was headed by Dr. Arthur Johnson of St. Catharines, Ont. In the search {party was another Canadian, Rev. Jack Shalanko of Niagara Falls, | Ont. Grady Parrott, president of the Missionary Aviation Fellowship, an- nounced the fate of the five who apparently were attacked just after sending a radio message: "Here come a group of Aucas we have not known before," At least one of the missionaries had been run through by a primi- tive lance. PLANE A MONUMENT The dead men were Peter Flem- ing, Seattle, Wash.; Nathaniel Saint, Huntingdon Valley, Pa.; James Elliot, Portland, Ore.; Ed- ward McCully, Milwaukee, Wis., and Roger Youderian, Lansing, | Mich. | Abraham Vanderpuy, president of the Inter-American+ Fellowship of Ecuador, said the missionaries' Piper plane, "Wings of Mercy," will be left at the death scene as | "a witness of their sacrifice." | Searchers 'said the Indians had stripped the craft and ripped the fuselage. i 7 | 'The mission group had been try- ing to win the Aucas' friendship for the last four months, oN river and dro machetes, be; and other ets which apparently delizhtéd the tribesmen. ENEW THE DANGER Informants in Quito said it was the 'third attempt by missionary groups to convert the Aucas who know little of modern civilization. In Portland, Elliot's father, Fred Elliot, read reporters letters from his son telling of the mission's > aA a: 8 - This hardy old gentleman, well & mails go through, He has wrapped up against the cold Man- | done this job without a break for But we could get into a new pe- of August. lif prison terms are to be effective] Code. ing will await his return. riod when both sides are working toward an early end." But he cautioned: "If it doesn't work, it could slide back into a stalemate again." UNION DEMANDS Union demands in the contract deadlock which sent workers out at Oshawa, Scarborough, Windsor, St | Ee | | i! y : 4 Raps U.S-GMC t UAW Meet a . D. (Tommy) Thomas (CCF),| MLA for Oshawa riding last night! criticized the part played by Am-| erican officials of GMC in the cur- rent strike negotiations. Speaking on ethe regular news broadcast of Local 222 UAW-CIO, Mr. Thomas claimed that the strike would now be over it negotiations for GM had been conducted by local management. "If local management had been allowed to negotiate with repre- sentatives of the union, the strike would not have lasted this length of time," he said He .claimed that the strike had been prolonged by 'interference from the other side." "FOREIGN" NEGOTIATOR If W. A. Wecker, president of | GMC had been in charge of ne- gotiations, the requests of the union would have got more sym- pathetic consideration said Mr. Thomas However, negotiations had been in the hands of Louis G. Seaton, "'a resident in a foreign country," he said. Mr. Wecker lived in Oshawa and had the interests and progress of the city at heart, claimed Mr. Thomas, and would be more inter- ested in settling the strike than someone in the US who regarded | The employment situation in |Oshawa has deteriorated further {now that the year end trading |peak is over. There are no jobs |to spare in the city. | Norman Hodgson, manager of ithe National Employment Service here, said today that about 3,200 men and women, not including the 10,000 GM strikers -- are seeking jobs in the Oshawa area. Howeyer demand for non-skilled labor is virtually non-existent, he added. The winter slump has set In and throughout the city there is a ¥ } } Oshawa as nothing more than a "hole in the ground." | Mr. Thomas also claimed that| General Motors had selected Osh-| awa as the spot to 'get back at the ; 1 international union" for negotiating 5 Ek 3.200 Seek Job InOshawa Area a modified GAW award with Ford in America BATTLEGROUND He agreed with Dr. J. R. Mutch- mor of the United Church that| general restriction of trade and |producter. Feeder plants for GMC are still experiencing difficulties and lay-offs are numerous. Canada was being turned into an "industrial battleground" by Gen- eral Motors. Commending the union of the UAW-CIO for the fin- ancial contribution it had made to the finances of Local 222, Mr.| Thomas said that the Local had got back more than three times as much as it had contributed in 1955. | The international union had sent back more than $3,429,870, he said. Negotiators for the United Apto| Workers are holding a four-day) committee consideration of their stand in the strike. Toronto reports today claimed that substantial progress toward agreement had been made during the week, the 17th week of the strike. Ontario Fires Kill 182In'% TORONTO (CP)--Fires in On-| tario killed 182 persons in 1955, a| provincial fire marshal's report said Friday. Nearly half the fatalities oceur-| {red during the final three months of the year and included 25 men, 19 women and 29 childeen. There were 352 injured by fires during] the vear. | Property loss totalled $26,528, 352, pith some damage yet to be tabu-| ated. ' international { | | | Louis G. Seaton, director of G.M. labor relations, is expected in To-| ronto on Monday for top level talks with the union. ¢ MOTHER AT FOURTEEN LATE NEWS FLASHES Just by way of adding to the | Quebec, became a mother at 14 | on record in the area and is family habit of making records | when her son, was born on Janu- | seen with her young son and Mrs. Marcil Leon, of Aylmer, | ary 1; she is the youngest mother | husband. HALIFAX (CP) -- A January French Hold Leadership Talks - -- PARIS (AP)--France's political parties launched a series of important meetings today aimed at de- ciding who should head a new French cabinet and what policies he should follow, Reds Return War 'Criminals' HERLESHAUSEN, Germany (AP)--The Soviet 450 Germans described as criminals" to West Germany today. It marked the first group of returnees classed by war criminals to reach West Germany since the repatriation of German prisoners Union returned the Russians as began last October. LANDS SAFELY |thaw, now in its 11th day, may PARIS (Reuters) A twin-en- cost maritimers at least $10,000,- |gined chartered aircraft carrying 000. Property damage alone from | Randolph Churchill, journalist son|f'cods and sleet was counted today {of Sir Winston Churchill, made a/at nearly $7,000,000. torced landing on one engine| Figures are far from complete. through thick fog at Orly airport Some areas of Nova Scotia are Friday night with only three min-|Still. flooded, Sleet and freezing anks. {raim fell again Friday in New - ------ | Brunswick. But a preliminary tab- ulation from rough estimates of To Recruit Force Fight Delinquents VANCOUVER (CP) Police | "Instructions have been given the| utes fuel in its t fighting roaming juvenile gangs, youth detail that the situation is wo i plan to recruit their own force of to be cleared up immediately. I 18 year olds to work as office| Trouble-makers are to be either places ele- road engineers, utility companies | cadets, leaving experienced police-| driven out of the city or convicted ments. land families whose homes were men free for patrol. and sent to prison." The youth detail has been in op-|f coded showed nature had dealt | The plan was announced Friday, The youth detail is a squad of eration several years, working!lihe east coast one of her most! (night by chief George Archer in|detectives known through the 750-| with probation authorities and juv-!costly blows. la fighting policy report to the pdlice| man force as 'the baby sitters." It cuile court offices. Beyond actual damage to roads, | commission in which he laid plans| patrols the juke joints and restau-| The cadet policemen, c hie f|bridges, railroads, wire lines and to "wipe out street-corner hooligan-| rants where teen gangs gather. Archer said in his first major re-|bnildings its the incalculable loss lism." TROUBLE SQUAD port since taking office Jan. 1,|to business and industry. Lumber-| | It was augmented by a report] The detail would be backed by| would work as assistant clerks, car{men, whose woods operations were| i from deputy chief Gordon Ambrose! the manpower of a special "trouble pool clerks, stores assistants and stopped, estimate their loss in the! which said: squad" to clean out '"gathering'complaint counter assistant, | hundreds of thousands. : of youthful rowdy "war ~ January Thaw May Cost $10,000,000 itoba winds, as he makes his pos- | the"past twenty-two years and, tal rounds, is volunteer postman, | he is as good as a clock for keep- | William McDonald, of Seikirk, | ing time on his two daily rounds, Manitoba, who, at ninety~ | early in the morning and early one years of age, still sees that | evening. 1 ; = plans to cofivert the Aucas. | » "We would like to reach this Bride 14 Must tribe," one passage said. "These S { ' people are killers. They do not have so much as a word for God in Attend School their language, let alone a word | | for Jesus." | LONDON Ont. (CP)--~The Lon-! {don board of education has decided | 1 hes The cold weather has caused a|? 14-year-old bride must attend | & n 1cte decline in construction work in the| school even though her husband is district, putting scores of strikers | unable to work. - I] Who had taken temporary jobs out| But one concession was made. For Brink S Retailers in the downtown area| 1 &irl, who was not named, will | sre now feeling the effects of the be allowed to attend high school | strike more severely M. D. Wy- during a morning shift so she can | 0 o man, general secretary of the re- he free to tak I Y tailer's association said today that during the fake a vant time Job, - od there had been a decline in 'of . | BOSTON (AP) El business activity since the holiday| The young bride's predicament convicts have' been dicted Pint i {ras explained to the board by a in absentia and pio ra However, most stores had kept|legal representative, H. S. T Ssentia ang on, po py on staff for year end reports and gart. ied paracipa ane 9, preparation of inventories. | He said that since the girl's By nk's robbery, the 1950." theft of A Canadian Press report today| marriage, her 19-year-old husband e century. claimed that there had been lay-|has taken seriously ill and has had| A county grand jury returned the offs at the new $10,000,000 centre to leave his job. The couple is|indictments -- 46 in all -- after in Oshawa because of the steel renting a house and their finances|listening to Joseph (Specs) O'Keefe {shortage. | are running low, Mr. Taggart said. 47, deserive Friday i fantastic BS a planning that went into the largest cash haul in criminal history. LJ Ld The FBI listed the case as '"solved" Thursday with the arrest u of six of the group. Two already were in jail for other crimes, an- ™ ® other died of natural causes a year ago and two more were sought in er Collision [r= | - FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover ' {asked public aid in apprehendin OTTAWA (CP) -- Two RCAF | Calgary-born pilot and his naviga- | the 3 suspects still at 0 ent ied_out, of thelr crippled tor, FO. Bill Delorey, 22, Quebec James Ignatius Faherty, 44, of i h Frid Th 1 the City, blew themselves out of their Boston and Thomas Francis Rich- air cras riday. e pilot of the 0s f Wi th, M second plane got his aircraft home plane after the collision at 13,000 ga Tih + ABS5: safely despite the fact part of its feet. The plane crashed in iel A. Gel vid BE" i sn ny mo, The oer They landed safely in a field a| robbery, resulted in the indictments ' . . » 99% few miles south of Carleton Place | --containing 148 counts and 10 al- | Ont., 25 miles southwest of here, | jaged offences--against: and were picked up and returned| Stanley. A. Gus 36 in fo thee, Uplands base at" Oiaval Samer 8, Cusion; 20 Jovi | by an * helicopter. ; is 3 > Plup. { Pilot of thagother plane, wo, [fisld, 45, Tow dead; Auihony. Pie, Pete Green : _ Grand Manan cent J Costa 'a1; Joseph F Me- x island, N.B., his fighter staggering gps 53. Adolph Mafrie, 44; SKY p Ty » » » Although hie ae Joe ote | Henry Baker, 49; Richardson; Fa- . h f { 7s 1f, who Nova Scotia, ravaged by: floods sloppy by the loss of a good part herty; and O'Keefe himself, v from rain and melting snow, ap- of the plane's tail assembly, he Was brought from a Springfield peared by far the heaviest loser. landed safely on a cleared runway jail to testify. Damage in that province was be- at Uplands. . | Sr -- lieved more than $3,500,000. |WONDER AT DAMAGE i . - ROADS AND BRIDGES }" Looking 'at Abie plare later. 'he Wife Convicted Damage to bridges and roads and other officers shook their alone may reach $2,000,000. The heads in wonder that the plate Of Manslaughter provincial 'highways department flew. All the starboard elevator Vv still doesn't know how many | and the top of the horizontal stabil- . ANCOUVER (CP)--Mrs. Har- bridges it lost, perhaps almost 100,|izer 'had been shorn off. Viet Fi Maison, i was cop- including tone suajor spans. Many| The limping fighter was escorted| {ho ile ae hans sugnier more were damage back to base by the third aircraft|n cband last October. She had Two of the largest were on the in 'the three-plane formation. It originally been charged with r- foaming St. Mary's river, 125) was flown by Fit. Lt. LB. (Mike)| dor ge ny miles east of Halifax. One, a {vo-| Pearson--no relation to the exter-| b . gpan covered bridge at Aspen, left! nal affairs minister. t ats vue remanded to the end of only one such relic of horse and| f100king at FO. Green's tangled| Mrs. Malcolm, mother of two buggy days mn the Whole province. | tail assembly, Fit. Lt. Pearson im-| was charged with murder after the Eleven of Nova Socia's 14 main- plored him over the intercom to body of her husband was found in land counties reported bridges) bail out. But Green couldn't hear.|the basement of their home Oct. washed out or damaged, including His radio aerial had been dam-|16. Defence counsel pleaded self- at least 66 smaller spans. aged in the crash. |defence.