THOUGHT FOR TODAY A. psychiatrist doesn't have to as other people is a man who worry as long do. x he Oshawa Times with light wind ' WEATHER REPORT ' A few scattered showers or thunder showers, clearing this evening. Sunday mainly sunny fe VOL. 91--NO. 153 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 1962 Authorized os Second Class Mail Pest Office Department, payment Ottawa ond for 'of Postage in Cash. FORTY. PAGES omg CHURCHILL'S WIFE, DAUGHTER Light Breakfast For Sir Winston LONDON (Reuters)--Sir Win- ston Churchill was "comfort- able" today after undergoing a successful operatioi Friday night on his broken left thigh bone, his hospital reported The hospital in a medical bulletin said the 87 - year - old) statesman spent a "good night with. natural sleep" and 'his condition at present is satisfac- tory." Churchill began this bright summer day with an austere breakfast consisting only of a cup of coffee diluted with milk. Physicians are counting on Churchill to retain the strong recuperative powers which have carried him through a long, 4c- tive and often dangerous life. If all goes well, the former e minister will be in idiesex Hospital about two weeks and should be walking again within a month after his release. US. Lure For Girls Watched WASHINGTON (CP) -- The|tion of the visa application, he U.S. immigration service hasj said. mapped out a double-barrelled| McClellan, chairman of the program to halt a cross-border/Senate rackets investigation traffic in young Canadian girls|committee, has demanded a lured into shady U.S. night/ tightening of immigration regu- clubs with false' promises of | lations. legitimate dancing careers Immigration officers testified) A spokesman said the plan,|during the hearings concluded a| to be sent to Senator John L| week age that bya girls--| |McClellan shortly, will include| some years old -- were! ja step-up in investigation of the|brought to the United States | girls applying for visas to work|With promises of night club) lin the United States and also| careers but forced into prostitu- lclose scrutiny of the club inition by crime syndicates. which she proposes to perform.|One officer cited the specific | Any suspicion that the girl/cases of two Canadian girls, |will be turned into another so-|Whose identification was kept) called exotic dancer for im./hidden, recruited by a Montreal ll mean rejec-|D0oking agency through Cana-| --__--__--_------|dian newspaper advertisements offering night club jobs. The) girls usually found themselves' herded into Chicago or neigh-| boring clubs and forced into im-| |moral acts under threat of) physical harm. j days ago, the U.S. immi-| k T b gration service told McClelland ac. 0 0. s four Canadian exotic dancers at a Cleveland night club were MONTREAL (CP) -- Eight|granted voluntary deportation} strike-bound trucking firms Fri-| when they were found soliciting} day invited their workers to re- drinks in violation of their con-| turn to their jobs -- a move im-|tracts tion reported: "The fixation of|mediately branded by the In-| Aside from the cross-border| the fracture of the neck of the/ternational Teamsters U nion traffic, McClellan wants care-| femur was carried out this|(Ind.) as a deliberate act of/ful watch over the American| evening successfully, and Sir| provocation Guild of Variety Artists (AFL-| Winston's condition after the' The firms state- CIO), accused during hearings) operation is at present satisfac-'ment that any of the 1,460\of collecting dues from the git® Itory." workers, on strike since April|dancers but providing them) It was signed by Lord Moran, 44 who want to return to work| With no protection against the| the wartime prime minister's| wij} find the gates ope nto|demands of the crime ~ syndi-| personal physician, the two sur-/them next Tuesday morning. | cates. geons performing the operation,) 'They said the men who ac-|-- Hoven, an'atetuns 0 |ST% et, eal sea 'La Data aay Beeps ecemeanamr wees news! "Trueke Strike! Truce Near ® es Louis Fine. It was Churchill's second OP-| payment for retroactivity plus| TORONTO (CP)--Tone Fine. 8 Truck Firms Invite Workers said in a } H eration in a little more than 24/i nyroved fringe benefits. hours. | | | Rod Hayes, president of| | Striking Local 106 of the Team- |sters, said that "if the com-) |panies act in such a way as 0) uge iprovoke violence, then there) | certainty will be-violence." | | Tt was an "'act of provoca | tion" to make such a statement. The strikers won't like to see jscabs passing through the Hamilton Man Finds Black | jtoday he feels a settlement has! Lady Churchill paid her hus- band a visit this morning. "'He is quite cheerful but a little drowsy," she said afterward. Widow Spiders |picketed gates, he said. | HAMILTON (CP) -- Two) Mr, Hayes said that company| jlarge black spiders, believed to| gates have been open since the Canada's deadliest, have! walkout started but no striker lbeen found by a Hamilton man.| been reached to end the five-; week Ontario transport strike. Representatives of the Inter-| national Brotherhood of Team-| sters (Ind.) and 60 companies! MIDNIGHT DEAD e Ls KENNEDY AND MEXICAN PRESIDENT AT LUNCH Bomb Falls Near American Hotel SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) -- A large bomb fell from a military jaircraft today about 100 yards! from a hotel near North Syra- |eus e, state police reported. Troopers said they had not determined whether the bomb was. live, ; Gritiee Air 'Force Base at Ontario's department of labor| Rome, N.Y., was asked to send |chief conciliation officer, said|a team of demolition experts to the scene Oakley Clement, owner of the New Bear Road hotel, said he heard a whistling sound and a thud about 2 a.m. He did not investigate then and did not Talks In | MEXICO CITY (AP)--Presi- dent Kennedy, heartened by the biggest public tribute, ever paid him in a foreign capital, lresumes talks today with Mex- Nico's leaders on how to: fortify. the Americas against political and economic threats. Kennedy, his reception. here regarded as a big personal tri- umph, apparently is laying his cards on the table in frank con- versations with Mexico's Presi- dent Adolfo Lopez Mateos. Mexico Centre On Cuba Friday. It was bound to play role in the discussions. The. enthusiastic public out- pouring to greet the presitent Mexicans. massed to cheer him --could strengthen Kennedy's hand in his search for common) ground with the Mexican gov- ernment on the political, eco. nomic and social problems plaguing Latin America. The impact of the visit was not confined to this capital of -- officials estimated 1,500,000/sch * | Early Morning Talks Bog Down SASKATOON (CP) -- A des- perate, eleventh - hour attempt o solve the medical care crisis n Saskatchewan flopped early voday. As a result, the 925,000 citi- 'zens of this province may find themselves in a situation with- out precedent in North Amer- lica. Six hours of talks ended in failure when the Saskatchewan iCollege of Physicians and Sur- geons and Premier Woodrow |Lloyd indicated in separate jstatements they are still di- |vided on the compulsory, pre- |paid, comprehensive insurance scheme. | The announcements were made only 21% hours before the legislation goes into effect. Many doctors have said they will discontinue private prac- tices. About 240--one quarter of the college's membership--will offer an emergency service free of charge at hospitals strategic. ally located in the province. PROMISES CONCESSIONS At the same time, Premier Lioyd said his CCF govern- ment was willing to make a "concession" to the doctors. To make '"'doubly certain" the doctors' interests would be protected, he said the govern- ment suggested an independent committee be set up to oyer- see the administration of the eme. The committee could make} suggestions for changes in the legislation. If the committee could not do this, it could be Patients Can accomplished by. a competent person, said Mr. Lloyd. © ~~ Both the doctors and the government said they hoped further discussions would be held but it was unlikely. any would take place today. : The doctors want the cn ment to withdraw the 1 implementation date -and 'to "continue further discusions to formulate a program .of -médi- cal care insurance which would be acceptable to all concerned." Both groups commended the organizations which € the meetings Friday -- the Sas- katchewan Urban Municipali- ties Association, Saskatchewan Rural Municipalities Association and the Provincial Hospital Ag sociation. LAST FOR HOURS The meetings lasted a total of six hours. The municipal representatives met for two hours with the doctors, two hours with the government and another two hours with the doc tors. Swift Current Future Puzzle' SWIFT CURRENT, Sask (CP) --This sparsely settled: but ite status iy et oe Bu after y is @ question ma: The Swift Current Health gion announced agreement with the Saskatchewan Medical Care Insurance Commission Friday. to continue its relatively indes pendent and regional basis. _ h b t ' are, eee mere |parted at 3 a.m. today after! awaken his guests. There is every indication that BREAKS IN FALL Churchill broke the bone, the| femur, in a fall Thursday while| vacationing at Monte Carlo,| Monaco. He was flown back here Friday and taken to the hospital. "A hospital bulletin issued Fri- day night following the opera- Indians Honor Loyalist Kin | MORRISBURG , Ont. (CP)-- | Jack Ormond was repairing) his porch when he saw them en/fool" who will listen to the tn-| |vitation "'and what will happen! the end of a plank He said there will be the "'odd "I jumped back, then rushed|to the guy will be on the com. negotiating for 17 hours. Mr. Fine said both unions and management "compro- mised a little' and an under- jat them with a hammer," he|panies' consciences." said He said the two parties are The mangled bodies were be-|close to an agreement jyond: recognition but were be-| don't y | standing had been reached A It will be subject to ratifica-| and I'tion by the five teamster locals see why the companies | and the Motor Tarnsport Indus- lieved to be black widow spid-|should make such a statement trial Relations Series, which| jers -- the most venomous in|when we're so close to settle- represents the trucking firms North America. ment." Meetings of the locals to vote, 1 on the settlement terms were set for 2 p.m. Tuesday at Lon jdon, Windsor, Hamilton, Tor-! lonto and Kingston Ken MacDougall, president of Teamsters Local 938, said talks July 1 Deadline | | Clement said he began an in- | vestigation about 7:30 a.m. and found the bomb embedded in earth. the subject of Premier Fidel Castro's Cuban regime and its alliance with communism came up in their first round of talks Photo Finish In Sweepstake Race CP from AP-Reuters 5,500,000 people. Reports from around the nation of 36,000,000 indicated radio and television coverage of the spectacular Sue -- Lawyer TORONTO (CP) -- Toronto lawyer Edson L. Haines, solici- first day of the visit was fol- lowed avidly. After a gruelling first day schedule which included three public speeches, a state lunch- eon, a city hall ceremony, an appearance at the Mexican folklore ballet and private talks with the Mexican president, Kennedy faced another taxing ; -At the end, Tambournie I1) schedule today. It includes a trip to 2 Hous- NAAS, Ireland -- Tambourine! jooked to be the winner. But ajing project on the outskirts of tor of Ontario Medical Associ- ation, said Friday Saskatche- wan residents could in certain cases, sue doctors who ceased to treat them. He said doctors in Canada cannot legally leave serious cases untreated. Mr. Haines was elaborating on an article in this months issue of the OMA Review, with reference to the threat of Sask: atchewan doctors to provide But, like the rest of the prov- ince, Swift Current may have no doctors to provide medical treatment. Swift Current's doctors are joining the Saskatchewan' Col. lege of Physicians and Sure geons in providing only hospis tal - based emergency medical services after July 1 in protest against the provincial govern. ment's compulsory medical care insurance program that goes into operation Sunday. Day-To-Day Basis II, a French-trained, American| photo finish was called for and|the capital and another talk lo lat t ti- Pee eager elo owned horse won the £68,000\the crowd had to hold its breath| only emergency service. Indians from reservations "hk doctor can't say "Tm For MD Service |with the Mexican chief execu- throughout Ontario gather to- day at the historic Crysler bat tle - farm nearby to celebrate Indian Day. | A bronze plaque will be un-| For Boat OTTAWA (CP)--Ahoy, small- boat owners. As of Sunday, July 1, you Plates |power or too many people for the size of the craft The plates will give the rec- veiled in memory of many In-jmust carry special self-sticking)ommended safe engine . power dians who remained loyal \o the Crown during the American! plates fastened in your boat, stating the maximum jas well as the safe weight limit engine Some boats already have them,| fication meetings to be held to- day Queen's Printer | Blasts Scholars OTTAWA (CP)--A number of Revolution. The day is sPon-|nqwer and weight limit for the|mounted by the manufacturer|Canadian scholars, holding sored by the Ontario St. Law- rence development commission. The Six-Nations Confederacy) near Brantford will send five) members of its elected council,| dancers and a brass band. Honorary chieftains will be in- vested, among them Indian Sen- ator William Gladstone of Al- berta Crysler's 'Farm, community 35 miles west of Cornwall, was a battlefront in) the War of 1812. craft. If vou haven't got the plates, then you must carry an_offi- cial transport department re- ceipt showing that you have ap- plied for them The new nounced early regulations, in May, an- boats founder Main causes of small-boat as a guide to the. owner Now all small boats 16 feet or less in length and carrying outboard motors of 10 horse- |power or more must be fitted with the plates. A formula for setting weight - carrying capacity Is ar€| worked out to provide a recom- aimed at reducing the toll of/mended maximum load of 12!4| near this drownings caused when small/pounds per cubic foot of. hull volume. This, officials say, will provide a reasonable safety 'accidents are too much engine margin the} titles and diplomats, have been described by Queen's Printer Roger Duhamel as "duds." He made the comment at a Canadian Library Association luncheon in a speech that noted a'"'good many of our best writ- ers do not line up university degrees on their visiting card." His address also contained an appeal that man should not al- low himself to be dominated by his current scientific achievements. KEY FIGURES STILL TO BE HEARD Probe Takes Holiday TORONTO (CP)--An explo-jof making a "highly improperjhe has naything to contribute,|all through the testimony --)ners in an Irish Hospital Sweep- | Joseph Me- sion touched off by former pre- mier Leslie Frost has sent On- tario's royal commission on days in a cloud of political dust) The retired premier charged) and unworthy" statement. The flare-up was over dence concerning Mr refusal last July -- commission was set u ent Premier Robarts evi- Frost's|Leader John Wintermeyer : : while he crime off to its summer holi-'wa; premier and before the! p by pres-| -- tO. S€€/with about 2,500,000 words of|back to the witness stand after) along with Attorney --Genear! |Roberts and Ontario Liberal When. the politics subsided, the commission adojurned until some time after mid - August the Liberal party which "'de-|a Toronto lawyer offering in-|eyidence on the record since ceitful" tactics at the inquiry,| and a Liberal spokesman promptly retorted that commis- sion counsel Roland E. Wilson was taking orders from Pro-| gressive Conservative Attorney-| General Kelso Roberts nied this and accused Liberal party counsel B. J. MacKinnon CITY EMERGENCY - PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 about attorney-general's formation in the partment COMPLAINS MISLED After a telegram from Frost complained that evidence brought out Mr by ing" and "unfair" jing the integrity of departmen land tal personnel "corruption" de- police the r. Wilson just as quickly de-|Liberal counsel was "mislead- to himself, the commission received Frost- Roberts lettérs saying the gov-} jernment had access to the pro- ferred information and defend- j|hearings opened March 21 but jseemingly some distance away from completing the first phase of the three-pronged investiga- tion ordered last December The phase directly under in-; | vestigation relate to allega- jtions by Mr. Wintermeyer al- lleging improper activities on the part of attorney -.general's department personnel, but it jhas spilled over. into many facets of organized gambling reputed links jgamblers and police and gov- Mr, Justice W. D. Roach, the) ernment officials commissioner, said lawyer Eric Scott--whose "corruption" evi dence apparently has come be-| ITO HEAR. KEY FIGURES Still to be heard on this as between} \gambling bosses Dermott and Vincent Feeley Feeley's evidence got stalled jweeks ago when he objected to giving self-incriminating testi- mony, and he never did get the Supreme Court of Canada ruled that he must talk. Me- Dermott has not appeared at all. "social" investigtaion inquiry into into which into --and an investigation into the extent of crime generally in Ontario and the capability of law enforcement agencies to deal with it With all this ahead, some months of work could still face the one-man commission. It has not been indicated whether Mr | Justice Roach, member of the Ontario Court of Appea, now -- will be heard later iffkey figures whose names runiuntil a) the evidence is in Irish Sweepstakes Derby today in a photo finish over Arctic! Storm Sebring, another American- owned entry, was third. Tambourine Ii and Arctic Storm each went off at 15-to-2. Sebering was a 6-to-1 shot. Larkspur, the 9-to-4 favorite, was fourth Both Sebring and Larkspur made their move too late. Tambourine Il won the 1%- jmile race with a fine driving \finish. The win was worth £50,- /000 to Mrs, Howell Jackson of Middleburg, Va., the owner. Sebring, a stablemate of \Larkspur, is owned by Towns jend Martin of Locust, N.J. The derby is the richest race in Europe confined to three- | year-olds | WON BY HEAD / Tambourine Il was a short |head in front of Arctic Storm lwhen the two hit the finish. \Sebring was about five lengths back of the two horses. | A crowd of about 50,000 {turned out at the track at Cur- lragh to watch the event, which lalso decided the big prize win- stakes 2 Canadians Draw Winner } By THE CANADIAN PRESS There were only two -Cana- dians with tickets on Tambour- In the future also is a generaljine II today as the French| clubs--|horse battled through to a! photo-finish first in the Irish gambling clubs has overlapped|Derby at Curragh, Ireland llage commission at this British] Each ticket was worth a $152,- 000 payoff for the official result. Tambourine TI took the lead through" when there is no other doctor available," Mr. Haines tive, about three furlongs from home jafter the early leaders, Gail {Star and Saint Denys, faded. | Ace French jockey Roger {Poincelet , who won both the |French and English derbies jlast year, rode the winner. Larkspur, owned by Ameri- can Raymond Guest, was the favored horse in the field of 24 before the start of the race. It was the first time a sweep- stakes had been run in con- said. "Under law he has a continu- ing obligation to patients under treatment. If he leaves them he will be considered to have abandoned them and would be liable for damages." Dr. P. Bruce - Lockhart of Sudbury, president of the OMA, agreed that Mr. Haines is "probably correct" in saying that doctors are not legally al- lowed to abandon patients un- NO TIMES ON DOMINION DAY There will be no issue of The Oshawa Times Monday, Dominion Day. Publication will resume Tuesday. The Times hopes its readers have an enjoyable holiday but not a permanent one. Take care |junction with the contest. REGINA (CP) --Emergency medical service in Regina, which goes into effect Sunday if there is no settlement be- tween doctors and government in the dispute over medical care insurance, will be run on a day-to-day basis. "We just don't know who'll be available to run the emer- gency service except on this basis," Dr. Clayton Crosby, "co- ordinator for eme sere vices in Regina and der continuing treatment. said today. Bury The Hatchet | ALGIERS (Reuters) --Alge- ria today was turning its back on months of Moslem - Euro- pean terrorism and preparing for a self - determination poll Sunday that is certain to bring independence from France The two big cities of Algiers and Oran were relatively quiet following the collapse of organ- ized resistance by the European terrorist Secret Army Organiza- tion, which waged a no-quarter war in an effort to keep Alge- jrla French, | Witnesses Denied Public Park Use New Algerian Cry Only a few random attacks have marred the new atmos- phere of Moslem - European reconciliation that is being en- couraged by both Moslem~and European leaders The new peace brought crowds of Moslems into down- town Oran Friday, where they | have not dared venture for fear of attacks by Secret Army terrorists 'BURY THE HATCHET' Oran has been the scene of a dramatic reconciliation be- tween Europeans and Moslems in the last two days with the lead being taken by a 28-man committee comprised of 14 Mos- lems and 14 Europeans. LUMBY, B.C, (CP) -- The vil- Columbia Okanagan centre} has ruled that Jehovah's Wit-! An official spokesman said Friday that "bury the hatchet" meetings of the committee had "removed the last danger of a The two top winners were|nesses be denied use of public/"eW flareup of Secret Army vi- listed as Cathis Boy, St. Cath arines, Ont., and A. Aitken of Springfield Park, Que. Cathis |Boy held ticket BZR. 73065; |Aitken held ticket ADC 05918 --worth $60,.800--on the second will| place Arctic Storm and three on paign,"' report progressively on each of|Sebring, which came third. The children to stand during the na- fore the commission fully by|pect of the inquiry are the two|the inquiry segments or wait|third - plece prize was worth $30,400 and school buildings or village! parks until they adhere to |what the commission says are laws of the land Commission Chairman James Three Canadians had tickets|Inglis said the Witnesses are) "until a "noticeable ca m-| refusing 'to allow their} ate| waging itional anthem or to partic} in student council activitieg olence in Oran." The western port city was the last main bastion of Secret Army resistance, holding out against Sunday's referendum the terrorist campaign was finally called off last Tues- day The curfew in Oran was lifted today within less than 24 hours of the independence poll.