Oshawa Times (1958-), 11 Oct 1962, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thuredey, October 11, 1962 'Bluestein GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN Fears Of By JOHN LeBLANC MURDER ON THE JUNIOR GRIDIRON Oshawa's Hawkéyes of the ruggéd, hard-hitting Junior Football Conference are an exciting team. When they lose, which is frequently, they often go down the hard way in "'cliff-hanger" fashion (trailing by six or seven points in possession on the enemy's four-yard line with 10 seconds to go). The Hawks (a superbly-conditioned crew with an un- flinchable desire to win) are anything but dull -- they have also done a fine job of giving the game a much-needed shot in the arm locally, Oshawa owes them a debt of gratitude (now that they are about to close out their regular schedule next Sunday against Balmy Beach in Toronto). Having made the above acknowledgements, there is another aspect to the Hawkeyes' almost-concluded schedule that is not so rosy, that is causing concern in the ranks of those who dearly love the game. Unless some drastic action is taken without too much delay, the casualty tolls from the Junior Football Conference will soon rival the casualty tolls from some of our greater national battles. There is far too much rough play, gridiron violence and mayhem in the Junior Football Conference today regardless of what coaches, referees or club executives may say to the contrary. SAD STORY OF INVICTUS AC Are these youngsters, many of high school age, and ten- der of limb, too thoroughly indoctrinated in the ways of the pro? Are they being asked to carry too heavy a load? Cana- dians are frequently shocked by stories of brutality and un- necessary slaughter in the bull rings of Spain and Mexico; but is this much different than the brutality too frequently on display in the Junior Football Conference where the sacrificial lamb is never a bull, but often a human. Let's study the case of the Invictus AC who, like the Hawkeyes, help to make-up the JFC circuit: Invictus opened its 1962 schedule in Oshawa in mid- August by edging out a 14-12 victory over the Hawkeyes, 'but it was a costly win -- Herb Geist, their 21-year-old freshman tackle, broke a leg and immediately lapsed into a coma from which he didn't emerge until last week. Heist, a 215- pound business college student, is still unable to talk and there is not the slightest indication as to when he will be released from the New Mount Sinai Hospital, where he has been confined since the Oshawa game. Heist's doctor has made no official statement regarding his injury but an Invictus AC spokesman expressed the belief that he may be suffering from a brain ailment caused when bone marrow from the leg injury got into the blood stream. The Invictus club suffered another loss, one equally as tragic, in a pre-season exhibition tilt in August with the rug- ged Oakville Black Hawks (the Intermediate team facetious- ly suggested as a replacement for the Argos in the Big Four recently when the Scullers were performing well under par)-- Invictus lost Jack Bogie, a 21-year-old defensive end weigh- ing 175 pounds in that tilt. Bogie suffered a serious spine injury and has been paralyzed from the waist down since that game. He has been in St. Michael's Hospital, but will be removed soon to a rest home. Bogie, an apprentice print- er at the Bryan Press in Toronto, was a three-year veteran with the club. A club spokesman described his injury as being "one similar to that suffered by Roy-Campanella, the ex- Dodger catcher," but he said there was a good chance for recovery. ONLY 3 WERE HOSPITALIZED When the Hawkeyes defeated Niagara Falls Ti-Cats 24-8 last September 28 in The Cataract City, there was another grim aspect to the game -- no less than eight of the Ti-Cat players were taken off the field with injuries (some via stretcher). Three of this number were taken to hospital, two with shoulder separations. When the Burlington Braves defeated the Hawkeyes at Kinsmen Stadium 20-15 October 5 one of their players was TORONTO (CP) -- Gambler Max Bluestein told of running a $4,000,000-a-year bookie opera- tion Wednesday but lost his memory when asked if he tried to get a guh-carrying permit in 1958 because he feared the Ma- fia was moving in on Toronto gambling. Before the Ontario royai com- mission. on crime, he said he could not remember reporting to police that there had been a meeting here of members of the crime society from New York, Buffalo, N.Y., Hamilton, Mont- real and "'a big wheel from California." ao Under direct commission questioning apparently based on a hither-to-unpublicized police report, the. Toronto business- man-gambler said that if he did make such a statement he was lying. But he would nut contra- dict it because he could not re- member, Big - money figures were} tossed around the hearing chamber as the commission sought to get at the scope of Bluestein's business, which the stocky former newsboy claimed| |has been legitimate since a 1960; arrest and subsequent convic- jtion for bookmaking at his Lake- \view Club in midtown Toronto. |WORTH 'ROUGHLY' $170,000 | Bluestein, who estimated his |present worth as "roughly" $170,000, laughed when told the trial magistrate had estimated the betting at the Lakeview was $13,000,000 a year with a profit of $1,000,000. j "I think he should go back to} school again," Bluestein com-! mented "'He's not even close."| His own calculation was that the handle was something over $10,000 a day on the average, but he did not give a profit fig-) ure, He said his income tax re- turns for last year showed only $2,000 earnings from gambling-- "you win and you lose'--and $28,000 from assorted projects as deals in bankrupt stocks. Commission questioners had to jog his memory frequently as they dug into his operations and relations with other uuder- world factions--he was savagely beaten last year in what was described as a gangland attack --and once Commissioner Mr Justice W- D. Roach threatened to jail him for 'contempt of court unless he answered ques- tions. This came when Bluestein ac- cused commission counsel Ro- in 1959. a difference of opinion with Pa- palia and Frank Marchildon, 4 convicted of with that kind of people?" he asked. minding my own business " muscle in on him, he said. In -- to specific questions, cans gambling. of the Mafia, when Mr. Wilson suggested the commission had a 1958 police report quoting him as saying there had been a meet- ing of out-of-town members of the Mafia here, that they were planning to move into Toronto and that he was opposed. moving anywhere," he added. police report--which also appar- ently mentioned that he had Denies Mafia The 50-year-old Bluestein said he believed in minding his own business. "t never look in the other guy's pot," he explained. "If they have something cooking, good luck to them." : He said he had never had any trouble with Joseph McDermott and Vincent Feeley, reputed gambling kingpins, and for a long time "never knew they ex- isted."" When the commissioner asked him if he had told police in 1954 that he owned a piece of the big McDermott-Feeley gambling club at nearby Cooksville, he de. nied this and added: "I: wouldn't take a piece of that club if you gave it to me." He was tight-lipped about Johnny (The Enforcer) Papalia, Hamilton gambling figure who was convicted in the 1961 Blue- stein beating and later extra- dited to the United States where he now awaits trialin a huge narcotics conspiracy case "I knew him well enough to stay away from him," he said when he was asked about his relations with Papalia, DIDN'T KNOW REASON Bluestein shed no more light) on the night club attack, which) took place in the presence of 100) customers who did not see it,| Tonight, onto weather office at 5 a.m.: Synopsis: Partial clearing and he maintained he did not|\was expected to take place see his assailants and did not know why he was attacked. across most of southern Ontario this morning. Warmer air is moving into southwestern On- tario and afternoon tempera- tures are forecast to range be- tween 70 and 80 today. Cooler air is forecast to push south. eastward into the north country by Friday morning. Lake St. Clair region, Wind- sor: Mainly sunny and warmer today. Variable cloudiness with a few showers or- thunder- showers tonight and Friday. : Warmer today. Winds southwest in on. Toronto! 15. He was asked if he had had assaulting im. "What opinions would I have| "I got enough trouble Nobody has --trying to e said he knew of no Ameri- moving Lake Erie, Lake Huron re- gions, London: Cloudy, clearing this morning. Variable cloudi- ness with a few showers or thundershowers tonight and Fri- day, Warmer today. Winds southerly 15. Western Lake Ontario, Nia- gara regions, Hamilton Toronto: Cloudy with showers and thun- dershowers ending this morn- ing, mainly sunny this after- noon. Variable cloudiness with a few showers or thundershow- ers beginning late tonight and Particularly, he knew nothing "I am not opposed to anyone He would not contradict the been in fear of his life in seek- Forecasts issued by the Tor-|Friday, warm. Winds light be- Friday jcoming southerly 15 this morn- jing. Haliburton, eastern Lake Ontario regions: change in temperature. Winds) light. |bury: Mainly cloudy today and} Friday, a few showers tonight. | Little change in temperature to- day, cooler Friday. Winds light foday, northerly 15 Friday. | Observed Temperatures Low ogernight, High Wed: |Dawson .... 34 3 Victoria .. |Edmonton |Regina .... Winnipeg .... |Lakehead .. White River .. S.S. Marie .... Kapuskasing |North Bay }Sudbury ... |Muskoka .. |Windsor .. | London eeeee |TOPONLO -sereeeeeee 5 'Ottawa \ ing the pistol permit--but said| he just could not remember it. Two Prisoners Given Terms | For Escaping SUDBURY (CP) -- Two pris- joners from Burwash Industrial Farm who accepted a lift from ; a guard while they were on the Georgian Bay,|joose were given penitentiary t r jterms Wednesday for escaping Mainly cloudy with a few show-| custody and breaking and enter. | ers today and Friday, not much | ing, William Scriver, : _. ldon, Ont., and John Robert Timagami, Algoma, Whit e| adams, River, Cochrane regions, Sault) were acquitted Ste. Marie, North Bay, Sud-|\charge of assaulting the guard. The two. men pleaded guilty 'to a chrrge of entering a sum- mer camp and stealing coats, a knife, a flashlight and some beer. Adams was convicted at St. Catharines June 26 for breaking and_ entering. cluded a previous escape. Mag- istrate Falzetta sentenced him to two years consecutive for the |Burwash escape: On the break- ing and entering charge he drew an extra year in peniten- tiary. Scriver was admitted to Bur- jwash after a conviction June 29 at Windsor for breaking and en- fering and Falzetta sentenced him to one year for escaping and an extra lyear for the break-in. Two other Burwash escapees ~|were each sentenced to one year jin penitentiary consecutive to Hhis six-month-old daughter Car- Holyn, interference prevented the baby ifrom breathing, death by hemorrhage associated j with asphyxiation. son's family doctor, said that iwhen Matheson called him to CONTINUING WARM WEATHER WEATHER FORECAST Cloudy Weather 21, of Lo- Catharines on a_ third 20, of St. three in- His record theft. Magistrate | Release From Pen jaw when he struck the officer Baby Strangling Case Remanded SARNIA (CP) -- Kenneth H. Matheson, 24, of Sarnia, was re. manded until Monday for sen- tencing after he pleaded guilty Wednesday to a charge of man- baby's nose and a cut on her upper lip. He also testified that the baby had been in hospital earlier and as a result of con- siderable brain damage would never have been quite normal. how sorry I am for what 1 did Dr. C, N. Partington, patholo- because I loved my wife and gist at the Sarnia General Hos- pital, testified that "deliberate"|#, Statement given to police and read by Crown Attorney S. A. Logan. "I was half drunk at time," Matheson testified. resulting in the ie Dr. J. H. Gibson, the Mathe- plete blank. "I knew after it had happened * "No one will ever know just :" Carolyn too," Matheson said in } don't know why I did {t- My mind must have been a com- ~ his home Feb. 4 he noticed|what I had done but not while Marine Pilots Complain Of Long Hours bruises on each side of the Arrest Follows HULL, Que. (CP) -- A man who was arrested within 24) hours of his Sept. 25 release from Kingston Penitentiary was sentenced Wednesday to three years in St. Vincent de Paul Penitentiary. Kenneth Chapman, 28, of no ine pilots working between the plained Wednesday that they fixed address, pleaded guilty toate working between 450 and charges of auto theft, assauiting|900 hours a month--an average a police officer and theit of auto|%f about 16 hours every day. plates. laaee we pps pe if the Police said Chapman was|Corporation of Professional transferring Ontario licence| Great Lakes Pilots, sent a tele- plates to a Quebec car when. dis- covered by police. Both cars had been stolen. Chapman frac- tured Const. Robert Ruyssen's|the organization, said the pilots with his fist. Oil Soaked Sand Found In Arctic OTTAWA (CP)--A large ex-| posure of oil-saturated sand has been located in the Arctic is« lands and offers "tangibl proof" that oil is to be found there, Resources Minister Dins. dale told the Commons Wednes- day. The site has been located by J. C. Sproule and Associates of Calgary, geologists acting for several companies. The forma- tion is estimated to be 60 to 80 feet deep and the exposed por- tion runs about 60 miles, he said. However, much more explora- tory work would be required to indicate its full significance. ave not been able to get 12 hours rest between ships, as re- quired by regulations. taken sick leave to get the rest they need. Twnty - three of the 56 pilots About 20 of the others are from the United States and the re- Heo tee are repr Civil Service Association Canada, partment is aware of the prob- lem and two more BEARDS BLOSSOMING KIRKLAND LAKE, Ont. (CP) tario gold-mining community al- ready have land F, Wilson of trying to smear his brother Irving when the lawyer asked about the Queen City Chess and Bridge Club, of which the brother had been president and which sur- rendered its provincial charter Other points he could not a INTERPRETING THE NEWS member included: | 1. The exact number of his) bank accounts and safety de- posit boxes, He listed two of each but could not say for sure that was all. 2. The spelling of the last Opposition Rises their reformatory terms. Fred Cook, 22, of Walkerton and Marvin Jourdain, 24, of Cochrane, ran into the bush Oct. 3. They were recaptured two days later, 35 miles south of Burwash, ; Cook was convicted at Walk- erton June 21 for assaulting a Shotgun Slaying Ruled Justifiable - LOS ANGELES (AP)--A cor- Prizes for the bush- scrawniest carnival, iest, Associated Canadian Travellers Carnival Ball, name of the accountant who prepared his income tax re- turns, His first name was Kenny and, since he visited the Blue- stein home three or four times a week as a friend of his son, he did not have to know his name. 3. Whether he had authorized his lawyer, while awaiting trial on the gaming charge in 1960, 'DON'T KNOW. NOTHING' "He's a legitimate business- man and never took a bet," Bluestein shouted. 'He don't know nothing of these things." "If this witness doesn't stop his tirade," Mr, Wilson told the judge, "I'm going to ask you to commit him for contempt and To Whit By CARMAN. CUMMING Canadian Press Staff Writer The news that still another part of Africa has reached in-) dependent statehood has an al- most-commonplace ring. : The political makeup of the continent has. been changing so swiftly since the Second World e Rule -- desia, continuing terrorism was) | reported, The drive against white dom- ination coincides with the in- creasing strength of the Afri- can bloc in the UN, With the expected addition soon of Uganda, there will be 33 Afri- can members--including South peace _ officer, serving a term for breaking and entering after a conviction Sept, \5 at Cochrane. Jourdain was 'Alpha 66' Reports Attack On Cubans oner's jury ruled Wednesday that the shotgun slaying of tele- vision actor Tom Gilson was justifiable homicide, Police arrested actress Saun- dra Edwards, 24, described at the inquest as Gilson's common- law wife, after Gilson was shot in suburban Van Nuys last Sat- urday, She testified Wednesday that 18th ANNIVERSARY BROADLOOM SALE COMING SOON TORONTO (CP)--Some mar. ot | Welland Canal and Sarnia com- °° gram to Transport Minister Bal. . cer requesting an investigation. -- R. A. Stevenson, president of .. nave been kept so busy they ... He said some of the men have -- |who work the district are mem. . bers of Mr. Stevenson's group. ,° ted by the . of 2 Capt. Frederick Slocombe of *. the pilotage division, depart- -- ment of transport, said the de- |. lots will « be added to the staff shortly. | The men in this northern On- started growing ~ beards for competition in the '= town's second annual winter "' and fanciest @ beards will be awarded at the ® give him a week or two to cool taken to Oshawa General Hospital for observation with ahead off. injury and later released, This question may be rightfully asked: Why do the Hawkeyes suffer fewer casualties than the opposition? Hawkeye officials are quick to point out that this is because their players are usually in better physical condition than the opposition, Ken Craymer, general manager of the Invictus Club, em- phasized one point today in a brief telephone interview with this department -- neither Bogie nor Geist were victims of foul play, their injuries were the result of accidents on the gridiron. Gilson, 29, was "very drunk and swinging on a chandelier." "He kept yelling, 'Shoot me; shoot me or I will kill you,'" the actress said. Africa--in a total membership! of 110, | The bloc is far from solidly NEW YORK (AP)--A New |York representative of "Alpha 66," a group of Cuban exiles, said Wednesday one of its raid- ing parties shot up the Cuban port of Isabela de Sagua and killed '20 of the enemy" includ- ing Russians. The attack began at 12:20 a.m. Monday, the spokesman said, to tell the Crown he was willing to surrender three club char- ters: Later, he amended this to say he had "told nobody noth- ing' about surrendering char-| ters. | re , 4. His arrangement with the| bi tapes the commissioner| Lakeview Club. I guess maybe ees ' subsidized them a little bit War that the cumulative ef- fects of.the changes sometimes) go unndticed. | united, even on colonial issues But a series of events in thel its approach varies from the last few days point up one ef-| sternly anti-colonial attitude of fect: The mounting opposition|the Casablanca group to the to white rule in any part of the| usually moderate view of the r - continent; igs frou, composed of 8 pried out by the commis- . could be about $200 a| In Uganda, on the first day 2 former French colonies, he ea lnterrogators, Bluestein's| month," Later, it transpired|of independence, Prime Minis-| pRamnED REBELS oe ba aca parti piesa recital of his operations con-|the lease was in his namo, | ter Milton Obote said his new| "Algeria is expected to lee aleuas' . with capture sisted of i | i i a_series of smallish leading part in the Casablanca| Details of the raid will be HSRGOR SATA NU-WAY RUG CO. LTD. 174 MARY ST. - 728-4681 icant. "And I shall, too," Mr, Jus- lice Roach replied. "Why don't you stop him ask- ing unfair questions" Bluestein asked. "IT haven't heard any unfair Se ¥ise Sw You've never tasted a dry sherry so dry ' |Commonwealth country will not ventures ('You trying to make|LOST MONEY AND QUIT This does not alter the fact that the league and club offi- cials, the referees and the fans (who frequently approve of extra-rough pley) must share in the responsibility for this grave situation in the Junior Football Conference today. A 14-year-old high school boy was the first U.S. fatality of the 1962 football season this year. That was on August 22. Two days later another boy, 15, collapsed and died following a football drill. Five days later a 14-year-old football player from New Jersey collapsed and died after a practice, On August 31, just 10 days after the first fatality, a varsity end, age 16, died while enroute to a Texas hospital. i The casualty list jumped at an alarming rate from Septem- ber 1 on, Up to the official opening of the season over the past weekend, the death list was 12. This does not include concussions, crippling fractures and patients on the hospital list (such as Geist and Bogie). OFFICERS TO FETE COL. R. 8. Col. R. S, McLaughlin has a special date for next Friday eevning: i ; He will be guest of honor at a dinner to be held by the Officers' Mess of the Ontario Regiment (of which he is an honorary colonel). _ The highlight of the evening will be the presentation to him by CotJ. R. Warnica, OC of the regiment, of a chair which is to remain in the Mess "to perpetuate his memory". The chair is a replica of one in the Memorial Room at Camp Borden (where each regiment is represented by a chair). It has a carving of the regimental crest and hand- made leather upholstery. It will be known as "The Colonel's Col. Warnica will also give a report on his recent visit to Wales (where he was the guest of the Welch Regiment for seven days) and will present the Ontario with a gift from their overseas affiliate, the Welch. Invitations have been extended to seven former OC's of the regiment to attend the Friday dinner. me out a big shot?"') with an as. sortment of partners going by Of his dealings with the Ring- side Club, where he said he did not hold the charter but was | such names as Skeezic O'Brien, Joseph (Schmaltzie) Zeldin and Joseph (The Goof) Pancer. He denied 'any knowledge of or any connection with any gambling syndicate. "Be a big syndicate, Schmalt- zie and me," he scoffed. the boss, he had been with it) just "long enough to lose my} money and quit." Asked what other operations he had been involved in, he said he and Skeezic had run a combined bookie and novelty shop and added: "I'd take action all over, I'd take it right outside the door here." During Bluestein's examina- tion, Mr. Justice Roach in- Boat Charges . . Dismissed formed the gambler the com- - bo rage nee _ eernene ae jords on his long-distance calls By Magistrate \to United States oddsmakers for jcurrent prices on baseball, foot- BRECHIN, Ont. (CP)--Magis-|hall, hockey and-other events |WORK FOR OUSTER Jjiching Sept. 2. He pleaded not trate G. W. Guest Wednesday|Which he booked, dismissed tharges of dangerous operation of a motor vessel and failing to remain at the scene of an accident against Chris- topher Young of Oakville. Young was charged following a boat collision on Lake Couch- guilty to both charges. In dismissing the charges, Magistrate Guest said there was no witness as to how Young's boat was being driven when it allegedly collided with a cabin cruiser owned by Harry Allen of Weston, Ont. following the Bluestein said he got his odds from establishments in Chicago, New -York and Boston, paying an unidentified emissary named Charlie amounts up to 30 a week and using a code on the recognize white - dominated South Africa or the Rhodesian Federation, still under Britain's wing. It hadn't yet decided whether to recognize Portugal, colonial ruler of Angola. At. the United Nations, Pre- mier Ahmed Ben Bella marked Algeria's. admittance with a promise to work for liquidation of all colonialism, He men- tioned by name Angola, the Rhodesian Federation and South - West Africa, ruled by South Africa under an old League of Nations mandate. On the same way President Sekou Toure of Guinea stressed group, which also includes Guinea, the United Arab Re- occo. Ben Bella did not spell out what Algeria is prepared to do| to support independence move-| ments. But his country, econ-/ omically prostrate after nearly) eight years of war and terror- ism, is rich in arms and mili- tary experience, Even before the end of the rebellion against France, the Algerians were training Angolan guerrillas at camps in Tunisia. The Congo also has openly trained Angolan rebels. Plainly, many more changes, the need for unity among newly independent .African countries and said the major reality of the world is '"'the division into free peoples and dominated peoples, and zones of poverty." In South Africa, a number of sabotage attempts against factories and_ utilities telephone. Commission counsel- Wilson questioned Bluestein on whether he had ever been connected with any Niagara Falls, Ont., gambling operation. His reply| was that he had shot dice at a club there whose name he could not remember, but not in the last dozen years, into zones of plenty| => there. were)? = last weekend, In Southern Rho-|:® peaceful or violent, will take place before Africa reaches its full maturity. piven out at the organization h eadquarters public, Ghana, Mali and Mor-|Puerto Rico, - the \said. in San Juan, spokesman Special Weekly : Message To Members Of CHAMBERS FOOD CLUB as the new HALLMARK Pale Dry Canadian Sherry Try it tonight! Treat peareal te Hallmark Cream Sherry and Hallmark Port, too. Remember, when the label says Hallmark, the wine is Canada's finest. ofthe THE PARKDALE WINES LIMITED' JOHN A. OVENS Optometrist HARE OPTICAL 8 BOND ST. EAST 723-4811 I accident, in which the Oakville man suffered severe face in. juries. | Young testified he had seen | no lights on whatever object he had struck with his boat, and told police at the time that he NOW! $300,000.00 Turpin Loses Appeal; Will Hang Nov. 8 TORONTO (CP)--Ronald Tur- pin, 29, lost his appeal Wednes- day against a conviction for cap- ital murder in shoott death of Metropolitan Police Const.. Fred Nash earlier this year. Turpin is scheduled to be hanged Noy. 8. Patrick Hartt, counsel for Ontario Appeal Court bench, said an appeal will be taken to the Supreme Court of Canada. had admitted killing the 31-year-old constable, fatally wounded in an east-end Toronto lired in self defence. assize court jury after a 15-day trial and Mr, Justice G. A. Gale ing| sentenced him to hang Sept: 25, Chief Justice Dana Porter granted a stay of execution to Nov, 8 to allow a hearing of the appeal. 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