hp -- i A ! THE TIMES TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising RA 3-3492 All other calls ....... RA 3-3474 he Oshawa Snes Cloudy with intermittent rain tonight and Saturday. Cooler still on Saturday. ; Price Not Over 7 Cents Per Copy VOL. 88 -- NO. 90 OSHAWA-WHITBY, FRIDAY, APRIL 17, 1959 Authorized As Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa TWENTY PAGES is gs! wi THIS YAWL WILL CARRY OSHAWA 'VIKINGS' TO HEL Oshawa Viking' Plans To Cross Ocean Soon The spirit of adventure lives on.| He has constructed his own| 5 In Ofusya A Lives on iy the equipment 2 boil and pour the|N eart Niilo Onjulka. He plans molten metal. to sail the Atlantic ocean to hisS| The main mast ot ves > native Finland in a 56-foot yawl.| will pe I igh, n ese! | MONTHS OF TRAVEL i He intends to make the journey js 50 feet tall. In all the two will " They i sped several months| iy 4 pi Rn pr pines goed caiTy 1400 square feel of canvas. ay Onjukka ic antici im. The trip will be -| + . y . tirely under canvas although the ge Onjukka Slaitus the vessel pated no trouble in transporting ship does have ar auxiliary|t ola lt uprig Fa any Xind|the boat to the Oshawa harbor motor for use in case of emer-°f Weather except a hurricane. [where jt will be launched. gency. He says that his ancestors have| The boat is located cn a friend's ALL HANDMADE |been seamen for several hundred property on the north end of Var| The ship is entirely handmade Years. He learnt how to sail from|coe's road. | by Niilo with the help of his|his father. | He said the boat will be put| brother Veikko. This despite the| His father owned a boat in Fin-[on a trailer, then hauled by truck fact that neither of trem had had land. Niilo sailed on it for four/to the harbor. | any previous experience in ship years. The boat was wrecked in| In order to finance the con-| building. a storm off the coast of Finland. struction of the peat he has work- ildi |ed for per of ti eg EE 5 ous funds for the project have come Oe own : ji plan to eoitinue on to he would then buy materi: if the trip|Africa, From there they will Seas. the boat. tes The boat is called "Ahti". He is a tool and dic maker by. lary. | After they reach Finland the lated a substantial sum of money In| | SINKI ' Queen Wants CONDITION SERIOUS Little Hope For Dulles FRANKFURT, Germany (Reut-|open next month and perhaps run ers)--John Foster Dulles' sister through the summer. said here today that her brother's| This is bound up in the second- A condition is serious and doctors ary question as to what bearing have little hope. |the Dulles resignation will have Dulles' sister, Mrs. Eleanor on the future course of American Dulles, was speaking to report- foreign policy. ers after her arrival here by air| The likelihood is that the basic on het way OE ee wader pings 3 foreign policy a conference. © PMDET | will remain unchanged. | of the German section of the Though Dulles often has been | To Mingle | With Folks In Africa they hope to visit] OTTAWA (CP)--Esmond But- to meet her Canadian subjects. He told a press conference dians at work and at play--she wants to become acquainted with them and learn how they live-- in her 12,000-mile tour of Canada this summer, He said that "hardly a day goes by" without the Queen mak- ing some decision concerning the visit, It was at her request that the six-week visit be informal! with ithe least possible ceremony. She wants to see the people plasterer. After he bad accumu-|and to have the people see her. She v to visit the = com- y thei Rei Ne and enjoy the people's pastimes. The visit, from June 18 to Aug. j of | : Vuiied States department {referred to as the architect . | U.S. foreign policy, in actual fact | She told reporters at the air- the responsibility for it rests with port that when she visited her|the president. The U.S. constitu- {brother soon after the announce- tion makes this clear. | ment of his resignation as State secretary, he had gsked her tol high admiration for Dulles, lo's sister. She is a mission- ter, who re | i pst wish for the| ' presents Canada at|express his best wishes for the i i {Buckingham Palace, has re- Berliners and for the German|Yiuostionably agrecd nly wits | ported how anxious the Queen is people. { \ |secretary took. He can be ex- The resignation of cancer- nected 'even though Dulles no Istricken John Foster Dulles aS|longer is in office, to keep his | Thursday she wants to see Cana- |S. state secretary promises to pacie principles intact. |dominate the international scene | for some months to come. | Some change may develop in | : . |the day-to-day application of for- | It arises immediate speculation gjey policy. Dulles was linked |as to what effect nis departure/yiiy "such diplomatic eatch- [from the state department helm pages a5 "liberation" "massive [will have on East-West negotid retaliation" and "brink of war." |tions on Germany schedu °| These gave him the stamp of a {tough no-quarter warrior at the conference table. He was re- garded by friend and for alike as a hard-bargaining negotiator, It is as a negotiator. as some in a hing | East-West talks. It is unlikely that his successor, whoever he may be, will be able to match the Eisenhower, who often expres-| commentators already have y : hd T Laperle was charged after the Cet Jail will child's mother, Mes Sueress Gas. vi a e J 7 hactie, ody I ere 44 4 | | i ¥ | MANSLAUGHTER CASE Mrs. Connie Nicholas on her | return to jail in Indianapolis | after hearing a jury verdict of voluntary manslaughter in the slaying of the late Forrest Teel. AP Wirephoto Cripple, 28 Charged With Son's Murder ALEXANDRIA, Out, (CP) -- |Lucein Laperle, a 28 - year - old ieripple, was charged with murder | Thursday night in connection with {the death of his five-month-old ison, Joseph Alain. I e . 'of their infant son in a bedroom. Mrs. Caskinette, who was living with Laperle, was also beaten up. o "days. will carry food for 5) days. He expects the launching to be Finnish this means "The King of sometime in May. With luck he/th e Waves". hopes to start the journey im| The boat will accommodate {trade, but an adventurer at heart, August. leight people, It has a main salon,' {1, will be the longest by a British {monarch to any country outside |the British Isles. She and Prince Dulles technique at the confer- Laperle was arrested and taken ence table. 'to police cells. Hostage Says Situation Tense DEER LODGE, Mont. (AP) A hostage freed for eight min- uies by rioting convicts at Montana prison said today 17 other hostages are "all sel up to be killed." Waller Jones, prison psy- chologist, was rcleased for an eight-minute talk with report- nouncement of an agreement would be made shortly. Deputy Warden Theodore Rothe 38, formerly of Waupun, Wis., shot to death and guard William Cox was stabbed in the arm dur- ing the early hours of the upris- ing. WARDEN ESCAPES Warden Floyd Powell, held at knife-point for nearly three hours, escaped unharmed with the aid of a convicted burglar wielding a ers. "It's tighter than hell in there," Jones sald. He said the situation 'is touchy" and guards who are among the meat cleaver, hostages "are all set up to be ea . killed, some will be hanged." Powell, Maj.-Gen. S. H. Mitch- opp p ? ell, commander of the Montana _-- oni Tog hI National Guard and Father Ly~ inmates are touchy. Any little |™an, were talking through the : "» | gate. fing Will set }t off. ntil the prisoners shouted "Everything is going to be all|threats to burn their hostages, du- right," Father Gerald Lyman, thorities had planned to send 150 Roman Catholic chaplain, told re-| officers storming the 90-year-old porters after he left a conference prison. There are 435 prisoners of prison officials and spokesmen |within the walls. for the rioting prisoners. A prisoner, identified by others The negotiations started after|as Jerry Myles, a burglar from the convicts threatened to burn|Butte, shouted to reporters that the 18 hostages with gasoline. the riot started over poor med- That warning stopped plans of of-|ical facilities, filthy sanitation ficers to storm the prison in an|and dissatisfaction with Montana effort to rescue the hostages. (parole board policies. Father Lyman had participated] Convicts took control of the in a two-hour, 45-minute meeting |prison late Thursday. at a prison gate between convict| "It started about 4:30 p.m.* snokesmen and prison officials.|said prison business manager El The priest said a formal an-|mer Erickson. Sex Offenders To we ye EC ra Te OTTAWA (CP)--A royal com. throngh failure in the future to {mission report today recom-| control his sexual impulses." | mended that all persons found by| The Criminal Code now defines [the courts to be dangerous sexual{a "criminal sexual psychopath® [offenders be sentenced to an in-| ag a "person who, by a course of determinate penitentiary term. misconduct in sexual matters, The recommendation is con-|has shown a lack of power to With the exception of the fin- ishing touches all that remains to be done now is to say the keel and construct the masts. The keel will be made of cast| fron, It will weigh seven tons.| Mr. Onjukka will make it him-| self. lembark for Africa. Philip will visit some 85 com-| munities. |g | A request of the Queen was to! {see the Canadian North. So the [tour will take her to both the {Yukon and the Northwest Ter- ritories. Her interest was sparked by the enthusiasm of Prince] Philip after he made a solo visit| 1954 . | dining room, captain's cabin, washroom and a flying bridge. The Onjuklas plan to go direct- 3 Escape Deat ly to Helsinki. Helsinki is Niilo's| srigiual home. They will visi In Orono l S wit is parents for a few Car, TruckCrash months. Following this they will in ORONO Staff)--Three men es-| Amish Farmers caped injury in a freak accident township vitage Thursday night ALL QUADRUPLETS ROBERT ANDERSON MONTREAL (CP)--The CNR says a firemen's strike would have no effect on its operations. Betting that other railway unions would not support a strike Firemen's Strike 'No Effect: CNR tained in the report of the royal eontrol his sexual mpulses and commission on the criminal 1aW| who as a result is likely to attack relating to criminal sexual psy- op otherwise inflict jury, pain chopaths tabled in the Commons| or evil on any person by Justice Minister Fulton. | f y , The 20-pae Xeport, PROPOSE cr jo hat where a court finds ; 2 8 an accused is a dangerous sexual sexual offenders and action by| 3 Sia 4 loffender that he be sentenced to sonal opinion, Mr. Gamble said the federal government in the preventive detention They said "the matter still has to be ex- treatment of confined persons, : od | : iceinn | Preventive detention would mean plored. was submitted by a commission| yo on in 5 penitentiary for {headed by Chief Justice J. C. Me- t May 11 when th | y Chief Justice J. C. Me ' noo May n agen he brother. Ruer if the High Court of Ontario.| 30 indeterminate per od." To Settle Here UNIONDALE, (CP)--An Amish of farming, using horses almost Mennonite farmer, one of four exclusively. who recently purchased property decared total losses when they GOT THE MEASLES burst into flames, Damage is timated at $12,000. The accident occurred when OPP Constable Donald Foulds stopped a car driven by William es- "While they are good farmers| Stillman of Guelph, to allow a Canadian, U.S. | Officials Meet On Pilotage PIEDMONT, Calif. (AP)-- Dr. and Mrs. H. Dean Hos- kins have issued a first an- nual report on the progress of their quadruples. Paul, Katherine, Sarah and called by the firemen, who seek/CPR on the same issue, most! | The commissioners proposed| Under the Crimi:a! Code, a to keep firemen aboard yard and freight diesels indefinitely, S. F. Dingle, CNR vice = president of operations, says: "Regardless of the possible work stoppage by the brother- hood, we intend to maintain nor- | i " : that the term "criminal sexual|person found by the courts to be J oe ot psychopath" in the Criminal Code a criminal sexual psychopath is {normal operations and the strike be abolished and that "dangerous sentenced to impriscnment for {ended after three days. |sexual offender" be substituted. not less than two years. The | The union subsequently signed OFFER DEFINITION | court may also impose a sentence |a contract with the CPR oh much! They said a "dangerous sexual of Preventive detention. fthe same terms it balks at today offender" should be defined as| The report proposed that *'spe- SEVENTEEN MAY DIE IN PRISO | N UPRISING zg in this section of Ontario, has|in the sense that they look after] Eansport to be pulled out of the : denied that United States mem- their land, Canadian farmers, di bers of the sect plan to acquire a would hesitate to-buy farms in| Another transport owned by Margaret can say 'mam "da-da," "bye-bye" and "hi on their first birthday, the mal services and to insure there | with the CNR. |*"a person who, by h's conduct in}cial provision be made in the pen- will be no interruption to the free] No date has been set for asexual matters, has shown a fail- itentiary system for ihe custody, flow of traffic." |stril'n, The union is awaiting the ure to control his sexual impulses control and treatmeit of every WASHINGTON (CP)--Canadian Transport Minister George Hees 4 large block of land. "We aren't trying to buy in any special block," said Henry Hertz-| Jer. "We bought the farms be-| cause they were the best value offered. We don't want to cause the area where they settle. If Brown Cartage Company of this happens, our farms will all Leamington, apd driven by drop in value." | George Siddall, also of Leaming- Fred Slater, former reeve of|ton, careened into the rear end the township, said: of the Stillman vehicle, Both "There were lots of better| Vehicles went into the east ditch and U.S. Treasury Secretary Rob- ert Anderson have set up a series of staff meetings to reconcile dif- {ferences between the two coun- tries on the question of pilotage regulations on the St. Lawrence parents said, The quads were treated-to a cake and new shoes Thurs- day. Each infant weighs 18 pounds, which was the total W. E. Gamble, vice-president of the Brotherhood of Locomo- tive Firemen and Enginemen, replied that the union would "take the necessary steps" to keep trains from running on CNR results of a strike poll, expected and who is likely to cause injury, sexual offender undergoing pre- on tiie weekend. 'pain or other evil to any person!ventive detention." any trouble in the community, we farms they could have got around |and burst into flames, only want to be able to live our here, but they weren't in a block. Stillman and the constable lives in peace." We asked them why they didn't managed to leap into the ditch Mr. Hertzler was interviewed 20 up around Mount Forest, seconds before the collision. The after reports that a group of East where they could get the same Orono fire brigade was unable iv of their weight when they came into the world a month prematurely. % They all are beginning to walk and all of them had the Seaway. Hees conferred with Anderson and other treasury, state depart- ment and U.S. Coast Guard offi- cials Thursday and said later that tracks anywhere in Canada. But he said there had been no talks yet with other unions to see whether they would support such a walk-out, Asked for his per- Nissouri Township residents had protested to federal members of Parliament against allowing large numbers of the Amish Men- nonites into Oxford County. Uniondale is about 18 miles northwest of Woodstock. "None of the farmers around acreage for as much as $5,000 to save either of the vehicles. $7,000 less for 100 acres than the; were paying here. They said the; wanted to County." Mr. Slater said that part of th y| Const. Foulds said later that v|charges are pending as a result stay in Oxford of the accident. oath of citizenship 'calls for ol THOUGHT FOR TODAY didates to say they will def measles together, at age nine months. | "further consultative meetings will take place at the staff level | |with a view to working out co-| ! operative arrangements." | Floods Ravage Argentina Nasser, Russia here have said anything to us about not wanting us here," Mr. Hertzler said. He is one of four who recently purchased five farms. The Amish Mennonites number about 40 and come from Pennsylvania, Maryland and Del- aware. The farms cover about acres a mile west of here SEEK GOVERNMENT AID 400 ment assistance in prohibiting fmmigration of any more of the group. "We recognize their complete right to religious freedom, but we object to their tendency to block settlement, to their boundary maintenance techniques and to the detrimental effect they have on prices of farm land in the sur- rounding area. They try to dom- inate the community completely and if they cannot, they will not live in it." 'Adams, one of nbers, said "The are a sect by themselves, oy "live by them- selves. They cling to old methods the Canada against aggression. These Many a person tailors his people won't take that oath so| religion to fit the pattern of they can't become true citizens.". his prejudices. Relations Dip BOMBAY (Reuters) -- Strained] Tha merger was "rushed relations between the United Arab|through" in the face of the con- Republic and Russia dipped today spiracy, he said. following an accusation by Pres-| Nasser's statements maintained ident 'Nasser of the United Arab|the stepped-up pace of his battle Republic that Communists have against Arab Communists and hatched a master plot to domin-| Maj.-Gen. Abdul Karim Kassem, ate the Middle East. ithe Iraq premier. Nasser said in an interview| BUENOS AIRES (AP)--Flood waters ravaging parts of Argen- tina, Uruguay and Brazil receded today, and aid was cent to an es- timated 100,000 persons. At least 12 persons were feared to have been drowned. There | were no official casualty figures, |for the hardest hit areas were icut off. | The sun shone after five days of steady rains. Relief missions {headed for the stricken regions by land, water and air. published here Thursday that Arab Communists, with Russian backing, plotted to seize Iraq, split Syria and Egypt and create] a "Red fertile crescent" in the Middle East. The 'Communist master plot" had lost in less than three weeks the "'enormous Soviet goodwill built up over three years of friendship," Nasser said. The Arab leader told R. K. Karanjia, editor of the Indian news magazine Blits that the Communists had aimed for a crescent - shaped federation of Iraq, Syria, Jordan, Lebanon and protest against the growing Gasoline Price War In Walkout At Smith Transport, Ltd. Drivers and warehousemen, working for Smith Trans- port Ltd., in Oshawa, are expected to walk out this after- noon, a spokesman for the company said today. This move will be made to back up a wildcat strike made by fellow workers in Montreal, The strike was a result of a worker trend towards: "piggy-back" shipments of truck trailers by rail. Toronto CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICF RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 Frank Hanley, Montreal City Councillor and independent member of the Quebec Legis- lature for Montreal St. Ann, is carried struggling from the council chambers by three nol- | % ° CITY HALL TUSSLE the sheikhdom of Kuwait, possi- bly designed to give Russia ac- cess to the Persian Gulf, the Gulf of Aqaba and hte Indian Ocean. icemen after he ignored an or- [IN MOSCOW der from the acting mayor to | Nasser said plans for the fed- sit down. The wrangle occurred eration wer: worked out at the| while the council was discuss. 21st congress of the Soviet Com- ing the civic budget estimates 'munist party in Moscow last Jan- for 1959-60. CP Wirepnhoto 'sarv " v TORONTO CP)--A gasoline price war began today among service stations in the city's east end. Regular grade gasoline sold for as low as 36.9 cents a gallon, about sever cents below the usual price. Legislation On Freight Rate Approved OTTAWA CP)--Government legislation aimed at easing the impact of the last freight rate increase by a $20,000,000 freight subsidy was approved by the Commons railway com- mittee todav and was referred back to the Commons. EXAMINE DEBRIS AFTER BLAST Firemen examine the debris [ left by what police described as | a suicide dynamite blast in a downtown Montreal hotel. The explosion took the life of Guy | dynamite were set off in Chap Charbonneau, abeut 40, of St. Lin, Quebec, and injured two other persons. Twenty sticks of | bonneau's fourth-floor room, CP Wirephote ee