| Whitby Submits $995,000 Spending Pr6 he Oshawa Time THOUGHT FOR TODAY The Four Corn says responsibility makes some men grow and others just swell up. ers philosopher ' ' , t he a Pp WEATHER REPORT Sunny and cool today, Sunny but increasing cloudiness Thursday and a little warmer. Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 1962 Authorized as Second Class Mail Stes ad foe See nS Postage THIRTY PAGES VOL. 91--NO. 109 Open Split On Berlin alk Plans WASHINGTON (AP) Anjhad made earlier when he as- i ween the United|sailed as unworkable a U.S. age a st Germany proposal for creation of an in-| clouded the outlook today for ternational authority to operate! 'ifuture U.S. talks with Russia|the supply lines between West} on Berlin Berlin and West Germany. A | U-S. officials said the Ken-\department spokesman said: nedy administration is deter-| "Both the president and the -,|mined to go ahead with the ex-|secretary of state have repeat- -{ploratory conversations. State/edly stated .. . that in view of a On Caan, OF VISIT Police Search Lawyer OLD UB Thought . Secretary Rusk is due to have "\another meeting with Soviet '|Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin in the next week or so. | Washington officials said the 'lsituation is complicated further by as evident within the German government \itself. The line Adenauer took in disagreement ithe potentially dangerous na- ture of the Berlin problem and 6 the personal sacrifices which T IT rists the American people have been, and may yet be, called on to make in connection with the) ALGIERS (Reuters) hands of gunmen and fulfilment of our commitment) diers and security police sealed|throughout the territory 43 per- to West Berlin, it was incum-|off the European Michelet Quar-|sons -- 39 of them Moslems-- bent on the United States gov-jter in central Algiers early to-|were killed and 27 wounded, 22 ernment to explore the possi-|qay and conducted a house-to-|of them Moslems, H In the Western city of Oran In Illegal Game TORONTO (CP) Royce Frith, current president of the Ont ario Liberal Association, was once warned for noisiness while gambling in a club run by Joseph McDermott and Vin- icent Feeley, the royal commis- sion on crime was told today, ment or any judicial function- ary. The lawyer was asked jwhether he knew anything jabout a published report last year that Magistrate J. L. Ad- dison of Toronto had been of- fered a $50,000 bribe in connec- tion with a case involving gam- public this week was described/ bilities of reaching some meas-|house search for terrorist gun- Worsnte infer. David: Han | | by these officials as differingjure of agreement with the So-\men of the Secret Army Or-|some 50 explosions were heard \phrey, a former legal counsel blers, line which Gerhardt talks with sharply from the FiForeitgn Minister Schroeder took in |Rusk | Adenauer told a press confer- lence Tuesday that "I see no 'lground for continuing the talks' between U.S. and Soviet offi- Icials. He also asked "do you LECTURED BY REDS {think there is no danger in con- viet Union on the Berlin prob-| ganization. iduring the night and reliable lem." | As the search went on, a Mos-|/Sources said the Secret Army Ey ~|Iem woman was shot to death in|had fired mortar shells into the a Bab el Oued, the European|Moslem quarters of the city. Widow Beaten working class quarter -- a kill- Earlier in the day, steel-hel- ' Robbed, Lett lother day of violence against |Clamped a curfew on the: city's) Stleege European quarter after gunmen figpHah WomeD: lin the area had poured bullet Previously, .through the long P S| : ; -linto a neighboring Mos | {months of terrorist provocation 8 8 lem He said he understood that the magistrate had formally disclaimed any such offer. Resuming Tuesday after an # for the gamblers, testified he |and Frith, another Toronto law- yer, visited the club at Cooks- ville sometime before its clos- fing in June, 1960 to "try our|1l-day recess, the commission luck." , heard evidence over a wide He said he and Frith, who/feld. had had a few drinks previ-| ously in a Toronto tavern, gam-| bled for a: short time in the cen.| a. Alan A. Jones, 29, an Australiah medical mission- ary from Sydney, goes about his work at the Seventh-Day | 'Adventist hospital in Saigon, South Viet Nam, today after | being stopped and questioned | by Communist-led Viet Cong guerrillas in a remote moun- | Dr JFK Fe On Medical Care Plan WASHINGTON (AP) eare for the aged plan will be) approved by Congress and that all doctors will treat patients under it--an indirect reference to. some 200 New Jersey physic- jans who say they won't. Thus Kennedy obliquely joined a more direct assault on | week ago before being allow- --Pres-|Kennedy's social security - fi- ident Kennedy says his medical/nance medical plan if it passed tinuing talks indefinitely with- out result?" The effect of his question was to suggest that he ithinks it might prove danger- 'ous to carry on the exploratory discussion indefinitely. tain village. Dr. Jones was one of five Seventh-Day Ad ventists lectured for two hours by the guerrillas a ' ed to continue missionary operations "as long as we |REACTS TO COMMENTS keep out of politics." The state department reacted (AP Wirephoto) 'to comments which Adenauer _.;man but els Confident % \t | S$ | jh it t 1 c (Abraham Ribicoff. He said the). Congress. |doctors were violating their pro- Kennedy, at the United Auto Workers) \ convention in Atlantic City, said/Mail Congress and the Ameri-'t without mentioning the New/can people. it Jersey physicians: In a statement, Ribicoff said "I am confident that the, these doctors apparently be- great majority, in fact all doc-|lieve it is all right for the fed- tors, will treat those who may\eral government to help build lice her attacker speaking Tuesday|fessional oath and that the reso-| gained consciousness during t jlution was an attempt to black-| assault after which her ling that may have signalled an-|meted French security forces| and revenge, the white - robed Moslem women had been al-| PETERBOROUGH (CP) -- A jowed to move freely through taggering along a deserted lane here Tuesday. Mrs. Nora Wheeler told po- that she was unable o furnish a more detailed de- cription. Police said the woman told) action against them, thus sab--------- them she was walking to her|otaging the French - Algerian cottage at the eastern edge of|neace agreement. own from a bus stop about} 0:30 p.m. when the attack oc-} urred, The men struck her over the! ead with a flashlight several he said. Mrs. Wheeler said: she re- he at- acker fled with her purse con- aining about $70. is = was @ YOUNZ |, otic ' : | % jtimes causing scalp lacerations jo came from Welfare Secretary|and rendering her unconscious, | 75-year-old widow was attacked, areas where their men went in beaten and robbed and left!fear of their lives. But Monday four women were shot and it was feared the Se- cret Army had decided on this as a means of provoking Moslems into bloody _ retalia- tion against Europeans which) would force French troops into However, only one Moslem) woman was killed Tuesday and' police said her death might) have been for a private motive, In the capital Tuesday a Mos- m died every 15 minutes at! 9 Freedomites Convicted In Bombing tre road Veterans' Club in the nearby town. _ Humphrey said his compan- ion was making a lot of noise jand throwing dice around and Girl Dies, 2 Hurt By Shotgun Blast LONGLAC, Ont. (CP) A five-year - old girl was killed and two boys were injured Tuesday when a shotgun with which a six-year-old boy was playing discharged. MR. X NAMED The man called "Mr. X" at |v ery} the Royal Commission on balay warned to be quiet. Crime in Toronto, which re- | He said they left shortly after sumed hearing after an li-day |that. Humphrey said he be- recess, was revealed as Frank |lieved the crap shooting was a (Curly) Gardner, Windsor | >ank" game, illegal in this gambler. See story on Page 2 |Province. He said he could not --CP Wirephoto |Tecall whether Frith was a quarter. | | | {member of the club, | Humphrey, in his third and final day as a witness recount- jing a series of associations with |McDermott and Feeley, also jtold the royal commission: 1, He was never instructed by the pair to try to get the at- Peace In Pacific Said Threatened :7er res ¢ CANBERRA (Reuters)--Aus-|mier Keith Holyoake and Aus-|/bling club at Niagara. Falls, tralia, New Zealand and thejtralain External Affairs Minis-|though he might have suggested United States today declarediter Sir Garfield Barwick as ~ hoes on his own. the peace of the Pacific area|was learned Australia may send| is menaced by threats of force.,army jungle warfare experts)DIDN'T MAKE PRESENTS The statement was contained|to help Americans training yer He replied no to a question in a communique issued after/South Vietnamese forces. |by Andrew Brewin, New Demo. two days of talks here by the) The Melbourne Herald said:|cratic Party counsel, as to ANZUS Treaty Council. "If a decision to send per-|Whether he had ever made The ANZUS Treaty is a mu- sonnel to Viet Nam is finally Peet at the pa ig on be- rs. Reds Blamed For Rioting In Portugal LISBON -- The Portuguese government today blamed Com. munists for anti - government riots here Tuesday in which an elderly woman was killed and at least 10 persons injured. A statement from the infor- mation secretariat described the riots as 'Communist man- oeuvres" and said calm had re- turned to the capital, although security measures still were in force. The statement said police used tear-gas and fired warn- ing shots "in the course of prompt suppression of these Communist activities.' In a "few cases" police used arms after being attacked, it said. Dead was a 62 ~ year - old woman who was hit by a bullet as she watched the demonstra« -- from a fourth ~ floor wine ow. the physicians' stand launched NELSON, B.C. (CP)--A Sons tual security pact made up of/made by the federal govern-| be covered by this national pro-|the hospitals in which they, New Zealand and by other administration offici- als The New Jersey physicians from Point Pleasant Hospital and Fitkin Memorial Hospital at Nepturne, signed a resolution last week saying they would re- fuse to treat patients under gram." practice, but that an insurance Also speaking before the auto workers, Labor Secretary Ar- thur J. Goldberg called the res- olution "a disgrace, a disgrace to the country." The strongest comments Pathet Lao Move Probed In Laos VIENTIANE, Laos (AP) Malcolm Macdonald, British co- chairman of the Geneva Con ference on Laos, sought to find out today why the pro-Commu- nist Pathet Lao broke the year- --)|Tha, the northern Laotian town that fell to the earlier this week The foreign office said Sir Frank Roberts, Britain's am- bassador in Moscow, asked For- Commmnists plan that would help their pa- tients pay their hospital bills would not be good." DENOUNCES STATEMENT Dr. J .Bruce Henriksen, who initiated the New Jersey reso- lution, denounced Ribicoff's statement as a threat to with- jhold federal aid from hospitals whose doctors oppose the med-| | lical care plan. Henriksen said: "This thing has been twisted to make us look like a bunch of stinkers, as if we were not going to take care of old people, but that isn't true. Our fight is against the King-Anderson bill (the Medical Care bill) and the socialization of medicine." old cease-fire and captured the eign Minister Andrei Gromyko | of Freedom Doukhobor who ad- gp mitted putting an' explosive eC Ua. ment the numbers would not be! 3. A mining company backed large, but the moral impact of/by McDermott and Feeley, and |charge at the base of a power pylon said Tuesday it was left to God whether the pylon should be blown up. The statement of Tim A. Ma- |kortoff. was admitted as evid- jence in an assize court trial|trjes° at which nine Freedomites were convicted of conspiracy to bomb the tower and six of theni -of placing the explosives. They were remanded for sentence. The destruction of the Con- solidated Mining and Smelting Company pylon caused a power failure that shut down some in- ' dustry and put almost 1,000 men 'out of work. royal government stronghold of to join in a request for such an Nam Than Macdonald flew to rebel head- quarters in the Plaine des Jarres to meet with Prince Souphanouvong, the Pathet Lao chief, who had pledged that he would never attack Nam Tha. Macdonald also was expected to confer with representatives of Souphanouvong's half-brother neutralist Prince Souvanna Phomua, who is ni France. Macdonald was accompanied by the three members of the international control commis sion for Laos--Avtar. Singh of India, Leon Mayrand of Canada and A. Morski of Poalnd A British spokesman said in London Tuesday that Britain had asked the Soviet Union to persuade the Reds.to withdraw from the northwest provincial capital 20 miles from Red Chi na's border, which fell Sunday after a four-month siege Britain and the Soviet Union are co-chairmen of the Inter- national Co ence in Geneva, which trving to. establish a neutral government .in Laos. is LONDON (AP) -- The Soviet Union and Poland today blocked plans for an international inves- tigation of the fighting at Nam CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 RAPS PROGRAM Medical Officer-of Health, Dr. L. A. Clarke, of Hamil- Previously Henriksen had! said the move should not be in- Soviets ' . terpreted as a doctors' strike investigation but the withheld agreement. A foreign office and added: told reporters: "If patients can't pay their "No agreement was reached bills out of their own pocket, or on any specific point. There through insurance, then we'll may be further discussions on treat them free. We just refuse Laos between Gromyko and Ro- to do it under the Anderson- berts." King bill." spokesman ton, claims adverse side-effects could result from Toronto's Sabin oral anti-polio vaccina- tion program. Hamilton, to example. (CP Wirephoto) | refused Makortoff's confession said that after placing the charges| "we said that it was up to God." The ministers expressed sup-|Australian participation in this}of which he was nominal pres. port for measures to help the|area would have beneficial re-jident, seemed to do 'odd pro Western government of|percussions to the non-Commu-|things" because of the mining South Viet Nam resist the/nist cause throughout Southeast|laws and his clients' tax posi. They reaffirmed their coun- 4. He knew the pair were op- desire' to promote secur- No Test Treaty jerating illegal gambling enter- ' Asia. Without France: did not consider his activi- MAY SEND EXPERTS \ties inconsistent with,his law- talks with New Zealand Pre- clear test ban treaty without edge of any attempts by Mc- ap adalah ciestestca --|F rance. |Dermott or Feeley to attempt U.S. Air Force Jet new Soviet position at a session| the attorney - general's depart- jof the 17-nation disarmament -- Of 10 civilians brought to the Sao Jose Hospital, five were suffering from bullet wounds. The riots began after leaflets were distributed urging the people to demonstrate. Police cars carrying well-armed, steel- helmeted police began patroling the central streets and squares. The police began firing after demonstrators stoned their cars on Lisbon's main thoroughfare, the Avenida da. Liberdade. The leaflets bore the slogan "Down with Fascism and 'war in Angola," Portugal's rebelli- ous West African territory, and were signed by "Duarte," the code name of Alvaro Cunhal, the Communist party secretary- general, threat posed by Communist! Asia." jtion, but he had no "real in- guerrillas. terest" in it. ity, stability and a better life prises but--in reply to another for countries in South East question by the NDP lawyer-- State Secretary Rusk of the GENEVA (AP)--Russia said) yer's oath to uphold the law, United States. wound up his today it will never sign any nu-| 5. He had no personal knowl- Valerian Zorin, Soviet deputy|to corrupt any member of a law |foreign minister, announced the/enforcement body, anyone in Crash Kills 6 Men |eonference discussing the test| LIMESTONE, Me. (AP)--An ban negotiations of the United] air force KC-135 jet tanker plane crashed and burned on takeoff early today at Loring Air Force Base, killing all six "If he wanted the tower to fall it's up to him--we did our States, Britain and the Soviet) Union. | Zorin referred to the recent French underground test in the part.' When Mr. Justice H. Alan Maclean asked the accused to he {stand to be remanded they re- wooded area 1,500 feet north of said, is not following Toron- |fused. When the court clerk re-'the end of the runway. peated the request they again THOMPSON IN ALBERTA | | By THE CANADIAN PRESS |trip to a Progressive Conserva-;through the Niagara Peninsula, Leaders of three parties went/tive rally tonight in Brockville|a coffee party and a press com to do battle today to stake a with a stopover in Kingston. ference were cancelled, claim to Ontario's rich prize of; After two days of campaign-| The 57-year-old NDP leader 85 seats in the June 18 generalling in his own riding of Algoma pledged his party's protection election East, Liberal Leader Lester|for the Canadian consumer in Only political chieftain absent|Pearson was in Toronto to pitch|his speech to some 350 persons from the Ontario campaignithe first ball of the Torontojat a rally for the ridings of scene was Robert Thompson of|/Maple Leafs' International] Welland, Lincoln and Niagara Social Credit, who planned to|Baseball Leage home opener, | Falls meet party candidates in Ed-|He was then to drive around the} It was time, he said, the Zov- monton and visit his own con-|western end of Lake Ontario,)ernment went to the aid of the stituency of Red Deer. He spent)with stops in lakeshore towns,|consumer who had been gouged Tuesday' in Vancouver for an evening rally in Hamil-|and cheated by the. economic The other leaders sought tojton }monopoly in Canada. The NDP, enlist support if thickly-popu AA s ie nN RET if elected, would appoint a min- lated agricultural and industrial DOL GLAS RECOVERED ister "to protect the Canadian regions of Ontario, a province, T- C. Douglas, who now de-|consumer against price-fixing jthat provides nearly one-third of|S¢cribes himself as in "first-class conspiracies, unscrupulous _pro- |the Commons': 265 members,|Condition" after a bout of stom-| motion techniques and poor Their program ach flu, was to address a New quality goods." Prime Minister Diefenbaker,|Democratic Party -rally in Kit-|~ yyy Douglas challenged Mr fresh from a. twoday swing Chener Diefenbaker to bring up the through Quebec, was to fly from He the campaign question of "free enterprise the St. Lawrence River com- trail Tuesday after versus socialism" which the munity of 'Mont Joli the being sidelined ir bed = since prime minister had forecast last |RCAF station at-Trenton. This|Sunday. However, to ease his }was to be followed by a trainireturn a scheduled motorcadel rejoined in Welland to ' | jada Leaders Seek Ontario Supp Quebec tour in the south shore St. Lawrence town of Rimouski with a declaration that he plans to expound a policy of '"'Can- first, foremost, and al- ways" in his campaign. "Our poiley will be Canadian, and it will not be dictated by anyone else in the world," he told some 1,000 persons at the Rimouski community centre Earlier, he outlined campaign strategy for Conservative party workers at Riviere du Loup. The key to victory was throug the efforts of party organizers at the poll level. The prime minister said he assessed the political wind to make him "very, very hopeftl"' that the 1958 results, which swept the Conservatives to power with the largest majority in Canadian history, will be re- peated During the day Mr. and Mrs. year as the chief election issue.| Diefenbaker visited the summer|party's British Columbia candi- Mr. Diefenbaker wound up his'home of Sir John A. Macdonald,'dates that if Canada becomes'tions Sahara and declared: "There is another power now testing nuclear weapons. This power is refusing to take part in the negotiations and has never said it would adhere to a nuclear test ban treaty." airmen aboard. The big plane, $3,500,000, came which cost down in a The aircraft was on a routine refuelling mission ort any more socialistic {t will be-; come a nation of "look-alikes! and think-alikes."' 1 | Working Canadians needed the security of prosperity, not) welfare. \ | "Tt is nonsense to tax all the initiative and development po-| tential out of the industries and) + individuals who should be al- lowed to go about the vital bus- iness. of expanding Canada's! welfare-sick economy." | The electoral machinery also} came under the spotlight again Tuesday. Chief Electoral Offi- cer Nelson Castonguay an-} nounced he has ordered an in- quiry into actions of the return- ing officer in Toronto Trinity} riding, The inquiry would determine} whether Henry L. McKinstry! "knowingly. or negligently" ap- pointed an election clerk and enumerators who were not qual-} ified under the Canada Elec- Act. Canada's first at St. Patrick. PEARSON TOURS ISLAND Liberal Leader Pearson had a hard day's driving over back roads on Manitoulin Island to take coffee and cookies and say hello to his constituents. His largest audience. was about 400, mostly school children, while his chief political speech was to a group of about 100 Indians at Wikwemikong Of some 12,000 residents of Manitoulin Island, about 2,000 are Indians and most of them have the federal vote for the first time in the forthcoming election prime minister, Five-year-old Thomas Rich- ardson has a bright smile for the cameraman after he was found alive and safe by Henry Vanderwall, left, a volunteer in .an estimated 400-man search party that included a mounted sheriff's posse, state police, bloodhounds and air- craft. Thomas spent. 19 hours in a swampy woods a mile Mr. Pearson, accompanied by his wife on his Manitoulin rounds, ended the day with a flight to Sudbury and Toronto In Vancouver, Social Credit Leader Thompson told his 3 LOST AND FOUND | north of his rural home near Grand Haven, Mich., when he became separated late JMon- | day from a group of cin | playing hide and seek. He was | barefoot and shivering when found but in apparent good health and spirits after a | checkup at the hospital. --AP Wirephote