oe &é \ 2 THE OSHAWA TIMBS, Mendey, May 6, 1963 Wounded Man Relates Story Of Five-Death Shooting Spree CASTLETON, Ont. (CP) -- Frederick Campbell, 20, has told the story of events leading up to the shooting deaths in this hamlet Thursday night of his 19-year-old, eight - month pregnant wife, her mother, sis- ter and sister-in-law. The women were blasted to death with two revolvers and a shotgun loaded with deer pel- ets Former clergyman Robert Killins, 56, father of Frederick's wife Pearl, died Friday night from severe head wounds. he suffered during the shooting spree. Police said that although many witnesses were still to be questioned, evidence indicates that Killins was responsible for the deaths. No charges were laid while Killins lay in a coma under armed police guard in Cobourg Hospital. From his hospital bed at Co- bourg, 15 miles southwest of here, Fred Campbell said he had been called to the home of Mrs. Killins (Robert Killins' wife, killed first), where he Big Spy Move For Polaris Secrets Seen LONDON (AP) -- Britain's spy catchers believe the Soviet espionage system soon will mount a great assault on the West with one major objective --to get the U.S. Navy's Po- laris secrets. To this end Russian agents, using techniques as old as sin itself, even now may be black- mailing a Westerner into feed- ing information into a Soviet spy net. These are among the implications of lessons learned from the Vassall case. British se curity men are deeply involved in efforts to keep ahead of the other side-- to spot potential security risks before any damage has been done. Soon Britain will possess In- formation about Polaris Mis- ailes under tefms of the Ken- nedy-Macmillan agreement in Nassau. When Britain's own Polaris submarine fleet begins to take shape some of the se- crets along with construction contracts will make their way to private industry. The secu- rity screen will have to be en- larged. PREDICT TOP DANGER Informants predict this will be the time of maximum dan- ger. The special tribunal in the Vassal case found examples of poor judgment and laziness in the British screening system. Because of such errors William John Vassall, a homosexual ad- miralty clerk, was able to pass secrets to the Soviet Union for seven years before he was caught, the tribunal reported to Parliament. Now British civil servants are required to report any contact with officials of Communist countries. This rule applies even to telephone calls and in- nocuous social exchanges. Fs Thomas Major, 43, - (wounded) WAS GOING TO BED the house, sobbing and shaking. vulsions. "She cried 'I saw mummy. there. house.) "As soon as I got my boots got upstairs I saw her sitting in a chair, She didn't move or speak. "There was a red spot the size of the end of your little finger in the corner of her left eye, MEN SCUFFLING | "Behind her the two men were scuffling on the floor. My father-in-law had a revolver in his hand. The gun kept waving }in front of me as they strug- | gled. | "My father-in-law called out to me to help him. '"He's trying to kill me' he said," Campbell said he became afraid and decided to return jhome to his wife next door. "When I got back my wife and her sister Peggy were in the house, We stood watching from out the window." Moments later he saw Brian Killins, 10, race across the street to the house where Tor- onto school teacher Peter Mil- ler, 20, stayed. Miller received a shotgun blast in the arms and may lose his left hand. Fred Campbell continued: "They both rushed over to our Teillet Says Firing Probe Is Welcome WINNIPEG (CP) --Veterans Minister Roger Teillet says he would welcome a chance to tes- tify before a committee investi- gating his department's dismis- sal of a $14,000-a-year pension commissioner. Gordon Churchill, veterans minister, called for the committee investigation Friday after previously alleg- ing the act was an abuse of ministerial authority. | "As far as I am concerned the matter is closed," said the new minister during a press conference at the St. Boniface Liberal headquarters. | "He can ask for anything he) wants . . . the full story is out. I'! make a full. report to any committee he wants, if the Commons decides it should be done. I acted within the full au- thority of the ministry." Mr. Churchill said' he ob- jected .to the dismissal of Ken MacKay, an Alberta man ap- pointed to the Canadian pen-| sions committee by the Con-| a former The Vassall case showed the Russians still depend on the old) orgy routine to recruit spies.| They trap and photograph their) vietim in some compromising} heterosexual or homosexual ac- tivity. WEATHER FORECAST servative government. Mr. Teillet said Mr. MacKay} was not reappointed when his One-year term was up because government should restore to three the number of French- Canadians on the board. Mainly Sunny, Cloud Periods Forecasts issued by the Tor- onto weather office at 5 a.m.: § : A fresh wave of arctic air is moving down across Hudson Bay. This will "tng - lower temperatures to Aorthern Ontario tonight and 'Tuesday. Shower activity with * the arrival of this cooler air is expected to be confined to the far north regions of the prov- ince. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Lake Ontario, Ni- agara, Georgian Bay, Halibur- ton regions, Windsor, -London, Hamilton, Toronto: Sunny with a few cloudy intervals today and Tuesday, little change in temperature, Winds light. Algoma, Timagami r . North Bay, Sault Ste. Marie, Sudbury: Partly cloudy Tues- day and turning 2 little cooler. Winds westerly 15 today, light) Tuesday. . White River, Cochrane re- gions: Partly cloudy and turn- ing cooler tonight and Tuesday. | Winds light on Tuesday, Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, High Tuesday Windsor «ssecsesee 40 65 St.T homas - 'ond Kapuskasing ...... 20 White River ..... 30 Moosonee .....+++- 15 watched Killins struggle with who boarded with Mrs, Killins, He said: "I was starting to take my boots off to go to bed when Peggy (Mrs. Killins' 10- year-old daughter) burst into I thought she was having con- 'They're fighting awful over (The Campbell home is along- side Mrs, Killins' two - storey back on I hurried over to my mother-in-law's house. When I | voting bond place, Then I saw the shadow of my father-in-law flash by the window and I went to lock the door. But he was too fast he barged in shooting, "T'm gure he hit me first. A big round ball of fire blurred my sight and a bullet grazed my shoulder. "I spun around when I was hit and I reached out to catch my wife by the hand. But the bullet that grazed me must have hit her. I could see her face all mashed. The last thing I heard her say was, 'Help me, Fred, help me.' "T think Miller was hit' next. He was right in there trying to help. Then everything went Ws 3? 3 Also killed was Miss Gladys Killins, 41, of Parry Sound, Mr. Killins' sister, Florence Killins; 50, his wife, and youngest daughter Patricia, 7. | CARACAS (AP) --Beaming |happily, New York's Governor | Nelson A. Rockefeller and iis | bride arrived in Venezuela Sun- {day to begin a South American honeymoon far from the Amer- ican political arena still buzzing over their marriage. A_ light j rain and a_ shower of rice | greeted them. | The state governor and his| bride, the former Margaretta) Fitler Murphy, paused only briefly at Caracas' Maiqusia jinternational airport after their \arrival from New York on a commercial airliner. They boarded a private plane and flew to their honeymoon retreat, Rockefeller's Monte Sacro (Sa- | cred Mountain) ranch about 110 miles southwest of Caracas. Rockefeller, considered a |leading candidate for the 1964 Republican presidential nomina- tion, turned aside questions about his political future as he chatted in Spanish with report- ers at the airport. He predicted /bliss for his second marriage jand said he and his bride will remain in Venezuela about two | weeks. | | Rockefeller gave reporters in| | New York no time to queston |him as he left Idlewild airport. He told them with a smile: "I know you would like to dis- cuss politics with me but I don't Governor, Bride On Honeymoon of his political future in the wake of dual divorces that made the marriage possible. Rockefeller was divorced March 16, 1962, after 31 years of marriage, by Mrs. Mary Todhunter Clark Rockefeller, 55, like her successor a descendant of top-drawer Philadelphia soci- ety. The new Mrs. Rockefeller, a trim woman of 36 with the nick-| name of "Happy," obtained an Idaho divorce April 1 from Dr. researcher for the. Rockefeller Institute. The long anticipated wedding of the pair took place quietly Saturday at the Rockefeller Po-| eantico Hills estate in Westches- | ter County, north of New York. The date had been kept a close secret. Rockefeller, a Baptist, and Mrs. Murphy, an Episcopalian, (Anglican),. were, married by a Presbyterian, Rev. Marshall L. Smith of the Union Church of Pocantico Hills. | Basic Nursing -- Course Study | think this is the time or the place." | Thus Rockefeller's public de- but with his dark-blonde bride of less than 24 hours failed to} yield any personal assessment RCs Enrolling Children In Public Schools JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) A movement by Roman Catho- lic parents to take their chil- dren out of parochial schools and enrol them in public schools is snowballing in Missouri. The parents are rebelling be- cause the state won't transport their children to the parochial schools. The move started without no- tice when 75 parochial students moved into the seven-room, 150- pupil school at Centertown Thursday. The next day 100 de- scended on the two-room Osage Bend school, and 85 on the school at Vienna. The littke Osage Bend school! may get another 150 pupils | Monday. In Jefferson City, vey tholic parents are aiming at transferring 1,500. In the St, Louis area, Catho- lic parents say they will close parochial schools next fall and turn thousands of children into the public school system. "We can't afford to keep on issues for public schools and paying parochial tu- | ition, too,"' said Garland Noonan |of Pacific, Mo., a leader in the drive. The Catholics had sought re- | lief through the Missouri legis- | |a two-year basic nursing course Planned | TORONTO (CP)--The Regis- tered Nurses' Association of On- tario will employ a qualified nurse for a three-month study of the possibility of developing at the Ryerson Institute of Tech- nology. The decision was made at the final session of the association's three-day annual meeting here Saturday. If, after the study, the asso- ciation approves a two-year ex- perimental course, Ryerson will be able to accommodate 30 stu- dents in September, 1964, Ex- ecutive Secretary Laura Barr said. Other studies which the rec- ord 2,334 delegates to the three- day meeting voted to initiate included a province-wide study through .conferences to define the "beliefs and responsibili- ties" of nursing. The results of this study would be presented to the 1964 annual meeting for approval and would be interpreted to al- lied health groups and the com- milnity in 1964-65, the resolu- tion stated. WORK SIMPLIED Helen McArthur, president of the provisional council of the College of Nurses, said the work of the college's elected council would be simplified by! by this research. A- resolution requesting the association's board of directors | to consider the possibility of) undertaking a study of the | structure of the organization | was also passed. Miss McArthur proposed Sept. 16 as the election date for the | first permanent council of the | College of Nurses, 1 James S, Murphy, 41, a rather LOSES WIFE, TWO CHILDREN | George McNeil, 37, lost his skirts of Sudbury, Ont., Sun- wife and two children in an day. He managed to save early morning fire that des- his four other children, troyed their home on the out- --(CP Wirephoto) SIU Chief Plans To End Dispute WASHINGTON (CP) -- Paul decency to wait for this report Hall, president of the Seafarers|to come out before we have International Union of North|any comment," Jodoin said in America, says he has somejan interview. ideas for settling the Great) je expects the report might |Lakes shipping dis pute but/become qavailable in a few wants to talk these over with weeks. the Canadian SI Ubefore he ' ' F : | The SIU, with the co-opera- makes them public. ltion of other unions atfihated "But I want to make clear | with the AFL - ClO maritime we are 100 per cent behind Hal|jtrades department, has been Banks and the Canadian SIU in|picketing and . boycotting the this fight," Hall added in alhandling in American ports of brief interview on the eve of|ships belonging to Upper Lakes the SIU's five - day biennial|/Shipping Company of Toronto meeting where Hall, Banks and|which has a contract with the other union executive members CMU. come up for re-election. Hall observed that while the "T have a number of ideas to.\OMU is a member of the CLA, propose to this convention onjit is not affiliated with the this issue but [ don't want to} AFL-CIO 'and the SIU in Can- discuss them before I talk tojada is." the Canadian delegation. beget The SIU president added he is going to be a report on the|.. |. . eat 4 Fie problem at. this|'8 convinced AFL - CIO Prest- convention, which also will con-|dent George Meany fully sup- sider what further action we'ports the SIU in the Great should take." Lakes issue. While Hall conferred with his) Meany will make a statement executive to prepare for the)before the SIU convention to- convention opening today,/day but his public relations of- Claude Jodoin, president of the/ficer said he is unlikely to Canadian Labor Congress, at-|make any public reference to rived to address the Interna-!the SIU-CMU battle. tional Association of Machinists) 41 was to have made a spa to "ly Vacs i apeech Saturday before 9 man: day and would not confer with] agement penne meeting but Hall. |Herb Brand, SIU public rela- tions officer, said the meeting suggest for the shipping fight between the CIC's Canadian Asked what solution he might was cancelled because of lack | of sufficient speakers. LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- The ation of Printing Trade Unions told the federation's annua! con- vention here Saturday that "a many men are out of work in the printing industry because printing is being imported." Harold Tomkinson of Toronto school texts and related and XBX physical education booklets--should be printed in Canada instead of in the United States. Mr. Tomkinson said imports of about $200,000,000 worth of printed matter from the United States should be cut at least by half and the business given to Canadian printing firms. Employers in the printing in- dustry are just as concerned about the situation as the 20,000. member OFPTU, said Purdy Churchill of Toronto, a member of the federation's resolution's committee. There will be little left of the printing industry in Canada if some action is not taken, added Leslie Young of Toronto, also of the resolutions committee. PASS RESOLUTION A resolution incorporating the objections was approved by the delegates, However, copies of the resolution will not be sent to federal and provincial gov- ernments until more research is done by the committee "to back up our claims." Other resolutions passed Sat- urday dealt with a provincial medical care plan, income taxes, minimum wage laws, un- Davie Fulton Seeks Votes In Kamloops KAMLOOPS, B.C. (CP)--E. Davie Fulton, British Colum- bia Progressive Conservative leader, announced Saturday he would seek election to the pro- vincial legislature in Kamloops constituency. And the Social Credit incum- bent, Highways Minister Philip Gaglardi, welcomed the chal- lenge. to seek the provincial ship. ment, Mr. Gaglardi said: Printing Unionist Assails Imports president of the Ontario Feder- told delegates that college year- books, maierial--and the RCAF's 5BX Mr. Fulton, former justice and works minister in the fed- eral cabinet, represented Kam- loops in Ottawa from 1945 until stepping down earlier this year leader- Commenting on the announce- employment insurance, the On- tario. Labor Relations Act and the Vacations with Pay Act. The medical care plan reso- lution called on the Ontario gov- ernment to provide a ¢ re- hensive scheme to be: adminis- tered by a government agency. a methods used by the Unemploy~ ment Insurance Commission 1% disqualify applicants from rex ceiving benefits; Mr. Tomkinson was re-elected as president of the 20-member Federation. di ae Other officers elected in cluded Peter McCombe, Bramp# ton, a member of the executive. OLD COUNTRY The plan proposed by the pro: vincial government c onstitutes "a smoke screen and a gim- mick . . . to get votes," said Mr. Churchill. The plan should include pre- vention, diagnosis and treat- ment of illnesses, rehabilitation of persons disabled by illness or accident. Everyone should be eligible to benefit from the plan. : mos HAVE OTHER REQUESTS ». Other resolutions: Called on the federal govern- ment to allow the exemption of union dues and professional as- sociation fees on taxable earn- ings in addition to the present $100 exemption allowed for charitable donations and medi- cal expenses. Urged affiliated locals to sup- port any individual union in any LONDON (AP)--Standings of top teams in Old Country soc- cer, including games of Satu day: : ENGLISH LEAGUE Division Everton Tottenham Leicester Wolverh'ton Stoke Chelsea Sunderland Newcastle Leeds North'ton Swindon Peterboro Coventry Bourne'th 23 10 10 100 201310 83 201018 92 17:15 9 78 63 49 615 10 58 42 47 union shop protesting the sub- jletting of any part of all of a| |Job to a non-union shop; Requested the federal goyern-| ment to institute legislation to} discourage the importation of; Priting by business establish-| ments in Canada by not allow-} ing the cost of imported print-| ing as a business expense far income tax purposes; Held that the Unemployment| Insurance Act should be amended to provide that alli hourly rated and salaried em- | Ployees be required to contrib- jute to the unemployment insur- ance fund; Asked that the provincial goy- ernment set by law a minimum wage of $1.25 per hour for both |men and women, a maximum |40-hour work week, and hire ;more inspectors to police the minimum wage, hours of work and vacation with pay. | WANT ACTS CHANGED Asked the provincial govern- ment to amend both the Onta- rio Hospital Plan Act and the proposed portable pensions act making it compulsory for all places of business to partici- pate, regardless of size; Recommended the provincial government amend its pensicn law to provide coverage for em ployees in the ._non-mandat \Crewe Division IV % 710 OL 57 59 231111 89 6957 191610 72 5554 -- 22910 80 55 53 Mansfield 22 811 98 6052 SCOTTISH LEAGUE Division I 18 & 1 88 90 63 68 67 79 79 91 Brentford Oldham Torquay Rangers Kilmarnock Partick Celtic Aberdeen 17 6 9 Division 1 St. Johnstone 22 4 6 East Stirling 20 7 6 Morton 123i Hamilton 18 810 69 Stranraer 169 9 8 TRISH LEAGUE Linfield 10 9 2 38 Portadown 910 3 4% Glentoran u 65 #@ Distillery bh 4 Ballymena 74 4 WERTZ RELEASED DETROIT (AP)--Veteran Vie Wertz was released Sunday by Detroit Tigers and turned down an offer to stay with the Ameri- can/League ball club as a coach. The 38-year-old first baseman was in his 16th season in the majors, He hag a busi- ness in Detroit and said he'll de- vote his full time to that for a while. a group (eligible employees are defined as members of a man- datory group between the ages of 30 and 69) between the ages of 25 and 65, with such a plan to be administered by a goy- "| LIS ONLY TO ernment agency. "As far as I am concerned, T am happy to welcome any con- test with anyone." Mr. Fulton said at a constitu- ency meeting that an official nominating convention would be held later this month, the first of 52, as his party goes after every seat in the provincial Called for a protest against "OIL FURNACE? PERRY SELL SPOT CASH OR TERMS "JOHN A. J. | BOLAHOOD | REAL "7254544 he ( DAY OR NIGHT 723-3443 house. ca iit EYE EXAMINATIONS PHONE 723-4191 by appointment F. R, BLACK, O.D. 136 SIMCOE ST. NORTH Maritime Union and the SIU,| which was booted out of the) CLC for membership raiding,| Jodoin said the "most impor- tant" event would be the com-| pletion of the Norris commis-| sion report on the issue. | "TI think we have to have the! COMING EVENTS Now On Classified Page In order to facilitate easier reading for all the vital statistics, The Coming Events will be moved over to the same page as the births, deaths, in memoriams, and obituaries. As a general rule, they will be print- ed on the third classified page. | lature, pushing a bill that wouid allow parochial and private) | schoo} children to ride on pub-| | lic schoo] buses. But a house! | committee killed the bill Tues- | day. ; | So far, the Catholic clergy has taken no part. publicly. 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