THOUGHT FOR TODAY More often than not, no one would notice an unpleasant truth about you if you didn't attract attention by trying to cover it with a lie. She Oshawa Simes WEATHER REPORT Cloudy with occasional showers Wednesday, temperature, little change in VOL. 88--NO. 233 OSHAWA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1959 Authorized As Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa TWENTY-FOUR PAGES Boy Dies When Hi By Bullet A 15-year-old Reach township|but about 200 feet from the shed) boy died on a country sideroad he said that he thought he was) on Monday evening after a riflelabout to faint, then suddenly had sent a bullet into his stom-{collapsed. ach, Lar Larocque, son off The victom, one of eight chil Mr. and Mrs. Vietor Larocque,|dren, was believied dead by the| RR 2, Port Perry, collapsed time medical assistance arrived. | while running from an implement] The incident vras investigated| shed after the rifle he had beenby Cpl. Norman McCombe and| holding accidentally discharged. [Constable Joseph Tullock, of the The accident occurred in an Whithy detachment of the OPP. | implement shed owned by George Mrs, Kilpatriek, who lives at| Kilpatrick, on the second con- the farm where the accident took | cession of Reach township, about| place, said the koys called in on J three miles south of Port Perry|her a few minutes before the and about a quarter mile from mishap. She sad she remarked| § the boy's home. {to-Larry that it was a poor day| | " {for shooting, amd he agreed. It| His two younger brothers! 4 Bs | Paul, 11 and Ricky, 12. told| Was not long afterwards when police that the three of them had Ricky appeared calling for help been on the Kilpatrick farm with PRONOUNCED DEAD @ 22 calibre rifle, with one car-| gpe called Dir. John Diamond tridge in the chamber, when they| who pronounced the boy dead, | ran into the shed fo get out of and called in Tir. D. Rennie, the | the rain, Reach township) coroner. { Larry is survived by his par-| RIFLE SLIPPED ents, three brothers, Ronnie, | They said that when they pre-pickje and Pwul, all at home, pared to leave, Larry picked the|ang four sisters, Shirley (Mrs. rifle up from a farm implement|y Oummings) of Cedar Creek; against which it had been lean-|youice (Mrs. NI. Woods) of Man-| ing. They said that the rifle sli>-| chester, and Ciarol and Debbie at| ped through his fingers, butt|p,me | first, and discharged when the npr Larocqui®, the boy's father, | butt struck the ground, the bullet; employed at General Motors, striking him in the stomach Ozhawa. The family has lived in Ricky ran to get help from the/Cedar Creek for the past 15 Kilpatrick home, about 600 fect|years. | down the road from the shed, The body was taken to the| and left Paul with Larry. Paull McDermott Panaker Funeral told police that Larry started home. Funeral arrangements | running towards the farmhouse! will be announced later "a i : fn re A 5 Cope EERE 5 Two people died in a collision | cloverleaf, The car was literal- between a car and a tractor- | ly torn to pieces, as the photo- trailer shortly before noon to- | graph above shows. The deaths day on Highway 401. The acci- | were the third and fourth on dent occurred at the Whitby | the same stretch of highway in 4 Charge 2 'HOW TO WASH A WALL: FROM TOP OR BOTTOM ? PHILADELPHIA (AP)--Rich- ard Levin of the city's person. nel department admits he has | Levin said he made a sincere | Tun up against a blank wall. effort to learn which: of the | wall washer if it doesn't know the correct way to wash a wall. SOUTH RIVER, Ont, (CP)--An elderly prospector and a family of seven told today of being kid- napped by two men who drove {them more than 150 miles at gun- | point before setting them free un- thought on how a wall should be | The top-to-bottom advocates And Levin's problem is this: | is more efficient and less water |charged with kidnapping 73-year- I ; | 11.30 a.m, when their car passed | whether there might be any pres-| | completely under a car transport ih PITTSBURGH (AP) -- A new fly back to Washington Thursday. Two persons died instantly at Men In Kidnapping Eight Abducted And Car Stolen (children, all of Bourkes, 35 miles north of Kirkland Lake. They also are charged with car | theft, with breaking, entering and itheft from a cabin near Wavell and with an armed holdup at Ti- magami. s Mrs. Way described the kidnap ride as "a nightmare." In the car were her children Jennifer, 6; Judy Ann, 5; Robert, 3; Joyce Marie, 17 months and Josephine, a two-week-old infant. Mr. Prochorenko said he had been held captive by two men Sunday and Monday, "I was returning to my eabin after looking for partridge. As I was about to open the door, I heard a voice behind say: 'Don't make a move,' It was a man and he had a gun. He moved up be. hind me and ordered me in the cabin, As I entered I saw another man standing inside. He had a gun too." The men asked him for money and were told he had none. Then they took 93 cents from the kitchen table and settled down to eat, all the time keeping a gun pointed at Mr, Prochorenko. They took some of his clothes, his 12- guage shotgun and a .22 rifle. Afterwards they took turns washed." contend their method is the One school, explains Levin, | only logical one. They say wa- | says you should start at the bot- | ter running down a wall in the |harmed. tom and work up; the other in- | washing process is removed as | Two men later were arrested sists you start at the top and | the cleaner works toward the |in Burks Falls, 50 miles south of work down. floor. North Bay, by provincial police How can the city select the best | is used. |old John Prophorenko, Mr. and | |Mrs, Arthur Way and their five I F 11 A 1 | g In 401 | PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (AP)--|collective bargaining agreement. | {President Eisenhower instructed] Eisenhower, who has been fighting a cold since Labor Day, | is feeling somewhat better. - He| idential intervention during the CRASH day in either of the major tieups. Although the steel strike is in the past week. Police had dif- [its 84th day, the economic impact ficulty in establishing the iden- [of the Atlantic and Gulf coast tity of today's victims, dock shutdown in its six days has More than 80 civil service job | Proponents of the bottom-to-top| who took them off a bus. applicants are hoping to take | method argue that streaks left | Police at Kirkland Lake said | aides to keep him posted today on any fresh developments in the plans to end his vacation and to| --(Oshawa Times Photo.) [been swift and great--and the federal government may well act the wall washers' test sched- | on unwashed walls by the top- [Lestie Anderson, 25, of no fixed i |steel and dock strikes. in that field first in any big-scale Conservatives In Fight For Russell Voters rejected a major Pro- A factor in Russell may have [the 265-seat gressive Conservative effort to been the long-standing request of|49 and CCF "It seems," laments Levin, | methods is professionally, gen- "there are two schools of | erally and socially correct. uled for Wednesday for five | downers are hard to remove. |address, and Alfred Grant Mar- openings. Washing upward, they explain, |tin, 28 of Hagersville, are James C. Hagerty, White House press secretary. refused to say back-to-work legal move. Reports Monday were that Eis- Beaten wy dey 3 p emergency So-day i vourt ction provisions of the Taft- Hagerty declined comment on that matter and also would not discuss the possibility of the pres- ident using the Taft-Hartley law in the steel dispute, artley law in the dock strike. failure by negotiators to-end the steel strike left it up to Washing- ton today for a solution to get the 500,000 strikers back to work. No further negotiating meetings were scheduled. The only action on today's agenda was a meeting of the United Steelworkers Un- 170-member wage policy ion's committee. The talks, resumed last Thurs- in| ay at the urging of Eisenhower, collapsed night, Each side ther. "Mond signs of progress. The alternative, the president It was clear, however, that Eis- enhower's patience in the long steel strike rab 2 he tread: int. An e alrea as The death March 17 of Exter- hate ve 3 {nal Affairs Minister Sidney Smith/the docks shutdown. |created the Hastings - Frontenac) The president Monday ecalled| {vacancy. Mr, Webb easily de-|the two strikes detrimental to the| Commons, Liberals 8 | sounded a cail for a swift end bo miles north of Belleville, | {Webb had polled 7,071 votes and Deadlock SCHOOL TRUSTEES Strap, Curfews For Discipline |feated William Shannon, 45-year-|United States and insisted that! old reeve of Marmora village, 30 the disputants try hard for a free | When counting stopped for the |night in Hastings-Frontenac, Mr, |Mr. Shannon 2,532, with 121 of] . '169 polls heard from. In Strike Orleans dock workers were under | walkout, but other longshoremen| ports along the Atlantic and Gulf | coasts continued their contract] day. | Mr. Brownridge sald many off As the deadlock between ship- {today's juvenile problems were pers and the International Long- {caused by a lack of discipline in|shoremen's Association deepened, |the home. He suggested a bed-|a federal mediator, indicating no {time street curfew. immediate hope for a settlement, | The newspaper editor said declined to schedule further talks| in alift : ith either side. | many municipalities have legisla-|"" tion for curfews, but were simply|. In New Orleans, a federal judge federal order today to end their|Will liberate Taiwan,' implied, would be action under the Taft-Hartley law. That could mean a federal court injunction to send the workers back to the mills for an 80-day cooling-off period. Chinese Premier Repeats Threats TOKYO (AP) -- Premier Chou En-lai. in a broadcast today re- iterated Communist China's de- termination to take Formosa. His declaration came less than two days after the Peking visit of] Soviet Premier Khrushchev, "Taiwan (Formosa) is. still NEW YORK (AP) -- Some New being occupjed by American im-| perialism, but the Chinese people * Chou said. "No elements whatsoever can there and in other United States/thwart this. American imperial-|lane highway has been reduced ism still tries to disparage and isolate new China in international extension strike, now in its sixth|affairs, But such attempts have met one failure after another," nt ay the : Wrec When President Eisenhower got| w the negotiators together, he gave strewn for 150 feet and the ear them until this Thursday to show sleeping and watching him. "They sat around all day Mon. day until supper time, Then they forced me into my three «= ton truck, took some dynamite and dynamite caps and drove to the home of Mr. and Mrs, Way." Mrs. Way said the gunmen walked in, aske for the keys of the jon Highway 401 just east of Whitby today, Peter McCormick, 41, of Gan- anoque, driver of a three-car tractor-trailer, said he was driv- ing east on the east-bound lane of Highway 401, when a car com- ing off the Brock street clover- leaf crowded his vehicle, causing it to veer sharply to the left. A west-bound car with two occu |pants- struck the side of transport, under vehicle. kage of the car .was Downtown Toronto Project TORONTO (CP)--Mayor Na- than Phillips said today construe. tion of a $25,000,000 office-build- ing redevelopment project on an entire downtown block is to start this year. The building is to cover the block bounded by Yonge, Rich- mond, Victoria and Queen Streets. The project is financed by Tor- onto and New York capital headed by a Toronto syndicate. It will start with the demolition of the Confederation Life Building and its replacement by a 30- storey office structure. Later a 17-storey building at Queen and Richmond Streets will be constructed. A pedestrian mall with a parkette included will be built through the block with shops in the new building much like Rockefeller Centre in New York, Mayor Phillips said. was €o0 completely demolished that it was unrecognizable. The |largest piece of wreckage stood three feet high. The occupants were unrecognizable. A third vehicle, driver uniden- tified, was also wrecked at the scene, a stretch of the highway | where only two of the four lanes are open, The driver was unhurt. These were the third and fourth fatalities on this stretch of highway in a week. A second head-on collision oc- curred at about the same time on Highway 401 'about three- quarters of a mile east of the | Pickering-Whitby town line. Two passenger cars were in- volved in this accident and both were badly damaged. Members of the Whitby detach- {ment of the OPP, investigating ithe accident, called for an am- bulance. | About six miles of the highway, {between Whitby and the Picker- ling Beach sideroad, is being re- |surfaced. As a result the four- to two lanes of traffic. As a result of the accident traffic in both directions was backed up for miles, jeurrent juvenile problems were! qt enforcing them. issued a restraining order against made by a panel of laymen--a . He: recommended school uni- {two union locals whose walkout. {touched off the mass strike by doctor, a newspaper editor, a city| 85,000 longshoremen Oct. 1. Seven a United Church min-|forms because "teen - agers are CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-8574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 | % . L] Scientists Keep » re 11 Moon-Shot Vigi MOSCOW (AP)--Soviet sclen- complicated, inter-linked comput- tists kept intent vigil at a re-/ing system of listening posts and ceiving "mechanical brain" to- scientific centres. However, there| day as the time arrived for théir was no doubt here in the Soviet At least a limited revelation of the 614.\what the Lunik sees Is expected asian, seskoning. th auto-{to be disclosed within the next| matic record and transmitting in-| 24 hours. Even if not detailed, it struments, was to soar within/may at least say that man's new 4,350 miles of the moon and start/Space-eye has registered a view jts biggest mission at 10 a.m.|of the hitherto unseen part of the EDT. | moon. Sere " "» | Russian scientists said the wrest the Ottawa - area con-|federal civil service organiza- ac Lin yout ed Lo "eo m plete automatic observ-|stituency of Russell from the Lib- tions for a 'pay raise which has tronic data was being received Atory"--ais they termed the space erals Monday, as the two parties not been acted on'in more than the "mechanical brain," a| traveller ~ would begin sending split federal byele¢tions in two|a year. The constituency takes in 3 back electronic data imme. Ontario ridings. |large sections of the capital's diately. Russell, a Liberal stronghold eastern and southeastern suburbs , Was Ww aul | wi y civi ive. - CRATER. PICTURES gimes 100, wen Paul where many civil servants live on um Scientists believe the electronic| manager and city controller, 159-SEAT SPREAD signals will produee pictures of Hastings-Frontenac was retained] The byelections left the govern- crater sears similar to those on|for the Conservatives by Rodney ment with the same numerical Removal the side of the moon exposed to Webb, 49, reeve of Norwood, 30|superiority over the Liberals. earth. |miles northwest of Belleville, {Conservatives hold '208 seats in w | Mr. Tardif increased the 1958 8 Pp ' Liberal plurality of 2,111 posted om 1 Take A Look by J. Omer Gour who held the | seat from 1945 until his death WASHINGTON (AP) -- Levels] March 24. He polled 21,065 votes of radioactive fallout from past Ah Sa to 14,169 for Conservative Wilbur nuclear tests do not justify action| earme ys T, (Wib) Nixon and 1,048 for to decontaminate milk supplies, | Denis Kalman of the CCF, who the United States agriculture de-| LONDON (CP)--J. F. (Bunny) !lost his deposit. partment said today. ~ |Ahearne, an official in British PEARSON COMMENTS However, the department said and international hockey for 27)" pihoral Leader Pearson, noting it will start a joint research ef-|Years, said today he has "nothing iy. + "the Conservatives threw fort with the Atomic Energy Com.|t0 hide" in connection with Ca-| ion: "cabinet ministers and a mission and the public health|nadian participation in the world number of Quebec and Ontario service to develop dairy plant 5 key tournament at Prague last npg into the Russell campaign, PORT ARTHUR (CP) -- The methods of removing strontium | March. {said the government tried to|strap, school uniforms and bed- 90 from milk. | "AN the documentation is here, make the election there an issue|time street curfews were sug- Laboratory tests, the depart. |including the bank statement, and of confidence in Prime Minister gested Monday at the Ontario ment said, indicate that possibly|anyhody is free to come and take|Diefenbaker's administration.. [Public School Trustees Associa. more than 95 per cent of the/8 loak at it," said Ahearne. "The result was not confidenceition meeting as methods of stu- strontium 90 that gets into milk| The president of the Interna- but condemnation," he said. dent discipline. can be removed by ion-exchange tional Ice Hockey Federation, | Both in Russell, where 54,056| The recommendations to solve resins, jand long-time secretary of the were eligible to cast ballots, and| The proposal to develop prac-|British Ice Hockey Association, |Hastings-Frontenae, where 27.072 tical plant methods of removing was commenting on charges by were gible, wet weather and| strontium 90 from milk grew out{the Belleville city manager, television broadcast of the world | 140 man of laboratory studies sponsored Drury Denyes, that Ahearne was|series game apparently cut into . by the AEC at the University of responsible for Belletille's finan-|the vote. However, the hot cam- Tennessee as well as by Canadian) cial losses in the tournament, won paign in Russell helped bring a and British scientists, 'by Belleville, | better-than-average turnout, C dian Fi Start OTTAWA (CP) -- Slowly, |firms willing to put time and first eight months of this year. laboriously, defence production-|mwoney into salesmanship in the|There are no comparable figures sharing arrangements between U.S. are finding that their efforts|for the previous year but there Canada and the United States/are paving off in contracts. |were virtually no such sub-con- are being made to work. The defence production depart-|tracts in 1958, The scheme whereby American ment here reports that U.S.| Canada still buys more defence defence industry is persuaded prime defence contracts placed | equipment from the U.S. than the and encouraged to place more(in Canada .in the field covered|U.S. buys from Canada, how- tontracts with Canadian com-|by production-sharing amounted ever. This country this year panies was introduced by thelto $36,000,000 in the first eight probably will buv some $150,000 - Canadian government just a year/months of this year compared(000 worth of defence material 280. {with $24,000,000 in the compar-/from the U.S, It was treated at first with|able period of 1958. This is a 50-| Perhaps in a year or two the some skepticism by the Canadian/per-cent increase. flow of contracts either way will fefence industry. But Canadian OTHER SALES he 4 These prime contracts do not sfence pr 'ting - sharing is! include those for American de- we Sieaee productiog hr oe 2 (fence construction in Canada or|thrown into it by the defence] {for normal- maintenance = such production department, the full as purchases of gas and oil--o co-operation of the U.S. adminis- 10.8. defence installations in this tration, the willingness of U.S country. industry to deal with new sup- Besides the prime contracts, pliers and the efforts of Cana- U.S. indlistry placed $82,700,000 dian manufacturers by no| worth of sub-contracts with the means all, it should be said--to| Canadian defence Industry in the'go after new business. is f {be about even, barring a reces-| ister and two businessmen, | . | "The strongest deterrent to lowed to choose for themselves. {modern crime is the use of the| Other members of the all-Port {strap in public schools," argued|Arthur panel who gave approval |Ronald Brownridge, editor of the|to Mr. Brownridge's remarks {Port Arthur News-Chronicle, be-|were Ald. Saul Laskin, Rev. Rus- fore the association's annual con-{sell Peden, vention, {Church, Dr. R. R. Mutrie, H, H. "Too often in the past, schools Styffe, president of Port Arthur have yielded to pressure from|Chamber of Commerce, and |parents and fired teachers for panel chairman Fred Dalby, for- |using the strap when it Was) ep chairman of the Port Arthur | richly deserved." Board of Education. LATE NEWS FLASHES Steelworkers Adamant PITTSBURGH (AP)--The United Steelworkers Union, | saying it has earned a fair settlement, pledged today to continue the steel strike "until justice is dona" The walk- out is in its 84th day. Canada-Euratom Agreements OTTAWA (CP)--Canada today signed two agreements in Brussels with the European Atomic Agency, known as Euratom, in the hope of creating markets for Canadian- developed atomic power plants and Canadian uranium. The agreements for co-operation in peaceful uses of atomic energy provide for each party to appropriate $5,000,000 over a five-year period for joint research. Long Work On Paintings TORONTO '(CP)--It will take about six months to get the six paintings stolen Sept. 15 from the Toronto Art Gal- lery, back in perfect shape, Edward Zukowski, the gallery's restoring and repairing expert, said. [too susceptible to fads to be al- Trinity United other New Orleans locals were not affected by the order. The National Labor Relations Board sought the order at the request of New Orleans shippers, | who maintain that the ILA failed to file a required 30-day advance notice of the strike, Officers of the two locals in- structed their men to obey the or- der, but members cf other locals continued to picket, and the docks remained idle. | At Palm Springs, Calif., Presi-| dent Eisenhower called the strike detrimental to the American peo- ple and urged a swift settlement. However, he had no comment on possible intervention, Chicago Faces Sandy Koufax LOS ANGELES (AP)--Chicago| White Sox face Los Angeles'| southpaw strikeout specialist Sandy Koufax today, fully aware| that unless they beat him they! have lost the werld series. Koufax set a National League| record for strikeouts--18--in beat-| ing San Francisco Giants Aug. 31, but he was wild and ineffective in the closing weeks of the pen- v nant drive. Bob Shaw, beaten by] Toronto detectives and offi- Los Angeles 4-3 in the second cials of the Toronto Art Gal game of the serics, vas named| lery examine six valuable as Koufax' opponent today. paintings stolen from the gal- ihe S50 cud aes Sls ing <' Jery three weeks ago and re- " covered last weeken' in a | west-end garage. Police are | | Sn hunting for the thieves. An anonymous phone tip led them to the discovery of the he.) VALUABLE PAINTINGS RECOVERED paintings. With his. hands on a canvas by -Renoils is gallery director Martin Baldwin. --(CP Wirephoto.) ~