PERSONAL APPEARANCE French movie actress Mar- tine Carol arrives in real for a personal appearance at the St. Denis theatre, which Mont- | | long festival entitled '"'la | grande semaine du film fran- | is featuring top current mov- | | jes from France in a week- | cais." She 'stars in "Nana", a movie based on a novel by | Emile Zola, (CP Wirephoto) More Secrets Shown From Marilyn's Life EDITOR'S NOTE: James Bacon knew Marilyn Mon- roe for 13 years, from the start of her career as an obscure starlet to her emer- gence as a movie sex sym- bol known around the world. In this second of a three- part series, he writes with intimate knowledge of the actress' dreams and fears.... By JAMES BACON HOLLYWOOD (AP) -- Mari- lyn Monroe had millions of male admirers and three hus- bands in her 36 years but if there was a favorite Monroe guy, it had to be Joe DiMaggio. She had been married at 16 to Jim Dougherty, now a North Hollywood policeman. Then to the baseball immortal and finally to playwright Arthur Miller, Last June 1, her birthday, she called me on the phone "Well, I'm finally going to see the New York Yankees play tonight." She made a charity appeal before a Yankees - Los Angeles Angels game in Chavez Ravine. DiMaggio's name came up in the conversation "I don't think I'll stay for the whole game, though. I weuld if Joe were playing. He's the only ballplayer I care about." TALKED OF JOE Marilyn's housekeeper, in an interview, said Marilyn talked constantly about DiMaggio in Restored Hand Robbing VICTORIA (CP) -- Sales-tax| dodgers who skip across boun- daries to buy goods and have them shipped home by the mer- chant are robbing provincial) treasuries of revenue, | But from discussions with pro-| vincial government leaders here) for the third premiers' confer-) ence, the only areas in which! the loss is of major proportions, are Quebec and Ontario. And these two provinces are ldoing something about it. Doctor Expects Frustration To Speed Work LOS. ANGELES (AP)--If you think life is frustrating now, |have a look at what one Uni- versity of Southern California psychologist has in mind for the future. Dr. Langdon E. Longstreth believes humans may become jmore efficient when frustrated. It works out that way with rats, he says, and he has built a machine to prove his theory with humans. "It's possible we might be able to induce a little frustra- tion into some of the assembly line chores -- such as fitting widget A into slot B--and in- crease the efficiency of the oper- ators and hence the whole pro- duction line," Dr. Longstreth says. His machine consists of a seat jfor the subject and some lights which the subject turns on and off with a lever. Dr. Longstreth {has built in some booby traps. | Just when you think you have llearned that bright |turn on the lever and the dim jlights are turned off by a left jturn, something happens. The gadget doesn't work that way anymore. To further complicate mat- as , . Onc - i i aot , the last months of her life. Once she was serious or no she ters, Dr. Longstreth can adjust she was reported having a. ro- mance with Frank Sinatra. But she confided: 'I love Frank as a friend be- cause he is Joe's good friend." She also said once: "I wish I had been more in- terested in sports as a_ kid. Maybe Joe and I would still be married today." After her divorce from. Miller, she and DiMaggio dated often. When the word of her death flashed Sunday morning, he was on a plane and down here within hours. DiMaggio brooding over a di- vorce from actress Dorothy Ar- nold, was giving his friends some concern. One of them called Vince Edwards, now tele- vison's Dr. Ben Casey, to ar- range a blind date. "I immediately thought. of Marilyn,' Edwards recalls, 'It was 1952. I introduced her to DiMaggio at the Villa Nova, an Italian restaurant on the Sunset Strip. I had been dating Mari- lyn, but I lost a girl friend that night." SPONSORED TEAM I saw Marilyn the next day in the 20th Century - Fox com- missary and she told me of her blind date with DiMaggio. I was impressed and gave her a glow- ing account of DiMaggio's base- ball prowess. She was impressed by. that Then -- I don't know whether Tale Related CALGARY (CP) -- Forty. year-old Bud Toner, a Calgary painter, flexed the hand and wrist that were sewn back on his arm 36 years ago by a coun-|are not sure whether it was his/ try doctor whose name has been surname or his Christian name | forgotten, and said "The doctor told mom and dad the wrist and hand would always be stiff, but look now. . The incident of the severed limb which was sewn back on by a Saskatchewan doctor in 1926 was recalled as the medi- cal spotlight focussed on recent rare operations which have re- joined severed limbs, "I'm tickled pink to hear Cal- gary doctors have sewn back on Hazel Donlin's arm and that boy's arm in Boston, but for the record I think that Saskat- chewan doctor who- tacked Bud's wrist to his body should Too Many Fish Feared Caught WHEATLEY, Ont. (CP) -- Commercial fisherme.n are worrying that they might be catching too many fish, Fishing fleets working out of ' this Lake Erie port and Port Dover took a 40-ton catch of smelt Monday. Fishermen said perch catches have been so heavy that they might glut the market A department of lands and forests biologist said no reason has been established for the unusually large catches of perch. He said the average daily catch last year was 25 tons. The owners of about 30 fishing tugs at Wheatley and Kingsville have agreed to Make only 1,590 pounds of perch each from the lake daily in an effort to keep a constant price. i be mentioned," said Bud's |father, Mark Toner. | The doctor is remembered only as Dr. George--the Toners --but the details of the accident and the operation are well re- membered. STRUCK BY BINDER Bud, three years old, was asleep in a field of rye on the i farm near Sask., 45 miles southwest of Saskatoon. His mother, driving a binder, did not see the boy! ;Shaded by the tall stalks, She heard a little scream and found} Bud writhing on the ground be- hind the machine, A sliver of skin held hand and wrist to arm. His leg was broken in two places. "Dr. George figured Bud wouldn't last. But he stitched his hand and wrist and plas- tered it in a cast,' Mr. Toner recalls. A long time later, the doctor took off the cast. "He said 'Bud, move your wrist." Bud wiggled it. 'Bud, clench your fist.' Bud clenched it. 'Bud, give your thumb a wiggle-waggle.' Bud did. "That doctor," said Bud's mother, "just picked him up in his arms and ran out of this old store where he had his of- fice and started: shouting 'Look what I've done, look what I've done'."' Bud said the wrist and hand are a bit stiff at times but give him no trouble. 'I got into the army, thumb, fingers, hand, wrist--all."' At Harris, town clerk 'Ben Kaiser said Tuesday there was a Dr. Nelles Thomas George practising in Harris at the time of Mr. Toner's injury. Dr George died in 1947 His widow and close friends could not recall the Toner case.' Harris, | said: "I knew he was some kind of a sports star--or something." Soon Marilyn was seeing no one but Joe. Before long she even sponsored a studio base- ball team. Only a few months ago, she told me that DiMaggio is "the finest gentleman I have ever known." I said: '"'How about the time he got jealous when you sepa- rated in 1954 and he kicked in the wrong door, and scared that spinster out of her wits?" "See what I mean," she quipped. "Only a_ gentleman would have kicked in the wrong the apparatus si it's hard to tell which lights are dim and which are bright. Preliminary tests show that humans, like rats, become frus- trated--and as a result more alert in trying to outwit the machine. "When you frustrate a labora- fory rat with a simple problem involving food as his reward," Dr. Longstreth says in a report on his experiment released by the school, "he will move through the problem twice as fast on the next try." "It is our hope that, with the apparatus, we'll be able to prove the same point with Sales-Tax Dodges Premiers Agree On Payment as well as just to keep them alive. Mr. Roblin's statements came ence at the conclusion.o f the THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, August 8, 1962 @ be put to work--at going rates Tuesday during a press confer-jof pay--to earn their social as- sistance. ' governments lights are! always turned off by a right/ Province Premier Lesage of Quebec and Premier Robarts of Ontario say negotiations have been car- rie@.on for several months at the administrative level in an attempt to find a means to stop this type of tax evasion. "We think agreement can be reached in the near future," Mr, Lesage said. : "Various methods have been suggested," said Mr. Robarts. "and they have to be checked out to see what their position is from a legal standpoint." DISCUSSEDBY LEADERS Of Welfare VICTORIA (CP) -- Canada's governments have agreed that able-bodied persons should work to receive social welfare payments. "It was pretty well agreed," said Premier Roblin of Mani- toba, "that it is undesirable to simply hand out money to the employable unemployed. It is better to find them a. useful oc- cupation."' He said the provinces want an provincial third provincial premiers' con. ference htre. municipal paid for at 'these levels. increased by employable unem efits from the unemployment in cial assistance rolls, of the cost. The premiers said that when social assistance was begun, it was purely a provincial and responsibility fully However, as the problem was ployed receiving no further ben- surance fund and going on so- Ottawa agreed to contribute 50 per cent -| Under present federal legisla- tion, none of the Ottawa contri- bution can be used to pay for work done. As a result, the provinces would have to pay the full share of any amount paid out where it required work by the recipient. : The provincial premiers said -|any negotiations carried on with Ottawa on the question, would -|be entered individually by each province. There would be no |ganging-up by the provinces to force any change. The premiers said the idea of the scheme would be to employ Teen-Ager Jailed On Damage Spree STRATFORD (CP) -- Joyce Anger, 17, of London, Ont., was sentenced Tuesday to six months in jail on 11 charges including causing damage to municipal property and utter- ing. She pleaded guilty to four charges of uttering forged docu- ments, 'one of theft, two of damaging property, three of illegal entry and one of mis- chief. The court was told she was arrested after ornamental agreement with Ottawa, which contributes 50 per cent of the money for welfare payments, so that the money can be used to Premier Bennett of British Columbia said the provinces now want some formula worked out where the employable per- sons on social welfare rolls can persons involved in municipal and provincial projects, such as constructing campsites, source roads and similar works. building broken into July " swans in. the Shakespearean garden were broken, plants up- rooted and four offices in one re. The problem was discussed ne recipients for gainful work the leaders' of the 10 provincial Monday at® the opening session of the two-day conference. here. To illustrate it, they used this example: A woman living in Ottawa) wants to purchase a $5,000 mink coat. She travels to Montreal, buys the coat there and has the merchant ship it to her home in Ottawa. By doing.so, she avoids) the six-per-cent Quebec sales tax and the three-per-cent On- tario tax. The merchant in Montreal is obligated to collect only the Quebec tax, which he would do if the sale was made over the counter, but he has no authority under present legislation to col- lect the Ontario tax. The woman is. obligated le- gally to report the purchase in Ontario and pay the Ontario tax, but it is not practical to lenforce this law so neither province receives any revenue. Premier Lesage said the mer- chants are not at fault. "The tax is due by the con- sumer. The vendor is: only the collector and he doesn't have to collect for another province. He's an agent of government only in the province where he does business." SEEK AGREEMENT Ontario and Quebec, he said, are attempting to solve the} problem by reaching agreement which would make the mer; chants agents of both provincial | governments for the purpose of collecting the sales tax. Under such an 'arrangement, the Montreal merchant would) collect the Ontario tax from the} Ottawa woman buying her mink in Montreal and having it shipped to her home. Neither Mr. Lesage nor Nr. Robarts would make any firm estimate as to the amount of revenue being lost at present through this .tax evasion method, but Mr. Lesage said it is substantial in his province. 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