Oshawa Times (1958-), 11 Oct 1962, p. 1

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WEATHER REPORT Variable cloudiness with a few 'showers or thundershowers be- ginning late tonight and Friday, Ghe Oshawa Canes = Aptrcrread oe Ennion Stone Sm feat Stes era Te Ottawa and for payment of Postage in THOUGHT FOR TODAY Many an old maid wishes she had married before she was old enough to know better. TWENTY-FOUR PAGES Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1962 FIGHTER, AIRLINER | War Rages | On Border Of Yemen northern borders and was work CAIRO (Reuters)--Fierce bat- tles were reported raging: along the borders of Yemen today in the wake of other reports say- ing the new Yemeni republican government idered itself at war with neighboring Saudi Arabia. All Cairo newspapers carried reports describing "ferocious" battles along the frontiers be- tween Yemeni revolutionary fotces and "forces of aggres- sion." The reports, from the semi- official Egyptian Middle East news agency correspondent in the Yemeni capital of San'a, said latest information indicated King Saud of Saudi Arabia had sent regular forces to the Negotiation Hits Snag In Cuba HAVANA (AP) Negotia- tions hit a snag Wednesday night and the release of 1,113 Cuban invasion prisoners was delayed again. But Prime Min- ister Fidel Castro planned fur- ther talks with negotiator James B. Donovan, poss"biy later today or Friday. The talks between Castro and the New York lawyer were to have ended Wednesday night. But after the two met for four hours in the presidential palace, a spokesman for the Cuban prisoners' families committee said: "Certain points have to be re- vised and this will take two or! three further meetings." f all arms in the south, : Some reports Wednesday said royalist forces had _ over- whelmed a garrison of 500 rev- olutionary troops defending ajj border fort. port from the Middle East news agency early today saying the revolt - torn Yemeni republic): considered itself at war with]: Saudi Arabia, which it said had massed troops on the Yemeni Yemen. The report from the Yemeni): capital of San'a quoted army); }man E] Baidany as saying: | "Such action is considered as) republic of Yemen. The Yemeni itself in a state of war with Saudi Arabia." The report came as Amman radio in Jordan said forces loyal to the Yemen royal house, top- pled in an army coup last month, had overwhelmed revo- lutionary defenders at Maarab and captured three Soviet of- ficers who were with a relie detachment supervising the de- fence of the fortress. The broadcast said 54 of the 500 defenders were killed and the rest surrendered while the royalist forces suffered only two dead, Amman radio also said ad- vance royalist units had set fire to a suburb of the Red Sea port of Hodeida and cut off its elec-| tricity prior to occupying the} city. Move Awaited To Avert Big u ja ing desperately to concentrate! i border and smuggled arms into r an act of aggression against the| _ government therefore considers} : council | note Cairo radio broadcast a re-|) -- commander-in-chief Abdul Rah-| | POPE PRAYS FOR SUCCESS OF COUNCIL nity. Church bells pealed. out|Visibly moved by his enthusi- as|astic reception. - cross this historic city TORONTO (CP) --Gambler Max Bluestein told the royal commission on crime today he could not remember how much a money he made from book- making in 1960 or whether he other than his own. : Bluestein was afflicted with | persistent loss of memory as 'Christian Unity Need Stressed By Pontiff VATICAN CITY (Reuters) --)was delivered after he was car-|acted in the name of all the \The Vatican's first ecumenical) ried into the basilica on his port-|council fathers, The ceremony in nearly a century|able throne amid an outburst of opened here today with a key-japplause and shouts of "long speech by Pope John/live the Pope." The Pope, wear- jstressing the need for active/ing a flowing heavily-embroid- measures to promote Christianjered white cape with a gem- \Bherewe 4...ung to indic HORS Mg hea due |more than 2,500 Catholic church leaders assembled in Saint Pe- claim of Cuban exiles that they raided the north coast port of Isabella de Sagua Monday and killed 20 persons. There has been no confirma- tlon of the raid or any comment on the exiles' claim in Havana.| OFFERS TO FLY As the negotiations dragged| on, informants in Havana said Pan American Airways has of- fered to fly the prisoners to Miami as soon as an agreement lead from the federal govern- ment was awaited today to get talks aimed at averting a train- stopping strike of 6,000 CPR trainmen back on the track. the contract demands of the trainmen before their Oct. strike deadline collapsed Wed- nesday after one brief meeting.) Railway Strike MONTREAL (CP) -- Some r Negotiations aimed at settling! 29 In an official statement, CPR} Vice - President R. A. Emer son said he "assumes" the fed-| eral government will intervene. He said federal Labor Minis- is reached. | The prisoners were captured) in the Bay of Pigs invasion in April of 1961. Castro originally ; ter Starr has been informed of|' asked $62,000,000 in cash for the release of all those captured, |*'¢ breakdown and added that, jtaking into atcoun | tions, needs and opportunities Of |), eligious splendor. They were summoned by the| 00 followers. The 80-year-old pontiff told) the churchmen the council was/complished the great mystery of designed' to state once again|that unity which Jesus Christ so |"'the continuity of church téach-| ardently prayed of the Heav- he modern age." The pontiff's inaugural speech! pi ctoric meeting although at no| ter's Basilica amid a blaze of} Pope to the 21st council of the] church--and the second in the! Vatican--with the task of map- ping the future of the R »man| Catholic Church and its 590,000 jing, to present it in excptional| eniy Father on the eve of His form to all men of our time,! -acrifice," t the devia-| "|Catholic church "regards it as|aiccretion or measure." lasted only a few minutes. Mass also was celebrated be- fore the Pope's speech. It ended with. the bishops exchanging embraces of peace and the Pop giving his benediction. The Pope's message was one lof hope and compassion, He |said he disagreed with proph- ets of gloom, "who are always forecastivg disaster, as though the end of the world was at hand." He said "we sometimes have to listen, much to our regret, to voices of persons who, though burning with zeal and not en- studded mitre on his head, was ag nah MAIN THEME The statement of Christian junity in 'his 5,100-word speech istruck the underlying theme of \the council, which is being at- tended by hundreds of observ- jers from other Christian chur- ches, mainly Protestant. | Speaking in Latin he said the commission questioners sought to cut through a tangle of his financial affairs up to the time he says he gave up a profes- sional gambling operation two years ago. He referred most questions about his earnings to the in- come tax department and had difficulty remembering what jobs he has had in the last couple of years. "T've been in a fog since I got slugged," said the gambler, who was savagely beaten in a men last year. Before he began testimony, Bluestein told the commission "J don't feel too good" and asked for a chair. He had stood mony Wednesday. CAN'T REMEMBER Under sharp questioning from commission counsel Roland F. Wilson, Bluestein insisted he could not come near estimating his gambling earnings in 1960, a year in which he estimated Wednesday the turnover. from his bookmaking operations was more than $10,000 a day. "T don't know," he said. "The income tax department has the figures. I don't have a clue. You are putting me up against the wall to say something I dowed with too much sense*of don't remember." her duty to actively take meas- ures so that there may be ac- HEES VERIFIES Canada Parts To He regretted many «church aders from Communist-ruled |nations were absent from the| . : jalthough no further talks are Relatives or friends have arranged with representatives paid for the release of a few h i captives, and 60 sick or wounded Pimen EUG CPR gerne prisoners were returned to Mi- are ready to meet with ami last April. junion again in Ottawa or any- where else. Two union vice - presidents, |William Kelly of Ottawa and Gordon Gale of Winnipeg, also said they are ready to go back jinto negotiations. Informed sources in Washing- ton say the U.S. government will pay for a shipment of about $13,000,000 in' medicine and food we if the prisoners are released, ; Any possibility that the CPR Funds raised by friends and might try to continae operating relatives of the captives in theltrains over at least part of its United States and Latin Amer 117,000-mile network was rubbed ica presumably will make up/out Wednesday when Mr, Emer- the remainder of the ransom|son said a walkout by the train-| demanded by Castro for their|men would immediately stop all , Speaking Results YOU'LL FIND INSIDE... | Oshawa Stamp Club : Show Opens Friday Page 13 |imprisond for their loyalty to| automotive parts to behind the Simcoe Hall Winter Program Announced Page Uniforms Proposed For Park Attendants .. Public -. Page Senior 'Chest' Two Clerks Said Better Than Council Page 13 | - Page 3 /als and patriarchs. Each kissed|department "is aware that au- 13 4 time did he explicitly mention |the word "Communist." | "We confess," he said, "that, we feel most lively sorrow be-| f cause many bishops who are solan old sore point with the dear to us today make us feel|United States, now includes their absence because they are|shipments of Canadian - made OTTAWA (CP) -- Canadian trade with Communist China, Christ, or kept away by other|bamboo curtain. |impediments." Trade Minister Hees, replying Before his speech, the Pope|to a question in the Commons was approached by the cardin-|Wednesday, disclosed that his his hand marking their obedi-|tomotive parts, wholly manu- ence, factured in Canada by vari- After the cardinals, it was the|ous automotive manufacturers, turn of two archbishops andjhave been exported to the |\two bishops representing about | People's Republic of China in |2,200 of their number attending | limited quantities. release. | traffie. the council. Some 65 Canadian) He added that automotive Public Hydro Backed In Quebec Campaign bishops are attending. parts are not covered by any They bowed deeply before the|item in Canada's export control steps of the pontiff's throne and/list and are considered "legiti- kissed his right knee while re-/mate export business for Cana- maining standing. dian traders." Two abbots and two superiors} Both Mr. Hees and depart- of religious orders genuflected|ment offfcials, however, de- tcfore walking up the steps of|clined to give any details of the the throne and kissing the| transactions or identify the com- Pope's foot while kneeling. panies concerned. Officials said QUEBEC (CP) -- Opposition|to his organizers to take nojridiculous." 1 from ities |Private power companies and|Quebec and in any case broad- jaccused Premier Lesage's cast regulations forbade setting He said Mr. Johnson Leader Daniel Johnson says he campaign contributions tends to believe that the people| of Quebec favor public owner- ship of electricity production. party of accepting them. Mr. Johnson made the state- ment Wednesday in Montreal CAMPAIGNS AT HOME as he pressed his election cam-|, MT. Lesage spent There were no facil for private networks one up. wants to use the Montreal sta- tions alone "so that the people a quieter) of Quebec can't hear him." in At the last ecumenical. coun- cil that opened here in 1869, the entire assembly of 803 council fathers advanced and rendered obdience to Pope Pius IX in- dividually. The process took export permits were kept con- fidential by law like income tax returns. The question of the export of truck parts to Red China arose out of a story in the Toronto more than seven hours. |Telegram. It said Chrysler Cor- The eight prelates who rend-| poration Limited of Windsor had ered obedience to Pop Johnibeen issued export permits to Chin ship about $62,000 worth of truck parts, said to be for non- military vehicles bought by the Nationalist Chinese government for use. on the Burma Road about 20 years ago. SEEKS COMMONS ANSWER In the Commons J. R Gar- land, Liberal member for Nip- issing, asked Mr. Hees to con- firm or deny whether such an export permit had been issued but did not mention Chrysler by name. From Windsor and _ Detroit came prompt denials by the Chrysler Corporation that its Canadian subsidiary planned to ship the reported $62,000 truck part order to China. "We categorically ¢eny that we have asked for any permit to sell to any Communist coun- try or that we would ever sell to any Communist country," the parent company said in a statement issued in Detroit. A company spokesman in Windsor said Chrysler of Can-} ada has never applied for or obtained a permit for the export of any truck parts either to China or any other Communist country. In Washington, Mrs: Margaret Schwartz of the U.S. treasury department's foreign assets con- Memory Loss Hits Bluestein had bank accounts in names Toronto nightclub by several) through three hours of testi-| Mr. Justice W. D. Roach, the commissioner, tried unsuccess- fully to get Bluestein to say whether he had disguised bank accounts during the same year. "I don't believe I did," the gambler said. |. "If you did, you would re- member?" the commissioner said. "Perhaps I would and per- haps I wouldn't," Bluestein said. IS DELINQUENT When the questioning turned COLLIDE KILLING 2 Five Injured As Jet Hits TCA Plane BAGOTVILLE, Que (CP) -- An airline stewardess and a passenger were killed when an RCAF jet fighter sliced into the > tail section of.a TCA Viscount airliner. Five other passengers were injured, two of them se- g viously. CECILE MARIA KELLER jto Bluestein's 1961 income, he told the commission he had not yet filed his income tax returns for that year. He estimated Wednesday he made about $2,000 gambling and $28,000 from various non-gambl- ing enterprises. Cuts In Export Sale Of Wheat Predicted MONTREAL (CP) -- Canada will have a reduction in exports |of wheat and flour in this crop year, George H. Mclvor, pres- ident of Robin Hood Flour Mills, said today, The extent of the reduction will depend largely on _ the LORRAINE POVEY The RCAF Voodoo, taking off Wednesday for a routine night exercise, piled into the Viscount as the commercial plane landed at the RCAF base: 100 miles north of Quebec City. Aboard the Viscount were a crew of four and 15 passengers. The dead stewardess was identified as Cecile Maria Kel- ler, 24, a native of Rorschach, Switzerland, who had served with TCA for 15 months. The Passenger, Joseph Houle Mont- real, died in hospital several hours after the crash. 4 TCA said the Viscount was taxiing after landing and had just turned at an intersection of the runway when the Voodoo struck it by the rear door and continued on, struggling to gain altitude. Both members of the Voodoo was not injured. His navigator, R. §. Jeffriés of the London, Ont., area, broke an ankle. Their plane crashed and burned amount of wheat bought by Red China during the crop year, he told 1,000 representatives of Ca- nadian industry, labor and goy- ernment at a one-day Canadian meeting of the National Indus- British Tories _ Approve Moves trial Conference Board, a U.S. research organization. Mr. MclIvor aid the reduction }would be caused by increased | crops in importing countries and lin most exporting countries, |thus reducing world demand for |wheat and flour. He was speaking in a panel discussion of leading Canadian executives on economic pros- pects of their industries. J. D. Barrington, president of McIntyre Porcupine Mines Ltd., said expanded exports to Eu- rope and revenues from new mines should more than offset normal depletion of resources and a certain loss in export sales of uranium. But the outlook must be con- sidered speculative,.he said, as |more than 80 per cent of Ca- nadian metal production is bought by foreign customers. "This is a particulatly vital factor in view of the current world surplus of productive ca- pacity over consumption for all major metals, and the U.S. stockpile .of surplusses." D, S. Holbrook, president of Algoma Steel Corporation Ltd., said demand in Canada and in the export market indicates a high fourth quarter output for the steel industry. Rumor Denied By Smythe TORONTO (CP)--Hockey cir cles started buzzing again today with a report that Toronto Maple Leafs have decided to sell star left winger Frank Ma- for $1,000,000. The report, emanating from Mahovlich Sale|; hovlich to Chicago Black Hawks|* For EEC Entry LLANDUDNO, Wales (Reut- ers) -- The Conservative party annual conference' today ap- proved. by an overwhelming majority the progress: made in negotiations for Britain's entry into the European Common Market. It approved a resolution wel- coming the progress of negotia- tions and expressed confidence in the government's -determina- tion to findjagequate safeguards for Commonwealth and Europ- ean free trade area commerce. An anti - Market amendment was overwhelmingly defeated by a show of hands, Passionate pro - European speeches by Deputy Prime Min- ister Richard A. Butler and Lord Privy Seal Edward Heath gained the victory for the gov- ernment. a mile away. The pilot and page of the alers F Tt Unies, oe gy ie ipeonet | ee ardess, rraine Joyce Povey of Medicine Hat, Alta., suffered a broken leg and scalp wounds. ~~Phe\Hotel . Dieu hospital at nearby Chicoutimi admitted ail Viscount - passengers and the TCA crew for observation. i Listed as injured were D. Grant of Toronto, G. Comeau of Chicoutimi, T. Landers of Sept-lles, Que.,.T. Downés and M. Smith, both of, Montreal. Two of the injured were oper- ated on immediately. In hospital for observation were nine other passengers, all from Quebec province. The viscount was on a reg- ular flight from Sept - Iles to Montreal when the collision oc- curred. Having no airport at Chicoutimi, TCA uses the RCAF base as a stop to pick up and deplane passengers. : The Voodoo, also known as the CF-101, is a two-seater all- weather interceptor powered by two jet engines. It carries a pi- lot and a navigator - observer and normally is equipped with rocket armament: trol division said she would in- vestigate the report. Even though it had been denied, che wanted to know the facts. The United States forbids its paign in two cities -- Montreal|4@y campaigning in his home i i i . = a ™ day. riding of Quebec West, He acl pate fer Ma Jeno on ea remier Jean Lesage has) |he can "make him say yes or| staked the life of his Liberal] ck out of a proposed face-| no to the question of 'ations ' ; to-face television debate sched-\"° ,.° government on the issue of pub- ' «1,| ization. lie ownership of private hydro. uled for Nov. 11 and said he will| electric companion He fos in- debate any subject Mr. John-\CITES HIS VIEW sisted that'a vote for Mr. John-|0", Wants except one--the re-| In Montreal, Mr. Johnson had| son's Union Nationale party ig| Port. of the Salvas royal com-|said he didn't want the debate| a vote against the expropriation) ™/8S10" Which investigated cor-|to deal strictly with public own-| of private 'power. ruption under the former Union| ership, which he insists is not Said Mr 'TohAdon egg ae uae |the issue. He said he wanted to re . aarugeede : | r, Lesage said the CBC had! discuss: | number of tires were stolen. No estimate has been given shies s tectee.t _ proposed Nov. 11 -- three days) 1. The sale of the Crown:| of the total amount of money taken. tionalization." His party's pro- before the provincial election--| owned gas distribution network) gram calls for expropriation of Plant Caretaker Charged With Arson stl tp tl jac gri Quebec Hydro to the priv-| joie ar je had accepted butiately - owned Quebec Natural aun 6 ieee ie he it seems that it 'no longer suits! Gas Company; GUELPH (CP) -- A plant. caretaker charged with arson the others y we beers '. : 2. Mr. Lesage's part in the) has been remanded for further mental ge ager agi - ay r. Johnson had said earlier)Trans_- Canada Pipeline Com-| pre-sentence report. John Robert Burns, 35, of Guelph, He said he has given orders|in Montreal he wants an ear-|pany deal that toppled the last] pleaded not guilty Wednesday but was convicted of setting lier meeting, and wants it|Liberal federal government, in| fire to the plant where he. was employed. { broadcast on both French and! which Mr. Lesage was minister} CITY EMERGENCY English networks. jof Northern Affairs and Na-| PHONE NUMBERS He said he had been in touch) tional Resources; | POLICE 725-1133 i FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 | Toronto radio station CKFH, was promptly denied by Staf- ford Smythe, president of Maple Leaf Gardens Limited who last oe { ) J's! Saturday rejected the Hawks'|® citizens from trading with China) $1,000,000 cheque following an\ii and generally extends this ban| offer made the night before at to subsidiaries of U.S. firms,!a downtown Toronto hotel, while Canada allows trade with) Joe Morgan, sports director of Cuba in all but strategic ma-|CKFH, said in a broadcast that terials. ; __|the Leafs will accept the offer} At various times, especially in| made for Mahovlich's services 1958 when it was reported that) by Hawk owner Jim Norris. China wanted to buy 1,000 cars| "The Leafs have. decided to from Ford of Canada, this pol-|take the money," Morgan said. icy difference has given rise to|"'Norris will be notified this difficulties between Canada and/morning that the Leafs have the U.S. called his bluff." In the 1958 case, in which it) "This is all news to. me," was reported that the U.S. par-|Smythe said. "I know nothing ent' company forbade any ne-| about it." 3 gotiations by its Canadian sub-| When Norris made his week- sidiary because of U.S. trading|end bid Smythe termed it a laws, the problem was finally| publicity stunt. ironed out in talks between; The Leafs and Hawks clashed Prime Minister Diefenbaker andjin Chicago Wednesday as then President Eisenhower. The/the National Hockey League| U.S. agreed to make an excep-|launched its 1962-63 campaign. tion in the case of Canadian sub.) The Leafs won 3-1. sidiaries of American com-| In an interview after the panies, treating each case on its|s*yme, Norris said his offer "is merits. wil open." cused Mr. Johnson of trying to LATE NEWS FLASHES Thieves Get Large Sum Of Money GALT (CP) -- Thieves walked away with a large sum of money when they blew a safe at Sherk Sale and Service garage at Ayr, near Galt, during the night. In addition a 1957 model car, a TV set, radio, power chain saw and a DRIVER RESCUED Transport driver Stewart) truck, carrying 'acid, was i waclennn Cae eee collision with another trans- roe tS een onto sree'. | port om Highway 502, about er after being rescued from | *. : the cab of his truck where he | SiX miles west of Napanee, Ont. Youth Banned From Operating Boats NEWMARKET, Ont. (CP) -- The driver of a powerboat that rammed a boatload of fishermen on Lake Simcoe in | August has been barred by court order from operating a boat anywhere in Canada for a year, Paul Loftquist, 18, of Toronto also was fined $10 with an alternative of 15 days in jail on conxiction for operating a boat in a dangerous manner. 3 television stations in the hope|since the Liberal take-over of _that a provincial network could! June, 1960. | be set up by them. He said one) 4, Nationalization of electric-| station had accepted, suggest-jity, mining and pulp. | ing Nov. 4. ,| 5. The Salvas royal commis-| Said Mr. Lesage: "Absolutely! sion 'inquiry. | |with Montreal's two private] 3. Quebec's administration| HOSPITAL 723-2211 was trapped it oe than an hour yesterday. '.MacDonald's --CP Witeohot

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