1 h with eggs mys "The weared shite. | preating THOUGHT FOR TODAY A person isn't nearly so likely to rock the boat if he has to paddle his own canoe. dhe Oshawa Times VOL. 88--No, 257 OSHAWA, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1959 Pout "Office "baportmens, Ottowa Alberta Outlaws All Stamps Alberta is the first province to pass such legislation, The amendment says, in part: "No business licensed under (this act) shall secretly or other- wise give or offer to give any EDMONTON (CP)--The Alberta government announced today sweeping legislation to outlaw all of trading stamps and sim- schemes "for the purpose of furthering the sale of any com- modity or service." premium, free goods, or use cou- The legislation, an dment pons, coupon books, stamps, trad- to the licensing of Trades and|ing stamps or similar plans for Business Act, was approved by|the purpose of furthering the sale cabinet order-in-council Tuesday.|of any commodity or service." The ban on stamps became ef-| Stores now operating such CANADA, U.S. PLA DEFENCE MEETING 'Anti-U.S. Riots Rack Panama fective immediately. A. R, Patrick, minister of in- dustry and development, told a press conference the legislation "is as wide as we could possibly make it." schemes will be given "a reason- able length of time" to discon- tinue them, Mr. Patrick said. CAN LOSE LICENCE The amendment does not affect ing-day offers by a new busi- Hooligans Terrorize Village ARKONA, Ont of Arkona"s lone constable left town with her four children Tues-| IGA stores in Alberta. | day following a Hallowe'en cut- break of teen-age hooliganism, But Jack Clegge, army ser- geant and part-time policeman in this village of 450 persons 30 miles northeast of Sarnia, said he will not abandon his drive to (CP)--The wife nounced Tucsday their scheme ness, except to restrict the give- aways and inducements to seven days. Penalties for infraction of the act range as high as $100 a day for each day of infraction, with the provision that the business| licence can be revoked. Loblaw Groceteria Limited in- troduced trading stamps in Al- berta last month and Independent Grocers' Alliance stores an- would go into effect today in 35 'Gem Robber | VISIT WITH Howard Green, right, Cana- dian external affairs minister, jokes with British Prime Min- ister Harold Macmillan as he MACMILLAN leaves Macmillan's 10 Downing street residencé in London. Green is on a tour of Europe. AP _Wirephoto. year-old girl Tuesday told how she travelled for several days with two Huntsville youths, now| on trial for murder before a Su-| preme Court jury. She said the three slept in a stolen taxi, in Girl Tells Jury Of Nightly Trip BRACEBRIDGE (CP) -- A 17- escapade and gave the orders, Panamanian national guards- Blasts make Arkona "s decent place to Montreal River. | River. and made the decisions, While they were staying with| McKee"s uncle, she learned po- lice were searching for them an told McKee. That night they slept in a barn, then borrowed a boat PANAMA CITY, Panama (AP) --Panama was out of bounds to Americans living in the Canal Zone today following violent anti- United States demonstrations during the 56th anniversary of Panama's independence. At least 82 persons were injured, three STARTED IN OSHAWA ' eriously. Crowds of demonstrators, pro- * [testing U.S. control of the canal, tore down the American flag at the embassy Tuesday, stoned the embassy and the U.S. informa- tion service office, overturned American - owned automobiles and battled U.S. canal police for four hours. The mobs finally were routed |men, canal zone police and fire- men and U.S. troops armed with rifles, bayonets and machine- uns. Demonstrations also took place in Colon, Panama's second larg- barns and on the banks of the and travelled down the Montreal/ogs oity.' No casualties were re- that their government establish its sovereignty. While there was no evidence of government participation in the demonstrations, the government frequently has lained that P. i loyees of the Canal Zone Company are not treated as well as U.S, employ-| ees and also that Panama should be paid more rent for the canal. Ambassador Julian Harrington filed a strong protest with the Panama foreign office against the desecration of the American flag and the damage to U.S. property. There was no immediate com- ment from the Panamanian gov- ernment, The demonstrations in Panama City followed a peaceful "show of the flag" in the canal zone led by two nationalist leaders, Er- live in." His family has sought sanctuary in Toronto, "I have been threatened and my nine-year-old son has been| told to tell me I'd better say nothing," said Sgt. Clegge, who had to summon provincial police Detectives Marvin McKee, 20, and Wayne | Sluman, 17, charged jointly with/ the June 17 slaying of Francis A Toronto mam who pleaded| guilty to a $5000 jewel robbery| Grosso, 29-year-old Huntsville taxicab owner, and his compa-| nion Bruce Spiers, 22, pleaded) Saturday night when he got em. irom an Oshawa home, today not guiliy. broiled A Pudi of{accused Toronto detectives of police found the decomposed| 150 persons. When a provincial police cruiser arrived. flames from old| tires, mail boxes and gasoline were blazing 25 feet high on Ar-| kona's main street. Police were cash from FET oF ed {beating him up three or four| times to obtain a confession. bodies of the two men in a gravel] pit near Dwight, Ont., after an| George W. Whelpley, #4, of On-| 11-day search. Both had el tario St., in Oshawa magistrate's today, to the theft of $4000 Toronto, pleaded guilty and a gun, 422 He also. pleaded to{381d shot in the head and their pock- court, jets emptied. Spiers' skull bad to been crushed. , stones, and .po- 00h dollars worth of jewels, 55 PICKED UP IN OSHAWA Speaking without ap emotion, Ann ~ 'Huntsville the two Hoya poked her up a fiiend's home in Kee parents the text entering the Oshawa on the night of the murder and Beth teckel 06 Masson|Grove Her fo the home of Me- up and name or testify against {Kee's uncle at Elk Lake, 190 the thugs," a police officer said.| Magistrate F. 8. Ebbs asked|Miles north of Huntsville. the accused if he felt he was| " m to stop but! they haven't the courage te stand|St. Both incidents took place or about Oct. 26. However, three persons were | During the drive north, she convicted Morday in Sarnia of being forced to plead guilty now. |sald, the car left the highway causing a disturbance here on He replied, "No. The goods were|near Huntsville and they drove Hallowe'en and were each fined|in my room. I have a record. I{to a small gravel pit. The boys $25 and cosis. They were Max have no lawyer. As far as I'm|left her in the car while they Faulds, Alan McChesney and|concerned, that's enough." |headed into the bush for 20 min- Douglas Poulton. Lloyd Perrian| Whelpley slso said he had notlutes. was remanded on a charge of pleaded not guilty. , However, his ear was Sgt. Clegge, based at nearby hemorrhaging as a result, ne| construction site who helped Camp Ipperwash. is serving with-|said, of his beatings In Toronto, | them push it out, she said. out pay after being appointed by| Magistrate Ebbs remanded the] Miss Young said she has known town council fow weeks ago. Po-|case for sentence next week, to both boys for about four years Hee said youths in Arkona were | get Whelpley's record. He in-|and steadily dated McKee for the running wild previously because structed the court to see that the|last year and a half. She said there was no police protection. jail doctor examines the accused. McKee was the leader of their | 7 INCHES IN CALGARY been subjected to any force by Leaving the gravel pit the car| destroying property after he(the Oshawa Police Departmen', [became stuck and McKee found | | still [three or four men from a nearby| TRAVELLED AT NIGHT She said they travelled by night and siept on shore for four days nefrre Elk Lake police ar- rested them, Other witnesses sald Grosso and Spiers had left to pick up McKee ard Slueman after get- ting a call at the Huntsville cab stand, on the murder night. Robert Boothby, a Dwight car. penter, said he saw a Huntsville taxi on the highway near his home on June 17 and together with otier workers helped Me. push a ported from there, U.S. Army troops stood guard along the Canal Zone's borders. The 9,000 Americans living in the |zone were ordered to stay inside the 500 square miles of U.S. ter- ritory. The target of Tuesday's out- breaks, touched off by P. nian nationalists, was the un- asual hold the U.S. has over the zone. The U.S. was granted con- trol of the zone in perpetuity after it helped the Panamanians win their independence from 'Co- lombia early in the century, In ER Aer an nesto Castillero Pimental and former foreign minister Aquilino Boyd. Living Costs Increased Last Month OTTAWA (CP)--Canadian liv- ing costs rose in September for the third consecutive month, pushing the consumer price index ET Pha oe, from 127.12 un earlier, statistics reported Snowy Weather All Over Canada The coid, white word "snow"|worst snowstorm so far this sea-|tic air. Heavy frost was forecast today lay across the weather re-| ports of Canada, almost from coast to coast Some areas were digging out; others were waiting. Southern Alberta reported the CITY EMERGENCY PHOKE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 Community Chest Score Ison. It crushed hopes that grain -- still standing in the fields--might be| harvested. | Calgary reported seven inches of bridge more than five. Up to 10| inches fell in the Crowsnest Pass| area in the southwest. The Trans-| Canada Highway was all but im-| passable. | {Deer in central Alberta down into| the United States. Temperatures, | under a blanket of very cold! Arctic air, were in the 20s. | PLOW GANDER RUNWAYS | Another srea hit was Gander, | Nfld., where transport depart-| ment snowplows were busy on| the runways of International Air-| port for the first time this fall. Four inches of snow fell Monday night and more on Tuesday. | The prospects? A disturbance is reporied heading east into the Maritimes, with more snow. In the Montreal and Ottawa areas, there were flurries. About two Inches fell Tuesday in Ot- tawa, most of it melting quickly. Montreal, with temper atures about freezing, greeted its first| flakes about dusk. | In Manitoba, the word was: | "Generally cloudy with snow-| flurries and temperatures drop-| ping te the 15 to 25 degrees above zero mark in the south:| zero to 15 above in some north-| ern regions." ported lignt snow falling with a high temperature for today set at 25 degre=s. Spow in the north was the word with colder tem! peratures. coast lay under a blanket of Arc-| & stopped traffic and|in the fruit-growing interior. SEARCH HAMPERED In the Espanoia area of North- |érn Ontario, the flying snow and snow; Medicine Hat and Leth-|turbulent water at the falls on| Whitefish River hindered the search for Arnold Esquimaux, a 24-year-old Indian guide missing on the river since Thursday. Temperatures were below The storm raged from Red freezing in the Medicine Lodge district of - Alberta where the search fo: Ira Herman, trapper missing s'nce Friday, continued. He had light clothing and only six rounds for his rifle. Girl Choked, Beaten, Raped TORONTO (CP} -- A 19-year-| old girl wee choked with her own) kerchief and raped behind a home :n 'Torontc's east end Tues-| day night by a man she de-| scribed as short and dark. | Police Chief James Mackey | has ordered an all-out manhunt| for the attacker. Police said the girl may lose an eye. The gir) told police she was re- turning from night classes at a high school and was standing] alone at a bus stop when the man| grabbed her by the arm and said "Come with me." When she screamed, the man| behind the house| where he struck her repeatedly, | then choked her into semi -con- sciousness. The gir] was taken to hospital Even the normally warm west after she staggered into a fire| hall. | CAMERA ACCIDENTALLY provides Canada's Prime Min- ister Diefenbaker with a halo at the Progressive Conserva- Diefenbaker Announces Contracts TORONTO (CP) -- Prime Min- ister Diefenbaker and Premier Frost of Ontario took turns Tues- day telling of the accomplish- ments of the Progressive Con- servative party. They addressed 1,500 delegates to the annual meeting of the On- tario Progressive Conservative Association. Mr. Diefenbaker said he had spoken up to the United States when everyone else said nobody could do it and that his frankness had resulted in $75,000,000 in new sub-contracts for defence in the first 10 months of this year. "When we, in opposition, asked the government to speak up to the United States, they said it couldn't be done," he said. Mr. ¥rost said Ontario's 'un- precedented" growth was apoar- ent ia the 500,000 new dwelling nnits in 10 years--a $20,000,000,- 000 investment in physical assets; an increase of 150,000 people in Southern Saskatchewan re- punched her in the face andthe province each year, and the dragged her growth of electrical power and services. He said capital requirements for the province 'in the next 18 to 2 vears are going to be , . . something in excess of $12,000, 000,000." |his efficiency tive convention in Toronto Tuesday. Shot caught the cir- cle of lights formed by a chan- delier high above Mr. Diefen- baker's head. CP Wirephoto. DONALD C. MacDONALD Labor Urged To Launch Offensive NIAGARA FALLS, Ont, (CP)-- The Ontario Federation of Labor was told that the labor movement and the United States will hold on joint defence problems Nov. 8-9, said today. three Khrushchev held their talks last September. north of Washington. bers of the Canada-U.S, minister- i 1 will be External Affairs Minister Green, Defence Minister Pearkes and Finance Minister Fleming. Secretary Herter, Defence Seec- retary McElroy and Treasury Secretary Anderson, The committee was set up in Camp David Set For 6 Ministers WASHINGTON (CP) -- Canada new round of ministerial talks state department officials The talks, to be attended by binet ministers from each ing Eisenhower's visit to Canada in the summer of that year. The committee reviews miay as well as the fence, and the question of the Canadian sharing of joint defence production. country, will be held at Camp David, Md., the presidential re- treat where Preside nt Eisen. hower and Soviet Premier Camp David is about 65 miles Attending the meeting, as mem- 144 tee of joint def On the U.S. side will be State late 1958 following preliminary di i isenh and in Canada is at a crossroads and, sus either "advance | e" "We do not intend to die," said Donald MacDonald, secre-| tary-treasurer of the Canadian Labor Congress. - He told the more than 800 dele-| gates that there have been or-y ized and co-ordinated attacks by busiasss organizations against labor and the unions must launch a vigorous eounter-offensive, The union movement could not iin static and continue to ex- ee aad: "We must organize the un- organized, unicnize the. organized Blaze Levels Regina Hangar REGINA (CP)--Fire levelled 3 hangar at Regina Airport early today, destroying 18 aircraft, 3¢ new automobiles and large stocks of equipment and materials stored in the building. Fire Chief Percy Wilson sald damage would be at least $500, The hangar was owned by the department of transport. A num. ber of firms rented space in the building. Cause of the blaze was not im- reported mediately kuown. Police by E Prime Minister Diefenbaker dur- no serious injuries. Court Ponders U.S. Steel Strike WASHINGTON: (AP) -- The United States Supreme Court fo- day pondered on a b steel strike as. which way to k in Sitove anew for a settlement in Mogi J was the 127.1 level at Sept. 1. The sub-index of food costs moved to a record 124.2 from 122.4 during September under the impetus of a sharp seasonal gain in egg prices, and price advances for fresh tomatoes and lettuce. Milk prices rose one cent a quart in some Ontario cities for the first price change in this com- mody in nearly two years. Prices of potatoes and other fresh veg- etables were off slightly and beef and pork prices held steady. WERK CHARGE IN ACCIDENT ORILLIA (CP) -- Provin- cial police are wondering i|up today, passed unanimously a (card-holding) members, utilize all the techniques and media of publie iclations and put greater effort, enthusiasm and vitality into our political~action efforts." The convention, which winds resolution calling for a drive to get 2000 union locals in Ontario to commit themselves to support of a new politica' party embrac- ing labor and the CCF. Claude Jodein, CLC president, said the proposed new party will accept converts from any politi cal group. Earlier the federation called for a national crusade to wipe "'offending. labor legis! ation" from the statute books of New- foundland, where certification of the International Woodworkers of America (CLC) was revoked. Delegates also voted to petition the Ontario government for pro- visions in the Election Act fol- lowing political candidates leaves of absence without losing senior- ity, pensions or employment. i David Archer and. Douglas Hamilton, both of Toronto, were re-elected president and secre- tary-treasurer respectively. e Pp union, The court gave no indication ds of when it would hand down its decision. Three hours of discus- sions Tuesday behind closed doors brought no announcement of results, but it was expected generally that the court would defended the statute's emergency machinery. He said congress had passed it to protect the country's interests. not long delay its ruling, with the strike already in its 113th day. The ruling will affect both the strike itself and emergency pro- visions of the Taft-Hartley labor relations law, under which the back-to-work injunction was is- sued two weeks ago by federal Judge Herbert Sorg in Pitts- burgh. The injunction, which would send 500,000 striking steel work- ers back to their jobs for at least 80 days, has been held in abey- ance pending the outcome of ap- peal. Joseph F, Finnegan, director of the federal mediation and concil- iation service, called before him negotiating teams representing the steel industry and the strik ng United Steelworkers Union. But there was no advance sign that either side was prepared to budge from long - deadlocked stands before the court has ruled. Ike To Tour Europe, Asia WASHINGTON (AP) -- Presi. dent Eisenhower was expected to announce today his plans for an unprecedented of European and south Asian countries next month, three-week's tour The trip, the most extensive he has ever undertaken as president, would take him probably Turkey, Greece, India and Pakistan, Other countries might be added to Italy, and Authoritative 'informants Tues- day disclosed that the trip would begin with a three-day stopover in Rome about Dec. 4, includ talks with Pope John in the Vai can. what charge to lay i the driver of an old - model car which left Mississaga Street and slammed into a tree last weekend. The accident was not re- ported to police. The law says an accident need not be reported unless damage ex- ceeds $100. "The whole car isn't worth $100," an officer said. Atomic WASHINGTON (CP)--A United States Atomic Energy Commis- sion official has disputed the eco- nomic efficiency of Canada's pro- posed atomic power system. Frank K. Pittman, the com- mission's reactor development di- rector, suggested to an atomic in- dustrial forum Tuesday that power could be produced cheaper from a number of other systems than the heavy-water natural ura- nium plant idea Canada has adopted. W. B. Lewis, research vice- president of the Crown-owned Atomic Energy of Canada, im- mediately shot back that Can- ada's system would be as effi- cient as any in existence. Lewis compared U.S, and Ca- nadian commercial atomic ef- forts with that of the tortoise-and- hare fable. At present, he said, the U.S. is ahead, but in a few years Canada may catch up in development. DIFFERENT RETURNS However, he conceded in an in. terview after the conference that estimate for Cana- Plan Criticized dian commercial reactors is based on a lower return on in- vestment than the one made by Pittman. Pittman downgraded the Cana- dian system to seventh place in listing potential cOsts of commer- cial power from various atomic systems, Compared with a poten- tial cost of 7.81 mills a kilowatt- hour for the pressurized water system widely used in the U.S., he estimated the potential Cana- dian heavy-water power cost at 9.03 mills. "I am sure that all of you rec- ognize that our evaluation of the potential of the heavy-water na- tural uranium system is not com- pletely consistent with that of the Canadians," he told the forum. LEWIS' ESTIMATE Lewis estimated Canada's pro- posed big CANDU commercial reactor, to be completed in 1964, will produce electricity at a cost of 4.75 to five mills a kilowatt- hour. He based this on a seven- per-cent rate of return on invest ment. Pittman made his estimate WASHINGTON (AP) -- Con- gressional investigators of quiz show rigging talked today of ex- panding their inquiries to take in other kinds of television pro- grams accused of misrepresenta- tion. The staff of the House of Rep- resentatives legislative oversight subcommittee, it was learned, has begun gathering information on at least one show of a differ- ent nature. Sources declined to name or specifically describe it at this point. The subcommittee meanwhile § = called as witnesses two officials of the Revlon company, which sponsored the $64,000 Question, They are President Charles Rev- son and Vice - president Martin Revson. PRODUCER ON STAND Mert Koplin, associate pro- ducer of both $64,000 shows, tes- tified that Revlon officials knew about the controls and made suggestions that involved keeping some contestants going and let- ting others drop out. Koplin added, somewhat grimly, that in television there is a tradition of pleasing the client. Revlon issued a statement Tuesday night contending that "pressure from a sponsor to do a better job did not give quiz program producers a licence to cheat." Representative John N. Ben- XAVIER CUGAT Testifies . . . nett of Michigan, senior Republi-|tee, in an interview called for can member of the sub on a l4-per-cent return. TV Probe Spreads To Other Programs guilty of deception on the air, saying no other bans would be ef- - fective. Koplin acknowledged that on occasions on all the shows he asked contestants in advance questions that were virtually identical to those used on the program. He admitted that when the contestant didn't know the answer he som supplied it. CLEARS NADLER, BROTHERS Koplin gave a clean bill of health, as far as rigging was con. cerned, to two big money wine ners, Teddy Nadler who won $264,000, and the blonde psycholo- gist, Dr. Joyce Brothers, who Salleted $134,000 as a boxing ex- pert. . Koplin said Nadler was "com- pletely encyclopedic in some areas." Miss Brothers performed an amazing memory feat, he said, by studying boxing encyclo- pedias so intensively in a few weeks that she became an ex- pert in this field. Charles Van Doren, who fea- tured in Monday's testimony, got a further blow Tuesday when NBC fired him from his $50,000 a-year job because of his part in the rigged Twenty-One show. He already had been dropped by Co- lumbia University, where he had been a $5,500-a-year assistant English professor. A new magazine, Leisure, said it would retain Van Doren as an associate editor despite the TV it-jcriminal penalties for those 4 sc