Oshawa Times (1958-), 10 Jan 1962, p. 1

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ee 5 spe Se ilkey THOUGHT FO. Then there are found it doesn't pay to make money--an inch too long. Re- DAY men who have Bhe Oshawa Cimes Elected Labor Council President- Page 15 WEATHER REPORT Mainly Sunny and cold today and Thursday. Winds westerly, 20. VOL. 91--NO. 8 Not Over Pe 10' Contes Por Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 10, 1962 Authorized es Second and for Sitges "o Class Mail Post Office Department, Poyment of Postage in Cash. TWENTY-SIX PAGES IN THE NEWS * |\Workers (CLC). FORMER LEADER OF SOUTH KOREA'S | military junta, Chang Do-young, is shown in Seoul, South Korea courtroom Tuesday -hears a revolutionary tribunal sen- tence him to death on a charge that he tried to ob- & struct the coup last May be- | fore he was accept the chairmanship of the junta and to become premier. (AP Wirephoto via radio from Seoul) persuaded to when workers arrived at the 3,000 Men Strike At Ford Plant OAKVILLE, Ont. (CP)--/liam Warrender after which the Workers at 'Ford of Canada's|union declared their strike dead- |Oakville plant went on strike line. . ' : |today apparently in protest at) Although neither side has dis- lslow contract negotiations be-|closed centract demands, it is tween Ford and United Auto|expected that UAW is seeking a} settlement similar ee am s i move by the|tained Dec. 13 when -G) set eitea aed came thf days differences were resolved and lbefore a scheduled strike dead-|ratified after a 73-hour strike at} line of midnight, Jan. 12, and|the seven GM plants in five after union pleas that the men cities. observe the deadline date. A Ford spokesman said pro- acum' at otver canoery Ontario Storm Falls and North York continued Conditions Continuing jas usual. Union and management both |said today the first news they} LOKONTO (CP) -- -Bitterly| cold winds whipping across the} Great Lakes today continued to) |had of a strike was the appear- ance of placard-carrying work- forment blizzard conditions in| parts of Ontario while the rest) lers who showed up between 5:00 of tne province was enjoying! a.m., and 7:00 a.m. A traffic jam was created plant to find their way blocked CANADIAN CITIES HIT BY SERIES OF BLAZES Belleville Block Swept By Fire BELLEVILLE (CP) -- Fire swept a main business block in the heart of Belleville today and burned out the entire block in about two hours. The whole Belleville fire de- partment, reinforced by a truck and crew from nearby Trenton, brought the wind - whipped flames under control by mid- morning. But half-a-dozen stores, a dresser's shop and insurance agency as well as upstairs apartments and offices. Electric power was cut off briefly in the city, but restored within a few minutes. Traffie was diverted from east Bridge Street, causing disruption of downtown travel. The fire force of Point Anne, five miles east, took over Belle- ville's two fire halls to deal with 'by pickets. Roy Dymond, president {Local 707 UAW said the walkout jwas a surprise. Andy Pollock, local vice-president, said he had any emergency calls as the bowling alley, offices and apart-|4! r . of is city's entire force was tied up ments were completely burned C1! r out. A large section of the roof|With the big blaze. burned away, causing the front| Salvation Army coffee wagons wall along the length of the | doled out hot soup and coffee to of clear skies. The snowsqualls closed schoois, marooned school-chil- dren and blocked highways luesday. They were most se- DR. A. F. LAIDLAW, na- tional secretary of the Co- Operative Union of Canada, has been appointed a con- sultant on co-Operatives to the Labor" Office. @ appointment is for a five- year term. (CP Wirephoto) Gunmen Take $30,000 Loot TORONTO (CP) -- Two men wearing silk stockings as masks and carrying guns. robbed Mrs. George Gooderham, wife of a brokerage house president, of $30,000 worth of furs, jewels and other articles Tuesday. The men forced Mrs. Good- erham and two maids into sep- arate closets in their exclusive Frybrook. Road home, locked the doors and ransacked the house. They tore the telephone from the wall and fled on foot. Mrs. Gooderham, once cho- sen one of Toronto's best- dressed women, broke out of the closet and from a window asked a chauffeur across the street to call police. George Hockley, chauffeur for Neil J. McKinnon, president of the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, turned in the alarm. Mr. Gooderham is president of Draper, Dobie and Company. Police said the men de- manded the combination of the house safe but Mrs. Gooderham and her maids said they did not know it. Allen V Metro Toronto Council ::=: re TORONTO (CP) -- Controller|of being riddled with fascism William Allen succeeded legend-|and communism. The "states- ary "Big Daddy" Fred Gard- iner as chairman of the Metro- politan Toronto council Tuesday night while at Queen's Park a caucus of Conservative MPPs from his new domain discussed the future of the system he has to administer. Mr. Allen, a 42-year-old law- yer who has never been de-| feated in a municipal election, took the top job on a vote of 14 to 10. He received 10 city and four suburban votes to win over his only official opponent, Reeve Norman Goodhead of North York. Harry Bradley, a perennially unsuccessful candidate for mu- nicipal office; strode into the chamber before council con- vened and accused the council CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 outstanding. | uncovered some by which to oted Chairma | '$12,000 Damages block to slant inward. Two Big Fires Hit Calgary During Night - CALGARY (CP) -- The fifth and sixth serious blazes in Cal- gary in just over two months struck the city overnight, de- stroying a $1,400,000 private citb and a central four-storey business block. Firemen were called at 11 p.m. to a three-alarm blaze at the exclusive Glencoe Club in South Calgary, then split their numbers at 1:45 am. and joined other units answering a four-alarm call sounded for a building, less than a block from the city's main intersection. There was only one injury. A fireman broke an ankle when he jumped from the second floor of the Glencoe Club. Damage in the downtown fire was not immediately estimated. It broke out in the basement of the 58-year-old building, then spread through a first - floor restaurant and shop and three floors occupied by a secretarial chool. The fire was just three blocks from the' scene of two fires that struck Nov. 29 and Dec. 9. Seven persons died in the Nov. 29 destruction of a business- apartment building. Witnesses said the Glencoe Club fire came after a flash of light and a "'great bail of 'fire"' in a stairwell beside the kitchen. The club contained a dining room, lounge and bowling alleys in its two-storey section, and eight sheets of curling ice, a skating rink, badminton courts and a coffee shop in the rest of the building. "It was the third fire we've had in six weeks," said Glencoe President Bob_ Borland. "There's nothing yet to indicate it was deliberately set, but we get the impression they can't all have been accidental." Arson has been mentioned in destroyed the old Victoria Arena Nov. 16 after demolition crews had torn down part of it. ble bu tno proof has been found. their tiny frame home at Bownes on Calgary's northwest outskirts. In Hog Bam Fire WELLAND (CP)--Sixty hogs were destroyed in-a fire this morning which razed a barn leased to Rodney Wright at one of the earlier fires, which) } A firebug is believed responsi-| § The rash began Nov. 3 when| >} three children from one family| | died in a blaze that destroyed were also destroyed. Kennedy Reluctant To Conduct Tests »»| Loss was estimated at $12,000. : Twelve persons living in two apartments above the stores escaped after the blaze broke out in an adjoining insurance office about 8:45 a.m. The fire spread along the whole south side of east Bridge Street, the block adjoining the main interseciion of this Bay of Quinte community, Unofficial estimates said damage would total at least $250,000 and could range to $500,000 and higher. SALVAGE MEAT Employees of the city's big- gest independent meat store, Black's Meat. Market, carried out a darge quantity of meat before flames engulfed the store. The fire also swept through a six-lane bowling alley, a bar- ber shop, hat store, hair- Five Children Dead In Blaze KAMLOOPS, B.C. (CP)--The bodies of five little children were removed Tuesday from the still-smouldering ruins of a country home. Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Bowie, parents of the children w ere away visiting friends when flames engulfed the home Mon- day night. Neighbors in the little com- munity of Barriere, 45 miles north of here, said they saw the flames but made no rescue attempt because they did not know there was anyone in the one-storey. frame structure. Dead are Robert Bowie, 5; Gilbert, 4; John, 3; Stanley, 18 months' and -Harvey, five months, A recent snowstorm knocked out telephone communications with the community of 500. Barriere has no fire - fighting equipment of its own. firefighters working in a tem- perature of about 8 above zero, Charge Arson 'In Brockville 'Hotel's Fire | BROCKVILLE (CP)--A new fire broke out in Brockville shortly after the noon hour to- day while firemen were still battling a $500,000 blaze which [secuaret the Grand Central ' otel. BROCKVILLE .(CP) -- Po- lice:today,.charged railway con- ductor FAL. Dayis, 48, of Trentoa-with. arson as the result of a fire which destroyed the Grand Central Hotel this morn-. ing. He will appear in Magis- trate's Court today. None of the 34 guests in the 38-room hotel was injured. Many fled the building in their nightclothes. The temperature outside was about zero. A strong westerly wind threat- ened at one stage to carry the flames to nearby buildings but firemen had the blaze under control and confined to the hotel by 9 a.m. The hotel was destroyed. Loss was estimated unofficially at ,000. J. O. Anderson of Brockville, who was in the room next to where the fire started, said he heard a lot of yelling and thought somoene was having a nightmare. He went into the hall where he met Cpl. Gerald Curtis of the Brockville police department and they knocked on the door but got no response. They then broke the door down and dis- covered -the fire. Both grabbed fire extinguishers and nearly _ i blaze under ---- when the extinguishers became empty. By the time they ob- tained others from another floor the fire was out of control. a ee \nearby Fenwick. Farm imple-| is tt WASHINGTON (AP) -- A rom. vas instantly shot down by/white House visitor quoted | Penitentiary | Roweau. President Kennedy as saying] Vincent tried to drag the/Tyesday he is reluctant to re-| |CLAIM LEGALITY County. : : : FLAMES WIPE OUT HUGE CALGARY CLUB |by seven days a conciliation|night, and likely will persist un- The spokesman declined to| weather office says little change |mitted earlier having no knowl-|orists to stay off highways be-| ithe week-long talks in Toronto | savEn BY FATHER Sap por gee irl other rules which have not been|where when the deadline ar- : them through the ice. /higher than at any time during cia Nes reine' ira mail 'bags, after being emptied, |tries didn't arrive in time. The union set a strike dead-|22Ped about a mile off Portitheir protest against the na- | |board Dec. 29, At that meeting, |'U8S worked more than an hour/startling rules the habit of relying on their ex-|pius the slowdown and arrived settle the 250 items then still|/&,.through to the boat. |stance, a letter addressed to the; Men on the rounds will de-| ; : . 'Iw i c and accurately addressed. They); coneiliation board Ford jof Picton. The pupils spent the|returned marked | comics are having a field day. Dec. 1. \their return trips. |in the General Post Office oper-| holder. was entered in a race against down a report of the meeting fected areas. Some secondary| e to the people of Sutton, Surrey, inom ns iin U.. DeGiInS New time as a telegram conveying i, tc the point where snow-| BREST, France (Reuters) __|Schools in the Welland area \publicity stunt--the ballet The found today on the rocks a.few|oUt the Georgian Bay area as|Democratic-controlled 87th Con-|far-reaching in his 29~years in| - ; ; is jreinstate the tea-break, stopped Three of her 13-man crew\t! inches of snowfall by noon|Plugging for early action on his jective is to win auprdeal: of {reinstate a PP elderly, financed through socialjexcept Mount Pleasant, scene and lifeboats were searching for|business block. Damage was es-\ate and the House of Repre-|) ooo. party, has tabbed|however, turned it down unless on the rocks as she was return-|were consumed. Four families\@ts in person his State of the ling year. House seats will be filled. jmail on the street, an elevator lposals probably will touch off 36 Republicans. In the House|door mail-slot. to be steeped in controversy. |formerly held by Democrats. rule book. pects for easing international) man by profession," who says) The caucus drew up a list of |his message on a request for Mr. Allen becomes only the|partment, and, like the Metro man Harry F. Byrd (Dem. Va.)} MONTREAL (CP) -- An es-\to buy, spotted two detectives have had in nine years. |House-passed bill to accomplish|end tenement, killed one police-| back. | é Ken Bryden, New Democratic "gear - r | nickname from his bluff over-jto make a statement. He said ich aes tate Aad | eS ng yoo Podge a Lice ernment when the metropolitan|"'quite brusquely." Said Horrible in 2 stoien-bonds case ended in|him and punctured the tin sid. Roger Robidoux of the Quebec; '"'He was like a wild 'man| ments i Stages : Mr. Gardiner's 24 collegues |certain essential services while tomed the Berlin Wall B RON Cet an ate: job | Home flew here Tuesday| The dead convict was Ray-| As they reached the second-| immediate from thejlines and tax collections come Crancellor Konrad Adenauer's| with another prisoner from St.) was jplanning services, shortly after the system came|reserves caused by the main-| Six policemen were waiting|wounded detective back down sume nuclear testing in the at- |members called to caucus by the individual members. He toured the wall with West)paid for a car Monday with) He is in critical condition. Italy, president of the Inter- the Metro experiment had mation, either into a single|'One can hardly believe that. Rouleau, who was in the lot|from the second to the third! will do its bestto negotiate an| ond gag knowledge of the vere mn the Niagara and Bruce | peninsulas and Prince Edward) | A union spokesman aid the) Tne snow started Tuesday trike is legal since it follows|mernng, continued into the ! |board report which failed to/til the winds change from the hand down recommendations. [present westerly direction. The ae e e term the walkout a "wildcat"|is expected for two days. British dl e aye |strike although the union ad-| Provincial police warned mot- ledge of the action. . tween London and Fort Erie be- | Ford and UAW negotiators |cause of drifting snow and gen- ] Mm jhave been close - lipped during erally poor visibility. } jand have refused to discuss ' : 4 union demands | Two young men trapped in @ LONDON (CP)--The post of-,handle only one phone call at|found that their weekly entries ? Ladebeoen amid aed ie on Take fice workers' decision to '"'work|a time and observe strictly|were still in a post office some- tions closely parallel the recent) T®, Were rescued when a lish-ito rule" has, in 10 days, left a 1 GM-UAW tate Awe were also|it& tug smashed its ,way to|mountain. of undelivered mailjin practice for years. rived. It is estimated that some 7 P avmevel One rule resurrected--that all|50,000 out of several million en- three 4 | John Payne, 2%," an Y-\the Christmas rush. ing deadiicg before the strike} ond Hough, 20, became The workers, insisting thatimust be turned inside out--| A Halifax newspaper sent by | iauey Gen ee bee wee : hes ee been paige @ge8./regular surface mail from Can- lline of midnight, Jan. 12 after|S'! _ Sur-|tional wage freeze is not a slow-|Postmen sorting packages ac-jada Dec. 8 apparently was pee with a "Gonelliation rounded them. Three fishing |down, have cording to size had fallen into|canght in the Christmas rush 5 jbetore Harold Payne -- John's! work perienced eyes but now the tape! ili union and management agreed), ; | : : 33 days after mailing. the board could not help them|{¢'her -- got his tug, the D and) During the weekend, for in-|measure is used. The situation, inconvenient | 0 Bye buses were|post workers' boss, the post-|jliver only mail that is clearly |though it a biog pe ase Pri |Stranded in Milford, southwest|master-general in London, was lig : ot a ee ee f I "insufficient| will not slide mail under a door |'S*s ang. Tenio, end television UAW officials had held 30 talks "iSht at their school when the address--state name of firm."|or through a window--even if| F P since their por sa cence buses were unable to make! The 173,000 workers involvedjasked to do so by. the house-| Wednesday a carrier pigeon tick | ichw. F i 7 ithe telegraph system, also con- Thomas 0'Co ch Highway crews were hard put|ation also include telephone| Many people who devotedly, of the counlliatina card handed|t? keep roads open in the af-|workers who are instructed tolfollow the soccer pools have gg by. the General Post Of- to Ontario Labor Minister Wil.|"¢ads were reported closed by! The pigeon, with a message the drifting snow. y was dispatched from outside the Wreck Of Trawler |2 'ew hours Tuesday in the Ni- Royal Opera House at the same lagava Peninsula, cutting visibil- ca e imil ti Th ; similar greetings. e pigeon Found On Rocks plows were called off the roads. ( 'ongress wesslon jwon, but it was all part of a | ' ; : uaa were closed for the afternoon.| ; |Two Pigeons 'opens in Sutton ee al m, 1 Pagcied Snow was reported through-| WASHINGTON (AP) -- The,issue may be one of the most|Jan. 29. : 3 | 4 ee it " -|Congress. |REJECT TEA-BREAK hand : h spifar north as. Parry Sound. The/gress begins its new session to i rer hg oe Frich en Sound area had measured\day with . President Kennedy) Kennedy's No. 1 domestic ob-|/%€ Post office has offered to : "ni d trying to! | when the 'work to rule" reached shore in lifeboats after|74CSaay- ee eaten eleg crivciems |medical care program for the|started, in all London offices the trawler was wrecked Tues-| Heavy snowfall hampered ones' ; lay eainnnt t| day night. The bodies of three|¢fforts of Port Dover firemen| With ee ain security taxes. of the worst mail pileup. The others were washed up today|'0 'ight a blaze in an old frame|ters to be disposed of, the Sen-) 7) Bailey, chairman of the|Union of Post Office Workers, ' fans i ives wi i til the seven still missing. timated at $100,000 as a restaur-|sentatives will mark time until) st Democrats' principal|made to apply to all London The trawler apparently ranjant, three stores and two offices|Thursday when Kennedy deliv-);7 yi. November. general| postal workers. | ; rt jelections in which 37 of the 100) Under the regulations: i ishi ; : '.<{Union message, outlining gov-|© | : ing ar fishing off the Irish : le out of upstairs ernment plans in the forthcom-|Senate seats and all of the 437) postmen will not hand over j ' The party breakdown in the|or on a staircase but will insist | , § yorld Pog ; Pee ont Lig ag aad Senate now is 64 Democrats and/on depositing it through the Ble 4 ve i» it's 258 Democrats, 178 Repub-| They will not carry more than Ey clacton tear sessicn teay eal with five vacancies, all|35 pounds as stipulated in the Few expect the president to} Convi ffi onvict, Officer need not be discarded, despite tensions in 1962. pressure for amalgamation. He is likely to bear down in Kill 1 I B ] he is aiming for the prime min- problems confronting Metro for|hroad authority to revise Amer-| 1 e n att e isters job, was later ejected. (study by Mr. Cass and his de-|ican tariffs to spur trade. Chair-| second Metro chairman Toronto council, threw out an intruder.|of the Senate finance commit-\caped convict, trapped on the|coming towards him and started and its 12 suburban neighbors GOT COOL RECEPTION jtee which would handle any|second-floor balcony of an east-|to cun They fired, and he fired) x ; in this result, said he thinks the man and badly-wounded another; Apparently wounded, Rouleau FIRST OF ITS KIND Party member for Toronto-| ee battl before lez , Mr. Gardiner, who won his|Woodbine, invaded the caucus' A Sy tumted tek ama lie oe ee riding approach, was originally|afterwards he was interrupted Wall In Berlin aia started as a police trap pee bas oF gan appointed by the provincial gov-|and the minister ejected him ; ' system was set up in 1953, the) Toronto and the 12 surround- hens ane get ater ge Oatley. aig ig of its kind in North a noe sige the BERLIN (Reuters) -- British) Provincial Police, and a para-|siaggering all over the place, a. i} System to co - ordinate|Foreign Secretary Lord cpa lyzing spine wound for Montreal , 4 nan' oday|Potice Sergeant Jean-Paul Vin-| Robidoux started up the rear! jon the council returned himiretaining autonomy in other|and described it as "horrible." ia ; | leight times to the $25,000-a-year/fields. ae stairs, followed by 'Vincent. ; Such matters as arterial/nicht from Bonn where he and| mond Rouleau, 30, a native of|storey verandah, Robidoux! | Mr. ves a rg favors|roads, trunk water and sewage!Prime Minister Macmillan got/Cornwall, who escaped along|cried "attention" (look out), He ransfer |municipalities to "Metro. of alljunder Metro control. The mu- agreement to take steps to plug|Viivent -de Paul housing, welfare, traffic and nicipal police forces were united |the drain of foreign currency|last November. While Metro councillors were into being but fire protection is\tenance of a British army in/at a used-car lot in Montreal's|the stairs and was himself shot| mosphere electing Mr. Allen, government/still within the jurisdiction of West Germany. east end for the man who hadjin the back. | ni Municipal Affairs Minister Cass' Recently there has been in- Berlin Mayor Willy Brandt. stolen bonds and who was to! Rouleau died under a hail of Parliamentary Union, said Ken- were coming to. the conclusion creasing pressure for amalga-| "it is too horrible,"' he said. taae possession Tuesday. bullets as he tried to climb nedy told him the United States| worked extremely well and.city or four separate boroughs.|this is the 20th centumy." linspecting the car he was aboutlfivor. agreement on nuclear testing. i x | Giuseppe Codacci-Pisanelli of| WILL COMPETE IN SLALOM Jean Vuarnet, gold medal winner in the 1960 Winter Olympics in Squaw Valley, Calif., will be a contender in the second running of the Giant Slalom competition in + Mont Gabriel, Que., Feb. 25, Vuarnet, a member of the French Olympic Alpine team, will join European and Cana- dian stars for the big race, (CP Wirephotod f

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