Oshawa Times (1958-), 17 May 1962, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY Some wives do the most wonder- ful thing with left-overs--they throw them out. he Oshawa Cimes ' . r x» ~~ J WEATHER REPORT Mainly sunny and very warm again on Friday, with light winds. Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy VOL. 9I--INO. 116 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, MAY 17, 1962 Authorized as Second Closs Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash. THIRTY-TWO PAGES Ex-Officer Says Raid No Secret TORONTO (CP) Former;on that force I could trust,") constable Robert J. Wright ofleaid the officer, who invoked) the provincial police said today|the protection of the Canada) that in 1958 gambler Joseph Mc-|Evidence Act to protect him- Dermott had advance informa-/self from the possibility of his' LAOS MARINES NEAR FRONTIER tion on OPP raids on gaming/testimony being used against clubs but it did not come from! him in future. } i | He said Wednesday that the yal commission should "thor- him. He told the royal commission ro: : on crime that he had beenioughly" investigate Const. | | "BOARDING PLANE IN THAILAND Fully equipped U.S. Mar- | northern Thailand. They are {| sent to ines board plane today at | among the first of a schedul- | beleaguered Bangkok airport for flight to | ed 1,800 Marines due to be Carpenters Victors In Logger Struggle | ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP)--Vir-)foundland woods a union shop; The IWA represented the log-| tually all of Newfoundland's 15,-|--all loggers working under the'gers until 1959 when it was 000 loggers now are represented|contract must become union forced to give way to the Inde-| by the United Brotherhood of members. pendent Newfoundland Brother-| Carpenters and Joiners of Am-| New employees. must join the|hood of Woodsworkers after! erica (CLC) under a new wage|union within seven days of being decertified at the height and working agreement, but starting. work and pay dues of a bitter woods strike. | nobody really knows how the through a checkoff system. Last year the NBWW recom-| loggers feel about it. Scattered across the province|mended that the carpenters be) Carpenter officials make one|are pockets of Carpenter sup-jinvited into the province, then) claim, the International Wood-|porters and others who want/quietly faded out of existence.| workers of America (CLC) an-'the IWA back. But most log-/The Carpenters mailed ballots other, and the resulting battle|gers are non-committal, which)to loggers, got back 4,041 and for control of the loggers has/leads many observers to think/claimed 2,173 of these were in come close to splitting organ-|they don't care much who rep-/favor of them. ized labor in Canada. | resents them as long as they| Another 1,791 were against, The Carpenters appear to|@re working. ; jthe Carpenters and 77 ballots' have won the battle in New-| The carpenters negotiated the/ were spoiled. foundiand at least for the timejcontract with Bowater's New-| he IwaA ridiculed this vote being. They have the support foundland Pulp and Paper Mills} 4. "phoney from start to fin- of 's. two. paper|limited and the Anglo .- New-| icp.) igowas:*4 ponsored,..con- companies and 2 two-year con-/foundiand Development Com-\aucted and courted by the car- tract on behalf of the loggers.|pany limited during March and enters themselves." They de Written into the contracts,|April despite the strenuous ob-|anded an independently con- signed late last month, is ajjections of the IWA and the' qucted vote with both unions'| clause which makes the New-!CLC. names on the ballot. The log-| Changes In Farm | Picture Detailed num-jtural products during th year valued at { the Communist- country. (AP Wirephoto) i |to 1, IWA officials said. | A CLC committee attempted jto settle the dispute between| the two unions. The CLC recom-} mended that a CLC-sponsored junion represent the loggers for| fone year with the two rival un- ions withdrawing from the| e previ-|scene. At the end of the year $50 orjan independently conducted) vote would be taken. | The IWA agreed, but the car-} OTTAWA (CP)--The ber of farms in Canada dropped /ous by 16 per cent between 1956 and/more. 1961 although there Re ; "FERS change in total farm area, the] Pr Tee gaa tabi consunse, enters said no. = of statistics reported to-|. ¢2+m was defined as a MI ences aa ay. wes "vi | S t ing on which agricultural oper-| - The bureau, in ss "ge "2 aieae were carried out and company, gp pied . and the series of reports , -- on said Which was (a) three acres or ee oe erage: yy repree 1961 census of -- ure, se|more in size, or (b) from one) senting private voces Pedy oa the aay arg pis\to three acres in size and on we i cboes the cantar Bese creased to 480,903 9 sed to(Which agricultural production Ni sate aa "a sigs: and total farm area dippe 9! during the previous year valued|!nto ¢ veka fet ey. folate te 172,551,051 acres from 173,923,-| $558 SF anidte $11.66 for a 10-hour day 7 It, th yerage area Foe eG as. Said 3,178,098 setter ds Cl ee As a result, the pores in-|a2cres on 40,731 holdings would) |. aay raise May 1. 1963 per farm for all Canada inj ave been classified as farm-|°nt-a-day raise May 1, 196: creased from 302 acres in 1956) ; gh While the contract appears to land if the definition had not be settled, the national aspects been changed. to 359 in 1961. However, a change in farm} *\of the IWA - Carpenter dispute definition between censuses had| The number of farms in 1961 are still smouldering. an important bearing on the|in Ontario, with 1956 aber ee Shortly before the contract comparisons, particularly for|S0n- in brackets, was 121,333 was signed, the CLC at its con- total farm area. (140,602) vention in Vancouver dismissed Under the more restrictive} The farm acreage in 1961 for IWA charges of raiding against 1961 definition, a farm was de-|Ontario, with 1956 figures in the Carpenters, but found them fined as a holding of one acre brackets was 18,578,507 (19,879,- guilty of "CLC policy infringe- or more with sales of agricul- 646). ment." Expansion In Quebec Creates New Climate MONTREAL (CP) DR.| Dr. Faribault dismissed any OTTAWA Marcel Faribault, president ofjidea of the separatist move- members of Prince Philip's the General Trust of Canada,/ment as being a serious threat Commonwealth Conference said today the traditional dif-/to Confederation or the Cana- took in the capital Wednesday, ferences between French and dian way of life. in their 26-day study of by signed by the! the AND} (CP) -- The 300 English-speaking Canadians a "The greatest objection to ee sib obe pages. sr by os "far less marked). eee © {the changing face of industry. go lagale of nuance Sox haps is its lack. of ye Wednesday, specifically, they than substance." plete, coverage of the situa- took a peek at the role the gov- Addressing the Duke of Edin- tion," he said. "What obliga-\ernment plays in this. And, to burgh's Second Commonwealth|tions. would independence en- 4 man, all those questioned Study Conference, Dr. Fari- tail? Would it actually be feasi- said they found it interesting, bault said the recent expansion|ble without help from other valuable and informative. of old girl, abd knife - point Wednesday night,jand necklace stuffed in a crate. jgers would support the IWA 10) q ining. "shocked" to learn from Mc-!George Scott, the OPP anti-| Dermott that he already knew gambling squad member whose of impending raids. He could) undercover posing as a crooked) not recollect how many times) policeman--with the authoriza-| this occurred but he said it had tion of superiors--resulted al-| happened "'at least once." most by itself in the convic-! Wright, who has been con-|tions. Scott has previously tes-| victed with McDermott and tified at the inquiry. gambler Vincent Feeley of ob- ini ; A ; 3. STRICTLY ON HIS OWN taining police information il Unlike that of Scott, Wright's legally, said his contacts with ane Me purported undercover mission McDermott had been for the was strictly. on his own, end purpose of trying to track down ae c 4 leakages of information from #@ Said he cashed in $1,500 the provincial police anti-gam-|W0rth of savings bonds to meet bling squad. Scott's insistent" calls for money in 1960 while pretending TELLS ABOUT RAID the cash came from McDer- He said that, on one occasion, | mott. McDermott had told him '"'you; Wright, who said he began don't know so much; there's go-|his investigation when he was ing to be a raid tonight." |transferred from the age . Ff bling squad to the Belleville de- McDermott - Feeley New Ram.|'achment at the start of 1960 sey club at Niagara Falls, Ont.|Said he opened up negotiations Wright said that during about! "ith McDermott but didn't 'get ; very far' with him before three months in 1958, when he|\°" . was in touch with McDermott, | Bringing him and Scott to- gether. i: acumen' Wine The former taxi driver and aekbiar thé butcher shop employee said he 8 decided to rope in McDermott He had asked McDermott on|pecause there were leaks from occasion if he were interested! the gambling squad and "'con- in information and McDermott) stant gossip that McDermott would reply, 'I don't think you|knew more about what the can give me any." squad was doing than our- "There wasn't a human being! selves." | Night Of Terror For Toronto Girl (CPYLN 16-year-/bag' in the wMey*? Two hours la: tT ucted and raped atiter they found 'her underciothes CIVIL SERVICE QUEEN Betty _Gittens,. a dusky- be-jos, last night was chos \ Miss Civil Service over 32 other entries in the annual Ottawa beauty contest. The ther ot the Miss Ba contest in 1959. --(CP Wirphoto) rbados beauty was found bound hand and foot|They had been cut froma her 23-year-old stenographer, mo- jaircraft Britain Ready | To Send Planes LONDON (Reuters) -- Prime! The three ships carried 1,800 |Minister Macmillan announced/men of the 3rd Marine Divi- |today that Britain would be pre-|sion. Their landing followed |pared to send a contingent to Wednesday's arrival on an ad- | Thailand in face of the Laos| vance force of 12 Super Sabre jcrisis if it received a request] jets and Skyhawk fighter planes |from Thailand in the next few/at Khli Airfield 100 miles north days. of here. The force would probably} The marines were joining take the form of RAF fighter/1,000 infantrymen of the 27th units, he told the House of Com- U.S, Army Regiment who were mons. jalready in northeast Thailand BANGKOK (Reuters) |from a recent SEATO military combat force of 1,800 United|°*°rcise- States Marines was flown to-|READY TO TRY PEACE? night to within 50 miles of Thai-| The swift military buildup land's northern border withicame amid reports that the troubled Laos. : three rival Laotian factions Twelve U.S. Air Force C-130| were ready to make another at- Hercules transport planes|tempt at a peaceful reconcilia« started the airlift at noon after tion. the marines began landing here! The neutarlist and pro-Com- at dawn from a task force of munist factions told the interna- the U.S. 7th Fleet. tional control commission Wed. Meanwhile, Australia andnesday in Vientiane, the Lao- New Zealand announced ther|tian capital, that they were will readiness to send forces tojing to enter into talks for a cO- Thailand to guard against Com-jalition government with the munist incursions from Laos. (rightist regime. A U.S. embassy spokesman; The offer was made to Avtar |said the marines were setting|/Singh, Indian chairman of the up camp under canvas at the|three - country commission hamlet of Hong Han, 20 miles|which was charged with super- east of Udorn, atop a plateau|Vising the year-old ceasefire in 50 miles from the Mekong River|La0s. ae border opposite the Laotian cap-| Prime Minister Keith Holy- ital of Vientiane. fear of ype ee said in a " '. 3 ing| Statement issued today in Wel- ' S nereng aon sage carryin8'lington that his country was guards shuttled back) onsideri di " nid. toptis chrom: the 28500 «-ton ng sending '"'a small i contingent" of troops to Thai- Valley. Forge in ds 3 potty: Bel south of here, fs He satd~he thought it "most las the attack transport Navarro|{m™portant that New Zealand /and landing ship Point Defiance join her allies in demonstrating | steamed up river to Bangkok. | and gagged on a bed in the|with a knife. musty basement of a house to-| Witnesses told police the kid- ay. napper had been wearing a uni- Nearly 100 policemen had/form with a white shoulder belt.| searched all night for her. |Detectives Robert Jones and A 15-year-old boy has been/Clifford Gilbert were told by a charged with rape, abduction,|woman that a youth down the and kidnapping. ' street wore a uniform such as The girl was on her way|they were seeking. CMAD ] heme from work about 10 p.m.| The detectives found the girl ec. ares esterday when a youth camejin the basement of the house 4 4 " he behind her when she was two|where the youth lived. TORONTO (CP)--The Cana- doors from home. She told police she had been|@lan Manufacturers Association He held a knife to her backjunable to call for help because/Said today a national health) jo 2o.nq (cp) -- Ontario's and began dragging her down|her abductor held a knife at/Plan covering only physicians') | tt. in its fourth day to- the streets in full view of her|her throat and kept threatening|Services would cost anadal shows little sign of letting sister who was sitting on the her. $447,000,000 a year at "a very a aes . verandah of their home. The' The father of the arrested Conservative estimate. sister's screams brought her|boy, his mother and brother Such a financial burden could father and her husband run-'told police they had been in the adversely affect the country's house all night and had heard/economy, the association told The latter chased the kidnap- nothing the royal commission on health] per, still holding the girl, but Police said the_girl, who was services Health Scheme RECORDS TOPPLE Cost Too High Throughout most of the prov: ince, Wednesday was the hot- test May 16 on record -- from Windsor and Hamilton in the south to Timmins and Whiet |River in the north. (CP)--Police $2000 Reward LATE NEWS FLASHES Offer To Spur School Bus, Truck Collide In Alberta Hit-Run Probe lost him in a lane not known to the boy, is a high) The association, whose 6,400 At. Malton near. Toronto it Police found the girl's hand- school student who sells maga-|members produce three - quar-| was the hottest day of any May Renee tr te zine subscriptions by telephone|ters of Canada's total man tiy Ontario. The mercury rock jin the evening. facturing output, argued that! ated to 94 at the Dominion pub- Youth Subdued ----'nothing should be done to hin- llic coathar 'often hase, | U S Plane Down ling private health plans, which ; : A WD. | " up BE , London, 94 in Hamilton, 89 in B Z00 Kee er | ill . oe than half of the/Toronto, 84 at Muskoka, 83 at popula A 4 4 | Y PEF | 20 Feared Killed mm eevemnent = operate Nom Bay, #8, Suabury, 8 TORONTO to-. NAIROBI (Reuters) ---- Ajscheme, applicable to Cana-| 10 ge in Kapiskaning cad old| United States Air Force plane'dians generally, should be un- wf i youth after a zoo keeper was|with more than 20 men board /dertaken," it said. ie threatened with a knife crashed outside of this Kenya' Steps should be taken how- Foreman George Stewart and capital today and police said ever to permit the purchase of| s two keepers at Riverdale Zoo|they understood there were no health insurance by those who} pee Y ction told police they were keeping a/survivors. by reason of age or pre-exist- zoo Wednesday night, in the . ® obtain coverage Their _pre-/ By de Gaulle light of the slaying Tuesday of| Time Running Out mium rates should be compar- a nesting swan, when they| jable to those paid by regular} spotted a youth in an animal subscribers. | pen, | 'ag The youth tried to run away! ALGIERS (Reuters) -- The to afford insurance, the associ-- PARIS (Reuters) -- President bui was caught and taken to an/Secret Army Organization con-\ation said a study should be Charles de Gaulle today headed employees' lunchroom, In the|tinued its terrorism today as undertaken by the commis-|into a four-day tour of central room the youth picked up atime began running out for its sion's research staff in con-|France in which he is expected sharpened table knife and went|campaign to keep Algeria sultation with social workersito prepare the way for a na- Pyne overpowered him Two Moslems and one Euro- ernment assistance should be|yjews on European unity, Riverdale Zoo officials said pean were killed in a spate of conditional on means tests. De! Gaulle left the capital the youth was found in an en-|seven gun attacks by 11 a.m. ~ zee ~_lafter solving a 12-hour cabinet closure near the zoo's lone nest-|The European was hit by a crisis -- one of the shortest on ing swan stray bullet. jrecord--caused by the resigna- |Party) ministers in the cabinet of Premier Georges Pompidou. The gaps were filled pain- \lessly by promoting three sec- retaries of state to ministers, | der the development of exist-| It was 90 in Windsor, 88 in day questioned a 16-year - {85 at White River. close watch on animals at the ----|ing medical conditions cannot) A Fixes Cabinet For Secret Tmy In the case of those unable} IX€s a ine for the kecper George Pyne, but! French and "other experts." Any gov-|tional referendum to back his jtion of five M.R.P. (Cathoile introducing a Conservative leg- South To North, Its Really Hot of almost all areas of Quebec's|countries and a chance of im- It was no easy day for them. cultural and economic climate|mediate help from the United|In humid, 80-degree weather has created an unprecedented | Nations? What of our immedi-|they attended a 75-minute meet- atmosphere of a "confidentiate neighbors to the South? ing in the National Gallery,| march into the future." What especially of the neigh- broke into 15 groups and! "Some ideological formula-/boring provinces and their im-jvisited 20 government depart-| tions are bound to take place| mediate interests? Should not/ments, attended a Government under such circumstances,|Such independence actually be House: reception, and_ visited especially among the younger|4 negotiated one and on what their respective diplomatic mis- intelligentsia,' he told some|'erms? Is not a revisionist at- sions for- dinner, before board- 300 delegates to the conference titude regarding a_ workablejing their special train back to at the University of Montreal.|/constitution a much better and/Montreal. To do this they had [mire sensible solution in all/10 hours. respects? Prince Philip, skipping de- "Indeed, by. and large, partmental tours, spent the French-speaking and English- afternoon at Government House |speaking Canadians have man- after presiding over the morn- aged to tolerate and understand|ing's general meeting. He 'flew each other fairly well. Theirjhis four-engine Heron aircraft jtraditional differences in life back to Montreal at 6:46 p.m., jare becoming far less marked|/EDT, after attending the Gov-| |and possibly more of nuancejernor-General's reception with! than of: substance." his "students."' | CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 i VERMILION, Alta. (CP) -- A school bus carrying seven children was reported to have collided with a truck today 12 miles north of here. The collision tore the wheels off the bus and sent the vehicle into the ditch, reports said. cee not known whether there were any injuries. 0 Ahead With Space Flight Plans CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) -- Atlantic Ocean wea- ther conditions were far from desirable today, but project Mercury officials pushed ahead with plans to launch astro- naut Malcolm Scott Carpenter into orbit Saturday. United States weather experts kept close watch on high and low pressure systems hovering over the ocean under the in- tended orbital path. Beaten By Father, Young Girl Dies TORONTO (CP) -- Adele Finucan, 9, died in hospital today of hammer blows inflicted by her father Wednesday Adele, on the critical list Wednesday, first was reported as rallying. Her two sisters, Mary Lou, 20, and Joanne, 12, are in satisfactory condition. islator as minister of public TORONTO (CP)--The provin- health and giving one vacated cial government offered a $2,- portfolio to the premier. 000 reward today for informa-; The quick solution to the cri- tion about a driver who struck sis has not, however, cushioned a Toronto youth two weeks ago)|the impact of the collective res- on Highway 401 and then left/ignations although they report- the scene. ; edly left de Gaulle unmoved. Commissioner W. H. Clark of, The official reason given for the Provincial Police announced|the resignation was disagree- the province would pay the mo-/ment with the president over ney for information leading tojhis controversial European pol- |the arrest and conviction of the|icy--a loose confederation in- \wanted driver |stead of a supranational organ- Ralph Barry Yates, 23, was|ization, based on strong Franco- solidarity with Thailand, when he military situation in north. em Laos had seriously deteri- orated and communist forces had moved near to Thailand's borders," 'Tailgated PM, Private Fined . HALIFAX (CP) -- An army private who tailgated Prime Minister Diefenbaker's car for ts several miles was fined $50 to- sunny weather is in store for\day on a charge of impaired southern and central parts of driving. i the province today. Cool air,| Pte, William Bevins, 32,. of which moved down over the|Halifax, a signalman with East- jarea north of Lake Superior|ern Command, pleaded guilty. jtoday to set off numerous thun-|. Beyins' 2% - ton army truck derstorms, will continue to pre-|was spotted Wednesday after- vail over northwestern Ontario.|noon weaving in and out of a White River received a dose |cavaicade carrying the prime of freak weather in the midst| minister to Halifax from Truro. of the sizzling heat. Storms|N.S, His truck, loaded with ca- briefly pelted the area with hail-\ple, passed 79 cars before stones one inch in diameter. reaching the prime minister's The warm air, covering. the |car. Eastern half of the United) He stuck behind the car for |States, most of Ontario and part|several miles before being cut |of Quebec, is gradually moy-\out by RCMP on the outskirts ing northeast. of Halifax. ™ | The weather office said all) were records for May 16. Continuing hot and mainly fr 'sant killed May '5, after his sports!German ties. jcar left the highway near Os-; But many political observers} hawa. He and his passenger,|considered the resignations to Michael Palmer, were thrown|be part of a permanent strug- from the car onto the highway.|gle for power between de Gaulle A passer-by dragged Palmer|and_ professional politicians. | joff the road, but Yates was run! De Gaulle no doubt will take! over by. another car whichjup the challenge during his| failed to stop. 'tour. } im 'SUPER-BLISTER month-old tire had This. king-size blister on a tubeless tire is being exam- ined by Douglas Phillips of Edmonton. He noticed a small bulge on the tire but a day later it. had expanded and jammed the wheel. The 18- 15,000 miles on it. Minutes after this photo was taken the blis- ter exploded, knocked Phillips to the ground. (CP Wirephoto) >

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