Oshawa Times (1958-), 15 Aug 1962, p. 1

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m Warm Osh THOUGHT FOR TODAY Why is it that t ways greener -- in the yard next he grass is al- and shorter -- door? he Oshawa Times awa Welcome For U.S. Vessels -- Page 3 7 WEATHER REPORT Partly cloudy with a few isolated showers and thundershowers Thursday. Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 15, 1962 Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department Ottawa ond for payment of Postage in Cash, TWENTY-SIX PAGES unt Cont For Lost P In Rugged LETHBRIDGE, Alta, (CP)-- Search planes droned into the night Tuesday over rugged ter- rain on both sides of the Can- ada-United States boundary in a hunt for a Second World War ace and his three compatiions who disappeared in their private plane Monday. The search was to continue today for the single engine plane piloted by Jan Falkowski, 50, of Goodwood, Ont., who flew during the war with 303 Polish Squadron. With him on the Calgary-io- Vancouver flight were Alma Tanski, 45, Tom Tanski, 22, and Grant McGregor, 20, of Osh- awa. from residents along a valley from Golden to Kootenay, B.C. "None have positively :denti- fied the aircraft,"' Fit. Lt. Brick- enden said. Mr, Falkowski was reported on a trip to Vancouver to ad- vertise a new form of night inues ane Area skywriting his firm is pioneer-| ing in Canada. WAS FIGHTER PILOT A veteran pilot with almost) 30 years of flying, he was a|~ fighter pilot during the Battle of Britain. The flight plan filed at Cal- gary said he planned to follow the regular Calgary-Vancouver| route at an altitude of 12,500) feet. An alternative route was) listed through Kimberley and across southern B.C, The plane, described as creamy white with orange and brown trim, left Calgary with} six hours fuel. It was equipped with high-frequency radio equip ment, Mountains along the route reach as high as 10,000 feet. Suicide May Be Father Of Victims PORT HURON, Mich. (AP)-- i!A father apparently leaped to his death from the international {Blue Water Bridge Tuesday lafter killing his two small |daughters and leaving a "Hope I Die" note. U2 pilot RCAF search 'headquarters here said their hunt has not ex- tended into the U.S» but that § the Montana National Guard - had some planes searching the border area. The search on both sides of the border was not be- ing co-ordinated. FLIES PATH A four-engine Lancaster with six air force men aboard flew a path Tuesday night from Lethbridge to Vancouver, re- turning after backtracking through Calgary, Earlier, an air force Dakota returned after checking out re- ports of a fire near Fording Mountain, 10 miles north of Na- tal, B.C, Fit. Lt. Stewart Brickenden, in charge of the search, said reports of sightings in B.C,.'S East Kootenays had been | checked out. The reports of sightings about PI Francis Gary | Ga. His petition charged his wife with cruelty and habitual intoxication. Petition alleged the. pilot had been separated from his wife since May 27. LOT POWERS FILES FOR DIVORCE Powers' plane was downed in May 1960 while flying recon- naissance - mission over the Soviet Union. He was released by Russians in February of this year in exchange for Rudolph Abel, a Soviet spy. --AP Wirephoto | an hour or more after the plane JAN FALKOWSKI i took off from Calgary, came said, | cer-| tainly caused embarrassment to the Macmillan government which all summer has. been en- gaged in delicate negotiations with the European trading bloc. MANY TORIES AGAINST For Sir Winston, too, it was obviously a trial. Nearly 100 Conservative members of Par- iament are firmy opposed to Briain entering Europe and showing signs of rebelion The 87 - year - old statesman acted quickly from his sickbed to. prevent his name being used as a rallying point for the anti- Market faction. Soon after hearing Montgom- ery make his assertion in a tele- vision newscast, Churchill or- dered publication of a hitherto private letter which set forth his views on the British application. The key paragraph appeared to be the last. school board. Damage Early Tuesday Linda Jane Powers, pictured in car with jof their home by their mother,) |by two hammers found in the Several notes, one saying! LONDON (AP)--Field Mar-jderstandably might want to! game," were found. | OTTAWA (CP) -- Unemploy- gion, which now comes out a Slip in a press interview the/ criticisms of Gen. Eisenhower\Jr., 30, a salesman, a man|Statistics and the federal labor} 'Seasonal requirements of ag. joining the Common Market. _|Tse-tung, made his disclosure! Sarnia. straight months in which the un-|Port said. This situation was diplomatic cat out of the bag.| London hospital where Sir Wins- he car pullee wasithe June-to-July figures' have|¢mployment occurred. g i 7 a_ hospital) jefac P ae asus Emerging from 108) isfaction at photographers as he O'Leary said Glombowski and| 29,000. \higher in almost all sectors with vith his own opposi- ' ' | Manuf ' } agreement with his own oppos of. which said "I hope I die to-| Percentage as in June. In July|with increases in many indus- "He agrees with me. He is en- ' ' del a é |Glombowski told of taking the|/#bor force. |the automotive industry. It appears that two young |the total labor force due to the | month. | month--they went on a win- e | An estimated 173,000 teen-ag-|{"0M @ year earlier. Non-farm gyholarge Planned AtCNE ent reports, '"'my son wil hope this year they've finally drawal of married women from! Per cent in its non-farm employ. will be adequate punish- 'sive 3,000,000 mark. 1962 1962 1991 EXAM RESULTS taken out of their allow- iserunue, been 2,962,000, This year the} Unemployed are to be found on page 15 amounted to $192.50. race around Lake Ontario to|July 21. Today's release did not Glombowski, 8, and her sister,| Wife, Barbara, in Rome, Ga., iSusan Marie, 6, were found] last March, Tuesday filed suit |beaten to death in the bedroom| for divorce in Milledgeville, ____|Mrs. Jane Glombowski, 25. | | Police said the girls' heads) M t Hit had been crushed from blows on gomer 1 S | house: The body of one sister! was in the bed, the other on the P li o | N floor. | '@) tica er V e "They didn't know what was) happening--I made it like a) shal Viscount Montgomery|keop his views to himself. As police, with road blocks) ment increased by 7,000 to 308,-| few days later. ' moved into the eye of a polili-|' Montgomery, whose record of) manned, sought the girls' miss-|000 between mid-June and mid-|_ Farming was the weak point cal storm today after letting) diplomatic fluffs range from ing father, John E, Glombowski,|July, the Dominion Bureau of|in July's employment picture, supposedly private opposition of/as a war commander to ultra-|drove onto the Blue Water|department reported today. jriculture were somewhat smaller Sir Winston Churchill to Britain! enthusiastic estimates of Mao|Bridge linking Port Huron and! The rise, following four|than in recent. years," the re- Not for the first time, the) of the Churchillian view. in his Witnesses said he left his car,)employed total fell substantially,|noted particularly in the Atlan- peppery 74-year-old war her0'customary perky manner. walked to the bridge rail, and|was not unusual, the report|tic, Quebec and Ontario regions appeared to have let a large Standing on the steps of the jumped over. said. During the last five years| Where all of the increase in un- Repercussions are expected to! ton is confined with a broken vel? jvaried from an unemployment 'wrmace NG be wide. thigh, he positively beamed sat- Glombow ski * ; increase of 15,000. to a drop of MANUFACTURING Aepate 2 Police Chief Daniel L Non - farm employment was visit to Sir Winston Tuesday, > shell. 5 | i OP |. st all | Montianiers anawunced te penned te bombil his wife had been having do- At mid : July unemployment increased activity in construc- found his old chief in complete mestic troubles. Glombowski represented 45 per cent of the| tion, transportation and. trade. | BREAKING PANES apparently wrote the notes, one) Canadian labor force, the same| Manufacturing remained steady tion to Britain joining the Euro- f last year there were 354,000|+,; Six. Mont y said: night." jor tast year Uhere were 494,000) tries offset by the seasonal lay- coe ee ng! A PROVES PAINFUL. ~aee said that in another|OUt of work, 5.2 per cent of the|offs for model changeovers in tirely against Britain going in." BOWMANVILLE (Staff)-- : ee ; The statement almost lives of Linda Jane and Susan; The joint release said employ-| The service field, which nor- Bowmanville boys weren't |Marie at 9:35 p.m, Monday. _|ment rose by 118,000 during|/mally shows a drop in this pe- too happy about the thoughts |-- the month with the increase in|tiod, held steady during the of returning to school next "4 e Bi Attractions influx of students into the la-| Total employment was a rec- dow-smashing spree at Cen- bor market. ord 6,569,000, up 2.8 per cent tral Public School, break- | | ers entered the labor market,|°™Ployment rose four per cent. Although no charges will "most of whom found work."| Quebec bance a result, Police Chief Ber- TORONTO (CP) -- Canadian|This increase. was partly off-/sain in unemployed, 4,000, de- nard Kietney says one par- Nitonat Ex ' ibition officials! Set by. a gnificant' with-| Spite a jump: of better than five be standing up to eat his |come up with the combination] Working ranks. ment. meals for a while." at wi n tal attendance| The picture in brief, with es- hief K binks < th tha I! send to a | timat th 4 | Chief Kitney thinks this F al fe as -|timates in thousands: : at the annual fair past the elu-| hale hae acl GRADE THIRTEEN y June | ie hypo ge = For several years the figure| ) : -year-old boys, plus the : has hovered close to the mark) [. Force 8 . ee fact that the damage will be at e rae ere datiee' baal eo Mh ag gd ret pote Grade 13 examination re- er een Sot, Sere, ee Soe 208301 "sal sults -- Upper School De- ances - "'| partmental Examinations-- The boys' parents are (CNE will have a number of new! ara ee re based On @ sur.) making restitution to the lattractions, from a schooner| Gr nacia duies the yoort yrdtent of this edition for Oshawa's three High Schools, OCVI, North America's largest ferris|include the bureau's industry-| Donevan and OCCI, wheel. by-industry details for each re-! "Long - term unemployment was substantially lower than last year," the report added. About two - thirds of those seeking work in July had been unemployed for less than three months. Another 12 per cent had been out of work for be- tween four and six months with 20 per cent jobless for more than six months. Virtually all of the year-to- year drop in unemployment-- Unemployment Jumps 7,000, But Report Says 'Not Unusual 46,000--was among men over 20 years of age. The Atlantic region had the highest jobless rate -- 7.3 per cent of its labor force. The un- employed rate was 5.7 per cent in Quebec, 5.3 in the Pacific re- gion, 3.8 in Ontario and 2.1 on the Prairies. A year earlier the regional rates were: Atlantic 7.4, Que- bec 5.6, Ontario 3.7, Prairies 2.2 and Pacific 5.4, BUENOS AIRES (Reuters)-- Fifteen-day prison terms were slapped on general staff offic- ers today in a bid to still the winds of mutiny blowing over army barracks. The punishment was handed out to 116 young officers, rang- ing from captains to colonels, who refused to salute Gen. Car- los Turolo Tuesday when he took office as the new chief of staff. The order was given by the army commander-in-chief, Gen. Juan Carlos Lorio, who was ap- pointed Monday along with Tu- rolo in a division of top jobs among the army's two feuding factions. Both men were backers of Gen. Federico Toranzo Montero, leader of the rebel faction that last week brought the country to the verge of civil war. The war office announced a "T think the government are Officers Jailed To Still Mutiny today or Thursday to discuss the situation. The military crisis deepened |Tuesday night with the resigna- jtion of Defence Minister Jose Luis Cantilo, who said he quit "in sorrow for having failed in my purpose. My greatest am- bition was to secure unity of the armed forces." The mass circulation newspa- per La Razon predicted an im- minent government crisis. Another 305 officers and pu- pils at the war school were re- ported backing their general staff colleagues in refusing to recognize the authority of com- manders who sided with Tor- anzo Montero in last week's crisis. The new men were appointed by War Secretary Jose Actavio Cornejo Saravia, who himself took over his job the previous Saturday as a compromise can- didate to patch up the army generals' meeting will be held split. right to apply to join," it said,;-- "not because I am yet con- vinced that we shall be able to| NO join but because there appears to be no other way by which we can find out exactly whether the} conditions are acceptable." | In these terms, Sir Winston's position appeared to coincide with the official government) line. But observers pointed out the letter was written a year) TORONTO (CP)--A new plea ago--as a private communica-|for a truce in inter-union war- tion to party organizers in his fare on the Great Lakes was electoral district of Woodford. made Tuesday at the opening The question being asked was session of the federal industria! whether Sir Winston had since! inquiry into :° 'pping disrup made up his mind that Britain and labor strife along the lake- should drop the negotiations and front stay out of Europe. If so, he un-| Mr. Justice T. G, Norris served notice that he will not tolerate any attempts to frus- CITY EMERGENCY [irate or intimidate his one-man invesigation. PHONE NUMBERS He told the Seafarers Inter- POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 RRIS RAPS INTIMIDATION graceful when some responsible)port a Canadian labor disputejopened testimony at the federal] people are acting like a lot of|to the U.S.," said Mr. Justice| investigation, Sons of Freedom Doukhobors,"'| Norris. Said the Vancouver jurist. The judge appeared to bejdent and general manager of His outburst came after Up- angry but he quickly explained|the company, explained the per Lakes Shipping Limited re-jhe was speaking loudly so that'eamplex corporate struc-! ported one of its ships was re-|everyone could understand him! ture linking the Upper Lakes fused assistance by SIU-manned clearly. line with other-shipping firms tugs at Chicago and faces a} The inquiry plunged quickly|in Bermuda and the Bahamas. boycott by longshoremen. to the heart of the inter-union) These firms own three vessels In no uncertain terms, the 68-\Tivalries that underlie the re-|--the Wheat King, the Northern year old Vancouver jurist/ cent disruptions of lake shipping) Venture and the Hilda' Marj- | served notice on all parties that|in American ports and in the|anne--for which Upper Lakes he intended to get to the bottom St. Lawrence Seaway--to the/acts as. agent. All three ships of the long-brewing union -dis-| bitter feud between the SIU andjhave met harrassment and de- putes that have disrupted lake|the newly - formed Canadian lays in recent months: shipping--even if it took "end-|Maritime Union (CLC) for the} 7. G. Houtman, personnel] American longshoremen and less time." loyalty of lake seamen. manager for the Upper Lakes| SIU members "I'm bound that I will not be} Upper Lakes. shipping; around|line, told about his early con-| "I think the situatien is dis-|frustrated by any effort to ex-| which the fight has been waged,|nection with the Canadian Sea-| i : national Union of Canada (Ind.) to use its influence to end har- assment of Canadian ships by men's Union, a Communist- |dominated union that was scut-| P. G. Kingsburgh, vice-presi-|tled in a bitter union war that/any Communist leanings. The An~-dal launched the SIU more than a decade ago. Mr. Houtman said he was an| came its national secretary-| treasurer until 1940 when. he was defeated in a union election! after a campaign of vilification} had alleged he had Nazi sympa-| thies. He had left the CSU and} SIU moved into the lakes. | DENIES RED LINK Mr. Houtman denied that he} had ever been a Communist,| Plea For Lakes Labor Truce saying he had been investigated by the RCMP and cleared of United States, which had once barred him from _ entry, had also cleared him to cross the! j organizer for 'the CSU, then be-| border. Mr, Houtman said Upper Lakes was forced in 1950 to ac- cept the SIU as the union for its seamen. The SIU placed pickets at several American lake ports, delaying ships and threatening to close the compa- |joined Upper Lakes before the "Y's operations. ' The result was that in order for us to remain in operation we signed an agreement with the Seafarers International Un- ion..." Mr. Houtman said. 4 | flocked Russia § MOSCOW (AP) -- Russia's "heavenly twins' returned to earth today and were reported in good health after bulls - eye landings ending record - break- ing space flights that apparently gave the Soviet Union a giant stride toward a manned shot at |the moon. The Soviet news agency Tass said the two Ruesian spacemen "brilliantly fulfilled" their task and "for the next few days... will remain under observation of doctors to study the influ- ences of prolonged space flight on the human organism." A "surge of jubilation" swept over the Soviet Union at the news of their landing, the ag- ency said. Moscow residents into Red Square. "Cosmos! Cosmos! Cosmos!" jshouted younger members of the crowd. Tass said Maj. Andrian Ni- kolayev landed in his spaceship, Vostok ITZ at 9:55 a.m. and Lt.. Col. Pavel Popovich in Vostok IV six minutes later at 10:01) a.m. BOTH ARE WELL "Both cosmonauts feel well," said the Soviet news agency. Tass said they landed "nor- mally' aboard their spaceships "exactly in the predetermined area" of the Soviet Union. The landing site, Tass said, was to the south of Karaganda, a town in Kazakhstan, "in di- rect proximity with the planned points of landing." This is the area from which past space shots have been launched. The flights lasted just 95 min- utes short of four days for Ni- kolayev, who blasted off at 11:30 a.m. Saturday, and just 61 minutes short of three days for Popovich, who went up at 11:02 a.m, Sunday. The Communist party central committee, the supreme Soviet presidium and the Soviet gov- ernment in a joint message said Nikolayev had circled the earth more than 64 times, covering a distance of 2,600,000 kilome- tres (1,600,000 miles). The mes- sage said Popovich made more than 48 orbits for a distance of nearly 2,000,000 kilometres (1,- 240,000 miles. SET RECORDS They far outdistanced the time and distance of any pre. ceding space flight. Soviet astronaut Maj. Gher- man Titov set the previous record with his 25-hour, 17-orbit flight Aug. 6, 1961. America's longest _ travelling spacemen, 'It-Col. John Glenn and Lt. Cmdr. Malcolm Scott Carpen- ter, each made three orbits this year. The world's first space. man, Russian astronaut Yuri Gagarin, made one orbit lasting 108 minutes on April 12, 1961. The Tass landing announce- ment said: "Tn conformity with the pro- gram of the flight for Aug. 15, 1962, the spaceships Vostok III RED SPACE EXPLORERS LAND ON 'BULLS-EYE' wept By Jubilation with cosmonaut Andrian Niko- layev on board and Vostok IV with cosmonaut Pavel Popovich on board have landed in the pre- determined area. The space- ships Vostok III and Vostok IV have landed normally. _ "Follows the time of the land- ings: "Nikolayev--nine hours fifty. five minutes. "Popovich -- Ten hours zero one minute. "After the space flight and the landing both cosmonauts feel well, The program of the flight of the spaceships Vostok Ii and Vostok IV had been car- ried out fully." WILL ACCLAIM A hero's welcome and world acclaim awaited Nikolayev, 32, and Popovich, 31, whom Soviet newspapers have dubbed "the heavenly twins." Red Square already was being made ready for a mammoth welcome for the two new heroes, possibly Sun- day, which is Soviet Air Force Day. After its first announcement, Moscow radio began a program of patriotic music, Both radio and television can. celled regular programs for the latest space bulletins mixed with patriotic tunes. Moscow television promptly showed pictures of the two cos- monauts in their flying helmets, shots which became a kind of trademark of the four-day op- eration. Soviet officials have not dis- closed much of what has been learned so far. However, the flights apparently gave these re- sults: The two cosmonauts proved that man can withstand the rig- ors of space travel with its ac- companying weightlessness at least for a trip to the moon and back. Such a trip is expected to take at least three days; with the first two days devoted to launching spaceships into orbit and joining them into a single craft for the final lunar voy- age. SHOW PRECISION The Russians demonstratéd pinpoint precision with their double launching. The ability to send up a second spaceship 24 hours after the first one had gone up, and bring it into orbit in the vicinity of the first ship marked an important advance toward the day when satellites can be joined together in space for construction of the space platform from which a moon shot can be made. Exactly how close the two ships came was not announced. The Sohio Research Centre at Cleveland, Ohio, reported that the two spaceships were only 75 miles apart when the centre first picked them up Sunday and that they probably had been closer and may even have touched earlier. MAP OF SOVIET RUSSIA locates Kazakhastan town of Karaganda (1), in the area where cosmonauts Nikolayev and Popovich are reported to have: landed their space ships 4 today. Both men are believed to have taken off from the usual launch zone near Kar- sakpay (2). --AP Wirephote Map 'a %

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