THOUGHT FOR TODAY Remember when church bells, not power mowers, awakened us on Sunday mornings? ec Oshawa Gime WEATHER REPORT Partly cloudy and cooler Satur- day with winds northwesterly 15 to 20 miles per hour. Price Not Over VOL. 91--NO. 128 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, JUNE 1, 1962 Authorized as Second Ottewo and for payment Class Mail Post Office Department, of Postage in Cash. EIGHTEEN PAGES CHIMNEY FIRE FORCES OCVI EVACUATION 4 £ TORONTO (CP) -- The On-, MORE THAN 700 OCVI stu- dents cheer Oshawa firefight- ers carrying a ladder to the roof of the school to flush a soot-clogged chimney that caused a small fire in the basement at 7:30 a.m. today. Waste paper in bins near the able to escape through the plugged chimney. The clogged chimney was discovered when a school staff member open- ed the basement door after the fire was quelled, He was met by a wall of soot caused when a vacuum formed. No |day with no indications of a set-) tlement soon between the high-| |way freight | striking union locals. | However, officers of the pro-| tvincial and federal conciliation| terminal after the Local 938 of the Union. Police escorted eight trucks of|trailers on rail flatcars -- arejcost $1.83 a pound; pork and - haulers and five|'the non-union Taggart Service/here to stay. |Limited across Teamster picket) lines at the company's Kingston terminal. services are preparing to step} In Windsor, 14 small trucking] yse of piggyback has been of- | " piggy' ' No Settlement Seen In Teamster Dispute erations -- transport of truck] The union, demanding a guar-|t antee that highway drivers not be laid off because of increased Union |sumer prices of meat and but- company|quoted the report of Judge J.|ter to finance the country's lag- |tario - wide Teamsters walkout)failed in an attempt to sign an|C. Anderson of the conciliation|ging agricultural program in }moved into its fourth day to-jinterim agreement with Toronto|board who said piggyback op-jthe face of food shortages. beef--up 30 per cent--will re- are measured against salaries much lower than those, in most Pork And Beef Prices MOSCOW (AP) -- The Soviet today increased con- Butter--up 25 per cent--will ail for 88 cents a pound. The effect of the increases -- Boosted 30 Per Cent be a burden upon the people, probably decreasing their eat- ing of meat and butter. As a compensation, some decreases were ordered in certain other products, notably sugar. The goverment added the in- crease is a temporary measure, The statement said the cost of producing food, meat and butter had increased sharply be- cause of the expenditures on mechanization on the farms, SOVIET SHORTAGES HIKE FOOD PRICES chimney in the basement | serious damage resulted and firms signed agreements with|fered a guarantee by the board/foreign countries. A semi- caught fire when heat from in as soon as conditions indi-| cate a possibility of settling the) there were no injuries. | --Oshawa Times Photo (strike of 7,200 Ontario truckers) ----_-----_ of the International Brotherhood} of Teamsters (Ind.). | Thursday's strike develop-| ments occurred here and at} nearby Malton, and at Kingston| and Windsor, / F. W. Murray, manager of the [ition Transport Industrial Re- Kamsack Doctors Praised By NDP rerte eee KAMSACK, Sask. (CP) -- A He said Saskatchewan doc-|"smokescreen" with their at- § |surprise vote among 675 persons|tors are the highest paid in Can-|tempts to make piggybacking attending a New Democraticjada, with an average income in|the main issue of the dispute. Party rally here Thursday|1961 of more than $18,000, and| Pickets stood aside at Malton showed about 80 per cent in fa-|this would he enough to draw|aS a crew of defiant Teamster vor of implementation July 1 of/all the doctors needed. besarte spc! cng pong j|the Saskatchewan government's| He gs at Libe | wheele eir giant rigs out o medical care plan. lphopeatatea Coacrsatine cane | M and P Transport Limited hog vote a rg Pg bers of the Saskatchewan Col-| _ ' of the meeting at whic' @-llege of Physicians ¢ . tional NDP Leader 7. C. Doug- a dng nb apa par Windsor Truckers las was the main speaker. Mr.|against the medical cz * Douglas was speaking in sup- = sassseadhcan ss Ahomaallawc Sign Agreement port of party candidate Leonard WINDSOR, Ont. (CP)--Four- teen Windsor trucking firms have signed a memorandum of Larson in Yorkton. agreement. with the Teamsters the school's furnace was un- | The resolution favoring the! compulsory, prepaid medi-| cal plan also proposed that those their drivers. Mr. Murray's statement Canada Denies Protest Made On EEC Deal LONDON (CP) -- The Daily) Express says Canada and Aus- tralia have objected strongly to the way Britain's agreement with the Common Market coun- tries came to light this week. The accord, reached at the Brussels ministerial meeting be- tween Britain and the six-na- tion community, covered the fu- ture handling of exports of manufactured goods from Can- ada, Australia and New Zea- land. The newspaper says Britain's Commonwealth partners '"'are saying the, announcement from Brussels cut* across their prior arrangement) with British nego- attending the meeting in this farming community of 2,800 per- sons, 150 miles northeast of Re- gina, extend their appreciation to Kamsack's four doctors. The Saskatchewan College of Physicians and Surgeons, which represents the 904 doctors in the province, voted opposition to the medical care plan early this jjmonth. Some doctors are re-| ported to have threatened tojamnounced Thursday that thelas five leave Saskatchewan, | Kamsack's doctors have said Medical Arts Up For Sale SASKATOON (CP)--Dr, M. G. Kunkel, president of a company of 50 doctor-shareholders in Sas- katoon's Medical Arts Building, building is for sale. He said the decision was union providing for hourly wage lincreases totalling 33 cents over the next three years, nine cents more than a conciliation board) recommended. | The agreement was signed by} |company and union negotiators] |Wednesday but not announced juntil Thursday. | All 14 companies involved are} some employing as few) or six drivers. None are| members of the Motor Trans-| port Industrial Bureau, the} small, tiators .. " jthat truckers with five years' seniority be kept in some kind {of employment in such an event. Mr. Murray said the release /of equipment from long high- way runs dropped because of piggyback has resulted in more trucks and more jobs in other road operations. The union strike ballot re- jected the board's proposal of a 24%-cent hourly increase in equivalent of $88 a month, pro- fessional and, semi-professional people about $222 a month. ment said that the increased charges cause there was no other means of raising money to pay the in- creased expenses on farms. WILL CAUSE BURDEN that the increase in price would skilled Soviet worker gets the The government announce- were necessary be- The government conceded This announcement left West- ern spectators somewhat non plussed since the aim of mech- anization in most countries is to cut costs, rather than to in- crease them. What has been known for sometime, however, is that the amount of money spent on mechanizing farms and in pro- ducing fertilizer has been kept so low that agriculture has fal- len behind the rest of the econ- omy. pay, which averages a basic $1.78 an hour. The bureau, agent for 65 trucking firms, approved the offer. In Malton, the Toronto Team- sters Local 938 apparently re- fused to accept a 35-cent hourly wage increase from M and P, which withdrew from the bu- reau after signing an agree- ment with the Teamsters local in Windsor for an interim rate of $2.13, 33 cents above the cur- rent Windsor rate, The company operates be- tween Ontario and Alberta, but its highway drivers are not sub- } In Ottawa, a senior Canadian} official said the government has| not sent a protest or any com-| ment whatever to London on the Brussels announcement. WELLINGTON (Reuters) | Prime Minister Keith Holyoake} of New Zealand said tonight| the recent Common Market agreements on imports of Com- monwealth manufactured goods} jject to union agreement. Jungle Probed For Attackers Of Leper Camp SAIGON (AP) -- Vietnamese Army forces probed the jungle $ Pegging Slows Exchange Drain OTTAWA (CP) -- Canada's foreign exchange reserves an by unusually large ,000 in the first two days $116 of May before the dollar was de- valued: and pegged, 'and since have increased by $14,000,000, a finance department re por t/000 showed today. Altogether, the reserves of gold and U.S. dollars declined by $102,000,000 for the month as a whole to $1,493,000,000 at the close of business Thursday. The-report was issued in the name of Finance Minister Flem- ing, who said that in view of the pegging of the Candian dol- lar at 92% U.S. cents, which took effect May 3, it was desir- able to report on operations of Today's report said that since the pegging of the dollar, the government had sold $48,000,000 of its exchange h on the market and that trans- actigns produced an increase . $62 agg for a net gain of $i4,- The foreign exchange re- serves, at $1,493,000,000, now have declined by $617,600,000 from their peak of $2,110,600,000 at the end of last October. This was a result of government pol- icy to funnel, U.S. dollars onto the exchange market to offset strong downward pressures on the Canadian dollar which oc- curred during the winter months. The present standing of the they will stay. The resolutionjreached Wednesday night at a|province - wide association of|«does not meet our position." |150 miles northeast of Saigon|the exchange fund before and wy asked the Kamsack doctors to|meeting at which members ex- trucking firms, "co-operate with the province|pressed the view that the pro-| of Saskatchewan in imiplemen-|vineial government. was. "not tation of the (medical care) act|showing any signs of consider-| the rest of Ontario. July 1." jing the health needs of the peo- "nie v7 But the agreements no doubt The Teamsters are still on|represented the best compro-|a strong Communist guerrilla strike against trucking firms in|mise Britain could obtain, he|band which raided a leper camp 'said. Mr. Douglas said he was con- [pie of Saskatchewan and will go ahead with its plans to foist the the province in the face of the|medical care vlan on the prov- controversial medical plan, an-|ince." jother 100 soon would fill their) He referred |places. } fident that if 100 doctors left Indigent Patient Definition Urged j . years ago, operates under al Pickets Protest ibeen vigorously opposed by the to the govern- ment's compulsory medical care plan which is scheduled to go into operation July 1. It has TORONTO (CP)--The royal commission on health services| was asked Thursday to give) special attention to supplying a| definition for the segment of Canada's population called, for lack of a better term, the "medically indigent." A brief from the Social Plan- federal grant. /904-member Saskatchewan Col- The Society of Obstetricians Radio Editorial lege of Physicians and and Gynecologists of Canada| MONTREAL (CP)--A_ crowd|8°S: jin the streets of Algiers today jcalled for legislation to ensure|of about 57 picketed the down-| In Regina, Dr. H. A. Brown,\as the second consecutive blood- jProvision of prenatal care tojtown studios of radio station|Chairman of the board of the|less morning drew to a close. every expectant mother. The/'CKGM Thursday protesting a|Medical Arts Clinic, said sale| The terrorist European Secret society estimated "'conserva-|broadcast editorial by Herb) "In trying to make piggyback-| Army Organization continued its nie Countik of Metropoitan|a tbat nine to 10 per cent| Manning, station news director. ing the main issue, they (the|mysterious truce in an appar- Toronto suggested that withinin hari in Canada end) Mr. Manning had questioned] striking Teamster locals) arejent effort to prove its bargain- the broadly accepted imine! a EHO. : i jthe usefulness of the hanging of|simply trying to throw up ajing power in any negotiations of the term "'there is a sere! he Canadian Association of| Adolf Eichmann in Israel. |Smokescreen,"' he said. with the Moslem Front of Na- large group, far in excess of| Pathologists said inclusion of! _ The crowd dispersed after po-| He said company wage offers,|tional Liberation. those in receipt of community| Pathology Services in the fed-lice sent a squad car to the!/totalling 12.7 per cent over the| Secret Army leaders want to welfare services." y eral-provincial hospital insur- scene, There was no violence.) contract period, are "far in ex-|talk directly to Moslem national- "We suggest that this group|2"C¢ plan is regrettable and| Police said some carried signs|cess" of recent agreementsjists to seek additional guaran- of doubtful legality and dubi- saying: "Eichmann first, Man-|made by other Canadian indus-|tees for Algeria's European is composed mainly of fully or). nonagy : | ' : partially employed persons ore ee 'ning next." itries, _|community before the Moslem retired -persons living on sav-! ings," the council said. "'We feel confident that it is this group that most frequently ne- glects physical and dental care because of limited financial] resources. "Because of a commendable sense of independence, a _ re- sistance to dependency, or ALGIERS (AP) -- Europeans Sur-/and Moslems mixed peacefully MASS KILLER SPURNS HOOD Bei Nazi Defiant To Last of accumulating debts which| TEL AVIV (AP)--Defiant to,Eichmann spurned the tradi-|"the final solution to the Jew-|ported later that Richman n| cannot be met in the foresee-\the end, Adolf Eichmann was|tional black hood and_ evenjish. problem'--extermination. |"was not sad" but was de-| able future, these families build|#anged Thursday night for or-|chided his jailers for making it} Byt the court said he actu, |fiant." Eichmann, who earlier| up potential or actual: health|ganizing Nazi Germany's war-| difficult for him to stand on the ally relished shipping Jews to|had expressed a belief in God) problems which are costly in|time extermination of 6,000,000) scaffold's trap door. their deaths by ihe hundreds of|but belonged to no church, "al the extreme to the individual,|European Jews. "My belief was correct," the|thousands, saying he was mo-|fused to reaffirm a faith in the family, and in the long run|, The young state of Israeliformer head of the Gestapo|tivated by '"'an ardent desire to| Christ : to the community." hanged the 56-year-old former| Jewish affairs section said.|. . . blot out an entire people| "I do have time to read the} The advisory committee of a Gestapo lieutenant - colonel at); 1 had to obey the rules of|from the face of the earth." bible," Eichmann told the min- Toronto pilot program for home|'Wo Minutes before midnight on) war and my flag. I am ready."| 3 ister. "I have peace. in' care told the commission home|2" improvised scaffold in a) At-a command from an [s-| REJECTS APPEAL _ heart. I am ready to die. care "is capturing the imag.|third-starey storeroom of Ram-|..6; guard, Eichmann stepped|,..¢% !staeli Supreme Court re-| ee wae ination "eve where?" leh prison near Tel Aviv. pai atc steppedjiected FEichmann's appeal|DRINKS WINE : ce 3 a e trap door and lunged tolacainst the de th sentence| Eichmann was told of the re- A brief from the committee, It was the 'first execution injhis death almost in a single mo-Qoo pees es ng een (jection of the clemency appeals said home care, specially suited|the 14-year history of this Jew-|tign. ; Tubsday, declaring even death --but not that he was to die to the care of the. chronically|ish state which counts among) Daath wae aliost paladiaie jwas an inadequate penalty. ; | ill, recognizes that many people|its citizens thousands of rela-| ~~ > sp pectic and With Samapected Se asked for and received a bottle "'do better in the familiar and|tives of Jews .whom Eichmann|Prison officials said. se at reel When lat sack wit, He arson Wall of it friendly surroundings of their/helped speed to death in Hit-| Eichmann was condemned to|£ichmann's doom about noon| Optside H Gut tr a bog own home or habitat." ler's gas chambers. death last December by a spe-| Thursday, rejecting appeals for! is' turned On floodlights was POLICE 725-1133 Strange Algeria Quiet Continues in my} that night -- about 8 p.m. He| dent Algeria. So far, Moslem quarters have| made, gave the city a new face. Me Thuot, |today in an effort to run down and carried off three American missionaries, | The Viet Cong band also car- |ried off food and medicines | seized in the raid, the U.S. Em- | bassy said. | News of the Wednesday night kidnapping reached here when another missionary got to Ban 8 miles from the jcamp, and spread an alarm. majority takes over an indepen-|Army units were sent in pur- |suit at once. 4 The raiders did not molest the denied any contact has been|950 Jepers or nine other Amer- jicans at the camp, including The truce, which began with) four woman nurses and the wife the Ascension Holiday Thursday,|and four children of one of the kidnapped missionaries, 44 Veiled Moslem women _pene-|¥eat-old A. E. Mitchell of El- trated the heart of the Europ.|/ensburg, Wash. ean city without incident: Mos-| stands over again. The markets] were crowded by European housewives, many of whom have been feeding their families with canned goods for weeks. Europeans close to the Secret Army said its commandos had received orders to "cease fire"| 3 until Saturday. Throughout Algeria Thursday terrorism took a toll of 17 lives --a relatively light total for re- cent weeks. Officials said the dead included 13 Europeans, most of them in Oran. West Germans Stick To Fact On Execution | BONN (AP) -- West German newspapers today printed fac- |tual accounts of the hanging of |Adolf Eichmann without com- ment, The Bonn government main- tained official silence on the ex- ecution today, but previously had condemned the Nazi slaugh- ter of Jews and praised Israel for its 'remarkably objective" Eichmann trial. The reported a pre-execution public more West Germans -felt Eichmann! should be hanged. - ; xecltive clemenc Nich-| Guards The pilot program, begun four; Eichmann's body was cre-|cial three-judge tribunal that/¢xecutive clemency from Eich-| Guards 2 . a former~British fort, on the | Mediterranean. the Jewish people and against} Eichmann - . : Eichmann learned death was jconclusion its announced deter-|rael. for the Supreme Court decision, yards to the scaffold. He walked jout justice in the name of alllinsisted he was only a minor|Hull, a native of Winnipeg, vis-|handcuffed to two guards, He| | ; ; Pena POP ". is family|and police set up roadblocks to |mated quickly and the ashes|found him guilty of acts of "un-/mann.. members of his family/1 7 10 ic nce the pileen, |scattered upon the waters of the|Paralleled enormity" against) @"¢ olners. CITY EMERGENCY . : : transferred| re) Aviy-Jerusalem road, Eichmann was cool. and un-|humanity--the only crime sub-|quickly from his cell in Jerusa-| PHONE NUMBERS |repentant as Israel carried tojiect to capital punishment in Is-|lem, where he. had been lodged |at hand only when guards came nclu ¢ ¢ n,/to his cell to take him the 50 jmination to record the history; The cold - blooded Nazi bu-|to Ramleh Prison. There, his| of the Nazi pogrom and handjreaucrat with thinning hair had/sPiritual adviser, Rev. William|steadily to the execution room FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 9 oo ge pdt |handcu a noe. jJews. jcog carrying out orders from/|ited him in his cell, made only HOSPITAL 723-2211 A faint smile on his fate,labove in the Nazi campaign for' The Prote#ant clergyman re-'and blow his nose. Random questioning of West Germans on their way to work of the execution. L Frankfurter Rundschau| # opinion survey, asserting that] # than one out of three| © The other two kidnapped mis- lem bootblacks and flower ven-|sionaries were identified as Da- dors, long absent, set up their | niel Gerber, 21, of Dalton, Ohio, a Mennonite volunteer who worked as a maintenance man, and Dr. Eleanor Ardell Vietti, 35, of Houston, Tex. after that point. The heavy $116,000,000 out- flow of foreign exchange re- serves in the opening days of the month exceeded even the $115,000,000 decline which oc- curred for the whole month of April. The Canadian dollar's value was dropped to 92% U.S. cents from its previous level. of around 954%, and Mr. Fleming said at the time that a major factor in the decision was some heavy international speculation. Rail Crash Toll Now Set At 63 VOGHERA, Italy (Reuters)-- The death toll in Thursday's rail disaster here rose to 63 today when the body of a four-year- old girl was discovered hidden in the twisted wreckage. The body was in the wreck- age of a passenger train's rear coach which was smashed by a freight train going 43 miles an hour. reserves--lowest point in more than a decade--compares with $1,935,200,000 a year ago. Babes To Get Potash Stock... SKOKIE, Ill. (AP) -- Saskatchewan baby born day miners reach the wo¥ largest high - grade potash that province will receive share of common stock in . company developing the mine International Minerals anA Chemicals Corporation of Skof kie said today it will award thé stock valued at about $37 a share.'The stock has been paye ing an annual dividend of $1.60, For more than five years mine ers for IMC at Esterhazy, Sask., have been battling down to the deposit which lies a half - mil underground. The project ranks as one of the toughest in min- is 9 history, company officials said, boatman who of Adolf This is the took the remains one request--to stop|today brought general approval|,Eichmann to a police launch nchored outside Jaffa har- bor in'Israel today. The re- mains of the former Gestapo colonel who was hanged last night were crefaated and the CARRIED EICHMANN'S REMAINS ashes. scattered on the high seas, --(AP Wirephoto via radio from Tel Aviv) F