While most of Southern On- tario shrugged off the first few. flakes of winter snow, 'OWEN SOUND DIGGING OUT residents of Ont., had to cope with 11 wet | first order of business in the | and sticky inches Thursday | Paperbacks Of Fleming Asks Canadian Owen Sound, | morning. Digging out was the | business district Lied # jord 4,070 miles an hour Thurs- tually soar to 100 miles or more. The former Sudbury jail] Unive guard was acquitted of man- \of-space | | | --(CP Wirephoto) US. Books Planned For Bolder Trade OTTAWA (CP) Carleton University announced Thursday' a program to publish low-cost paperback editions of outstand- ing Canadian books that now are out of print. The university has received a $4,300 grant from the Canada Council to enable it to conduct a country - wide survey of the needs, in schools and universi- tles--particularly for rare and) valuable works. The university said there is a growing s hortage of Canadian books on history, political sci- ence, economics, sociology and> the fine arts. The first books. in the paper- back series, to be called the Carleton Library, are expected to be published next fall. They will range in price from $1 to #2. Work has already begun on WINDSOR (CP)--An appeal to the United States for 'broader, bolder' trade policies to help solve problems resulting from development of the European Common Market was voiced Thursday night by Finance Min- ister Fleming. He also said Britain and the Common Market, in their own interests, must concern them- selves with the prosperity of the rest of the world in working out their trade and tariff policies "In terms of sustained eco- nomic growth and- prosperity, there is no such thing as self- sufficiency," Mr. Fleming said in a speech at Assumption Uni- versity's annual seminar on Ca- nadian-Ameyican relations. Fundamental problems faced not only Canada but also the en- tire free world from the crea- new editions of the Confedera-|tion of the six-nation Common tion Debates of 1867 in the Par- Market and the prospect that Mament of Canada--then com: the Six may be joined by Brit- prising Ontario and Quebec only. Police Get Rifle In Fatal Shooting | RENFREW (CP)--Provincial} lice said Thursday night they oe seized a rifle in connection with the fatal shooting of Ever- ett Montgomery, 51, at Twin Lakes, about 22 miles south of here. No further details were re sed. ain, the world's second-largest importing nation. The U.S. could not be indif- jferent to the repercussions Eu- ropean trade develop ments {would have through out the world, "More is required than an at Board Member's Removal Asked VANCOUVER (CP) Re- |moval of labor representative It was first believed that/Ben Baskin from the provincial Montgomery, whose body was/labor relations board has been he has issued no directions to found by other members of a\asked by the Trail, B.C., local the provincial police to question geven-man hunting party, hadjof the Mill and Smelter Work- died of a heart attack, but anjers Union (Ind.). autopsy performed Thursday re-| Trail local president Gerry vealed death was caused by a| Flanagan claimed in a letter to bullet that ripped through aj|Labor Minister Mr. Baskin, wester.. representa- ltive of the rival United Steel- 'e 1 jworkers of America (CLC), Fines Product |trying to stir up trouble as a prelude to USWA in the Trail area. heart vessel. Of Pampering' Peterson that is "raiding" by the He said Thursday he has had ino acknowledgement to his let VANCOUVER (CP) -- A 20-|ter to the minister. year-old "product of parental) pampering and over-indulgence"'| was fined $1,500 in suburban North Vancouver Thursday for| breaking and entering and theft.| Magistrate A. D. Pool im-| posed the fine and the descrip- tion on Michael John Hilker, He also sentenced him to one day in jail. The fine was paid immediat- ely by Hilker's father Gordon, | director of promotion and pub- licity for the Vancouver Inter- national Festival. The youth pleaded guilty to breaking into a cafe with a Mr. Flanagan claimed that Mr. Baskin had sent anti-Mine- Mill! literature to unioin workers at the Trail smelter. The Mine-Mill union repulsed an attempt in 1952 by the USWA to organize in the Trail smelter of the Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company. Illegal Entry Evidence Heard TORONTO (CP) -- A Crown younger accomplice and steal-|witness testified Thursday at ing bottled beer and cigarettes worth $18.45. "I realize $1,500 is a terrific fine but there is no reason in this world why you shouldn't go/ to jail for six months," said the magistrat. | He cited Hilker's record of) the trial of two Chinese charged under the Immigration Act that he once was offered a paper that would enable him to bring his son to Canada. He testified at the opening of the preliminary hearing of Loo Yuk Chee, alias Harry Loo, a 'head titude of neutrality, however benevolent, to regional develop- ments overseas "The United States could take the lead, and I trust that it will, in international co-operative ef- forts aimed at finding prompt and effective solutions to these problems." Mr. Fleming painted a dark picture of Canada's trade nego- tiations with the Common Mar- ket, which is moving to lift all barriers on trade among its members and create a common tariff against goods from other countries In sessions of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, which began more than a year ago, Canada had met dif ficulties in seeking to ensure that its trading rights in the six Common Market countries were preserved The Common Market's pol icies on agricultural products "appear to be highly restric- tive."' About 40 per cent of Can ada's exports to the Common Market last year were agricul- tural products Roberts Denies Telling OPP To Check Crime TORONTO (CP) -- Attorney- General Roberts said Thursday police chiefs in various cities about the scope of organized crime. But he told a reporter that if OPP officials are doing this, "it sounds like a common sense idea," He added that interrogations of this type are carried out by the OPP frequently on a routine basis Mr. Roberts was commenting on published reports that an in- vestigation into organized crime in Ontario was !aunched quietly by his department this week as result of a Toronto speech Mon- day by RCMP Commissioner C. W. Harvison. Commissioner Harvison said organized crime was spreading to Canada from the United States The Star says Inspector Jack Hatch, who took over Nov. 1 as of the OPP anti-gambl- ing squad, has visited several cities mainly in southwestern Ontario in a check on the ex- tent of gambling. It says these points include Kitchener, where Inspector Hatch interviewed the poiice chief on the subject. three convictions for being in/Toronto travel agent, and Lee possession of liquor as a minor|Mon Kuen, alias Kent Lee, pro-| and three traffic convictions. prietor of a trading company. "I gave you warning after)/They are charged with conspir | warning in this court. You failed|ing and assisting in the illegal | to heed therm and your family failed to drive them home." | The magistrate said he had| suspended the youth's driving) licence on one occasion "and his) father turned up in court here/ada in 1919 and is a naturalized begging for its return before the) suspension period had expired." | Production Firm For TV Announced | TORONTO (CP) Forma- tion of a new company to create and produce programs for the! Canadian t e1& vi sion industry was announced \hursday. It is Channel! Television Pro- ductions Limited. Principal shareholders in the company are Beaver Film Productions} Limited, CTV Television Net- work Limited, and Ted Cott,| ho'der of various American! awards for distinguished broad-| flects the unanimous view of the| casting. and president of the |Student Affairs Committee, the} American Public. Srvice Net- work oS ADDED SPORTS LONDON (CP)--The Interna-|giident Affairs tional Athletes Club, an organ-| between 1954 and 1959. Loo Man Jap, granted the protection of the Canada Evid- ence Act, said he came to Can- Canadian citizen. In 1948 he applied to the im- migration office here for the ad- mission to Canada of his wife and their son. His son, however, was over-age and his wife was too ill to leave China. No Fraternities For York Students TORONTO (CP)--Students at York University have been for idder to joir social fraternities or sororities, York President Dr, Murray G. Ross announced Thursday night. Dr. Ross said the decision re- Faculty Council and the stu- ee and has been approved y governors the university's board of A resoluticn initiated by the Committee, a student-faculty body, sald mem- ization formed by British track |hership in fraternities or soro- and field stars, is urging the | rjtieg "would be inconsistent British Empire Games council to| with one of the primary aims of include walking, the decathlon) york University, . and steeplechase in future|tion at Glendon Hall of a Games. . . the crea- | small, | residential liberal arts sollege." jentry to Canada of six Chinese) New Mine Mill Talks Starting j Speed Record Set 1'In X-15 Rocket | Wins Acquittal On Two Of 3 Charges Robert Cecil h of 250,000 Force pilot flew the X-15 a rec-/miles. But the X-15 may even- hombarde, 19 day in an all-cut test of the é White and the stub - winged rocket plane's top speed. Then x.15 were dropped from a B-52 slaughter and TORONTO (CP) -- An assize {court jury Thursday acquitted Graham, 40, of ; : : two of three criminal charges EDWARDS AIR BASE, Calif.|hitting the designed maximum arising from the death of Tor- (AP)--A United States Air altitude THE OSHAWA TIMES, Pridey, Nevember 10, 1961 15 t | LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- The rsity of Western Ontario is in the final stages of develop- performing an/ment of an instrument which he made a perfect landing with mother ship over. the Cali ornia abortion. But the jury convicted| will permit scientists to track a shattered windshield. Maj. Bob White, 37, who has feet, manoeuyred his way research craft, coolly afterward: in danger at any time." White pushed the X-15 70 m.p.h. His searing flight--the craft's skin temperatures rose to 1,100- degrees Fahrenheit -- climaxed the speed half of the X-15's dual speed - altitude research mis- sions. There are no plans to try to fly it faster. Next step, possi-| bly next week, will be a try at) Drop-Outs SUDBURY (CP) -- Negotia- tions for a new contract be- tween the Internation! Nickel Company and Local 598 of the International Union of Mine Mill and Smelter Workers (Ind.) will begin Wednesday, it was announced Thursday A bargai ing comittee elecied by the Local 598 mem- bership and headed by Don Gil- lis, president of the local, will present a brief to the company outlining the union's demands, which have not been made pub- lie. The current three-year con- tract with Inco expires Jan. 2, All previous contracts were for one year. The bargaining commiitee of Local 598 has been assisted by representatives vf the Canadian Labor Congress, which curren- tly is backing the local execu- tive in its feud with Mine-Mill's national and district officers. 30-Year Term For Revealing US. Secrets WASHINGTON (AP) De- spite an hour -long plea for mercy by his lawyer, Irwin C. |Scarbeck Thursday was given the maximum penalty of 30 | years' imprisonment for reveal- \ing United States secrets to Polish Communist agents. Federal Judge Leonard Walsh meted out 10 - year terms on each of three guilty counts re- turned by a jury against the 41- year-old former U.S. embassy aide in Warsaw. The judge, who said that mak- ing an example in this case was a factor he had to keep in were to be served consecutively for a total of 30 years. If the conviction and sentence are upheld on appeal, justice department lawyers said Scar- beck would not be eligible for a parole until he had served 10 years. Scarbeck was convicted Oct 27 after a 314-week trial. He was charged with passing se- cret documents to Polish agents who surprised him in bed with a 23-year-old Warsaw girl A married man with three children by his. second wife, Scarbeck contended during his trial that he submitted to de- mands of the agents to spare his family and to protect the girl. His wife, Karen, 37 him throughout. In pleading for leniency, de- fence lawyer Samuel Klein said Scarbeck had turned over ma terial that was classified but did stood by not involve U.S. security, Affect Jobs OTTAWA (CP)--A new study on Canadian education says the high rate of students who fail) to complete high school is hav-| ing a disastrous effect upon) Canada's manpower situation at} a time when unemployment is reaching "alarming propor- tions." | The report, prepared for th 1962 Canadian Conference on} Education, calls for a '"'sober| appraisal" of how to provide all| # : Canadian youngsters with a marketable occupational skill. But it rejects the idea tht all) children need to complete the} entire school course.» "Many of those who drop out) of school) do so for excellent} reasons. and are better out than in,' the report says, adding that university is not the only way of continuing education for high) school graduates. The 63-page study was written, by Dr. Lewis S. Bettie of Tor- onto, former secondary school superintendent for Ontario, and) Dr. Edward Sheffield of Ottawa,) jresearch officer, Canadian Uni-| |versities Foundation. It is de-| | signed to stimulate discussion of forum topics at the education) conference in Montreal March} 4-8, Life Insurance Depends On Tribe Marriage EDMONTON (CP)--The valid-| ity of an Eskimo tribal marri- age will determine beneficiaries Of $25,000 insurance policy left by an Eskimo named Noah, who died in a fire at an Arctic ra- dar site. | Court action will determine the validity of the marriage and it Is believed the case will set a precedent in Canada. | The case is scheduled for hearing Tuesday at Yellowknife in the territorial court of the Northwest Territories before) § Mr. Justice J. T. Sissons. ; He flew into the Arctic last! § summer to obtain background information on Eskimo mar- riage rites, Noah was married Eskimo rituals at his home on Broughton Island, 275 miles! § north of Frobisher Bay, and the| } couple had a daughter. Noah later obtained Work at a radar| station, was injured and died. His employers had taken out a $25,000 insurance policy on his life and because Noah did not leave a will the money norm- ally would have gone to his wi- dow and child. . gliding back for his landing. At 70,000 feet, moving at 1,500 operation on Dianne. m.p.h., the outer panel on the side of the shattered. The {nner panel 'ng following an attempted abor- didn't crack. right High School | through fe BB his form an abortion. Graham then began instruments te Mari!yn's apart windshield | the stenographer died of poison tion. Mr. Justice D. C, Wells re- was charged after to 100,000 feet, the body of the young woman |was found in the apartment of _ her. sister, Marilyn, 25, March his 11. He admitted taking a box of ment but denied performing an Medical evidence showed that desert. He rocketed to 95,000 Graham of conspiring to per-!their rockets and shoot radio levelled off and hit out of 4070 m.p.h. mark just as the jmany a tight spot in the edge- mighty rocket engine exhausted manded Granem in custody un- saidjits fuel after 86 seconds' burn-'til Nov. 17. "I was never ing time. He coasted miles an hour beyond its de-|™anoeuvring to test high-speed- |signed top speed of 4,000 m.p.h.'handling with and without |The previous record was 3,920 oioctric autopilot, waves through the air {more precision Work is being done on the in-) strument, cailed a refractome- ter, by a group of postgradu- ate students under Dr. D. R. Hay, associate professor of physics. The refractometer, designed -|by Dr Hay, measures the vary- ing levels of moisture as a bal- loon carries it upwards. Eventu- ally it will reach a height of six -| miles When a rocket is sent into space, scientists cannot be cer- with Develop Gimmick To Track Rockets feet--46% onto stenographer Dianne La-| tain the. tracking radar is ac- curate--the rocket may be sev- eral hundred feet from the point the radar indicates. This is be- cause radar beams bounce off the varying levels of moisture in the air. The refractometer has inter- ested the United States Air Force, seeking precise methods oft racking in rockets. Dr Hay designed the instru- |ment while working for the De- fence Research Board. AIDS REFUGEES BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP)--Ths |Vatican's pontifical mission for 'Palestine refugees has donated |$60,000 to establish a centre for the blind in the Gaza Strip. ATTENTION MR. MERCHANT It's Time To Prepare Your CHRISTMAS GIFT-SPOTTER MESSAGE! Merchants in Oshawa, Whitby and District found last year's Gift-Spotter Ads highly successful in stimulating sales of Gift Merchandise. Your Ad will be systematically: arranged for easy reading and to be used as a convenient guide to gift shopping You will be pleasantly surprised et the special low rates and our Gift-Spotter Ad-Writers will be pleased to help you. THE FIRST EDITION REACHES GIFT SHOPPERS NOVEMBER 15, 1961. BE SURE YOUR GIFT ITEMS ARE OFFERED TO THEM. THE OSHAWA TIMES CHRISTMAS GIFT-SPOTTER To be published daily from Wednesday, Nov. 15th... Saturday, Dec, 23rd IN WHITBY MO 8-3703 IN OSHAWA 723-3492 taste that flavour crisp 2 clea