The Oshawa Times, 18 Apr 1960, p. 2

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THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, April 18, 1960 STELLAKIS Parthenopoulos, an impoverished Greek 4-year- old with a possibly deadly heart defect, holds on to his mother, Calliope, on arrival at New York Airport Sunday (top picture). They are greeted by Associated Press writer John O. B. Wallace, a former heart patient himself, who arranged for help to bring the youngster | to a skilled heart surgeon in New York. A story by Wallace of his own heart operation brought an appeal from the IN SEARCH OF LIFE » ¢ | NEW YORK South African Team Gets Booing LONDON (Reuters) {Charles de Gaulle leaves today BOYCOTT GAMES boy's physician for help. The surgery, planned for next week, will be free. Nick Drivakos, 28- | year-old Greek-born dishwasher (lower picture), wanted des- perately to see his sister and her son, before the boy under- went the operation. United States consulate in Montreal, where Drivakos resides, friend- ly newspapermen and a radio station pitched in to get him an emergency visa and plane fare to New York CP Wirephotos Boy, 13, Accused Of Knife TIMMINS (CP)--A 13-year-old boy, charged with murder in the knife-siaying of a 63 - year widow, is expected to appear fore a juvenile court day Police Chief said Sunday judge Tue Beacock the preliminary hearing may ' start Tuesday as well. It will be held in camera unless the boy is committed 'for trial. He now is in the town jail Saturday the boy appeared briefly before Justice of the Gordon Slaying police said had no previous rec ord, was arrested Saturday six bedroom of an she lived alone woman had been stabbed chest, back and arms Fri dy night. A blood smeared kitchen 'knife was found beside the body and a dagger with a five-inch blade lay on the kitchen table in the where The in the apartment re rE . arrived Sunday to be greeted by 300 booing demonstrators with banners reading "apartheid isn't cricket." The demonstrators, kept out of Londen Airport by police, shouted at the 15-man team as it went into town by bus. The demonstra- tors also scuffled briefly with a group of South Africans who live here and turned out to welcome the cricketers, making a spring and summer tour The demonstrators grabbed a South African flag unfurled by Extensive Tour Taken By DeGaulle | PARIS (AP) -- President for Ottawa to start his most ex- tended foreign tour since he re- one of the demonstrators and a ing two cents off American quar-ione trying to get them to stay pic face will not be disfigured turned to power two years ago.| He takes off from Orly Airport this afternoon (9:25 a.m. EST) for a 14,000-mile, 17-day trip that will take him also to Quebec City, Montreal, Toronto, Washington, New York, San Francisco, New Orleans; French Guiana and the French West Indies islands. The 69-year-old president spent the Easter holiday at his country home at Colombey les Deux Eglises, resting for the gruelling trip and polishing the speeches he will make most of them from memory, for de Gaulle is bothered by bad eye- sight and hates to read texts in public FARM CRISIS De Gaulle leaves behind him a worsening domestic farm crisis, a threat of demonstrations sn | South |the welcoming group and {ricans but I shall boycott their cation that our money is second- He will deliver|y req non-white cricketers from not to infest their coffers 'Movie Star |4! KILLED IN CANADA Entertainer (AP) Swedish |movie star May Britt declined |Saturday to confirm or deny re- |ports that she and Negro enter- |tainer Sammy Davis Jr. are |planning marriage. | "1 will say this, we are dat- ling," Miss Britt told a reporter. |She is staying in New York while filming parts 'of a motion picture in this area. When asked if she was plan- |ning marriage, the actress re- plied: "I consider someone if is serious, |let it go at that." | she parried questions on | whether she and the singer had |discussed marriage, saying "I |think that is rather personal and |I'¢ rather not answer that." She said she has filed in Santa Monica, Calif., for a divorce from her husband of 18 months, Edwin Gregson. That divorce, she said, |is expected to become final in September. Davis' name has been linked romantically with the Swedish Over Easter By THE CANADIAN PRESS Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta Easter holiday activities were/and British Columbia had two marred by an accidental deathleach. There were no accidental toll of at least 41 during the long|deaths in Prince Edward Island weekend, including 27 highway|and Newfoundland. fatalities and nine deaths by| The survey included deaths in drowning normal holiday activities but not The road deaths totalled two industrial accidents. more than the number predicted] Ontario dead: by the Canadian Highway Safety Donald James Madden, 2, son Council 0. Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Madden, A Canadian Press survey from drowned near his home in the 6 p.m. local times Thursday to village of Carlisle, 10 miles north 'midnight EST Sunday showed ot Hamilton, Thursday night Quebec heading the list of high-| Emery Pigeault, 28, Calumet way deaths with nine fatalities, Island, Que., struck by a car at followed by Ontario with eight.'a highway intersection south of Three road deaths were reported Pembroke Thursday might in Nova Scotia, two each in New| Trooper Thomas W. Gallagher Brunswick. Alverte and Eth isy 24, Toronto, fatally injured Thars- Columy ia and one in Saskatche- 4, night when his car rolled off Quebec and Ontario each re- Highway 115 near Oshawa. corded three drownings, Noval Robert James Ritchie, 59, Tor- Scotia had two and Manitoba Onto Friday when the car he was iriving hit a traffic island on ne. v al . : Highway 11 south of North Bay QUEBEC HAS MOST and plunged down .an embank- | uebec led the death toll with one p % |star since shortly after he and a, Quen of 14 Ata] ad 12 ivi ito a conerete lamp stand Canadian white singer, Joan noua Qentia five Now Rp ok hi (Stewart. recently broke off ap Nova Scotia five New Brunswick, Benjamin Ot a 20th Century Fox WOOLEY'S WEST MIGHTY WILD star, appeared in several motion pictures, the latest being Blue Angel Davis previously was married ' [to Holy singer Loray White, SALMON Idaho (AP) ey's west is mighty the census taker knows Mrs. Gene Vincent headed for the Salmon River farm |They were divorced | home of Bill Wooley last week. | JOHANNESBURG The census-taking woman found [Easter Monday a that Wooley's home was on [most South Africa, a showdown the far bark of the river and |in the week - long Negro work the only transport is an over- stoppage called by the outlawed the-water, hand - pulled cable [African National Congress was car. But the car was on the (delayed 24 hours. x date let's everytime | but Gleason, 3, Provi- Wool wild; In S. Af (AP)--With holiday for some police forces throughoul tion for the first test of strength the river with the country's leading Negro political organization since it went underground Strong Mrs. Vincent's shouts brought no reply She waiked along bank to the home of Mrs. Joe Williams and asked how to get Wooley's attention. Mrs. Wil- | the crowd to rescue it. Police quickly restored order. About 40 demonstrators op- posed to the South African gov-| |ernment's apartheid policies also police patrols kept watch on Negro settlements around major urban areas, but there were no immediate reports of any trouble Hundreds of thousands of groes who work in the big cities and environs were caught in the political squeeze. The govern- ment warned anyone staying from work faces loss of jobs or even banishment to native reserves in the remote in- terior London hotel. at the sky told a press conference at the| met her man at the cable cross- team, "We would play with t away : their South Africa would be 100 per Sh C d Africans would be willing to play said they did that on every visit Sunday suggested that Americans would be interpreted as a set- cricketers were here for sport dian discount on American cur- ment's strict segregations polic- dian) discounting our currency| Police offered protection to Ne- |booed and waved placards when the cricket team arrived at its| liams reached inside the door, pulled out a rifle and blasted "WE WOULD PLAY" Back came Wooley's explo Team manager A. D. Nourse sive reply and Mrs. Vincent hotel that if non-whites were| ing. picked for the South African . = A M "I think the whole public of mericans ay cent behind us." A questioner asked if the South Syn Y DETROIT (CP) The Detroit WOULD BE SETBACK a team of mixed races. Nourse Times in a front-page editorial A failure of the work boycott to England, spend their vacations in the back for the ANC in its campaign The manager stressed the United States to avoid a Cana- to force an easing in the govern- and were not concerned with|rency. ies and gain freedom for jailed politics. "We have endured their (Cana-|Negro leaders. for a long time," the editorial|groes going to work and threat- Brockway, said. "Their new trick'of knock- ened sharp action against any- Labor MP Fenner leading anti man, said: "I am a great lover half dollars smacks not only of intimidation. of cricket and it will be a great cupidity but also usury Most of the known ANC leaders sacrifice not to see the South Af-! "It carries an arrogant have been jailed, but the thou. sands of strike pamphlets that impli games." class money. A group called the anti-apar oH that's the our Cana- ,.o.¢ indicated effective under- theid movement, sponsor of Sun- dian pals feel, it is not unreason- ground machinery has been set day's demonstrations, promised able to assume they look upon up similar protests everywhere the us as second-class neighbours : Scuth Africans play "While they are in that frame The group said its protest was of mind," the editorial continued, Post, S : not directed at the players per-|*'it might be smart not to burden groes, said a large number of sonally but at apartheid which|Canada with our presence and | Negroes had been arrested for with distributing the stay - at - home leaflets. way The Johannesburg Golden City a Sunday paper for Ne- the team our coin." by| ? discontented miners and increas-| § ing military activity by rebels in Algeria Premier have to Michel Debre will face alone opposition censure motions against de {Gaulle's policies when the Na- tional Assembly reconvenes April |26. Deputies are angry because {the president refused to cali on {emergency assembly session to {debate the farm crisis although a majority of tioned for it The farmers are worried be - old hours after Mrs Valeda Laurin's cause farm income is not keep- be- body was found in a pool of blood |ing pace .with the rising cost items they need to purchase, Busy Days Ahead For of the assembly peti-| | - "wn May Mary | Highway Deaths | 27 «dence Bay, drowned Friday near his home. | Daniel A. McLellan, two-month- lold son of Mr. and Mrs. George| McLellan, asphyxiated Sunday in| their home in Shannonville, 10 niles east of Belleville. | Amzey Brant, 59, of the Tyen- dinaga Reserve, 15 miles east .of| | Belleville, drowned Saturday|g when fell into a ditch. | Robert Drummond, 10, Belle-| ville, killed by motorcycle Satur-| day while playing in the street. Roseanne Burman, 69, Brant- ford, fatally injured by car Sat-| urday while crossing a street. Daryl Bolender, 10, killed by truck Saturday when cycling on| Highway 121 near Haliburton, 50 miles north of Peterborough Gerald Knight, 4, son of Mr. land Mrs. Willard Knight, fatally injured Saturday night when struck by a car in the street near his home in London Chesley Bellar, one - year - old son of Mr. and Mrs. Bern Bellar, killed by a car Saturday night in Holland Landing, 30 miles north of Toronto. 'Boycott Threat © LJ MAY SEAL FRONTIERS There were other press reports that the government may seal {South Africa's frontiers with three British protectorates Swziland, Basutoland and Bechu-| analand to prevent suspected| government opponents from flee-| ® Two of these, Oliver Tambo and a Ronald Segal reached Nairobi Sunday night MULTIPL Segal, 27-year-old editor of the These three young goats are | left-wing magazine Africa South,| part of a family of quadruplets | had a two-hour wait before board-| born recently on a farm near | {ing a plane for London. Tambo, Lethbridge, Alta, The fourth acting president of South Africa's| kid died. The multiple birth is banned African National Con-| considered unusual among gress, planned to fly to Tunis. rion re They left South Africa without passports -- a criminal offence-- and asked for political asylum from Britain while in Bechuana-| land. Then they traveled north on documents issued by the Indias commission in Salisbury, South ern Rhodesia. |VERWOERD BETTER | Prime Minister Hendrik V Verwoerd was reported making a steady recovery from two bul- let wounds in the head, and doc-| tors said he would not suffer any permanent injury : ; shot April 9 by a white British- the Teamsters Union are to meet born farmer. today in an attempt to end a Dr. H. W. Synman, one of the week-long wildcat strike of Wind- surgeons attending the prime|S0F truckers. minster, said Verwoerd"s senses] Trucking company managers are functioning normally and that also are scheguled to meet with | |industrial relations officials of Teamsters Strike May Be Settled WINDSOR (CP) Union offi- - apartheid spokes-|ters and four cents off American home--either by persuasion or| One bullet lodged in Verwoerd's|the Motor Transport Association| ear, the other in his cheek. Dr.|in London to discuss the Windsor Synman said: "An operation situation either on the wounds or to re-| Robert IL. Wilson, secretary- move the bullets is not necessary. |treasurer of Local 880 of the flooded Johannesburg and other The bullets came to rest in soft| Teamsters Union, said he is op-| parts and can do no further dam-|tomistic about chances for a age. They can be removed at a|settlement with rank and. file later and more convenient time' members. Negroes in the vast Transkei He said the men had agreed reserve in the eastern Cape prov-|tp return to work Thursday, but| ince gave a new twist to the ra-|not all the companies were in ac-| | cial struggle by launching a cam-| cord. f paign to force 23,000 whites out The strike started last Monday| fof the territory. when 26 employees of Smith] E Transport refused to work in pro- Itest of the firing of a union stew-| ard who refused a run from Chatham to Toronto. Verwoerd was|cials and striking members of| E BIRTH goats, but twins are common. - The kids are being helped to pose for the photographer by | Jim Magistand - CP Wirephote ~ | DIFFERENCE A new picture tube would make . . . For price, etc. consult pur service department. MEAGHER'S | 5 KING ST. WEST RA 3-3425 LEAN TENDER SLICED LEAN 54 SIMCOE NORTH Tuesday and Wednesday Only! Sensational Meat Features! CLUB STEAKS Breakfast BACON Ib: nw 49 29° is. $1 MINCED BEEF SKINLESS WIENERS he Peace Roland | CLOTHING CUT Godin who reac by the charge to him and ordered Chief Beacock woman's clothing was badly him remanded in custody nan slashed. She had apparently been ARGUE REUNION IN REGINA daughter Dawn, 4; Nancy Gail Kroeker, 3: Susan Argue, 6; Mrs. Argue and Hazen; his sister Dorene; Ernie Kroeker aid the St. Lawrence - MONTREAL (CP)--A busy day| today at St. Lambert Lock, and bustling days ahead for the St Lawrence Seaway The seaway was to begin its| second season today at 8 a.m., when the Lemoyne, a veteran Canada Steamship Lines freigh- ter, moved into St. Lambert lock, | the first of seven on the 135-mile| stretch, to officially open the route to the Great Lakes. "The first day will be as busy as last year, but it won't com- wife Lucille (Hazen's and Lyde Argue, 13 --CP Wirephoto | THIRD ANNUAL DINNER OSHAWA AND DISTRICT BRANCH OF THE CANADIAN DIABETIC ASSOCIATION to be held on Tuesday, April 26, 1960, at 6:30 p.m. sharp NORTHMINSTER UNITED CHURCH Simcoe St. N. at Rossland Rd., Oshawa GUEST SPEAKER MR. PETER WHELEN, Vice-President, Toronto and District Branch of the Canadian Diabetic Association THE POWER OF CREATIVE LIVING be obtained from any executive member or ot HENDERSON'S BOOK. STORE. ADMISSION $1.75 and his sister); son Hazen, Member of Parliament for Assiniboia and CCF leader in the Commons. Seated around the table are Gregory, 10, (left): his mother, Mrs. n Argue and her | For the frst time since | is her Christmas 1958, Mrs. L Argue of Regina could look around the dining table Good Friday and see her entire fam- ily. Ready to carve the turkey Bennelt Cert "Ever since I was a boy in college," he said, "it was my dream to be in the publishing business with Alfred Knopf." Under the agreement reached CHILDREN DO HAVE WORMS Ever since Grandmother's doy per ents have relied on 'Mother Graves' to ave relief from worms. Easy end SAFE to give to children from 1 year up. Quickly effective. The boy, a Grade 7 student who i -- m-- - attacked first in the kitchen and then dragged to the bedroom Girl S ends Wounds on her fingers indicated Pp tacker with bare hands The body was found by a 10- year-old boy who was unable to wo £f phone police from the Laurin apartment as the line had been cut. He ran to a neighboring house to find a phone. . LOURDES, France (Reuters)-- arrested boy had been holidaying Add Em Thre: - year - old Fernande De- nearly is Dorute Gatinegy but|tinue that way," said Seaway| S pire with a handshake several days nomme of Hamilton, Ont., who is to have returned today superintendent Rene I'Heureux] NEW YORK (AP)--The pub- ago, Cerf said, Random House suffering from the effects of al Funeral services will be held|Sunday night. "It will take three|lishing house of Alfred A. Knopf|will control all Knopf stock but) liver disease, will spend 15 days|at Angers, Que., near Hull, Tues-|or four days to clear the traffic|Inc. will be sold to Random Knopf and his wife, Blanche, will at the shrine of our Lady of day. Mrs. Laurin was the mother|at this end." House Inc., this week, heads of|continue to run the firm under | Lourdes in the hope that a mir-|of five. About 25 ships, ocean and|the twa firms said Saturday. |his name. | This was disclosed today by| REJECTS ACTION Lemoyne. Last year, some 60 Random House, said the merger, ' her mother who also said that{ MONTREAL, (CP)--The . ships were waiting wh in which Knopf will continue to t , he Que ing when the sea- P! | her daughter had visited the di-lbec Court of Appeal has upheld Way was opened April 25 in a|oPerate separately under the GET THE BEST rector of the medical consulta-la 1958 Superior Court judgment blaze of pageantry. same management and with the tions office at Lourdes, Dr. rejecting an action taken against) Queen Elizabeth and President/same staff,' was "the fulfillment For Less At Pierre Dives the Canadian Pacific Railway by Eisenhower officated at the open-|0of a dream" 'ernande, who flew from Mont-|Newage (Can.) Limited, it ing ceremony and the 'royal|" : ye MODERN 9262 SIMCOE ST. N. OSHAWA RA 8-6451 or RA 3-4131 she had tried to fend off her at At Lourdes Police said the parents of the acle will cure her. SEs lakes vessel®, were to follow the| Bennett A. Cerf, president of -- | s : was real to Paris last week to visit learned Sunday. The company yacht Britannia was the first ves- the shrine, weighs only 23 pounds. |claimed that in dropping six ofisel to enter the long-awaited She is suffering from the ef-'the 69 words in a cable from deep-water route fects of Banti's "disease which England, CPR's telegr When the deep - doctors say is incurable. A ma- company, Canadian Pacific T taried into the locks jor operation last November graphs 0 lose ¢& and stopped internal bleeding but $160,000 government contract. The such. narrow for their eould not restore the affected ti dam- | big sel trouble and sue. ~lithere were unexpected delays. Pleasant... Effective Mother WORM EXT KING ST FE, OSHAWA, ONT the water ships green lock unused Tickets may Graves ERMINATOR had caused e a crews skippers to confines company claimed $71,750 ve ran into |ages. ® Everyone invited -- diabetic or non-diabetic @

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