i . ' 2 ™ OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesdey, April 27, 1966 ACTRESS HEDY LE- MARR embraces her attor- ney, Jordan M. Wank, in a Los Angeles courtroom Tues- day just after a jury found her innocent of a shoplift- ing charge. (AP Wirephoto) Hedy Lamarr "Not Guilty" On Shoplifting Charge LOS ANGELES (AP)--Ac- tress Hedy Lamarrt's role was) for real and she played it with dignity and a smile. "Not guiltv,"' said a munici- pal court clerk, reading the jury's verdict Tuesday at the flimax of Miss Lamarr's six- ey trial on a charge of shop- % ing. The jury deliberated five jours. » Hedy, 51, flashed a smile, then axjother as her. fingers entwined those of her lawyer in a victory grip. Then she rose and walked to the jury box. thanked and shook hands with each of the seven men and five women jurors as they left. The Vienna - born star was charged with stealing 18 items worth a total of $86 from the May Company's Wilshire Boule- vard department store Jast Jan. LA A woman employee made a citizen's arrest as she left the store. Miss Lamarr Monday she had gone out to look for her business manager, planned to pay for the items all Smiling, she! at once Con Game ihe Dallas Executive | WEATHER FORECAST DALLAS, Tex. (AP) sty a Dallas sales executive has ~~ Police Been fleeced of $21,000 by one! of the oldest con games in the Book: A flashing, whirring money machine. « Forgery detective Oscar. Shin- augh added that a Fort Worth! inessman dropped about $2,000 to the same bunch, be- lieved to' be a car dealer and! his accomplices. _ The 48-year-old Dallas man arid the 25-year-old Fort Worth} victim told police they fell for) a@-money - making machine! acheme. that Shinpaugh called "d@ne of the oldest and most un- }colored chemicals.' jby a former business ee |tance April 5. There, the man said, he foun "| a portable "money-making lab" replete with "'miraculous a Jab ing liquids, a spinning money cylinder and various bottles of The acquaintance said the de- vice could make $10 bills out of }$1 bills. And $1,000 bills out of $100 bills. They demonstrated by bleach- jing out a $1 bill in thick, clear jliquid, After a few minutes in the cylinder, the bill emerged looking like a $10 bill. The Dallas man said he was |taken in, the officer related, and testified | SUMMATIONS EXPECTED TODAY Landreville Case Nears Last Stages By JOHN LeBLANC OTTAWA (CP)--The federal igovernment's judicial inquiry into the high finances of Mr | Justice Leo Landreville ends to- | day after a spirited defence of this honesty and a couple of idays of sometimes + confusing testimony from the embattled judge. After a final day of summa- jtions by Jawyers for the Ontario | judge and the commission, Mr. | Justice Landreville's career will {go into the hands of Ivan 'C. |Rand, retired Supreme Court of |Canada justice who is investi- \gating his connections with a 'natural gas company. The 56-year-old judge got 7,500 free shares of Northern Ontario |Natural Gas Co. stock in 1957. The federal government wants to know what, if any, was the connection between this and the jfact that NONG got a municipal franc hise in Sudbury while the judge was mayor in 1956. Tuesday, after periodic: prod- dings over changes in his testi- mony and over his refusal to volunteer information before be- ing subpoenaed by an Ontario inquiry in 1962, the judge closed lout with a declaration that greed never motivated his ac- |fivities. "IT feel the whole matter is |more of an attack on my intelli- gence than my integrity," he said as he contended his deal- ings in NONG stock had been "in a quite traceable manner." UNDERWENT GRILLING However, he underwent a warm grilling over the fact that, when the RCMP finally ran across his NONG stock ac- tivities six years after they oc- curred, he refused to give in- formation in advance of being called before the Ontario in- quiry. Under vigorous pressing by commission counse| William Morrow, the judge said his re- fusal was partly because he had been "annoyed" that an RCMP officer had not told him the On- tario inquiry was being opened and partly because he had Mr. | were {sought advice from many quar-, ters. "You really thought that you not capable of making your own decision on a question | of that sort?"' the commissioner ' asked. Commissioner Rand also re- monstrated when Mr. Justice) Landreville listed Lionel Chev-| rier, former Liberal cabinet minister and now high commis- sioner in London, as mong those from whom he had sought ad- vice. "Do you think that's going to be any extenuation?" the 82-| year-old retired judge observed. The Chevrier reference im- pelled Mr. Justice Landreville-- who had been rapped earlier for giving testimony contrary to that he gave the 1962 Ontario inquiry--to make a change in the afternoon from evidence he had given in the morning. CONSULTED MINISTER He at first said he consulted Mr. Chevrier when he was look- ing for advice before getting called | to the Ontario inquiry in $25,000,000 Owed In Taxes, Interest NEW YORK (AP)--A federal judge ruled today that six American shipping firms owned and controlled by Greek ship- ping magnate Stavios Niarchos owe the U.S. government $25,- 000,000 in taxes and interest. The government 0 btained were all keen marbles players.|military purposes only. judgments in federal court for $16,528,000 in what it claims are; taxes owed over a 16-year pe- riod by the six firms. The bal- ance represents interest on ethe unpaid taxes. U.S. attorney Robert Morgen- thau said the judgments were unopposed by the North Amer- ican Shipping and Trading Co., Inc.; American Pacific Steam- ship Co.; Transoceanic Marine, Inc.; American Overseas Tan- ker Corp.; Corp.; and Plymouth Tanker Corp. Mainly Cloudy, Showers Southeasterly Winds TORONTO (CP) issued at 5:30 a.m. Synopsis: More snow and rain is predicted. for Thursday. Lake St. Clair, Windsor: Mainly cloudy with showers. Winds southeast 15 to 25. Lake Erie, Southern Lake Huron, Niagara, London, Hamil- ton: Cloudy with showers. Winds --Ferecasts believable tricks in the books. "left the motel to get $21,000 of southeast 15 to 25. The detective said the Dallas man said he was summoned to) | shortly with 210 $100 bills in a quron, @ suite ina large Dallas motel] PS ER Death Of Harry jhis own money. He returned suitcase, Griffith "Shock" To Larry Rink, 23 "CONTANTINE, Mich. (AP)--! try Rink and Harry Grif- ith had similar forms of cancer Ot,the bone. Both fought for life fast month in similar experi- mental operations. Now Rink knows Gith is dead. ait sort of shocked me at first," said Rink, 23, of the southwest Michigan community @f'Centreville. But, he said, he's @i}l optimistic and is even shop- Sieg for an artificial leg i HERE AND THERE ' * Oshawa Fire Depariment 'answered one minor grass fire and a small truck blaze on William st. e. yesterday. that Grif- 'Magistrate Harry Jermyn 'will be the guest speaker 'Wednesday at the annual gen- @fal meeting of the Humane &pciety of Oshawa. The meet- 'img starts at 8&8 p.m. at the Simeoe Hall Boys' Club, Bulalie ave, «*Two city men are among 'this year's graduates from the Bastern Pentecostal Bible School, Peterborough. They will be attending graduation 'ceremonies at Massey Hall, 'Toronto, tomorrow night. The air are Thomas Wright, son af Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Wright, 'of 767 King st. w., and Wayne Werner, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Werner, of 339 Inver- ness st. Roth have eeen stu- dents at the school for the last three years Doctors removed Rink's leg last May, hoping to check the progress of his tumor. It didn't work. But when Griffith, 63, of sub- urban Philadelphia, and Robert Allen, 29, of Tucson, Ariz., took part in a cancer-transplant ex- periment, Rink's doctors thought there was new hope. Rink flew to Buffalo, N.Y. where: doctors at Roswell Park Memorial Institute cay! him' with Thomas Welker, of Monrad, Mont., and repeated, the prospective cure. Cancerous tissue was __re- moved from each victim and transplanted into the other, It was hoped each man's body would build up antibodies to fight the foreign matter--and the victim's own cancer, as well. Griffith died Monday despite the experiment. Doctors say Rink, Allen and Welker must be watched for some time be- fore it will be known whether the new treatment helped them. Rink and his wife expect their first child in September. REMEMBER WHEN you could ge excellent meals at reasonable prices? Well, you still can at the HOTEL LANCASTER 27 KING 87. WEST, OSHAWA ~ | cloudy Lake Ontario, Northern Lake Georgian Bay, Halibur- Killaloe, Toronto: Mainly with showers, southeasterly 15 to 25. | Ottawa: Mostly cloudy with moderating temperatures later in the day. Winds northeast 15. Timagami, Cochrane, Western James Bay, North Bay, Sud- bury; Cloudy with snow likely changing to rain. Winds south- east 20 to 30. Algoma, Sault Ste. Marie, White River: Overcast with rain. Winds southeast 20 to 30. ton, Forecast temperatures Low tonight, high Thursday Windsor ..... . 50 Trenton ... St. Thomas ,. Killaloe ooevecccnce the. province * y Winds | London .... Muskoka .. Kitchener'. sovecces 30 + 28 35 25 32 25 Mount Fores' Sudbury ..... Wingham .. Earlton .... Hamilton ... Sault Ste. Mari St. Catharines ..... Kapuskasing .. Toronto .... White River . 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Chauffeurs licence neces- This position offers an interesting challenge for a woman APPLY IN WRITING TO L, B. LEITH | The Oshawa Times several openings for INCLUDE FULL The Positions Available Are: (Female) Typing TO: RD, CLERK Some previous telephone or Ventura Steamship) late 1962. He referred to that, politician as minister of justice and his administrative chief. In fact, Mr. Chevrier did not be- come minister of justice until April, 1963. He admitted in the -afterneon he had been wrong and said he called Mr, Chevrier in early |1963--by which time he had al- | last winter, ready testified at the Ontario | probe. Names of other government} officers came into Tuesday's evidence by the judge. He told of going to then Justice Minister Favreau in 1964 and asking for a royal commission inquiry wre his behaviour after Ontario At torney-General Wishart had told) him he was thinking of having | criminal charges laid. Mr. Favreau had told him: "Yes, I know, the prime min-| ister is sympathetic to you and| he told me this matter should be cleared up some time." Before the commission was appointed, Mr. Justice Landre- ville was charged with munici- pal corruption. He was dis- charged at a preliminary hear- ing in 1964. The judge quoted the Ontario attorney-general as telling him after the discharge that "this matter is settled now and you shouldn't consider resigning." MARBLES DREW FANS George Washington, Thomas Jefferson and John Adams, three United States presidents, | for sentence. SECRETARY, 19, PREFERS JAIL OTTAWA (CP) -- Nineteen- year-old Eileen Conlin of nearby Orleans again chose to stay in jail Tuesday rather thén accept court probation terms that could prevent her from seeing her boyfriend for a year. Miss Conlin. a_ secretary, has been convicted of false pretences and fraud arising from a province-wide travel- ling spree with her boyfriend From AP-Reuters SAIGON (CP)--U.S. Air Force B-52s pounded North Viet Nam for the second time in the war) today, again attacking Mu Gia) Pass on the supply route to the} south. In their first raid on the north) 15 days ago, the planes dropped| !700 tons of bombs which set off) landslides that closed the pass. Buia week later U.S. spokes- jmen said North Vietnamese |workers had reopened the road- way and men and supplies for, the Viet Cong were again able to get through. While the long-range Ameri- |can bombers from Guam struck) the north, Viet Cong terrorists, singled out a new target in a month-long wave of violence in Saigon. A powerfu ploded in the midst of civilian construction workers, killing eleven South Koreans and two! The boyfiend, alse 19, faces | similar charges. He is now in | the Ontario hospital for the | criminally insane at . Pene- tanguishene. Last Friday, Miss Conlin was told she could go free on one-year probation if she kept away from people with crim- inal records, The girl hesitated, then agreed to sign the probation order, but changed. her mind outside the courtroom, Taken back inside she was remanded her to last Monday in custody more than 40 persons, including! | some children. The South Koreans worked for) RMK, the big American con- struction combine handling Appearing in court Tuesday, | Miss Conlin said "1 still don't think I'd be able to keep such a probation promise." New Defence Pact For U.K., Singapore LONDON (AP) -- British and| morning truck to take them to partment's building projects in! | South Viet Nam. South Vietnamese and injuring] most of the U.S. defence de | wounded 143. Since then about two dozen grenades have been thrown, most of them at U.S. military personnel. The Viet Cong aiso have at- tacked Saigon's big Tan Son Nhut Airport, assassinated four |persons and staged six hit-and- |run raids on the outskirts of the city. KILLED A POLICEMAN Police said Viet Cong guerril- |! as shot a policeman to death 'as he was driving a jeep \through the capita! Tuesday night. About 100 guerrillas also attacked a city outpost, killing |two militiamen and a deputy | village chief. During the night, a Viet Cong Rt the. § hurled a hand grenade at the Saigon residence of the jcommander of the South Korean forces in South Viet Nam, Maj.- |Gen. Chae Myung Shin. The 40-year-old general was not at home, but the blast in- |jured a guard and destroyed a vehicle. Another grenade was thrown | this morning in another part of | B-52s Pound North Viet For Second Time In War the city, injuring three Chinese textile plant technicians... While bloodshed continued in Saigon, North Viel Nam broad- cast a claim that its jets shot down two American planes northeast of Hanoi Tuesday and damaged several others. It said nothing about the MiG-21- re 'ported shot down in the same area by a U.S. F-4 Phantom iet. A U.S. spokesman said the MiG-21 crashed in flames 35 miles from China's frontier after it had been hit by a heat> seeking Sidewinder missile from the Phantom, Now Many Weer FALSE TEETH With Little Worry Fat, talk, laugh or sneeze without bined of insecure false teeth slipping or robbins. F lr firmer and more com- This pleasant powder habe (denture breath), Get drug counters everywhere. The men were gathered in a) narrow street waiting for their) Singapore leaders have agreed work when a claymore mine ex-| on broad terms for a new de-|ploded across the road, cutting fence pact giving Britain mili- tary base rights in the tiny city- | lets. state indefinitely, Common- wealth officials reported Tues- day night. One major condition reans, two Filipinos and several children, by set Singapore territory for defensive Hote, a U.S. officers' billet, | which killed "six persons and them down with a hail of pel-| The injured included 87 Ko-) The Jatest wave of terrorism) Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew,in the Saigon area began April) |was that the British must use|1 with an attack on the Victoria 452 Simcoe St. S. uring Admiral T.V., Zenith, top lines of furniture and appliances. i Furniture & Appliances Oshawo's New Furniture and Appliance Store teot- 723-0011 Top Service and mony 7k « BIG LOOK ¥ al Jun SMALL PRICES BRIDGELAND Meat-0-Rama YOUNG ROASTING OR FRYING CHICKENS CANADA PACKER'S 37: SLICED BREAKFAST BACON 69: Me ROUND STEAK RUMP or PRIME HIB T-B SIRLOIN STEAK, PORTERHOUSE STEAK, WING STEAK HE ONE STEAK, BLADE 2 7h Te erm BS ts LR S ib. 55° WHY PAY MORE AND GET CANADA PACKERS Margarine, Shortening, Tenderflake Lard 4». 1.00 CANADA PACKERS CHEESE succs 1.00) ; GILSON FREEZER 5 YEAK WARKKANTY $149.50 3 pkgs. | Brown's BREAD LESS? 24-02, LOAVES 1.00 BULK BACON ib. 7° CANADA PACKERS BEEF BOLOGNA PEAMEAL by the piece 3m 1.00 COMMERCIAL SIDES OF BEEF 45 Red Brand SIDES OF BEEF Ib. 53° Blue Brand SIDES OF BEEF Ib. 52° 909 SIMCOE ST, NORTH CUT AND WRAPPED FREE SIDES OF PORK Ib. 43° BRIDGELAND MEAT-0-RAMA "HOME OF THE KING OF MEATS" (At The Crosswalk) HINDS OF BEEF Ib. 49: PHONE 728-3661 RS