Oshawa Times (1958-), 8 Sep 1962, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY Remember when Johnny used to ask for the garage keys -- to get the lawn mower? : FRG ARG GRE I LN FAL GLENN OA ALAS AT I he Os a Sime ' WEATHER REPORT Sunday mainly cloudy with scat- tered showers. Winds southerly. at 15 to 25 miles per hour. Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy VOL. 91 -- NO. 210 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1962 Authorized os Second Class Mail Post Office Ottawa irtment and for payment of Postage in le TWENTY BEAR ON LOOSE IN PORTLAND | A bear blundered into Port-} residential district. A small{ runs away, but others en land today and caused} group -- hundreds turned out | without apparent mounting excitement as he | later -- watches as the bear | Police later killed the bear. | Toamed 244 hours through a/| crosses a street, One man | ae Wirephoto | : | Kennedy Told | Red Arms In Cuba (ns. 0 Spur US. Call-Up Red Missiles _ ST. PETERSBURG, Fia,) REDS THREATEN WES1 WITH MONSTER BOMB Soblen On Mend, 'Still Unconscious | LONDON -- Dr. Robert Sob. 'len showed signs of improve-|tation order against him. ment today as he lay in a coma 48 hours after taking an over- portation to the United States. His doctor reported Soblen's ~~ |heart was stronger, his blood'tion. pressure back to normal and to carry out the British depor-| | Barnes. said -Soblen's leuke-) mia apparently has not been af-| # concern. | dose of barbiturates to evade de-|fected by the overdose and he) is being administered antibiotic drugs to prevent any lung infec. | "He is being fed intrave-) his coma lessened, with 'no lung;nously with glucose and he is| infection or worsening of his in. having- antibiotic drugs injected] curable leukemia. Dr. C, G. Barnes, the:consult-| ant in charge of Soblen at Hill-| ingdon Hospital, said the 61- year-old fugitive spy has not recovered consciousness "even momentarily" but "the fact } intramuscularly to prevent in- fection of the lungs. | "There is no sign of infection) e* 'he Ipngs at the moment.) His blood pressure fell yester-} day as his heart showed signs) of strain. It has now risen to By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER of unexpected developments in (AP) -- Emerson Rupert, Re-| that he is in a lessening degree /normal levels. WASHINGTON (AP) -- Con-|the Cuban situation. gressional leaders predict speedy approval of President/and the far greater danger, ac-| ber general elections, sent a| Kennedy's request for standby) cording to these informants, lies| telegram to President Kennedy| power to call 150,000 military/in Berlin, where there has been|Ftiday saying Florida was in publican opponent of Senator|of coma makes us more hope-| The more serious problem! "¢orge Smathers in the Novem-|ful he is going to regain con-| condition and his -heart shows | signs of improvement also. | sciousness," He added he did not think Sob- len could be moved within 48 "It is an improvement in his Soblen, facing life imprison- ment in the United States for reservists to active duty if nec-ja steady buildup of East-West| danger from more than 200 Rus-/hours of regaining conscious-| spying for Russia, was watched sian missiles on Cuban soil. essary to deal with a new) tensions. Rupert said in the telegram| East-West crisis, | Kennedy, State Secretary Primary concern in high offi-|/Rusk and Defence Secretary|that he had talked with many} cial quarters here centres on) McNamara are reported agreed|Cuban refugees in the Miami} the possibility of new Soviet/that it would be important for| area who told him that the mis- moves in Berlin. But officials |the president to have additional| siles are ready for launching in} recognize that Kennedy's fe-/ resources of military authority.|underground silos on military | quest also may be regarded in| The new authority would run| bases in Cuba. | Moscow and Havana a8 & 80-/from the time Congress ad-| He pinpointed the bases as slow warning for the military) journs, now expected some time|San Antonio, Pinar del Rie| g "S| next month, until next Feb. 28,/province, Colombia Aerodrome! The pr sent his req) which would be about two/near Havana, Cayo Largo, e (| buildup in Cuba. to Congress Frday without any! months after the next session|maguay and Cienga Zapata in prior public hints of such ac-|heging * prs som eevinta'" tion, although the White House{-------- _______ $$$ Anti-Castro Leader Aims At Red Ships CARACAS, Venezuela (AP)-- The leader of anti-Castro Cu bans who shelled Havana last month said Friday his group is |holding her husband's hand, |kissing him and trying to coax {him to awareness. Refugees Arrive |ness, ruling out any early bidjover during the night by _his| wife at 'Hillingdon Hospital,| where he 1 as taken Thursday} after swall*wing drugs while being taken to nearby Londen jairport to be put aboard a plane. | Mrs. Soblen spent five HOUEh at. the spy's bedside es 4 | MOSCOW (AP) -- The Soviet Union through its official army jnewspaper Krasnaya Zvesda (Red Star) said today it would drop 100-megaton bombs in bases in England, Germany, Ja- pan or elsewhere in case of a |war with the United States. | | "The might of the Soviets Soviet Article = Cautions West -- drawn into NATO, CENTO and other aif of the danger created -by.- tl American military bases, : | why it is necessary for tirelessly to try to obtain thelr liquidation." hy: SEATO, | The story was accompanied|ion is well known, Global | by a map of the world showing | distribution of U.S. bases, to-/ jother rockets are able 10° |liver nuclear warheads. 'up 4 | gether with their m | tential, A digest of the article was carried by Tass news agency in 'its foreign service but made no mention of the threat of bomb- jing bases in Allied countries with the monster bombs. Red Star in its much longer article, said: | "Humaness and concern for | the destinites of all mankind is characteristic of the Soviet | govérnment and the Commun- ist' party. It is exactly because lof this that we are making tre- mendous efforts to explain to the peoples of the world. espe- | cially the people who have been Aortic Valve | Transplanted Y To N.Z. Girl power po- 1 gat to any point ¢ | the globe. They can strike wi jever number of objectives: necessary including also |ican bases of aggression." Boy Lives With Bullet In Brain SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (APS Donal Fligor Jr., 14, who hast bullet buried four. inches .in brain, can return to school. day--but he's got to lead a q life from now on, says the-d or. 4 Today, some five weeks, the dark-haired boy was dentally hit by a .22-calibre ' tol bullet, Donal's recovery' pronounced as. nearly. plete as can be expected. ° be int he seventh grade at ior high school. é Dr. John Meagher, a mi surgeon credited : with . sa said the plan was discussed with Republican and Democra- tic congressional leaders when | preparing to launch sea attacks: In Gold Mountain BEATINGS ANNOY JUDGE they met with the President Tuesday for a fill-in on Cuba. This tie-in with Cuba quickly created speculation that Ken- nedy and his advisers may be more worried than they have appeared to be about the recent substantal deliveries of Soviet arms to the Castro regime. , Informed officials said this was not the case, although they said Kennedy would like to have the standby power in the event International CMU Attackers Called Jackals TORONTO (CP)--Speeds of more than 100 miles an hour re-! sulted last May when a car) bearing two men from one) union fled from two others ear-|Maritime Union and the sIu,,answer to a Soviet announce- rying rival union members, the) federal shipping inquiry heard) Friday. before a report is made on the! Great Lakes-St. Lawrence Sea- way labor trouble spawned by| rivalry between the Canadian The former was sponsored by the Canadian Labo rCongress to break the maverick SIU, ousted jon Communst-bloc, ships in Cot ban waters. | Juan Manuel Salvat told a) press conference} | "Any Communist flagged! have 'arrived here by air to} ship, regardless of nationality, | sta seen in Cuban territorial waters will be regarded as a military target and will be attacked without previous warning." Salvat and members of the Students Revolutionary Direc- torate came to Caracas from Miami to issue what they called the Caracas Declaration as an ment of military aid to Cuba. TORONTO (CP)--Eight refu- gees 'from Communist China rt & new life in the "gold| _Oshawa's first citizen, Col. mountain," their term for North) America. | The group is the fifth to fly! from Hong Kong since Prime) Minister Diefenbaker opened the} door to 100 refugee families in} May. There now are 52 families/ in Canada. } Ng King Hung, 23, who fled) Canton last May, said life in| China is like "living in a bird's} ceiving the congratulations and best. wishes of hisvaritiny friends on the celebration of his 91st birthday. No special Hoffa Bounces He said his organization now has 300 youths active and pre-| cage." ee "You are just a little birdie) doing what your masters. tell JFK's Brother R. S, McLaughlin is today re- | CELEBRATING BIRTHDAY events are planned as 'Mfr. Sain" plays host ata family | gathefing to be attended by his four daughters and two sons-inlaws. The Oshawa Times joins with its readers in extending its best wishes. AUCKLAND (Reuters) -- A' Donal's, wife, gave: his, heart operafion involving the;@ check-up at: Children's Hos #- transplant of an aortic valve|tal in Columbus. Donal: was; from .a dead person, has 'saved| the: hospital 16 days--10 of |the life: of a. 14-year-old New)|Wwhile untonscious; -- foli Zealand girl. the accident Aug.:3. The operation, believed to be} Te the first of its kind in the ~-- Fl ' i 4 | Flash In Sky :: Lights Halifax! Trade Bloc Entry | Harkness, whose aortic valve has been infected by spinal me-; | ningitis. | HALIFAX (CP)=A 'flash: ip the sky, described variously: *conelike,"' "'ball-shaped'"' ' i-colored", « was. .reporti i wide Sections. of: the Ma! t y today. 4 hs RCAF headquarters. here sumably ready to take part in| Secretary-Treasurer Jim Todd|from the CLC in 1960 for mis- hit-and-run raids on Cuba. | From Office? Snubbed By Hees you to do." Bomb Testing Informer Urged LONDON (AP) -- The Pug- wash Conference scientists, in- cluding delegates from both of the Canadian Maritime Union| conduct. (CLC) said he and a companion| CLC witnesses the last week), cars which attempted to box in|¢xPeriences in the SIU before the Todd car on Highway 400/Joining the CMU and about a| er- Mr. Todd said he was slowed|Sonnel this last spring. _ | ai East and West, came up Friday|to a speed of 30 miles an hour--|,,,!"-_ Justice Norris Friday) To Block Anaees ; > jn |Jackals ara said they were cow- bomb testing: An automatic/broke away from the box-in ardly and "perte | were tailed by the two other) have been testifying about their! May 10. series of attacks on CMU p with their own answer to secret|he had been going 80--before he|#Xened the attacks to that of seismic station controlled by an|manoeuvre and sped on to call international authority. |police who detained four mem-| The idea is to be sent to the| bers of the Seafarers Interna- heads of state of the big powers. tional Union of Canada (Ind:).| The scientists, drawn from 35; One driver was SIU Vice-| countries, gave news of their| president Paul Gagne, Mr. Todd) proposal at the end of their|said, from Thorold, Ont., and 10th conference seeking ways to/the other was official John Ja-| unentified Indian \3 : make science Pe ad and not/cobson of Toronto. 55, died in hospital Friday] - we said he rat to a curse to ma . - . | fre ford 'hive.| understan e origin of' infor- Their answer to the problem SNARLS THREAT ee ack eee room fang mation in a Toronto Telegram of checking secret nuclear wea-| No charges have been laid) outskirts of | this village. 5|story saying Canadian maritime igorical assurance" that the {Canadian Labor Congress 'of af- \filiates plans no action to close Unknown Indian Killed In Crash | Siten" the teaeral 'shipping n- WHEATLEY 'p)_An|quiry. Friday by CLC counsel ed. Ind a ged. oben |Maurice Wright. CIC Denies Plan ctly shocking."| moRoNnTO (CP) -- A "cate-feral Workers (CLC) --. which} eisreas | bargains workers--closed the passage to retaliate' against American hap assment of ships mannid by the Canadian Maritime Union, a CIC affiliate formed pressly to crush the controver- MIAMI, Fal. (AP) -- The Miami News says Teamsters) OTTAWA (CP)--It would not Said Carl A. Pollock, Union President James Hoffalbe to Canada's advantage to| president of the Canadian told members of a recently or-|take out membership in any of) Manufacturers' Association and ganized Miami local he once/the free-trade areas that have) Dominion Electrohome: threw Robert Kennedy out of/been suggested, Trade Minister| 'The' existing burdensome tax his office. |Hees said Friday. |structure is a serious drag on The News says Hoffa made} When Canadian membershipjeconomic growth and a deter- the claim during a speech|in some bloc akin to the Euro-|rent to job-creating investment |Thursday night to 200 members/nean Common Market is pro-|and risk-taking. .. ." of Local 100), Communications} posed, ihe told an industrial] Mr, Pollock also bad some Workers of America. | jexpansion conference, the ideal advice for labor. Hoffa' said the incident hap-|should be studied thoroughly! "Labor must be convinced jPened during the Senate rackets/and not treated as 'a mere] that at this stage of our national jcommittee investigation Offround phrase thal rolls easily|development wage patity with |Hoffa's activities. Kennedy, now] og a platform." Ithe U.S. ts neither a practice? U.S. attorney - general, was the) 44, ' : | propbaRion Peer A rence committee's special counsel. is department had carefully | Proposition nor a realistic goal. Hoffa was quoted as describ- studied the question and there|To insist upon it is to invite ' Sik |has yet to come to light a net |industrial disaster." Seaway cana. for seaway ex- sial: Seafarers international Union of Canada (Ind.). | it had received no report: of : | object. | Reports indicated it was seen |most clearly at Springhill; @ | northern Nova Scotia coal min. /ing town, 1s | A report from Prince, Bdwaid: Island said the flash was' b! ish. In Moncton, ..B., it wa | described as white; At Spritig- hill, residents said it. chan, | color, It was also seen at § | John, N.B, An RCAF spokesman said a people were in the main' st: lof Springhill 'when this -th lit up the whole town. It wis | like daylight. It changed: colors |... every color of the- rainbow. | Then it exploded and-the smoke | stayed in the sky. It. was. SH lover in a few seconds:". --~ - The SIU is supported in ing Kennedy as a "slick, edu-| ; c . advantage to Canada as a whole|------- American ports by the long- : e : cated youngster' who thought ahs a ; he could outfight Hoffa. jin the joining of any of these oy pon tests--a major obstacle at disarmament talks in Geneva-- involves use of an automatic seismic station sealed by an in- ternational " authority into a| black box. It would be sealed in such a way that any tam- pering could be easily dis- covered and then placed. in agreed numbers in host coun- tries. from the incident. Testimony was that one of the four SIU men struck his face close to Mr. Todd and snarled: "I just want to'know you good be- cause we're going to get you." miles southwest of Chatham. He was a passenger in the car of a local farmer, Clifford Preston. The car crashed into a ditch when Preston lost control. | Preston is in satisfactory con- unions are threatening to close the seaway again. This would be as a counter to a palnned boycott by the In- ternational Longshoremen's As- sociation of Canadian ships in The inquiry under Mr. Jus-/ dition with a fractured left|United States ports, the news- tice T. G, Norris of British Col-| umbia completed its third week! Friday and appears to have an-| other eight or nine weeks ahead| shoulder. Preston had picked up the In- dian at the local employment ex- change. |paper says. | For 36 hours beginning July /1 the Canadian Brotherhood of |Railway, Transport and Gen- shoremen and other unions. The story was raised at Fri- day's session of the inquiry into Great Lakes labor problems by counsel L. A. Couture of the St. Lawrence Seaway Authority. He said that any step to close the seaway "or any intimitation of any such step .. . would con- stitute a very serious trans- Former Officer gression' of the international The Teamsters president did not elaborate. 'Two Gamblers a treaty between Canada and the Kept In J ail 'UNION CLAIMS DETECTIVES DRIVING TRUCKS Strike Violence Flares HAMILTON (CP)--A_ dispute|ported that union and company|tended that settlement was be-;trucks and strikers, the com- bubbling off and on for eight|were apart on some 25 separatéling held up by Oliver Hodges,| pany obtained a Supreme Court months .is behind this week'sjissues -- including the big one|Canadian head of the Ceramic|injunction - limiting spickets to strike violence at the big Ham-jof wages -- and called on he| Workers. iiton plani of Dominion Glass) Company. disputants to get into direct negotiations and modify "rigid'"'| cessfully to have a negotiation|Utside t= injunction territory. The company sought unsuc- "The company and Local 208/positions taken before the/session called with Hodges ex-| of the United Glass and) Ceramic Workers of North America (CLC) have been try-junilaterally -- put a wage in-/the company announced an ing vainly to negotiate a con-jcrease into effect, but the union) ejpht : ' and|increase for Aug. 3, with an-|ime scuffles, and throwing of a conciliation board threw upjcalled the strike Aug. 18. Some!other four cents to come in ajTocks and tomatoes. Thirteen its hands more than two months/1,100 employees are involved in|year -- a move the union|Sttikers have been arrested. tract since last December, and; ago. At that time, the board re- CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE. DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 a board. The company eventually-and called it unsatisfactory one of Canada's largest plants making glass containers WANTS .A PACKAGE The union demand has been for a package estimated to be worth 42 cents an hour--includ- ing a 22cent wage increase--on a base wage in the previous contract of $1.63 for men and $1.40 for women It claimed that the company refused to bargain in good faith, cluded. | Going direct to the workers,;| | - cents - an + hour wage) promptly declared unac-| ceptable along with fringe im-| provements made by the com-| pany | Initially set for Aug. 20, the; strike actually went into effect! Aug. 18; with the union claim-! ing the deadline was advanced) because the company was rush-| ing out truckloads of material! to beat the shutdown. time GETS INJUNCTION U.S. which covers the seaway} TORONTO (CP)--Two gamb- operation. Jers anda former provincial four at each plant gate. But many strikers milled around Friday an injunction was granted barring any pickets. Vehicles emering or leaving the plant have touched off sev- eral incidents this week involy- There has been 'tension and name - calling, but no injuries. Strikers publicly burned com- pany leaflets drawing attention to the injunction. Hodges ac- cuses the company of provoking the incidents to get evidence to keep the injunction in effect, and the union contends it is un- necessarily harsh. Another union claim is that private in-| vestigators employed by a Ham.) ilton agency are used as truck and the. company in turn con-! Following incidents involving/drivers. Mr Justice T. G .Norris of|police constable. will remain in British Columbia, presiding at/Toronto's.Don Jail until the On- the inquiry, said "I wouldn't|tario Court. of. Appeal rules on trouble myself unduly." ltheir conviction. last March on ja charge of conspiracy. ' | Vincent Feeley, Joseph Mc- Oshawa Driver Dermott and former constable |Robert Wright .were free on 1$50,000 bail until. Friday when Cleared In Car lthey surrendered 'themselves linto custody. 4 | The court heard argument on CCl ent eat jtheir behalf Friday but re- \served judgment. Feeley is ST. THOMAS (CP) A | scheduled to appear Monday as coroner's jury investigating an)/a witness before the royal com- accident which took two lives!mission on crime Aug. 5 Friday night recom-| The three men were acquitied mended immediate improve-\of conspiracy to bribe a police ments toa sharp curve on High- officer in June 1961 but. were way 3 six miles west of here.|convicted of. conspiracy to ob- Three-year - old Maureen|tain information illegally from Ewings of Niagara Falls diedjthe same officer, Constable at the scene when her father's|George Scott. car collided with another car; Patrick Hartt, appearing for driven by Nick Kowalchuk, 68,)Wright that it was ' wrong) of Oshawa. for his client to have been tried Mrs. Ewings died later of}twice on substantially the same! injuries. Mr. Ewings is siill in| evidence. He said Crown prose- hospital. jeutor Gordon. Ford refused de- The jury attached no blamejfence counsel application to to Kowalchuk. But jurors saidjhavye both conspiracy charges large signs should be erected|tried at the first. proceeding warning..of the' treacherous} Percy Milligan, special Crown curve until {t can be properly|prosecutor at the second trial, banked or straightened. lappeared for the Crown. | groupings that have been sug:! gested." . | | Canadian businessmen who) advocated taking the 'country into a free-trade grouping were) those whose enterprises would jbenefit from such a move. | The one-day conference, spon-| jsored by the trade department, | jbrought together one of the most impressive arrays of busi- jness talent ever assembled in} ;Canada. Altogether 425 at. \tended, including 160 company lor corporation presidents and) |two dozen board chairmen. (CRITICIZES TAXATION The conference produced! jmany criticisms of the present! jrates of taxation. | Murder Suspect's | Brother Gets Bail TORONTO (CP) -- Bail was set at $7,500 Friday for Alan Eugene Armstrong, 30, charged) |with being an accessory in the} murder of Haliburton bank) manager Eric McConnell last! week, | Armstrong's brother, George] Owen Armstrong, 28, is charged with the murder. | Mr. Justice H. A. Aylen, who} set bail, was told that Alan Armstrong's. widowed mother is} willing to pledge her home for! bail. Alan Armstrong was said) to have been his mother's main support and to have: been eon- tinuously employed for 13 years by A. V. Roe Co. Ltd. and Or-| enda Engines, Ltd. He lives| with his mother. % | | JOHNSON RETURNS HOME Lyndon B Johnson is greeted warmly by from a 15-day goodwill tour six Middle East and Sduthe European countries; Johns said he found .a -friendly- att. mosphere in all the: countries he visited. + Vice president Secretary of State Dean Rusk, right, at Andrews Air Force Base, Md., near Wash- ington, as Johnson returned ' ' y

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