Oshawa Times (1958-), 29 May 1962, p. 21

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

THOUGHT FOR TODAY A man with a good vocabulary fis one who can describe a shapely girl without using his hands. he Oshawa Fimes WEATHER REPORT A. few showers and thunder. storms this afternoon and eve- ning and again Thursday after- noon and evening. Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy VOL. 9I--NO. 126 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, MAY. 30, 1962 Authorized os Second Ciass Mail and for payment Post Office Department, of Postage in Cosh. TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES RESCUERS SEEK CHILD IN UNUSED COAL MINE Avalanche Of Buying Hikes Market Prices | } Ap RRO RRR Ed WORKERS CLEAR DIRT FROM MINE SHAFT Violence Flares At Ottawa Truck Firm TORONTO (CP) Police;departure of transport trucks. moved quickly to avert threat-| Police said a car carrying onto, ened violence at an Ottawa'several children was driven injmany smaller centres as the transport terminal Tuesdayjfront of one: truck. When the'Teamsters set up pickets at night as a strike by 7,200 mem-|truck pushed the car down the warehouses and terminals. bers of the International Broth-| road it was pelted with »ricks,) First »f the five locals erhood of Teamsters (Ind.) tied|rocks, sticks and milk ns| volved up most of the province's inter-|containing paint. The cab win-jline was Toronto-based Local city trucking. dows were smashed. 938, which officially went' out Ottawa police arrested four) There were no reports of in-;Monday night. A faction of the men following an incident at the|juries but a Teamster spokes-|local, anticipating the vote, set terminal of Taggart Trucking)man accused police of using up pickets Sunday. Service, one of two Ottawa! brutal methods in dispersing the; Neither side sees an early end truckers not * affected by the) crowd. to the dispute at the centre of| strike against members of the) The province - wide walkout) Which is a union demand for a Motor Transport Industrial Re-| came in advance of a Thursday|8uarantee that drivers will not| as transport workers, are to be 1532 vote against a settlement) The conciliation board recom- eharged today with causing a| recommended by a conciliation|mended that no worker with 100 men gathered outside the/fect within a few hours quired to take other jobs if their terminal in an attempt to block! By Tuesday night trucking! highway runs were eliminated. cents an hour in the current |basic rate of $1.78. Some 200 PETERBOROUGH (CP) -- A|that they planned to sell the Freed In Oshawa 5 ardboard 2 Neg y 75 pound cardboard box of}meat to Negroes in Detroit who In Oshawa, strikers are per- Tuesday 'a _ edad yh scandy ge hey. had never told'on a round-the-clock basis against Nic econl, charged|Peconi they were planning to} jowever, transport company gingerly opened by S. G. M.|ton had known they could never by strikebound company equip- Grange, special crown prosecu-/make a deal with Peconi if ment, ful distance by John DeN Ken-| "That's why you had to be signed to Teemus Products, | nedy and C. L. Dubin, Peconi S|'cute' about the way you spoke Ajax, from the Direct Winters from Toronto. Peconi was one of 14 men ar- two unconnected rings dealing in dead animal meat. Most of Cpl. Orlow J. (Dusty) Lutesjup the transcontinental services|Teported to have told its em- and Cpl. Edward Drayton, pot os Ad pegs gag cratic Party, said the situation new factor into the election Ont Wict. 24 they wanted]. «<critical"--with the Canadian|fight, which appears to be get- in Windsor and Detroit The prosecution said although He said the government has rally, while Liberal Leader were planning to sell the meat | Pute between the publicly-owned Mr. Douglas heads from meet- as human food CNR and 10,000 rail workers be- ings in Saskatchewan to Flin ment from Prime Minister Dief-|t9 Vancouver, Comox and Vic- enbaker or Labor Minister toria. lations Bureau, agent for 65) midnight deadline set by the be laid off as a result of the disturbance by interfering with! board and approved by the com-|five or more years seniority be sbcnarshselaanpeti The rejected contract pro- | maintenance men voted in favor meat, kept in cold storage since "would buy anything." mitting only perishable goods with selling meat unfit for hu-'sell the meat on the human food customers are providing their tor who is handling similar|they had actually said they! Tuesday afternoon, strikers counsel, the carton was tied up|to Peconi?"' Mr. Dubin asked. Stevenson road south yard. rested early in January in con-| the men were, like Peconi, lic-| RCMP officers who for a sample of -the meat they] seople facing a general election|ting hotter and livelier Lutes and Drayton only spoke|@". "inescapable responsibility") Pearson flies into the Yukon for Both testified they mentioned,onging to the Brotherhood of Flon in northern Manitoba. So- Starr 1was aimost paralyzed in Tor- Hamilton, London and in- fivelentered the election campaign,|if the strike goes into effect as! in it firms. union in case a strike ballot|Ppractice of transporting trailers other persons. panies was announced Monday|laid off because of piggyback, | | vided for a wage increase over Unfi nfit Meat Trial }of accepting a similar pact. October, made its appearance} In his cross - examination of to be removed from the Trans- git ahaa ed market. own means of removing their| cases across southern Ontario,|were going to sell the meat for permitted the removal of 60 again and returned to the! - 3 nection with what the RCMP ensed dead animal removers) By THE CANADIAN PRESS jand working rules. Negotiators; months represented themselves) T. c. Douglas, national leader scheduled at noon next Monday would be buying from him tOlyune 18 and -with Parliament as tiladis Gadd te to' 'Peconi indirect. terms,|t0 take the initiative and use its}, meeting at Whitehorse, then Railroad Trainmen (CLC) cial Credit Leader Robert Police said the four, identified) favored a walkout. The 2,456,to-| "Piggyback" by rail. The arrests came after about night and the strike was in ef-|but said workers should be re- jthe next three years of 2314 e Evidence Smells | Perishable Goods in Peterborough county court|the two corporals Mr port. yards, now being picketed However, once it had been Cpl. Lutes said he and Dray- goods. Nothing is being moved and inspected from a respect- human consumption. bags of perishable goods con- RCMP car which brought it HEATS VOTE CAMPAIGN said was an investigation into and disposers. A strike threat that could tie|are still talking, but the CNR is| as meat dealers from the Wind-| 9 ¢ the labor-backed New Demo- The strike deadline injects a sell in the legitimate meat trade! diccolved Cancouved today for a malor they made clear that they] 'fices to solve the contract dis-/fjies' to Prince George, BC There was no immediate com-/Thompson takes his campaign CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 | PROMISES CONFERENCE URGED MEETING About 4,000 people at Victoria, Mr. Starr urged the dispu- B.C heard Prime Minister tants two weeks ago to meet|Diefenbaker promise that his and make intensive effort to re-|government will convene a na- solve their dispute over wages|tional conference on human re-| ra situation looked blackest. since TORONTO (CP)--Buyers tookjvolume since "'Black Tuesday,"} over from sellers Tuesday as/Oct. 29, 1929 on the Montreal|the Toronto and Montreal mar- |Canadian stock markets scored|and Canadian Stock Exchanges.|kets were crammed throughout ja dramatic advance in the wake/Industrial volume was 445,400'the day with onlookers. | lof one of the worst declinesishares compared with 542,320 since the 1929 crash on the day of the crash. most felt in New York--where The Toronto ndustrial index; Floor traders there reported|it all began--as buyers seized --compiled from 20 leading!the day as the most hectic and|domination of the market from stocks--rolled up an_ over-all/most unusual in memory. lgain of 18.9 points and a net gain of 5.57 on the day to s 4s ll ei, | Swirling Rally rsces mcner In the first hour of trading An _ayalancne of buying sent | she index was driven down 13 33} bea -- on mammoth vob points--the biggest drop in the At New York um¢ ne exchange's high- jmemory of exchange officials-- speed ticker tape ran two hours lby frantic sellers unloading! and 44 minutes late, smashing ltheir stocks. The drop looked Late Tuesda Monday's record of 69 minutes. \like a sure bet to surpass Mon-| y An ctcaenr mgr sai |day's decline of 16.31 points, the os waneeil 'i _.|Was recovered from the $19,- steepest compilation be NEW YORK (AP)--The New 500,000,000 erased from the gan in 1934. At one point the|York stock market took a/quoted value of stocks Monday. ticker tape fell 25 minutes be.|much needed rest today after a; The Dow-Jones index of 30 in- hind recording transactions. dizzy whirl in which it rallied |dustrials all but wiped out Mon- However, at mid-day the mar-/from its steepest dive since day's loss of 34.95 points, as it ket began to show signs of re-|1929 shot ahead 27.03 points to 603.96. sistance. By 2 p.m. the strength|, Stock exchanges are closed) The fnal volume was 14,750,- lof the buyers was being felt as|for the Memorial Day holiday./000 shares, second only to the |prices began to surge upwards) The swirling rally Tuesday) 16,410,030 shares traded Oct. 29, led by the hard-hit blue chip afternoon recovered almost all 1929. issues--the high priced issues f the ground ono Me Howard D. Graham, presi-| considered to be the foundation aa ca price collapse in °° /dent of the Toronto Stock Ex- - ~ aa But investors and brokers had ot fone the sell-off Monday ON BUYING SPREE this question to ponder: oe weoay Mornmg was prob- Ba I : ably due in large measure to Cheers could be heard on the Will the rally carry through) mass psychology." trading floor as "bargain hun-|tomorrow?" | H al . ters" brought on a buying spree| There was no way to telling! eg said it was wrong to that pushed volume to its high-|whether. the momentum gen-|™@Ke any comparison between est since the end of March--alerated will be sufficient to hur- the recent movements of the total of 4,966,000 shares. dle the holiday breather. stock market and the collapse At Montreal, industrial issues| Some brokers were optimistic)(hat was experienced in 1929. The visitors' galleries at both| ¢ But the force of the rally was! ; |\discouraged sellers just as the} @ PRICES HIGHER i JEAN KOWALCHUK, elder sister of the boy, cries on shoulder of unidentified friend when word was brought to the surface by John Kubin, district mine inspector, that there were no signs of life below. --CP Photo No Hope Held For Survival GHOST PINE CREEK, Alta.junder earth or had fallen down (CP)--Rescuers descended intoja narrow hole behind steps an abandoned mine shaft again'leading down the shaft. today in an attempt to reach! If he had fallen down the hole, four-year-old Kenny Kowalchuk.|he might be near the bottom of No hope was held for his sur-|the 85-foot shaft, which once vival. |supplied domestic coal for farm- With heavy timbers shoringjers in the Three Hills district, up the earth around the top of;, the shaft where the boy disap.|ACCIDENT STUNS PARENTS peared about noon Tuesday,| Stunned by the accident, workers were able to descend|s'ain farmer Peter Kowalchuk the shaft again. jand his wife were taken by rela« Below-ground rescue attempts| tives to their home, eight miles were suspended early today|#W&y, for the night. while crews. laid planks in the|, About 9:45 p.m. hush fell over top 15 feet of the shaft. the spectators as a rescue A portable pump poured air|Worker called to shut off a car down the mine where carbon|™0tor which had been provid- dioxide made early rescue at-/ng power for a light. tempts hazarduus. | It was believed that rescuers The mine, abandoned 30 years| thought they heard something ago, is two miles from this cen-|!" the area where they were tral Alberta hamlet and about|Working--between the 36- and 50 miles northeast of Calgary.|49-foot levels. Summoned by Johnny, Mrs.| A minute later they called for Kowalchuk found a hole in the|the motor to be started. grass-covered mound marking), At Edmonton, J. A. Dutton, the old mine site. She was re-|director of the provincial mines ported to have talked with the| branch, said that if the boy sur- trapped boy while her husband|Vived the fall through the de. sped to the nearest phone by|Dris, it was unlikely he could car to call help. jhave survived the accumulation RCMP Corporal Keith Suther-| of gas near the bottom of the land of Three Hills, one of the |Shaft. first rescuers on the scene, re-| Rescuers used fans to clear ported he heard the child whim-jthe gas from the shaft and pering about 1:30 p.m. There/Pumped in fresh air, was no further sign of life. | SHUT OFF AIR After coming out of the mine, Congo Leaders Mr. Kubin ordered rescue work: . ers up from the 40-foot level Confidence Bolsters Exchanges LONDON (Reuters) -- Most Western financial centres today recorded rallies on their stock exchanges following the drama- tic recovery on Wall Street Tuesday from Monday's big skid. Rising prices were reported from stock exchanges in Lon- don, Hong Kong, Singapore The increases were coupled with a return of confidence in the financial world. Shares of the five major Brit- ish banks, which suffered a £75,000,006 ($229,000,000) drop in panic selling, made a strong recovery. Oils also were in good demand During the first hour of trad- ing some of the hardest hit is sues rebounded almost to pre collapse levels. National. Provinical Bank which had shed 11 shillings, re- covered 7s 6d. Barclays Bank, which was down 9s 9d, regained 7s 6u. BUYERS ARE ACTIVE Activity was even more hec-|ing breathing apparatus tackled/Itzhak Ben-Zvi for mercy. tic at times than at the height of the big sell-off Tuesday. back in," one broker said. ak the union dead-jracked up the highest daily|but conceded it would be an up- "thill struggle to sustain an ad-| ° jvance in a market that has been} i )declining since mid-March | Terrorists Seek "| "People will see. what's go-| this} it} iseemed," one broker com-| "It looks like a good | jing on and thing isn't reflect that as bad as |mented. {summer." | Another characterized Tues- [ dav's action--a nosedive in the|EuUropean settlers are trying to}comment so far from the FLN morning and an upsurge in the/8¢t Moslem nationalists into ne-|government in Tunis. But the afternoon--as "sheer idiocy at/89tiating Algeria's future with|nationalists' attitude has always its highest." A sudden surge of buying by {mutual funds and other institu- tions sparked the rally The advance, with blue chip stocks in the vanguard, jerked from. a shroud of ll Street om. Brokers on the floor and Wa glo Milan and|SPectators in the gallery at the . Exchange d as the closing bell rang New York Stock cheere at 3:30 p.m Ship Blaze Fought In English Port SOUTHAMPTON, Eng- land (Reuters) -- Fireman bat- tled for more than two hours today to control a blaze in the . |28,705-ton Union Castle liner Ed- 'inburgh Castle which is under- going a refit here. The fire started in the liner's boiler room and spread quickly through six decks of the liner. More than 50 firemen wear- the blaze. Other fire - fighters and the air supply which had been. pumped down the six-by eight - foot shaft. for several hours was shut off. | He ordered a halt to below- | ground work until cribbing Deal With FLN 2hethars'ss of the shaft. He said he feared earth piled about 12 féet above |_ ALGIERS (AP) -- Desperate) There has been no formal the top of the shaft would col- lapse and trap rescue workers. Hundreds of spectators kept an evening-long vigil around the mound marking the spot where Kenny disappeared. They talked in hushed tones while rescuers inched their way down the shaft. Mr. Kubin said it would take two or three hours to place the cribbing around the top of the shaft. From then on it would be a job of hoisting out soft earth. Mr. Kubin said he believed the boy had either been trapped them instead of with the French|been that the Secret Army rep- | government. jresents no valid political force | Offers to negotiate a "system|and that it can be destroyed in of coexistence" have been made|15 days if tough enough means by the terrorist Secret Army/are used. Organization and the General | Union of French Workers of Al-/ISSUES ULTIMATUM | geria, which represents virtu-|, The French Workers' Union ally the whole European labor|iSsued a virtual ultimatum de- force. jmanding direct negotiations They have not put their de-|With the Moslems before the 'Unite Armies LEOPOLDVILLE (Reuters)-- Premier. Cyrille:.Adoula. of the central Congo government and President Moise Tshombe of Katanga province have agreed on the integration of Katanga forces into the national Congo- lese army, it was announced here today. A communique, issued after their 11th meeting here Tues- day, said the two delegations adopted a recommendation to 'integrate effectively the armed forces of all parts of The Congo." Observers said it was the first concrete measure adopted by the Congolese leaders since they began their talks last week on ending the secession of Ka- tanga province. mands into concrete form. But|July 1 referendum on self-deter- _ |as their part of the bargain, the|Mination or its members would / European terrorists are propos-|@uit Algeria. | ing to stop their murder of Mos-| "If we leave, the economy lems and_ systematic destruc. |would collapse," the settlers say. tion. The labor unions are of-| Most experts agreed. lfering to halt the exodus to| But the Moslem nationalists France of the European labor|are determined to achieve their force. |political objectives -- independ- ec --_----_-----|ence and control of the country] --no matter what the cost. | Nazi Su erman . v7": the government} p reported that two well - armed e Secret Army commando groups Be S For Life |--47 in all--have been arrested. 9: | The government said 42 Eu-) JERUSALEM (Reuter s)--|"neans were expelled from Aci Mass Murderer Adolf Eichmann| 214s, Ueseay capper appealed today to President subversion, : : : | The unofficial death toll in He asked in a formal appli-|the terror Tuesday was 30 per-| pumped oil out of the ship into|cation that the death sentence,|S°"S, ina Fe 22 Moslem are "There is a mad rush to get|the sea to cut the risk of explo-jimposed on him for organizing)@2"d two Moslem women. An- 'sion. sources, details. For the second night running, prime minister, who fielded their shouts adroitly. Earlier, on mainland British Columsia, Mr. Diefenbaker was jgreeted in Clearbrook by some 500 persons, most of them high school students. There were bobby sox squeals in the. crush around him. Campaign speeches went heavy on the state of the econ- omy and the extent of unem- ployment Mr. Diefenbaker accused Lib- eral Leader Pearson with "twisting and turning' on whether the Liberals would free the Canadian dollar from its pegged value of 921% cents in terms of the United States dollar. Mr Pearson, speaking at North Battleford, Sask., said the government was forced by ex change pressures to devalue the dollar, The pressure he said, adding: Strike Threat New Issue He did not give any| "It is not going to be easy to|A reprieve from the president hold it at 92% cents." Mr. Pearson was critical of lof the CNR next Monday has Ployees that they will be laid off|hecklers turned up to taunt the;|the government's handling of trade and policies generally. At Edmonton, Mr. Pearson attacked the government as a group of men 'more skilful at political manoeuvring than at the management of govern- ment."" He also encountered hecklers but did not answer their interruptions. Social Credit Leader Thomp- son criticized both the Conser- vatives and the Liberals. He lumped them together and said |they are offering election poli- cies of debt rather than of posi- tive expansion. "The Pearson-Baker team is jeynical enough to go on ex- pediently promising projects. we will have to amortize over the jlives of our children and grand- children, rather than offering Canada a system for making money to pay for the things we economic js still on,jneed," he said in Caroline;|as "very lucky" with face and| police with a description of the Alta. ithe wartime slaughter of mil.|ther 17 persons were wounded. lions of Jews not be carried out.|, French Gendarmes still were @. Defence Lawyer Robert Ser-\investigating two mass graves vatius, speaking to reporters/found in a Moslem suburb of before flying home to West Ger-| Algiers. They contained the bo- many, said his client's fate was/dies of 35 Europeans believed in the hands of the president. |Kidnapped, tortured and_ slain Eichmann's plea came a day|Py the Moslems in retaliation after the Israeli Supreme Court|for Secret Army killings. Sree pig 8 ome Aremere trom the presides' 2 Men Sought In Bowmanville | Rape Incident Authoritative sources said the} justice minister, Montreal-born) BOWMANVILLE (Staff) -- Dov Joseph, intends to submit}A province - wide search is on his opinion on the appeal to the/for two men wanted in connec- president "in the speediest/tion with the raping of a 34- manner possible." year-old Belleville woman near) All indications here were that here early today. is his last chance to avoid be- ing hanged. Eichmann's plea was made in a four - page letter he wrote) after the dismissal of his ap-| peal. He wrote in the advice of Servatius. Brian Darwen, 4, of 41 Thorncroft crescent, Ajax, stands awed by a pillar of doughnuts. Perhaps he is won- dering at which end he should begin, He and his brother, Glen, were visitors at the General Motors Open House barring a reprieve Eichmann! The victim, whose name is will be executed in a few days. | being withheld by police, is be- * . Toronto. She was found by Con- Child Survives stable James Schultz at 2.20 Fs un side Highway 401, while he was 50 Foot Pl ge ;on routine cruiser patrol. She year-old boy Tuesday survived) Hospital suffering shock. a 50-foot drop from a cliff on; Police are looking for a 1958 Timothy Orange, son of Mr.\reported stolen from Toronto and Mrs. Thomas Orange, wasilast night. The victim as yet, ~~~" lieved to have been picked up in a.m. in a delirious condition be- HAMILTON (CP) -- A four-/is in the Bowmanville Memorial the Hamilton Mountain. model blue Chevrolet that was described by hospital officials has been unable to furnish the (leg abrasions. 'two men. | this | EYE OPENER at the south plant, Tuesday night. A total of 8,268 peop'- visited the plant Tues The open -hoyse will c afternoon and (See story page 17> Admitted

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy