R.S. McLaughlin Gives $25,000 To School -- Page 9 THOUGHT FOR TODAY Some men leave footprints on the sands of time;. others leave only the marks of, heels. he Oshawa Gunes WEATHER REPORT Mainly cloudy with a few snow- flurries tonight and Wednesday. A little colder Wednesday. Price Not Over VOL. 91--NO. 61 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, MARCH 13, 1962 Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department, for payment of Cosh. Ottawa and Postage in EIGHTEEN PAGES | Canadians Smuggling 'Not Named OTTAWA (CP)--Seven Cana- mons by Enhart Regier (CCF-- ._@\dian soldiers and two Canadian| Burnaby-Coquitlam). 3 \civil servants have been impli-| ad "d Indochina. |External Affairs Minister Green Prime Minister Diefenbaker| refused to give any information told the Commons Monday the|/on the case beyond admitting smuggling involved movement) that an officer had been brought of gold and opium from one city home for wrongdoing. in Indochina to another. i S dn ani ..| FINDS NO EVIDENCE The two civilians--male clerks S Distenbaker said teks is of the external affairs depart- " a ; ment--have been suspended and| "0 evidence that Canadians hii , , : gehen : | servi the t commis- op ocye py ea Mae 6 they ied atement a, on smugled_ narcotic nto asian 0 an ae mitting they smuggled g: eR Ae a opium on behalf a Chinese 0 meat recent trac salvage party rigs lights, gen- | craft went aground March 6 "s erators and other equipment | after breaking a towline in An officer and a non-commis- |' rep : sioned officer were engaged in|iNg arrests in British Columbia. in an attempt to refloat her. | heavy seas. (U.S. Navy Photo The unmanned _ mothballed | via AP Wirephoto) The destroyer Monssen re- | mains hard aground in the At- lantic off this storm-battered | island yesterday as a Navy Lending Rates Tough Issue For Commission VICTORIA (CP) Lending' He also suggested investment/if the six-per-cent ceiling were rates of chartered banks on alljdealers stick with chartered/raised. types of loans may prove to be} banks instead of turning to other) Mr. oti aa gold smuggling, while five other) Such suggestions had been e ' 8 de by Mr. Regier. ranks appeared to have engaged) ™@ y i , in smuggling gold and opium. Mr. Diefenbaker said some of those involved received INVESTIGATION GOES ON of money in local currency" but Disciplinary action was taken|reports concerning the amounts against some of the military| paid for smuggling were greatly | personnel in Indochina, said Mr.) exaggerated. Diefenbaker, Investigations of . the others were continuing. The prime minister said the smuggling activities were dis- covered last year. Those in- Food Rationing The nine were serving on Can- Leman said he found it 2 Under questioning by Mr. Re-)____ //cated in a smuggling racket in|gier in the Commons last week,| one of the most contentious is-| institutions 0 f fering cheaperjhard to reconcile such an "ex sues before the royal commis-|rates because banks have aj|treme view' with current sug- steady supply of funds for such/ gestions that business firms are sion on banking and finance. ada's delegation to the interna- tional truce supervisory were given. com-} missions in Indochina. No names} HAVANA | | | | | | | | | volved who were sit! in indo- DJ ang Revealed By Cuba Leader Premier Fidel | sion to study the after effects of OTTAWA (CP)--Labor Minis- ers today that the government plans a new approach to auto-| mation aimed at bringing tech-| nological dislocations "wit hin} reasonable control." | Mr. Starr dropped the hint--| without elaborating--in reply to | |a legislative brief from the Con-| federation of National Trade Un- ions to Prime Minister Diefen- baker and the cabinet. The CNTU brief, submitted on behalf of 110,000 trade unionists, urged legislation to protect workers affected by automation and called for a royal commis- automation. Mr. Starr said he agrees with U.S. President Kennedy's state- NEW APPROACH TO AUTOMATION Labor Minister Hints Controls ment that automation and the ter Starr told Quebec union Jead-| consequences of automation rep- resent the "supreme domestic challenge of the 1960s." "I may say that my depart- ment is continuing a member of studies within industry dealing with the effects of automation," Mr. Starr said. "It will form the basis of an approach to this problem where- by we hope to be able to bring the attendant dislocations within reasonable control." To cope with automation - era effects, he said the government will require the full co-opera- tion, advice and help of both management and labor. He said the National Productivity Coun- cil is one forum where labor and management can meet to produce solutions that are mu- tually satisfactory. Trade Minister Hees also 3-Man Board stressed a need for labor-man- agement co-operation in making Will Probe Castro announced Monday night jthat his government plans to im- This became apparent Mon-|lending and provide service|largely insensitive to interest ' riser ' pi |Canadian products more compet- day in a submission from the|others can't match, rates, within certain limits, due P i Outside the Commons, infor- 7 itive abroad. mants held out the possibility British Columbia Bond Dealers') William A. Mackintosh, re-jto tax deductibility and other re t that the seven military men will Association, first group to ap-|cently - retired principal of factors. | pose stringent rationing of food) and other goods in Cuba later/ com-|be tried by courts-martial. It}ini, month. was understood the smuggling! Castro told of the rationing took place between Saigon and plans in a television broadcast pear before the commission as|Queen's University in Kingston,) The it began public hearings that/Ont., and one of the seven com-/ ment. will continue intermittently missioners, asked why the asso} Mr. Williams and Mr. Clarke I across Canada until next fall. |ciation thinks there should be|were the only witnesses before Hanoi, capitals of South Vietii, which he declared "we have The association said invest-|competition at the lower end ofthe commission in its one-day| Nam.and Communist North Viet! inherited a hell." ment dealers are unable to ne-|the banks' lending scale but no|sitting here. The commission ad-|Nam respectively. | He also aiimitted abortcom- gotiate interest rates on their/competition at the upper end. _|journed for two hours soon after) Mr. Diefenbaker told theljings in his revolution, saying one-day loans and must pay the) '"'That's a particularly good/the sitting began because the| House the public interest de- that at times "we have not "established rate" the banks/question," said V. Ben Williams/British Columbia government|manded that the record be set)made an. objective analysis." have set up instead of compet-jof Vancouver, association pres-|did not appear at the time al | stratett in view of ""naccurate"'| "We fell into subjectivism and te es ae sta 'statements outside the Com-|promised certain things in a witnesses did not |Hospital, where seven infants College in directing the teams The allotment of Worst flooding in three years has hit Sarnia streets with many of the newer, un- sewered residential areas in- undated. Pumps, graders, posthole. diggers and tank By THE CANADIAN PRESS Light snow and drizzle fell over Ontario today in the wake of rain and snow that struck parts of the province Monday. under one of the heaviest snow-) storms of the season. Western| Ontario reside ts sloshed through flooded streets. The storm dropped 10 inches of snow on the capital by early Monday night, clogging streets The Ottawa area staggered! SARNIA FLOODING trucks have been employed in various efforts to give some relief. John and Patsy Barry boat on Houston street in the city's north end. (AP Wirephoto) Rail Dispute OTTAWA (CP)--A three-man conciliation board will be estab- lished to investigate the contract dispute between the major rail- ways and their 104,000 non-oper- ating workers, a reliable source said today. The informant said Labor Min- Light Snow, Rain In Storm' s Wake tending classes in the Quebec communities of gatineau nd Templeton were bedded down at homes in the towns after their buses bogged down in snow. Highway 17 between Ottawa and Arnprior, about 310 miles northwest of the capital, was blocked 2% hours by snow and traffic jams. Power failures put Ottawa tel- evision stations off the air for short periods and downtown ister Starr has informed both the railways and the 15-union "non-op" negotiating committee that the board will be set up. In normal practice, the next move is up to the disputants. In deciding on a three-man board, Mr. Starr apparently turned down the railway bid for a lone conciliator--presumably an independent mediator of high public status. This railway pro- posal met a cool response from union leaders. The unions, bargaining for railway workers who do not ac- tually operate trains, are seek- ing a 23-cent hourly pay in- crease, plus a job-security pro- gram that would protect work- ers with five or more years of Both ministers emphasized the importance of the Kingston con- ference of labor and manage- ment leaders, sponsored by the Productivity Council, starting Friday. In its brief, the CNTU said such government enterprises as the CBC, National Film Board and the Queen's Printer have an, ~ important role to play in both Canada's culture and economy. The brief criticized the Cana- dian Chamber of Commerce for seeking "to restrain state inter+ vention in our economic life." Woman Killed, Husband Hurt In Pickering PICKERING (Staff) -- A 61- year-old woman was killed this morning and her husband ser- iously injured when their car smashed into the side of a transport on Highway 2 at Fair- |have died since Friday. Dr. Lawrence Finberg flew from Baltimore to help in the jround-the-clock efforts to physi- cians and nurses Ten babies who drank the for- attempting the save the four. The treatment consists of re-| moval and replacement of the! infants' blood by transfusion. The latest baby to die was four-day-old Michelle Dawn| Bowser, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Charles Bowser of Bing- hamton. | The bodies of six of the chil-| dren -- three boys and three "through increased failures of|of the association, offered i for a "great battle in the field T Vv o Save Babies is that "perhaps they're downjnadian development would be} The food rationing will mean men accused of trafficking in) The government outlined the ical condition, still were in the girls ranging in age from three Joseph Sam Perry. The jurors Brockville bank loot. |salt formula, Mrs. Lillie Colvin, 29, a prac- House Advised: Of Wheat Deal OTTAWA (CP)--A new Inter- national Wheat Agreement, pro- monthly port Beach road. Killed in the 7.20 a.m. crash was Mrs. Ada Mary Tyndale, RR 1, Claremont. Her husband, George Robert Tyndale, 61, suffered three broken ribs as well as facial and knee lacera- tions. The Oshawa General Hos- pital reported his condition as satisfactory this morning. Pickering Township Police report that. the Tyndale car was proceeding west on High- way 2 when it collided with an eastbound transport driven by William Matthews, 37 of Ruth- ven, Ontario. and highways and disrupting] Sparks Street was without lights} | briefly. Police, appealing to) motorists to stay off the streets, beans will be 2 s, ri ; six pounds and : sea oe. rion ag jase egetnetg ae potatoes or yams)" Many rural school children at- 1 9 houeriwcs eit --------~ | reported at least 500 minor ac- have to pay two cents more a jeidents. pound for meat. Supplies of| Showdown Part SARNIA HARD HIT | At meat, fish and eggs to restau-| Sarnia, bulldozers were} ts will be cut in half. S i -- | Of Peace Talkk (rtscadstice te permit the water Wounded Corporal! For Algeri ans to drain. Tank trucks syphoned|yiding for a 12%4-per-cent-a- Spends Bad Night EVIAN, France (AP) -- water off the streets. : bushel increase in both the In many locations -- particu-|maximum and minimum prices, I French and Algerian nationalist officials moved into the show- BERLIN (Reuters)--An RAF corporal shot by East German up to 15 inches deep. Advising the House of the The association said any in-| 'The commission will take|------- crease in the existing legal max-|note of it, said Chief Justice) atte Sy ive pans ae imum 'of six per cent on char-|Porter after neither Mr. Wil-| DEATH TOLL 7 |that time," Castro said. dize Canadian development|Vancouver, executive member| | companies both large and/ther comment. of agricultural production." _ small." Paul H, Leman of Montreal, a Under the program, there will Chief Justice Dan Porter ofjcommission member who is) |be three categories of rationing Ontario, commission chairman, |vice-president and treasurer of| j--those applying in Havana suggested one reason the banks|the Aluminum Company of Can-| only, those applying in cities may not be competing on short|ada Limited, was critical of the! jand towns and those in force e Pl " 1 IY A to rock bottom now." jeopardized by business fatlunen| BINGHAM TON, N.Y. (AP)--)be known definitely until autop-|that each Cuban will receive pauiaaiterrtit itesidven ne aA --|A Johns Hopkins specialist/sies are completed, |three-quarters of a pound of K |joined teams of experts today in| Finberg is an expert in dia-| meat a week, two ounces of but- \the battle to save four critically-|lysis -- restoring chemical bal-|ter a month, a half dozen eggs ury e l era es ill babies fed a salt-laden for-|ance to the body. He joined Dr./a month, and a half a pound of |mula at Binghamton General|John Kiley of Albany Medical|fish in 15 days. CHICAGO (AP)--A U.S. dis- Rosden operates an interna- trict court jury resumes deliber-|tional law practice from Wash-! bonds stolen in a $3,350,000 Ca-| alleged activities of the three de. city-owned hospital nadian bank burglary fendants in November of 1958,| The seven deaths were being The case was given to thejafter Credit Suisse, a bank in/investigated by state, local and jury at 6:20 p.m. Monday after|Basel, Switzerland, complained|hospital authorities. Dr. Jason| days { : MK as ays sight Papi defence and government law-'to Rosden that some bonds|K. Moyer, hospital medical di- olay gd peacg yers had concluded their clos: pledged as loan security had/rector, said one of the babies mon table salt," a physician ange Rec oa tet _Mannarino's lawyer, Vincent) "We are not sure whether so- tical nurse questioned about|border guards Saturday night Se a Casey, saia witnesses had estab-|dium intoxication (salt poison-| salt found in a sugar can in the|"passed a. bad night" at the n ov otel lished alibis for Mannarino for|ing) was responsible for these|formula room, has denied any|East German hospital in Pots- : On trial are George Rosden, those dates when the govern-| deaths," oyer told a press con-| wrongdoing. She is the mother| dam where he 54, of Sumner, Md.; William Ra-/ment had contended he was in-|'erence Monday night, He said of three 'children and is preg- treatment bin, 53, of Chicago, and Sam volved in stolen Deng dealings.'the cause of the deaths will not nant spokesman said here. tered bank loans would jeopar-|liams nor Warring P. Clarke of| | his Gian denis atin called | e Doctors Fight loans to investment companies|association's statement that Ca-| |throughout the country. ations today in the case of three! ington, D.C. mula, including the four in crit- ing arguments before Judge been identified as part of the|that died had not been fed the said. Mannarino, 64, of New Kensing- i a SEES scribed by the government. in able doubt." searchlight on allegations of!a hideout here. it's no secret that bookmaking | of the Ontario New Democratic tended, who was a "'jack-of-all| Suess -- and the commissioner) These charges have come|least a complete lack of liaison|ing formation of the royal com- tario connections with interna-\refused such a demand for department was getting $800 a'No. 2 is to be an inquiry into tad dus tor Glad a Wow Forni ML meat. ay Mr. Wintermeyer was threat-|concerns crime generally in Wintermeyer some fairly well-known CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 the Brockville, Ont., Trust and which we all live." royal commission on crime, set|A Detroit man operating|clubs, the record shows that/been no suit so far. connections with the underworld Mr. Justice W. D. Roach of the starter, it intends to look into|ment jret out possible contributions government lawyers alleged, de-|Walk across the field and miss|in the legislature that goaded|Of a provincial police under-| port. slammed }many-tentacled Mafia gambling operations but also gation may have been stopped|eraj" concerning terminations Savings Company. The trial be- gan Jan. 15. The defendants were de A defence lawyer claimed:|UP to probe a possible network| with United States narcotics of-\there have been fla iola-| . ; C 1 ¢ vit § § r | P grant viola- The government has failed to of big-time operations in thej|ficials was shot to death anditions of law. Some of the most| ASKS INDEPENDENT PROBE make a case beyond a reason-|Province, will first turn thelhis girl friend's throat cut in/notorious of these clubs (and| Donald C. MacDonald, leader in Montreal Ontario Court of Appeal starts) suggestions of irregularities on) 2. Failure of the attorney-|from racketeers to pcdsécal Mannarino got in touch with|hearings here March 20. When|the part of Ontario government! general's department to act on|party funds. Rabin, the government con-|they will end is anybody's/ officials. police reports "'indicates at the) Premier Robarts, in announc- scribing Rabin as "the interna something." new Premier John Robarts into|COver man an entry that inti-| The commissioner was given tional lawyer who provided the The field could be a big one. setting up the commission after)mated an unnamed "senior of-|three terms of reference. First entry to international finance."|There have been charges of On-|predecessor Leslie Frost had/ficial" of the attorney-general's|he is to look into social clubs. ALLEGE BRIBERY stuck harpoons into the govern- 0" ioe mae Attorney-Gen-/of investigations, suppression of Bribery of police has been|Ment directly by accusing some sg an al age be Page evidence or payments of alleged 'in court. A Toronto(Ufmamed government officials general hotly denied this. |money. The other reference merstate wanworaion «= CRIME PROBE STARTS MARCH 20 closing arguments as examples Government lawyers described "?On8doing within the govern-' The rough stuff will be taken|goes on in some) had not been|Party, chipped in with a sug- trades who had a lust for power 1S Ot guessing: primarily from Opposition between the attorney - generaljmission Dec. 12, said his gov- tional narcotics and gambling! months. month from gamblers. any improper relationships be- oe a ME casts cual MAO We led ened with a $1,000,000 libel suit/the province and the capability inter-state transportation of se H i t G t F i S of "daring and deceit with ut- Mannarino as the source for the ™ent itself. up as the last part of the royal|properly investigated by the) gestion that independent in- power and money." Rabin in. | We won't drag it out," he|Leader John Wintermeyer, and/and the provincial secretary."|ernment will take any action |syndicates involving money in| mr. Mr. Wintermeyer also sug-\tween "senior officials of the by one man he mentioned if he|of Jaw enforcement a oi |found slain and partially burned} 1. On the govérnment's han- } gencien 10 curities stolen May 3, 1958, from ter contempt for the laws under' TORONTO (CP) -- Ontario's,in a field near Rochester, N.Y.jdling of charters to "social"|the House. He did so. There has stolen bonds through his alleged. The one-man commission of commission's inquiry. For thelattorney - general's depart-|Vestigations are needed to fer- jurn made contact with Rosden, | Said, "but I don't intend to just|jt was a speech of his Noy. 29| 3. He quoted from the diary|necessary as a result of its re- jthe multi-millions, and with the oyt at gested the undercover investi-\legal staff of the attorney-gen- would make his speech outside|deal with it. arly in north Sarnia, where|is "a significant advance on the there are no storm sewers, and| present agreement," Acting Ag- in Sarnia Township -- pumps|riculture Minister Churchill said were used to reduce street ponds}Monday in the Commons. down phase of their peace talks today with an agreement appar- jently still one or two days away.| | One informant in touch with ldifferences to bridge before) |could sign a cease-fire. ; | The French news agency AFP} reported Monday night that the! cease-fire would be signed to- day. But the informant said it definitely would not be. He added that it may come Thurs- lay or the following day but re- fused to make any hard pre- diction. Reliable sources said one of the points still not settled is the role of the Algerian nationalist troops in the interim period be- tween a cease-fire and indepen- dence. The negotiators have agreed to recruit a Moslem "local force' that will be under the control of the provisional gov- ernment which is to take over for that period. The force would help maintain law and order, and the French army, French riot troops and gendarmerie to back up the local force. Flooding Forces Out 7 Families BUFFALO (AP) -- Firemen evacuated seven families from} ; their homes Monday night after flooding put one section of the hamlet under in nearby Elma] * three feet of water. | Melting' snow and ice and} heavy spring rains sent Buffalo Creek over its banks, flooding cellars and knocking out ea tric power and furnaces. The runoff from melting snow and ice also caused extensive flooding of backyards and base- is undergoing| the progress of negotiations said)ments in the London district. a British Army|the two sides still had several] At Port Stanley on Lake Erie's north shore, Omar Be- ~|France and the Moslem rebels|chard and his family evacuated their home when a foot of water from the flooding Kettle Creek spilled over their floors. The agreement announced last week in Geneva, Mr. Churchill said, parliament will be asked to ratify it this session. He said that for the first.time all major wheat suppliers, in- cluding Russia, attended the six- week meeting in Geneva to work out a new agreement to replace the present Interna- stream's rise was blamed on an ice jam. tional Wheat Agreement which expires July 31. , Ross and Murray, Claremont and a daughter re- siding in Toronto. A third vehicle was involved in the accident, Police stated, when it attempted to make a left-hand turn at Fairport Beach road. The Tyndales have two sons, living in It was the first traffic fatal- ity in Pickering Township this year. There were six in 1961 and six in 1960. DEATH CAR WRECKAGE r ~--Oshawa Times ,Phote t § a!