The Oshawa Times, 30 Apr 1960, p. 1

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WEATHER REPORT Occasional rain with scat. tered thunderstorms changing to showers Sunday afternoon, cooler late Sunday. THOUGHT FOR TODAY The oldster who says "Things aren't what they used to be" is usually deploring when he ought to be rejoicing. shawn Sines ized as Second Ciass Mail Department, Ottawa TWENTY PAGES , Price Not Over Pos t 4 Office 3 0 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, SATURDAY, APRIL 30, 1960 TURKISH STUDENTS DEFYING BAYONETS Six Canadians Soldiers Force Die In Crash End To Strike ISTANBUL (AP) -- New MILWAUKEE (CP)--A Royal World War type--took off from =~ 1|anti - government demonstrations Canadian Air Force plane, trying Ottawa's Uplands Airport Friday 7 erupted in Istanbul today as some to make an emergency landing evening. Shortly after 10 p.m. it ° 1 1,000 students ,and youths, shout |with a runaway propeller,|radiced the Billy Mitchell Air {ling freedom, paraded before |erashed in fogbound Lake Michi-/ Force Base here that it was in & | the building where the NATO gan Friday night. By dawn this|trouble and would attempt an {foreign ministers are to meet | morning there was no trace of emergency landing. 1 | Monday. {the six occupants, one of them| Officials at the field said the The tightest security prevailed |one of the RCAF's best - known|plane made one pass at the field at the NATO building, [senior officers. and missed. As it circled back 89--NO. 101 also. were demonstrating 'else- where in Istanbul against Pre. mier Adnan Menderes The groups, about 40 or. 50 strong, were appearing in scattered parts (of the city, $ | Earlier in the day, troops with fixed bayonets removed 2,000 student sitdown strikers from the campus of Istanbul University. The students, who had staged an 18-hour demonstration, were interned in army camps and charged with violating martial law regulations, The Istanbul military com- mander declared in a com- munique: "The students who did not heed the warnings aimed at bringing an end to recurring re grettable incidents and for the return of order will be temporar- ily detained in camps to face legal proceedings for disobed- lence to martial-law regulations, resistance to police and assault." FORCED INTO TRUCKS When they refused, infantry troops, with bayonets fixed on rifles, entered the main gate of the campus and gradually forced the students into waiting army trucks, There were 100 girls among the rikers. W. A. Nelson, the Seventh Day Church in Canada, is seen pre- senting a cheque for $5000 to E. H. Walker, general chairman CLC Convention Ends Top Officers Remain MONTREAL (CP)--The week. an attack--the labor movement Knowles and William Dodge as long Canadian Labor Congress may suffer a civil war. | executive vice-presidents. convention ended Friday night Four general vice-presidents, with the labor movement head- JODOIN RE-ELECTED also returned for two years, are: C returned william Mahoney of the Steel- Friday for another two years as|workers, William Jenoves, Brick- ing for party politics and some| Claude Jodoin was degree of internal disruption, as} re than 1,600 delegates gave[ SC peosideni. A S00 $16,000 a layers; George Burl, Autowork. almost unanimous sanction to) 5° 'MS salary 4 Bers; and Frank Hall, Railway labor's entry into the political" "pit ro election was wanitousl 5 battleground, and unopposed. He has headed WIDE DISCUSSIONS The new party, dedicated to s0-lype CLC since its formation in| Unemployment, South Africa, L reform in both federal and ios; piéket lines, inflation and social Sp aides were also re-'security were among other prob- ¢lected: Donald MacDonald as|lems aelved into at the conven- treasurer, Stanley|tion. / yr ! a. TEAMSTERS WARNED The congress the leamsters Union to stop raiding another CLC affiliate or face the same fate May 28 The 10,000-men controls Great and the 40.000-membe sters brotherhood, with tion over expected operation, 1 solid front their membs Once out the a union subject to raid congre; affiliates without protection from! the parent body If unions decide to raid either the - SIT r th Tee the ; therhood also told r SIU, which| shipping, Team- jurisdic- were co- kes |rebels but said the town was de- fended by only five policemen. truckers p. reby of was e orming as high as yd. against assaults on hip CL( b de mete Z tail way "ran r and ienera Worker. lating such Delay In Land Probe For Draft By Bryden it ¢ Thousands of troops stood However, aircraft parts and|Out over Lake Miehigats a muf- shoulder to shoulder outside the clothing scattered over a wide|fled explosion was heard. id proach. Helicopters swooped low CHEQUE PRESEN D TO HOSPITAL FUND |that the plane had exploded on sounded os if it was trying to overhead. president of | of the Oshawa General Hospital | Fund came from five organiza- | Ontario-Quebec Conference of |impact. climb in a hurry. | awa. They are the Canadian | lishing Association Inc., and |an officer's flight pants and heard a splash and then a boom," COMMODORE STEPHENSON | demonstrators and troops, but General Hospital, looks on. The |other items not immediately water." streets, The plan was to disperse |youths carrying Turkish flags, {personnel services at air force but failed to find any trace of the ministers were due to-pass within at Truax, Wis. Stephenson, 46, had been in the P al aguay Mort a es ments now in effect in Istanbul g g Command headquarters, St. Hu-|training in Canada, and in 1944 ; ) today against armed invaders| Small roving bands of students!st: i e to nies «aid D. E. Dyck, 28, Moose Range, he could go overseas and fly op- finance and trust companies said Alfredo. Stroessner. { pe j Neil A. Porteous, 25, Ottawa. All{the RCAF's No. 6 group bomber| {mortgages are common in the who struck across the jungles | k | The plane, a twin - engined/raid to Hannover, Germany, in {$2,000 on a second mortgage, they 38 shag Ch ald tina' 'said' several columns of 000 just to secure th sian ; i 4 3 Go Sa y bonus of $1,000 just to sec e| . i [invasions from Brazil as well) |' WASHINGTON (CP)sCanada's|U.5. Afr u" planned 40 Bo Pt . sites sites i 4 rt of the CCF, farmers and No tok. Thue ii t 4 | ast-Ditch { yo oy ul She i gradu ef "liberally-minded people. otal. "hus ihe mortgage is the upper reaches of the Parana aircraft missiles have been| ; : 2 Kay Tictori py The C i t agreed upon for the birth of the T. E. McKay of Victoria Grey nits Mn ef, A anadian governmen | A eh ots . | mi ice oy | deciding to rely on the Bomare enti the ilsion 0 per cent a year on second mort Despite the chins-up statement] The rebels appeared in greater mittee sliced another $294,000,000 8 y the Seafarers' International awans ay Chessman's lawyers today {ver per: i 1 ,000, i dian lab Yea period cases, he said, the | {repulsed last December, ing only $50,000,000 ty continue! Some members of the U.S. a labor E ses, aid, For Orchestra | costs he will have to pay. In| George T. Davis planned a new | row. | A communique said one in-| Congress could yet {Le cvmmendation of the appro- Ing costs P Wi ave to pay. 1 | ~apered Disguised as r wizard, : 3 ' i day. Generally, however, th through the title role The the ny RN ™v the conditions indicates he con. questions of federal law. Hejvion, . I r had very little success" in its|mittee's wishes. f 11 fit of the Ottawa ports arena. He ve his lead- (confronted after signing of the|O" pany) al noon today to accept/means my hands are still com- The interior ministry admitted) testing. In Ottawa Friday Defence Min- inancia benefit o ne awa 8 Is arena. > ga 8 ead- a . 3 ee bd B j f ili | D Philharmonic Orchestra ing lady a resounding peck, to |mortgage agreement with exhor it for filing, |pletely tied. I am powerless to| (pare. sites at North Bay and|to approve the committee's rec- lemency- rec sndati v M ier, . original mm [ d wooed nto carnival | Earnscliffe Castle" the good arranging the Joan of Se ation er punishment but under state law 0% Laurier: Que srishvaly net Sudatious, crowd, wooe into carnivz arnse » Castle he got five » cent of the principal. 3 C | mood by the buffoonery of well- | witch in the political innuendo ive per cen. of. Le principa Fy a I me, ag Itence of a twice-convicted felon to 5 aljer 21 Unusual 4 min, unless the Supreme Court so rec- extra money over the admis- | commissioner, " sion was coaxed in games of Liberal MP J. W. Pickersgill t He Dickson arranged a "last" press any further petitions for a clem- conference for Chessman at 10|ency recommendation. minister makes an ozz of him. Oitawa Rough Rider quarter- self," promised master of cer- ; | bin substantial scarecrow [] death in the octagonal-shaped|day asked President Eisenhower - : $Ap esting sen chamber. to intervene. | WASHINGTON (AP) The Long Island, within [] | Polaris submarine George Wash Silver Stream ington was testing its missile- AD ox TL © DidF Nene still-unfinished structure, Tanks area were found in the lake| 1Wo fishermei were drawn up at every ap- shortly after daybreak, indicating|the airfield said the plane had 4 a A h a Mis : TANKS FOLLOWED MARCH ron di i . | tions affiliated with the Seventh- | the Church, the Oshawa Mis- Picked up were two wheels HEAR SPLASH Adventist Bulg Tune SSP bi Day Adventist comunity in Osh- | sionary College, Kingsway Pub- from the plane, heavy clothing,| 'The motor conked out and we There were no clashes between . L. Wilson, president ol Union _ Conference (National | Maracle Press Limited. |jacket, a grip containing the one of them said. "There was no| jams followed Je archers 20d contribution to the Building | Executive Headquarters), the | (Photo by Peter Ellins.) plane's log, a seat, a suitcase and (light, no explosion when it hit the I . gradually pus em to side |identified. Crash boats and an army heli- nvasion {them there. ; Hi h Rates | Air Commodore J. G. (Joe) copter immediately begin a The procession, headed by {Stephenson of Windsor, chief of|search in the fog and darkness, g » | orce n {marched down a wide street headquarters in Ottawa, was|plane, The coast guard ordered [through which some of the NATO Noted On making the flight from Ottawa to/up more boats to intensify the |the United States Air Force Base|search at dawn. a few hours. | : ] Maximum security arrange- Also aboard were Wing Cmdr. RCAF since 1938. During the waH G.W. Kuziar, 43, of Air Defence he was a leading figure in pilot! ASUNCION, Paraguay (AP)-- have caused grave traffic snarls By Fighting was reported continuing throughout the city, | 1G i | bert, Que.; FO Robert P. How-|reverted one ran rom group i PE xsoROUCH phi Om ard, 29, of London, Ont., Fit. Lt.|captain to wing commander so|seeking to overthrow the strong Clas 0 # 3 man government of Presiden! i i t |Sask.; Sgt, Lawrence J. Bisson, erationally. : zk ! ay ot utes of WO te Soo Wainwright, Alta.; and LAC| He flew with 432 squadron at| The government said casualties| omarc as 3 P ye p had been inflicted on the rebels, {ares but Kuzier were stationed at Ot-|station at Eastmoor, in « York- Who Stuck i ° ® " ise |tawa. shire, and was sl own on a/from Argentina. Householders who want to raise | (Paraguayan sources in: Argen 1 : on | sai Mitchell b y, 1945. d fui said, may be asked 'to pay a, ; Paraguayan exiles had launched y Fo tara loan, and then have fo pay seven 2 A hk rest dintores | Paraguavan 'air force planes plans. for. two. de f# nce si "gountries, fo 10 per cent interest on the $3, bombed. the "battleground" on equipped with Bomare: anti ¢ _ ; |secretary - {made out for $3,000 although th to eight in the U.S. and two 2 sy aavion-- grok es GOs Ooty SEO ED me River that forms the boundary placed in dire jeopardy by United/Canada, ably in mid- in tawa--wa " | . LJ between Paraguay and Argen-|States legislators. FLEMING S 0ZZ | Trust Company said some lend- Oo 1 Osa] ! 1A To es pre vas. oft] The powerful House of Repre- Scrapped the Avro Arrow super- Pp as (he X sio SAN Tal " Eg) 5 ¥ | gages, making a total of 72 to 81] SAN FRANCISCO (AF) a = el, it appeared that|strength than an ineasior force Friday from funds originally ear- (for anti-aircraft protection. ; - the 1.5 { . oe i y > ree- : y his counsel, 9 . 2 Union rom the 1,500,000- member {per cont 'interest Over 3 three pared last-ditch legal strategy the 38-year-old self-taught of about 1,000 men which was marked fof the Bumare-B, leav-|SOME MAY OBJECT Congress--central body of Cana- aimed at saving the convict au-| | oT ng. ; t ue : ) ; thor from San Quentin's gas|Was approaching the end of his| limited development if the mili- House of Representatives are borrower is fold He Viscount, D {chamber Monday |stay of nearly 12 years on death|500 BEATEN BACK tary deems it worth while. likely to put up a fight when the terest rate, lega Pes and enda- | hn od | Albi er goes in with @Pplication for a writ of habeas He accepted calmly Friday|surgent band of about 500 men|the committee's recommenda-|priations committee reaches the OTTAWA (CP) Finance | Ottawa Southam news bureau. this cgse the buyer foes Ja with|3PP which he said would raise|night the news of the court's ac-(was beaten off Friday in attack-|tion, but little enthusiasm has House floor for debate next Tues- Minister Fleming his eyes open, and by accepting ing the tropical jungle town of|been shown here for the missile, | w {0 Friday night | star Joan Fairfax in a jig, |siders them reasonable asked William I. Sulli, clerk ofl Governor Edmund G. Brown[Puetie Catlos Auiosip Lopez on|which the committee said "has/House goes along with the com- arg ZZawé glib 4 sta JO8 he aj E: ng, ' 0 "" n Qtn R , > : : . ia} P, EEN Tidal gn i finan Bob dat lil nil He said some borrowers are the State Supreme Court, to be |issued a statement saying *'This the fall of the village of Colonia| Canada has already spent about|ister Pearkes noted that the Ei- ing lady a xe ing 1 bitant lege] fees or finder.| The condemned Los Angeles|take any action." |Otano, only 10 miles away, to 50($500,000 on construction of Bo-|{senhower administration also has wg ari g oo Fogg im "Lady, Glinda the vod of |charges" made by an agent for| ved Nght" bandl's petition for| mye governor opposes capital al anticipate: 2 Lady G é 2 G Friday: for the third time again | cannot commute the death sen- day ig } 2, @ | known capital personalities at | comedy was Sir Savitle the eighth annual benefit. The | Garner, United Kingdom high | S - t Shi oss {ommentds. ovie 1p At San Quentin, warden Fred| The court's decision ruled out chance creaked into the arena as the . "Our number one finance | tin woodman. : uo . Near Site a,m.--exactly 48 hours before the In Rome, the president of the back Russ Jackson played a six-foot convict's ninth date with|Italian Chamber of Deputies Fri- emonies Charles Lynch of the | United States Navy sighted a VANISHING COINS Russian trawler Tuesday 60 {miles off mile of the spot where the new launching apparatus The navy said Friday the same TORONTO (CP royal commission investigating On- tario H ic Powe 1 mission's purchase of land at Sarnia expected to be de a few days a dec Friday 3 Argo McGil Court The to permit resent hearings ) | a stated ca Sarnia land transaction However, M ray ne witnesses to be called before royal commission before dec on Mr. Bryden's application "If you're prepa me with a stated proper form I'm pr 1 sider he said. "I'm rather reluctant 1 CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3 following si Vi on I Jusiice George ray of th of é royal commissioner agreed Kenneth Bryden, rep CCF party the ¢ the t the a repare draf ( he concerning t Justice v McGill said would he the ding furnist n the ed to case eps 1 to co grant it becau 1 would cause a substantial delay, but I think you're entitled to it." If Mr. Justice McGillivray does not accept the stated case, then Mr. Bryden may appeal directly 0 the Ontario Court of Appeal under provisions of the Public e Ontario Enquiries Act REASON FOR REQUEST Mr, Bryden, member of the legislature for Toronto Woodbine, ed for a stated case after the "justice refused to change his rul that certain evidence relating to the land sale and Metropolitan Toronto's assessment commis- ng © sioner would not be admitted. E dence er, he had ruled that evi involving A. J. B. Gray not relevant to the inquir "because it concerned a time sub- sequent the the land I'he royal commission was es- tablished after Hydro purchased 176 acres of land from Dimen- sional Investments Limited for $1,250,000 or about $7,000 an acre, I'he company purchased 3,100 acy of Chippewa Indian re erve land for $6,521,946 or ahout $2.200 an acre Dimensional Investments, jcorporated in 1958 for the {purpose of buying the land for re Isale purposes, had used Mr. ( to purchase of es in ole ray signed their options as a land adviser because of his Russian ship, the previous experience as minister of municipal affairs. Va., home base of most The hearings stalled briefly U.S. Atlantic fleet riday when it was discover. In both cases the trawl that files belonging to Dimen- in international waters. The navy change in Canadian pockets, are|eral sional Investments were moved continued its tests wi from one lawyer's office to an. George Washington, other, with their present where- volved shooting dummy abouts unknown. missiles from the sub to t R. L. Kellock, counsel for the face. Ontario Liberal party, wanted to Presumably the know where they are equipped with sonar, the Lawrence Gordon, a Toronto water listening equipment Vega deputy spotted the next day off Norfolk, which Vega was Hit By D ht By THE CANADIAN PRESS |000--72 bags of silver--to Buffalo American coins, which once|banks in three weeks. | er was made up almost a third of the] In Parliament, Postmaster-Gen-| William Hamilton, under)! the becoming a rarity in Canada. topposition questioning, admitted | in-| In Jess than a month the coins|that in some areas postmasters Polaris have almost disappeared in some have been instructed to pass U.S.| he sur- areas, flowing back across the|coins on to the public rather than border in a silver stream. {incur the bank's discount by de-| was It was April 7 that Canadian|positing them. | under- banks began discounting United] John Pool, manager of a Chat- fisher- States coinage. The rate is two ham, Ont. branch of the Royal of the th solicitor, said the files had been men now use to hunt schools of per cent more than the prevail-|Bank of Canada, said his bank| turned over to two clients of his, fish a Norton Penturn and Saul Saltz man, who were involved in a fi- nancial transaction with Dimen sional Investments D. Park Jamieson, past presi- dent of the Canadian Bar Associ- ation, told the hearing he was re tained by the Crown OTTAWA (CP) ~ The pany of Toronto during the Sar. expected to be set up next week, The effect nia land deal, then went with Di- it Was learned I'riday. mensional Investments, whic hl The committee's study had employed Crown Trust as agent to obtain the Indian prop erty. : in some policy discussions He said Crown Trust agreed to The chief pay each Indian, who had signed fence Minister Pearkes an option to sell, the sum of $100) G. Ernest Halpenny "a show of good faith." The don), a lieutenant colonel 'ompany had already paid ahout' medical corps during the $9,000 to the Indians when they World War. is slated to be up to March 31, 1959 possible it will be able to as @ ] on it Defence Committee To Hear Minister restricted to defence expenditures but i witness will he De- his firm has shipped $27,000 to|U.S. border. points such as Platts- (PC chairman of the committe ng Fund C ing daily rate for paper money has been forced to order silver| --a total of about six per cent--|from outside sources during the] and applies on silver in amounts/last few weeks. | of $1 or more. "When people take their Ameri- In the face of the bank dis- can silver out of circulation in a count retailers began charging|border community such as this, customers one cent on a nickel|it is bound to create a silver special jor dime, two cents on a quarter|shortage." | rust Com- Commons defence committee is and four cents on a half-dollar.| U.S. coins/ NOTHING NEW Banks point out they have al-| ways had to discount U.S. coins| at the prevailing rate on cur- t js! BIG SHIPMENTS rency, but that the practice grad- One official of a major Cana-| ually disappeared. Then busi- dian bank said in Toronto that nesses began sending people to was that yvernight became highly un- will be popular engage! CRASH AREA SEARCHED from the erash of a RCAF plane that plunged into the lake while attempting an emergency land- ing. Buffalo where their Cana- banks. and 'the same burgh, N.Y,, Lon-|thing is happening in all major dian money was exchange for in the border points." U.S. coins plus the premium.] Wing Commander Jeoffre Second| Another bank, which did not!They brought the silver back to| Woolfenden of the Royal Cana- named ship any coinage to the U.S. be-|Canada and spread it around in dian Air Force (left) and his |fore the discount, has sent $25,-/making change. ! associate, Capt. James Henry of the U.S, Air Force, scanned the dark waters of Lake Michi- gan last night and today look- e ing for survivors or wreckage ww ~ 0 4 San | 8 | WP | wh [| gE E Pr odie wits es 3

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