2 THE OSHAWA 'TIMES, Friday, Merch 9, 1962 S. Viet Nam Compared To Korea, Before War STOR Trailer homes on Long Beach Island near Beach Haven Inlet, N.J., are piled By JACK BEST OTTAWA (CP) -- Opposition Leader Pearson drew a parallel Thursday bet ween unfolding events in South Viet Nam and Mithose which led up to Commu- PA \nist Chinese intervention in the Korean War. -| And he said, referring to the situation which that intervention produced: 'We missed World War Three by a hair's breadth." The former external affairs minister was speaking during *\Commons debate on a_ $10,- 000 expenditure item -- subse- 4\quently approved--covering Ca- nadian participation in the Indo- china truce commissions. Other members of the com- 4\missions, which operate in Viet '|Nam, Laos and Cambodia, are "\India and Poland. War now is 'lraging in South Viet Nam be- tween government forces and Communists. External Affairs Minister Green said that "looking at the broad picture," he believes the presence of the commissions has prevented a big war from reaking out. They had exerted restraining influence. : The commissions were di- vided, however, and this pre- sented a-'"'very difficult situa- tion." Apparently referring to the Polish members, Mr. Green M WRECKS TRAILERS eral days. Damage was in the millions. lresentative of one country work- --(AP Wirephoto) jing very close with the Com- <a," up like a train wreck scene after a storm lashed the At- lantic coast for the past sev- SITUATION DANGEROUS erate Ex-Priest Said tion is fraught with danger. Be- lsaid they operate "'with the rep-) the point where those who are helping each side get in conflict with each other, then anything can happen." Mr. Pearson noted a state- ment by the Chinese govern ment that it would have to con- sider what action to take if the U.S. continued sending troops into South Viet Nam. "This is what happened in Korea," he continued. 'At the beginning there was no Chinese intervention. It was felt by a lot of people that there would be no Chinese intervention, but the Chinese government said that under certain circumstances they would intervene and they did intervene. We missed World War three by a hair's breadth. Let us hope that does not hap- pen in Viet Nam." Mr. Green: "I thing there are United States combat troops there for training purposes. |There are 4,500 according to the lannouncement from Washing- Hon as |HELPED IN LAOS | Mr. Green, dealing with the Laos commission, said it has "greatly reduced" the fighting Slo COLORADO SPRINGS, Cole. \former NHL centre who says between pro-West and pro-Com- munist elements there. He also told the Commons he believes the 14-nation Geneva conference on Laos, which be- gan nearly 10 months ago, has achieved excellent results. This conference was called to frame a new East-West agreement to isolate Laos from the cold war. Mr. Green said that from his experience at geneva--he led the Canadian delegation in the conference's opening stages--he would say that no country rep- resented there wants a world war started over Laos. Mr. Pearson said he finds it hard to believe the Chinese Communist representative at Geneva is "really anxious' or willing to have a neutral Laos. "Tf that were the case, it is hard to understand the support that the Chinese Communist goy- ernment is giving to the Viet Minh forces which, as I see it, 'are trying to prevent a neutral |Laos and trying to set up in that country a Communist state or a state which will be allied to the Chinese Communist em- |pire."' an Nets Two In Canadian Win easy 8-1 victory over Finland Mr. Pearson said the situa-|(CP) -- Tod (Slinker) Sloan, the/Thursday night at Denver. "This isn't like the NHL--it's They say Charlie the Bull Mountain, Ont. This includes | can do anything a horse can BULL BUILT FOR TWO and Beatrice, 18, Lewis. Hydro To Op If Strike Starts acceptance of the board report hind the North Vietnamese|playing as an amateur is fun,|fun," says the dark-haired na- forces operating against pro-|is wasting no time--before hejtive of Vinton, Que., who lives Western South Viet Nam were|starred displaying his wares in|in Toronto where he has a finan- the Chinese Communists. And|the world: hockey champion-jcial interest in a construction! behind the South Vietnamese ships. company. Living Quietly Californi In a I ornla were United States forces. Sloan, a 34-year-old veteran of; "I still like the game. But I "Tf this civil war can be con-|12 seasons in the National|got fed up with pro hockey, the, SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Altined to the forces of Viet Nam,|Hockey League before returned/routine, the tough training} Roman Catholic priest, centre Of/9n one side or the other, per-|to amateur status last Decem-jcamps, the 70-game grind. | a $2,300,000 lawsuit against the|hans there is not going to be|ber, scored two goals and as-/Those bodychecks hurt, too.| staff and by other means if the/tomers, but: rejected the offer| church, is living quietly and Prl-| any widespread trouble. But if,/sisted on two others, to lead/There's hardly any bodycheck- workers go on strike. as neither technically feasible| Vately_ in California, his lawyer|in fact, the war broadens out to|Canada's Galt Terriers to anjing in these international giving a ride to Ronald, 17, around the Lewis farm at ---(CP Wirephoto) Illegal Beer Sale Brings $500 Fine TORONTO (CP)--A Toronto warehouse. If the beer was re- sold, he wondered what the dif- ference was between such a re- sale and bootlegging. Mr. Barns said he had in- formed Romano he would be complying with the law if he J. A. Barns, former Toronto) used delivery slips. TORONTO (CP)--The yg Electric Power Commission offif a strike is called. | Ontario has notified its employ-| It acknowledged a union pro- ees it will continue to operate|posal to maintain power to what the system with supervisory|the union termed essential cus-| Th tification came in a let-|nor practical. : jsaid Thursday. Dw sa} = : ~|games."' 3 ifi | j orvis -- ; Pigg sin jhe | Lawyer Thomas O'Brien said Canada moved to the top of/™4n who testified he sold beer| district supervisor for the brew-| er to hydro employees from) 2TTE he d t know just where| arpad seg Seas '~ \from a brewery at a commis-jery, testified "Carman pushed a z 38 LETTE e does not know j Ww ie . = ) \ery, J. M. Hambly, general man-| DEBATE Boccnnd yg OO presi-| Walter Ryan, the 57-year-old INTERPRETING THE NEWS lenin" aieisina gos champlon'| sion of 50 cents a case was fined |little beer for us. He would ask| 1962 ager. scri Mr. H: »¥s|priest, is living but he is "prob- ie a he 1$500 and costs today for illegally| people to buy beer." | . a ; t the N |dent, described Mr. Hambly's t, Lo ee United States and Switzerland,|™ ' | } M t L The Hydro local tsi "os Na-lietter as "just a little short of|ably in northern California" and ry | who also won their opening|KeePing liquor for sale. | Asked by prosecutor Martin) olor Licences --, Lang gn eg ag ll He interpreted dae og, ey ins megenet, 1em umore | games. | In age op whether he had paid oth-| Boat ORS. AM? as an indication Hydro is con-| Ryans onde wife a lee 'i jmano, 40, Magis S| ers 50 cents a case for doing the} strike ballot within the next two| igering the use of strikebreak-|mother of his four children }U.S. FINISH FAST |Butler said he felt Romano was| . 'ie ; | weeks. The union has rejected/o,<, and added the union's offer| brought suit Monday against the | ,, Zhe U-S., held scoreless in the |probably to some extent a dupe not 'done 50 Randle eck sa} DONALD the majority recommendations}:, 'maintain essential services|Church in Mineola, N.Y., charg- Not T (ele) Popular first rors + sy et in the transaction which led to! a +rangement fell within a sales] MOTOR SALES y |goals in he second period and'the charges. Romano must , |trounced Norway 14-2 in Broad-|<serve three months' in fail st! man's sphere. 300 DUNDAS E. WHiTBY of a.conciliation board. would not stand if this hap-|ing Roman Catholics had spir- Mr. Hambly's letter added the) pened. ited the priest away in 1955 and } ee _ {kept him prisoner in monaster- The conciliation board major- jes, | ity recommendation, rejected by| Alice Ryan, 41, of Glen Head,| the union, was for a two-per-cent|N.Y., said they were secretly} increase dating from April 1,!wed in Maryland Nov. 13, 1950,) 1961 and two per cent effective | while Ryan was assistant pastor| Jan. 1, 1962, for a two-yearjof the Glen Cove parish. agreement that would expire} O'Brien said the priest came March 31, 1963. }voluntarily to California in 1955 A minority report by the un-|and has been here ever since, ion nominee suggested two in-|living on his $176 monthly mili- creases of four per cent. Heed Reem bens as a re- ; reece tired captain-chaplain. ae ees een employees) "TJ don't think he would ever go back to her," O'Brien said. "That situation wouldn't work jo commission may withdraw its! Unfit Meat Case Suspects Arrested TORONTO (CP) -- Two Tor- onto. men for whom arrest war- rants were issued Wednesday by the RCMP surrendered Thurs- day to face charges of selling meat unfit for human consump- tion. Charles Bannerman and Eu-) gene Leo McCarron, both 62,| were sought after police found) that 16 tons of meat from dead} animals had been sold to a Tor- onto firm within a one-month pe- riod. RCMP said the men have been in the meat business for 20 years, and in partnership for|Thursday when the panel truck|married. He's out the window|put up a stiff battle against the)and by 1949 the battle was over. three years. The double arrest brings to a) total of 16 the number of men| North York. | (Markham Township. arrested after police posed as buyers of dead and fallen ani- mals. moor World Arena here Thurs-| the fine is not paid. | | He said the 50-cent payment For Your Convenience: ut."' While he doesn't know Ryan's whereabouts, the lawyer said, "he is definitely not in a Catho- Truck Driver Dies By HAROLD MORRISON __ {has agreed to establish a num- Canadian Press Staff Writer|ber of reforms to give his peo- The war in South Viet Nam/Ple a_ better chance for pro- has become intensified and de-|stess but U.S. sourcess say he spite the massive aid of the|is autocratic and his reforms United States, the forces of|are slow in coming. day night. Switzerland, which doesn't fig- ure to be up there long, had the distinction of gaining the first) victory in the top bracket when it beat Britain 6-3 in an after. President Ngo Dinh Diem seem to have trouble holding their own against the Communist-led Viet Cong. Reports out of Saigon indicate Communist guerrillas are op- erating in strength in the south- ern part of the country, grow- ing bolder by the way. The U.S. administration sug- gests the reason it is making a more determined effort in sup- porting the existing regime in | There doesn't seem to be an-|noon game at Colorado Springs. lother anti-Communist fighter of/ In the only Group B game, his stature on the immediate;played at Denver, The Nether- horizon who could inspire the|lands outlasted Australia 6-4. population and obtain support of} The Canadians and the US. the democratic political forces. | won't play again until Saturday The United States may be/Night, when Canada will meet stuck with Diem, in the same|West Germany. way it was stuck with Chiang) Sweden plays Switzerland, the) i a| West Germans take on Norway} Kai-shek, who proved to be a J NOI strong battler tee the Com-|and Finland tackles Britain in ionship action. In munists but not too popular| today's champ with the bulk of the Chinese. In|Group B Japan meets France. An additional charge of illegal| "5 ® cartage fee and charged ' possession of liquor was |to cartage. missed. Magistrate Butler said the Romano testified he bought| beer became Romano's property beer from Dow Brewery (On-|if he obtained it from a brewer's Qpen Saturday Until Noon © Open Daily 'til 5 p.m. © Ample Free Parking BUY NOW, AVOID THE LINEUPS tario) Limited at the regular re- tail price, sold it for the regular) price, and was paid 50 cents a! case by Frederick Beckett, a/ sales representative. He said he sold the beer to friends or in response to tele-| phone orders, disposing of 150) to 175 cases a month. Nazi Records First @ spoon... stir. . STOP... + Measuring cu ALL MIXED UP? . clean up what's spilled. . . ladle eut each glass -- : PURE SKIM MILK "AT THE STORE OR AT YOUR DOOR" 1946, the Communists had one- Canada, the defending cham- p... add water. /. ete end: LET'S JUST PICK-UP A THROW-AWAY CARTON In Head-On Crash |' is sett : egime \lic institution. They won't have|South Viet Nam than it did in TORONTO (CP) -- Carmelojhim. |Laos is because the South Viet- Mario Biscardi, 22, was killed) "He was a priest and he got/namese appear more willing to he was driving collided head-on\as far as the church is con-|Communists while the Laotians with a dump truck in suburban} cerned." were poor soldiers and didn't O'Brien said the former priest|seem to have their heart in the Driver of the dump truck was|did not leave his family because| struggle. Douglas Shannon, 27, of nearbyof remorse over breaking the} But even in South Viet Nam, vow of celibacy. tenth of mainland China. By the/Pion, played aggressively lend of 1948, they had one-third/against the Finns and concen- | trated its scoring into flurries, itallying twice in less than two | minutes early in the first period) to take command. In the second) period Galt scored twice in 17) seconds and added two more) |goals within seven seconds dur- President Kennedy says the |United States will remain in South Viet Nam as long as nec- jessary to flush the guerrillas out. On the basis of the present Feeling Lack | STUTTGART, West Germany) (Reuters)--The diary of a Nazi) warrant officer expressed sur-| prise at his own lack of feeling while watching executions, a} court trying him for the war- time murder of 21 Jews heard} DIAL 728-6241 Tdeal Dairy Limited QUALITY DAI PRODUCTS jrumor appears to persist thatisituation, the U.S. may find it- ing the. last minute of the pe- Thursday. | ~|Diem isn't too popular with the/self in South Viet Nam for a ind. The diary, sent in anony-| Pe LITTLE CHANGE IN TEMPERATURE WEATHER FORECAST |masses and that criticism of his} Jon - ~~ i sieaesatd POURS IMGICATE BMECTEL Pc @: HiLs TEMPLEATUES, TODAY jcloudy with not much change in temperature. Light winds. Cloud Predicted Across Ontario Official forecasts issued in Toronto at 4:30 a.m.: Synopsis: A disturbance is ex- pected to move. eastward south of the lakes during the day pushing cloud across the prov- ince. Wet snow is likely along the lower lakes as it passes. Saturday is expected to continue mainly cloudy with not much »change in temperature. Lake St. Clair region, Wind- sor: Cloudy with occasional wet snow or drizzle ending by eve- ning. Cloudy with sunny periods and not much change in tem- perature Saturday. Winds east- erly 15 to 25 today, becoming light Saturday. Southern Lake Huron, Lake Erie, Niagara regions, London, Hamilton: Cloudy with occa- sional wet snow beginning dur- ing the morning and ending hy everfng. Cloudy with sunny pe- White River region: Cloudy with a few snowflurries today} and Saturday. Light winds. Not} imuch change in temperature. Low tonight, High Satu Windsor .... St. Thomas London ... 1 | Forecast Temperatures | rday 35 regime is spreading into his army. PREDICTS RESISTANCE Two weeks ago, Diem's pal- ace was strafed and bombed by two South Vietnamese fighter bombers. While a U.S. author- ity in Saigon brushes off this incident as an isolated case springing out of a personal mat- ter, the pilot of one of the planes says dissatisfaction with Diem will persist as long as he is in power. Another disturbing element is that the Communist guerrillas, while directed by the North Vietnamese, appear to be get- ting some help from South Viet- namese peasants and farmers. Some of this aid undoubtedly 'lresults from threats. But there also is a suggestion that the bulk of the peasants are not too friendly to their leader. The dilemma for the United States is that there appears to be no alternative to Diem. He Chrysler Workers Strike's 18th Day WINDSOR, Ont. (CP) -- A strike by 3,000 production work- jers at Chrysler of Canada en- iItered its 18th day Thursday. Subcommittee meetings on the question of seniority were held between union and man- agement negotiators, but no full g time 6-Year Terms For Prisoners Who Escaped Bob Mader, Joe Malo, Jack| \McLéod, Bob McKnight, Ted KINGSTON (CP)--Three pris-| Maki and Floyd (Butch) Martin oners who escaped from the me-| scored singles for the Canadians, dium-security prison at nearby | who held an overwhelming 41-17 Joyceville were sentenced edge in total shots. Thursday to six years in Kings-, Only some near - impossible ton penitentiary. saves by Finnish goalie Risto The trio, Fred Segriff, 23, and|Kaitala peevented the Canadians Paul Meuller, 21, both of Toron-|from running the score into dou- jto and Thomas Thompson, 24, ble figures. lof Ottawa escaped Jan. 25 by| Galt goalie Harold (Boat) Hur-| jeutting through the metal ven- ley got excellent support from) ltilator of a fourth-floor dormi-|his big defencemen all night. He; ltory and sliding to the ground|Missed a shutout early in the} down knotted bedsheets. ithird period when Ertti Niemi-| | 'Two days later they stole ajfen's close in shot slipped just) car from 70 - year - old Harry inside the nets. | lBlacklock, who farms near) \Joyceville, after holding him jhostage for seven hours. | They were arrested Feb. 3, ' near Toronto after a wild car} lee during which police fired) Can t Be Found tree Shai. <,..| WINDSOR, Ont. (CP) -- Five | At the time of the escape Seg-|jyyeniles, blamed by police for| \riff was serving five years for), wave of vandalism in subur-| jarmed robbery; Meuller three}44 sandwich South Township, | years and six months for break- have disappeared. 1 jing, entering and theft; and) 'The juveniles were questioned Thompson four years and five} arto $5,000 damage was done |months for robbery in a school and a drive-in the-| pee: Ser goes atre and two abandoned build-| ings were burned. The five were} POWER PLAY WORKS Two of the Canadian goals were scored while the Finns} were a man short. Sloan, with a lifetime NHL record of 220 goals, scored the |third and eighth goals and as-| sisted on the second and the} fourth. 5 Young Suspects | with vio- ry. | 7 mously, was identified by the|= defendant, Austrian-born Felix Landau, 51, as being in his hand- writing. An entry for July 12, 1941, while Landau was in charge of Jewish workers in the town of Drohobycz, Galicia, said: "Reported at an execution... Twenty-three were to be shot, including two women; ..I am picked out as a marksman and have to shoot any who may flee. "The death candidates arrive with shovels, in order to dig their own graves. Strange, I have no feelings. No sympathy, nothing."' Another entry that month! said: | "During the afternoon about} 300 more Jews and Poles were, bumped off . . Hundreds of Jews with bloodstained faces, holes in their heads, broken hands and distended eyes, pass} along the road . . . I have noth- |} ing against it but they should| no. let Jews run around in this | state." | GIRLS BOYS MOTHERS FATHERS GRANDPARENTS will all be present for FAMILY NIGHT at 7:45 p.m. -- TONIGHT You will be welcome Calvary Baptist Church Centre and John Sts., Oshawa, Ontario Mentholatum Ointment eases cold discom- | forts fast! Helps loosen chest congestion, open up nose, relieve miserable mouth reathing. Soothes chapping. Soothing Comforting Mentholatum Ointment riods Saturday. Not much change in temperature. Winds easterly 15 to 25 today, becom- ing light Saturday. Western Lake Ontario region, Toronto: Clouding over this morning with a period of wet snow likely in the late after- noon and evening. Saturday |cloudy with sunny intervals. Not much change in temperature. Winds easterly 15 to 25 today, light Saturday. Eastern Lake Ontario, north- ern Lake Huron, Georgian Bay, |Haliburton, Timagami, Coch pane, regions, North Bay, Sud- bury: Sunny, becoming mainly cloudy during the afternoon. Saturday cloudy with sunny pe- |riods. Little change in tempera- jture., Light winds. Algoma region, Sault Ste |Marie: Cloudy with a few snow- flurries tod&y. Saturday mainly | Kitchener Mount Forest .. Wingham .... Hamilton St. Catharines Toronto Peterborough Trenton Killaloe .. Muskoka .. |North Bay . Sudbury . Earlton Kapuskasing . White River .. Moosonee .. "18.8. Marie ... Observed Temperatures Min. Max. 7 9 47 33 20 Dawson .-+. Victoria .. Edmonton . Regina Winnipeg ..... aus 'Fort William .....- - 35 bargaining session was planned.| ROCKET MISFIRES Officials of Local 444, United) POINT MUGU, Calif. (AP)-- Auto Workers union (CLC), are|A Nike-Zeus anti-missile rocket} canvassing merchants and bus-| was destroyed high over the Pa-| iness offices in the city seeking|cific Thursday when it veered) financial aid for cases among union members. . |ploded just a few seconds after) | Strikers are receiving $30)launching. | }weckly in strike pay, but union . left in their parents' custody pending disposal of the case by Crown officials. Police learned the juveniles failed to attend school Wednes- emergency off course. The rocket was ex-|day and: did not return to their) homes Wednesday night or Thursday morning. \officials said additional funds) jare needed for special cases of jhardship. |S.S. Marie ....+... 25 | White River ....... 23 Kapuskasing . - 19 }North Bay . |Sudbury . Muskoka . |Windsor . London . ANNUAL sP Halifax Victorian Order of Nurses MEETING Monday, March 12th -M, CITY ADMINISTRATION BLDG. CENTRE ST. ai | Is 48-Hour | Automat white back-up metallic A-90941 T 230 KING STREET WEST CORVAIR 700 SEDAN wall tires, windshield washers, CLIFF MILLS MOTORS LTD. Special 1961 ic transmission, wheel discs, lights. Finished in gleaming midnight blue. Licence . FULL PRICE $2199 725-6651