Oshawa Times (1958-), 19 Jan 1962, p. 1

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ounty Counci THOUGHT FOR TODAY An early settler is a person who pays his income tax any time before April 30. Told EMO Funds N he Oshawa Fime eeded -Page 5 WEATHER REPORT Mainly cloudy tonight and Sat- urday. Occasional light snow Saturday, continuing cold. Light winds, VOL. 91--NO. 16 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, JANUARY 19, 1962 Authorized os Second Class Ma Ottawa and for payment i] Post Office Department, of Postage in Cash. EIGHTEEN PAGES ier SEIZED WITH DOPE Pasquale '"'Joe" Fuca, 60, | snarls-at captors and camera as he sits handcuffed in base- ment apartment in Brooklyn Thursday. Fuca sits in front of sacks of pure heroin and arsenal composed of a Japan- ese machinegun, rifle, shotgun and dagger which federal nar- cotics agents said they found in the apartment. Heroin, weighing 24 pounds, would AND ARSENAL New Congo Bloodshed UN Discloses Today LEOPOLDVILLE Fresh| bloodshed in the eastern Congo, again involving Congolese troops, was disclosed by the United Nations today. A spokesman said four civil-| jians were killed and seven Eu- ropean churchmen threatened | have been worth three and | one-half million dollars in the | illicit dope market. Arrested | with Fuca were his stepson and the latter's 20-year-old | wife. --AP Wirephoto Counter-Coup Dominican Civil Rule SANTO DOMINGO (AP) -- Afident until the junta deposed swift counter-coup led by his|the seven-man council Tuesday own officers ousted strongman |night. Gen. Pedro Rodriguez Echavar-| Young businessman Donald ria Thursday night and restored|Read was named to fill Bala- constitutional civilian govern- | guer's council seat. ment to the Dominican Repub-| Radio Caribe said Balaguer's lic. |whereabouts were not known. The sudden end of two days} Rodriguez Echa varria, ar- of military-dominated junta rule|rested by his own troops, sat) touched off one of this ancient|glumly under guard in a wait- city's wildest celebrations. jing room in the National Palace Rafael Bonnelly, 57-year-old|as Bonnelly was installed in the lawyer professor, was sworn in|council conference chamber 150 as president almost 48 hours|feet away. after he and three other mem-| Just two months ago he had! bers of the all-civilian State|been a hero to Dominicans for Council were led out-of the-Na-|leading the air force uprising tional. Palace as prisoners of|that expelled the last of the would-be military dictator Rod-|Trujillo dynasty. riguez Echavarria and a civil- His guards said Rodriguez ian-military junta installed in|pohayarria would be held pris- their place. joner until the state council de- Six of the seven members of| cided his fate. the state council--most of them! air Force Gen. Andres Rod- long-time opponents of the Tru-|-isuez Mendez was named Rod- jillo dictatorship emerged |riguez Echavarria's successor from incarceration or embassy as chief of the armed forces refuge and resumed control of Caribe radio reported , the government they first took/ Rodriguez Mendez was com- up Jan. 1. mander of the Barahona base ACCEPT RESIGNATION from which the November air The state council's first act|force uprising was launched. after returning to the National} Bonnelly is a member of the Palace was to accept the resig-|National Civic Union, which nation of Joaquin Balaguer, a|U.S. officials consider has the Trujillo holdover who was pres-|best chance of bringing democ- Government Plan Termed 'Failure' OTTAWA (CP) -- Opposition, VANCOUVER (CP) -- Social Leader Pearson said Thursday| Credit Leader R. N. Thompson night the government's legisla-|says the speech from the throne tive program as outlined in the|is "an election program giving speech from the throne is a|empty promises to all," "deep disappointment" because} He said it indieates an earl: of "total failure" to deal with) federal election. four major problems facing) Mr. Thompson commenting in Canada. va statement on the speech, Hazen Argue, House leader of| caiq: the CCF-New Democratic Party "I am appalled at the total group, echoed Mr Pearson's|,.. : E i words in saying the contents aoe i gp Ngo oagenag ad the throne speech "are very) ™mstration Come '0: EDs disannsintins indeed" | with the desperate economic si- Mr. Pearson said in a state-/'tation that its policies have ment the government has not created in Canada today. shown any sign that it intends} The Progressive Conservative to come to grips with these government had given vague problems: impressions of what it hoped to y 1. "No program of action for|40, but said nothing about how|that Russian-built submarines|Public Health laboratory _re-|Belleville. it would finance these things. economic Telling the people about deficits the stimulation of growth, 2. "No program of action to effectively combat chronic un- employment. 3. "No definition of a coher- ent policy indicating that the government recognizes the dra- tegy. THRONE SPEECH PACKAGE NO SURPRISE by hoodlums Wednesday in a brawl at a Roman Catholic mis- jsion school in Bagira, Kivu .| Province. Local police and the troops Return were reported to have clashed. | All the dead were believed to be Negroes at the school, St. |Paul's College. In addition, three were wounded. UN re- ports indicated the white men were not injured. A UN Malavan platoon visited |fhe shout in most iips. the scene Thursday and re- | The council also faces a ma-|Ported the situation now is |jor reorganization of the gov-|Calm. Bagira is in eastern Kivu lernment. Many departments are|240 miles northeast of Kongolo, |still in the hands of die-hard|@ North Katanga town where illo followers who had been|tampaging Congolese troops |protected by Balaguer. jmassacred 19 Roman Catholic A reorganization of the huge | missionaries and an _ undeter- jracy to the Dominican Repub- jlic. | "Libertad! | Libertad!" was |Truj | armed forces also is necessary.|Mined number of Negro civil- | UN reports from Stanleyville JAKARTA (Reuters) -- The} recom- Maj.-Gen. Achmad Jani said:| UN headquarters received a Smallpox Toll terms of a time limit for diplo-| "a - : day on the West Irian issue s0| across the country. Indonesian) Qne of the remaining four authorities main- jon. jtained a tight check on Pakis- The military at present take 35/ians New Year's Day. The cents out of each. peso (offici-/{foops were in a command once ally $1) in the national" budget. |!oyal to pro-Communist Antoine -- |G ga, the recently deposed jdeputy premier. Peaceful End -- cvorr cusno H d F \indicate that Gizenga is still in ope or |his Riverside mansion there un- " der guard by central govern- By Indonesian |=," Yy Reliable sources said the United Nations has chief of Indonesia's '"'liberation|mended that Gizenga be brought joperation staff" for West New/|here to remove him from the Guinea said today he believed|Stanleyville area in Oriental {a peaceful solution was possible|/ Province in case there is any in the territorial dispute with|further trouble with Gizengist the Dutch. soldiers, \'We are still doing our utmost|report that Col. Alphonse Pak- jto find a peaceful solution for |@Ssa, nominally the commander the. West Irian (West New|) _ ope ree |Guinea) issue." Asked if the Indonesian gov- ernment still was thinking in a : matic activity on the dispute, | Climbs To Six |Jani_ said: | LONDON (Reuters) The "I have heard that (acting/qeath toll in Britain's outbreak United Nations secretary-gen-| of smallpox climbed to six to- eral) U Thant and President!qay as thousands of Britains Kennedy are going to meet to-|jined up at vaccination centres jwe had better see." : The latest victim was: a three- He added "'our policy remains | year-old boy, one of five chil- unchanged, talks will be possi-| dren who were taken to hospital ble only on the transfer of West/with the disease in the city of jIrian from the Dutch to us." Leeds. | Meanwhile, the Navy announced it will conduct| children and a doctor who per- jgunnery exercises up to 12 miles| formed a post-mortem on the joff Sabang in North Sumatralfirst victim three weeks ago until Feb. 8. It said vessels not|were reported to be in poor con- |showing national colors, or ig-| dition, |noring signals, would be fired) Meanwhile, | The Dutch Thursday an-|tanis entering the country. The jnounced their willingness to| disease was brought to Britain jhold talks with U Thant on the|by a Pakistani who arrived |possibilities of reaching a|Christmas Day and became one |peaceful settlement. lof the fatalities. In Jakarta there were reports! An official of the Birmingham had arrived as part of Indo-|ported a nesia's mut i-million special motorcycle dollar|"mercy squad" has delivered | would be poor pre-election stra-|arms deal with the Soviet Un-|smallpox vaccine sufficient to|fare, was thrown 90 feet by thejh lion. | treat more than 1,000,000 people. of forces in the eastern Congo,|vember and apparently also | | has been returned to Stanley-|perpetrated the Kongolo kill-| § JOHN HARRIS a ville from North Katanga. lings. Pakassa is the commander of| Where his loyalties now lie-- jtroops who massacred 13 Italian|with Gizenga, the central gov- UN airmen at Kndu last No-jernment or elsewhere -- is not oA STRELA OY SSR CO ---|now known for certain. | But troop movements _re- Some Grounds |ported in Kivu Province, lying |between North Katanga and s 4 Stanleyville, have stirred fears or ptimism |that the troops might be moving back to defend their onetime OTTAWA (CP) -- There are|leader. "some grounds for cautious op-|-- -- timism" in the world situation,) .., the government said Thursday| Kingston Barber in the speech from the throne} z ;cpening Parliament Fang eh lgrry Killed In Crash "While the world outlook con-| PRESCOTT, Ont. |tains elements of continuingjeph Lawrence Blair, 49, a King-) danger, there are some grounds|ston barber was killed in al for cautious optimism. |head-on collision east of here to-| "Major military conflicts)}day. He was a passenger in a have been avoided and the pro-|car driven by Francis Card, of cesses of conciliation and nego-|Kingston. tiation are in progress or in| he accident, a head-on col- prospect on many of the impor-)jicion between a tractor-trailer tant international issues... . land a passenger car, occurred The speech dealt at greater viere Highway 401 narrows length with foreign affairs than) ito two lanes at the approach any speech from the throne in| ' recent years. It said international agree- ments on measures for con- trolled disarmament remain) ¥4!!- ; vitally necessary if the world is} The truck was driven by Nor- to be freed permanently from|mand Genache, 38, of St. Johns, the menace of war." Que. He escaped injury. Life Prison Term For Killing Uncle ST. THOMAS (CP) -- A Su-|the doorway of a granary on his} preme Court judge early today|farm at South 'Dorchester. | sentenced Robert Keith Abell,|) The jury returned to the) 118, to life imprisonment only|courtroom twice to ask ques-| |minutes after a jury found himjtions or direction on points of| |guilty of non-capital murder in| law. | the slaying of his uncle. Abell maintained his outward | The jury found Abell, origi-/Calm when sentenced,. When he| jonly two lanes from the High- jway 16 junction east*to Cern-| | nally -charged with capital mur-|¥48 led from the courtroom for! ; ' : r der, guilty after eight hours|the last time he did not look} and 16 minutes' deliberation. {at his father or the -- x ; . |Mrs. Appleford. | Mr. Justice J. F. Donnelly." During the trial Thursday al after commending the jury and/jeurologist testifid Abell may| |hearing a ag irene egy oT have suffered the first convuls- jmercy, took less than 10 min-live attack of his life when he jutes to announce the life S€N-| hot his uncle tence, which is mandatory in)\ Dr. William P.. Molnnis of |such cases. : jLondon, Ont., said he came to | Abell was charged with the|this conclusion after conducting shooting of McIver Darius|prain wave tests on Abell. He (Mac) Appleford last Oct. 18./said results of the tests were |Mr. Appleford's body, riddled) not normal, jwith bullets from a .22-calibre; The doctor said it was pos- rifle, was found crumpled in| sible Abell had a disease of the | }mind which rendered him in- | |capable of recognizing the na- ture and quality of the act. Taxi, Train Crash | Dr. William A. Cardwell, re-| Fatal For Driver itired Barrie psychologist, dis- | if s | agreed He said that in his | BELLEVILLE (CP)--Wilfred | opinion Abell was capable of |Carter, 57, was killed early a ic heh hie taxicab appreciating the act. |day when his taxicab was in| « | jcollision with a CPR freight}, He told me enough to know boone : vg - |he was aware of practically all jtrain at a level crossing in) the activities of the day in ques- jtion, except some he didn't wish Mr. Carter returning to histo tell me." cab stand after delivering a| Abell was working as a farm| and for Mr. Appleford at. the} time of the slaying. | | 'force of impact. matic new trading patterns that now are taking shape in Eu- (CP)--Jos-| * to Highway 16. Highway 401 has' 3 i Bs oh LIBERALS GAIN SEAT. STRENGTHEN 2 OTHERS Confusion Over Renfrew By FRED CHAFE Canadian Press Staff Writer Liberals took one seat from the Progressive Conservatives in five Ontario byelections Thursday, strengthened their hold on two others and put up a powerful battle in two ridings held by the Conservative gov- ernment. The Opposition won Renfrew South, Conservative 'since 1945, in a race that ended in confu- sion when the returning officer first declared the PC candidate a victor. The switch came shortly after 1 a.m. today when returning of- ficer John F. Findlay said an error had been discovered in "j vote tabulation. He announced Liberal Leonard Quilty, previ- ously declared beaten by Con- servative Colin Mulvihill by 65 votes, actually was the winner with a 135-vote margin. Brant, a Liberal stronghold, remained in the fold by a land- *, slide and in Kenora the party's » slim majority in the 1959 gen- LEONARD REILLY 4 * F : ROBERT NIXON Missionaries Back To Cuba MONTREAL (CP)--Five Ca- nadian Roman Catholic mis- sionaries, expelled from Cuba last Nov. 17, have been read- mitted by the Castro govern- ment. A spokesman for the Society of Foreign Missions here iden- tified the five as: Rev. Jacques de Charette, 46 of Charette, Que., now attached to the San Alberto seminary Colon, in Cuba's Matanzas Prov- ince, Rev. Gerard Campagna, 51, of St. Paul de Chester, Que., now attached to Versailles parish in the city of Matanzas. at at eral election was incréased sub stantially. WILL ASK RECOUNTS Liberal Leader John Winter- meyer, jubilant at the trend, declared recounts will be re- quested in the Toronto ridings of Beaches and Eglinton which Ridi Commons, termed the results a "keen disappointment" except for Beaches. He added: "It would seem that even in Canada's largest industrial province, labor has shown little inclination to support a labor party."' The new members elected: Progressive Conservative -- Leonard Reilly, 49-year-old bu- sinessman, 183-vote victor over Liberal Jean Newman. in Eglin- ton where Eamonn Martin of the New Democrats ran a poor third: and John Harris, 43, a sales manager, who held Beaches by 256 votes over Lib- eral Donald MacGregor and 404 over the NDP's candi- date, Stanley Bullock. Liberal -- Robert Nixon, 33, son of 42-year 'legislature vet- eran Harry Nixon who in- creased his late father's 1959 majority in defeating Conserva- tive Garnet Brown and Robert Good of the NDP in Brant; Ro- bert Gibson, 30-year-old lawyer who defeated Conservative Pete Robertson and NDP e Emile Blouin in Kenora; and Mr, Quilty, whose third oppon- ent in Renfrew South was farmer Leonard Laventure of the NDP, Mr. Gibson continued a panty tradition for Kenora by running the Conservatives retained in tight races. At mid - morning, Premier Robarts said at his London home he had not yet decided whether to call for a recount in Renfrew South. He expected to decide today. The New Democratic Party, contesting its first Ontario elec- tions since it was founded last summer by the CCF and the Ca- nadian Labor Congress, ran third in all ridings and produced a serious contender only- in Begches, where 404 votes sep- arated the winning Conservative from the NDF candidate. New Democrats increased their popular support, however, over their CCF predecessors in Standings in the 98-seat legis- lature, scheduled to open its spring session early next month, will be Conervative 70, Liberal 23 and New Democrats five. Premier Robarts, fighting his first campaign since taking over the reins from Leslie M. Frost late last year, noted his admin- istration has been in office only two months and rejected a sug- gestion that the byelections were a rest of his new govern- ment. Later he said in a statement from his home in London: "Now that these campaigns are behind us we can get on |with our job We can now com- plete the plans which my ad- |ministration has under way for Peopi greater progress and jt is province. Reaction to the New Demo- crats' showing was mixed. Provincial Leader Donald MacDonald, regretting the close defeat in Beaches, said he and L on a Liberal-Labor ticket, but is jcounted among the Liberals in | the legislature. All seats were made vacant by deaths of sitting members-- |Albert Wren in Kenora, former mines minister James Maloney in Renfrew South, former liquor commissioner William Collings in Beaches, former education minister W. J. Dunlop in Eg- linton and the elder Nixon in Brant. The Liberals made their big- gest inroads in Toronto. Dr. Dunlop won Eglinton by close to 7,000 votes in 1959 while Mr. Collings' margin was almost 3,000. These gains, plus Mr. Nixon's strong advance, helped push the Liberal share of the popular vote to 45 per cent compared with 38 for the Conservatives and 17 for the New Democrats. In the last general election the Conservatives polled 50 per cent in the same ridings, the Lib- erals 38 and the CCF, which contested only four, 12 per cent. The voting, in the midst of winter's most severe cold wave to 'date, climaxed a campaign that saw all parties' strongest figures \tour the five ridings. It produced two explosions in the late stages. Immigration Rules Change Expected OTTAWA (CP) -- Changes in Canadian immigration regula- tions to remove racial discrim- ination from Canada's immigra- tion laws are expected to be an- nounced in the Commons today by Immigration Minister Fair- his colleagues. hoped to build from the foundations it had es-| tablished. Hazen Argue, House leader of the CCF - NDP group in the clough. Under the new regulations, im- migrants from all countries will be subject to the same' regula- tions. : Algeria Riots rope, and the opportunities and challenges they represent for this country 4, "After two years of inde- e Rev. Horace' Gauvin, 51, of St.) i ake 6 i l1ves Epiphane, 'Que., now at the So-| }ciety of Foreign Missions house} |in Havana. |. ALGIERS (AP)--Six persons | Rev. Guy Rivard, 32, of Mont-|were killed in Algiers and Oran |today as terrorism continued un- of| abated in the country's two larg- L P i K Pp t gestions that|welfare was indicated--a con-|come tax, allowing the provin-|done "in an equitable manner cision and procrastination, there; OTTAWA (CP) -- Bigger old|pelled some suggesti | | is still no clear statement of an|age pensions, more aid to uni-|/Prime Minister Diefenbaker|tributory plan of old age pen-|cial government to pay the upon an objective basis." intelligible Canadian defence|versities and prairie farmers,|would call an immediate elec-| sions and related benefits added|grants, expires this year. ° i real, now at Colon. policy--whether Canada is or isjand some broad reforms of Par-| tion. to the present pension system.| A government bid to reform) :UDY CLOSURE _ | Rev. Yvan Labelle, ed in not to have nucleai arms." liament are key points in the : ahs First, however, a constitutional |the Senate was hinted with the, Special Commons commit-|Montreal, also at Colon. ' est cities. : : Mr, Argue said one '"'glaringjlegislative package on which| WILL BULK LARGE {amendment would be needed|announcement there will be "alt will be instructed to draft) Their return raised to 20 the! Two Europeans and a Moslem example" of omissions in the|the government is expected LB gel awe gi _-- Itland the provinces would be|measure relating to. the Sen. [Proposals o ee ae cee ie saci ef Peter Weta cline uot othe vce "4 is)make a general election bid this /&¥' joc are bene-| as is. lata" A «4 |ure rule in Commons debates--} ' Missions S K cog i eal Bae Pg oak gare odwoceaggetbodosy jate. Nothing was specified. , controversial rule last used|in Cuba. A year ago the society|in Oran. | In Bone a French . postman cement as to a gov-| year. \fits will bulk large in the pro- tet : | , ais 7 | \ cntsobat policy to "tet ee * The package -- hardly a sur-/gram the government 'will put|, ~ ie A es yp hit = ad Bien tend fae a ae iby the former Liberal govern-jhad 41 priests there. I E Y ployed people to work" prise one -- was unwrapped|to the voters. The prime. minis-|,2%\ Year's Crought, there will ker already has hinted at a re-| 7 ont during the tumultuous 1956) ~~ cece was slain while making his i Com- s |ro 'Polio Cases Drop | | | ond i ' "This speech from the throne|Thursday by Governor-General|ter can call an election at any|De & se) Palys a i pay-|tirement - 4 4 4 genge es pipeline. battle in the means more stagnation," he|Vanier as he read the govern-|time, and the throne speech list|™ sh : gyms bh ied Pay: $16 bnccves gt ne 10, UE ons. said in an interview ment-written speech from the|0f measures doesn't exclude the|MCMs, in live an hs lag abe Lasuell acon |students, who finally drifted home about. noon. In. Constantine, two heavy charges of TNT exploded about midnight in the local govern- ment headquarters, heavily damaging two offices. Public transport continued strikebound for a second day in Algiers. The strike was called to protest against the lack of security of bus drivers. One was recently wounded by a terrorist. Thousands of Europeans and 32, unds. All of the gunmen escaped. In Oran some 5,000 high school around $42,000,000 each. The usual pomp and pagean- CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS throne opening the new session|Possibility the government has of Parliament. other proposals up its sleeve. The pension boost was unspe-| Along with the pension in-| cified, though widespread spec-|crease, the government will Pro-| promised boost in grants to uni-| julation is for an extra $10 on/Pose a similar boost in assist-|yersities, now distributed in all DOESN'T SAY COST No price tag was put on the Two other parliamentary re- try marked the session opening form steps were spelled out/as Gen. Vanier--travelling by| more clearly. auto instead of horse - drawn) An independent commission|¢arriage because of blustery| |will be set up to take over the|Cold weather--came to Parlia-| For Canada, 1961 OTTAWA: (CP)--The number| <>, of paralytic polio cases reported in Canada dipped sharply in 1961, students paraded through the ity with banners demanding protection for the schools. Other jbanners said "Algeria -is |French" and "The Secret Arfhy to Power." The secret army is Moslems failed to report for work today because of the trans- port strike. Some schools were closed, a number of shops failed to open and many local govern- ment employees were not at jthe $55 monthly cheques paid to|ance payments to the needy/provinces except Quebec at the|job of recommending redistribu-|ment to read the throne speech | jall aged 70 and over. jaged between 65 and 69 and in|rate of $1.50 per capita of pop-|tion of Commons constituencies, in the Senate chamber. A subsequent government an-|blindness and disability allow-|ylation. The throne speech in-|done every 10 years by a polit-| Soon after, however, the op-|Statistics showed a total of 186/paign against Algerian inde- nouncement of an early start by ances, all of which are jointly |dicated legislation to: meet the ically-loaded House committee position parties served notice! cases reported across Canada| pendence Parliament on enacting part of |financed with the provinces. situation in Quebec where anjheretofore. The throne speech they'll provide plenty, of: fire-|last year compared with 909 the! Riot police tossed a concus- the program. apparently dis-| An even bigger step in socialjarrangement on corporation in-|said this will ensure the job is|works in the session. iprevious. year. 'sion grenade to discourage the Statistics made available to-|the right-wing European organ- le their posts. |day by the Dominion Bureau oflization waging a terrorist cam- In Oran, an estimated 1,000 Europeans tried to sack the headquarters of the committee of support for President Charles de Gaulle. Troops stopped them. POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 | '

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