' THOUGHT FOR TODAY Usually, when all has been said and 'done, much has been said and very little done. he Oshawa Times WEATHER REPORT ' Chance of a th undershower to- night. Cloudy but warmer Tues- day with some thundershowers, VOL. 91--NO., 101 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, APRIL 30, 1962 Authorized Ottawa and as Second Class Mail Post Office Department, for payment of in Cash. Postage THIRTY-FOUR PAGES 5 Soldiers Killed By Comrades RAILWAY WORKERS the brief withdrawal of the ar- mor-supported troops, cars and delivery trucks were able to cir- culate freely. The troops first occupied the centre of Oran Sunday in a manoeuvre aimed against the terrorist Secret Army. They were enforcing a ban against all vehicular traffic and park- ing. Citizens were warned not {to walk along roadways in the ALGIERS (AP--Five Europ- ean soldiers were slain as they slept Sunday by Moslem troops of their unit, posted near the Moroccan frontier, reliable sources reported today. : After opening fire on their comrades, the three Moslem soldiers fled into mounatinous countryside with all the weap- ons and ammunition they could carry, the informants said. PLAN STRIKE VOTE CNR Employees Reject Increase JOHN COLDWELL, 7, WITH HOOK Fish Hoo Bowmanville Boy BOWMANVILLE (Staff) -- Two young brothers heading for) a nearby stream to go fishing) Sunday, didn't reach their des- tination. The youngest, seven- year-old John Colwell, RR 5, was held captive to a_ fence when a fish hook lodged in his lower lip. John's 10 - year - old brother David ran to the house to fetch help. Their mother, Mrs. Robert Colwell, ran to the fence where she saw her son was trapped. "He wasn't crying," said Mrs. Colwell, "just calling] 'help, help'."" In the meantime David had) called for help from Mrs. Grant} Ball, who lives across the| street from the Colwells. She! hustled to the spot where John} was still caught and snipped! the string with a pair of scis-|* sors. This relieved John from his| eaptive position, but the hook) was still in his lip. Mr. Ball) drove John, accompanied by his mother and father to a doc- tor's office in Bowmanville. There, Dr. Anfossi froze the boy's lip and removed the hook. Ships Collision | Victim Resided In Montreal NORFOLK, Va. (AP -- The Norwegian ship Tarantel, her right side ripped from water| line to deck in a Chesapeake| Bay collision Sunday, rested| aground today while men from} two U.S. navy salvage vessels battled to keep her from settl- ing deeper. | The bodies of two passengers killed when the Tarantel was) rammed just about amidship by} the Greek freighter Hellenic} Splendor remained aboard the stricken vsesel. The Greek ship,| although heavily-damaged, con-| tinued under her own power to/fired in that series, one known|drowned in Lake Chandos 30/cil of statesmen, jas Teak, exploding at an alti-|miles north of here | Philadelphia. One of the dead was Mrs.\tude of 252,000 feet, and the| Provincial Constable M Augusta Fabriani, about 55, ofjother known as Orange, burst-/Baker said the wife of the miss- Montreal, wife of an Italian for- eign service officer. The other| The gigantic fireball from one|band had was Richard Berry, about 40,\of the two shots at Johnston Is-'in a cano land was seen in Hawaii somewas found floating on the | of Westfield, N.J. k Traps Later the same day John) told The Times he found the hook in the garbage and he} and his brother decided they would go fishing in a small stream on the property owned by the Southview Golf Club. The incident occurred at a frontier post near Marnia, lo-| cated about 10 miles west of the Moroccan frontier. It was not the first time Mos- lems serving in the French Army have deserted their wits in the Algerian interior. But it) was the most serious incident reported since the Franco-Alge- rian cease-fire went into effect March 19. Moslems in the French Army have been under increasing pressure to join the rebel army since the cease-fire was signed. é sa The French Army is still manning electrified barbed wire barriers along the Moroccan and Tunisian frontiers in order to bar entry into Algeria of 40,- 000 rebel troops in the two neighboring countries. The rebel forces may not enter Algeria legally until a vote is held on Algeria's future. TROOPS RETURN Meanwhile in Oran, French Si e if S| it STRING TANGLED "When we reached the fence, the string got tangled around the wire," he said, 'I tried = pull it off but it wouldn't give,| so I tried biting the string. I wanted the hook, not the string." John has a small mark on his lower. lip where the hook! dug in, but apart from that he| is fine. He has a strong hunch, how- ever, that his mother and fa-|Highway 69, 20 miles south of/dle East threat of communist aggres- ther will call a halt to any} more fishing escapades this) eason. Army units returned to the cen- ling earlier in the day. During Crash Kills 2 Men Near Parry Sound | PARRY SOUND, Ont. (CP) -- |Two Sudbury men were killed Sunday and three others injured when the car in which they were travelling to a convention in Kitchener rolled over on j here. Dead are Paul Hall, 27, and|s Bud Abbott, 44. | High Tes Planned By US. WASHINGTON (AP )-- The/700 miles jexploding of H-bombs at high/from the two explosions and the altitude over the Pacific will give scientists another oppor-| tunity to check the effects of} such blasts on electronic com-| munications. There is no clue as to just when such blasts may be set off as part of the current United States nuclear test program, but a warning to navigators and pilots to avoid an area around Johnston Island becomes effec-| tive Tuesday. However, the Federal Avia- tion Agency has told airlines crossing the Pacific Ocean that they can expect three to four) -- days warning before specific} shots are fired. High-in-the sky shots touched off in the Pacifie in 1958 upset communications in variou 5| ways and degrees as far as) 1,500 miles from the burst. | Two high-altitude shots were ing at 141,000 feet. | t Blast Ss 8 e i) a away. Reflections e artificial aurora caused by the hodrogen burst's equivalance of 1,000,000 tons of TNT were ob- served in Fiji and Samoa, some d will CENTO allies to ensure the de- fence and stability of the Mid- area or to form groups. Reds Must Cut Obsession For Secrecy: Rusk LONDON (CP) -- U.S. State ecretary Rusk said today the East-West arms race cannot be nded "unless and until Russia abandons its obsession of sec- recy." In a statement to the open- ing ministerial session of the Central known as CENTO, Rusk said: Treaty Organization, "The Soviet Union has, thus ar, been unwilling to agree to lan effective treaty banning all nuclear testing... cumstances, has had no choice but to as- in the cir- the United States ume its responsibility to look o the common defence and ltre of the city after withdraw-|conduct a limited series of at- }mospheric nuclear tests." Rusk then added: "The arms race cannot be ended unless and until all ma- or powers agree to do this-- and unless and until the Soviet Union abandons its obsession on ecrecy. Secrecy and disarma- ment are incompatible." Rusk said the United States go on working with its "against continued ion." CENTO consists of Britain, | Pakistan, Iran and Turkey. The United States takes part in its work as an associate member. ENDS MESSAGE Prime Minister Macmillan ent a message to the confer- nce urging CENTO to "remain nm guard against aggression nd subversion." Macmillan--at present in Ot- tawa--said "'we seek co - exist- nce and co-operation, but the program of the communists has one nothing to remove suspi- cion." 2,000 miles from Johnston Is-| land. | Whether the high. altitude! shots in the new series will be seen as far, or even farther,| was a matter of conjecture. The previous high altitude) shots caused a degree of com-| munication blackout that varied ti widely and some communica-| tions channels were operable at! all times d pai | | | a Police Seek Body Near Peterborough: PETERBOROUGH (CP) --\p Provincial police today werela dragging for the body of Robert Stanwick of Toronto, fearedic c A) - | ing man told police her hus-|p e Sunday. The canoe|o "le Cc gineers, jindustrialists, to catalogue each have-not' country's needs and Kid Plan Urged For Countries TORONTO (CP)--An interna- onal plan to help the under- eveloped countries of the ;world was urged today by Sam- el Bronfman, of Montreal, in n address to the Canadian lub, He suggested that the "have" ountries pool their huge re- ources of capital, skills, ex- erience and management into great organization. He added: "A plan whereby the have' ountries would create a coun- bankers, en- scientists, economists, rovide a pool of talent and gone out on the lake/resources to plan for their pri- rity - development problems, ake. |would be of such far-reaching consequences as to be of a jrevolutionary character.' Mr. Bronfman, president of Damage to bow of the Greek freighter Hellenic Splendor, which collided with _& cargo-passenger ship near mouth of the Chesapeake Bay, killing two persons, is inspect- ed by custom officials after the freighter tied up at Phila- DAMAGED SHIP LIMPS INTO PORT delphia today. The freighter and the Norwegian ship Tar- antel collided in heavy fog. (AP Wirephoto) linto the European | Market. The British leader, rived here last by Mr. Diefenbaker, time out from electioneering. tries exchanged by the OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis- ter Macmillan of Britain and Canada's Prime Minister Die- fenbaker scheduled an early meeting today on the vital is- sue of Britain's proposed entry Common who ar- evening from Washington for a two-day visit, was greeted at Uplands Airport taking Behind the arrival pleasan- two|met on the tarmac by the Ca- leaders, there appeared to lie on both sides a resolve to speak frankly on the Common Market issue. Canada has been in the fore- front of Commonwealth coun- tries expressing misgivings jabout the economic: and politi- cal implications of Britain's possible move closer into the European family. The tone of Sunday's arrival ceremonies was friendly but bu- | siness-like. | | Mr. Macmillan, after being} Delayed nuclear test ban may next year. Talks Predicted WASHINGTON (CP) -- Pres- ident Kennedy and Prime Min- ister Macmillan appear to have come to the conclusion that the prospects of resuming serious negotiations with Russia on a not| emerge until late fall or early|sians don't want a ban and that Test-Ban He said Sunday that in order jto make progress on negotia- jtions for an effective test ban "the Russians have got to jmake a move and so far there is no sign of it." "The assumption is the Rus- Dief, Macmillan Meet On Planned EEC Move nadian prime minister, said he had come for "'sensible, down- to-earth talks and consultation." His talks with Mr. Diefenba- ker--at least two meetings were scheduled for today--were not to be taken as negotiations. They were "the discussions between partners,' planned in "the spirit of a family con- clave." There has been speculation that Mr. Macmillan will ask Canada to stipulate the mini- mum economic guarantees she would require before giving her blessing to British membership in the Common Market. Canada has taken the general position that Britain should not enter the Common Market un- less the trading position of her Commonwealth partners is fully protected. At present, Commonwealth countries occupy a_ privileged position in the United Kingdom} market. Negotiations between Britain and the European Common Market countries are expected to reach a climax this summer, possibly in August. OTTAWA (CP)--The Brother- hood of Railroad Trainmen (CLC) announced today it has rejected a conciliation board's wage recommendations as "'to- tally inadequate' and plans a strike vote involving some 10,- 000 CNR trainmen. The 19,000-member union's ne- gotiating committee said it has advised the CNR the -board's recommendation for a 6%%-per- cent wage increase to be spread in five stages over three years is unacceptable. The dispute does not involve some 9,000 union members who work for the CPR and short-run Canadian railways. A strike ballot was being spread among CNR conductors, trainmen, baggagemen, yard foremen end helpers, yardmas- ters, car retarder operators and freight operators. No date of possible strike ac- tion was announced. A Brotherhood spokesman said/n a statement the concilia- i board refused to grant now required on trains of more than 60 cars going through the Rockies. The Brotherhood's statement today quotes at length from Senator Roebuck's minority re- port, It says the senator was "strongly critical" of the CNR and the board chairman. The trainmen represent the last of the three groups com- prising the running trades with which the CNR is trying to reach a contract agreement. The engineers and firemen pre- viously agreed to a 614-per-cent wage increase over a three-year -- ' e CPR, which negotiates separately with the unions, has settled with its firemen and en- gineers but its dispute with the trainmen still is before a con- ciliation board. _ Canada's 110,000 non-operat- ing railway employees, not in« volved in actual running of trains: are awaiting setting up of a conciliation board to hear their contract demands. They seek a 22-per-cent-an-hour wage increase plus a job security program. OBJECTS TO PROPOSAL e added that proposed "drastic changes" in working conditions affecting job security could result "in destruction of the various crafts represented by the Brotherhood." The union originally sought an 18-per-cent increase. There 'iwas no counter-proposal from the CNR. The majority report of the conciliation board which sat for seven months studying the dispute, was made public April 18. It was signed by Judge J. B. Robinson of Haileybury, Ont., its) chairman, and com- pany nominee T. R. Meighen of Montreal. Liberal Senator Arthur Roe- buck of Toronto, the union nom- inee, filed a minority report recommending a wage increase of eight per cent spread over two years. The report to Labor Minister Starr, which is not binding on either side, proposed a one-per- cent wage increase retroactive to June 1, 1961; another one per cent retroactive to Dec. 1, 1961; and three 114-per cent raises to be paid at the signing of a con- tract, at Dec. 1, 1962, and Dec. 1, 1963, Among a long list of rule changes involved in the dis- pute, the board recommended removal of the third brakeman Anti-Bomb Meeting Dispersed By PC TORONTO (CP)--Police Con- stable Edward Lloyd dispersed a ban-the-bomb meeting in Tor- onto's High Park Sunday by riding his horse into a crowd listening to a, Welland high school teacher. Const. Lloyd informed the speaker, Gary Moffat£ of a city bylaw limiting such speeches to prescribed park areas and told the audience to move on. The crowd, mainly members of the Committee of 100 Against Lost Fishermen Presumed Dead In Round Lake Psa p's Baw dd Ont. nos ermen were ume drowned Sunday in Round Lake, ; about 12 miles east of this Parry Sound district village, and a fourth man was rescued by two schoolboys. The missing men, all mem- bers of the RCAF, are WO George Noble, 45, Fit-Sgt. Har- old Harris, 43, both of Centralia RCAF Station, and Cpl. William MacGregor, 47, of nearby Foy- mount Station. Civilian Archie C. MacLellan, 33» of Foymont was rescued by two boys in their early teens,' Wayne Edwards and John Ad- riel of South River, who heard his shouts as he clung to his overturned boat. The four men ventured on to the lake Saturday morning in stormy weather, Noble and Harris in one boat and Mac- Gregor and MacLellan in an- other. MacLellan told provincial police they tried to return to shore when the weather wors- ened and both small boats over- turned, FRIEND GOES UNDER MacLellan said he caught hold of MacGregor, a non-swim- mer,. while clutching the over- turned boat with the other hand. He said he held on for 1% hours until his friend lost conscious- ness and went under. The two boys, who were stay- ing in a cottage on the' shore, heard MacLellan shouting after he had been in the 33-degree water for two hours. The boys paddled out to Mac- Lellan in a boat without oar- locks and pulled him aboard. At the shore they dragged the ex- posure-weakened man out of the Lani but were unable to carry im. Nuclear Arms, thinned out. jthey intend to test again." On that basis the West had no alternative but to await the out- come of new Russian decisions on nuclear detonations likely to be launched after the U.S, com- pletes its current series in June, In two days of talks, Mac- millan and Kennedy touched on While the two leaders agreed during weekend talks here to continue to press for disarma- ment "including the ending of nuclear tests,"' an aide to Mac- millan said it may not be re- alistic to expect any new ap- proach to nuclear negotiations until the Soviet Union under- takes and completes another se- Attack On Vietnamese Police Hit Montreal, © 2%:"2csss pe Denied By Cambodia ment would not be simply a a Strike Vi urb Strike Violence | Bronfman said, cannot con- MONTREAL (CP) -- Quebec boon to the _ lesser-developed terference with the movement, can't force|tinue to exist half prosperous Provincial Police prepared tolof their trucks." "However, we world-wide prosperity. them to comply," ee Text of his speech was issued countries, but would create he added,|and half starved. meet force with force if neces-| sary today as reinforcements| panies have observed an uneasy| move from Quebec were rushed into into Montreal to prevent a re- currence of violence at a strike- bound north-end trucking depot. Assistant Director J. P. Des-|Liesse Road into a minor bat-|secution of some of the men in- sureau said Sunday night the 35} men will be part of a 115-man} force on hand to prevent vio-} lence if trucks make another attempt to crash a picket line at the depot in suburban Dor- val. "We have no alternative in the matter," said Mr. reau. "The companies have a legal injunction against any in- f! CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 | Dessu-|§ The eight strike-bound com-| truce with the International) Brotherhood of Teamsters (Ind.) since Friday when a mob of 200 men turned Cote de} jtlefield after two trucks tried to) volved. break their blockade at a Smith| Transport depot. POLICE RETALIATE One truck was set afire by a barrage of home-made gasoline bombs and police retaliated with tear - gas and warning shots, bringing charges of "strikebreaking" from union of- ieials. Mr. Dessureau emphasized that the police were within their rights and had no alternative; but to protect the trucks and/Georges Lapalme for assurance) their drivers. Inspector Gerard Houle, chief} of the criminal invsetigation di-| vision, has asked the companies depots until this aftrenoon when "They have the legal right to their trucks they want." whenever|t0 the press before delivery. ries of nuclear detonations. world issues, including sum- itry, Berlin and the Common Market. _ Insp. Houle said an investiga-| tion into the riot is continuing} and could lead to criminal pro-| LATE NEWS FLASHES Two gasoline bombs used by the mob were being checked for fingerprints and police were studying photographs taken at the scene. He said preliminary investi-| gation had shown that a num-} ber of "imported" might be involved. 'We can't be sure but I think we can expect some arrests shortly,"" he said 3) Sunday the companies ap- pealed to Attorney General that court injunceion against the pickets will be observed. The injunctions, limiting the number of pickets at. a depot to keep their trucks inside the'to three, forbid the union from interfering with the free move-| traffic will be at its lightest. {ment of trucks. DRAYTON, Ont. (CP) -- Five-Year-Old Drowns In Creek A five-year-old boy drowned Sunday in a shallow creek on his father's farm 25 miles two young friends. PEMBROKE (CP) -- Th were placed on six months su 72 hand grenades from a CNR Barker, 23, Carl Bedard, 17, an guilty April 17. HAMBURG (Reuters) -- Says gunmen made an attem Walter Ulbricht of East Germ cret week, Moscow talks with Soviet | north of Kitchener while fishing with an older brother and hoodlums Suspended Term For Grenade Theft ree Pembroke youths today spended sentence for stealing freight car April 10. James d John Firkin, 19, were found Attempt To Kill Ulbricht A West German newspaper pt to kill Communist: leader any as he returned from se- Premier Khrushchev last They agreed that a summit conference at this stage may serve no useful purpose, but they reaffirmed their willing- ness to go to the summit "when- ever there is an indication that such meetings would serve the interest of peace and under- standing." | Millbrook Blaze Levels 500 Acres MILLBROOK, Ont. (CP) Five hundred acres of ever- green trees were destroyed by fire three miles southwest of here Saturday. About 200 men, including forest rangers from as far as Lindsay and Minden, fought the blaze, fanned by strong winds. Millbrook is 13 SAIGON (AP -- South Viet Nam received a stiff note from Cambodia South Viet Nam decides to break relations with our coun- ocean to avoid Cambodian tere ritory. Flights carrying .Cambo- today denying/try, it is free to do so and tojdian or Thai passengers be- charges that Cambodian troops/take full responsibility for the|tween Bangkok and the Cam- led an attack on a Vietnamese] decision," border village in which 54 per- sons were killed. The note demanded that the Vietnamese government "make up morally for the damage sut- fered by the entire Cambodian nation. following this false and cruel accusation." Viet Nam has fo rmally charged that 200 Cambodians, led by government guards, made the attack April 20 on the village of Vinh Lac, 120 'miles west of Saigon. The Vietnamese National' As- sembly passed a resolution con- demning Cambodia and calling for a "change in policy" to- ward the neutralist monarchy. This was widely-interprteéd as the first move toward a diplo- matic break. The semi-official ANIMOSITY FLARES The flare-up in the centuries- old animosity between Cambo- dia and Viet Nam may become a major complication for the West in the area of Indochinese politics. If diplomatic relations should be severed, the entire Indochi- nese peninsula would be split down the middle from the 17th parallel. of the Gulf of Siam. In the West is pro-West- ern Thailand. In the centre is Laos' southern tongue, con- trolled by Communist forces, and Cambodia. In the east is South Viet. Nam. One of the effects of a split would be on air travel. Presum- ably all' flights between Bang- Cambodian|kok and Saigon would have to bodian capital of Phnom Penh have been discontinued. In the event of a general con- flict in Indochina, anti-Commu- nist forces may find themselves spilt apart by the central strip. Communist units with their Soviet-operated supply bases in southern Laos probably could make quick work of marching south through Cambodia, com- pletely separating anti - Com- munist Thailand and South Viet Nam. But many U.S. military 'ad- visers here concur with a come mon Vietnamsee view that the closing of the Viet-Nam - Cam- bodia frontier would help in the war against Communist guerrillas. South Viet Nam has long claimed the Viet Cong uses bases in Cambodia to launch hit-and-run attacks on miles south of Peterborough.."- !newspaper La Depeche said "'ifidetour far to the south over the Vietnamese soveramen) posts.