Oshawa Times (1958-), 18 Jan 1962, p. 1

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QxX-! THOUGHT FOR TODAY Middle age is the time of life when, after one night out, you need two nights in. Ghe Oshawa Times ickering Hospital Blitz Nets $27,330-Page 3 WEATHER REPORT Mainly sunny with a few cloudy intervals and one or two brief snowflurries today and Friday. Not: much change in temper- ature. Price Not Over OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, JANUARY. 18, 1962 Ottowa" end' for? payment Authorized as Second Class Mall Post Office Department, of Postage in Cash. TWENTY-TWO PAGES VOL. 91--NO. 15 10 Cents Per Copy i ed were rushed to hospital for treatment of. burns. The fa- ther, a miner, was at work at the time of the fire. --(CP Wirephoto) beau, 54, and four of Mr. and Mrs. Jean-Paul Briere's chil- dren: Roger, 5, Irene, 4, Rita, a village near the mining | 3,..and Gisele, two months. town of Val d'Or, Que. The | Mrs. Briere, 22, saved an- victims were Mrs. Lea Bari- | other child, Ronald, 1. Both \ Four children and their aunt died when fire destroyed their frame home in Jacola, New Dominica Junta Stifling Opposition By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS|that deposed the 16-day all-/Echavarria. They said the Ken- The Dominican Republic's civilian council of state Tuesday|nedy administration is deter- new junta clamped tight restric-|night. mined to oppose revival of tions on the country today with} But authoritative reports fil- strongman rule in Santo Do- a series of sweeping decrees tering through the strict Domin-|mingo and is planning strong designed to stifle opposition to/ican censorship said the real/measures should 'the new gov- 'Throne Speech Could | ALGERIA RIOTS SPARK | Hint Election Plans | Canada should accept nuclear} arms, unemployment, the Col-| umbia River power project, and} the government action on Sen-| ate reform which Mr. Diefenba- ker has forecast for this ses-| sion | Conservative MPs presuma-| bly were given a broad outline of the government's sessional} program at a_ party } Wednesday. Emerging from the 90-minute caucus, during which cheers and applause were heard by reporters outside, Mr. Die- fenbaker said he has never seen| such optimism about the out- come of an election. OTHERS GATHER TODAY The Liberals scheduled eatd sel ara ' pre-session caucus for today.| King, hire 1940 ~_ Far' ltrian beginning" of the election|The New Democratic Party-CCF' liament Bah seMbabicadarichin a |campaign now will be aired|zroup also was to meet, contin-| lfrom the biggest platform of/uing strategy discussions which them all, the floor of Parlia-' got under way Tuesday. OTTAWA (CP) -- Parliamentjsolved it for an election all in goes back to work today. The|the same day. big question is for how long. An indication of the govern- This fifth session of the 24th\ment's election thinking may be Parliament, elected March 31,/given in the throne speech out- 1958, is being generally re-|lining the administration's leg- garded as the last before theljislative program, to be read at next federal general election. | today's opening by Governor- It may run its full course into|General Vanier. the summer--if the government} Gen. Vanier is to start read- is planning a fall vote -- or iting ie speech about 3:30 p.m. may be ended abruptly by ato Commons members and sen- call ior an early spring test at/ators assembled in the Senate. the polls. 7 , Some have even suggested herein BE ourow Deer may last only a day or so, But| romises 10 De an argu: Prime Minis ter Diefenbaker, | Mentative session, however long isi lasts who makes the decision, has|? Seamer already said he won't follow the All the issues that have been sample of former Liberal thrashed out on the hustings in wien ah {recent months in what Mr. Die- prime minister Mackenzie| baker teraied'" the" "fades: 4 U THANT UN Secretary Attempting To Make Peace | TIGHT SECURITY MOVE Increase French Street Soldiers PARIS (Reuters) -- The French government has ordered drastic tightening of security precautions in Algiers, Oran and other Algerian towns,} usually well-informed sources} said today. They said new orders, issued after a cabinet meeting Wed-| nesday, aimed to curb the} growing wave of attacks by Eu-| ropeans and Moslems by putting| more troops on the streets, par-| ticularly where Moslem and) European areas meet. Checks on motor traffic would be intensified in a bid to curb sons were killed and 25 wounded throughout the North African territory. In Algiers, Moslem bus driv- ers went on strike today, stop- ping 80 per cent of services, after a conductor was shot and killed. Two Europeans were stabbed and wounded by Mos- lems. - A new terrorist weapon ap- peared in Algiers when two European - run cafes were wrecked by the explosion of bottles of cooking gas. attacks from cars. There was [JN Sa Con talk of a ban on motor tratfie| ys go in some main towns between 8| p.m. and 5 a.m. | Information Minister Louis} Terrenoire announced the gov-| ernment will press its fight) against the rightwing Secret! Army Organization with all) means at its disposal. | 17 BOMB BLASTS | FEC-Canadian the apparent takeover by the strongman is the armed forces ernment prove to be a military military. But unrest seethed in chief, 37-year-old air force Gen. dictatorship. ment. At present, the 265-seat Com- UNITED NATIONS (CP) -- The secret army responded The chief issues promised to mons has 203 Conservatives, 50) acting Secretary-G eneral U|during the night by exploding a Santo Domingo. Pedro Rodriguez Echavarria. The junta decreed a modified Huberto Bogaert, a civilian) In Washington, state depart-form of martial law, suspend- official of the Trujillo era, was|ment officials said the juntajing civil guarantees, and im- named to head the junta of four/appeared to be comnsey un-|posed a dusk-to-dawn curfew, civilians and three military men'der the power of Rodriguez : a : 4 Su{|STUDENTS DEFY TANKS | Heavily armed troops pa- trolled the capital streets. But tanks and more troops had to be called out Wednesday to break up a student demonstration pro- testing the swift government change the night before. The troops opened fire on the youths, killing one and wound- 13,000,000 ing two others One band of I pounds. youths set fire to a school and Farmers of Canada is to vote) He 'aiso urged dairy farmers |stoned police cars. today on short - term policy |to press for freer access to the! Bomb explosions could be measures aimed at holding|United States cheese market,/heard fram many parts of the down Canada's booming milk|where U.S. import restrictions city. It was believed they were production and disposing of limit imports of Canadian|noise bombs which the police huge butter stockpiles. cheese to 500,000 pounds a year.|use to disperse crowds. Butter Price Cut May Be Requested MONTREAL (CP) -- The an-javeraged nearly nual meeting of the Dairy be Canada's attitude toward the|Liberals,, nine NDP-CCF mem-|phant pressed a peacemaking| |European Common Market and|bers and three vacancies. In|effort today to bring 'The Neth-| more particularly Britain's ne-|the 102-seat Senate, there arejerjands and Indonesia together| gotiations to enter that trading|68 Liberals, 25 Conservatives, ltor negotiations to -settle their bloc, the question of whether|two independents, one independ: |dispute over control of West | apenas, |e cue | PATHER OF 11 7 | 'INCOMPATIBLE' lelection of a new deputy| Thant cabled identical ap- TULSA, Okla. (AP) | . oy jpeals to Indonesian President | speaker of the. Commons the | cukarno and Dutch Premier Jan District Court Judge Ray- mond W. Graham granted |government's nominee is Paul] ; : Martineau, Conservative MP for|¢ Quay. to accept his services| Evelyn Jones, 27, a divorce from Ernest Jones Tuesday Pontiac-Temiscamingue -- and|2§ Rasher y oon He --, both) a few other routine matters are|t@ hold off from any drastic ac-| but said the basis for the petition was "the most "i ; jtion in retaliation for Mondah's pcheduled tr. tie Spenne ORY eval clash off the coast of New amazing I've ever seen." "That a husband and fa- Friday will see speeches by|** two Conservatives, the mover|uinea. | and seconder of the traditional) Later Thant talked with) reply to the speech from the|Dutch Ambassador C. W. A. ther of 11 children should be guilty of incompatibility does injustice to the term," said Judge Graham. Tariff Cuts Expected Soon LONDON (AP) -- The \sig-na- tion European Economie Com- munity is hopeful that it can lreach a tariff-cutting agreement with Canada within weeks. The hope was expressed Wed- nesday in the wake of the agree- ment between the Community and the United States to cut du- ties on a broad range of goods. Negotiators for the Commun- ity, obviously elated over the new accord, said the time now has come to clear up the ne- gotiations continuing under the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade in Geneva. "We are hopeful and optim- throne. But that day also will|Schurmann and Indonesian Am-| bring the session's first question|bassador. Sukardjo Wirjopran-| period--a chance for the oppo-|oto. Informants said he notified sition to get in its first licks at/them formally of his cables to | their governments. | ithe government. record 17 plastic boinbs in Paris and three in other centres. Most of the bombs. exploded in apartment buildings, causing no casualties but extensive dam- age. In Algeria, troops killed 13 Moslems in the suburbs of Oran Wednesday night and early to- day. The dead included a prison 'Must Control, Punish Troops LEOPOLDVILLE (AP)--The United Nations says it's up to the Congo central government to bring under control rampag- ing Congolese troops who mas- sacred 18 or 19 white Roman Catholic missionaries in the north Katanga tewn of Kongolo. A'spokesmam said the UN has no troops anywhere near. the area being terrorized by troops who were sent Communist Antoine: Gize his recent bid for power. The UN, said the spokesman, is .relying on Premier Cyrille guard and four Moslems under sentence of death who escaped from Oran prison Tuesday. Three Moslems were wounded} in the city this morning and} post office workers went on hour strike following the death| Thant of a postman during an in- surgent attack. In terrorist violence 13 per- Revenge Sought 24-\Acting Secretary - General Officials of the 350,000-mem- fj C¢. Rouse, secretary-man-| Youths blocked off s0mélistic that we can reach agree- The real fireworks will come) Sukardjo told reporters Indo-| ber group have estimated the current butter surplus at more than 200,000,000 pounds. Latest official figures show a record surplus of 116,000,000 pounds of butter and butter oil as of May 1, 1961. It is expected that delegates will back the recommendation of a special dairy committee urging the federal government to slash the retail price of but- ter immediately by 14 cents a pound, while maintaining the support price to the farmer at 64 cents. Delegates and speakers at the week-long annual meeting have argued that a consumer sub- sidy of at least 14 cents is es- sential if butter is to compete with lower-priced vegetable oil substitutes. Resolutions are also expected to urge milk boards and asso- ciations to control production at present levels un- til stockpiles of dairy products dwindle. The special dairy committee plumped for a 2-cent federa! fluid milk} ager of the Ontario Whole Milk|streets with any material they Producers' League, said Can-|could find to usé as obstacles ada's, fluid milk production isto traffic. The streets were lit- "increasing at a rather alarm-|tered with refuse, shattered ing rate." glass and nails. A record 19,100,000,000 pounds |~---------- were produced in 1961, of which . ' 6,900,000,000 were consumed in Auto Firm S Head fluid form. Mr. Rouse said total fluid use| Arrested, Charged rose by one per cent over 1960) SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) -- because of population increase, | ; but per capita use continued to| sherwood Egbert, president of decline as it has since 1956. |the strike - bound Studebaker- z2 __|Packard Corporation, was ar- $25,000 Damages jto fight pickets in front of the/countries, including Canada, jrested Wednesday night on a disorderly conduct charge after In Toronto Fire jcompany's plant. He posted $50'Britain, Sweden, New Zealand TORONTO (CP) -- Fire de-|cash bail. and Australia. stroyed part of a wartime mu-| The charge against him was| The agricultural issues are nitions plant in suburban Scar-jin an affidavit sworn out by/described as being the most im- borough Wednesday night, caus-|Gloyd Richards, a picket, that|portant. Canada is worried ing damage estimated by fire-/Egbert challenged Richards to|about her markets for farm men at $25,000. physical violence during a|products in the Community. The fire, cause of which has|picket line incident during|She is seeking access to Com- not. been determined, burned|which Egbert was reported to|munity markets for her wheat, about three hours before it was|have shed a topcoat and offered|tobacco, oil seeds and a range brought under control. to fight. 'of other foods. ment with Canada on the cut- standing issues within weeks," said one of the Community's top negotiators in a telephone} interview from Brussels. The agreement with the U.S. broke a log-jam in the Geneva GATT talks that has prevailed) for more than 16 months.| Common Market repre senta- tives tended to concentrate on) the American issues because they presented the most formi- dable problems. The feeling is that now that these have been cleared up, it should be fairly easy to reach) jhe was reported to have offered/agreement with other GATT|sti hangs over the cause of ajton, Sask., said he and Pierre natural gas pipeline explosion /Gagne, 32, of Shoal Lake, Man., that killed eight workmen andjwere standing alongside a trac-|said the offer still stands but injured four others Tuesday. deputy minister of mines and minerals, whethér the cause will be de- termined. ' in Canada, occurred 35 miles|of the line. severely burning its victims. The couple were married when Mrs. Jones was 13. They have children aged 12, 11, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, and 2 Monday when Mr. Diefenbaker,|nesia is "flexible." He added, | Liberal Leader Lester B. Pear-jhowever, that his government) son and NDP - CCF House/favors negotiations only if the) Leader Hazen Argue deliver|Dutch government commits it-| their first major addresses to|self in advance to transfer ad-| lopen the throne speech debate.|ministrative control of the dis- Pipeline Blast An informed source said he Still A Mystery expects the Dutch reaction to Earl Westman, 24, of Kenas- Thant's overture to be favor- able. DUTCH WILLING | De Quay cabled Thant Tues- day that his cabinet had ex- pressed readiness as early as Jan. 2 to negotiate with Indo- nesia "'under your auspices and without any preconditions." He} EDSON, Alta. (CP)--Mystery tor about 50 feet from wheré|warned that his government re- H. H. Sommerville, Alberta's|the pipeline was laid. serves the right of self-defence "The pipe was lying in alif Indonesia attacks Dutch ter- three-foot deep ditch and weer tch 'oncilied ti ; e Dutch are reconcilied to : were drawing off the gas Pres-| piving the Indonesians control worst of its kind|sure after testing that portion| over the territory. But appar- lently they are withholding an | 'The next step was to tie the|advance pledge in hopes of ob- I jtested section into the rest of|taining some assurance in the| A blaze which followed the/the system. We were all waiting|negotiations that the Papuan said he doubted The blast, northwest of here, mutilating or| price support on powdered milk without a supported price since 1959 and which has sold in Que- blast set fire to trees 100 feet |for the pressure to bleed off.|population of West New Guinea away. Metal, clothing and parts|Some of the men were sitting|ultimately will be allowed a of bodies were strewn around jin a truck a short distance from|plebiscite to determine whether By Moslem Mob BONE, Algeria (Reuters -- A mob of thousands of enraged Moslems ran wild through the streets of Bone Wednesday in one of the bloodiest vendettas since the current wave of viol- ence erupted in Algeria almost three weeks ago. Four of the Moslem rioters were killed in clashes. They were among the 13 persons killed in attacks throughout the day by Moslem insurgents and right - wing extremists, French military authorities said. The rioters were seeking re- venge for the bombing of a Moslem apartment house in which 10 persons were killed. They battered a European to death with a shovel and looted and set fire to European - owned stores and automobiles. One po- liceman was wounded in the fighting before order was re- stored. Adoula's government to "inves- tigate the reports (of the mas- sacre) and restore its author- ity." In New. York, the UN said U. "feels certain that re- sponsible Congolese authorities |will exert every effort to ensure that those who are guilty of such an outrage will be quickly found and severely punished." However, the Congo govern- ment appeared incapable of es- tablishing control in Kongolo or the rest of north Katanga. The central government also has no troops in the area. Kongolo was garrisoned by troops of Katanga President Moise Tshombe, but these withdrew when the Gizen- gist troops invaded from neigh- boring Kivu province. OTHERS IN DANGER Fears rose for the safety of an estimated 20 missionaries still at their posts around Kon- golo, which is the seat of the Roman Catholic vicar apostolic in north Katanga. With Gizenga under virtual house arrest in Stanleyville, the troops appeared completely out of control and taking orders from no one. The Vatican news service re- ported a young African semin- arian who witnessed the New Year's Day massacre and es- caped said the soldiers shouted at the African children in the mission: "tomorrow it will be your turn." bec and Ontario for as little a: four cents a pound. Two Ontario dairymen Wed- nesday outlined the problems facing two of the industry's less troublesome commodities, fluid milk and cheese. W. 0. Coon, a director of the Ontario Cheese Producers' As-| sociation, described the cheese} industry as "'one branch of the dairy industry that is in a fairly sound position." He estimated 1961 cheese pro-stake. duction at 115,000,000 pounds, an increase of 6,000,000 pounds over 1960. Cheese exports totalled 600.0 pounds--an increase of} 1,50,000 pounds--but the gain in exorts was nullified by a! corresponding decline in domes- tic sales. Mr. Coon said there is. room to »roduce more unpasteurized cheddar cheese and more for- eign-type cheeses. Canada's an- nual imports of foreign cheese CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 | 20,- By-Election Outcome Depends On Turnout By THE CANADIAN PRESS 'vatives, 20 Liberals The outcome of today's "'lit-/New Democrats by tle general election' in Ontario|deaths responsible for the by-| 'Should we keep those con- may rest more on the hardiness elections. tracts from these people be- of the party supporters than on| As the campaign closed Wed-|cause they are Conservatives? the strength of issues in the|nesday night, Premier J ohn|Does the fact a man supports a campaign for the five seats at/Robarts and NDP Leader Don-|/government in power preclude ald MacDonald were both injhim from having such con- If a heavy turnout develops it|Renfrew South. Liberal Leader|tracts? I think not." will be despite some of the cold-|John Wintermeyer was at Tor-| Mr. Robarts declined to pre- est weather of the winter. The|onto, scene of two of the byelec- dict the outcome of the byelec- mercury wasn't expected to tions. tions--first indicator id his pop- climb beyond 10 above zero in , ; , jularity since he took over as the three southerly. ridings, 5 be-|F toe ne -p.(premier last fall from Leslie low in Renfrew South -and 15 be-|_- Robarts, speaking at Arn-| Frost--other than to say he was low in Kenora riding. prior, said he plans no formal)*satistied" with the situation. * : ; inquiry into a controversial sale} yr Mulvihill's bid t ; sen & few snowflurries eX- of timber licences in the riding|for the Conservatives tie seat tod winne: si of the ridings but will discuss the matter with last held by former mines min-| and strong westerly winds in|},ands Minister Spooner. ator Saute Maloney is opposed! all of them, the day bears little i indi ' 4 resemblence to the January evaed sear et abe oy Lie Quilty --who ns tour in support of PC igct to M ; | thaw politicians would have candi pa veh lost to Mr. Maloney in 1959 by orerorved: candidate Conlin Mulvihill, said/9 999 yotes--and Leonard Lav- he was unable to see anything ) Of the five seats being con-|wrong with the contracts, 'They Wyte tather Caauoes became tested in the 98-seat legislature,|were given in the normai way the outstanding issue in Ren-| three were last filled by Pro-|by the department." frew South, organized gamblin | gressive Conservatives, one by| He was I 6 gry 4 a Liberal and one by a member|charge by Mr, MacDonald that|ridings. of the Liberal caucus who cam-|six of seven timber licences is-| The two Toronto seais at paigned as Liberal-Labor. sved by order-in-council 'in the stake have traditionally b-en The elections' will restore to rding ad gone to 'well-known 'eld by the Conservatives, but full strength standings in the/Tories."' neither opposition party was and fivejother contract went to a prom- the five inent Liberal, added: legislature left at 68 Conser-| The premier, noting that the (willing to concede defeat. iCanterbury. commenting on ajtook the spotlight in the southern|but execution is no adequate | migration procedure. the area. |the line. Pierre and myself|they will be independent or In- The men were testing the;were standing around. donesian. pipeline at the time of the acci- dent. The ruptured line is part of a 42-miie feeder which Piggott be- gan building last November. About 90 per cent of the line has| been completed, except for test- i robed By Mr. Sommerville suggested al particle of metal inside the pipe) TORONTO. (CP)--Two sisters|izing what they were doing or might have caused a spark/from Greece, who accused a|what was in the' documents. when the valve was opened. _ |travel agent of trafficking in im-| The Star replied with a state- Bodies of the dead were sent|rigration visas and then repu-|ment by lawyer 'Peter Georgas to Edmonton for identification. | diated their statements, are go-|--before whom the original af- ii ing to be asked to explain. jfidavits were signed. Abolition Urged Superintendent John D. Mc-| Of Death Penalty |Farlane of the immigration de-jstatements back to the girls jpartment said Wednesday '"'the|"paragraph by paragraph in whole onsiga is in the hands of/Greek"' to make certain they s | police." LONDON (AP)--Bishops and! ye said the RCMP has en- archbishops of the Church oftered the case on instructions| ENTERVIEWED AGENT England called Wednesday for\from Ottawa. Meanwhile, Mr. |knew what they were, signing. abolition of the death penalty--| 'The situation arose when col-|Said he has interviewed Mr. or at least its suspension for ymnist Pierre Berton of The|Minakakis and the travel agent| # five years. \Star ran a series of affidavits|has explained all his actions to They also urged the govern-|from Greek immigrant women|the superintendent's satisfaction ment to introduce a bill provid- | saying travel agent Constantinos|@and there is no evidence of ing compensation for the rela-\(Gus) Minakakis has charged|Wrongdoing in the immigration tives of murder victims. them a fee on the understanding/ department. | "Murder is total and tragic/he would circumvent normal im-| A third statement of denial, jcame to light when Gus Kava- compensation," declared the} Then The Telegram produced|ratzis, brother of Mrs. Anna Bisnop of Southwark, Dr. Mer- affidavits from two of the five--|Theohardis, said he had made Immigration Case _ Mr. Georgas said he read the| ¢ McFarlane| § NEW STR vyn Stockwood, as he pronosed/Rena and Alexandra Damianou/all the arrangements in his sis- the resolution in: the upper|--repudiaiing their earlier state-|ter's 'dealings with the travel house of the convocation of)ments and claiming they signed|agency and believed that she ithe first affidavits without real-|had been confused over them.! Pedro new the This is Rodriguez military Maj. Gen, Echavarria, strongigan of ONGMAN Dominican Republic. --AP Wire photo) b: aby ere Prove af

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