THOUGHT FOR TODAY Wealth is stuff and nonsense; if you have the stuff, people for- give your nonsense. Oshawa Zine WEATHER REPORT Cloudy with scattered showers and a risk of thunderstorm to- night and Friday. Little change in temperature. Price 10 Cents Per Copy She OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, MAY 10, 1962 Authorized os Second Ottawa and for payment Class Ma il Post Office Department, of Postage in Cash. THIRTY PAGES" VOL. 91--NO. 110 New Wave. Of Algeria Terrorism tion on what had happened in the. darkness or if there were) casualties. | FLOUT WARNING ' 4 4} : The terrorists paid no heed ; steno the dead were lg" a sande waning, fom gerian port town of Oran. Aul|Premier Ben Yousse en but one of the dead and all but|Khedda of the Algerian provi-| ! | , fios-|Sional government that they) © a ee |would jeopardize their future, © a : = in the country if they keep their) ie ot See Ried were attacks on the Moslem popula- y n Moslem women, shot dead i aa e streets of Oran. | : ; i the quick series of at-. Speaking from his headquar- tacks, several hundred Moslems|ters in neighboring Tunis in aj j tried | to enter the European|broadcast beamed to Algeria, | quarter to vent their anger.|Ben Khedda called on the Eu- French police and troops hur-jropeans "'to open your eyes to ried to the scene and dispersed|the new Algerian realities. the crowd. No casualties were} «phe Europeans 'have their reported plac in the Algeria of tomor-| The killing of the Moslem|row," he declared, "but it i) women was clearly in reprisal|up to them to decide if they for the death of a young Euro-| merit it : pean woman Wednesday. Euro- The cease-fire pact reached a by the nationalist rebels and peans said she was shot by 4) France provides for equal rights Moslem disguised as a woman|foy Europeans when the Mos- in robe and veil. lems take over the government. One by one, the European) But Ben Khedda charged "ul- terrorists shot down Mosle m|ra-colonialists and the regen women as they: shuffled fear-|2tound secret army with 'the fully along the streets of Alge- help of "certain French mil te ; itary authorities' were under- tia & second city. mining the peace agreement The bloody morning followed) ith th campaign of terrorism a night of machine-guns chat-| ,~ he spoke, the terrorism tering in various sections Of -aved on in. Algeria. Wed Oran and several heavy explo-|,o<qay's toll was 37 dead, 33 of [ f i ES ALGIERS--The Secret Army Organization unleashed another wave of terrorism in Algeria to-) day and 22 persons were 'killed! and 17 were wounded. | north early today, One unofficial estimate damage near the $20,000 mark though Fire Department offi- cials are still investigating the 302 Atom Powered Sub Crashes With Freighter SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- A French authori-/"Uclear-powered submarine and almost completely in check by Stevenson's: road north. To Institution |moderate, appealed to his peo- nesday was committed to a/pendence. ja freighter collided 30 miles would help restore him to a\turn in all their weapons be-| Pie to be commissioned in pic al ace informa-|them Moslems, and 38 wounded, their leaders, but Ben Khedda The blaze was first discovered jwarned: "Anger of the Alger- ---- ae jian masses is growing. This si- By Magistrate Iple to hold their tempers and 7 the civil VANCOUVER (CP)--Charles)not be provoked into Heathman, who told a Vancou-|War that the Secret Army is mental institution for an indef-| Meanwhile, inite term. ities, responsible for law and or- west of here Wednesday. The Magistrate James Bartman|{er until the country is handed) 545 churned into San Francisco normal life. \fore May 20 or face automatic/jess than three weeks, the sub- The magistrate said he had|three-year prison sentences. | marine was escorted by a navy "lain awake at night searching) The order was one of a se- tugboat. FIREFIGHTERS ENTER BURNING STORE Fire gutted the interior of a by a city employee who stopped grotesque shapes. ; drug store on Stevenson's road off at the pharmacy to buy cig-|cosmetics and stationary were arets. about 8:45 a.m. The SMOKE UNDER DOOR Norman Bradley, 204 Powell under the door of the building and ran to a house next door to turn in the alarm. Firefighters had to smash the hinges off a back door to gain entry to a store room at the rear of the building where.the fire was located. Acrid smoke and intense heat|block suffered damage from! mr, Jermyn feels it is just @\Downing Street is running into| Giacalone also disclosed, the |greeted them when they forced dense clouds of smoke which) misunderstanding and that most/more delays because of labor|inspector said, that it was he * . jemigrated to Canada from Hol- election as returning officer. He|bling operations "'f \claims that if he wanted to, he|had "'no problems King An Oshawa woman whol land six years ago charged to-| day that two federal election) enumerators placed her namejcreating a disturbance under|Crime was told today. on the voters' list illegally. Mrs. Matthew Vangils, 282) street east, said two ladies representing the Liberal and Progressive Conservative) vote. "TI told them 'no'," she said, 'my husband and I have only} Damage Near $20,000 -= "ss. Displays of scorched and twisted throughout put store was not open at this time. the main store. The store room at the rear was completely destroyed. Con- tents of this room were not dis- cause and full extent of damage| Street, saw smoke coming from closed. Fire Chief Hobbs said at the scene that the fire had probably been smoldering for hours be- fore ft was discovered. SMOKE. SPREAD A barber shop and an insur- ance office located in the same been here six years." | that this was enough to qualify and began to take down their names on the lists they carried. | We haven't taken out our citi- zenship papers," Mrs. Vangils said she protested, "'but they) kept on writing 'and told me to go to the polls on election day anyway and if they wouldn't let me vote, to forget about On| However, Harry Jermyn, On- tario Riding's returning officer} |has a different story. He claims} that the two enumerators asked) Mrs, Vangils if she was eligible to vote and she said "'yes". MISUNDERSTANDING | Illegal Election & | Listing Charged This is Mr. Jermyn's first | Hearing Told Gambler. - Claimed 'No TORONTO (CP) -- A Detroit; |racketeer claimed Joseph Mc-| Dermott had his Ontario gam-| "fixed" and) over pro- Problems' Detroit last March about the bribe offer. Giacalone had told him that Frank (Curly) Gardner, an as- sociate in the club, had told the could prosecute Mrs. Vangils for| tection, the royal commission on| Detroit man that he could the federal election act. 10 CENTS A NAME Enumerators are paid 10 cents for each name they secure for the voters' list. They travel in |parties came to her door and|pairs with a representative of jasked if she was eligible tothe dominant party and the op- Fire Guts Drug Store, position. Mr. Jermyn explained that all enumerators take an oath and a violation on their part could) result in serious charges. "I don't think anyone would chance a possible two-year jail term for the 10 cents they would make for securing a name," stated Mr. Jermyn, "our enum- rators are honest people." Mac's Return To Residence Hits Delays LONDON (Reuters) -- Prime Minister Macmillan's return to his traditional residence at 10 |their way in the main entrance. filled the entire concrete block immigrants do not realize that/disputes. |One of the firefighters said the \display windows at the front jwere so hot he could not touch jthem. |PLASTIC MELTED | Plastic stores fixtures jmelted and run down walls in and cement building. Owner of the barber. shop, Joe Giorgi, seid he arrived at |his 'a.m. but did hot notice any- ithing unusual. The smoke had had not reached his shop at thatialso applies to them, but it jtime, he said. shop 'shogily before ¥8:30/pecause the British, Welsh, Scot, they have to have lived here for) lfive years and be a Canadian \citizen. He said that some think /tish and Irish people are eligible lto vote after,one year, that this 'doesn't. ey 34 of them Moslems. H th an Sent The Moslems have been kept/qone to Lane Pharmacy, jtuation cannot continue." Ben Khedda, regarded as a ews' r April 21 he/trying to stir up in a desperate, iitied. a lereaheld boy, Wed-|#ttempt to block Algerian inde-| said he hoped Heathman, 39,/0ver to the Moslem leaders, or-|},y under its own power to- would receive treatment that|dered European civilians to\qay followed by the freighter. his soul' in considering his ver-\Ties of anti-terrorist measures' No injuries were reported| dict, but on the evidence before 2nounced Wednesday by the among 137 crew members on| him he could make no other French high commissioner for the two vessels. chick. | Algeria. The 12,000-ton freighter also| n erman an | |proceeded into port without as-| ' = Magistrate Bartman said Heathman's case would be re- viewed from time to time be- | sistance. | The crash occurred in calm| Reuther Renamed U.S. Seeking Clarity The chanceilor is known to Work on rebuilding the 200- yearold prime minister's resi- dence will stop Wriday,.the coh- tracting firm says, afd the site closed "for the time being" un- til the labor troubles can be sorted out. Reconstruction of the dry-rot damaged Downing Street resid- ence began in 1960, and was exs| pected to have been finished this summer. The cost was or- iginally estimated at £1,250,000 ($3,750,000), but extensive dam- age to the interior was discov- ered after work began and now it is estimated the job will cost £1,600,000. Meantime Macmillan 1s living | | Insp. Hatch testified he had} |been authorized to withhold re-| ports from headquarters and) juse an informant to be known! jonly to himself in order to pre-! | jserve secrecy. He said the in-| {formant could be in jeopardy if} jhis identity leaked out. - | | He had refused to give the! name of the prospective infor- {mant even to Deputy OPP Com-! |missioner James Bartlett when} \the letter asked for it, he said.| | Insp. Jack Hatch of the On-| \tario Provincial Poilce quoted Vito Giacalone, one - time as-| |sociate of McDermott, as say- jing in March that the Toronto jgambler, in underworld lan- guage, "had it all the way." | The inspector translated this as meaning: | "He was fixed. He was all the way through. He had no prob- |Jems." Hatch testified the Detroit man, who said he was McDer- |mott's partner in the Roseland Gaming Club near Windsor up until the 1957 closing, did not |give any figures on what might |be paid for police protection. who authorized an offer of $500 a month to Hatch for tip-offs on Roseland raids when the of- ficer, now} head of the OPP anti-~ garhbling squAd, was in charge at Windsor. The inspector told the com- mission Wednesday that the of- fer was relayed to him in 1957 by Leslie Trumble, an acquain- tance, on behalf of principals who the intermediary did not name. ASKED ABOUT BRIBE Hatch said that he asked Gia- calone, during a conversation in Murder Charge |cate," "buy" Hatch for $500 a month, Giacalone said he had told Gardner that if this could be done "pay him and get rid of him." He said he knew nothing further about the matter, The inspector was asked if he knew whether Giacalone was con- nected with the Mafia -- Sicil- ian crime syndicate. "T couldn't positively say he was connected with the syndi- Hatch replied. "You would have to take the answer from whether he was operating or wasn't."" Strong Stand Promised On Medical Plan REGINA (CP)--The Saskat- chewan government will stand firm on implementation of its medical care insurance plan as long as Saskatchewan people want it, Premier Woodrow Lloyd said Wednesday night. Speaking on a government- sponsored telecast, Mr Lloyd urged people to "be firm and make clear" to their own doc- tors they wish the health plan to have a fair trial. He also urged doctors to give the plan a fair trial. The plan is sched- uled to go into operation July 1. Mr. Lloyd promised that "no« doctor will have to leave the province because of government intereference in doctor-patient relationship." He added: "One more thing I promise that your government too will stand firm. As long as we know that the people want a health insurance plan in this province, we can stand what- GAMBLING CLUB CLAIMED 'FIXED? seas off the Farallon Islands in) WASHINGTON (AP)--In an, Kennedy said further that the] at Admiralty House, ever pressure opponents of such . fore any decision was made on his release. Heathman was twice sen- tenced to be hanged for the suffocation murder of 10-year-| old Donald Ottley in Vernon, B.C., Labor Day, 1960. He was later freed by the B.C. Court of Appeal. Under the law of double; jeopardy a man finally ac-| quitted of a charge after due process of law, cannot be tried President Of UAW ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) Walter Reuther was re-elected by acclamation Wednesday to his 10th term as president of the United Automobile Workers Union, Emil Mazey was turned as_ secretary-treasurer of the 1,000,006.member union, also unopposed. George Burt, for the last 23 years director of the UAW's Ca- -lother sub, the Archerfish. the Pacific between the 300-\effort to restore allied harm-|U.S. proposal to Russia for &n\object to a provision in the au- foot submarine Permit and theony, the United States is re-|international authority to oper! thority proposal that would |468-foot Matson freighter Ha-|ported seeking full clarification|ate the Berlin supply lines| . Berli 4 Hast Ger waiian Citizen. from the West G®rman govern-jacross East German territory|#ive East Aad i es A The navy said the submarine,|ment of its stand on explorat-|has not been opposed by West | rticy members: 4 on - with 90 men aboard, was on anlory talks with Russia about|Germany. He conceded differ-|@tion authority. He is strenu- operational cruise from Mare|terms of an East-West agree-jences over details of how such|9USly opposed to No nen Island naval shipyard with an-|ment on Berlin. lan organization could be set/ment with Russia ge n | President Kennedy also made|up but said such differences are|V!°W would afford a degree oi A Matson spokesman said the|clear at a press conference 'quite natural." recognition to the East German freighter, with a crew of 47,|Wednesday that he wants to see} Adenauer said in Berlin this|COmmunist regime. was inbound from Honolulu for/secrecy restored to allied con-|week that the authority pro-| Kennedy was told by a ques- nearby Alameda with a miscel-| wiitations on proposals put tojposal is unworkable. He also/tioner that West Germans gen- In Death Of 83-Year-Old HULL, Que. (CP) -- Gilles Laurin, 22, of Hull, was charged with capital murder Wednes- day night after a coroner's jury ruled he was "criminally re- sponsible" in connection wth the death of an 83 - year - old woman here May 1. a plan may be able to apply." He termed 'a new kind of means test" the doctors' deci- sion to provide emergency med- ical services only if they can not practise outside the Medi- cal Care Act. 2 Men Suffocated Buried In Trench. |laneous cargo. -- _|the Soviet government during|said he thought the talks would | erally fear some kind of U.S. the talks. He seemed to be ask-jcome to nothing, and he sug-| toward East German rec- H ing Chancellor Konrad Aden-| gested it was dangerous for fag Burmese Airplane lauer in a diplomatic way to|them to go on indefinitely with-|Bnition. He denied there is |stop debating the issues in pub-|out results. any basis for such fears. Crashes, 29 Dead : jlie. je in a long session Good longer on the union's interna-| RANGOON (AP)--A Burmese| Other officials said there is| riday. tional executive board than the! Air Force Dakota crashed Wed-|considerable confusion here TROIS-RIVIERES, Que. (CP) Two men who sought shelter from stinging, wind - blown sand in an eight - foot - deep sewer trench, died of asphyxia- tion Wednesday when the trench agan on the same charge. nadian region, was returned by) Heathman _ told Magistrate|acciamation for another two- Bartman Wednesday his story! year period. told to Sun city editor Jack) purt was first : i 9 ' st elected direc- Holt was not true, and that heitor of the Canadian section in was drunk when he spoke to 1939, Only Reuther has served The mangled body of Miss |Bernadette Rochon of Hull, was {found at the rear of an aban- jdoned house near the main street of this city across the Ot- jtawa River from the capital. ; j Dr. Jean - Marie Rael, a| Was filled in by a fellow worker The Sun paid Heathman $500/Canadian director. nesday in a ravine off the north- for his story, stipulating the) Burt is also a vice-president/ern Shan States and all 29 per- money was to be used forof the Canadian Labor Con-\sons aboard were killed, the psychiatric treatment. gress, {government announced today. A-Arms For Canada Big Campaign Issue By THE CANADIAN PRESS | Prime Minister Diefenbaker| arms completely--without qual-!or allow the expansion of 'nu 1 ifications. clear weapons beyond those who says Canada will not join the} Wednesday saw Mr. Diefen- have them," he said in Brock- world can hitch its hopes on|Leader Pearson all campaign-| With the United States and its disarmament. _ i jing in Ontario, with Social Credit)overwhelming nuclear power The Progressive Conservative|Leader Robert Thompson in his|there should be no widening of leader injected Pog nuclear/home province of Alberta. jthe nuclear family. The main arms issue into his campaign H ; i for the first time Weasteday MOVES TO PRAIRIES aearetamet ik wots rene gh night at a rally in Brockville,| Today the political chieftians' world-wide inspection Cnt jelectioneering was to move onto al : ree i broker 6 > He said the Liberals have Earlier, in Calgary Liberal|/® 2roader front, with more ac- defence critic Paul Hellyer said)" ps on the Prairies that Canada had already as-|_/Time Minister Diefenbaker sumed nuclear responsibilities| jy. - speak " Neepawa when accepting the strike-re | 74740", Man; Mr. Douglas|tory connaissance role to be per-| aw 0 return to his Regina > , ACCTING: formed by CF-104 Star-fighter| Headquarters; and the Social ALREADY ASSUMED? jets of Canada's NATO Air Di-|' redit leader scheduled a party Mr. Hellyer told reporters in vision in Europe. jseminar in Saskatoon. Remain-|Calgary that Canada had al- And in Galt, Ont., T. C. Doug- ing in Ontario was Mr. Pear-|ready assumed "nuclear cy daoienea that the Nea Thats son, who planned a day's whis-| sponsibilities"' osrathe Parle sci . tle-stopping by car through the reconnaissance role assigned to rly rejected nuclearitohacco country bordering on'the CF-104 in NATO |Lake Erie "Whoever accepts it is in a c EMERGENC be Mr. Diefenbaker flew from ajnuclear role," he said. 'But the IT Y Y snowy Rimouski Wednesday|government refuses to confirm PHONE NUMBERS jmorning to campaign in sun-jor deny whether the CF-104 will jdrenched,. blossoming Easternibe so armed." He visited the RCAF) He later told a Vancouver and shifting" on the nuclear is- sue, and their stand was "con- and fused, incoherent and contradic- Ontario POLICE 725-1133 lao on at Trenton, Kingston and|press conference that the Bo- 3 |the Thousand Islands area be-|mare missile isn't "worth a FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 |fore delivering his main address\damn" and the U.S. should be Brockville. HOSPITAL 723-2211 "We do 'not intend to expandling. asked if it was worth maintain- j jover what Adenauer is driving jat. His public criticism of the U.S.-Soviet discussions is out of line with West. German views communicated through official |channels, they said. Kennedy undertook at his press conference to play down reports of allied difefrences over the talks. He noted that Adenauer had |said in Berlin earlier this week |that he was not optimistic about |the outcome. [we believe there, should be a continuation of these talks." The West German government,|membership only," the spokes-| Britain's jhe added, has supported contin- 'uation. been "shuffling, shilly-shallying) | LONDON (Reuters)--There is |"no question" of Britain apply- ing for associate membership of} the Common Market, a foreign} joffice spokesman said here to-| day. | | The spokesman was replying} The spokesman had_ been to questions at his daily press|asked to comment on newspa- The United States has "'never|conference about press reports|per reports that during his visit been unduly optimistic'? about|that West German Chancellor|to West Berlin earlier this week, achieving an East-West agree-|Konrad Adenauer had said Brit-/Adenauer told the Senate in nuclear family as long as the|/baker, M. Douglas and Liberaliville. 'We want disarmament.) ™e"t, the president said, but!ain should be an assoicate and|closed session that political not a full member of the six. Britain is applying for '"'fuli jman said. | The spokesman was asked if! jhe accepted the official West German statement denying the jreports and said: "You could! not get any more categoric} | statement." | BONN (Reuters)--The West German and West Berlin gov- ernments today denied reports} "I would remind you also that West Germany's attitude to Britain's entry into the mar- ket has throughout been un- changing. We have always strongly urged this." and Commonwealth complica- tions made it advisable to limit entry to associate | membership. 24 Persons Die In Plane Crash RIO DE JANEIRO (AP)--A| Brazilian airliner with: 27 per- sons aboard crashed and _ex- jthat Konrad Adenaucy told Ber-|ploded while coming in for a! |member of the Common Mar-| there were only three surviv- KONRAD ADENAUER lin Senate members that Brit- ain should be only an associate ket. i The West Berlin city govern- ment--which is sontrolled by) the opposition Social Democrats; --issued a statement saying the reports were "invented." ' A federal-government spokes-| jman here described the report) las "absolutely false" and de-| clared: "I can say most emphatically on behalf of the chancellor that no such remarks were ever|approach and blew landing during a rainstorm Wednesday night. Police said ors. | The twin-engined Convair 440 took off from Rio de Janeiro for the Brazilian port city of Victoria, 250 miles north of here on the Atlantic coast. Officials of the Cruzeiro do Sul (Southern Cross) Airline said the plane carried 22 pas- sengers The airliner burst into flames as it was making its landing} up. after made. 'plunging to the ground. % FAILED TO ORBIT The Thor-Able rocket blazes away from Cape Canaveral, Fla., today carrying a sate- llite payload with a flashing light that was to aid scientists to measure distances on the | surface of the earth. The roc- ket performed satisfactorily on launch but the satellite failed to go into orbit ry --AP> Wirephoto at k the woman had not been raped) as at first reported. The doctor, who earlier per- formed an autopsy, said the woman had died of asphyxiation and had probably been stran- gled with her own clothing. Britain Planning = a : Heatzeal medio s tegal expett, |e Fore er aie ahidhe Full Membership Panneton, 33, father of four children, and Yvon Vincent, 22, a bachelor. They were employed by Lavio- lette Construction Company on a.sewer installation project in suburban Duvernay Terrace. Pro-Reds VIENTIANE, Laos (AP) --| Prince Souvanna Phouma has ordered pro-Communist Prince Souphanouvong to withdraw his Pathet Lao trvops from Nam Tha and Muong Sing to behind the original cease-fire line, in- formed diplomatic sources said) today. The informants said the neu- talist leader sent a cable from France to Souphanouvong, his half-brother and ally, denounc- ing the seizure of the fwo gov- ernment outposts in northwest Laos as a violation of the year- old cease-fire agreement. Souvanna, the choice of the big powers to head a neutralist regime in the jungle kingdom, |was reported to have also ca bled his acting "premier," Phagna Khamsoukeola, at rebel headquarters at Khang Kay to arrange for the withdrawal of the pro-Communist troops. Souvanna left for Paris five weeks ago to stay until June 1 for medical treatment and the wedding of a daughter. He told French newspaper men Wed- nesday night he vas prepared v i Ordered Out Of Nam Tha to return to Laos any time Prince Boun Oum's rightist regime formally requests re- sumption of talks on formation of a coalition government of Communists, Conservatives and neutralists. Souphanouvong's pro-Commu- nist rebels also were reported ready to return to unity talks. CONFERS WITH PHOUMI Malcolm Macdonald, British co-chairman of the Geneva Con- ference, conferred in Vientiane with Gen, Phoumi and the gen- eral told reporters Macdonald had agreed to "'try all means" to get Souphanouvong to ob serve the cease-fire. Macdonald flew Wednesday to Khang Khay, the rebel capital in the Plaine des Jarres, but did not see Souphonouvong, The pro-Communist prince was re- ported farther north in Sam Neua province with an eye in- fection. Phoumi said Macdonald _ex- pressed hope his talks With lesser Pathet Lao and neutralist leaders in Khang Khay would bring "good results."