Grand Jury Urges New County Court House -- P. 5 THOUGHT FOR TODAY WEATHER REPORT \ When he's late for dinner, many a husband is served cold shoul- der and hot tongue. he Oshawa Zime Sunny with near-normal tem. peratures today and Friday. Clear and cool tonight. VOL. 91--NO. 133 Price Not Over 0 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 1962 Authorized as Second Ottawa ond for payment Class Mail Post Office of Postage in Cash. TWENTY-FOUR PAGES CRUISE SHIP AGROUND Great Lakes cruise ship South American lies aground in the south channel of the St. Clair River near Harsens Is- land (background) on the American side of the U.S. - Canadian waterway. The ship | | went aground yesterday noon. The vessel was reported in no danger and its 230 passengers were in good spirits. (AP Wirephoto) Labor Wins New Seat, Tory Fortunes Ebbing LONDON (CP)--The political|vative and Labor vote. fortunes of the ruling Conserva- tive party sagged still lower to- day with the loss of a "'safe"' Tory seat to Labor--the first OAS ALGIERS (Reuters) -- Eu- ropean gunmen killed four Mos- lems in two attacks in Algiers early today--first day of a re- |newed campaign of terrorism |by the Secret Army Organiza- | tion. ans | The attacks followed the lift- jing at midnight Wednesday night of a week-long truce by the apparent collapse of at- tempts to reach a peaceful re- conciliation between the terror- ist "keep Algeria French" group and the mixed European- Moslem European executive rul- ing Algeria until an independ- ence vote is held July 1. In the first attack, police said, Europeans in a speeding car machine - gunned a group of Moslem workers in the Hus- sein-Day suburb, killing three. The fourth victim, in a separate attack, was a Moslem newspa- per vendor. The Secret Army announced the ending of the week, - ol cast. | TALKS AT IMPASSE | The announcer, who _identi- |fied himself as the high com- |mand spokesman, said negotia- |tions between representatives |of the Moslem and European communities had reached an impasse. The negotiations had been opened by the Secret Army in an attempt to reach new polit- ical guarantees for Europeans in an independent Algeria. als, who last held power in the| The 1,000,000-strong European TAKE OTHER SEAT [eet 1900s, recently captured|community already has guar- In the other byelection held in another Yorkshire district, Derbyshire West, the Conserva- Labor gain in Parliament since the 1959 general election. Dr. Jeremy Bray, a 31-year- old mathematician, won the House of Commons seat for Middlesbrough West, a north of England industrial district, in one of two byelections held Wed- \\nesday. Dr. Bray defeated Con- ervative candidate Bernard "Connelly by a vote of 15,095 to 12,825. The Conservatives won the the seat in 1959 with a major- ity of 8,710. They polled 25,495 votes to 18,134 for Labor and 4,336 for the Liberal party. Liberal candidate George Scott finished third Wednesday with more than twice as many votes as 1959--9,829. Two inde- pendents got fewer than 200 votes' apiece. ~ Obviously, the Liberal up- tives retained their seat out with a greatly reduced major- ity as the Liberal candidate fin-|B ished second. Conservative candidate Aidan Crawley got 12,455 votes, Lib- eral R. Gardner-Thorpe 11,235, Laborite J. Dilks 9,431 and R. Gregory, an Independent, 1,433.) q; Crawley is a 54-year-old au- thor and television commenta- tor who a few years ago sat in Parliament as a Labor mem- ber. He explained his switch of parties by maintaining that Labor's program was unsuited to the Britain of today. His wife), is Virginia Cowles, the writer. The Conservative margin was reduced to 1,220 votes while in a straight fight with Labor in 1959 the Conservative majority); was 8,109. The Conservatives polled 22,034 and Labor 13,925. |; surge had cut into the Conser- Teamster Strike Boon To TORONTO (CP) -- Railways reported booming business Wed- nesday as a result of the Team- trucking company asked the Ontario La- bor Relations Board to declare ster's strike and a the strike illegal. Both Canadian National Rail- ways and Canadian Pacific Railway credited the strike by 7,200 Ontario truckers with) bringing them increased freight} business. The CPR reports that small freight shipments through Tor- onto have increased 500 per cent. Both railways are dis- patching extra equipment from across the country to meet the Ontario rush. Settlement of the 11-day walk- out seemed distant as the breach between union demands and company offers widened. Argosy Carriers Limited of London, one of 65 trucking com- panies idled, asked the labor re- lations board to declare the strike illegal and applied for an injunction against pickets. Argosy claims the Teamsters went on strike while on assigned jobs during working hours al- though no collective agreement between the company and any trade union was in effect at the time. TEAMSTERS TO MEET Leaders of Teamster locals in Hamilton, Windsor, London, Kingston and Toronto were to meet here to arrange the terms CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 | HOSPITAL, 723-2211 in the west coast resort gains last month in municipal elections and Wales. seven seats in the 630 - House of Commons but their popularity has soared recently among British tended with the government's austerity measures. of lackpool. The Liberals also scored big throughout England | They headed into Wednes- lay's byelections with only seat the Conservative citadel of Or-jantees for its well-being under pington, near London, and came within a few votes of stealing| another "safe" government seat Toronto Plans Trading Centre TORONTO (CP)--Plans were jannounced today for an Inter- national Trade Centre on Tor- onto's waterfront--a $60,000,000 project including a trade cen- tre, hotel, bus terminal, shop- discon- voters, The Conservatives still re- ain a.99;seat edge in the Com- mons, but the loss in Middles- brough West reflected growing discontent ment's -wage-freeze in. particu- ar. with the govern- The Conservatives fear that the next general election, The middle-of-the-road Liber-| nich must be held no later Liberals could split the Conser- vative vote and pave the way | for a labor victory. Railways they would demand for a settle- ment. Tuesday, Toronto Local 938 of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters proposed a 72-cent- an-hour package as the basis of the strike. Trucking companies have offered a 24% cent in- crease. Ben Lessard, president of London's Local 141 said three, firms have signed interim agreements with the local "to get their trucks back on the road." He predicted others would follow. S picknell Transport com- pany, London, M./F. Jones Transport Limited of St. Thom. as and Canadian Freight- Ways of Windsor granted truckers a wage imcrease to $2.13 from $1.78, he said. Mr. Lessard said the truck- ers will resume work immediat- The Middlesbrough West sult brought shouts of jubilation from the Labor camp. Labor leader Hugh Gaitskell described the win as 'ta won- derful, wonderful result." "This is one of Labor's great- est victories since the war," he declared. Liberal also declared he was satisfied! with his party's big increase in| ping mall, heliport and under- |ground car park, | The project was announced by |Mark A. Levy, president of Levy Industries Limited, and Harry G. Kimber, chairman of the Toronto Harbor Commis- sioner. It will be on a nine - acre site bounded by the city's main |Younge Street, Queen's Quay, Bay Street and Lakeshore Bou- levard. Plans were drawn up by Tor- than in the summer of 1964, the/onto architect Mandel Sprach- |man. }the Secret Army. This marked} Kills 4 Moslems In Algiers {the Franco-Algerian peace pact reached 12 weeks ago, but the Secret Army said these were not 'sufficient. "We are again taking up war |--particularly in the economic | field," the announcer said. He advised women, children| { and Europeans to leave Alge-| 7 |ria to "free the men for the | scorched earth policy." | "Since no one will listen to us, we are again taking up war," he said. "Despite the hopes of some, there will be no divisions between the leaders of the Secret Army. The civilian and military leaders will be united for the same aim -- to save their compatriots." The broadcast said, however, that an understanding still was possible between the European settlers and the Moslem nation- alists provided the French gov- ernment did not interfere. '| Two Secret truce in a pirate radio broad-! Army Men Executed PARIS (AP) -- Two Secret Army killers were executed at dawn today--the first to be sent before a firing squad--but for- mer Gen. Edmond Jouhaud re- mained in the death row he had shared with them. The fate of the 57-year-old Jouhaud, deputy com der of the underground terrorist army, still rested with President de Gaulle. There was an indica- + oo de Gaulle would spare his ife, Southeast of Paris at Fort du Trou d'Enfer (Hell Hole Fort) rifle volleys followed by two pistol shots -- the customary coups de grace--rang out at 4:12 a.m. They brought death to Albert Dovecar, 37, a former sergeant in the Foreign Legion, and Claude Piegts, 27, a civil- ian. They had been convicted of slaying a police commissioner in Algiers March 31, 1961. Dovecar and Piegts refused blindfolds as they faced the fir- ing squad. "Aim at the heart!" shouted Piegts. Just before the shots rang out he cried: "Vive I'Al- gerie Francaise' (Long live French Algeria). "Vive "Antriche (Austria)! Vive } gion!" Dovecar shoutec. The bodies were buried in nearby Thiais Cemetery. re MISSING 11 YEARS Barilko, COCHRANE, Ont, (CP) the share of the vote. cessfully treated by a two-stage operation and he now is making|scene by a helicopter crew of a very satisfactory recovery,"|the Ontario department of lands a hospital spokesman said. Scrubby wilderness only a few -----|miles from one of Northern On- a ee jtario's transportation lifelines Atlee Discharged tas «: jhas ended its ll-year conceal ment of the fate of Bill Barilko 1 and Dr. Henry Hudson. Following Surgery) Searchers Wednesday found LONDON (AP)--Ear] Attlee,|the skeletons of the two men 79-year-old former Labor primejamidst the smashed wreckage minister, was discharged today/|of their plane, which apparently from hospital where he under-|caught fire in plunging to the went surgery on a duodenal ul-|ground 45 air miles north of cer. jhere and a few miles east of "The ailment has been suc-|the Ontario Northland Railway. The searchers were led to the and forests, who spotted a ely and that the wage increase) will be adjusted to meet the| terms of the province-wide set- tlement. Meanwhile, the strike caused) LATE NEWS FLASHES another 25 men to be laid off in Brantford. Victoria Trans- port, a non-union trucking firm, closed .operations Wednesday, following a demonstration by 35 pickets. The demonstration was or- derly but a spokesman for the firm said it will close down for) the safety of the drivers and} the equipment, Twenty-five staff| members will be out of work.) Earlier 12 employees at Cope- land Refrigeration and another 12 at Sterling Action and Keys were laid off because of the} strike. Both are Brantford) firms. Before Wednesday's layoff at Victoria Transport, the National! Employment Service office' in |Brantford reported that 150 per-| sons in the transport business} were out of jobs. Gasoline Price Hike Probe Urged TORONTO (CP) -- The Ontario Retail Gasoline and Automotive Service Association said here today it will ask the federal government to investigate gasoline price in- creases by major oil companies this week. Kenneth Lang- don, secretary of the association, said the increase will whittle service stations operators' profits to the "lowest level ever." Rat Infested House Ordered Demolished HAMILTON (CP) -- A city-owned house in which two sleeping children were bitten by rats has been ordered demolished. Board of control issued the order after receiv- ing a confidential report from city officials. The children, memebrs of a family of seven living on city welfare, were bitten about two weeks ago. Howie Young Fined $100 For Assault KITCHENER (CP) -- Howie Young, former Detroit Red Wings player in the National Hockey League and now with Edmonton Flyers of the Western League, today was fined $100 for assault causing bodily harm to a policeman. Doctor aie so comma Oe@letons Found glint of metal bushland. They found-a Fairchild 24 pontoon plane 'which checks proved beyond a doubt was the one used for a James Bay fish- ing trip by the Toronto Maple Leafs hockey star and the Tim- mins dentist. The plane disap- peared Aug. 26, 1951, on its re- turn to Timmins. The letters CF-FXT, part of the plane's registration num- ber, were clearly identified. Joe Shalla, a member of the first search party to reach the wreck, said the Fairchild's fuel tank apparently had exploded. The plane was partly burned and there were signs thé bodies also had been burned. Shalla, of the lands and for- ests department's Cochrane di- vision, said the plane plowed a hole eight feet wide and three |feet deep when it went down. The wings had been sheared off and pieces were found partly hidden in shrubbery. Announcement of the discov- ery was made by Lands and Forests Minister J. W. Spooner, whose deputy, Frank MacDou- gall, said relatives of the men were notified immediately. First hint that the mystery was nearing an end came last Thursday, when helicopter pilot Gary Fields first detected the gleaming wreckage. No landing was made at the time. But after the 'copter re- turned to its base at this com- {munity 40 miles north of Tim- jmins, officials realized the |wreck was on the line of flight the Fairchild would have taken {had it been on course in the 236-mile flight to Timmins from Rupert House. in the dense 4 Queen mother Elizabeth is scheduled to arrive at Mont- real International Airport at 5 p.m. EDT today, the second royal visitor to Montreal in less than a month. Prince Philip visited in mid-May but his visit lacked the pomp that VISITS MONTREAL PROBE ON CRIME RECALLS JOLLEY _Ex-MLA Returns For Explanation TORONTO (CP) -- Arthur C.,tice Roach discussed the mat- will accompany the queen mother's stay. This photo- graph of the queen mother was taken in August, 1960 on her 60th birthday, in the draw- ing room at Clarence House, with her Corgi, Billy. --CP Wirephoto LONDON (CP)--Britain Wed- nesday soberly reiterated a pledge not to join the European Economic Community until Parliament approves the final agreement after full consulta- tion with the Commonwealth. The undertaking was given again by Lord Privy Seal Ed- ward Heath, the government's chief Common Market negotia- tor, when he launched a two- day debate on Britain's applica- tion to join the community formed by France, Germany, Italy and the Benelux countries. "We shall try to work out in Brussels solutions to the main problems," Heath said in an hour-long speech. The packed Commons cham- ber listened intently and soberly as he continued: "The (Commonwealth) prime ministers' conference and sub- sequently Parliament will have the other proposed, solutions as part of an over-all settlement." DISCUSSES ACCORD The pledge was given when the lord privy seal was discuss- ing the accord reached with the Six on treatment of exports of manufactured goods from Can- Britain Repeats Euromart Pledge to consider this along with all/aqded that the economic case ada, Australia and New Zea- land. "This arrangement which we have reached is, of course, de- pendent on all the other ar- rangements which we shall try to reach in the over-all solu. tion. They must be considered together and evaluated to- gather." Heath set a fateful tone on most of the debate both with his delivery and with state- ments such his contention that the negotiations were the most complex and complicated Brit- ain had probably ever engaged in, Labor Leader High Gaitskell maintained the sober approach in a speech cautiously express- ing the hope that eventually the negotiations would result in an honorable success. Gaitskell, however, stressed a number of reservations and for joining has been grossly ex- | with perjury. #itario Court of Appeal will be z\asked to rule on the question S\of whether Feeley should be siforced to give evidence -- in- eijected to Wednesday on the Jolley, former Progressive Con- servative member of the Legis- lature for Niagara Falls, will be recalled before the royal com- mission on crime concerning ev- idence which led Wednesday to a suggestion that he be charged Commission counsel Roland F. Wilson said: today that Mr. Jolley would be given a chance to explain how he wrote testimonial letters for gambl- ers Joseph McDermott and Vin- cent Feeley in 1958 and told the commission this year that he ter briefly with Feeley's law- yer and then adjourned the hearing until 2 p.m. while he studied court decisions on the point including rulings that re- sulted from Canada's postwar spy trials which had been pre- ceded by a royal commission at which those accused had been examined. Feeley dribbled a droplet of information Wednesday and promptly touched off a legal fight over whether he can re- fuse to talk of matters that might incriminate him. did not know Feeley and had only a bare acquaintance with McDermott. Liberal party counsel B. J. MacKinnon suggested to the commission Wednesday that Mr. Jolley should be charged with perjury. Meanwhile Mr. Justice W. D. Roach, the commissioner, con- sidered today whether the On- cluding his income tax returns since 1953. -- which Feeley ob- pouee it might incriminate At today's opening, Mr. Jus- $450,000 Blaze Razes Building QUEBEC (CP) -- Fire swept a four-storey building in the lowertown commercial district overnight, causing loss es- timated at $450,000 by Fire by Fire Chief J. B. Voiselle. A fireman suffered an elec- tric shock and a woman was struck and knocked down by a blast from a hose. Police were checking a report that the blaze might have been set by thieves. Someone re- ported hearing a window smashed before the outbreak was spotted. The brick building on St. Jo- seph Street housed a furniture store, the offices of a finance company and warehouse space Laos Factions Step Nearer To Coalition PLAIN OF JARS, Laos (Reut- ers)--The three Laotian faction leaders have agreed on alloca. tion of the key defence and in- terior ministries, main stum- bling block in the formation of a coalition government, it was announced here today. announcement was made by neutralist chie! Prince Souvanna Phouma after the first meeting in the latest at- tempt by the three leaders to set up a Coalition regime. Souvanna was met in this leftist-held area of central Laos with right-wing premier Prince Boun Oum and p> "sewernigt Pathet Lao leader Prince Soup- hanouvong. (In Bangkok, Thai Premier Marshal Sarit Thanarat told re- porters earlier that Boun would propose that Souvanna hold the key interior and defence port- folios.) The meeting took place on this plateau some 110 miles northeast of Vientiane, the Lao- tian administrative capital. Princess Grace Declines Role NICE, France (AP) -- Prin- (SSA Soares emitter geet on the two upper floors. Income Tax Plans Denied By Robarts TORONTO (CP) -- Premier cess Grace of Monaco says she definitely will not play in Alfred Hitchcock's film Marnie. She in- dicated she probably has re- tired from the movies perma- nently. The former Grace Kelly an- nounced two months ago that Robarts denied Wednesday thatjshe would make her return to he is preparing a provincial per- sonal income tax. He said a suggestion that such a tax is in the offing is "absolutely ridicul- ous." He was commenting on a statement by Liberal candidate Paul Martin, who asked the pre- mier to 'deny that he is right now preparing a provincial per- sonal income tax because he knows there is no hope of get- ting any more money from the federal government because of aggerated. the financial mess at Ottawa." day by Matin, Princess Grace said of Marnie: the screen this summer in the Hitehcock movie. Later the British director said he had postponed the production. In an interview published to- the newspaper Nice "On the one hand I will not have time and 'on the other I have been definitely influenced by the reaction provoked in Monaco at the announcement of my participation in the making of this film." Five Soldiers Dead In Crash PEMBROKE (CP) Five young soldiers, two from On- tario and three from Nova Sco- tia, were killed early today when two cars collided on High- way 17, five miles west of this} Ottawa Valley town. Members of the 4th battalion, Royal Canadian Horse Artillery, stationed at nearby Camp Peta- wawa, they were identified by the Army as: Gnr: John Andrew Munroe,} 21, Trout Brook, N.S.; Gnr. Ed- ward Burton Boutilier, 22, Hali- fax; Gnr. Ronald Dennis Lyn- ess, 21, Willowdale, Ont.; Lance-bdr. Franklyn W. Kane, 25, Pembroke; and Gnr. Paul) A. MacKinnon, 19, of New Wa-| terford, N.S. | Kane, alone in one of the cars, was the only married man among the victims. ' jretains VANCOUVER (CP) -- Dele- gates to the Second Common- wealth Study Conference leave for home today, carrying with them this message from Prince Philip: "It is up to people like you to make certain that mankind responsibility for and control of his environment and does not let the world slide into a state of confusion merely for lack of thought or fore- sight." Prince Philip, the conference, made this re- mark in a 20 - minute speech Wednesday to the 300 confer- ence delegates at the Univer- sity of British Columbia. The 25-day travelling semi nar, in search of means to 'aid in deciding "'the human conse- quences of the changing indus. trial environment®™ carried del- egates across Canada, into in- president of dustrie s, communities and homes. "Whatever use you make of the experience,' Prince Philip told them, "I would only ask you one thing: To remember that whenever you are re- sponsible for taking a decision in your industry or community, it is going to react on people." He said this is the crux of the conference. Growing popu- lation, greater centralization of control of industry and com- merce, growing mechanization and automation made the in- dividual less and less impor- tant. "Progress means nothing un- less people come along with i of their own free will. Effi- ciency is merely another name for tyranny unless it is con- sciously achieved by the volun- tary actions of groups of human beings." The 300 delegates from 35 the conference, Study Group Carries Message From Philip Commonwealth countries ended which began May 13 in Montreal, by attend- ing a private dinner Wdnesday night, As the Conference ended, Prince Philip, who spawned the idea and held the first confer- ence in 1956, said it had "brought a new life and a new meaning to the Commonwealth idea to a great many people." He said Canada had taught many lessons, perhaps the most important of which was that "a high standard of fiving does not insulate communities from the harsh problems of industrializa- tion which are experienced in every part of the Commone wealth." Today Prince Philip was to fly with many of the delegates to Toronto, from where he was to:go to New York for a dinner address tonight before depar ture for London, SRE SYA RRR RA renee mm