WEATHER REPORT Scattered showers tonight. Saturday partly cloudy and con- tinuing warm. THOUGHT FOR TODAY Some TV celebrities are much in the public eye -- others get in the public's hair. ¢ Oshawa Zines Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Ottawa and for payment of Postage Department, in Cash. OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, MAY 3, 1963 \ FOUR WOMEN KILLE TWENTY-TWO PAGES: VOL. 92--NO. 104 10 Cents Per Copy | Guard, Convict | Killed In Clash | At Penitentiary MONTREAL (CP) -- Guards at St, Vincent de Paul Peniten- tiary stormed the cell of two rebelling convicts with pistol- fire Thursday in a desperate, but unsuccessful, attempt to save a fellow. guard's life. He died after being stabbed. One of the convicts was killed and the other, his cousin, wounded. It was the third time within two weeks Canadian convicts have tried to get transferred to another penitentiary by holding a guard hostage. Guard Raymond Tellier, 35, was forced into a cell at knife- point after supper hour by two Mass Protests By Negroes - convicts, who demanded they be given transfers to Manitoba's Stony Mountain Penitentiary. Warden Michel LeCorre or- dered a charge on the cell five minutes. later when he saw blood oozing into the corridor lfrom the cell. He said he knew it must be Tellier's, as he was unarmed. The convicts were mowed down by bullets. Marcel Mar- coux, 34 was killed and his cou- |¢ sin Claude, 21, hit on the arm/i by a bullet. | Tellier died within half an f t 1 LeCorre, and was guard." convicts had stabbed Tellier again as the guards rushed the cell, this time in the abdomen. Tellier was married and the ather of three children. He had been working at the peniten- iary for eight years, said Mr. a "good Marcel Marcoux, killed by the guards' bullets, had four years eft to serve on a 10-year sent- ence, while his cousin had been n prison little more than a year serving a five-year sentence. 4 | Both were in prison for armed hour from loss of blood. Thejrobbery. warden said he had been slashed twice in the legs and stabbed in the abdomen. Two weeks ago two convicts in the British Columbia Peni- tentiary at New Westminster, B.C,, started a riot and forced authorities to grant them a transfer by holding a guard hos- tage. Ironically, the two convicts asked, and received, transfers to St. Vincent de Paul Peniten- Oshawa Man ? Wins Games Gold Medal SAO PAULO, Brazil (AP)--| ¥ BLASTED BY SHOTGU Rural Village Shooting Scene BELLEVILLE, Ont. (CP)--! Police said today Robert Kil- ins, 56, an ordained United Church minister, was under close police guard in Cobourg General Hospital following the shotgun deaths Thursday right of his wife, two daughters and 2n unmarried sister at Castle- ton, a rural village 38 miles west of here. Provincial Police Const. Lorne Stinson chased a car from the scene and three miles later forced it off the road. Killins was bleeding from a } through the blood-splattered live ing room of her sister's: home into the arms of neighbors, was' taken to hospital suffering from acute shock. : Mr. Killins, a diabetic, has been in ill health for some time, Police said there had been re- cent family strife. Police are believed to have taken two shotguns and a re volver from the scene. FLQ Blamed In Birmingham ' "2 Pa ary, a massive, maximum-se- BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP)-- curity prison on the north out- Birmingham jails were filled) skirts of Montreal, A third B.C. today with hundreds of Negroes| prisoner was tratisferred to 9 srg ris sg integration | Stony Mountain. leaders desc as the initial) eae thrust of a massive renewal Oe we ae tan Hone | Alex Oakley of Oshawa, won the! ; gold medal today in the 20,000- metre walk at the fourth Pan-| } American Games. ' Oakley, 34-year-old native of| 3 St. John's, Nfld., gave Canada| : its ninth gold medal of the cur-| | severe head wound when he was |taken into custody. | Florence Killins, 41, and her |youngest daughter, Patricia, 7, jwere killed by shotgun fire in jtheir home--built by Killins--be- jside his own shack where he In Legion fant Anmaneten proiest GemonsiTa The number arrested in {seized a prison instructor ai |knife-point and held him for Thursday's waves of marches and picketing was estimated at) 700 by city jailer Chester Aus- tin. He said more than 300 were booked at city jail. A matron estimated 300 to #00 were lodged at the juvenile detention home and the country} jail reported about 100 prison- ers were taken there. Police said a few rocks were thrown at officers during the demonstrations but that none was hit. There were no reports of any other violence. "We are definitely starting a stepped-up campaign to lay our Glee ol the community bm ow the sout gration 'fight. four hours until authorities granted them transfers to Dor- chester Penitentiary in a New Brunswick. "'y The warden said the two con- victs slashed Tellier twice, once in each thigh,. before announc- ing their demands. They had waited 20 minutes before an- swering his questions. They then asked for a trans- fer and gave authorities 15 min- utes to make up their minds. They also asked that no legal action be taken against them for seizing a guard. ( 1 rent games. In second place--and winner of the silver medal--was an-|' other Canadian entrant, Nicola) : Nick) Marrone of Montreal. Marrone, born in Fossacesia, Italy, is 38. Oakley was clocked in one hour, 42 minutes, 43.2 seconds, and Marrone in 1:42:35.0. The bronze medal for third Place went to Ronald L. Zinn of the United States, timed in 11:49:44.2, Another American, Donald 0. Laird of Chicago, was fourth in :52:13. Fifth was Renato Cou- tinho of Brazil in 2:07:46.3. An- Mr..LeCorre said when the blood was seen, 'We had t0Act King|--and act quickly. "Our man's} rn inte-|life was at stake.' He said it appeared the two Pearsons Final other Brazilian, Adalberto F.rtz, Was sixth in 2:21:33. 'The 20-kilometre walk, held on city streets, began at Santo Domingo Park in the outskirts and finished at Pacaembu Sta- dium, where track and field competition is centred. : Oakley, a bachelor who works as a mechanic, holds the Ca- nadian 20-kilometre record of one hour, 34 minutes, 10 sec- onds. He also holds Canadian Sn Sis THREE HAY RIVER, N.W.T. (CP)-- Airlifted over the rampaging 'Mackenzie River system wat- ers, more than 1,300 residents of two island communities waited out a destructive spring flood on the mainland today while another 1,200 stood by amid Hay. River's devastation. All 750 men, women and chil- dren of Fort Simpson had been evacuated from that flooded hamlet 625 miles north of Ed- vey the devastation caused by should be declared a disaster area. Mr. Laing indicated there would be no early decision on declaring a disaster area. The RCAF, with planes and helicopters, has spearheaded the evacuation. A medium-sized helicopter plucked the residents of Fort Simpson from danger SCHOOL CHII- flown out of flood-stricken the island community of 1,800 ter. DREN wait their turn to be Hay River, N.W.T. Most of persons was covered by wa- 1300 Flown From Two Towns Wait Out Spring Flood Peril nesday the call for help was made, Thursday 80 per cent of the down was under water. .» Frank Cunningham, assistant deputy northern affairs minis- ter, who flew from Ottawa. to join Mr. Laing, has been au- thorized by Gordon Robertson, deputy minister and territorial commissioner, to spend up to $50,000 for relief purposes. GRANTS RELIEF FUND An additional $10,000 was --(CP Wirephoto) women and children had been flown to safety--some going as far south as Edmonton. Huge dirty cakes of ice, some three to four feet thick and 15 feet across, have. smashed their way through Hay River, pow- ered by the flood waters from the Hay River. Scores of houses and house trailers were over- turned. Others were damaged. Mayor McBryan said more than $1,000,000 damage has been done. lived alone on a side road near |the village of 400 residents. Killins' eight - month - preg- }jnant daughter, Mrs. Pearl Campbell, 19, was killed in her home on the other side of the shack and 'his spinster sister, Gladys, 40, was killed in her house next door to Mr. Killins. OTHERS WOUNDED Mrs. Killins who boarded at her home, 'Their conditions were re- ported as satisfactory in hospi- tal at Cobourg, 15 miles south- west of the village. Brian Killins, 10, whose fa- ther moved the family from British Columbia 12 years ago Three men were wounded-- Toronto schoolteacher Pe*er Miller, 20, who may lose his left hand after being shot; Freder- ick Campbel, shot in the throat trying to protect his wife; and Thomas Major, 43, a friend of Bombing ST. JOHNS, Que. (CP)--A dy- namite explosion described by municipal police as "a big job" early today blew out the front windows of the two-storey Royal Canadian Legion Building in this centre about 25 miles south- east of Montreal. No one .was injured. Shortly after the blast, an anonymous person telephoned the Canadian Press bureau 'in Montreal and said in. French; "Le Front de Liberation Que- becois has struck at St, Johns." St. Johns municipal police said the last persons left. the building. about 30. minutes he." lfore the explosion which origi- nated under the cement front steps. : The cement was cracked, bricks were chipped on the face of the building and all windows after leaving the United Church there because of a difference of opinion, narrowly escaped death facing the front of the building were smashed. The Quebec provincial bureau Talk In Britain. monton. More than 600 were|in a five-hour operation. The when a_ shotgun blast torejin St. Johns said it was under LONDON (CP)--Prime Minis- ter Pearson held his final con- ference with Prime Minister Macmillan today and said he is highly pleased with the results of his two days of talks with British leaders. The Canadian leader spent 20 minutes at Admiralty House, Macmillan's residence. Then the two prime ministers went to a luncheon given by George Drew, Canadian high commissioner here. Earlier Selwyn Lloyd, former chancellor of the exchequer, and Jo Grimond, leader of the Brit- ish Liberal party, called on Pearson at his Dorchester Hotel suite-for separate half-hour dis- cussions. Lloyd, who was foreign sec- retary at the time Pearson was Canadian external affairs min- ister, said' they talked mostly about old friends. Grimond said he and Pearson dealt with trade problems, es- pecially British-Canadian trade relations. "I found the prime minister full of ideas and energy," he said, but declined to discuss any specific suggestions made by Pearson. This is Pearson's third day in London but so far there have been no announcements follow- ing his meetings with Prime Minister Macmillan, cabine t| members and political leaders, The Manchester Guardian party t ish leaders before making pro- Pearson planned a chat with! Jo Grimond, Liberal party, leader, after seeing Lloyd, then} he and Macmillan were to at-| commissioner here. Mrs. Pearson Thursday vis- ited the House of Commons, in company with James Barker, an official at Canada House, and went to a London clinic high commissioner, is recover- ing from a minor operation. Philip. They will be overnight guests at Windsor Castle. Pearson has obviously been enjoying his London visit, meet- ing with scores of friends he made while serving as first sec- retary in the Canadian high commission office between 1935) jand 1941. Thursday night he at- jtended a reception at Drew's residence. tend a luncheon at the home of] : George Drew, Canadian high i where Mrs. Drew, wife of the| ; Tonight Pearson and his wife) | dine with the Queen and Prince] ' records for three miles 5,000 me- res and 30 kilometres. In 1962 he was U.S. champion at 30 nouncements on matters involv-|kilometres and North American ing the two countries. jchampion at 20 kilometres. i larctic communities declared 'lister flew to Yellowknife, ALEX OAKLEY + | small plane. plucked from Hay River, 125 miles to the south, in. the last two days. Northern Affairs Minister Ar- thur Laing, in office only. two weeks, was flying into Hay River today to take personal charge of rescue work and con- sider whether to have the sub- disaster areas. Ninety per cent of Hay River was under' water, swollen by spring thaw and pocked with grinding ice. Damage was esti- mated at more than $1,000,000. Most of Fort Simpson was sub- merged. The new northern affairs min- N.W.T.,. from Vancouver Thurs- day and was to fly the last 117 miles to Hay River today in a TO SURVEY SITUATION His purpose was three-fold, he said Thursday at Yellowknife: To take charge of any evacua- tion proceedings, to ensure all steps necessary were taken to prevent an epidemic and to sur- KATMANDU, Nepal word was iceeded in conquering Mount Ev- erest for a second time. ' Two members of the Ameri-|! Commonwealth relations." It refers to the frustration of| 2 Canadian reporters who flew} a here with Pearson and haveican Everest expedition reached} been unable to pry any solid in-|the 29,028-foot summit of the; formation from the discussions|world's highest mountain Wed-| going on in a fourth-floor room/nesday, overlooking Hyde Park and at/man announced Thursday night.| Admiralty House. {Presumably the two climbers) returned to the assault camp} EXPRESSES SURPRISE A Canadian spokesman ex-/fore nightfall Wednesday. pressed surprise at the Guard-| myo exnedition's base ian's criticism. He said it was radioed Katmandu today only natural that the new Cana-| 41 personnel were well dian government wanted time to added no details assess the opinions of the Brit-/ camp} that)" lfor a secor team, which had) CITY EMERGENCY | PHONE NUMBERS | POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 | HOSPITAL 728-2211 ,, Swiss feat in 1956, when two teams reached the peak on suc cessive days jgroups have returned to safety.| It was not even known whether|Swiss climbs in 1956, the Chi- \both of the first conquerors nese Communists claimed that iti .|were Americans or whether one|they reached the summit in 1960 = ee ee |was a Sherpa, from the nativetand, left a statue of Mao Tse-| \tribe of mountaineers that fur-|tung. The claim has not been ac-| nished the guides and porters|cepted in international moun- jtaineéring circles, and word was New Zealander Edmund Hil-|awaited whether the American llary--now Sir Edmund--and alclimbers had found any 'trace 1,228 feet below the summit be-|for the expedition. but climped to the ice - Hill The exped .jion's plans called) 495: been climbing a day behind thelnedy has hailed first group, to press on to the|countrymen jsummit. This would match alheights of Mount Everes oring the climbers: Everest Peak Sought By Second U.S. Team (AP)--|word beyond the bare announce. ays i front-page st that/With the Stars and Stripes al-/ment that the first team had/p the lack '< ceca tcl Gis talks ready planted on the roof of the|reached the peak and planted|tiers "appears to mark a return by World, Canada to the tradition of se-|awaited today whether an cret diplomacy in the field of/Amercan expedition had suc-| eagerly|the U.S. flag. IDENTITIES SECRET The expedition's policy is to} ious teams secret until all three| crusted 'pleasantly-rounded cone,"' In Washington " who. scaled He issued this statement hon- perience to their farthest fron- join the distinguished |group of British and Swiss| |mountaineers who have per- formed this feat." jing human endurance and ex- | residents were carried to the safety of a mainiand airport from where they were to go to Yellowknife. At Fort Simpson 300. children were included among those res- cued when the Mackenzie River jammed 10 miles downstream and held back the water, It overflowed the island for the first time in memory. When the water began to climb Wed- granted Thursday night by Ed- monton city council. It was to be made in the form of money, supplies and personnel and to be used as directed by the Red Cross. Additional funds were promised if more was needed. Mayor W. R. McBryan of Hay River said 1,200 of the town's 1,800 residents remained Thurs- day night. He doubted more would leave, but was happy the Bitter Feud Hits In Quebec House QUEBEC (CP)--Premier Le- sage has threatened to try to have Opposition Leader Daniel Johnson disbarred as a lawyer if he repeats outside the House charges he made against Mr. Justice Elie Salvas who headed a royal commission investiga- tion of the former Union Na- tionale administration. The premier's threat came Thursday night at the height of the bitterest feud between the two party leaders thus far this session. During the 40-minute battle, both men charged each other's administrations with having in- terfered with judges. Mr. Lesage threatened to call before the bar of the House judges whom he said had told him they were given orders by the late Union Nationale pre- mier, Maurice Duplessis. Mr. Johnson countered with a threat to call Jean-Paul Bois- as| year-old s ary described it, on May 28,'furth of Santa Monica, Calif, de-| Collections Up .... ; _ _ |voted all his energies over the President Ken-|jast three years' to organizing} "our gallant|the climb. the icy| Dyhrenfurth 'chose 18 Ameri-| University cans.and one Briton from more} than 150 candidates on the basis |keep the identities of the var--CHECK CHINESE CLAIM In addition to the British con- quest and the two successful Sherpa, Tensing Norgay, first)of the Chinese. The expedition's leader, 44 Norman G. Dyhren- "I am most pleased to learn of ability to work as a team Later, a third American teamjof the success of the American |They jwas to try for the top. But injexpedition on Mount Everest.)climbing Mount Rainier-in Katmandu today there was no|These American climbers ? practised for two weeks push-| Washington last fall. joly, before the courts in the seizure of 4,000 false voting slips during the November provincial election campaign. The opposition leader said that Boisjoly has been bragging that Attorney-General Georges Lapalme had intervened with YOU'LL FIND INSIDE... | Customs Tec cm rage 1 i Citizenship Week Plans Outlined .... Page 11 Plan Delayed ..... Page 11 Camera Club Plans Display | Car Hits | Tree, Two Hurt .. Page il Page 11 Appeal Court judges on his be- half. The whole affair started in- nocently enough when Mr. Le- sage '"'teased"--as he later put it--Mr. Johnson about having a higher revenue than he did. In the ensuing interchange Mr. Johnson said his family 'Shave already suffered enough from the accusations made by the premier when he was a party leader before 1960". He was apparently referring to the sale of Hydro-Quebec's gas distribution facilities. in Montreal to Quebec Natural Gas Corporation in which a number of legislature and gov- ernment members held shares. Their participation in the sale was condemned by the Salvas commission in a report last Aug- ust, although the report said there was nothing in the law ex- pressly to forbid members from being shareholders. | "We were smeared, we were |smeared, Mr. Speaker, unjustly, junjustly, by the accusations of the premier and by the conni- vance of a judge named Judge Salvas,"' declared Mr. Johnson. | Mr. Johnson was listed among the shareholders of natural gas, although at the time of the sale |--1957--he was not in the cabi- jnet. | The opposition leader said the |province was in an odd situa- tion "when judges cannot. find laws or legality and turn to im- provised morality." | Pearson Named Ninety per cent of Hay River was under water Thursday night but Mr. McBryan said those still at the town were in adequate shelters. he worry was the chance of another big push of ice down the river. Temperatures, which dropped to about 10 degrees in the region Thursday, built up to two inches of new ice. It hin- dered some evacuation opera- tions. TOWN IS EMPTY Fort Simpson, built on a two- mile long island at the junction of the Liard and Mackenzie Rivers, was an empty town. The evacuation included all 750 residents to an airport one mile away on the. mainland. Of wrenching out tufts of hair. house when Mrs, Killins was shot. Peggy screamed to her older sister Pearl Campbell to lock the door, because "mother has been shot," and hid under the bed. She left after the shooting. Brian went across the street to the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Day. He asked Peter Mil- ler, who boarded with the cou- ple, to accompany him to his mother's house. Police said Miller was shot and his left hand blasted away ae the home of Mrs. Camp, ell. Peggy Killins, who ran across the top of his head, Brian and his 12-year-old sis- ter Peggy raced from their instructions to release no infors mation about the explosion. Le Front de Liberation Que- becois is a self-styled separa- tist, terrorist organization which has been blamed for the killing of W. V. O'Neill, 65, by an ex- plosion at an army recruiting centre on Sherbrooke Street in the heart of Montreal on April 20. The group has claimed re- sponsibility by means of secret communications for the recruit- ing centre blast and other ex- plosions. since it announced its existence in a mimeographed press release received in var- ious Montreal riewspaper offices March 8. these 176 arrived at Yellowknife early today. That town has thrown open private homes, schools and busi- ness offices to help bed down the victims. No injuries were reported at either town and there was a .|plentyful supply of food. Cc. L. Merrill of Fort Smith, northern affairs administrator for the Mackenzie District, said Thursday two Flying Boxcars will handle the movement of Fort Simpson people to Yellow- sengers a flight. U.S. Relations With Haiti Deteriorating PORT AU PRINCE, Haiti (AP)--U.S, relations with Haiti are deteriorating rapidly. In the last five days, the U.S. embassy has fired off five pro- tests to President Francois Du- valier's government, complain- ing about different incidents. All have been ignored. The incidents were: A bitterly anti-American ad- dress April 21 by Jacques Four- cand, pistol-carrying head of Haiti's Red Cross, at a cere- mony launching a government- sponsored "month of grateful- ness" to Duvalier. Fourcand calted the United States a false democracy and said Haiti would not be a "'tool of Washington." The wife of a-U.S. Marine ser- geant was held in jail for 2% hours and a noise bomb ex- | To Privy Council LONDON (Reuters) The Queen has appointed Canada's Prime Minister Pearson a mem- ber of the Privy Council, it was! jannounced today. ploded: in the yard of another marine sergeant. | Police arrested a Haitian sec- retary employed. by the U.S. embassy and are still holding her. knife. Each can carry 60 pas-|™ Norman Dyhrenfurth, ieft, leader of the American expe- dition: that has scaled Mount Everest, and Dr. William Siri, a member of the team, are | shown at a news conference in Los Angeles last Novem- ber. They showed some of their equipment and discuss- ed their plan to scale the SCALE EVEREST chest worid's highest mountain: A radio message yesterday said two members of the U.S, team reached the 29,028-foot. peak in the Himalayas. Dyhren- furth is from Santa Monica, Calif. Siri is a physicist at the University of California: --(AP Wirephoto)