U.S. Crackdown' On White Slave | Market Begins WASHINGTON (AP)--United| States Senate investigators have called for a massive crackdown on tax-cheating white slavers allegedly operating behind the! gay facade of honky tonk night clubs, Senator John L. McClellan, (Dem. Ark.), said in an inter- view the evidence his Senate in- vestigations subcommittee has' produced already in public hearings shows "the condition 4 Cram Algerian Ports By HARVEY HUDSON in Algeria may run wild during} Algiers by ship and two hours MARSBILLE, France (AP)-- the next month in celebration) by plane. By air and sea, the once de-|f Algerian independence, _ The ministry for repatriates fiant Europeans of Algeria are| France represents security/has a large office here to aid fleeing the land they had vowed that the Europeans could not be! anyone in trouble. A special to keep French forever, sure of in independent Algeria. | teletype circuit keeps informa- About 6,500 sad, bewildered, TO VOTE JULY 1° tion: up to date on available ho- bitter and disillusioned people, 'The 10,000,000 Algerians will (¢! Teoms. Anyone without from Algeria arrive in France yote July 1 in a referendum to|™0ey is directed to a Special every day. Many: have never! determine whether they want| centre which has beds for as before seen«this country. independence from France, ™4"y as 2,000 people and food The number seems to be lim- Moslems outnumber Europeans|2%@ lodging are free for 48 -=ree] Shocked Europeans ited only by the availability of about 9 to 1 and are certain to SIGN URGES ALGERIAN INDEPENDENCE VOTE ae ae A Moslem looks up from his inde- work in an Algiers gas station which has an inscription on Douk Women --AP Wirephoto War Drums Beat Ignite Twelve : Reis ot Oe Pretest TRAIL, B.C. (CP)--Sons of hollow beat of Indian war|chant to the drum beats Se drums continues to drift across|" The Indians dance in relays, Freedom Doukhobor women at/iic. tiny Turtle Mountain res-| usually until about midnight Krest a running out of : y & estova are Ing ervation town. ;While dancing they carry houses to burn down. Angry Chippewas are protest-/ various items such as mirrors RCMP said 12 more homes ing the death of an Indian ehild| and fans--but no weapons. y they say was not admitted to i 2 SAS ee ens the federal hospital here. tahe dec ' an Wadi Ss s , = ' started aS Freedomite shacktowns 40 miles. The war dance is the group's qa. night, ekccias for the err a traditional method of protest.'7,4 . th ; = north of here in the British Co- _ : y ndians say they want to ex- The Chippewas have chosen a)... a . ' y : 47,|Press anger and . resentment lumbia Kootenays. high hill about one-quarter mile | ove, the death of one.vear-old "There's not much left of from Belcourt in full view Of miner Cree Jr Thay have Krestova now," said a police the hospital to act out their' promised no violence. -- officer. "Out. of about 150 resentment. The child died June 17 of shacks, there are no more than' About 20 men, women and pneumonia after. outpatient two dozen left." The burnings children dressed in ceremonial treatment the previous night for brought to 156 the number of|costumes and some with .war a cold i Figedomite dwellings put to the ------------ as elu : torch in a 16-day rampage of 'Carson and nude decacustratibns. Power Company Takeover Cost The outbreak started June 8 Exceeds Value at Krestova and spread to other| Freedomite colonies at Gilpin, VICTORIA (OP)--An audit by the firm of Price, Waterhouse | } | Dr. Thomas K. Huggins, med- ical officer in charge of the hospital, which is run by the U.S. public health service, said doctors had no way of telling the child could so quickly jdevelop pneumonia and die. | Huggins says the dancing 1s being carried out by a dis. gruntled splinter group from the reservation. Glade and Shoreacres. Police believe the fires are) protests against a preliminary) court hearing underway at New) Westminster for 70 Freedomite| elders charged with conspiring to intimidate the governments) | transportation. "If there were ships to take jthem out, no Europeans would |still be in Oran," a man said las he stepped onto the dock. The old, the young and the omen make up the biggest share of the arrivals. They come with their dogs, cats and | canaries, Some come with their lcars, | Almost all fear the. Moslems British Papets Fail To Inform Director Says HARROGATE, England (Reuters) British newspa- pers are so small in size that the country is "fast becoming the least informed nation of all the major' countries in the world," J. M. Coltart, m ging director of the Thomson Organi- zation, said: here Saturday. |. The Thomson Organization, headed by Canadian Roy Thom- son, owns newspapers in Britain and many magazines and news- papers abroad. Coltart, speak- ing to members of -the York- shire Newspaper. Society, said newspapers need not be en- slaved by. the cost of newsprint and the amount of advertising. "Maybe we shall have to look at the price of newspapers," he said. "We can learn more about what is happening in the world in Milwa or Winnipeg news- papers or in Copenhagen or Zurich than we can in the Brit- ish press today. This should never be." | | | Tories Split On Entry In By FRASER WIGHTON | LONDON (Reuters)--A grow- ing number of. British poiti- cians see Edward Heath, 45, lord privy seal and deputy for-|lenging task that has faced any|/M eign secretary, as standing well| British minister in recent times. | sults. in the front rank of "'possibles" for the prime ministership in a file, like that of the opposition|result Canada now faces vote '"'¥es.'"' The number of men coming in by ship is relatively small," said Albert Payan, police com- }missioner for the Marseille 'port. "One day this week we |had 4,882 arrivals by sea, and only 530 of them were men be- tween the ages of 17 and 60." "My sband stayed behind to guard the apartment and the furniture," said a woman with three small children. "He may come later or we may go back to Algeria. We'll have to see how things go." An 80-year-old retired farmer had tears in his eyes. "I've lived there for 40 years: 1 wanted to die there. I didn't want to leave but my children wouldn't let me stay." 6,500 ARRIVE DAILY About 3,500 repatriates--they are never called refugees -- come to Marseille by ship on an average day, and another} 3,000 arrive by air. Other planes} go to Paris, Lyon or Toulouse.) A few ships make the longer trip to Bordeaux. | In addition to the fleet of 15 ships in normal service to Al-| gerian ports, the liner Cam-| bodge, which normally carries) about 400 passengers on trips to the-far east, arrived with more than 1,400 repatriates from Bone. "We had mattresses on the floors of salons and smoking rooms, and some of the passen- gers slept on the outside decks; | I had to put six people in first- class cabins intended for two," the captain reported Marseille, the traditional gateway to France from Al- geria is about 36 hours from | | | | | Market -- {mon Market negotiations, Heath would be in the centre of the |spotlight as the man who per- }formed possibly the most chal The Conservative rank-and- hours. About 50 per cent of the re- patriates move out of Marseille the same day they arrive. They go by train or in friends' cars. Most of the rest stay only a day or two. Just under 10 per cent seem to be trying to find permanent housing in the Marseille area. About 35 per cent have the idea of settling in the sunny south- western portion of France where the climate most closely resembles that of their beloved Algeria. is' an outrage" calling for con- certed action by federal and lo-! cal police. A parade of witnesses has charged that powerful, tax- evading crime syndicates and assofted hoodlums have taken over the tawdry night clubs, de- fraudnig the U.S, govenrment and forcing girl dancers into prostitution. McClellan has charged the situation involves) collusion with some high offi- cials in the AFL-CIO union, the American Guild of Variety Art- ists, War On By JOHN MILLER MOSCOW (Reuters) --Soviet courts now are playing their part in the government's cam- paign against religion, particul- arly evangelical sects. The general campaign for the souls of Soviet citizens who still believe in God is a daily fea- ture of life here. But of late the Soviet propa- ganda machine has intensified its activities and its main target has become sects--Seventh-Day Adventists, Pentacostals, Jeho- vah's Witnesses and even Bap- tists. Pravda, 'the Communist party newspaper, showed the way the wind was blowing last- week when it reported a trial of five Pentacostals in Kharkov, the second - largest city in the Ukraine. The head of Canada Facing Complex Crisis Historian Says OTTAWA (CP) A Queen's University historian says a feel- the sect was onday's general election re- Prof. Sidney Wise said as a of Canada and B.C, through ar-|and Company shows the British jt over last August was $110,-future Conservative govern-Labor party, is deeply divided/ very complex crisis" and may 284,045. It also showed the company had. retained earnings totalling $29,805,760, These tWo figures come to a total of $140,790,895. son and bombings. Most of the Columbia government paid $31,- accused are from Krestova. 042,247 more than the book Police said Sunday's fires! values of B.C. Electric Com-| were "routine affairs,"~set as : . usual by Freedomite women PaDy, Premier W. A. C. Bennett with kerosene. They said the S4¥S- women -have given up their us-| Mr. Bennett Saturday showed The government paid the B.C ual practice of stripping off reporters part of an annual/Power Corporation which held their clothes, throwing them statement of B.C. Electric pper-|all the BCE common shares, a into the burning' homes and|ations to the end of the last|total of 171,833,055 compensa- standing naked in the streets./fisca] year--March 31, 1962--|tion. Few arrests have been made) which had been prepared by the! The power corporation is seek- because almost all of the homes! accounting firm. It showed that ing a Supreme Court declara- have been burned down by their|the value of common shares for|tion. that the compensation owners. BCE when the government tookl should have been $225,000,000. mete" 4 4 fully expected to lead his party 82d Development Minister i 4 4 ; ment. If Britain achieves member- ship of the European Common Market without sacrifice of ba- sic domestic and Common- weatth safeguards, this would further enhance the already high prestige of Heath, the min- ister in charge of British entry negotiations Politicians expect that whether or not Britain's current bid for membership yields con- ditions which Britain can ac- cept, the Common Market issue will dominate the next general election campaign--probably in 1964. Prime who would by Minister Macmillan, then be 70: is in this national contest. But it has been frequently spcculated that if the Conservatives won, he might step down soon after seeing the new .administratio settled in. = IN THE. CENTRE And if the new government was installed against the back- 4 | ground of a success in its Com- ; Volunteer Health Organizations Join OTTAWA (CP) -- The Cana- dian Council for Crippled Chil- dren and Adults and the Cana- dian Foundation for Poliomyeli- tis and Rehabilitation, proposing -\union to each other for seven g years, announced Stinday they) with will marry into the Canadian ¢ anada, Raymond Bousquet, punishable by sentences of up MAINLY SUNNY WITH A FEW CLOUDY PERIODS WEATHER FORECAST i ast 'Sunny Tuesday, Slightly Cooler nh Forecasts issued by the Tor-| Cochrane, northern Timagami| Muskoka onto weather office at 5 a.m.: regions: Variable cloudiness|North Bay § : Although partly| léarine during|Sudbury «' cloudy weather is forecast for| {8 morning, clearing "ated recto dan today, maikly sunny weather jg|the afternoon, Tuesday mainly Kapuskasing : for Tuesday. cool.! white River.. sunny and _ continuing Moosonee lair, southern Lake) Winds light. Niagara, | : Sasa WHY BORROW MONEY TO BUY FURNITURE? with cloudy periods to. isolated thunder-} g. Mainly| The soundest financing is offered by : dealers whose, ads show this symbol, It pays to ask for Forecast Temperatures Windsor St. Thomas. London ... | Kitchener Wingham .. |Hamilton ... St. Catharines Toronto Peterbor Trenton 75 70 7 70 'Ough . sunny Tuesday little cooler, light winds. Northern Lake Huron, Geor- gian Bay, eastern Lake Ontario, | Algoma, southern Timagami,| Haliburton, White River re:| gions, North Bay, Sudbury, Sault Ste. Marie: Partly cloudy! with a few scattered showers to- day, clear tonight. Mainly sunny oa cool Tuesday, winds light. | ' JAC TIME PURCHASE PLANS ny) 'It's either trade or fade,' 'te. Macaulay told a press con- fe se Saturday. "We have to on the issue of British member- ship of the Common Market. But politicians say that if the negotiations were to fail, this still would not minimize the appreciation of government. ad- herents for the burden Heath had carried in handling them for his country. inde Oc Fade Macaulay Tells Businessmen TORONTO (CP)--Economics Macaulay has announced his department will launch a trade "crusade" in September to in- crease Ontario exports. | succeed in trade if we want to create more employment oppor- tunities.' He said he will meet with leading Ontario businessmen and trade officials during the summer to provide them with detajls of the drive to increase!" exports, Involved in the pro- gram will be order-taking mis-| sions to Europe, the opening of more trade offices. on the Con- tinent and the establishment of manufacturers co - operative' agencies. Earlier, Mr. Macaulay met French ambassador to have reached one of the great turning points in its history. He told the Ontario Library Association annual trustees lun. cheon that there were no ready- made answers to this crisis and there were no familiar, guide- posts for the road ahead. "Canada has appeared to be coming to the end of a rainbow it has been seeking for 'a cen- tury or more. It has examined the pot.of gold and found some- one has devalued the cur- rency."' The election, he said, had dis- closed fundamental problems which had no immediate con- nection with the political situa- tion. He suggested the confusion, reflected in novel electoral pat- terns, arose partially from Can- ada's need to readjust to events taking place outside the coun- try. These included the new trad- ing relationships resulting from formation of the European Com- mon Market, the implications of the emergence of the new states of Africa and Asia, continuing United States-Soviet competi- tion and development of nuclear weapons. canon Food Speculators Face Jail Terms HAVANA (AP)--Private pur- chases of more than 25 pounds of food a week from farmers is | Rehabilitation Council for the and three of his staff to discuss|to 180 days in jail under a new Disabled. the possibility of increased Cuban decree published Sun- It is believed to be the first\trade between Ontario and day. time two Canadian volunteer health organizations have amal- gamated. The union brings Easter Seals cam council and France. | "They told -me the French and Germans are much inter- and in buying our products, .. . Aimed at what the govern- ment calls speculators and mockers of food rationing, the toegther the ested in investing in Ontario|decree also provides penalties of six. months in prison for any- feign of the { the \Canadian His excellency said he is surejone, besides authorized truck- March of Dimes campaign of|we can do more business with/ers, transporting more than 25 the foundatron. form an annual bi than $3,000,000. et of more co-operation in. our trade ven-! tures in Europe.' cogent, they| France and he offered us every, pounds of food on the highways. uag The vehicles of violators will be confiscated. MORTGAGES Ample Funds for Ist MORTGAGES 2nd MORTGAGES We Also Purchase Ist and 2nd Mortgages N.H.A, LOANS ARRANGED You Will Find OUR SERVICE IS FASTER OUR COST IS LOWER SCHOFIELD-AKER Limited 723-2265 -- 360 King West After Hours -- 728-3376 "Sandy" McKinnon wishes to announce his appointment to the Staff of Mills Motor West. "Sandy" extends to his friends and customers an open invitation to visit him at Mills Motor Sales Ltd. ANNOUNCEMENT Sales Ltd. King Street _ Russia Steps Up Religi jailed for five years with five years exile when he came out jof prison. Four other members: | Were sentenced to a total of nine |years in jail. | | ARE ILLEGAL | Unlike the Russian Orthodox |Church the sectarians are. jile- gal. But what section of the So- | viet law the five were tried on |was not clear from the report.| }Pravda merely said the trial |showed that the Pentacostals jhad "brought harm to people's |health and encroached on their | rights."" is known, It however, -that some of the sects stubbornly fol- low teachings which irk Soviet | authorities. Some teach children jto refuse to. sing Communist }songs or join the Pioneers. the country's youth movement. Izvestia, the Soviet govern- ment newspaper edited by Ale- zei Adzhubei, son-in-law of Pre- 'mier Khrushchev ,said it had |recevied letters from readers |'demanding sharper measures jagainst the criminal activities |of religious sects." It hinted that such measures were 'being | considered. Hi Prices ling of "confusion and anxiety" | .|in Canada was reflected in last} | | OTTAWA (CP)--Prices on a |wide range of imported goods are likely to rise because of the |higher import duties announced | Sunday. But the question of how. much | prices will rise--and on which }of the imported goods affected jis difficult to answer, finan- cial department officials said. The problem is similar to try- ing fo calculate the price in- jcreases that resulted from the jdollar devaluation. When the |dollar was pegged 714 cents be- low par it meant in effect a corresponding tariff on im- ported goods. : The effects of the higher du- ties will depend to a large ex- jtent on the amount of retail /competition in selling individual | articles. As a hypothetical example, {f 'a bottle of scotch whisky could jhave been imported on Satur- |day for $$4 and sold to the con- sumer for $5, the extra 15-per- {cent duty announced Sunday would mean an added 60 cents jon the import price. | Thus the retail price of the scotch would rise to $5.60 unless provincial liquor boards absorb part or all of the increase, or the foreign distillers lower their |price. There is no domestic {competition--scotch is not pro- |duced in Canada. | COMPETITION ENTERS | But where there is competi- tion the situation could be dif- ferent. Consider an American- made refrigerator, which a store on Saturday could sell for {$400 after bringing it across the border priced at $300. As of to- day the import price goes up by 15 per cent to $345. Will the. store increase the $400 retail price by $45 to $445" LIt will have to consider whether /Canadians will pay that much, when comparable Canadian- | | Increased Duties 'NIXON AIDE BEATEN Charles Licvhestein, 37, a re- search assistant for former vice - president Richard M. Nixon lies in a critical condi- tion Saturday after he was slugged by two would-be rob- bers. Lichestein was walking to work when the thieves London Truck Firm President Threatened LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- Mrs. | livering the threat. H. J. McManus, wife of the} Mr. McManus described the president of McManus Motors/threat as "intimidation of the Limited and Husband Transport| highest order." Limited, said Saturday an| "It's near time these Team- anonymous telephone caller had|Sters smartened up," he said. threatened a gun would be|_ "Fear is their chief weapon. pointed at the head of her four| They go out and try to intimi- children "unless your husband|date these workers. I'm not soon settles these strikes." against unions. I am against Husband Transport is in-|irresponsible unions, volved in the bitter, Ontario-| . : wide transport strike by the In- ked By jumped out of a car and ask- ed him for his wallet. He re- fused and they slugged him with pistols inflicting a skull fracture and severe lacera- tions. --AP Wirephoto ternational Brotherhood of Teamsters (Ind.). McManus Motors, a garage, is involved in a separate strike - with teamsters union Local 1,847. e Mrs. McManus said the caller hung up immediately after de- made refrigerators are avall- able at perhaps a lower price. The store might absorb part of the increase itself, thus get- ting its profit margin. Or it might ask the U.S. supplier for a lower price. Exempted from any extra charge are $2,900,000,000 worth of annual imports. These goods include: 3ananas, grapefruit,. oranges, orange juice, tea and coffee, als, raw materials, farm machinery, lumber, gasoline, and most component parts for Canadian manufactures -- such} as car parts and aircraft parts. | SHORGAS HEATING & APPLIANCES Industrial and Commercial The established, reliable Gas Dealer in your area. 31 CELINA ST. (Corner of Athol) 728-9441 r EDWARD DRUMM STAR SALESMAN OF THE WEEK EALTY REALTOR Lloyd Realty (Oshawa) Ltd. 101 Simcoe North © 728-5123 @ Open Every Evening LIFE... . Is Just A Bowl Of Gherries. When you have new, easy-core carpets on the floors. Choose from the largest selection of imported and domestic carpets in Oshawa, NU-WAY RUG &.. 174 MARY STREET 728-4681 "All work done In Oshawa by Qualified Oshawa Technicians" co. 4 ae Ufou can have your new oil furnace installed for $10 a month! 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