Oshawa Times (1958-), 28 Jun 1962, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY Are you sure you aren't an egotist? Would you rather be you than anyone else? he Oshawa Gane ' WEATHER REPORT Sunny and. a little warmer Friday across most of the pro- _ VOL. 91---NO. 151 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, JU NE 28, 1962 Churchill Fractures His Thigh MONTE CARLO, Monaco, fit and well, doffing his hat and (Reuters) -- Sir Winston Chur-| posing for photographers. chill fell and broke his thigh} Churchill has paid frequent bone today. and doctors carried|visits to the Riviera since his| out a "'successful'" operation. | retirement as prime minister in| The 87-year-old British elder) 1955, statesman underwent surgery; Early in 1958, he was spend-; after a fall in his hotel room|ing a happy holiday at Roque-| here at 4 a.m. ; }brune in the south of France Dr. Charles Chatelin, chief) When he was struck by his old surgeon at Monte Carlo Hospi-|enemy, pneumonia, accompan- tal, told yAporters after doing ied by pleurisy. the operafion: - . ' ae ici _ -- bis ' ifears for his life and members The operation was succeSs-| 4 the fafnily hurried to his bed- DN age ge Bo Sit| side gg various parts of the f &; wor! London. tomorrow." Churchill was taken to the But two, weeks later he was hospital after he fell while get- ting out of bed in his eighth- floor penthouse suite in the lux- ury Hotel de Paris, where he had been staying since arriv- ing from London Tuesday on a | two-week visit. | He was visited in the hotel by Dr. Chatelin and Churchill's {Monaco physician, Dr. David | Roberts | Then he was rushed to the -- the Princess Grace SIR WINSTON AS HE STARTED HOLIDAY Next Move Awaited In Medicare Battle An official medical bulletin REGINA (CP) -- Saskatche-jeither side of a change' in * wan residents, caught in al plans which are pinned to next|velopments Wednesday against the neck of the femur --the up deadlock between the govern-|Sunday's starting date for the|the backdrop of the 2¥-year|per narrow part of his left ment and the province's doc-| government program fight to imtroduce a compre- thighbone tors, are waiting uneasily for} With the start of the compul-|hensive program in which the) In London, Lady Churchill an a fresh move in the bitter dis-sory, prepaid medical care|government wiil pay residents'/nounced Sir Winston would be pute over medical care insur- plan, the College of Physicians/doctor bills. \flown home Friday ance and Surgeons has said doctors')/ The College of Physicians) A spokesman at the hospital There are no indications from| Offices will close and only hos-jand Surgeons, representing the/said the wartime British prime {pital - based emergency service|province's 904 doctors, opposes| minister was "quite comforta- will be provided. the scheme on the grounds it/ble." The CCF government has|gives the government a virtual] The spokesman added: "He is stood firm in refusing to delay|monopoly of medical services!sq cheerful that he is talking These were some of the de- Said he suffered 'a fracture of |sitting up in bed and smoking) ithe famous cigars that have be-/ come his trademark | | In 1959, an_ indisposition jforced him to-put off a meeting |with West German Chancellor |Konrad Adenauer, then visiting |London, but he recovered within |24 hours | In the autumn of 1960, there was concern when he fell at |his London residence and broke a small bone/in his back. He was up and about within two weeks, celebrated his 86th birth- day and had fully recovered by January, 1561. Former MP ol Found Guilty 'Taking Bribe | |Bruneau, 45, today was found! MEMBER CA TWENTY-FOUR PAGES # RECALL LETTE CONFIDENT ASTRONAUT U.S. Astronaut Walter M. Schirra, Jr., who. will fly Project Mercury's longest | flight late this summer, flash- | OTTAWA (CP) -- Raymond} es a wide smile of confidence at the news of the six-orbit TORONTO (CP) -- Ellis P. Morningstar, Progressive Con- servative member of the Onta. rio Legislature for Welland, said today he does not recall writing a testimonial letter in 1954 for a Niagara area gambler now a fugitive from a United States indictment. Mr. Morningstar said he doubted that he had written a letter bearing his name and vouching for gambler Bert Nero, which was found by po- lice in a raid on a Cornwall gambling establishment 'in 1954. A typewritten copy of the let: ter was produced before the royal commission on crime Wednesday by provincial police, who had returned the original with other articles seized in the Cornwall raid. It was signed "Ellis Morningstar, MPP." The MLA said his customary signature is "Ellis P. Morning- star, MPP, Welland." Apart from this discrepancy, he said, the general composi- tion of the letter did not appear to be in his language. "T. can't recall ever signing in that fashjpn," he said. Mr. Morningstar said he had known Nero since around 1941 when he lived in Welland but pointment was no surprise for his equally confident wife, Josephine, Schirra said. Back- up pilot for the next step to- ward space will be L. Gordon Cooper, Jr. Doubts Validity | Of Testimonial while he was township reeve but he did not know whether it was suspected as a gaming h ouse and had never been asked for a testimonial letter in connec. tion with 'it. The letter produced at the in- quiry contained no reference te this club. Asked about a paragraph in the letter saying Nero ha worked for him in civic oar: provincial elections, he said that this was not correct so far. as he knew but later recalled he had heard that some: time ago Nero had been one of hig "many workers." When Mr. MacKinnon out previous police testimony that the letter had been written on legislature letterhead, Mr, Morningstar said this material is not accessible only to memes bers of the legislature. ; He said the letterhead could be picked up by visitors to the members' writing room ever though it has a sign "members only" and attendants on duty. Legal Bookies - jstart of the plan until its dif-and control of the profession. |about his return to England but|Suilty of accepting a $10,000) mission Wednesday. The ap- --(AP Wirephdto) lferences with the medical pro- Women's Jail Has 4th Fire fegsion are settled MONTREAL (CP) -- The 58) Regina have prepared forms in .| dicating an grad pi Se Bro tere 8 of emergency service spend 'At least two days' in/@vailable. police cells, Jail Gov- WARNS TOURISTS in Saskatoon and to patients the nature to be The college's governing coun- cil has rejected Premier Wood-| row Lloyd's offer to make a) public documentary statement; on proposals to allow doctors to practise outside the Medical Care Act and to repealer alter other sections of it. | we do not yet know when he/bribe in 1956 while he was the|* will be able to leave." Liberal member of Parliament Churchill had been staying in|f0" Glengary-Prescott. an eighth-floor suite of the lux-| County Judge Frank Costello try Hotel de Paris since arriv-|84¥e him a suspended sent- ing from London Tuesday for| ence. Bruneau was accused of ac- Socreds Looking had no knowledge of any crim- inal activities on Nero's part ex. cept for a bootlegging convic- tion in 1945, The OPP Wednesday de. from a 1958 platinum smuggling conspiracy indictment at New- scribed Nero as a bail-jumper Mayor's Idea PORT ARTHUR (CP) -- Mas yor et of Arn. prior says r . should be legal in Ontario. fo raise revenue for the province's 'mu« nicipalities, ; He told the Ontario Associa. A | ® a a enn a accom cepting. the money to use his| To New Election ark, N.J., and Liberal party provincial ernor Albert Tanguay said to-| Jn Saskatoon, the board of / day trade announced plans to pub- The prisoners were trans-\lish advertisements advising ferred to QPP cells Wetinesday| tourists there may be a short- night following the fourth fire|age of medical care in the prov at the jail in a little more than|ince this summer. 24 hours. The blazes all appear) In Regina, Mineral Resources to have been deliberately set. Minister J. H. Brockelbank an- Four Lutheran | Denominations | End Division DETROIT (AP)--The largest merger in the histony of Luther-} anism in America took place} {here today when four Lutheran denominations joined force; "An epochal, long prayed-for jevent," said Rev. Franklin} {Clark Fry, of New York | Thousands of Lutherans, in-| cluding 2,500 delegates and offi-| cials, were on hand in Detroit's giant Cobo Hall | Rev. P. O. Ersell of Minneap-| olis said "at long last these four |Lutheran bodies have come to-| gether because they belong to-! gether, because they have one Lord and one faith." Their past divisions trace back to differences in national Firemen had little trouble put-jnounced plans for air or ground ting out the latest blaze, first)ambulance transportation of pa- spotted by matrons in the'tients to hospitals which are washroom of the institutions|staffed -- in Alberta or Mani- fourth floor. jtoba, if necessary. Carpenters-CLC Battle Simmers OTTAWA (CP) -- Like a dor-,vention in April, stopped pay- mant but dangerous volcano,|ing its monthly per capita dues the dispute between the Cana-|to the congress treasury and dian Labor Congress and one of /finally proceeded, despite CLC its biggest affiliates, the Car-| warnings, to sign contracts with penters brotherhood, -is still) Newfoundland's two big logging smouldering. 'companies to represent the is- Barring-a sudden saw - off, land's 15,000 woodworkers. the next eruption may come in| [Wabor sources say the car- August when the CLC's top penters union so far seems. to be brass meets here in executive) Standing alone in its fight with) cnurch--the Lutheran Church of session -- with the problem of| the congress. America the Carpenters Union sure to be} Fears that other building, It has 3,500,000 members, the high on the agenda. trades unions could pull out of sixth largest Protestant body in The dispute started when the the CL© have not materialized the United States 65,000-member United Brother- 3! least not up to now. It "will provide a mighty wit- hood of Carpenters and Joiners,| Indications are all sides will ness for the faith in the midst second - ranking union in Can-|!et the dispute, simmer quietly/of all the compromising, hu- ada, started to organize loggers until it comes up at the August manizing and secularizing ten- in Newfoundland--a jurisdiction|Session of the congress execu-'dencies abroad in the world claimed by the rival Interna-| ive council, inner cabinet of or- today," said Rey, Lavin Lun- tional Woodworkers of America.|anized labor in Canada. deen of Minneapolis. factors have faded, leading to \formation of the new united pany her hushand on the trip,|influence in' the eieeig yigare| She was told of the accident at|/purchase of property at) Cc e ill' «| Hawkesbury, Ont., for a post of-| pag gga Oe, RPE Pe site. He pleaded not guilty, Dr, Charles Chatelin, chief}2"@uing that the money was @ surgeon at the hospital in Mon- -- aco, Dr. David Roberts and Dr./he an insult to members of Par-|& Andre Fissore, an x-ray expert,|jiament to impose a prison term| examined the British wartime) on Bruneau as a deterrent. He prime minister. ordered him to sign a bond to HAD BEEN FIT keep the peace for two years.) When he left London on his Maximum sentence on the vacation flight, Churchill looked|charge is 14 years NOT EMBARRASSED a Evidence Gives | Judge A Laugh | TORONTO (CP)--Mr. Justicejaccount, he asked whether he W. D. Roach, Ontario's royaljcould testify secretly because commissioner on crime,|what he had to say would be | when a-witness confronted him court . . . it involves you, sir."| with evidence that was sup- The commissioner told him to posed to embarrass him per- go ahead in open court. Cronin sonally wrote some of it down and, with) Former Sgt. John Cronin, who prodding from the judge, even-| quit the Ontario Provincial Po-|tually came up with the hesi-| lice in 1954 with $50,000 savings,|tant information that another] was explaining how he had met/man at the meeting had come) with gamblers Joseph McDer-|up with something like this: | mott and Vincent Feeley in a He knew the commissioner, hotel here after he was sub. and his family, the commis-| QUEBEC (CP) -- The accent |was on elections rather than \parliamentary strategy Wed- nesday as 27 of Social Credit's as tel i 30 members Judge Costello said it would sibared. at 'nearby: Tad Besa: organization for another gen- eral election. Fernand Ouellet, tireless 38- year-old party organizer, said he will try to organize 50,000 active party members in Que- house found-in. counsel B. J. MacKinnon said today Nero also had been con- victed twice as a gambling- Earlier this week OPP con- stable George Scott testified the letter, addressed "to whom it port for their first post-election caucus. The caucus is expected to end today, when a press conference is scheduled with national leader Robert N. Thompson and deputy leader Real Caou- ette answering the questions. Wednesday's only written statement said the members are "completely and sincerely. united behind Mr. Thompson and Mr. Caouette." There has been speculation since the election that Mr. Ca- ouette's weighty Quebec contin- gent would shift the party lead- ership his way. However, Mr. Thompson told reporters he and Mr. Caouette are in "complete harmony" on party policy. Mr. Caouette felt the 99 Lib- origin and languages. But these|j,,ched heartily Wednesday|"very unfair to someone in the|era] members would bolster the 116 Progressive Conservatives of Prime Minister Diefenbak- er's government and would make "strategic absences" from the Commons to prevent the opposition from overthrow- ing the government But mostly the "Creditistes" --Mr. Thompson was the only one of four western members able to appear--talked about poenaed to testify. sioner was "mad at the world") ; because a son had got into trou-) In the middle of a rambling | 7) at Windsor,."went through| The head - on collision of the| two unions has reverberated for months through the halls of la-) bor, threatening to rupture la-| bor unity by driving a wedge! between the building trades un-| ions and other CLC affiliates. | In its recent actions, the Car-| penters union has virtually dared the CLC to suspend it. It walked out of the congress con- Ontario Mayors Elect Officers PORT ARTHUR (CP)--Ma- yor Percy Burton of Irqouois Falls Wednesday was elected president of the Association of Ontario Mayors and Reeves. Mayor Angus Campbell Pembroke, was elected vice-president Mr. Burton succeeds Reeve M. L. Swart of Thorold Town- ship Honorary treasurer elected was Reeve H. 0. Waffle of Eto- NEW YORK (AP) --There'll| This- change results from a, never .be a monuiment to the | dollar-and-cents reality as welll Allis-Chalmers machine opera-i|as humanitarian motives. | tor who retires next. year at 70.| The most efficient machine in| Drunks seldom rate public hon-|the world can't be efficient if) ors. ithe man running it operates at! But this man has a differentionly half his capability. sort of memorial--one~ that will] When alcoholism hits a plant, continue salvaging lives for|it shows up in absenteeism, re- years to come. It is the revolu-| duced efficiency, errors, acci- tion he caused in a big firm's|dents, loss of customers, loss of attitude toward alcoholic ejtraining investment and lower ployees. production The machine operator was! An oil refinery worker came the first alcoholic' the company|on the job with a hangover and| set out to help, and success--/turned the wrong valve--$50,000 his own and the company's--|in oil went down the drain made him the forerunner of} The total cost of alcoholism imany others. jto industry has keen conserva- bicoke Today, there are between 80|tively estimated at $1,000,000,-| bios and 100 other U.S. companies 000 a year ithat have similar policies. They; For Allis - Chalmers, a new| |range from du Pont to the Newjawareness of the problem and| CITY EMERGENCY |York Times positive action came during the PHONE NUMBERS __ 7° these firms, the alcoholic|/Second World War. | jno longer is an unstable bum.| "We needed every man on) INo longer is he summarily|the job and operating at 100 per| |sacked icent,"' recalls Menry Mielearek | Now he is seen as a sick per |manager of employee relations) ison. deserving the same con-iat company headquarters sideration as a worker sufferjng, Milwaukee. "When. you have from diabetes or other dise of first POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 } in| Help For Alcoholics | Policy Of Companies |been cut from eight to 2.3 per|lic Service Employees (CLC). s,'men absent because of drink-| \business money or something') . the man certainly was drinking. "Well," 'chuckled the commis- sioner, "he certainly has the) |advantage of me--I don't know) \him,' ' | As for his son, he had been about two years old when Mr.| Justice Roach left Windsor, where he practised law With the help of commission) , or working inefficiently, ; ge ' counsel Roland F. Wilson, the you can't meet that objective.| i man was identified as John m wee Se ee ee be! ucDermoit, a lawyer of subur- ban Don Mills, and Mr. Wilson said he will be called today to tell about the episode, | had 37 years with the company.| There was no indication 'vf the! He had been given 11 discipii-|connection between the two Mc-| nary warnings about drinking. Dermotts. | He didn't stop, so he was fired.) workers, there was some eve Kingston, Union good worker | Quit Talks Again about this one man. He was a} Management executive work- ing with Mielcarek decided to. KInGsToN. (CP)--Dis- jeussion on wage demands and| do something. They got him to In| working conditions between the| some way of handling the prob- lem other than firing the worker." The machine operator then Ont join Alcoholics Anonymous six months, he straightened Out] city and board of -werks. em- and came back on the payroll Iployees today ceased again The union went along, get in}after nearly three months of in- his seniority restored ltermittent talks Today Alls - Chalmers has} Agreement with city repre- three AA groups meeting on|sentatives on appointment of a company property \conciliation officer is sought by "Our absenteeism has|Local 9, National Union of Pub rate cent and our firing for failing| The city has asked employ- to co-operate has been cut fromjees to work on a six-day-a-week 95 to 8 per cent," I shitt with double time for work- reports Miel-) carek, 4 ing. overtime on Sunday. Liberals Back Pearson's Cry -- For Session OTTAWA (CP) elected Liberal members Parliament have unanimously endorsed their leader's de- mands for an immediate ses- sion of Parliament to discuss the government's , financial emergency measures, They pledged co - operation Wednesday in "effective .meas- ures to protect the soundness of the currency.' But they said it was "distorting the facts" to pretend that the emergency arose suddenly. "Defensive emergency meas- ures now are essential but they. must not. last beyond the emer- gency,"' the members said in a statement' issued after their first caucus meeting. Newly- bec and about 39,000 in the ts lantic provinces. The object would be to have four to each poll in Quebec, where the party at election time claimed 14,000 active members, and two to each poll in the easterly provinces. Meanwhile, David Wilson of Toronto would aim for two .ac- tive members in each poll in Ontario and the western prov- inces. These members would pa $14 annual fees, attend semin- ars on party doctrine and spread 'the word in their neigh- borhoods. Program Irks Swede Consul CALGARY (CP) -- Gunnar Swalander, Swedish consul for Alberta, says he will protest to the CBC over an "absolutely fantastic' film presentation of the Swedish welfare state. The film, In Search of Para- dise, was carried Wednesday: on the CBC program Background. Mr, Swalander said there was "an over -. emphasis on sex throughout the program -- an emphasis which is not indica- tive of the country." "T've never seen anything like it. It was absolutely fantastic. Not one thing was correct in the whole show." in Mr. ency. may concern" and written on Legislature letterhead, ap- peared to have been used to help establish a Cornwall branch of the Port Colborne social club, which had operated Morningstar's constitu- Today Mr. Morningstar said he was aware the club had op- erated in Crowland Township tion of Mayors and Reeves Wednesday ey off - track gambling would produce mil- lions of dollars of revenue over a 10-year period. He spoke at the closing session of the Asso- ciation's nanual convention. Mr. Simpson, past president of the Canadian Federation of Mayors and Municipalities and the Ontario Association said a heavy provincial tax, shared by municipalities, could be at- tached to any legislation enact- ing legal horse race betting. Provincial revenues could also be increased, he said, if toll charges were applied to major highways and bridges. PITTSBURGH (AP) - Hold- jing out against hunger and thirst, 11 convicts were sprawled today on a_ water tower at Western State Peniten- tiary, apparently determined to show how long they can keep up their protest demonstration. Two gave in Wednesday. One of them was taken to hospital because of his weak condition. Prison officials waited for the test to come down. It was just a matter of time, they said. The leader of the defiant con- victs, parole violator Robert Payne, 29, started his fourth day under a blazing sim. He climbed the tower Monday aft- ernoon. Twelve others joined Payne on the tower Tuesday evening 'Defiant Convicts Remain On Tower in demonstrating against al- leged prison brutality. The two who: gave up Wed- nesday climbed down from the 100-foot high catwalk within a two-hour period around dinner time. It was felt the sight of con- victs filing into the mess hall was a factor. f One convict shouted to re- porters Wednesday that the tower prisoners were protesting the use of gas on prisoners in the "hole" (solitary confine- ment). He said gas was used on prisoners for talking and other minor infractions. At a press conference, War- den James Maroney admitted "prepared" ammonia gas is used on prisoners who act up- but denied that any are treated cruelly. of} B09 Liberal Leader Pearson, who| #7 presided, told reporters after the one-day gathering that the Liberal party is ready for an- other election but that it will] § perform its duties as a respon- sible opposition. It would support the measures| it thought essential for the pub- lic good but vote against meas- ures it opposed. If this brought down the government and forced another general election, "that will not be unwelcome." Almost the entire labor force at the SAGE defence ite at North Bay, Ont., went 4 strike Wednesday in sup- | port of a grievance by elec- trical workers there. Mau- rice Skivington support of the pickets in tnternational Brotherhood of Bleetrical Workers. SAGE WORKERS ON STRIKE ei: (cP Wirerpoto)

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