Oshawa Times (1958-), 14 Apr 1962, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY Many wives have just one extra- vagance -- they love to spend money. Ohe Oshawa Times WEATHER REPORT Cool tonight, mainly sunny Sun- day with seasonable tempera- tures, Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy VOL. 91--NO. 89 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, APRIL 14, 1962 Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash, TWENTY-TWO PAGES | | | | IDOL OF YOUNG SKATERS | 1962 ice show | day night when he returned to the Ot- beginning Fri- tawa Minto Club, where he skated while attending high | school. He stars in the club's Don Jackson of Oshawa, world men's singles figure skating champion, was mob- Seaway Tie-Up Ended As Pilots Okay Pact OTTAWA (CP) -- Pilots werejtlement and the 6 a.m. resump- Their walkouts had been set' for to return to their posts today tion of normal duties midnight aboard ships in the St. Law- One oft he first vessels ex- The rence River, ending a walkout pected to be freed was the Ca- ting up a federal commission to that tied up shipping on the nadian Pacific liner Empress of inquire into the entire pilotage busy waterway between Mont-/pritain, idle in Montreal since Situation in Canada. Details of real and Quebec for eight days April 6 for lack of a pilot. Most/the proposed commission have The back-to-work order was'of her original 900 passengers|not yet been worked out signalled Friday night following were flown by chartered plane| Other features, meeting conclusion of an agreement be-'or made other arrangements to/of the pilots' original demands, tween the striking pilots and reach Europe include shipping companies, with Tran- An upward income adjust- sport Minister Balcer playing a AVERTS OTHER STRIKES ment for pilots in the Quebec key mediating role. Friday night's settlement also|Montreal (River). Montreal Telegrams were sent to the averted threatened sympathy!Harbor, and Cornwai districts, 278 Federation of St. Lawrence/strikes today by pilots at Saint/a revision of the method of cal Pilots notifying them of the set-'John, N.B., and Vancouver.' culating earnings, and an agree-| ree os oe ~™ ment by the pilots to seek no increase in fees for the next jthree years; | Provision for four additional jpilots on the Quebec-Montreal | }section; training of pilots in the} |Cornwall and Kingston dist ricts; | jand abandonment of a transport departmental proposal that pi- lots should contribute to the up- (CP) -- Technical|sites on the Columbia and even-|keep of small boats used for evidence to back his charge tually into the U.S. among the ship-to-shore travel that the Columbia River treaty international river 'FAIR SETTLEMENT' is a sellout to the Ll nited States MENTIONS REMARKS iter BHaléer ganoanae was made public Friday by ' He . sages ease 4.laeresment to-reporters -aaid Gen. A. G. L. McNaughton e pinned his statement Fri- ag : are Regen i day on remarks attributed to the circumstances it was a fair The development plan chosen justice Minister Fulton in Al-|settlement." for the 60-year treaty signed ota . Andre Bedard. president of January, 1961, would cost $264, . s : -.-.4.7ithe pilots' federation, com- 200,000 more in Canadian-U.S Mr. Fulton, head of ¢ anada's mented "'we are happy with it" construction and provide Cana- treaty negovating team, was though the increases. were not dian power at costs ti to quoted as saying the McNaugh- as high as originally sought. No nearly four times ton formula would have meant figures were released 'of the fee unit than in the U.S., said the 4 better treaty for Canada but increases for the pilots, who retiring Canadian chairman of that B.C. wishes had to be met. now earn an average $12,000 a the International Joint Commis-| "I am glad to have Mr. Ful-' year. sion. ton's statement... that he de-|" The Shipping Federation of An 800-word statement reiter- ferred to views of the govern-|Canada said it would co-operate ated the line of testimony he Ment of B.C.," said the gen-\a; Mr, Balcer considered the gave in 1959 and 1960 the eral. "It is my view that the settlement in the national inter- Commons external affairs com- People of Canada should now be ost, and welcomed the decision mittee. told the heavy cost that Fulton'tg set up an inquiry commis- it ois ie nialor has thereby imposed on Can- sjon: | from the general since his crit ada The shipping officials said, icism last week that he had He said he was irked by his\however, they maintained their been retired at 75 on a decision '@ tire ment announced twoloriginal stand in connection "arbitrarily made by a dicta- Weeks ago by Prime Minister/wth the walkout. Thev had de- tor' and that he had dissociated Diefenbaker and effective Sun- ¢lined to meet with pilot nego- himself from the treat the day, because he had worked for/tiators until the men returned start of high-level negotiations 12. years on the Columbia. He\to work on the grounds the early in 1960. said he was being relieved of an walkout was an "illegal strike." : appointment "in an attempt to'. The pilots, prohibited by law CALLS FOR DAMS throttle . objections to a very/from striking, held a continuous The treaty calls anada damaging arrangement with the!pilots' meeting to discuss their to build three storage dams in government of B.C. and a con- demands as the pretext for the British Columbia. Their cost)sequential disaster to Canada." | work stoppage would be $344,000,000, with the U.S. returning half the extra power generated from the con trolling action on the Colum bia's seasonal fluctuations The treaty --CP Wirephoto settlement calls for set- many Treaty Sellout Charge Renewed OTTAWA the in greater per to first word for ( has been ratified by the U.S. but Canadian fication has been delayed federal-B.C. differences The McNaughton plan. based on initial recommendations in 1959 by the International Joint Commission, would wipe out the controversial High Arrow Dam on the Columbia and eliminate the equally-controversal Libby Dam in Montana The Libby would back water more than 40 miles into Canada along the Kootenay River, a tri- butary of the Columbia. The U.S, secured a five-year option to build it after B.C. vetoed alternative measures of provid- ing U.S. flood control Gen. McNaughton would di- vert the Kootenay into the nearby headquarters of the Co- Jumbia in southeastern B.X. so that more water would pour through ° Canadian generating rati by OTTAWA (CP) -- A private liament Hill is that election day 35-minute talk between Prime|will be' Monday, June 18. ne 9 tage em _ me If that is the case, Parliament eral Leader Pearson has shed would have to be dissolved no new light on when the na-|within the next seven days be- ei beh gone sai ere cause of the need for a mini-| ve two party leaders talked) mum of 57 days advance notice gala eg" solic go to put election maduinets into a r ee 0 operation, vl prime: minister's office Frt- _The Commons is expected to Top speculaton was that the rise Wednesday for the start of prime minister had invited Mr ithe Peer tecess. . Dissolution Pearson in order to give him could come then or in the Ly an advance tip on when Parlia- bid eee reel anne 10g ment will be dissolved and when ie voRny dae voting day will be. This kind of , News of the Diefenbaker- prior information has been Pearson meeting spread rap- given opposition leaders before. idly through Commons corri- But neither party leader con-/40TS, and by the time they} firmed that this had happened.|°™erged from the prime min- One report was that Mr. Dief-|!Ster's office, laughing and enbaker hadn't committed him-| Shaking hands, a crowd of re- self firmly to a date porters awaited them. In any event, Parliament and Said Mr. Pearson: "the-prime the country may know next minister and I have had a very | week, Mr. Diefenbaker told the/interesting talk on international Commons earlier Friday that/affairs, on Commonwealth mat- he hoped to be in a position to|ters and what can be done be- indicate Parliament's immed-'fore the end of the session." jiate future early next week Said Mr. Diefenbaker General expectation on Par-jagree entirely with bs CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 od the sum-| / Leaders' Talk Sheds No Light On Election ig Steel ompanies ack Down | WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pres-;ing whether the anti-trust laws dent Kennedy's victory over big|need strengthening. steel left him clothed today! "The penitent shall with vast new influence to| punished," Celler said, shape the economy of the) 4 Senate anti-monopoly sub-|-------- United States. | committee headed by Senator} D not be The steel giants bowed one bY Estes Kefauver (Dem. Tenn.) one Friday io a massive, three-| 51.4 wit) go ahead with steel| day government drive forcing|hearings. A spokesman said: | them to cancel $6-a-ton _ in| "We're interested in the monop-| creases announced late Tues-| qv situation of all those price day. jincreases one after another The nder under furious|This hasn't changed now that Kennedy attack was a public|there has been an equally quick spectacle unlikely to rye! od reversal." ten soon by industrial leaders ; ae hee a try at breaching| CANCELS INCREASE -- - --o ~ Loepagghir. the administration rules for| The surrender parade was|its foundadons al pide ei wage-price stability signalled by 'Inland 'Steel's de-/Siaken oy inter ena nat The president, after denounc- Cision. not to eataaa leet tage Then| Bs e "ies the hanes of ing the price boosts touched oft| Bethlehem Steel, No. 2 in the i eB all . tahor Congress by. the industry - leading U.S. angustey Aid heavily anvolved a ey t 'cadet ge pek-long na- Steel Corporation unleashed the government ship-bullding, cane al Keer te fa ia e Friday full brunt of government retal- celled ita 'previously amournced mys ge i "tee were liatory power to force a cancel-|" om then on it was a rout |1,166 trade unionist registered | lation. i cha : -onventi ie hes at ty Cand with U.S. Steel tossing in the|at the convention and they had Sates are most gratified,' Ken- towel. It said at couldn't stand nedy said on learning that ma- alone and wanted to saica china jor steel producers had re-| S¢tious obstacle to proper rela- versed their decisions. He was| pons ibe | Lt clans denn bers for ust starting an inspection of ae: ee, Sette ee ore! Party in a inate Pleat piaeneevee U.S. Steel board chairman] ( 2" oS 0 i Roger M. Blough said at a tele- lige vag ll-out war on corrupt ORDERS PROBE CONTINUE |Vised press conference in New Causal fs comaiy «dill The president's brother, At-|York that his firm would stick nated cinions ; torney - General Kennedy, al-|to its higher prices. eae major membership cam- though also elated at the ad-| Labor Secretary Arthur is : : J. paign, co-ordinated by the CLC ministration victory, ordered Goldberg -- one of the chieflon a long-term basis, to enlist full speed ahead on the New otk federal 1j ti Kennedy lieutenants in bringing)more than 500,000 white - collar ork federal grand jury investi- : : workers in the ranks of organ- gation into the price increases.|{he steel industry around-- ized labor. : He said the price cancellation went: secretly to New York to A special. study by will not have any effect" on|talk turkey to Blough. CLC Executive Council on the the probe : The arsenal of weapons the|"problem of jurisdiction dis- Similarly, two congressional president wheeled into his all-/putes and their solution by ar- committe, said they would/out economic foray against the|bitration and other methods." surre VANCOUVER (CP) The 1. "Fullest possible support" Democratic federal New coming the the the | | | to the Ont.| being | . ' Terrorists Protest General's Death ALGIERS (AP) A general strike paralized Algiers today as Europeans answered a call of the terrorist Secret Army for a shutdown to protest the death sentence imposed on former Gen. Edmond Jouhaud, former Secret Army chief in western Algeria. All stores, restaurants and bars in down- town Algiers closed. Reds Can't Be Trusted, Dief Agrees OTTAWA (CP) -- Prime Minister Diefenbaker today en- dorsed the Western view that Russia's word cannot be trust- ed in a nuclear test ban without international control and in- spection, "'Any unpoliced test ban treaty would be dangerous to the survival of the Western world," he said carry out plans for investiga-|big business leaders was an| These were the highlights of Celler (Dem. N.Y.) said, how-| termined political and economic| vention, which also made deci- ever, the House of Representa-| if ever before|sions on a multitude of topics, committee) employed by a USS. would engage in more of alment. Every major govern-jternatonal issues, housing, im-| study than an with the purpose of determin-'act, cation, taxes and trade. JODOIN RE-ELECTED e Kennedy Hailed eset ja-year president of the con- gress. He defeated Gordon) ja member of the Auto Workers} Union, by a vote of 695 to 152.) WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pres- the president exerts his lead- Mr. Jodoin since he became personal prestige and put Re-|the people using the prestige of |; i 'eating Ae : ' tion in 1956. publicans on the political de-|the government of the United} The convention also re-elected phe jena big steel's price feat." $ executive vice-president. é Kennedy's enhanced prestige! Joe Morris, western chief of gge: | 2 ies LS 5 a a "7 7 . i j biggest companies, U.S. Steeli\Democrats who rallied vigor-|of America, was picked for the| fe ol ya ais ie denounced the price increase} yjce presidency, succeeding é ; S€/after steel had signed what was former CCF parliamentarian elements of public opinion and! w- act wi : | ; threats of eiatctan" tt pact with the Steelwork-|out to fight in the next federal ers Union. election under the NDP banner. major companies fell in line| themselves, along with the pres- ie presidential pressure. little man who would have been| From this successful battle/hit in the pocket by price in- emerged with a newly-estab-|jinkeq to a steel cost rise B I b k lished reputation as a dragon] Republicans didn't like" y ce rea er odore Roosevelt. have on the fall congressional|(CE) -- The icebreaker Alex FEW CAN COMPETE elections. Many of them felt/@74er Henry was due to arrive ' th ri " iness'" tao |rior's Whitefish Bay, where she president summons all the} em with a "big business tag. will try to free two icebound|} means at his command--as| acTION EMBARRASSING us ance-- Lines. few can compete with him in they had been politically em- gee ships Friday night after drop-| fairs. ig es , Steel executives who went along|ping all lightkeepers on Lamb, Senator Hubert H. Humphrey | without price increases for two 7 ; 5 The icebound vessels are the mocratic leader, said the out-|president Eisenhower but chose|bulk carrier Georgian Bay, re- come "underscores that when/tg tect the power of a Demo- Taconite, Minn., and the pack Republican leaders tried to nomic and not a political mat-|tons of merchandise. ter. They said Kennedy. admin-| The ships' way was a steel price rise, posed the In addition to the Henry, the biggest danger of inflation. Lakehead - based light tender lrefused to go along with the;ernment-is in operation putting) mary of the leader of the Op- Price increase. Instead, they) Arthur main light. Its next duty| position." \fired away at Kennedy's tac.|will be placement of lights and and reporters |pursued Mr. rearson with more 'haan ibeiee atte! LATE NEWS FLASHES had talked about the election, | declined to say whether the! any dates, aia closed off fur-| had been a personal talk and| that any further statements government. | "I wouldn't want to betray! Earlier in the Commons, Har- old Winch (CCF -- Vancouver to say for the convencience of MPs from distant constituencies solution next week or merely an! Easter recess of the present ses- tions. Chairman Emanuel/ awesome display of coldly de-|policies endorsed by the con- 4 ! s |power seldom tives judi ciary govern-jincluding economic policy, in- investigation, mental department got into the Migration, social security, edu- Claude Jodoin, the burly bi- jreal, was re-elected as $16,000- ' bed , gee a | ragon 1 er Lambert of St. Catharines, Ont. It was the first ballot test for} ident Kennedy has increased his|ership and puts the facts before | president at the CLC's forma-! fensive with a smashing break-'States, he is difficult to de-|William Dodge of Ottawa as The action Friday by the two|seemed likely to Pay off for|the International Woodworkers and Bethlehem, in rescinding alorously to his cause when he/other $13,000-a - year executive| power play that combined the regarded as a non-inflationary|staniey Knowles who dropped Like a row of dominoes, other! The Democrats could picture after Bethlehem toppled under ident, as the champion of the Shi N d Aid with big business Kennedy|creases in consumer goods killer of the school of one of/think about the . impac his favorite predecessors, The-| president's hon Bong : SAULT STE. MARIE, | s g Democrats would try to plaster/2t 00n today in Lake Supe- He demonstrated that when a ' ry plaster ; oes 'irr ships of Canada _ Steamship} Kennedy did int his instance--| There was little doubt. that ' A } The icebreaker headed for the the market of the country's af- barrassed by the action of big ; oe ; . Slate and Battle islands. of Minnesota, acting Senate De-!vars under former Republican ported bound for iron ore at cratic. president and lost. tab the controversy as an eco- ing to the Lakehead with 5,200 istration spending, rather than! barred by windrowed ice. With some exceptions, they|Nokomis of the Canadian gov-| Democrats in condemning the|personnel on duty at the Port| They parted, tics. buoys at the Lakehead. questions. that he and the prime minister prime minister had mentioned! ther questioning by saying it would have io come from the confidences in any way." East) asked the prime minister whether there would be a dis- sion. New French Government Being Formed PARIS (Reuters) Premier Michel Debre resigned along with the test of his cabinet today, way for the appointment of his successor, Georges Pompidou, by President Charles de Gaulle. Pompidou was running into trouble in forming a new government "I hope, early in the week, to be able to make a statement| that will answer the question in the fullest detail," Mr. Diefen- baker replied. r formally paving the elegates Back New Party voted overwhelmingly in favor | 4 by trade unions and their mem- { age freighter Fort Henry, head-!$390 000,000 a year into direct} NUCLEAR ARMS RAGE EXPECTED | Russian Premier Vows To Match West's Tests MOSCOW (AP) -- The stage;tests are necessary to Amer- was set today for a nuclear |ican security because the Rus- arms race as Premier Khrush-|sians made gains in their series chevy vowed to match Westernjof more than 50 nuclear blasts s|nuclear tests blast for blast--/last fall. junderwater, underground, in the] At the 17-nation disarmament atmosphere, even in space. conferences in Geneva, Britain Khrushchev has rejected al/also spoke of what it called the last-chance appeal from Presi-|Soviet nuclear weapons advan- dent Kennedy and Prime Min-|tage gained from the Soviet ister Macmillan to accept a/tests last fall. The British said F |controlled end to nuclear testing|then they were willing to let the 'jand head off American tests|Soviet Union keep this advan- |scheduled for later this monthjtage if it accepted a cheat- lin the Pacific. proof test ban treaty. '| Kennedy and Macmillan had} Khrifshchey also sounded asked Khrushchev in a state-|what appeared to be another {ment earlier this week. to re-| call for a summit meeting on jconsider the Soviet refusal to|disarmament, declaring "I accept any form of interna-|would be willing to travel any- tional controls within a test-ban|where at any time to sign a treaty. |treaty on general and complete Khrushchev's answer, in a/isarmament." i i jnote distributed by the Soviet} Western leaders have rejected vat |news agency Tass and a ged gpa ig a. ig wooed i cast by Moscow radio, said the|calls on the grounds that lower CLAUDE JODOIN Soviet Union cannot accept the/level negotiators must show 5 win ' Western plan because Russia|some progress before a meeting be wee a. refuses to permit "'unhampered/of heads of state promised to clamation as secretary - treas-|intelligence" over its territory.|bear fruit. urer at $14,000 a year. Instead, Khrushchev urged the As full-time officers, the four) Western powers to show, more men will have the task of try-|trust in the Soviet Union and ing to patch up what appears accept its proposals for an un-} US. Proposes to be an irreconcilable internal|Policed test-ban treaty. one ss Fresh Berlin quarrel between the IWA and|Wise, he declared, "the imple- | Parley Ideas the United Brotherhood of Car-|mentation of your declared de- | WASHINGTON (AP) -- The penters and Joiners, second-|cision to hold tests compels us largest affiliate of the congress|to sh and hold tests of our with 64,600 members: nuclear weapons. "And in the future your hold- CARPENTERS WALK OUT ing of nuclear weapon tests un- The Carpenters Brotherhood/der ground or in the atmos-|United States is reported to stalked out of the CLC conven-|phere, in space or under water,/ have put before its Western al- tion Wednesday and appeared|will force the Soviet Union tol lies four sweeping ideas for pos- headed toward a self-imposed/hold tests of its own nuclear|sble U.S. - Soviet negotiations exile outside the mainsteam of/weapons so that the defence (of/on Berlin--including a proposal organized labor. |the Soviet bloc) . . . would be/for creation of an international The walkout --_ staged in/at an appropriate level." Prgeo to operate West Ber- rotest against what the Car-| i i rticipa- ate ya garded as unfair | HITS ns criapet vege «th (Her Ne ies Coleen "gre treatment by CLC officers) in} rusnchev asserte e} a 'in, their dispute over the right to|Western powers were prompted| ,, The three prea By so er represent Newfoundland Log-|by a desire to establish mili-|, ; lide thie week's a gers. tary superiority over the Soviet adit a oe 'ah "ee Pa aia The price of peace in labor's|Union. But to Western leaders| Orth Ru aL vit a family appeared to be agree-|Khrushchev's interpretation of) Fibaena stig ia aiadatiys ment by the Carpenters union|"an appropriate level" likely| 4, iaratians b tia. Noth Ate to a "properly conducted vote"|means an advantage over the| rantic Treaty Aiihanics and the among the loggers to find out) West. hoo epee yhich union they want. Kennedy has said the u.s, | Communist Warsaw Pact toge- stuns sine ee rats : a ther with guarantees against violation by either side of ex- isting borders and boundary lines on the cold war frontiers in Europe. 2. An agreement among the ° nuclear powers not to sup- ply nuclear weapons to any country not now possessing them. 3. Establishment of commit- tees of East and West Germans to deal with practical problems arisng between the two Ger- i i f | I / Better Mortgage Deals Proposed TORONTO (CP)--Three sep-jurged not only by Mr. Camp- arate pleas for federal action|bell but also by Gairdner and| to stimulate private housing in-) Company of Toronto, and the vestment in Canada were made/Ontario Urban Development In-|man states. Friday to the royal commission|stitute, the latter comprising a} State Secretary Dean Rusk is on banking and finance, |group of town planners and sub-|scheduled to begin a new se- Proposals. generally were|division engineers. ries of Berlin talks here Mon- aimed at making residential) Gairdner and Company rec-|day with Soviet Ambassador mortgages a better deal for pri-}ommended that the Bank Act|Anatoly Dobrynin. _ : vate investors, getting the com-|be changed to allow chartered! The Berlin situation is ex- mercial banks back into the|banks to finance NHA mort-|pected to be discussed by Pres- mortgage business, and improv-/ages in the same manner as|ident Kennedy and Prime Min- ing the secondary market in|they finance bonds, and that\ister Macmillan when they con- which mortgages can be bought/b>anking 'arrangements' |fer here and at Kennedy's es- and sold. |made to help dealers in mort-|tate in Virginia the weekend of Behind these ideas was the|8®8°S- |April 28-29. portrait of the. federal govern- ment as potentially the biggest jlandlord in Canada, since it has jbeen putting $250,000,000 to lending for houses to fill the gap left by reluctant private in- vestors. John .R. Campbell, Toronto lawyer and mortgage expert, said that unless this reluctance is overcome by making Na- tional Housing Act mortgages more attractive, private invest-| ment cannot keep pace with Canada's prospective housing demand over the next 10 years. MUST DROP OUT Of the 76 companies and in- stitutions designated by the gov- ernment as approved lenders under NHA, Mr. Campbell said, only four or five now are con- tinuing such lending "in any real volume." | Efforts to develop the second- ary mortgage market were | Snow Wipes Out Signs Of Spring | CHICAGO (AP)--Early signs] of spring were blotted out by a| mantle of new snow over a| large section of the United) States today. Some was added during the night in the lower Great Lakes jregion, the upper Ohio Valley, | the Appalachians and northern New England. More than three inches fell at Limestone and Ca-| rikou. Me LOOK MA, NO HANDS ggg of Coral Gables, Fla, The camera stopped the ball's 'flight after Laver hit a back hand Rod Laver of Australia, top-seeded player in the ten- nis tournament at Houston, | seems to be eating the ball during a match }with Frank (AP Wirexhoto)

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