Oshawa Times (1958-), 4 May 1962, p. 1

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Sh. 8 Sts Shs DR I ag eS ihn ig Brg BE ee THOUGHT FOR TODAY When the time comes for gardening, the best labor-saving device is a bad back. sil AL ER FLA DEB POL LPP ELD FOR. Oshawa Times WEATHER REPORT Mostly sunny and warm Satur- day. Chance of a few well separ- ated thunderstorms late in the day. OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, MAY 4, 1962 Authorized as Second Class. Mall Post Ottawa and for payment of Office Department, Postage in Cash, TWENTY-FOUR PAGES VOL. 91--NO. 105 Urged By Rusk An Ameri¢an source said the state secretary presented the foreign and defence ministers conference a sweeping review of cold war problems, stressing armament. He said the was ready to sign a nuclear test ban treaty at any time, but saw no possibility the Soviet Union was willing to grant necessary inspection. Meanwhile, Rusk said, the U.S. tes series will continue. He also saw every prospect the Soviet Union will soon resume testing. The ministers also will ex- amine conditions of a new U.S. BG GE OF THREE TRAINS " Berlin, nuclear testing and dis- United States); plan to give all the NATO al- Couve de Murville of France into the path of the second. raeli radio Monday jcommuter train -- and walked|Telegraph, which said the Is- 'quoted |strong reports of an assassina- As Leave Ship VANCOUVER (CP)--Twenty w members walked off the said) Actyess Jayne Mansfield and her"husband, Mickey Hargi- tay, were a smiling couple when they appeared at a char- ity .affair in Beverley Hills, DIVORCE SUIT | falitornia, on March 15 of this year. Thursday Jayne filed suit for divorce against her mus- cle-man husband in Santa Monica, Calif., charging ex- treme cruelty. ' (AP. Wirephoto) | LOSES RANK 90-Days OTTAWA (CP) --Cpl. Mau- rice Victor Joseph Noel, 41, of Regina, was sentenced by a court martial today to 90 days in an army jail and was re- duced to the rank of private for his part in the smuggling of gold and opium in Indochina last year. In Jail For Smuggling vice charge but Thursday sud- denly switched to a guilty plea after consulting with his de- fending officer, Maj. F. A. Le- ger of Quebec City. His unexpected move ruled jout the submission as evidence |of a 14-page handwritten state- ment Noel had given provost of- ¢}was hurled against cars and 'jup. The crowd refused to let 'jor 11 pounds of plastic explo- BOOBY-TRAPPED TRUCK BLASTS MOSLEM AREA Talk On Berlin French Urged Wipe Out OAS ALGIERS -- A booby-trapped gasoline truck blew up in a Moslem area of Algiers today. First reports listed one dead and several injured in the latest act of terrorism attributed to the Secret Army. Several Moslems were badly burned when flaming gasoline the rebels seven weeks ago to put Algeria on the road to in- dependence. The _ extremists have vowed to fight to the death to keep the North Afri- ean territory French. France is responsible for the maintenance of order until the Moslems take over after a self- determination referendum. But the Algerian rebel press service in Tunis said that only the interim Algerian security force provided for in the cease- fire agreement "can establish order by liquidating the Fas- cists of the Secret Army." This security force is slowly being formed to operate under the in- terim provisional government, but so far it has not been turned loose in Algiers and Oran, the chief theatres of Se- cret Army terrorism. The French government meanwhile promised to crack down on the European terror- ists. High Commissioner Chris tian Fouchet, the administra- tive chief in Algeria, told the territory's million European settlers in a radio - television speech that he had issued rig« orous directives against terror- ism to the commanders of the security forces, Fouchet denounced 'co w- ardly" terrorist attacks on Mos- lem civilians and warned the European settlers to choose to support law and order "not to- morrow, but today." At least 14 persons were. killed and 25 wounded in ef of violence throughout Alge Thursday. Thirteen of the dead™ and 17 of the wounded were ce military officials sai Dutch Forces Fighting Indonesians THE HAGUE (Reuters) --- Dutch forces in West . New buildings. Several surrounding homes, most occupied by Mos- lems, were set afire, and a do- zen parked cars burst into flame. Officials said among those in- jured --mostly from burns-- were two young Moslem girls. Several Europeans were re- ported slightly injured. Fire companies quickly quelled the flames. A tower of smoke drifted from the area on the heights above the Casbah, where 80,000 Moslems live. ANGR CROWD GATHERS An angry Moslem crowd of about 1,500 swarmed around the areas as brilliant flames shot anyone except firemen 'through. Officials at the scene said 10 sive had been used to blow up the truck. The driver's body was hurled 100 feet. The terrorist Secret Army which vows to keep Algeria French was blamed by officials for the latest vehicle booby- trap. Wednesday a booby - trapped car blew up, killing 62 Moslem dock workers and wounding more than 100 others. The Algerian rebel govern- ment meanwhile called on the French government to ignore sentimentality and legality and wipe out the European under- ground. The sharp demand from the provisional government in Tu- nis was coupled with a warn- ing that the situation in Algeria is getting worse and there is a risk of "unforeseen conse- quences"--a hint of retaliation from the Moslem masses that nationalist leaders have so far held in check. After an emergency meeting in Tunis: leaders of the rebel Guinea are fighting Indonesian paratroops, the Netherlands government announced today. It said a "small number" of regime said: 'The. liquidation of the Secret Army demands radical measures excluding all sentimentality and transcending Indonesians were dropped April 27 near Fak-Fak on the south- east coast of the Pacific island and the civil administration and The five-member court delib-|ficers. The switch came as soon erated 2% hours before pro-|as the judge advocate ruled the nouncing sentence. statement admissible after a Earlier, Cpl. Gerald Albert)day-long trial within a trial. clared deserters by the Cana-} ian immigration department. They complained about what they called rough treatment by . 4lfirst officer Jan Beeman. They simade no specific charges but complained that when _ they signed on 19 months ago in Liverpool they were promised |they would be back in the home |port within four or five months. Captain J. W. Gardiner and first officer Beeman declined comment on the dispute. The ship moved out from Cen- tennial pier into mid - harbor | where it is expected to wait | while arrangements can be \made to replace the striking jcrew members. |cooks walked off and began pa- jrading 2'ong the dock. They jearried placards saying \strike"' |breakdown officer." PRESIDENT NASSER "cause of the fir ATHENS (AP)--State Secre- tary Rusk, seeking approval of all the Untied States' NATO al- lies for further talks with the Russians on Berlin, said today ; the Soviet Union currently wants aa the West to think no Berlin cri- WRECKA sis is pending! Speaking at the spring mevt- & ing of the North Atlantic Tre -ty n |Organization, Rusk warned that ee ] e ce uspec S the idea of no crisis was the im- pression the Russians wished to |make. Even if true, he added, d there was no way of detern:in- ing whether it was permanent n Fatal Train Crash #3¥\cssear Soviet manoeuvring. sk said the West TOKYO (AP)--A train engi-jon Tokyo's north side and side- : He insisted that never before Pons? re advantage of the neer and three other trainmen| swiped a commuter train filledjin 18 years of railroading had Soviet attitude regardless. involved in the three - train|with Japanese, homeward-jhe misread a signal. lies @ voice in the employment wreck that killed 163 persons| bound after a day in the capital President Shinji Sogo of the i of nuclear arms against a Com- were arrested today on suspic-|celebrating Constitution Day. Japan National Railway wept D ies | munist onslaught inWestern ion of criminal negligence. Injured, stunned survivorsjas he told reporters the acci-j urce en Europe. More than 380 other persons poured out of the passenger|dent was caused by "the care- eae rp were injured in the chain reac-|train's windows and doors andjlessness of our officials." One} h . Of noe py er Se ae tion smashup, 100 of them se-|huddled in the darkness on ajof his assistants said the freight) ooting reg yas in Washington with verely. jnearby track, Then another|train passed through a red Soviet Ambaamuticn Anatoly Do- The engineer, 38-year-old No-|commuter train roared into the! light : : R L d va ' A hin gina 1h cont. rifumi Manakami, was _ grief|wreckage, sliced through knots) "It rained people," said one) ea er rynin ma alt in idireport stricken before his arrest as he|of survivors, jumped the tracks|man who lived near the wreck.| eS [pe gee mg has ort ar the told reporters he might havejand plunged down an embank-| "It was hell and I had to close} CAIRO (AP) A ite gv Jeb i Sad supp misread a railroad signal as|ment into a row of houses. j|my eyes," said Tadio a ee Gaal te er : ae earns iving the green go-ahead min-| vas. 's sec st) another witness. |today publishe § | e other big _ Siar biteee the nis FE ly Seven age Mma Ramune Tadashi Miyano, who lived| President Nasser had been shot France, West Germany and "I don't know how I can/ world War. No Westerners were|below the embankment, rushed|/and wounded by an assassin. hoog -- Thursday gave him apologize," Minakami said. _| reported among the victims, |utside when he heard the first} He said the | president iSitheir backing to continue the Announcing the arrests later,) sinakami said he was sure) "25": |'sound and well" and declared) talks seeking to determine Sov- Shoichi Kimura, chief police in-|. co: the green go-ahead sig-|_. "bile 1 watched, I saw the)"such reports--as all other ré-liet willingness to reach #t least vestigator, declared: ent S ipa &*/second train come rushing into|ports on the United Arab Re-|an interim arrangement on Bet- {nal about 1-155 feet from the the scene," he said. "I saw alpublic by Radio Israel or pro-|lin "We have determined that &)coliision point "but it might|7& SCeme De Said. | saw a)pu y eae beeen we : sige ag freight isdaidiae oaiek ped pic bc into my house. The roof flew! The semiofficial Middle East and Foreign Minister Gerhard jumped the tracks minutesjoccurred if the light was|°! and the whole house crum-|news agency also issued a de-|Schroeder of West Germany after it passed a signal point|green." 2 |Pled like dust. nial, circulating it only outside/ Thursday night endorsed Rusk's ey 3 - d Ironicaily, the death toll prob-|the United Arab Republic. The | dealings with the Russians on ably was boosted by safety fea-|agency called the assassination) Berlin. tures instituted after 106 trap-|report "an utter fabrication that) -------- ----_--__---- Dollar Value ( 'ut ped Japanese died in a burning/has no foundation." nine A train in Yokohama in 1951. The! The denial by the Middle East ht C Japan National Railway in-|news agency said the report Freig er rew © r stalled switches in all its cars was "cheap propaganda" on the to enable passengers to open|part of, the Israeli radio. | 8 Raises City Debt the doors in emergencies. The! The report of the assassina-| Said Deserters passengers Thursday night used|tion attempt was published in : : these switches to leave the first/Britain today by the Daily Devaluation of Canada's dol-;market) but money was scarce ; lar to 92.5 cents in American|and you couldn't get a firm bid funds will cost Oshawa taxpay-|on debentures. I felt the cdianat -- far Ge ay Gieublaree 'which ccent, but | dart kaos wee' |tion attempt, following this with| . y e S oh) occ u idn't know when." | :. resi | . rg a have been sold in the U.S.) When Canada's dollar first fell Murder Charge |: wos Oe ee or ae ee market, estimates City Treasur-|from its premium position more Biseesa ' a Ng me 0 oF es de er Harold Tripp. jthan a year ago, the increased 0 Mi s tan urecay end. Wi . This increase is expected tojcost on the $2,770,000 worth of ver ISSINg --s fairly cat 8 for gg tee J pert gage in the U.S time because principle and in-|was jus ,000. terest debenture payments are} This debenture total repre- Golf Player fixed so the total amount is con-|sents approximately 15 per cent stant: as the _ interest de-|of Oshawa's outstanding deben-| EDMONTON (CP) -- Police creases, the principle increases. |ture debt. said today that Raymond Da-|. TOTALS WILL DROP With no more debentures|niel Workman of Edmonton has However, as a series is made|S0!4 in the U.S. market, alljbeen charged with capital mur-|; up of 10, 15 and 20 year deben-|Wi!! be paid off by 1977. This/der in connection with the dis-| tures, totals will drop in the|¥°2™ about $352,000 in princi-|jappearance of Edmonton golf) maturing years. jple and 'nterest _will be paid|professional Frank Willey, 48. Oshawa sold debentures, pay-| Off, roughly equivalent to last} The announcement was made| able in U.S. funds, only in 19567°" jat_@ press conference by Po-| and 1957, when money was\REALLY A DEBT jlice Chief M.. F.: E. Anthony. 3 scarce in Canada. A debenture is really a debt.| Willey was reported missing} This was -advantageous be-|It is a means by which a city bY his wife April 20. | cause the Canadian dollar was;can borrow large amounts of Chief 'Anthony said Workman,| then at a prefhium -- and be-|/money and repay it over a de-also known as Raymond Blain,} cause interest rates on the/fined period of time. has been arrested. | money borrowed were (and still, The city's security for the, Willey's body has not been! are) one-half to three-quarters|debenture is its taxing power.|found. Police believe the body} of one per cent lower than The city sells its debenture to|was buried in a shallow gravel those available in Canada the highest bidder, trying to getiin a clump of trees in the} Says Mr: Tripp: "I didn't\as close to $100 per 100 as pos-'\Looma, Alta., district, Chief want to go (to the U.S. money/sible Anthony said | OTTAWA (CP) -- Reverbera-jof imports. And provinces andjterms of United States cur-| creases arising from the stabili-| Ron W. Todham,. president of tions were felt today in business municipalities with foreign-held|rency, Treasurer James N, Al-|zation will not be passed on to|Chrysler offices and on the election hust-;/bond debt complained it will/lan said at Toronto. customers at present. ings across the country from the) mean added cost in interest and) Ontario has not been a heavy; farl K. government's dramatic move to principal payments. borrower in the U.S. market! dent of American Motors (Can-|Canadian content." cut the Canadian dollar's ex-| Premier Jean Lesage of Que-|during recent years and will/ada) Limited, said the lower| change value and peg it at 92% bec said the pegging will have have few borrowings maturing value would add about $20 to| vant U.S. cents. only a negligible effect on Que-| within the next five or six years. the price of a car made in Can i Stock market prices spurted bec's finances. Total U.S. loans outstanding,|ada but $80 to $90 to an im-| dian economy to offset the im- ahead Thursday, especially on Mr. Lesage, also provincialjhe said, amounted to about) ported car, | mediate disadvantages of the big export industries. Wheat/ finance minister, said that since|$110,000,000. The new . dollar| «phe trick is not to import {exchange deal," Mr. Todham ices t up six cents a/his government took power all| level would add about $120,000) ia. dteone ; gy, | Said. ol Seuriet loans have been floated on the/to interest costs this year, |N¢ Said. "we're going to swal- bushel." Tourist officials ap- Candi "add etd Ad Ae "| Sar tai ' ae this [OW its we're not going to pass|SEES MORE TRAVEL plauded. eg a lS gad ands WEL DO Bae when the US. dollar waglit on. What we lose in profit,| Alan Field, director of the But some _ retailers talked 'he erin staibtiieadion: siti aa dled ot ahaa 'nce sho we're going to pick up in busi-|Canadian Government Travel about possible price increases cost the city of Montreal $600.-fcent, and. by borrowing in the|2°** taken away from the im-|Bureau, said he is sure that resulting from the higher cost| p99 guring { : , rie Jers: 8 in Me! ports." more U.S. visitors will be en- ing the next 12 months,|U.S., we got an interest rate : ; bes LA tao to Conan Lactance Roberge, city finance|that was one per cent lower}, A Spokesman for General en ae o come to Canada director, said Thursday. The|than the Canadian rate. tors of Canada Limited said:/and will spend more money. CITY EMERGENCY extra money would have to| 'This offsets much of the cost| 1 would | be safe to say the| "There's Some evidénce to PHONE NUMBERS cover losses in bond values and|of devaluation, We're not as|move won't have any effect on|show that in 1961 the lowered higher interest rates. well as we were before .. . but | 1962 car prices. : value of the Canadian dollar iene we can't really say we've been|_ Karl E. Scott, president ofjwas accompanied by quite a POLICE 725-1133 EFFECT ON ONTARIO hurt." aa Ford Motor Company of Can-|large increase in Canada's tour- : < The Ontario government will ada Limited, said the movejist income. It also means, FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 not be greatly affected by Ot- CAR PRICES STEADY f HOSPITAL 723-2211 would be an incentive to ex-|think, that more Canadians will | tawa's move of pegging the;Ca-| Spokesmen for Canadian car porters aps could have favor-|be encouraged to travel more 'nadian dollar at 92.5 cents in'manufacturers said price in- able effec.m "We hope there will be ad-|# ages for the whole Cana-|F I 'inside their own country." | | West, 33, was given 30 days de- tention and cut down to a pri- vate for his role. Noel, father of two children, showed no emotion as the sen- |tence was read. He was charged with a breach of military discipline jand order, and not with any criminal offence. The charge was laid under the National Defence Act which provides a maximum penalty of dismissal |with disgrace. | Cpl. Noel, father of two teen- jaged children, originally jpleaded not guilty to the ser- | Deckhands, stewards and): and "carpenter nervous Corporation of Can-|F% jada Limited, said the stabiliza-| ; Brownridge, presi-|tion "'will greatly add to our]; ~~ AILEEN HALL Teacher Stands For Nomination Miss . Aileen Hall, MA, fematics at OCVI in Oshawa, |said today that she will allow her name to stand for nomina- jtion at the upcoming nomination |meeting of the New Democratic Party in Ontario. riding. The NDP's will hold their convention in Oshawa May 15 at Hotel Genosha. Miss Hall jcame to this country from Scoty land in 1957, # four-cornered electoral al jteacher in English and Math-| |MAKES DELIVERIES The army prosecutor, Maj. James Fay of Ottawa, said Noel while serving in Laos and South Viet Nam with the truce legality." Dutch troops are '"'taking the The European extremists have launched daily attacks with new savagery since France reached a truce with necessary measures." A defence finistry statement also said that "unidentified air- craft" were spotted Wednesday over the extreme western tip of commission made two opium deliveries himself--"or pack- ages he believed to contain op- ium"--and arranged for two! other deliveries. | Total amount of opium in- volved was 121 pounds. Maj. Fay: said Noel was paid 50,000 piastres and 80,000 pias- tres for the deliveries he made jhimself, the. larger amount be- the island and over the south- east coast. Meanwhile, some 850 troops today sailed for West New Guinea as part of a Dutch buildup there in face of Indo- nesia's announced intention to "liberate" the island. The Dutch reinforcements, the second shipload to head for DERBY FAVORITE CUT FROM RACE LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) Sir Gaylord, strong favorite to take Saturday's Kentucky Derby, was declared offici- ally out of the race today by trainer Casey Hayes jing exchanged for $1,150 in United States currency. No dol- |lar equivalent was given for the the disputed territory in the last two weeks, included com- mandos and "special units" about which no details were after developing a lame- ness following a_ half-mile workout. |smaller payment in piastres. - | given- | | The door was opened for a |with the announcement that the |Social Credit Party, for the first |time in history, will enter a can- |didate for the federal election in the Ontario riding. Allan Alexander Alton, of Ux- bridge, was nominated earlier this week at the nomination con- Party at its national }quarters in Toronto. Mr. Alton is a Social Credit veteran and. until 1961, had been on the ex ecutive board of the Ontario its inception in 1940, |FOUR-WAY FIGHT In anticipation of the nomin- nominating convention, May 16 this is the fourth time in the past 30 years that four candidates will compete for the votes in this area in a federal election. servatives, Liberals and the CCF the Reconstruction Party in 1935 entered the race. In Social Credit Association since ° ation of a candidate of the New = Democratic Party at the NDP & Besides the Progressive Con- fj Socreds Name Alton g 1953. the Labor Progressive|cessful as a Social Credit can- race|Party had a candidate and in|didate in York North in the fed- 1958 an independent candidate,|eral elections of 1958, was born, Helge Nielsen, entered the field./ raised and educated in Toronto. Mr. Alton, who was unsuc-|He entered a railroad career in 1907 by joining the Canadian Pacific Railway Company. In 1911 he entered the service of the Canadian Northern Railway Company. In the First World War he went overseas with the Canad- ian Expeditionary Forces, with Motor Transport. On demobiliz- ation he returned home and served as a brakeman andjcon- ductor with his old company. For some time he acted as 'chairman of the adjustment _ board for railroad conductors of - Northern Ontario. LIVES IN UXBRIDGE After retirement Mr. Alton settled in Uxbridge. He has two daughters and one son. Mr. Alton is now establishing his campaign organization in the riding and will soon start actively in his bid for votes. Campaign headquarte have not yet been establishes. vention of the Social Credit : head- °

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