The Oshawa Times, 13 Jun 1961, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY It isn't what a girl knows that should bother a man, it's how she learned it. The Osha Time Dw WEATHER REPORT Hot thundery weather will con- tinue throughout tomorrow the day. Cooler "Price Not Over OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, JUNE 13, 1961 Class Mail Authorized es Second Post Office Department, TWENTY PAGES 10 Cents Per Copy "MIGHT AS WELL KILL MORE' and Sheriff Fay Gillette tim -- the "death" that start- (rear) looked on. The two | teen-agers are in custody for a series of seven killings in | five states. But the first vic- "We thought as long as we'd killed one, we might as well keep on," said George Ronald York (left), 18, as buddy James Douglas Latham, 19, vived with critical head in- juries. (AP Wirephoto) Families Run To Sea Ahead Of Forest Fire ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP) -- A breaks around the dwellings. late Monday at Traverse Brook, fierce forest fire that sent'He said not women and children fleeing for scorched. It spread siwftly through a the refuge of the sea as it] The flames, feeding on stands|neck of woods separating the threatened the logging commu-|of birch and fir, knifed their|village from a nearby pond. nities of Hare Bay and Dover|yay to the edge of the commu-| There was no immediate es- was brought under control to-'nities, Hare Bay, which has|timate of damage. day. {about 1,200 residents, was vir-| 'Oshawa Firms ed it all -- didn't die; he sur- one home was|about five miles from Hare Bay. | Holiday Plans |will employees of Ontario Mal- Hourly-rate people at General |leable Iron Ltd. Motors of Canada will receive, lan extra eight hours pay be-| Duplate of Canada Ltd. em-| cause July 1, this year, falls on|ployees will have Monday, July a Saturday, the company said|3, off and be paid for the {.day. {holiday provided bey work the The regular produc tionPreceeding Friday and the fol- schedule of cars and trucks -- lowing Tuesday. Houdaille In- nearly 1,000 a day -- will be|dustries Ltd. will remain closed maintained on June 30 and July| Monday, as will Fittings Ltd. | 3 in order to meet the continuing| Qualifications for holiday pay | high demand from all across|/at Houdaille Industries and the| Canada for the company's pro-| Fittings Ltd. are) the same as| ducts. The extra eight hours at Duplate of Canada Ltd. pay will be in lieu of closing] The R. D. Werner Co. plant the plant on a week day. will close Friday, June 30, a ; : _icompany spokesman said today. wy Sqlatied people ar. | The spokesman said the com- rangement with departmental Pany's contract with the union | supervisors as work schedules | S215 for the plant closing permit. In many cases it is ex-| y. 4 : |pected that salaried people will] Graham Coulter, of Coulter add a day to their regular| Manufacturing Co. said the firm {vacation period. |is undecided to date, ut labor | _|and management is endeavoring |e. Bellar People Lig, em. to. work a schedule to permit the plant closing Monday, July 3. rangement as GM workers, as| Enh Steel A rtd. {and Fabricated Metals Ltd. is also undecided what the holiday 'Tractor Team Reaches Cuba MIAMI, Fla. (AP)--The U.S. tractors - for-fre ed om team reached Havana today on its prisoner exchange mission. The group declared its '"humanitar- ian purpose" to free 1,200 cap- tured invaders by exchanging 500 tractors for them. The arriyal in Havana was re- ported here by Pan American World Airways. The four man team of tech- nical experts departed after |arrangements with their workers will be. 'Rutolite Strike Over SARNIA (CP)--The Electric Autolite company here resumed production today after a walk- out by 450 office and plant work- ers closed the.plant Friday, Company represen "and sirike leaders met Monday night and issued a statement assuring employees that differences be- tween the two groups would be discussed jointly. First of these { Irvin Chambers Scarbeck, an American foreign service officer, was arrested today in Washington on charges of turning over national secur- ity information to the com- munist government of Poland. a SPY SUSPEC . [Mr. Fleming had told him the : |cabinet was upset by the action OTTAWA, (CP) -- Governor James E. Coyne of the Bank of Canada said today Finance Min- ister Fleming has requested his immediate resignation. Mr. Coyne said he "will not resign quietly" under the cir- cumstances relating to Mr. : |Fleming's request that he leave his post now and not wait for the Dec. 13 expiry of the gov- | |ernor's seven-year term. In a statement Mr. Coyne said of the central bank's board of * |directors in Feb. 1960, improv- A native of Brooklyn, N.Y., he has been serving as second secretary in the American Embassy at Warsaw. He re- turned to Washington a week ago. (AP Wirephoto) ing conditions of the pension for the bank's governors. The finance minister said cab- inet felt the bank governor had failed to discharge the respon- sibilities of his office in allow- ing the board of directors to take the action on the pension, Mr. Coyne said. Mr. Coyne said the action was taken unanimously and after thorough consideration and that the justice department had said it was entirely within the pow- ers of the board. "SLANDER" ON INTEGRITY "This slander upon my own integrity I cannot ignore or ac- cept," Mr. Coyne said. "It ap- pears to be another element in a general campaign of injury and defamation directed against crown corporations, the chief executive officers and other Kennedy Injury Causes No Worry WASHINGTON (AP) -- Presi- {dawn on the hour's plane flight dent Kennedy's back ailment to Havana with the hope of talks was scheduled for today. aboard four schooners anchored| Dover loggers, fought through! RB a, Began re-4 the night and eventually stopped | ul S, the spreading flames. The blaze was brought in ® 5p 8 check after a gallant 12 - hour SOME STAY PUT from Ed Ralph, chief forester vessels watched as the flames| LEOPOLDVILLE (Reuters)-- at Hare Bay. played a deadly game of touch|The United Nations announced 3 28 and go with their homes. | today it has reached agreement CARVED FIRE BREAKS | Other persons, including mamprwith Congolese authorities for Stuart Peters, Newfoundland's in Dover, with a population of{100 unarmed Nigerian police Not 2 home in the commu-|/tually encircled by flames at nities was so much as scorched. /one time. Women and children, who had{ An estimated 1,000 firefight- spent the night crammed ers most of them Hare Bay and| struggle by the men of Harel Not all women and children| Bay and Dover, about 110 miles went to the schooners. Many| For Con 0 northwest of St. John's. elderly persons refused to leave| g Reports of their success came their homes. Those aboard. the| deputy minister of resources, 700, escaped by car. Dover is reported by radio from Hare about two miles from Hare Bay. Bay that firefighters saved alll The outbreak, fanned by 30- the houses by gouging out fire mile-an-hour winds, was sighted plus a Canadian signal detach- ment to be stationed in the vital supply port of Matadi. The Nigerians will leave Leo- | poldville by trains Saturday for Matadi, on the estuary of the Congo River. Wilfred Hand, president of working out a satisfactory trac-|Local 421, United Auto Workers tors for prisoners trade in the|(CLC), said company proposals next couple of days. {were submitted to the local The non-government team ar-| Membership and the 50 office rived in Miami from Washington Workers voted to return to work. late Monday night amid a brief| The office workers had set up scare. Local police were tipped picket lines Friday and 400 fac- that some opponents of the pris-| tory workers refused to cross it. oners exchange plan would Main issue in the walkout was stage an airport protest. The po-|thé company's method of deal- lice whisked the experts from |iNg With grievances. ; their plane to their airport ho-| The company had warned it tel rooms through side tunnels.|Would prosecute striking work- But the demonstrations never|ers and union officials said the came off. strike was "a spontaneous dem- A spokesman said the U.S. onstration that they had taken caused little visible concern at the White House today. But the lingering pain which has forced him to walk on crutches threw a question over his plans for the immediate future. Kennedy has a date in Hawaii late this month to address the governors' conference. He is considering a trip to South America next month. On his program today Ken- nedy has a speech before the U.S. Conference of Mayors. That requires a half-mile drive from, the White House and a walk into the Washington hotel where the meeting is being held. Paper Gets U.S. Secrets LONDON (AP) -- The Daily Herald claims that photo- graphed copies of secret docu- ments bearing a United States intelligence stamp were mailed to it Monday by an anonymous person in Rome. The documents were immedi- ately shown to a U.S. embassy official here and then sent to the Pentagon in Washington, The Herald says. Sudanese troops and a Cana- dian signal group were forced out of Matadi early in March |after a 36-hour battle with Con- golese soldiers. Protracted negotiations be- situation on the Jordan-Syrian tween the UN and the Congo- border, complete with figures/lese stretching over three and the exact position of forces. months have led to the agree- The Herald says Brig. - Gen.|ment. Bosell, U.S. military attache,, A UN spokesman said today admitted such reports were a movement control unit, prob- compiled, but quotes him as ably composed of Swedes and saying: "It is impossible to say|the Canadian signal detachment, if these are genuine or forged would accompany the Nigerians. till they have been checked. But! He said full agreement had genuine or forged, the aim ap- been reached in principle for the team had no specific appoint.| 2: Wiey would take." ment to meet with Castro per-| sonally in Havana, but he ex-| pected the pro-Communist prime | minister would show up reinoun| He also scheduled the usual of his interest. Castro originally : Pearson, JFK tinued to talk about it. | Talk On N ATO Stevenson WASHINGTON' (CP) -- L. B. in for a long period of cold . |Pearsun called on President | Heading pears to be to create friction| Nigerians to carry arms but the The documents "purported to be copies of reports compiled by U.S. agents on political and military developments in West- ern countries," the newspaper reports. It says there were 12 photo- graphed copies of documents in the package and a letter typed on a single sheet of flimsy white paper. CLASSIFIED MATERIAL The letter, according to The Herald, reads: "Much of the classified ma- terials to which I have access affects the security of my coun- between America and her Al- final decision would be left to lies. | the Nigerian commander. LOSES BAIL John Papalia Nabbed On Street TORONTO (CP)--Johnny Pa- sault occasioning bodily harm, palia, elusive defendant in the and two other men are charged war," Pearson said in an inter- {Kennedy late yesterday at the|view. |White House and talked over| He said Kennedy showed a possible moves for strengthen- good deal of interest in Cana- |ing NATO. dian affairs and asked when the Pearson, Canadian Liber al next ASUNCION, Paraguay (AP)-- Adlai Stevenson today flies on {to Chile after an overnight stop {in South America's only dicta- |torship. Touring South America as | President Kennedy's special en- voy, the chief U.S. delegate to the United Nations came to Paraguay after issuing a blast at dictators, But his meeting | with Paraguay President Al- | fredo Stroessner, considered the continent's only remaining dic- | party leader who was one of the | held, founding fathers of the North| Atlantic Treaty Organization, said of his conversation with the president: ! "We had a good talk and the president expressed a need for strengtnening NATO." Pearson visited the White House after a speech before the U.S. Conference of Mayors in which he proposed that the NATO council be turned into an international - cabinet of the 15 member countries, empowered to co-ordinate and unify their general election may be Tuesday morning breakfast with Democratic congressional lead- ers, a final discussion with Ital- ian Prime Minister Amintore public servants, "I cannot and will not resign quietly under such circum- stances. "For the sake of future gov- ernors of the bank, and in the interest of propriety and de- cency in the processes of gov- ernment and in the conduct of public affairs, I feel myself un- der an obligation to ensure that this matter is brought into the open in order that it may re- Fanfani on critical probl facing the Atlantic alliance and a session of the National Secur- ity Council. HAS BEEN BUSY Young as he is--at 44 the youngest president ever elected --Kennedy has set a pace that would fatigue most men. Even for a man who had not hurt his back--playing football and when his PT boat was rammed by a Japanese destroyer during the |war--a bachache would almost {be expected. Dr. Janet Travell, White House physician, reported Mon- day she was satisfied with Ken- nedy's progress. And Press Sec- retary Pierre Salinger added that Kennedy said he was feel- ing much better. The president returned Mon- day morning from a vacation in Florida where he swam in a heated outdoor pool in an effort to relieve the ailment which was attributed to spading dirt in a' ceremonial tree planting on his trip to Ottawa last month. Salinger said Kennedy will be using the crutches for at least part of this week. Normally, Kennedy would have seen his afternoon visitors Pearson said he didn't know, in the west wing office. ceive full ideration and dis- cussion. "I may add that at no time has the government expressed disagreement with the opera- tions of the Bank of Canada un- der my management, either in the field of monetary policy, or FLEMING ASKS COYNE TO QUIT IMMEDIATELY | Won't Go Quietly Bank Chief Says in those fields, in which we act solely as agents and under the instructions of the minister of finance, namely in debt man- agement and in operation of the exchange fund." Mr. Coyne said that Mr. Fleming's request for his resig- nation was made on Tuesday, May 30 on behalf of the federal government. WANTED COYNE OUT The governor said Mr. Flem- ing told him the government was considering what action to take in the matter of the pen- sion, had not yet Ome to a de cision, and wanted Mr. Coyne's resignation before it came to a decision. According to the rules of the bank's pension fund a special pension has always been pro- vided to a governor or deputy governor immediately on ter- mination of service. Lord Home Leaves For United States LONDON (Reuters) -- British Foreign Secretary Lord Home left here today by air for the United States and talks with Dean Rusk, Adlai Stevenson and Dag Hammarskjold. Home, 3 -American talks will centre 'on Berlin, disarma- ment and Laos, was accompan- ied by Sir Evelyn Shuckburgh, foreign office deputy undersec- retary for West German ques- tions. Home will land in New York and meet there with United Na- tions Secretary - General Ham- marskjold. He also planned to meet with Stevenson, chief American UN delegate, during his four-day visit, It is not known whether he will meet President Kennedy. LATE NEW S FLASHES NORTH BAY (CP) -- Owen Nugget says. The newspaper Duncan Sandys Heads OTTAWA (CP) -- Commonw dom move to join the common Quebec (CP) -- A petition inquiring into purchasing prac Nationale government. Feener Confesses Second Murder Feener confessed to a second murder just before being hanged at Haileybury early to- day for the knife killing of Kay Chouinor of Timmins, The says it learned from a com- pletely reliable source that Feener admitted killing Dolly Woods of Kirkland Lake in 1959. For Ottawa ealth relations secretary Dun- can Sandys will come to Ottawa soon, probably in the sec- ond week of July, for discussions on a possible United King- market, Prime Minister Dief- enbaker informed the Commons today. Halt Union Nationale Probe for a Quebec Superior Court injunction today halted proceedings of the royal commission tices under the former Union {brass knuckles-iron pipe beat-|with possessing offensive weap-|tator, was friendly and un-|foreign policies. try, but I did not, nor will I re- veal such material. ! "What burns me up is the es-| pionage carried out by our in- telligence services against our Allies and friendly countries. "The only way I can find to put a stop to this insanity is to expose it." One document, The Herald re- ports, gives the location and size of West German infantry divisions. Another gives details of British troops stationed in Kenya and an outline of British strategy in the Middle East. A| third is'a review of the military CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 MHOSPITAL RA 3-2211 | |ations. ing of Toronto gambler Max ons. Bluestein, was arrested early to-| Papalia, sometimes known as Jay vg 3 street hore after fail-| yohnny Pops, was out on $2,000 Et Stil up flonday OF @lbail when the case came be- The Hamilton ambler. also| {OF Vagisirate Filmore Mon: wanted 'on 8 a smuzghngl oy" The other five appeared, charge in the United States, | Put the court was adjourned a was picked up on a bench war.| ouple of times to await the ap- rant issued by Magistrate PEArance of the Hamilton man Thomas Elmore Monday after|2(eT getting word that he was his failure to appear on a/due in momentarily. He did not charge of assaulting Bluestein, turn up. Bluestein was beaten up by The magistrate adjourned the several men in view of scores hearing to June 26 and ordered of patrons in a night club here|Papalia's bail forfeited. March 21, apparently in a tus-| He is one of four Toronto men sle for power in gambling oper-| charged in the United States in connection with a dope smug- None of the witnesses would gling ring alleged to have im- talk until brought before a ju-| Ported $7,000,000 worth of heroin dicial inquiry held in private, |into that country since 1958. Eventually, Papalia, 32, was The other three were picked charged along with Frank Mar- up recently and ordered extra- childon, 40, Fred Gabourie, 35, dited to the U.S. after a hear- and Jack Weaver, 32, all of Tor- ing here. Papalia was still strained. Their talk was brief and de- tails were not disclosed. But the Paraguayan government is known as one of the Americas' strongest supporters of U.S. pol- icy. Leaving Rio de Janeiro Mon- day, Stevenson told reporters "we in the Americas don't like dictatorship." Asked why he 'was going to Paraguay, he re-| 4 : plied his trip "was not arranged unite and increase centralized through personal preference but| control, Pearson added, the cold to visit all 10 capitals in South|War and the European trade America." blocs may increase tension and In Asuncion, Stevenson re.|trade restfictions between Eu- . rope and North America. The ceived the warmest public wel-|givicions among the Western Al- come of his tour, now at the lies would make Soviet Premier halfway point. About 1,000 per- Khrushchev "dance more hap- sons greeted him at the airport. |pily." : : For soveral days the govem-| Faron sald te president ment radio had urged. a bigl,q his meeting with Khrush- turnout for y Kennedy's repre-|chey. The NATO council should be- come '"'a political general staff for the Atlantic alliance," he said. NEED INFLUENTIAL MEN "For this purpose its mem- bers should be important polit- ical personages with influence in their own national govern- ments." If the NATO countries do not A total of five centuries and | 30 years is represented in the ages of the people gathered L onto. They are accused of 'ds-|wanted on that charge. sentative. | "I can tell you we are indeed| at the home of Mrs. White at 8 | 1454 Simcoe street, north. The Qccasion was a mutual birth- y party held to celebrate eir good health and long- RECORD BIRTHDA ded 46 G0 Y PARTY evity. Shown chatting in the garden are: froma left to right, Mr. C. L. Macsey, 88, Mrs. H. Pascoe, 90, Mrs. L. Pascoe, 84, Mrs. A. Oliver, 85, Mrs. W. Graham, 96, and Ms. E Pascoe, 87.

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