Oshawa Times (1958-), 26 May 1962, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY 'A sharp tongue and a dull mind are often found in the same head. She Oshawa Cimes WEATHER REPORT Mainly sunny with seasonable temperatures and light winds on Sunday. Over er Com 'Price Not OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, MAY 26, 1962 auithoriond es Second Clase W Class Mail Post Office Department, ot Postage in Cash. TWENTY PAGES mv 91--NO, 123 EIGHT PEOPLE KILLED. AS BLAST RIPS HOUSE | Terror Decides General's Fate PARIS (AP) -- Highly-placed|as the verdict was to him, he /French sources said. today that|had hoped that the Secret Army /uniess Secret Army terrorism in|might sharply reduce its cam- Algeria noticeably slackens in|paign of terror. the next three days, former Gen.| The contrary has resulted. Edmond Jouhaud's death sen-|Since Salan's escape from a tence will be carried out. sentence of ccath the Secret! Jouhaud, 57, was condemned| Army has pushed ahead with its "AURORA 7 BACK AT THE CAPE | suffered of astronaut Scott Carpenter was returned to Cape Canaveral, Fla. The capsule, | background, appeared to have | M. W. Bland, deputy man- ager of the Mercury project, | answers newsmen's questions | after the Aurora 7 spacecraft Moslems' Vengeance Held Back By Leaders ALGIERS (AP)--Moslems injare getting longer in the nearby| to death April 13 for being No. 2|program of killings in Algeria. man under Raoul Salan in the|In Algiers especially Moslems Secret Army, and for takingjare bombed and shot daily on part in the abortive putsch in/the streets of the big port city. Algiers last year. It was this upsurge of vi-|% He was granted a temporaryjolence, the sources said, that)? stay of execution Friday when/forced the grim decision to wait his lawyers filed an appeal to|only three more days, Then, if} © the Supreme Court asking for a/Algeria does not quiet down, retrial. the former general will be ex- | The French sources, who de-|ecuted. jclined to be further identified,;|------ site be thee tts ost! Toronto Taxi | Driver Shot | no damage in the orbital flight from the Cape Thursday. --AP Wirephoto there need not be a review. The court could simply reject the appeal. This would leave Jouhaud's commander fate _in the hands of President) meagre food! de Gaulle. Only de Gaulle could street ing has who distributes ; TIME FOR A LAUGH F fire and police chief, said the | | 2-Storey Home Blown To Bits ASBESTOS, Que. (CP) Eight persons, five of them children, died Friday when an explosion blew a two - storey house to bits in this mining town 80 miles east of Montreal.| Another child and a teen- ager were taken to hospital, the child in grave condition. Adrien Larrivee, the town's | 'explosion, which took place) about 9:35 p.m. EDT., may |have been caused by propane |gas. | Besides smashing the house, jthe blast also knocked down a lcement wall of an adjoining |bakery and set fire and heavily |damaged another house. | The victims were identified jas: Mrs. Reynald Lambert, 44; land two of her children, Yvon 2% and a twin 6; Mrs. Arthur Paradis, 54, Huguette Briere, 19, Luc Pellerin, 11, Louise Toutant, 8, and a young boy whose surname is Bourassa. The injured are members of| He said Gaouette "went there to check the furnace and found a leak in a propane gas tank outside and turned it off. He left and a few minutes later the explosion took place. "'Gaouette said he went out- side and shut the valve on the tank. Then he told Mrs. Lam- bert to open the doors and let the gas out. He was getting in his truck when it exploded." Chief Larivee said people who were in the house shortly before the explosion, including Gaouette, had told him they sniffed gas in the air. Three of the bodies were found in the cellar and the other five by the side of the house where some children had been playing. Search For Kayak Champ Abandoned the squalid Casbah of Algiers ground their teeth in despair El Kettar Cemetery. An aver-) age of 20 Moslem wounded are treated daily in the Casbah's and made ready new makeshift three makeshift hospitals, hospitals for the victims of Eu- ropean terrorism. manned by Moslem medical "Swear to remain disciplined,|students and a handful of tired to forsake your vengeance and|Moslem doctors. your anger," urged exhausted| Barbed wires surround the leaders of the Moslem National/Casbah and the adjacent area Liberation Front. from which most Europeans "Kassaman" (We swear),/have fled in panic. Their apart shouted crowds of men in tat-|ments have been taken over by} tered clothes. |Moslems who fled the European "Kassaman,"' echoed_ yeiled|areas. : women with flashing dark eyes,} Normally, 80,000 Moslems live; French authorities admit' it}in the Casbah. Nationalist of-| has been miraculous that the/ficials say the number of in-| Casbah's Moslems have not/habitants of what they call the swept into European Algiers to) "greater Casbah" now exceeds seek revenge on Secret Army)150,000. terrorists, who are trying provoke Mosiems into a bloo bath the Europeans hope will 'L/SEARCH IN GARBAGE | Food trickles into the Casbah block Algerian independence. bees Moslem women still must creep into the European city to FEAR MAY AROUSE |pick through garbage pails. Eu- Moslem nationalist officials in ropean gunmen find them there.) the Casbah fear that if the Eu-| Five food convoys destined ropean terrorism is not checked|for the Casbah from Moslem soon, they will be unable to|farms around Algiers have been hold back their aroused coun-/attacked by Secret Army com- rations to the needy. Some food S4ve Jouhaud, and this possibil- is still sold on the free market.| ity now seems remote unless the "We have to be judges, po- Secret Army halts its campaign re isihst administrators and dis- Both De TO WAIT tributors of food," said one na-| "7, : t : tionalist official. "There is no ee Dales understood that Jou- Reaneh law ate? aud's execution was considered for this weekend, but that it was MET BY TOUGHS decided to wait three days to A stranger entering the teem. See if Secret Army murders in ing maze of alleys is immedi- Algeria halt or noticeably slow ately intercepted by tough|¢own. young Moslem men who check/ It is common knowledge. that | By Passenger | TORONTO (CP) -- "Three fours,"' gasped acb driver Philip Quinn. "I've been shot." The radioed distress call sent some 30 fellow cabbies Friday) night to a street in downtown) Toronto where Quinn, 36, lay! helpless in Co-op cab 444, He had been shot by a male pas-| senger. The bullet lodged in his} spine, | As Quinn was. being taken to} High school students break Conference, was special guest | the Lambert family. The second| e , : ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP)--A twin was reported in serious into a laugh as Prince Philip | at the taping of a radio pro- makes a point while meeting | 8'@™ for high school students, 3 Laughing is Brenda Nunns, an audience of 80 students in | who interviewed Prince Philip Toronto Friday. Prince Philip, | before a question-and-answer visiting Canada for the sec- | period. ond Commonwealth Study --CP Wirephoto Canoes To Jets documents. Foreign newspaper/d¢ Gaulle was in a rage that men are directed to nationalist /Salan,_ confessed ag of the officials. rrorist organization which is| drivers and police fanned out! The crowded streets stilled as trying. to block "Algerian inde 1 i I walked through. At the sight|Pendence, got off with a life sen-| Wet & lenge sine On sale me. of 'my Euro pean "face fear tence. ne -- i eng a | flashed Raphael of the chil- But de Gaulle, in respect of co dren. Women moved away. Beg- the democratic processes, would) 'P lice said i described|study conferenc life in i ars whispered curses, |20t intervene in the verdict.| olice said Quinn describedjstudy conference on lite in. in: a. 13 ane lifts inte band t ee ee we peasy yaad : pg ig Cr a briefed) Saskatoon and Edmonton. One ; hand-a ed | ssed in a brown suit. | story sana-|tra ' a man escorted by a Moslem. dian' transportation before, tak-|(Tua, takes the CNR route and Dispatcher Frank Toorish said) qi; ansportati ak- ; . : "A friend," shouted my| Sh rt W k that as far as he knew Guinn|ing a bas telp to Nineare Walle the other is a CPR train. guide. 0 er or. had not been robbed. He saidjand a train trip to the Pacific. MEET EN ROUTE In a Moorish cafe, men came uinn picked up the s ; | -*n Q ae P pyre) Prof. Donald Creighton of the} Delegates will hold meetings to shake hands. at a nightclub. ; ; : j they Week Debated : |University of Toronto history|en route, making use of steno- |hospital, where his condition) |was reported only fair, taxi! Briefing Theme TORONTO (CP) -- Delegatesjonto, the delegates divide to to thé Duke of Edinburgh's|board two special trains bound or Vancouver with stops in {Northern Ontario, Winnipeg, "Just write the truth," condition in a Sherbrooke hos- pital and Jean-Guy, 17, was in fair condition with first-degree burns to the face in hospital jhere. |PROPANE GAS EXPLODED "It was a propane gas explo sion," said Capt. Josaphat Dionne, who lives about 800 feet from the 30-year-old house owned by Mrs. Paradis. The Lambert family occupied the lower floor. Chief Larivee shared the same belief after taking a statement from Clement Gaouette, a plumber who visited the house shortly before search of Lake Ontario for Don- ald Dodge, the national men's singles kayak champion who va- nished while on a practice run in his kayak last Thursday, has been called off. . Authorities abandoned the search after finding no further trace of Dodge other than his overturned kayak sday night, i Dodge, a 21-year-old student at the Eustman School of Mu- sic here, took the kayak out from a park beach. Police said heavy winds gusts and choppy water may have overturned the kayak. Dodge, from Niles, Mich., won the kayak championship last the explosion to check the fur- nace. summer, 'Defence Porous trymen. The rows of Moslem graves Moslem Block M ALGIERS (AP) A time bomb planted in a pickup truck exploded on the Algiers water- front today killing at least four persons and wounding six. One European was killed, but all the other victims were Moslems police said. Hundreds of screaming Mos- lems surged out of the nearby Casbah at the sound of the blast bringing members of the newly- formed Moslem police force on the run to head off a riot. Fire engines and ambulances hurried to the scene, but most of the ambulances returned empty. Moslems generally re- fuse to let European-manned ambulances transport their wounded or allow European hospitals to treat them. ; Stretcher-bearers of the rebel National Liberation Front car- ried the wounded to a first aid point in the Casbah quarter several hundred yards away from the waterfront Calm was restored in the area half an hour after the blast. Groups of Moslem youths patrolled the Place du Gouvernment at the foot of the Casbah, warning Europeans to move away. Helicopters . flew over the area {mandos in recent days. ' Bach narrow, smelly, wind- Poli b Riot simultaneously in the suburb of Maison Carree (Square House), shattering Moslém-owned stores and other |property. No one was reported injured. Algerian violence Friday claimed the lives of 38 persons, all but one of them Moslems. A record 1,800 persons lined up at nearby Maison Blanche airport to flee to France today. Thousands of Pied Noirs, or European settlers, have left Al- geria for France during the last few weeks almost Ontario Adults Slow repeated. -- - ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP)) George Meany, president of the} G I Bl t AFL-CIO, says he expects the| ap S as e ;merged labor movement "'to | very seriously consider" a coun- a | : A | try-wide campaign to reduce the! _. . aia' we iscussing »| | In Berlin Wall standard work week to 35 hours| "8 Orland Nokes, 21, of nearby countries shrninb bee ig | om 40, | fr Such a campaign, Meany said) | BERLIN (Reuters) -- A six- \foot hole was blasted in the|Friday, likely will,be taken up Berlin wall early today in a|by the AFL-CIO executive coun- series of: four explosions. cil when it meets in Chicago in East Berlin police and French) August. gendarmes hurried*to the scene| He told the convention of the and confronted each _ other/International Ladies' Garment} across the gap. East Berlin) Workers Union, "I am of the} workmen later arrived and be- opinion that a reduction of the| gan repairing the wall. |work week, with the same take-| West Berlin police reported home pay, would have a tre-| four explosions--the one at the mendous impact." | wall and three lesser ones) Meany first endorsed the 35- nearby--were heard near East)hour week at another conven- 3erlin's border with the French tion here last week. He is at sector of West Berlin. odds with the Kennedy admin- The one that damaged thejistration and Labor Secretary wall was caused by explosive Arthur Goldberg, who feel that laid on the East Berlin side, the present 40-hour week is best! they said. for the economy. | To Take Sabin Syrup By THE CANADIAN PRESS Ontario's adults have gener- ally adopted a_couldn't-care- less attitude toward the offer of free Sabin anti-polio syrup. Communities which have held public clinics. generally report that while 90 per cent of the {plan intensive for! the fall cials reported better than 50 An Ontario health department|per cent success in their im-| spokesman said Friday the|munization drive. Sabin vaccine is complement-| ary to the Salk vaccine, which} tp, i ) : ' e lat as 20V- was introduced in 1955. ered rendteg a er cuak cd "One does | not replace the the school children, 50 per cent! other," he said of pre-school children and only| campaigns The Uxbridge Man, 21, Dies In Accident | MARKHAM, Ont. (CP)--Den-| Uxbridge was _ killed Friday) when a car failed to negotiate curve on Highway 7 near |this town 20 miles northeast of|Niagara Falls, |Toronto, Police said a mechan-|away. ical fault probably caused the} acciddent. effect of transportation policies |in on community life before break-|Sunday and the CPR group will {dinner at the University of Tor- SPACEMAN SKINDIVES jdepartment related the story of|graphic and conference cars as transport in Canada from birch|well as reference libraries of bark canoe to jetliner at a plan-|several hundred volumes. The etary session closed to the|books will be given to visitors press. |from overseas at the end of the The 300 delegates from 35) 'Tip. The CNR group will stop off Hornepayne for six hours ing off for a visit by bus tojspend the afternoon and even- about 80 miles|ing in Schrieber, to visit with residents of the northern On- After a private reception and tario communities. Prince Philip, president the conference, will fly from Toronto Sunday. The prince Friday placed a of west \ | Experts Probing Flight Reaction cornerstone for a new. residen- tial college at University of | | |Toronto and spoke to YMCA |leaders at a closed meeting. TELLS OF PROGRAM An account of the meeting jreleased later said Prince |Philip described the operation in Britain of an award program GRAND TURK ISLAND (AP)jabout his capsule attitude and designed to promote physical _/Was astronaut Malcolm Scott|therefore, on several occasions, | fitness preoccu-|}when Capcom |pied or simply reflective during|municator) tried to get him on his last whirl around the earth? |his retrosequence, he kept re-| Carpenter confused, Space officials seem unable to} agree on an answer. | As they weighed this and) other questions today which arose during the 37-year-old| naval officer's thrilling space journey, he had a date to £0) skindiving with other astro- Lambton County health offi-|nauts off this tiny West Indies|ing stations thought Carpenter confused because he was too island. Then there were to be more questions about his three-orbi-| ques In Toronto about a third of|tal flight with astronauts John|/------ H. Glenn, Walter M. Schirra,| Virgil I. Grissom and Leroy) Gordon Cooper joining in the interrogation. \Carpenter performed his tasks and public service (capsule com-\among young people. In Jungle Fight BIAK, New Guinea (AP) --| Another part of the first President Sukarno has won the phase of the Indonesian cam- first phase of his campaign to/paign also has proved success- take West New Guinea from the|ful: The paratroopers. have Dutch. managed to evade Dutch ma- Indonesian troops have shown rines by hiding in the deep bush they could easily penetrate the|and refusing to fight. Dutch defence screen along the, WORK ON PAPUANS Serang Sea in the westernmost) This means they can re- |part of this strike torn is-/main free to work on the na- land. tive Papuan villagers and pro- | Dutch military men believe|Indonesan population, hoping to there are at least 400 paratroop-jincite them to overthrow the lers operating deep in the jun-|Dutch authorities. gles along a 500 - mile front, In the second phase of the which stretches from near Kai-|campaign, the Indonesians are mana on the south to near|finding it harder going. |Sorong on the west. In the beginning of the "mili- | The Dutch have done little to/tary action' against the Dutch, stop these aerial penetrations. Sukarno's forces tried the sea. The area is too large, the Dutch|Their first attempt ended in forces are too few. \failure when a small force of Only one C-47 troop carrier|Indonesian motor torpedo boats has been shot down -- by alwas turned back last January. Dutch Neptune patrol bomber--|One boat was sunk. There were since the Indonesians began|casualties, and prisoners were | their parachute drops April 27. itaken. turning to what he was doing,"| the station said. ", . . It was) difficult to assess whether he was confused or preoccupied." But Dr. Stanley T. White said " , in an appropriate. manner. His theory was that the track- busy at times to make the re- ted responses. Workers Giv The time bomb was seen as School children have been get- another attempt by the Euro-|ting the vaccine, adults and pre- pean Secret Army to provoke|school-age children have been Moslems into retaliation against|staying away in droves. the Europeans, The Secret <A _ survey by the Canadian Army strategy is aimed at/Press shows many local health bringing intervention of French departments have not yet taken forces against the Moslems, advantage of the supply of free thus breaking the March 19 vaccine. Evian - les - Bains cease - fire) The new vaccine has been agreements and providing available since March when it Moslem rule in Algiers. was approved by the federal BOMBS EXPLODE government. The Ontario gov- in other 'terrorist ction to ernment shares the cost with day, 15 plastic bombs exploded the federal government and dis- tributes the vaccine free to lo- cal health boards The vaccine was in supply, at first, ,but freely available However, some local unit including Simcoe county and Hamilton, have no plans to in- jtroduce the vaccine at the pres ent time, Other centres such & limited now 1s CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 "ss 'Ottawa, London, and Guelph| spokesman said that abo no * i about 90-95 per cent, of school hd ett a ea as aetge ted children, more than 75 per cent}HOLD A DRIVE Carpenter will have a chance Co L to answer other questions about} mpany oan as ; io . : a ; his condition during flight when! About 80° por' Gel of duit lgnaberinad git Dustin, iit o| thy Teeter, Gee mmitrneey scree to cee The Ena the province have had "shots" three-day drive in which more |saneay had Piping sirneg he cay ta Pride ae "ded ae ee a : h €/ celebration and a press confer- Compatiy Ltd. Friday decided) ! accin han 60 per cent of eligible per-| ence. On Monday, he will fly|to make a $5,000 loan to keep Comparative figures for Sabin) sons took the vaccine. The cam-|t9 his hometown. of Boulder,|the company and their jobs go- vaccine would not be available|paign covered 97 per cent of the|Colg.. for another welcome. ing. until at least the end of next|school children, 75 per cent of | fy 5 : J. T. Rogerson, busines month, when many of the|pre - school children and 42|CRITICS CONFER ranantative tor Local 602, at ie arger centres will have com-|per cent of the adults. The question of Carpenter's Upholsterers International Un- pleted their immunization pro-| In Kingston -- where there condition during his last orbit jon of North America (CI Cc) grams. hasn't been a polio case since|arose late Thursday night, sev- said the 90-day loan to the count So Far Peterborough has re-|/1955--about 16,000 of the 53,000/eral hours after he had been pany would ease a temporary| ported the most successful|population took the Sabin vac-|plucked from his tiny life raft financial strain aq campaign, with 80 per cent of|cine. The breakdown is 10,000)/in the Atlantic 250 miles be-| a+ five per ' t interest, the| the population taking the vac-| school children, 4,000 adults and! yond his target landing area. loan whe tiny i pada set cine, Dr. James Anderson, med-|2,000 pre school children. Men of the 17 Mercury track-| jhe future "ol 06 Hees emiity a ical officer of health, said 90| The Kitchener campaign cov-\ing stations got together on in the union local te ai ie shies, per. cent of school childrenjered 30,500 -- 18,000 of them'their world-girdling radio net-| The Joan has been scarethaadl were covered as was ex-|students--of the total population! work for a postflight critique. py D. R Cleveland) and A Hy cted. But he said it was an of about 74,000. The Kaua., Hawaii, station Holland Beceitivaa bf the Great 'encouraging surprise" to find) Many centres that have al-/said Carpenter sounded tired) West Saddlery Company urn: U. Thant, left, acting secre- that a <a pe of -- red held i are planning|and his voice was weak as he|ers of 52 per cent stock in the| * wry-general of the United Na- pre-school children had also/follow-up cayhpaigns to start flew over. |Hees Company whic a ac-| ns, receives ¢ responded to his "blitz". leither next month or in the fall.! "He was concerned | tures liause tintin, ov | hen 'at Giaen ious Cae pe ! quite ton University chancellor C. J. Mackenzie. It; was his first official visit toGanada, a visit U. Thant made despite the ~~ SuGKiAKY-GENERAL GETS DEGREE fact he is in mourning for his son who died in an-accigent in Burma Monday. { --CP Wirephoto

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