arlington Twp. Stiffens Building Bylaw -- Page 4 THOUGHT FOR TODAY Most successfal .Marriages aré built on a 50-50 basis -- he earns and she spends, Che Oshawa Times Warmer today. Saturday sunny with increasing cloudiness: dur- ing the afternoon and evening. OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1962 EIGHTEEN PAGES VOL. 91-- NO. 209 -~Dief Plans To Heed Proposals. OTTAWA (CP)--Adoption of many of the far-reaching pro- posals of the Glassco royal commission on government or- ganization appears almost cer- tain- The only question left is how many. The commissions report, re- leased Thursday, calls for a massive revision of the whole federal operation to strip away a mass of outdated controls and put it on a businesslike basis. Prime Minister Diefenbaker said after releasing the 300,000- word report .that its proposals will require the fullest study and added: "T've always found that those who talk loudest about economy scream the loudest when action is taken to bring it about." Finance Minister Nowlan, More Violence In Hamilton Glass Strike HAMILTON (CP) -- Violence erupted again Thursday outside the strikebound Dominion Glass Company Limited and six more strikers were arrested. Rocks and scrap metal once more flew and tomatoes were brought into the fray when the strikers pounced on a truck that crossed ir lines: More than 50 police led by Inspectors William Homer and Samuel Burd were targets themselves. Tomatoes were who said he has not yet had time to study it thoroughly said "acceptable" recommend- ations in the report will be acted on within a year. Meny could be done wi:hou. legisla- tion. Many observers noted the timeliness of the report's pre-| diction that action on its plan| would save "'tens of millions of| dollars" a year. The govern-| ment is in the middle of its} cost-cutting austerity program.) Main criticisms came from| civil service organizations which denounced the royal com- mission's rejection of their campaign for negotiation tights. They also took exception to pro- posals to trim the powers of the Civil Service Commission and give each department the right to hire senior staff, pro- mote, transfer, compensate and dismiss. The three - man commission, headed by Toronto accountant jand business executive J .Grant Glassco, 57, reported that it found the government has grown too big for- the tight cen- tral controls which date back to horse-and-buggy days. As a remedy, it advocated bold decentralization, giving FLOOD WATERS NEAR TAIPEI Chinese people gather along shore and watch flood waters of Tansui River pound houses near Taipei during heavy rains Thursday, during Typhoon Amy. The typhoon cut across | Formosa Thursday, taking eight lives and injuring 22 per- | sons. Property damage was reported to have run into mil- lions of dollars. (AP Wire- photo via radio from Toyko). each department responsibility for its own budget and staff. The result would be a string of | department corporations run on the lines of modern industry. | The commission, which hired| 197 specialists to handle its im- mense research job, still has four more reports in prepara- tion with the first of these due in about two months. All will be out by the end of the year. at the policemen and their )and-the-strikers jeered and challenged the police to take off their badges and guns. A copy of an _ injunction against the union was burned in the street, At least one man was injured. The United Glass and Ceramic Workers of North America (CLC) have been on strike against the company for 40 days. Thursday's trouble came on the eve of the resumption of talks, broken off in August. The 1,100 strikers want higher wages, a change in working conditions and seniority clauses. Since the strike began there have been several incidents on the picket lines, two Wednesday after which six men were ar- rested. The company has ob- tained an injunction and two extensions limiting the number of men who can picket the gates. The men arrested Thursday were Robert McInnis, 38, Wayne Dawson, 27, William Rideout, 28, and Albert Gray, 27, all charged with intimidation and mischief. Leo Boucher, 20, was charged with obstructing police, and Gerald Dubois, 24, was charged with assaulting police and with obstruction. Bail was set at $200 each. The union said it would attempt to raise it. : Union officials said they in- tend to lay charges against several police officers and com- pany officials. One of their members Thursday was armed with a movie camera. OTTAWA (CP)--The govern- ment today asked business how best to boost Canadian produc- tion and got the heaviest part of the load tossed back at it in the form of pleas for tax cuts "and betier tariff deals. These were the two most recurring suggestions made as five industrialists and one. retail business executive led off the trade department's '"'industrial expansion conference," a one- day session attracting more than 400 businessmen. Carl A. Pollock, president of Dominion Electrohome and of the Canadian Manufacturers' Association, said the most urgent need in Canada is for corporate and individual tax Five Arrested In Attempted Assassination PARIS (AP)--French police have arrested five persons and are seeking six more in con- nection with the attempt to as- sassinate President de Gaulle Aug. 22, infyormed sources said today. Of the six still at large, three were reported to be former for- eign legionnaires of Hungarian SAN BERNARDINO, Calif | (AP)--On a pineclad mountain slope two little girls, one with an agonizing leg fracture, kept} a days-long vigil near the bo- dies of their parents killed in an air crash. Leaning against a tree trunk was the wreckage of their light plane, its tail in the air, crumpled against the ground. Inside the plane's cabin, strapped in the seat, was the| crushed 'body of. the girls' mother. ' | Outside, a few feet away, lay} another body--their father. Through three bone - chilling) nights and three sun-scorched! days, without food, without wa-| ter, the girls stayed by the wreckage waiting for one of the many search planes they saw} overhead to spot them. At mid - morning Thursday| help came. TELLS HER STORY Thursd4y night, in a bed at St. Bernardine Hospital, six- year-old Julie Clark told her! nationality. The Hungarians are believed to have not been pre- sent when bursts of machine- gun fire raked de Gaulle's au- tomobile as it sped through the Paris suburb of Petit Clamart. The leader of the band was reported to be a French lieu- tenant who deserted some time ago. An informed source said the group were members of a se- cret army delta--killer --com- mando squad assigned the task of killing the French president. Eight men participated in the actual assassination attempt, made as de Gaulle, his wife and son-in-law were being driven to an airport for a flight to his country home at Colombey-les- deux . Eglises. Bullets struck self-sealing tires on de Gaulle's car and raked the body. story. "The plane went down real fast," she began. "Mommy and daddy didn't have a chance to say anything." At Julie's side was her grandmother, Mrs. Scott King. Softly, with tears welling in her eyes, Mrs. King stroked Julie's blonde head, carefully avoiding the big black bruise near one eye. Her tears.were not so much for Julie as for :her 'son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. William Clark, who died on the mountainside, and for Julie's eight-year-old sister Laurie. Ju- lie was. suffering only from bumps, bruises and exposure. William Clark was vice-pres- ident of Travelodge Motels In- corporated, Both he and huis wife Jacqueline, daughter of See I t reductions aimed at stimulating the economy. ". . , Industry's ability to 'increase production on anything like the necessary scale will depend very largely on whether these incentives are forth- coming--and quickly." Mr. Pollock said corporate taxes should be cut to a level at least as low as that in effect in any of the leading industrial countries. Depreciation ailow- ances should be increased. FAVORS TARIFFS | As for tariffs and what he called "other productive de- vices,' Mr, Pollock said busi- ness in Canada asks only for "consideration comparable to that accorded foreign. manufac: CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS turers by their governments." Later the tariff theme was taken up by H. H. Lank, presi- dent of Du Pont of Canada Limited, who said more re- |Search is one of the basic needs POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 jin getting a more satisfactory |industrial growth rate in Can- lada. | Mr. Lank said this can be achieved through researgh | developed within companies in Canada or by purchasing re- search results at home or abroad. : The government could help stimulate each of these routes. For example, its proposed tax incentives for research--not yet enacted--should apply to all research, and not only to those who spend more _ research dollars than they did in 1961. "Secondly, the government should provide the same type of protection . ... to the imports of highly technical products which is applied today by the large industrial importing and exporting countries such as the United States and the members of the European Common Mar- ket and this should rise and faij with prevailing schedules: SEEKS NEW AWARENESS 0. W. Twaits, president of Imperial Oil, Limited, said there must be new awareness of governmental responsibility for "investment climate' and the need for appropriate fiscal} and monetary measures. its nose/} ys I the corporation's president,| Julie didn't know it but the youngsters were only 300 yards from a backwoods road above the wreckage. They could not see the road through the dense pines. Motorists on the road were 32. Laurie, in another section: of the hospital, was undergoing three hours of surgery to set a protruding bone in her left thigh. *'When the plane hit," Julie continued, "daddy and La and me was thrown . mommy stayed in the plane." KNEW PARENTS DEAD Julie previously had said she knew her parents were dead be- cause "they didn't move." She said she helped Laurie sit up against a log. "She was crying because her leg hurt. But after a while she quit crying. "Laurie said I should go over to the plane and try and find some water. I looked all over because we always carried wa- ter but I couldn't find any. I couldn't find any food either. "Then Laurie told me to look for something for us to keep warm with. I went back to the plane and found a_ suitcase. M h We didn't get cold. go up over the hill to get help. scared again though." |New Trouble | |by a tiny margin over Conserv-/ an For Ben Bella | In Algeria ALGIERS (AP) Deputy Premier Ahmed Ben Bella and his political bureau faced the threat of harassment from a new quarter today--the militant commander of the 45,000 - man | regular Algerian Army. Industry Asks Better | Canadian Tariff Deal After a five-day, vest-pocket civil war, rebellious guerrillas in control of Algiers and cen- tral..Algeria recognized the au- thority of the political bureau as Algeria's temporary gov- ernment Thursday, Ben Bella in turn put a brake on the regular army, which had ignored Tuesday's cease + fire agreement and tried to con- tinue its advance to Algiers, Coil. Houari B dienne, Crash Kills Parents, Girls 3 Da n Bush could net see them. parties, at the crash scene as }ground party reached there. A helicopter, carrying pilot t the . girls' dent of Travelodge Motels, first spotted the wreckage among towering pines at the 7,900-foot level. Landels radioed ground then, fearing for the emotional state of his passen- ger, flew King to nearby Big Bear Airport. He arrived ~~ the SEAWA MAY BE PMs Talk Over EEC Problem A well - informed. Canadian| source said one purpose was to} study prospects for the next round of British-Common Mar- ket talks on the agricultural is- sue to see whether any dent in the Common Market position could be expected. Diefenbakers arrival com- ments included a hint that Can- ada may present proposals that would allow a major increase in Commonwealth trade. Norris Raps Seafarer In Inquiry | TORONTO (CP)--Mr. Justice T. G. Norris of British Colum. bia said Thursday that a mem- ber of the Seafarers Interna- tional Union of Canada (Ind.) had rendered himself liable for contempt of court by talking to a federal shipping inquiry wit. ness. LONDO N (CP)--Prime Min- ister Diefenbaker, newly ar- rived in London, had the Aus- tralian and New Zealand prime ministers to lunch today to talk over their mutual food ex- port problem should Britain the European Common Market. The luncheon in his hotel suite was the Canadian lead- ers 'first engagement following his overnight flight from Ottawa for the Commonwealth prime ministers' conference opening |Monday- Prime Ministers Menzies of Australia and Holyoake of New Zealand were the only guests at the get-together which London newspapers have termed an ain by all three countries--in- cluding some $300,000,000 a year from Canada -- are vitally in- volved in the still-unsettled ne- gotiations between Britain and) the six-nation Common Market. Holyoake has been the most ex- plicit of the three in criticizing the trade terms under discus- sion. The Evening Standard says today. the British government tried to discourage "to- Canadians May Close Seaway To U.S. Ships will be discussed at the Mil- waukee meeting. Part of the ILA 'bitterness stems from claims by the long- shoremen that OMU crews -- manning vessels operated by Upper Lakes Shipping Limited --do work normally performed by ILA members. The . SIU had_ bargaining rights with Upper Lakes before the OMU took over. and the ILA has supported the SIU in the latter's attempts to shut Upper Lakes vessels out of U.S. ports, Doctor Links Deformities To Radiation RED DEER, Alta. (CP)--Dr, (b J. le Vann, medical super- intendent of the provincial train- ing school for retarded children here, says an increasing num- ber of birth deformities in Al- berta is linked to a meteoric rise in Canadas' radiation level of strontium 90, - Dr. Ie Vann, conducting in- vestigations into the rising num- ber of infants born with mal- formities for the provincial gov- ernment, said TORONTO (CP) -- The Tele- gram says Canadian maritime unions are threatening to close the entire St. Lawrence Seaway to all United States flag vessels in retaliation against a threat- ened boycott of Canadian ships in U.S. ports. The Globe and Mail said ear- lier that a Great Lakes confer- ence of the International Long- shoremen's Association in Mil- waukee Sept. 28 will discuss plans for a boycott of all Cana- dian shipping in the U.S. If both sides carry out their threats and plans, key ports on both sides of the Great Lakes would be paralyzed. The Wel- land canal \would also be af- fe It was believed the boycott of Canadian shipping was a move t6 aid the Seafarers' Interna- tional Union (Ind.) in its battle against the Canadian Maritime Union (CLC), BLOCKADED SEAWAY In uly anti-SIU factions blockaded the seaway and the canal for 30 hours to support the CMU, Pat Sullivan of Buffalo, N.Y., secretary of the ILA's Great Lakes district, is quoted as say- ing many of the ILA locals are bitter about the CMU, but re- The justice tongue - lashed Paul Stuart, an electrician em. ployed here, for having chatted day's' meeting on grounds it would appear to be a "ganging up" of a bloc of Commonwealth fused to say whether a boycott 5 . the connection between defo ities and the higher levels of radiation cannot be ignored- with William Fiegehen, 35, of Collingwood, Ont., while the| latter was still testifying to the} inquiry. : | "I don't propose at the pres.| ent time to commit you," Mr.| Justice Norris said although members inside the prime min- isters conference. On his arrival today, Diefen- baker denied in a press confer- ence that he has any such in- tention, | PCs Face Second Test Since Vote ; OTTAWA (CP)--The Conserv- ommy and daddy's clothes|ative government faces its sec-jran second to Mr. Regier in were in it. We put them on andjond test at the polls since the/June. Rene Gamache, another uddled together to keep warm.|June 18 general election in the|/Burnaby councillor and a lum- British Columbia constituency|ber grader, will represent Social "Later Laurie. said I shouldjof Burnaby-Coquitlam Oct. 22.)Credit. George Burnham, a New in the|Westminster I got halfway up and got scared| Ontario riding of Stormontjsaid he will run as. an inde- so I ran back. I didn't get/where voting was deferred to|pendent. The first test was July 16 because of the death of Liberal candidate Albert Lavigne prior to the general election. Mr -Lavigne's succes- sor, Lucien Lamoureaux, won ative Grant Campbell. Te Burnaby-Coquitlam _ by- election will provide New Dem- ocratic Party Leader T. C. Douglas with a new opportunity |to gain a seat in the Commons. The former Saskatchewan premier was defeated in Regina in the June election at which the Conservatives returned only a minority of the Commons members. The byelection was made pos- sible by a cabinet acceptance of the resignation of Erhart Regier, re-elected in June to the seat he has held since 1953, Mr. Regier resigned to provide' his leader with another chance and Mr, Douglas was promptly nominated by the NDP constitu- ency association, The possibility. of a five-way fight loomed, The Liberals nominated Warren Clark, Burn- chief of staff of the regular army, reluctantly agreed to ob- serve the cease-fire, but bitterly protested two major points in the cease-fire agreement. One clause that aroused Bou- medienne's ire called for both the guerrillas and the regular army to stay clear of 'Algiers until after the legislative elec- tions, which the political bu- reau Thursday scheduled for Sept. 16. Reserve Resident Killed In Flames BRANTFORD (CP) --An el- James Hill, 70, burned to} death Thursday when fire swept his frame cottage. Police said|J. Wri he apparently coal oil , starting the fire. tipped over a | Two Gamblers Surrender At Don Jail TORONTO (CP) -- Gamblers Vincent Feeley and Joseph Mc- Dermott, on bail since March following conviction on charges of conspiring to obtain police in- formation illegally, surrendered at Don Jail today to await the outcome of an appeal. Their appeal from the convic- tion and 18 - month sentences was opening today before the derly Six Nations Reserve res-|Ontario court of appeal, and ident died in the flaming ruins|}they were to remain in cus- of his home, 15 miles south-|tody until east of Brantford. the court handed down decision. They have been free on $50,000 bail apiece. Convicted with them, Robert ght, former Ontario Pro-| vincial Police constable;"also surrendered today. "you have endeavored quite clearly to shake him (Fiegehen) in his evidence or to. have him change it." SHOULD PROCEED He said the inquiry, appointed to investigate bitter inter-union rivalry and violence on the Great Lakes and 'seaway, should proceed. Further, thi: was a first offence. y "But I will not have witnesses before this court interfered with or intimidated... ." Mr. Stuart admitted that he aby municipal councillor who has Murderer Said Mentally Ill HAMILTON (CP) -- Bruce Griffett, 38, who killed his mother, a neighbor and a po- liceman and then committed suicide, should have been com- mitted as mentally ill three years ago, an inquest was told. Dr. C: G. Beacock, a psychi- atrist, said he tried to getGr-fi fett committed but -his mother refused to give her consent and he was powerless to do any- thing further. The inquest is being held into the deaths of Mrs. Martha Grif- fett, 69, Milton Nelson, 66, the neighbor, and Const. David Gregory, 34, He said the rate of deform- ities in Alberta has increased to pd per thousand from 5.9 since The former physics lecturer at the University of Alberta said despite reassurance from other physicists of the limited effect of small amounts of ra- diation, he believes there is a real threat, He said strontium 90 has an affinity for calcium and gets into the bones of animals, such as cows. Milk and beef from cattle used by humans can af- fect unborn infants. The. stron- tium 90 can attack important chromosomes which govern the formation of body cells. Conti- nual re will build up the intensity. storekeeper, chatted with Mr. Fi dur- jing the noon adjournment and expressed sympathy as one Mr. Diefenbaker, announcing] "working chap to another." the byelection date after a} Mr. Fiegehen said Mr. Stuart cabinet session, said legal' offi-/C2Me. '0 him and asked him whether. he was sure he was do- cers express grave doubts that] ing the right thing. MP can resign. between| The inquiry background in- election day and the election of|yolves the ousting of the SIU a new Speaker by the Com-|by the Canadian Labor Con- mons. There was no precedent.| gress two years ago for miscon- However, he said, it was| duct and the formation this year decided to accept Mr. Regier's|of the CLC-affiliated Canadian resignation but it must not be|Maritime Union to fight the regarded as setting a precedent.|controversial SIU. Soblen Weaker Doctors Reveal _ LONDON (AP) Doctors fighting to save the life of un- conscious Dr. Robert A, Sobl said today the fugitive spy's heart has weakened and his con- dition "'is-giving cause for anx- Soblen still was unconscious more than 24 hours after he drugged: himself in another at- tempt to escape being sent back to a life sentence in an Amer. ican prison. was taken Thursday after he } knocked himself out with bar- biturates. Soblen, bail-jump- ing 61-year-old spy swallowed Arugs in- ambulance taking W. E. BARDETT, secretary of the Hillingdon Hospital, near London Airport, talks to newsman outside _hospital where Dr. Robert Soblen, iety." The 61 - year - old psychiatrist was hurried to Hillingdon Hos- pital after taking a heavy con- | centration of barbiturates. The hospital at 10:20 a.m. an- a a: gives rise to anxiety." PRESSES PROBE: While doctors sought to rouse the runaway spy from his coma, the home office pressed forward with an investigation into how = was able to drug him- self. Duncan Fairn, chief director of the prison administration, headed the inquiry. He will re- port his findings to Home Sec- retary Henry Brooke. A home office source said Brooke would decide whether the report should be made public. Soblen became ill Thursday morning 'as an ambulance was taking him to board a Pan American airliner for New York and a life sentence as a war- time spy for Russia. Nearing 'the airport he fell-into a coma and his baffled. escorts hurried him to hospital. Soblen was given sedatives throughout his two-month legal battle to remain in Britain. He was in pain with a swollen liver and spleen caused by leukemia. HOARDED PILLS? One British newspaper" spec- ulated that Soblen had managed to hoard drugs doled out to him by Brixton prison doctors treat- ing him. It said he might have pretended to swallow pills but concealed them under his ton- gue, him from a prison hospital to airport where he was to board a plane for return to U.S. (AP Wirephoto via radio from London) | 1