2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdey, April 26, 1962 Union Of Christians Aim Of Vatican II ROME (AP)--Augustine Car- dinal Bea said Wednesday the Roman Catholic Church's forthcoming ecumenical council hopes to give impetus to the eventual union of all Christians. Cardinal Bea, head of the council's Secretariat for Chris- tian Unity, said that such a un- ion--bringing together 900,000,- 000 of the world's population-- would have immense weight upon the solution of interna- tional problems, especially that of peace. The 80-year-old prelate spoke to the Foreign Press Associa- tion in Rome about the council, matters of the (Roman Catho- lic) church. "It also wishes to prepare-- even though far in the future-- for the union of all baptized persons, all Christians. "What would such a union mean for humanity?" ANSWERS QUESTION Cardinal Bea, who has been instrumental in arrangements for the visits made to Pope John by other Christian lead- ers, answered his own question in this manner: "Imagine and try to weigh what it would mean for human- ity if all Christians acted com- wh ich opens at the Vatican Oct) 11 } | Preparations for the council, to be known as Vatican II, have been in progress for nearly three years. The council will bring to the Vatican represen- tatives of the church from all parts of the world. In addition representatives of other Chris- tian faiths are expected to at- tend as observers. "The importance of the coun- cil," said Cardinal Bea, "'be- comes more clear when one considers that it will not be limited exclusively to internal Japanese Cotton To Canada Rises OTTAWA (CP)--Japan_ will) pletely united in the questions of nuclear arms, of disarma- ment and of peace." Cardinal Bea _ emphasized, however, that christian unity would require many years to achieve. Cardinal Bea described the recent visits of Protestant lead- ers to Pope John as meetings a government seeking to establish "more pa-} However, DRAMATIC RESCUE OF THREE PEOPLE export slightly more controlled|source said quotas have been cotton textile products to Can-|increased only where it was felt ada this year, Finance Minister|that a boost in Japanese im- Fleming announced Wednesday.|ports could be accommodated This was the scene in the "The road," 'he said, "cer-| Gulf of Georgia near Vancouv- tainly is long, but at least a| er just after a rescue lifeboat start has been made."' | from the ferry Princess of cific and serene relations." Vancouver took two men and a woman off a sinking fish boat, The fishboat, the Geor- gia, was swamped by high (CP)--A_unior spokesman said Wednesday thc end of Quebec's big truckin; strike is in sight but a state ment by management wa: couched in terms much less op timistic. Teamsters lawyer Phil Cutle: said a settlement has beer reached with another of th firms and he expects the other: will fall into line shortly. But a conflicting statemen: 'came from the Motor Transpori and Industrial Relations Bureau 'epresenting the carriers. Rob- ert E, Cureton, chairman of the bureau's negotiation committee, 'aid the committee still plans 'o meet here Friday with two dera! conciliation officers ap- pointed by Labor Minister arr, Mr. Cureton also said the committee plans to continue criminal court prosecutions 'aunched earlier against the un- on and several of its officers. Complaints filed by three of the strikebound firms contend the strike is illegal' and the union officials have been ordered to appear in court May 1. ALSO FILES ACTION seas and can be seen going down. The three clung to the sinking boat for 1% hours be- | fore being picked up. A dog was lost in the sinking. (CP Wirephoto) Mr. Cutler said meanwhile that a damage action against bureen ana Mr, Cureton has been filed by Rod Hayes, presi- } | | ; sseieeay 8 comfortably by Canada. see genliao Fem oapesy om The 1962 quotas for controlled agreed to "orderly increases in quotas on Japanese radio and television tubes, plywood and rubber-soled canvas-type foot- wear. have} z »|Japanese imports were agreed jments. These restraints, in the |form of voluntary export quotas upon following lengthy trade talks between the two govern- applied by Japan, were started Fund Given Mr. Fleming's announcement} represents a relaxation of re- straints on imports of these several years ago to prevent |flooding of parts of the Cana- jdian market with certain low- jeost Japanese goods. {BROADEN CONTROLS In the major field of textiles, controls have been broadened in goods from Japan. imported from Japan. |tile items have been brought! At Conference | Sex Over-Rated ithe last three years to cover Mr. Fleming said that in the under quota control. | WATERLOO, Ont. (CP)--Sex, the cotton fabric quota has been! nearly all main textile items Teen-Agers Say 1962 arrangement no new tex- However, a sub-quota within! while presenting a problem to|introduced in order to put a| most teen-agers, is over-rated, /limitation on shipments of dyed|from 1,500 centres. that took/nied being paid $2,000 to get her as a group of teen-agers decided corduroy. Imports of this prod-| Wednesday. uct will be limited in 1962 to! This was the decision of 115|1,740,000 square yards. | delegates to the Ontario-Quebec| One item -- cotton damask| teens conference following a lecture by Arlette Pederson, as- sistant to the president of Wa- terloo Lutheran University. In a summary of the pro! lems faced by teen-agers as from quota control. Along with orderly increases| in quotas for rubber-soled can- p.|Vas-type footwear, radio and| television receiving tubes and ite |plywood, there also will be a poe dl gp maa the dele |small increase in the quota for 7 Hee jtransistor radios, and it will be Girls want a definite answer| expanded to include all transis- on how far they should go in|tor radios and with three trans- petting."" Most teen-agers rea-listors or more, including fre-| oye roa A appara but feel quency lratgapennaecl eet multi-| i . wave sets, combination sets Teen-agers don't like to differjand other specialty types. from the standards set by their! group and find it hard not to} conform, Parents' limitations on| | FLOATING BOOST jcheque for $310,000, most of it) $310,000 | UNITED NATIONS (CP)--A | | | TORONTO (CP)--In almost a collected in Hallowe'en outings) last year, was presented to the United Nations children's fund) Wednesday by the children of|¢ : : Canada. day of getting romantic atten- The cheque was turned over|tions from gambling boss Vin- to the international organization) cent by 16-year-old Rosanne Rich-|pecting husband was a corporal man of Brooks, Alta., and 10-)on the provincial police anti- year-old Joel Thayer of Sault}gambling squad. Ste. Marie, Ont. They repre-| Her voice was strong and sented some 350,000 children|clear, however, when she de- Peterborough told the royal part in the campaign. husband to leave the squad for Mrs. Adelaide Sinclair, a Ca-| another police post. nadian who is deputy director) Mrs, Gladys Shrubb followed of UNICEF, received the/nor husband into the witness! 18th-floor conference hall at UN) three days of cross-examination headquarters, The Canadian ambassador to); stimony about the UN, charles S. A. Ritchie,|itween ov: welcomed the two children and} said he was pleased that the) children of Canada, in the in-| terests of world understanding,| had raised such a_ substantial) reall |something former OPP eyed 2 $50 000/Stable Robert Wright told un > beg | Const. George Scott more than last year's contribu-| COVE! agent sold tion--amounted 'to almost half|!™ ® Toronto tavern in 1960, the $63,000 contributed by the| Wright, along with Feeley Canadian government for 1961,)and gambler Joseph McDer- Mrs. Gordon Richard, chair-|mott, recently was sentenced to man of Canada's national|/18 months for conspiring to ob- associations and political and police official-| | quired con-| der-| Feeley while her unsus-| their activities should be dis-| cussed, reasoned out and based) upon the teen-agers' maturity.. | Drinking is not much of a problem since it usually arises! at "dull parties." | The conference ends Friday. ROME (AP)--Italy hopes to orbit a 200-pound research sat- ellite from a platform floating in the Indian Ocean in 1963. It would be Italy's first satellite, and would relay to earth data on air density variations caused by solar radiations. |UNICEF committee, at-| jtended Wednesday's presenta-| ition, along with several other| members of the committee and) the parents of Rosanne and| Joel. Mrs. Sinclair was hostess at/ {a luncheon afterward. | tain information illegally from} a police officer, SITS STIFFLY Mrs. Shrubb, a trim blonde} wearing a navy silk suit and a deep cloche hat, was provided with a chair in the witness box. |She sat in it stiffly. She toyed with her pearl necklace and fidgeted with her white gloves. She said she gave no infor- mation knowingly to the dapper Feeley, was paid no money by him and quit seeing him after realizing it was '"'not the right thing to do." He kept telephoning her for another year, she added. | Mrs. Shrubb said she spoke} to her husband for the first time about the 1957 association last week, at the request of commission counsel Roland F. Wilson. Shrubb was not in the com- mission chamber while his wife WEATHER FORECAST Cloudy, Cooler During Friday Forecasts issued by the Tor-/ onto weather office at 5 a.m.:|cloudy today and Friday, snow- Synopsis: A low pressure flurries Friday little change in area moving eastward will temperatures. Winds easterly 15 bring cooler weather with scat-|to 20. tered showers to southwester Ontario Friday. Little change in temperature is expected for the Low tonight, High Friday remainder of the province. | Windsor 50 Lake St. Calir, Lake Erie,| nig oa Lake Huron, Niagara regions, |S¢° Thomas..+.++.. 50 Windsor, London, Hamilton,| London 45 Toronto: Mainly sunny and con-|Kitchener . tinuing warm today. Chance of Wingham ... a brief shower this evening. Hamilton Friday mainly cloudy and St. Catharines cooler with a few scattered Toronto ay showers. Winds southwesterly Peterborough 15 to 20 today, northeasterly 15) Trenton 2 to 20 Friday. Killaloe x Georgian Bay, Haliburton, Ti- Muskoka magami, Algoma, Sault Ste North Bay. Marie, White River regions: Sudbur. ms Bes Partly cloudy today and Friday. ariton eeoers'y ie A few scattered showers to- Kanuskasin night and Friday. Little change White Rives os in temperature. Winds easterly|Moosonee ......... 15 to 20. : Sault Ste. Marie... Lake Ontario region: Mainly|Mouynt Forest sunny today, chance of scat- Ses teerd showers, cooler. Winds Observed Temperatures | | } | | | Cochrane region: Mainly | | | | | Forecast Temperatures , |testified. Subpoenaed witnesses have been barred by commis- 'Uhilden's Shrubb's Wife Tells Probe Of Attentions By Gambler "I kept telling him not jmission. a year before the Shrubbs| jmoved to Peterborough at the} end of 1958. He kept calling her, but not so often. | "Who would he ask for when your husband was home?" ked Mr. Wilson. "He*would ask for Jack." "Did he ever pay you any oney?" She said no. m tablecloths--has been removed|cheque at a ceremony in an|nox after he had undergone| LEAVES MONEY | On one occasion, she said, he |and had provided headline-mak-|left about $40 on the table,/tound in the Jordan Club in| Municipal officials at Fort Erie labove the bill, after they had organized gambling/|unch and drinks, and left early.| Asked whether Feeley had in- about her husband's understand. Explaining the acquaintance- |ship had been a "'mistake,"' she said she felt that "if I got nasty, he's tell my husband, and if I were nice with him he's leave me alone." One of Shrubb's last pieces of evidence Wednesday was to! lagree with Liberal party coun-| {sel B, J. MacKinnon that it dent of the striking Local 106. He said the suit arises from statements Mr. Cureton made concerning Mr. Hayes. The strike started April 14 and involved 1,800 men. Eleven carriers were affected initially, She said she met him "'three;seemed the only result from a whisper, the attractive wife ofjor four times" after the intro-|long series of confidential re- Police Chief W. Jack Shrubb of|/ductory meeting. |port to superiors on police- to|gamble tieups was that some ommission on crime Wednes-|bother me," she told the com-|of the contents of these docu- iments seemed to be getting She stopped seeing him about|back to the gambling frater- nity. FIND MAGISTRATE Some other points in his evi-| cessfy) dence: Cloth Workers Upset Feared Over Japan formation leakage as Shrubb and had asked permission not to make reports to headquarters on gambling raids and antici- pated raids. 4, A "senior member of jthe attorney - general's depart- jment" (unnamed) in Septem- al '9. ber, 1958, had expressed satis-} MONTREAL (Cr)Sae te fags: jnadian Apparel and Textile arin at she pin gpg of a SUC') Mnaufacturers Association said ae raid on the Ramsey/ wednesday night more than 10,- yh ot Niagara Falls, a rival | 000 Canadian clothing workers 1, A magistrate whose name operation to the McDermott- was kept private by the com- combine. The official mission was found in companyjhad commented: "That's fine; with Joseph McDermott,|I want to tie this up for a spe- |Feeley's partner, during a raidjcial reason," which was un- on their Cooksville establish-| specified. ment in April, 1957. The same |. ELIE Aaa night, a membership card bear-/FORT ERIE MEN DENY ing the same surname was| During the day, three former Toronto during a raid while|and Bertie took the stand and that club was empty. denied knowing either McDer- ie t : dintasic mott or Feeley. They had been 2. A series of long distance) mentioned by Ontario Liberal! The mention of the $2,000 pay-| Work, she said that, if he did,/calls from a Port Credit num-|Leader John Wintermeyer, in a ment to Mrs. Shrubb arose from|he put it in words she did not| ber used by Feeley appeared to/ legislature speech last Novem- |have gone in the summer of|ber, as among those to whom| 1958 to 'their Frontier Club in|Calls had gone from the Port! Bertie Township near Fort Erie|Credit accommodation number} on nights when the club was|Used by Feeley in' 1958. | |being raided. (The club was} They were Fred House, aj |subsequently closed after re-/farmer and reeve of Bertie |peated raids by township po-/ Township at the time; Michele lice.) Tartaglia, a restaurant owner, deputy "could be displaced" this year because of a move increasing the quota on Japanese imports. A statement issued by the as- soctation's executive director }Dan Rosenbloom of montreal \described the federal govern- ment's action as "'disappoint- ing" and accused Japan of dis- regarding "the way .. . other countries are trying to bring order to international textile trade," Mr. Rosenb! om _ indicated dissatisfaction with the volun- tary quota system, saying: "Instead of allowing the Jap- anese to tell us what voluime ot clothing and textiles they will ship to Canada, the Canadian government should simply fix, for duty purposes, the value of Japanese goods at levels which would permit Canadian produc- 3. Sgt. (now inspector) Jack)@nd then Fort Erie -- Hatch at Windsor seemed to|reeve, and Lloyd C, Williams, a have the same problem of in-|businessman who was a Fort ren ------ |Erie councillor in 1958. ers to compete." He said Canada's negotiators "probably' obtained what they INTERPRETING THE NEWS consider a reasonable deal" un- der the current Canadian pol- licy. POLICL 'WRONG' All disclaimed any links with gambling clubs, and Mr. Tar- taglia said he had told Mr. Win- Canada Miffs Bri By ALAN HARVEY Canadian Press Staff Writer It will be '"'salesmanship at the summit'? when Prime Min- isters Macmillan and Diefen- baker meet in Ottawa next Monday. Two leading ministers, Dun- can Sandys and Edward Heath, have aready made pigrimages to present the British case on Europe. Macmillan is likely to find Diefenbaker a reluctant cus- jsioner Mr. Justice W. D, Roach from hearing testimony of oth- lers. _| Mrs. Shrubb told how a mu-| tual friend introduced her to Feeley. Previous evidence has| indicated that the gambler had tried to date OPP female em-| ployees. Donald Lloyd of Chatham in- troduced the two in a Toronto cocktail lounge. Lloyd, who had employed Mrs. Shrubb: as man- ager of a Chatham motel, was sitting with her when Feeley came along. | She said she did find out} what his profession was, could not remember when. She was not sure whether he was introduced at the outset by his right name. |TURNS HIM DOWN She said she turned down "'a good many" date requests from Feeley. Once she met him and "passed the time of day" with him in a department store. An- other time, she was alone in a Edmonton «+sses.05 Regina Winnipeg ......... Fort William...... S. S. Marie... White River....... Kapuskasing ...... North Bay......... SUGDULY - sscsecccss Muskoka «sessesee Windsor ... London Toronto .. ttawa ... Montreal ..... Quebec OHIO: eikécs | her for a drink. tomer, though nerhaps more ac- commodating than a few months ago. Putting things plainly, British ministers are still a little miffed about Canada's attitude toward United Kingdom membership in the European Economic Com- munity. The Whitehall view, conveyed to this reporter by a man in touch with ministerial opinion, is that official Ottawa has been "'totally negative" on the issue. BOTH HAVE REASONS Perhaps both countries have source for complaint. The Canadian government has an election coming up and is legitimately worried about what may happen to Canadian trade when Britain becomes a card- jcarrying member of the Euro- jpean club. On Britain's side, it is galling to take the painful decision about negotiating for entry into the European Common Market and then to be reproached, in newspaper reports and else- lounge and he came and joined|where, with breaking up the| |Commonwealth. argument advanced by the pro-|phone records had come from |termeyer personally his name had bez. smeared. Mr. Wil- liams said he might be able to show he was out of town on the date of the alleged call, if it were available, but it was not. Mr. House produced a letter Vi e tish jfrom Mr. Wintermeyer expres- }sing regret that he had been Perhaps the most powerfullembarassed but saying the "But the policy is wrong." He said in 1961 for every four shirts made in Canada there was one imported from Japan. For every five blouses made here there was one from Japan and there was one Japanese dian-made. Canadian producers mean- while were unable to compete because of a wide disparity in production costs. Mr. Rosenbloom said the av- erage Canadian employed in the clothing industry -- there are |some 172,000--earns $1.50 hourly or more with "some of the best fringe benefits in the world." In Japan the average wage in the European bloc is that Britain|Shrubb's files. He also said he must be strong if it is going to) had personally received two or hold the Commonwealth to-|three protests against club gether, and that it can't bejraids from Frontier employee strong without Europe. Script Mitchell--since listed as CLUB CHANGING missing and believed dead--but In this view, joining Europe|4lways had referred him to the is seen as an act of loyalty, a/Police commission. : more realistic move than any| Arthur C. Jolley, Progressive stand-pat policy based on sickly-| Conservative member of the bedspread for every two Cana-| sweet sentimentalism about an|legisture for Niagara Falls} jassociation whose basis is|fom 1953 to 1959, was to be} \changing fast. the first witness called today.| | Those who visualize Canada,| Australia and New Zealand suf- fering financial hardship when Britain hops the Channel are re- minded that such countries are getting rich relatively faster! than the underdeveloped coun- tries of Asia and Africa, crucial battle-grounds of the East-West economic war on any long-term by Shrubb among the calls from! the Feeley number. VALUABLE GIFTS NONTREAL (CP)--The Uni- versity of Montreal has ac- quired 15,000 works to add to its library of 350,000 volumes. Gifts by three collectors in- industry "all-inclusive" was 20 cents in Canadian funds. He was also irked that the His home telephone was listed|quotas were not announced ear- lier. ". . , This year now is nearly one-third gone and our produc- ers and merchants have been unable to plan their production ead marketing because the Jap- anese have neglected to an- nounce their intentions until now." view. With Britain's rate of eco- nomic growth at a_ standstill while Europe leaps ahead, the situation is arising in which West Germany has more money} than Britain to lavish upon} needy nations. | Such factors convince much informed opinion that Britain-in- Europe is necessary and indeed cluded poetry, manuscripts, maps, old engravings and re- search works. JOHN A. OVENS Optometrist HARE OPTICAL 8 BOND ST. EAST 723-4811 | | | } | | | | | PATHFINDER MAPS Showing homes, indus- tries, schools, etc. in color. Available at news stands. Union Sees End ck Strike 3ut two reached a quick settle. nent with the union. Meanwhile an official of a trucking firm not involved in he dispute was attacked and yeaten Wednesday by a group of unidentified men. He was Ian Cameron, Mont- 'eal manager of the Ontario 'trucking firm of. Edwards Transport Company. At the same time one of the com-- pany's trucks was reported nissing on a trip to Montreal from Toronto. Cameron was treated in hos- pital for severe cuts and bruises after he was att; d by four or five men while ng out of his car in front the com- pany's downtown oifices, The carrier that agreed to terms with the union Wednes- day was St. Johns (Iberville) Transport Limited, Cutler said the contract provided an hourly wage increase of 30 . cents spread over three years, added by Pn current hourly rate of | Camegie Hero Fund Honors Cab Driver PITTSBURGH, Pa. (CP)--A Hamilton taxi driver, who res- cued an _ 82-year-old woman trapped by fire and tried un- successfully to save a second woman, was among four Cana- dians honored Wednesday by the Carnegie Hero Fund Com- mission, | Ronald R, Smith, 29, received }a bronze medal and $500 for his jrescue of Mrs. Yetta Lieberman jand his attempt to save Mrs. |Margaret Place, 84. The incis j\dent occurred April 23, 1961, jwhen fire in a Hamilton store filled apartments above it with dense smoke, Two other Ontario men also received bronze medals and $500 each for a rescue opera- tion in Prince Edward Bay on Lake Ontario May 15, 1960. Ber- nard M. Keogh, 39, of Milford and Brian C. York, 35, of Pic- ton launched leaky rowboat in rought water to save three of four men from a capsized mo- torboat. A posthumous award went to Donald L. Tiee, 37, of North Tonawanda, N.Y., who saved one teen-ager from drowning and died while attempting the rescue of a second. at Port Col- borne, Ont., last Aug. 8. Tice's widow will receive her hus- band's bronze medal and also $80 a month for a maximum of five years. $50,000 Grant Withheld, Says Secretary RENFREW, Ont. (CP)--The secretary of the Renfrew school board said Wednesday night she has been told that the provincial education department is with- holding a $50,000 interim grant from the board which refuses to repay a $79,977 overpayment made earlier by the govern- ment, The provincial education de- | partment had ordered the board to repay the money which was paid out in grants as a result of padded enrolment figures. This occurred while Allan Gay was supervising principal. He now is serving a three-year pri- son term for embezzling money from the board. Mrs. Margaret Ashfield, sec- retary, told a board meeting Wednesday night she received a telephone call from Dr. F. S. Rivers, director of education for the province, advising her that the $50,000 interim grant is be- ing withheld because the board had broken the law in refusing to make repayment. Special Weekly Message To Members Of CHAMBERS FOOD CLUB inevitable. 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