WEATHER REPORT Sunny with a few cloudy inter- vals today and Wednesday. Little change in temperature. THOUGHT FOR TODAY The orchestra conductor got there by facing the music. She Oshawa Times VOL. 9I--NO. 166 gird Bg OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, JULY 17, 1962 Ottawa and for it Postage Cash. Authorized as Second Ciass Mail Post Office Department, Payment of in SIXTEEN be Rescue boats move in to tow away passenger helicopter which lost an engine and made emergency landing in the East River in New York today. The twin-engined helicopter took off from Newark Airport with 18 passengers and three crew- men aboard for five-minute flight to Wall Street Heliport on the East River. As the 'cop- ter prepared to land an engine 10 Cents Per Copy City Takes Big Step To Remove CNR Track By RON DEVANEY jthe city will pay $10,000 in com-;posed location of Athol and Sceptical North Americans | pensation to each of the three|Mary streets (northwest cor- who refuse to believe that ajfirms now serviced by the{ner). stretch of what was once Can-|tracks: Lander Coal Company, Oshawa will get $19,000 from lada's main east-west highway |Limited; Bathe and McLennan/the CNR for removal of the {still carries a working railroad|Building Supplies Limited and/tracks and poles; and the ex- line should hurry to Oshawa {o|McLaughlin Coal and Supplies/cavation and rebuilding of the see for themselves. | Limited. : é _ |track section of the street. | It is just a matter of time un-| The Canadian National Rail-| Cost to the city of new pave- | CRASH LANDS IN RIVER i (aestits quit and the aircraft came down short of landing area. Report said there was no dam- age to craft and there were no injuries. (AP Wirephoto) Mac's Axe Cuts More Aging Cabinet Wood LONDON (Reuters) -- Primejsistant to the education minis-;minister, in charge of civil avia-| special Minister Macmillan today held|ter. the major new ap-| : t provide an unload- ; il this self-proclaimed "Motor "4¥S Musi = |ment and sidewalks along the \clty'" ids itself of the 68-year-|i28 area with all roothagte geen of the trackage has been old Oshawa Railway Co. tracks] {@cilities in the vicinity o 0! estimated at $81,000. which, aseardiha 100s down. street -- probably on the oe gdaoae cuits. town merchant, have made Osh- The CNR will be fully respon- | awa reminiscent of Old West Revell gy. i eg | : e tracks, rrining towns and the "laugn-| Brewery a ae el ; ' " ei poles from the priv- ge hogs . a prose Mon-| ate properties of the three firms ith council's "| . day night of the report of its; May Continue All This Week | jas well as the removal of over- Macks Gommnittes: the |head wires from the street. racks ' | This request for removal of tracks seem nearer removal) | the spur lines, identical from 1 three companies, teok coun- |tion. Amery ALDERMAN BASTEDO READ REPORT Woman No Plea PICKERING (Staff) -- A 57- year-old Pickering Township woman has been charged with procuring an abortion following a five-man police raid last night in Pickering Township. Thelma E, Blackburn, 57, was charged this' morning in Whit- by Magistrate's Court. No plea was taken by Magistrate F. S Ebbs. She was remanded one week without bail. Three Metro detectives and |two members of the Township |Force raided the Ninga Kennels on Highway 2 at 10.30 p.m. En: trance was gained through the front and back doors. Pickering Township police report that a large quantity of ideGaulle Backed ABORTION CHARGE LAI AFTER PICKERING RAI Appears, Taken Ergot, a drug, and instruments was seized. SENT TO LABORATORY Pieces of bone found in a stove and in the kennels have been sent fo the Attorney-Gen- eral's laboratory in Toronto for analysis, Pickering police said. Police are pumping out two septic tanks on the premises today. Surgical instruments found at the Highway 2 kennels included a sterilizer, catheter tubes, and a duck-billed speculum. George Richard Peacock, 50, is being held by Police as a material witness, He is from the same address. Officers taking part ia the raid were Sgt. Richard Bodley and Constable Peter Nichols of the Pickering Township Police. Metropolitan Toronto police in- cluded Det. Sgt. William Quin- surgical the first meeting of his new ca-| Among | was succeeded byjthan ever before. The air is! lal ci nell, Det. Robert Frost and Det, binet -- drastically transformed following his second series of | wholesale ministerial changes in} four days. | pointments was that of Sir John Hobson, 50, as attorney-general. Hobson succeeds Sir Reginald Manningham - Buller who was mentary undersecretary {to the colonial office. | Niall Maepherson, 53, former A third of the familiar figures|made lord chancellor, Britain's| junior minister, was named pen- who formed the old 21-streng cabinet were gone. Macmillan, who dropped seven senior ministers from the cabinet Friday, fired nine more members of his government at lower levels Monday night and made a total of 24 appointments to add to the 11 announced last week. It was the second instalment in Macmillan's plan to give his government, and the. Conserva- tive party, a new, younger and more vigorous look in an at- tempt to recapture the voters who have been flocking to sup- port the opposition Labor party and the resurgent Liberals in recent byelections. Monday night's appointments affected only one cabinet post, aviation minister. Most of the changes were in ranks of min- isters outside the cabinet and ministerial assistants. As part of his new "youth look," Macmillan brought 11 young and promising back- benchers--non - office holding members of Parliament--on to the government team. The "baby" of the new men is 31-year-old Christopher Chat- away, former sub-four-minute miler and TV commentator who was named parliamentary as- chief judicial. officer, in last |Friday's shakeup. | Julian Amery, 43, Macmil- lan's son-in-law, was moved from the air ministery--a mil- itary department--to aviation _ Drowning in Bala Ruled Accidental BALA, Ont. (CP) -- A coron- er's jury Monday night brought in a verdict of accidental death after it was told David William Saine, 20, of Scarborough ice. Saine, an all round high school athlete in the Toronto suburb, plunged into the Fore Bay at a hydro plant here after police were called by a resident of the area to investigate a noisy party in a cabin. "We were all scared of the police," John McQuire, 20, tes- tified. "We had never been in trouble before and we did not want the scandal of a wild party." Saine and four companions had come to this resort town to celebrate the end of the school term. UN Troops Killed Women: Tshombe sentenced To Die ELISABETHVILLE (Reuters) President screaming women stormed a United Nations roadblock. The Katanga president al-| leged the two were killed by bullets from troops who manned the road-) block. A Red Cross worker three persons were killed and|'® break up the demonstration,'eral other persons. confirmed there were 15 wounded. Tshombe spoke to reporters after the shrieking Negro women attacked the roadblock clawing at Indian troops and pelting them with stones, Those killed were apparently hit by stray bullets. The Indian troops had fired in the air but after more than an hour of vi- olent demonstrations the women showed no signs of dispersing. SWING RIFLE BUTTS The Indians attempted at first to disperse the women peace- fully but several of the. soldiers lost their patience and waded into the mob with butts swinging. The women--many of whom had babies slung on their backs --carried placards proclaiming) "the women of Katanga demand the withdrawal of the murder-) ous United Nations mercena- ries." The placards also declared "down with the Kennedy- CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 their rifle} |Adoula - Nehru clique." Cyrille Moise Ts hom be|Adoula is premier of The Congo. claimed two Katanga women| Observers feared the demon-| were killed and 15 wounded) stration might spark off another ers) -- A military court today| vote through fraud. | here today when about 10,000 jfound of fighting between Ka- jtanga and UN forces though |Katangan forces so far had ta- |ken no action on the side of the women. the Indian UN! Katangan soldiers and male|8 and May 14. civilians near the roadblock stood by laughing at the frantic said attempts by the Indian troops|missing him, but wounding sev-|him. Prado's six-year term ex- t | | REGINA (CP)--Arrangements have been shaped for the first face-to-face talk between prin- cipals in Saskatchewan's bitter medical care dispute since doc- tors withdrew normal medical services July 1. The CCF. provincial convention at Saskatoon agreed Monday night to a request from the Saskatchewan College of Physi- cians and Surgeons to have a representative of the college present the doctors' case to the jeonvention Wednesday. The convention will be at- jtended by Premier Woodrow S. |Lloyd and all but one member of his provincial cabinet. Doc- tors withdrew normal service in the province in protest against implementation of the govern- ment's compulsory, prepaid medical care insurance plan. It is not known whether the jcollege representative will be | college council President Dr. H. D. Dalgleish. The request that a representative be allowed to speak came Monday from Dr. Dalgleish to Harry Link of Sas-|would permit doctors to practise! jsions minister replacing John |Boyd-Carpenter, promoted to} football. $30,000 COMPEN According to the terms of th report adopted Monday night, SATION Hugh Fraser, 44, former parlia-|seeping out of an old political TORONTO (CP) -- Talks be- tween Ontario brewers and of- e|ficials of the Brewery Workers' Union (CLC) will likely continue all this week, ispokesman said today. a management} 1 by. surprise recently and re- sulted in the formation of the special committee to hammer oui a final settlement. The city will bear the cost of tracks removal from the centre of King street to the firm's drowned while running from po-| ti | Medical Care Dispute Rivals Plan Meeting the Soft | chief-treasury secretary Friday.| | Lord John Hope, 50, minister! bs works, was replaced by Geof- \frey Ripon, 38. | Earl Jellicoe, 44-year-old son| jof the First World War victor) jin the Battle of Jutland, suc-! jceeded David Renton, 53, as! minister of state at the home| property lines. THREE POSSIBLE DELAYS Three things could delay tracks removal:-- the comple- tion date of the unloading site is the end of September at the latest, according to the special committee's report. ~The CNR must wait for letters from each of the three firms saying they do not need rail service into their plants; Lh ed The 3,100 members of Military Coup Brewery, Flour, Cereal, | Drink, and Distillery Workers of |America International Union Reported Near jseek a five-per-cent across-the- jboard wage increase, a four 4 day work week of 32 hours, and In Lima Peru a one-year contract. -- - lh een ole Degen geo board ice. = snus | Hea sides e issue Alan Green, 50, was ap-| LIMA po es fninent" today|nd recommended. a company pointed minister of state at the foil vg a cet nation of the| Package offer still being studied Board of Trade, replacing Sir| Owing» 'sitet ih Pres-|Py the union, a number of the Keith Joseph, who last Friday| sont Manuel Prado refused to|18 Ontario locals have not held/the CNR cannot make a move was promoted to minister of bow to the armed forces' de.| strike votes. juntil these letters are received. housing and local government.| -onas that he nullify the June| Neither the Brewery workers) --The compensation money Lord Saint Oswald, 45, and} 19 general election. which represents all but the/cannot be paid by the city until Maj. James Scott-Hopkins, 40)" premier Carlos Monreyra Paz|London employees of John La-|approved by a private bill which become joint parliamentary sec-/cojgan and his ministers quit\batt Limited, nor the Canadian|Will be introduced at the fall retaries to the minister of agti-\Monday night during a four-|Labor Congress local which bar-|sitting of the Ontario Legisla- culture, fisheries and food./nour emergency meeting with|gains for the Labatt employees, | ture. Their predecessors in these of-| prado, Former finance minister/has held a strike. vote. | The report was signed by all fices were Lord Waldegrave| alex Zarak told reporters he ex-| The contract which the union|four members of the special and William Vane. pects the armed forces to take/seeks to have renewed is that}committee: Mayor Christine Macmillan's axe also cut the|nower within one or two days.|which was signed after a 41-|Thomas, Ald. E. F. Bastedo, number of women in the gov-\" The military chiefs have de-/day strike:in 1958, and expired|Ald, Walter Branch and Ald. ernment to two from three when| manded nullification of the na-|Dec, 31, 1961. 'Finley Dafoe. he removed Edith Pitt, parlia-|\tional elections in a move to|------------ -weiapevil -- to ee mai black the possible election to| ministry, from the administra-\the presidency of Victor Raul] tion. Haya de la Torre, candidate of tormont eturns The second series of changes) the Popular Revolutionary Al- had been widely predicted. jliance (APRA). j e Liberal To Fold residential baling on) et LEO ET OL O fo actions consistent with the po-|@ leftist but avowedly antt- litical sympathies of each pa-|munist ticket, He failed, how.) coRNWALL (CP) per. sie cach PB ever, to get the one-third of the/ mont riding returned to the ste _jtotal vote required for election.!.+3) fold Monday by a scant| candidate. | | But they still made the top Long hated by the military, headlines in the British press| Haya de la Torre was high man this morning--with editorial re-|in the presidential gine le m- Stor-|ferred two weeks because of the Lib-|death of the original Liberal Under the constitution, the| margin f 92 votes of more than new Congress, scheduled to Con-95 999 past. jvene July 28, is to choose a) jn a battle that saw the lead |president from among the three, times, Lucien . a .,\change several jleading men in the presidential 4 moureux; 41-year-old lawyer; For Murder Try i jrace, The military has charged) ..41ched the seat from Progres- JAKARTA, Indonesia (Reut-|Haya de la Torre got his big|<iy. Conservative Grant Camp-| oureux, an aide to Lionel Chev- rier who represented Stormont in the Commons for 10 years, 11,661 votes to Mr. Campbell's 11,569- *| Social Credit candidate Mel |bell, who had taken the consti-/ Rowat and NDP candidate Mrs. |tuency from the Liberals in the| Marjorie Ball trailed far behind |1958 general election. with 1297 and 970 votes respec- | | sentenced to death two men| Prado's resistance to the mil- charged with attempting tojitary ney he = oS murder President Sukarno dur-|support A gave him in the) " : " i ing prayer meetings at the|1956 presidential race. In re- |, Mr. eee sh ei yg tively. |Freedom Palace here on March|turn, Prado legalized the party) "Yer, Said ne will seek a re-) 1) ja) muoK and 'allowed Haya de la Torre)Count. The result was in doubt until | On May 14 a man fired three|to return from the exile into) The Uiberal victory narrowed | the last of 139 polls came in. jpistol shots at the president,|which the military had driven the PC > the 265.sea \Only six polls before that Mr. oe ve A tata iCampbell had taken the lead ie standings: lafter whittling away a 491-vote margin his Liberal opponent had built up. 30 0 | Mr. Campbell led by 60 votes 18 g with 135 polls counted. vem, Markham Man Dies From Stab Wounds |pires officially July 28. _pires of icia y July 3. 1962 1958 116 208 | 100 9 | PC Lib SC |NDP (CCF) | Vacant RESIGNS 8.C. SEAT | The vaciacy is in Burnaby-) |Coquitlam, the British Colum-) |bia riding won by Erhart Reg-) ier of the NDP in the June 18) katoon, president of the provin-|outside the act if they wished.|general election. Mr. Regier re | cial CCF association. |These changes were later incor-|signed Monday to make _pos- The request from the college| porated in the act's regulations.|sible a byelection in which T. matches one made a few weeks|Th ecollege insisted the act/C. Douglas, NDP leader, will A a LANCASTER, Pa. (AP) -- before the act went into effectlitself must be withdrawn before|bid for a Commons seat. ee Grove, 33, of Markham, by Premier Lloyd. He asked and/negotiations could resume to| Douglas was defeated in Regina Ont., was stabbed to death and was granted permission to pre-|reach agreement on a plan "2 deg this eastern On. (bis. wife seriously injured in sent the government's case on| acceptable to both sides. : ba ciuhuaney had Beep de.|Somalia, Africa, Paul N. Kray- medical care insurance to an) With implementation of the|'@™o Constituency had been de-)) i) ocotary of the eastern "gg Mat of the prov-/act July 1, most of the ram }Mennonite board of missions, | "tors. ince's 700 practising physicians H said Monday. iTRADE VIEWS closed their offices. Emergency} Truck Crash Kills Kraybill said the board head- Ith i a service has been provided at 40 quarters at nearby Salunga had Although there has been no|>°"' A eRe A h meeting of the two sides since|¢signated hospitals by about} Two Neaz Cobourg jreceived a cablegram from the the start of the doctors' boycott|20 members of the college) Somalia board mission where of the medical scheme, college|through a plan co-ordinated by} BALTIMORE, Ont. (CP) --|Grove and his wife Dorothy and government have: traded|{he Canadian Medical Associa-/ William Purdy, 69, and his wife,|were serving. : views and' charges in press|tion Hazel, 6, of Grafton, were; The wire, Kraybill added, statements. Or. Dalgleish said Mente Monday when their pickup ~~ ee were op A television program featured | many doctors will decide within cae " a abd _ ie uaccte toe "avenlie Boba hei oth Premier Lloyd and Dr.|the next few days whether to|@¢d at a township intersection * ission i iscio. N Dalgleish but they were inter-| ain in th : H -,|near here. \the mission in- Mogadiscio. Mrs. viewed separately Henares in the province. He said) ys Purdy died in the crash:|Grove was reported in Mogadis- ; : jthis is the week of decision for|tor fusband died later inicio hospital with multiple stab Direct talks between the col-|individual doctors. |hospital. : |wounds from the same individ- ba leiwssig' 2 ge bans cabinet) At the time of withdrawal of} The driver of the otherjual who killed her husband. nm jast month. normal service, many doctors|vehicle, a grave! truck, Howard! No reason for the,assault was The government _offered|said they would remain two)Toyne, 21. of Baltimore, was not!given in the wire. changes in the Medical Care| weeks to see how things worked injured. * Grove, a 1959 graduate of the Insurance Act which it saidjout before deciding on a per-| Baltimore is about five miles/Toronto Bible College, was on manent course of action. Inorth of Cobuurg. Dy \his first foreign assignment. Bi a A Final returns gave Mr. Lam-| PARIS (Reuters) -- President de Gaulle's plan to give France her own atomic strike force won a political victory early today in the French National Assem- bly. After Premier Georges Pom- pidou defended the independent deterrent in an hour speech, the assembly voted at | censuré aimed" at weapons, A total of 206 deputies voted for censure--just 35 short of the majority needed in the 480-seat assembly. The motion of censure was in- troduced by the Socialist and Radical parties and supported by some Roman Catholic and Conservative critics of de 'Hit-Run Death ' Suspect Bail Set At $2,000 BOWMANVILLE (Staff)--Bail was set at $2,000 in court here today for a 19-year-old youth who is facing criminal charges following the hit-run death of an Oshawa man on the Tewn Line road north, July 7. Gene Peters, nue, Oshawa, was represented by Terence V. Kelly, an Osh- awa lawyer. He was remanded to July 24. Craig Howe, 31, 420 Steven- son's road north, was dead on arrival at the Oshawa General a car that did not stop. Charges of criminal gence causing death, leaving the scene of an accident, and driving while his license was the accused by Magistrate R. B. Baxter, but no plea was taken. Peters was arrested by police after he had reported his car stolen and returned to s%e if it had been located. Peters' car was found four miles north of the accident scene Mr.. Howe was believed to have been standing at the Side of the road attempting to settle an argument when he and ian Oshawa restaurant waitress, |Beverley Doran, were struck. Sir Churchill Walks Unaided LONDON (Reuters) Sir Winston Churchill walked un- aided today for the first time since he broke the thigh bone in his left leg in a fall in Monte Carlo, June 28. He was helped from his. bed in a London. hospital and was able to move across his room to a chair on the other side without the help of a nurse. The 87-year-old statesman appeared to be rallying again after complications in the in- jured leg of phlebitis (inflam- mation of a vein) and later last week a bronchial infection. His doctors' bulletin Monday said he was making satisfactory | progress" and that no more bul-! letins would be issued until Fri- day, an indication they were satisfied with his condition. x On A-Force Plan long 1 am. to defeat a motion of blocking French production of atomic Montrave ave-| Hospital after he was struck by| | negli-| § under suspension were read to] : thrombosis (a 'bloodclot), and} Douglas Walton. Gaulle's European and military policies. Observers saw the vote as significant because it consti- tuted endorsement of the de Gaulle nuclear policy won with- out any concessions to his op- ponents who favor a western European strike force. The defeat of the motion was considered to mean that effec- with his long-planned reorgani- zation of the French military tive parliamentary opposition to a French deterrent is finished and that de Gaulle can go ahead Algeria Crisis Meeting Held, Result Awaited _ALGIERS (Reuters) -- Alge- ria today awaited the outcome of a crucial overnight meeting of top nationalist political and military leaders discussing the leadership crisis in the Alger- ian provisional government. The meeting of the general council of Wilayas--the six mil- forces on atomic lines without |fear of obstruction. |DEFENDS PGLICY | In his defence of the policy, |Pompidou denied charges that jan independent French deter- jrent would threaten the stabil- jity of the Atlantic alliance. | "Far from weakening the al- jliance, it will strengthen it--by jits. existence and by the fact |that it will be controlled by a country exposed to the first dan- ger. "It is in this way that it will play its real role as a deterrent because it leaves the adversary in no doubt of the consequences of even a limited aggression-" The censure motion was spe- cifically aimed at stopping the approval of government funds to build a French isotope sep. aration plan costing 200,000,000 new francs ($40,000,000). The plant can be used to build hydrogen bombs. as well as to provide. enriched uranium. 235 for industrial purposes. | itary commands holding the real power in the country--was aimed at devising a political bu- reau for the National Liberation Front (FLN) which led the na- tionalists through 7% years of war against France but has been split by quarrels that came with peace. Once a political bureau is set up, the FLN will be able to pre- pare for the elections set for Aug. 12 to vote in Algeria's first National Assembly. Information Minister Mo- hammed Yazid said Monday night that the meeting of the Willaya leaders was being held somewhere near Orleansville-- halfway between the camps of the warring nationalist leaders Premier Ben Youssef Ben Khedda and Deputy Premier Mohammed Ben Bella. Yazid said the quarrel be- tween the two leaders was over the direction of the FLN and not over the political aims of the Algerian revolution. Capt. Frederick A. Rueckel, West Long Branch, NJ., a Marine helicopter pilot based at Soc Trang, South Viet Nam, show. bullet hole in pilot's canopy caused by Communist | Viet Cong ground fire during | flight over guerrilla band the CLOSE CALL FOR PILOT past three days. Capt. Rueckel said his chopper was struck four times, one bullet only missing him by four inches, This picture was made by M/Sgt. Al Chang of Stars and Stripes. (AP Wirephoto by radio from Saigon.) i sa aes