ll Firms THOUGHT FOR TODAY Figures may not lie but girdles keep a lot of them from telling the truth. She Oshawa Times Sign Building Trades Contract -- Page 13° WEATHER REPORT Clearing this evening, becoming clear overnight. Fair and mild Thursday. ° Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, MAY 2, 1962 Authorized os Second Class Mail Ottawa and for payment Post Office Department, of Postage in Cash, TWENTY-SIX PAGES VOL. 91--NO. 103 Kine PERONIST TURNED AWAY Andres Framini méeemen protecting him wm sympathizers pressing close, leaves after being turn- ed away at the Government flanked by May Day Clashes India Oificals House of Buenos Aires prov- ince at La Plata, Argentina, Tuesday. Framini, lendteg Peronist. exponent elected governor of the province in March, had come to be sworn Hit Portuguese al nd LISBON Portug counted one dead than 50 persons injt more today;Salazar's dictatorshi p claimed the demonstrations -- the most ed while violent in years--were part of a } in. President Jose Maria | Guide bas denied Peronists | the right to offices they won in the elections. (AP Wirephoto) laim Capture CALCUTTA (AP)--Indian of- \ficials claimed today the cap- ture of the headquarters of the Naga tribal rebels in the north- east frontier territory. Security forces were reported scores were arrested in turbu-;|Communist plan for a general to have encircled the headquar- lent May Day clashes between] security forces and anti-govern- ment demonstrators in the coun-| try's two largest cities. uprising through the country. The government asserted the Communists had failed to mus- ter support except in Lisbon, Club - swinging police and/the capital, and Oporto, Portu- troops crushed the outbursts, but scattered violence contin- ued through the night. gal's second city 175 miles to the northeast. The regime had banned May Premier Antonio de Oliveira Day demonstrations after the| Nickel Workers Voting Favors Steelworkers WINNIPEG (CP)--The first count of votes by employees of the Internati | Nickel Com- pany at I s Man., showed a gin in favor of the United Steelwork America (CLC) announced Tues- day of votes cast, 1,168 favored the United Steelworkers and 409 the International Union of Mine-Mill and Smelter Work- ers. (Ind.) There were 17 spoiled bal However to only 1,594 held todas labor board a wide ma on by of resentat I a the 1,596 a as the total came a recount is to be Manitoba The vote was taken by the presented Tuesday Followi may cer- chosen by the in to abor board the union of 1,889 nickel com- were eligible to are at ent rep- Mill total pany workers VOR Fp ' résenvéed by union pre Mine the appearance of anti-government} leaflets signed '"'Duarte," the pseudonym of general secretary of the out- lawed Portuguese Communist Party. Unconfirmed report said Cunhal recently slipped back into Portugal after two years in Moscow. In Lisbon, large numbers of security forces were waiting when the first group of work- ers crossed the Tagus River on ferry boats to protest Salazar's 32-year rule. FIGHTING RAGES The demonstra into the waterfront streets and an estimated 2,500 of them massed in Black Horse Square the centre of government minis- tries. Hundreds of police and troops moved in to disperse them. The fighting raged for three hours Police and stone-hurling dem- onstrators exchanged gunfire as as the officers broke up the demonstration "In Lisbon," a government statement asserted, '"'Commun- ist agents, many from other re- gions of the country, formed groups totalling several hun- dreds. of people who attacked the police with stones and, in some cases, with gunshots." Two policemen and three ci- villians were reported hit by gunfire in Lisbon, where 32 in ors 'surged all were treated at hospital. ters but the rebel leaders es- caped Loss Of Rank, 30-Day Term F OTTAWA (CP)--Cpl. Gerard Albert West, today as_ sen- ltenced to 30 days detention and reduced to the rank of private by a court-martial on service charges arising from the smug- gling of gold and opium in In dochina. The verdict was~read by the court president, Brig. N. H Ross of Fredericton, after he and the four other members of the court deliberated in a closed room for two hours The sentence came after Cpl. West's defending officer, major} Albert J. Clark, asked the court martial not to be influenced by} discussion of the smuggling in} the Commons earlier this year Cpl. West changed his plea Tuesday to guilty on two service rges, namely "'an act to the prejudice of good order and dis- cipline" and "conduct to the prejudice of good order and dis- cipline.' Major Clark said the offences} should be considered by the court-martial only in relation to army discipline "T suggest that you should not) c pre. Bz or Smuggling | Fredericton and in which hejbreach of military law implicated a major and a cor-|carrying a package from Vien- poral and several other NCOS|tiane to Saigon "though sus- in activity which he suspected!picious that the content was was smuggling. gold," and by clearing through NO CHARGES ANNOUNCED |CUStoms in Saigon a trunk that The army later identified the he believed contained opium. two as Maj. W. A. Platt. and! Cpl. West's statement said he Cpl. H. J. Noel, who will be/Was given a package by Maj. tried later. They were not|Platt for delivery to a_ ser- further identified and the army|seant in a Saigon hotel. The far has not announced the/Corporal said he was told that charges against them the package was for the ma- Cpl. West is charged with jor's girl friend, "I said it was awful. heavy for a parcel that size, but he (the major) made a joke of it," the corporal's statement said. Police Probing : sateen "I was suspicious that it might so right." NEW YORK (AP) -- Police|ahout-$20 in Canadian currency {gon airport. he had "'suspicions" of what the Charge Against be gold or opium but he being a zater in the statement, werd West said he was paid 2,000! have launched an investigation|_by Cpl. Noel for obtaining a into charges by producer Sid/trunk from customs at the Sai-| husky private detectives while} his estranged wife, actress-sin-|tryunk contained. major, I figured it must be} all Judy Garland ,/ South Vietnamese piastres--| Luft that he was held by two] The accused said ger Judy Garland, fled with the} ia A section of the Naga tribes|be influenced by the fact that/couple's two children. jhave been fighting Indian separate sovereign state. Indian officials announced! that valuable documents had) been seized and that these re-| vealed a hopelessly disorganized jels. They said the documents |showed that the Nagas are run-| Tuesday's evidence included|London where she is making a} {food and money. Test Ban Talks To GENEVA (Reuters) -- Talks among Britain, the United States and Russia on a nuclear test ban treaty will resume Thursday, a British spokesman announced today Agreement on _ Thurs day's meeting of the three- power nuclear subcommittee of the disarmament conference here was reached in informal consultations held by the mem- ber delegations. The announcement ended speculation that Russia had de- cided to walk out of the subcom mittee in protest age U.S nuclear testing in the Pacific British delegate Joseph God- ber meanwhile told today's plenary session of the disarma- ment conference that his con- fidence in Russia's will to achieve general and complete disarmament had been "much shaken." inst Canada Can't Ignore Europe Prospect: Mac TORONTO (CP)--Prime Min ister Ma lan headed a flurry of. ¢ civic honors y ex- plaining to Canadians that Brit- ain cannot ignore the prospects offered by closer ties to contin ental Europe The Br ing up a bus) conferred wi nto and toc itish leader was ¥ week which he th Ken Washington and Prime ister Diefenbaker in Ottawa > also addressed United States and edi- their Ca Canada lieu er Mac sched freedom of gar box A President 1g on Ontario's J. Ke uled the Toronto and a silver ci a city hall ceremony. CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 to receive al 9 | Mr |Britain is determined to main- uncheon 'reception by the On- tario government was listed as his last official function before leaving by air for London at 7:30 p.m In a televised speech Tuesday night at the annual dinner of the Canadian Press, Mr. Mac- millan emphasized the import ance and difficulty of Britain's pending decision to join or re- main outside the six-nation Eu- ropean Economic Community. WILL SAFEGUARD A communique issued earlier, following three formal confer ences with Mr. Diefenbaker in Ottawa, said Mr. Macmillan had reaffirmed his govern- ment's determination to safe guard essential Commonwealth interests in negotiations aimed at British entry into the Euro- pean Common' Market. Canadian leaders recently have expressed fears that Brit- ish membership in. the Common Market would seriously disrupt Commonwealth trade In his Tuesday reiterated speech Macmillan night that in the ties of Commonwealth lwealth ties. while realizing that closer com- mercial association with: contin- ental Europe could enrich Brit ain and the world But he suggested that Britain cannot afford to "stand alto- gether aside" from the move- ment for European unity "Every time we have tried to escape from the grip of Europe we have been drawn back," he said. "If things. go wrong in Europe, we are immediately in volved and so, indeed are you "But if things go right, there in this community an im mense power which can be 'mo bilized not merely from the point of view of self-enrichnfent but from the point of view of ful- filling the role which advanced} communities ought to play in the world." Mr. Macmillan, who ported to have.told Canadian and U.S. leaders not to:assume sritain would join the Common Market said is was re under any. conditions nothin allowed to Tuesday ight could or should be weaken' traditional this particular incident... . was jarmed forces and demanding a|brought up in the House." West, about 33, served asa security guard in Vien- tiane and Saigon last year and) is the first of five soldiers to jstand trial in charges arising! Cpl. Alvaro Cunhal,|State of affairs among the reb-|from alleged smuggling of gold) Miss Garland took the chil- jand opium within Indochina. s|ning short of arms, ammunition,|a Feb. 9 statement the corporal! movie gave to provost Treaty : Resume He the officers in afraid that to agree on the vi question of interna- tional verification of nuclear explosions. and other suspicious events just not good enough,"' In a major Godber declared "This, I think, is the acid test of our Soviet colleagues."' "I say to them bluntly: 'If you really want a treaty on and complete disarma- ment, then face up.to this prob- lem and either produce realistic proposals of your own to deal with or else at least show interest in these constructive proposals which have been brought forward by others.' "' FAVORS U.S, PLAN The British minister for foreign affairs called the United States' 10,000-word dis armament plan "a most valua- ble contribution toward facilitat- ing the further progress of our work." he was refusal said Soviet "Gg policy speech, general of state "It gives . the fullest guide ever set before a disarmament conference. on how we_ should set about attaining our goal of general and complete disarma- ment," Godber said. Toward the close of his 4,000- word address, Godber criticized Soviet delegate Valerian Zorin. "T have formed the impres- sion more and hore in listening to him recently that he seems to be becoming more interested in propagandist declara- tions and less in real negotia- tion "He does indeed seem more and more to have gone out of his way to find points of differ- ence Council Requests Salary Increases TORONTO (CP) -- Metropol itan 'Toronto council will re quest the province to authorize a $1,200 salary increase for Me- tro councillors Council voted 14 to 7 Tues- day for an increase in. mem- bers' salaries to $3,000 from $1,- 800 a year but discarded a pro nosed $1,000 for Metro 1OW to alary increase the who addition the members of @XE committee $2,000 ir itive receive Common- their salary as Metfo council-;middle. The front end, Also being studied was a hotel spokesman's charge that two uniformed policemen as- sisted Miss Garland in. taking the children fromthe fashion-} able Stanhope Hotel last Satur-| day night dren--Joey, 7, and Lorna» 9--to! She was not available for comment, but her manager said she knew nothing of Luft's charge Frank Bromber, manager, said the two uni- formed officers told an assist- Riding in the federal election. ant manager in advance they; Mr. Cafik won election over were "going to assist two pri-\John Lay, a former Liberall! vate investigators in getting the standard-bearer on two occa- two children out of suite 606 and sions, in a convention attended that they would use force,. if by more than 300 Liberals in the Ae like breaking the Whitby Township Hall at Brook- 44 lin BREAK LOCK There were three nominations Bromber said the uniformed for the candidacy, Robert policemen not only broke the Stroud, Oshawa businessman, room lock but carried the two|Was also nominated but with- children to the street drew his name. announcing the investiga-, Mr. Cafik's nomination was tion, Deputy Police Commis- Proposed by Terence Kelly of sioner Walter Arm said Oshawa, and seconded by Har' "If there were any policemen|0ld Philips and Gordon Colby. there at the time, we want to|Mr. Lay was nominated by Ald. know who they were, what they| Hayward Murdoch, of Oshawa, did and why." "and seconded by Earl Dowswell, ---|Warden of Ontario County and Reeve of Uxbridge Township, and William Davidson, a mem- ber of Whitby town council. | Ralph Jones of Oshawa pro- jposed Mr. Stroud's name and t ;his nomination was seconded by! Russell J. Murphy and Mrs. Jill Moore, date Stanhope gay candidate to contest the Ontario f i In s i t Police Claim No Foul Play In TRRIOGON er ricz riomen The battle between Lay and TORONTO (CP)--A man andicafik for the nomination turned his wife were injured todayout to be strictly a matter of when their automobile exploded whether or not Liberal fortunes in an underground garage in would prosper if a new face west end Toronto were placed before the people. Hospital officials said Joseph' Mr. Lay's proponents cited | Juhasz, 41, and his wife, Mary,'the fact that Mr. Lay had been 36, suffered face and head lac-| Liberal candidate in elections of erations from flying glass./1952 and 1953 and had on the Their injuries were described Jast occasion lost by only 1,100 as not serious and both were yotes in satisfactory condition On the other hand, Mr. Ca- Police said an earlier theory fik's nominators, especially Mr. that foul play was involved had Kelly, said that "it's new peo- been discounted. ple who will instill spirit into The early-morning blast shat-'the people of this riding and tered lower-floor windows of the|bring it back to the fold where six-storey apartment building/it belongs.' under which the car was spARR LIKEABLE parked In their addresses to the con- Arson squad investigators vention, both men indicated said containers of acefylene gas|they held no personal antagon- were either in the trunk of thejicm towards the sitting mem- car or nearby and may have'per, Michael Starr, Minister of caused the explosion Labor. In fact, both men ad- The blast which demolished mitted they thought he was the late model car was de- quite a likeable person. scribed as being. "like a bomb Speaking first, Mr. Lay said falling," according to Mrs. that the Liberal candidate would Gundel Werner who was in Ger- fing a big target in this elec- many during the Second World tion if he sought to unseat Mr. War Starr, a cabinet minister. She was in the apartment, "He is a very nice person and directly above the demolished|I don't think there is anyone late-model car visiting building) who knows him who does not superintendent Mrs. John UI-|like him," said Mr. Lay. mer, All the windows were) "But, as a minister in the smashed in the Ulmer apart- Diefenbaker government, he meni, and groceries and other has to share in the responsibil- items were. jarred from theirity of that government," he cupboard continued, '"'and if we want to Eyewitnesses said the car ap-idefeat the Diefenbaker govern- peared to have exploded in the; ment it may -be too bad -- they|but we will have to defeat the laitting mamber." wag none date. In seeking j tion, he noted that in 1952 and 1953, when the Liberal govern-|"but what do we get?" ment was at the crest of its) The Bomarc missile, he said,|/¢™S Tegularly show up at set power, Michael Starr, a Pro-\has nothing in it. "It couldn't| times for work. gerssive Conservative had been|knock anything down. There's elected in. Ontario Riding, the!more danger in a .22 rifle." Cc \§ by| LEAVES PRISON Madame Raoul Salan, wife of Secret Army Organization leader, has been permitted to leave prison and live in a re- ligious home, official sources in Paris said Tuesday. She and her eéx-general husband were arrested April 20 in a police raid in Algiers. --AP Wirephoto / SAVAGE OAS OUTBURST BLOODIEST IN WEEKS 116 Moslems Die, Patience Wears CP from AP-Reuters as cars carrying the wounded ALGIERS--A savage wave ofjarrived from the blast scene in Secret Army terrorism includ-|front of an employment centre ing the explosion of a booby-/for Moslem dockworkers. trapped car left at least 16) European workers in nearby Moslems dead and upwards of|banks and _ industrial firms 100 wounded today. |were hurriedly sent home as It was the bloodiest day in re-|/French security forces and cent weeks in Algiers, and for|Moslem insurgent agents tried a time it appeared that Mos-|to head off a murder rampage \lem patience was about ~ by Moslem crowds. break into bitter widesprea SEIZE KILL HIM ; 4 | SEIZE, p vengeance against the Europ-} The European was séiged leans. | | One European man caught up -- killed by a band of Mos- in a Moslem crowd after the|/¢™s when he approached the booby-trapped car exploded had)2rea shortly after the blast. It his throat cut. But. otherwise|¥@S the second terrorist attack the well disciplined Moslems,|#8@inst a Moslem labor centre jtaken in hand by nationalist| i" two days. lagents, kept calm. | Crowds of ragged Moslems | at least eight Moslems werel ing P tad pte -- a lente rs Mh ee ing office when suddenly with- lea wii mby amd ot sarang ie Sar poe iside a crowd of 1,500 Moslems Heain oy 1 div . reg |waiting for work on the Algiers) +poy 8 ail directions, then a About 100 were injured! wre ppeeean "ees a to carry : ested doen : 0! eir wounded. in the withering hail of metal.| The car was ripped apart and Another eight Moslems were) lddes were avian # again slain and 10 wounded in pes pocteers or several Secret Army terrorist machine-| When the explosive charge-- gun attacks. : _.. \fixed with a time fuse -- went Tension mounted in the Cas-| off jt opened up a crater bah and other Moslem quarters} about eight or 10 feet in diam- Cafik Liberal Choice For Ontario Riding Norman Cafik, 33, a Picker-| Mr. Cafik had kind words forjhis time to the matter of get- jing Township businessman and|Mr. Starr too, "'He cannot be/ting the Liberal unheard of as a possible candi-/underestimated," he said, "for)He rounded out his speech with! until recently, was Tues-jhe is well liked, well respected'a fiery attack on the policies of night named Liberal party|and is no man's fool." SEES BIG CAMPAIGN Mr, Cafik promised his fol- owers a campaign second to if he were named candi- the nomina- irst PC to represent the riding n 22 years. "This riding lost to the Con- ervatives when the trend was n our favor," said Mr, Cafik, and "if we are going to win it now, we have got to have althem." new face, a man who will cap- ure the uncommitted." And of the uncommitted, Mr. Safik stated that there had been a 28 per cent increase in popul ation in this riding since he last election. Mr. Cafik did not devote all --------------leter in the paved dock area along the Mediterranean sea- front. A water pipe was cut and a geyser of water shot up from the scene, "The explosion lifted a ca parked nearby and hurled i several yards onto the top of another car. Both vehicles caught fire. The dockside was littered with chunks of smouldering metal and pieces of concrete paving. Huge splotehes of blood spattered the pavement. The injured included several white-robed, veiled women who had accompanied their men to the dock. nomination. {the Conservative government over the past five years. | He lambasted the current de- fence policy and said that 25.8] Apparently about 40 pounds {per cent of the budget goes for! of explosive had been packed jinto the car by the terrorists, "This is necessary,"' he said,|\who then parked it near the {employment office where Mos- It was the second time in about two weeks that a booby ae ' jtrapped car-had exploded in a installations, Moslem crowd in Algiers. "| The Secret Army, which op- poses Moslem rule in an inde- pendent Algeria, has been des- perately attempting to provoke the Moslems into attacks on jthe Europeans, in the hope that the French Army would What the country needs, he/side with the Europeans. Thus, | said, is a specialized army, high-|the cease fire agreements ily trained to perform a specific signed March 18 would be task, The country, he said, can- compromised or broken and Al- jnot afford nuclear arms but can geria's evolution toward inde- jPlay and important role in|nendence would be slowed or \world affairs if its defence| Pitted, 'money is spent wisely. | There are two |"it's no secret, there is no dan |ger to anybody." The RCAF, he |said, is flying craft 10 years jold and the navy is equipped jwith prewar vessels. "And it's jcost a lot of money to get eS