] 1 yi | | ~ Arrested THOUGHT FOR TODAY It may be said of many a person that his mind is closed -- but not for alterations. dhe Oshawa Sunes WEATHER REPORT A few snowflurries tonight, Sunday mostly sunny with little change in temperature, winds northwest tonight and Sunday. Price Not Over Vol. 89--No. 13 OSHAWA, SATURDAY, JANUARY 16, 1960 Authorized os Second Class Mall Post Office Department, Ottawa SIXTEEN PAGES 10 Cents Per Copy Court Raps 3 Neo-Nazi N.Y. Youths NEW YORK (AP)--An Ameri-|States, but the hate demonstra- can representative at the United tions seemed to be abating in Nations has called on the .world Furope, where they began in organization to denounce the out- West Germany Christmas Eve. bursts of anti-semitism through-| The resolution was presented out the world. ' |to the UN subcommission on pre- The appeal was issued as. al vention of discrimination and pro- New York court stunned three|tection of minorities by Justice youthful American admirers of Philip Halpern of Buffalo. Hitler Friday by charging them| The draft, co-sponsored by Brit- with treason. Conviction could ain, France, Austria, Uruguay bring the death penalty. and Finland, asks the subcom- Widespread anti-semitic flare- mission to condemn the anti-sem- ups were reported in the United |itic displays as a violation of both the UN charter and the declara- tion of human rights, Two Men IwAR ON SOCIETY The reason charges were or- dered placed against three youths' who had "been accused only of |consorting for an unlawful pur- pose--a misdemeanor. "As I look a ' said M |trate Milton Solomon, who is Jewish, "treason exists where lone plots a war against society and his government." One of the defendants, John , self-styled leader of an socialist renais- vas boastful In Oshawa Two Ottawa men were arrested Friday afternoon in the Hotel Genosha and charged with utter- ing fraudulent cheques. b Sergeant of Detectives William Jordan made the arrest in com- pany with two other city detec-|. tives, on a tip from the Whitby|' "8 the Ju detachment of the OPP. Pleaded, Im Arrested were Royal R La |B SNe of Spo%, 32, aud Marcel Berthiaune, 4. A satchel seized by detectives Nv shook contained blank cheques and rub- 4: e equally, 9 ke 9. de ita ber stamps bearing company Th glice. Ta10eG aliace.s home Baines, isday and found swastikas, The pair had registered at one RE 228, Dana: Oshawa hotel and then told the speeches : ini proprietor they wanted to check Ci out again, demanding a refund. OTHER INCIDENTS They were in the lobby of the, Among other outbursts of anti second hotel when the detectives semitism: closed in. In Chicago's Forest Park area One of the men attempted to 50 tombstones were tipped over escape by running out the door.|and some daubed with swasti- He was caught when he reached kas in a Jewish cemetery. the bottom of the stairs leading In Detroit, a 14-year-old boy, to the exit. son of a high school teacher, ad- Police were told that an ac- mitted he had painted swastikas count had been opened in an|and Hitler slogans on a school. | " Oshawa bank with a $10 deposit, |He told police he was *fuehrer"| JOHN §, ently asked the New Su-/in a different position. He is a of which $7 was of a nazi-style club, (Prime Minister Diefanbaker . sf, Reports of new outbursts came/preme Court to set asid b-| Newfoundland resident The pair is believed to have from Europe. od 0. se e.a Suh-| ul evaded road traps and travelled arrested in Trieste Friday night to Oshawa by taxi. Provincial |after they sang Fascist songs in police started the search after a the streets. The three were hit-and-run accident in Trenton: charged with Fascist sympathies, Two men and two women of a penal offence in Italy. the same gang were arrested in| A British clothing firm cancel- Mr. Parsons sai arty officials. ; ance: Mr, ns said he expected to|Party Trenton after the accident. They led orders for. $42,000 worth of receive procedural instructions . e I did thi THESE SYMBOLS of Nazism, | said he was the '"'Fuehrer" of res «+ | a teen-age club of Nazis, are found 14- | y police secretary year-old 4 | disp in Detroit, who | Pat z. The boy told in the home of a boy PM Tries To Void Court Subpoena Nfld. (CP)--|without portfolio and Newfound- iefenbaker has|land's only cabinet minister, is volving election spending. {would bring Mr. Diefenbaker The application, filed Friday|here, a commission could be sent by R. A. Parsons, a St. John's|to Ottawa to take the evidence of Thivierge and Barbara Parsons, |in that country. Mr. seized 1 a motel near Brighton campaign during the em ortly before entering a cabinet] COBOURG (CP) -- Joseph Ger- subpoena is not effective outside charge of murdering his cousin, | trial, scheduled to open Jan. 21,| Boyd Jackson, a Frankford I by the Progressive Conservative of n House Monday were identified as Patrick O'- cloth from West Germany in pro- tod by il th : Hearn, Arthur T. Hill, Bunny test against anti-semitic outbursts Soay, . mall from the prime Trenton Man Sent N w M all of the Ottawa area. In Germany there has been vith (Lenosker WE ve To Trial For Murder A cheques writing machine was marked letup in the ant itle| cefore \h two i 1 i I x meeting in Ottawa. His applica-|ald Lafferty, 36, of Trenton, was when the arrests were made. days. tion to have it set aside says the committed for trial Friday on ° Newfoundland. Thomas Lafferty, 42, of Belle- Defence Polic It summons him to appear at a ville, on Dec. 30. , a civil suit' involving funds taxi driver, said the used was spent in the 1957 federal election hen he p : le 1 a $10,200 action a businessman Will g that money 1 ( treasurer of the Newfoundland PCs was not used for the specific purpose intended 2 He wants it back. ) 1 pre There w:s no ward on plans of ation of historic 2 rights. Aly er top-ranking members two ~ t is majority of the 80-4, party were odd part nations isi served with subpoenas. If Mr.| needed f ption Diefenbaker's action is success-| MANCHESTER (Reuters)--The Mr. Diefenbaker announced the ful, it would seem likely similar Guardian says Nikita Khrus throne speech debate will be in-| applica be made by|chev, in his reference to a ne framework of proposed measures terrupted Tuesday for discussion State Secr Cqurtemanche Russian "fantastic" weapon, in the throne speech. Extension of an aid plan fc rairie farm- and Alli rt, national di-| "lifted the lid on what seems to of voting rights to all Indians ap- ers whose crops rector of the pa resemble a world of science fic- peared the only item likely to! | Snows William S. Bro minister 'tion." meet clear sailing. - i QE EE - a A Ea Opposition Leader Pearson, noting the speech did not men-| tion defence, said this would be taken up by the Liberals. The Liberals also plan to criticize the government for lack of reference to Canada's financial condition and for skipping lightly over trade. | TO GIVE VIEWS MONDAY | Mr. Diefenbaker said the gov- ernment's views on defence pol-| | icy will be put before the House ' Monday. | Way was cleared Friday for the throne speech debate when| Emilien Morissette (PC--Rimou-| ski) moved the! traditional ad- dress in reply, seconded by Mrs. | Jean Casselman (PC--Grenville-| Dundas). | In a question period before] their speeches, Mr. Diefenbaker| said there is little likelihood a| royal commission studying rail-| wey problems will write its re-| port before a current freight-rate| freeze 'ds about March. Hear- ings 2- scheduled into late that| month 1 time will be needed to comn.'e the report, he said. External Affairs Minister| Green said Canada has won '"'a| great deal of support" for sea- law proposals it will make dur- #ing a Geneva international con- ference next March. Its '"'rea- sonable compromise" calls for a CITY EMERGENCY - Ea PHONE NUMBERS | i § : POLICE RA 5-1133 74 | Manitoba's 15th representa FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 | Mon five | his wit of the crown, Hon. Errick F HOSPITAL RA 38-2211 | Willis (second from right) and OTTAWA (CP) -- Parliament, |six-mile te. the formalities and polite phrases | clusive fis} of its opening days out of the| The Ry way, settles down Monday to the {0 1 serious fighting. Rough lines on which the two main federal contenders will do battle have already been indi- cated. Prime Minister Diefenbaker"s Progressive Conservative gov- ernment Thursday outlined the 2 mile y the 12-mile 1 and the who also ne, RECEIVES CONGRATULATIONS e, smile broadly as they | Mr, Willis, 63, was sworn in as congratulations from | Lieutenant-Govegnor at the le- former Lieutenant-Governor J. | gislative building, in Winnipeg. S. McDiarmid and his wife. --CP Wirephoto | ho his |¥ night | of Russia May En 'Science Fiction Tom' Sputnik a earth" | | | a] | Hy! | Sd | | {| | % [tions of two complaints alleging t | embezzlement. | | police today he and a younger | companion painted swastikas | on a public school. | AP Wirephoto | Teen-Ager | Acts As 'Nazi Leader DETROIT (AP)--A 14-year-old boy whe said he was the Three youths were poena ordering him to appear| Legal sources here said last|"Tuehrer" of a teen-age club off Conviction on the charges could as a witness in a civil suit in-|week it was unlikely a subpoena Nazis told police today he and a have cost - Frank his right to {younger companion painted] swastikas on 'a public school. The boy also said he smashed lawyer, will be heard Tuesday. the prime minister and the other|a school window and left a note | westport, Conn., described him|year at the time of the union| reading: "Heil Hitler--the Third| | Reic | Po confiscated. from his me: Three swastika armbands; | two flags, one bearing a swastika| and the other an eagle; two| brown shirts and one black one,| all bearing German insignia; | homemade rubber stamps of Nazi emblems; three looseleaf note-| books containing clippings, pic- {tures and notations about the Nazis, and 25 paperback books| about Germany. | The b whose name was with- e son of a University| English teacher. His is a nurse. | mother ow the 'Liberal "is that Mr. | "The probability newspaper says, /|Khrushciiev was not talkin g| about mere advances of degree, | "There would be no point in| mi all this fuss about al I r bomb or a rocket with ing greater " | Refer idea of range, ng to speculation on the| ting bombs in orbit to| t distant tar- , The Guard- rd to see what | arr ngement | ave over the launching of | missiles, | which needs y allo this in advance." R adds ULED OUT The pap that nuclear submarin surely not no- vel ¢ $ all this en-| at bacteriologi-| - | chemie, pons to im- large populations have | ct of not guaranteeing| immobilization of . rocket. | hing § a conse: the bas | ience of this, The ardian says immobilization | weapons '"'are unlikely ever tol a central part in a 'deter- policy such as the Russians] néw appear to have adopted." | "So, is it after all the death | ray, or the device that brings age suddenly to any chosen|j region of the world, or that|j which can submerge a whole continent to the depth of Atlan- tis? I y tir 11. It is hoped that it will not." 1 t London La-|t that the| 'peeping on thet arations from /|t above the "is Russia's coming summit Herald, spe: The Daily bor paper weapon per to spy West's defence preg hundreds of miles and the the at this ace talks." The paper says this is the con-|t clusion of Western experts» who have studied results of the Lunik CG of the moon, [ney's office Friday . | [TWO CHANGES an|ig turning his country's fortresses force in Cuban history. not clear, but its strength is be- peak. ers are t ple"s army in which every loyal worker student and farmer will be given a gun and taught how Hart rog t which transmitled to Mos-|can states recently to follow Cu-| 4 / pictures of the hidden side ba's example of turning its mili-|bla itary centres into schools. Blackouts Hit Ontario Areas Hydro Repair Crews Busy 'MAN IN A HURRY" | . | ke Of Ice Storm olice Probe | In Wal e Of lo out about 5,000 rural |had the freezing rains stopped [customers around Orangeville, Pl P 7] than the winds and snow stepped |Shelburne, Grand Valley, Arthur ane Puzzle and Isabella for about four hours. That was the story in ice-bat- SERIOUS PROBLEM tered Southern Ontario Friday as| Ontario Hydro described the gusts up to 33 miles per houripreak as the most serious since from the northwest and some the geet storm which lashed the snow added to icing trouble and|province Dec. 28. taken out last April, another | knocked over hydro poles. | Before the break about 1,100 $100,000 accident policy taken out] The winds snapped five ice-\ryral customers were already in November, and three accident|laden hydro poles between Rock|ithout power from earlier line policies of $62,000 each taken out Mills and Dundalk about 60 miles preaks, northwest of here, stopping trans- in Decembe | More than 500 linemen and The beneficiaries were his wife mission on a 44,000-volt line and |, oooncy helpers were working and their two small children. | | Friday night to repair the breaks At her Westport home, Mrs, [but hundreds of families still Frank sobbed: "I will never be- Move To End | faced we two additional days lieve the insinuations they are Ti . without electricity. ime Confusion making about him. I will never| Wind also helped knock over believe them." OTTAWA (CP)--A move to end about 500 telephone poles in the Ey confusion over Daylight Time in Orangeville, Fergus, Shelburne VErank, the son of a former Canada has been proposed by area. deputy police commis- Eric Winkler (F C--Grey-Bruce). In the stricken area winds of had been persuaded tol He put a resolution on the 15 to 25 miles an hour were pre- ia for a vacation py| Commons order paper Friday (dicted for today by the weather- . He carried a small] Urging the government to stand- man, but they are expected to blue flight bag to the airport. |b oize the dates when daylight|pecome light by tonight. Temper- Ep time begins and ends in each of | atures will be in the 20s A cracked windshield forced ihe time zones across Canada. | some snow. MOVE IN TOWER the scheduled Boeing 77 airliner i A complaint lodged last March|out of service. Its 104 passengers acy proposal would Jot require alleged that Frank misused $20,- were reassigned to two other|,o..""wrany areas in Canada| The Bell Telephone Company 000 from a property sale he engi-| planes. Seventy - six of - them| ot change their clocks for the of Canada announced Friday neered for a client, pocketing|travelled safely to Miami aboard nimer months. | night it is bringing a micro- part of the money. The bar asso-|an Electra turbo-prop. | {wave tower from Montreal to ciation 'was notified. ---- | {overcome disruptions in long dis- BEAR CAN HAVE 1 rimi investigation was . . |tanc vice in th eid up ater Frank posted so. UAW Official J TI Fired From Job | BAD INSOMNIA 000 to await the outcome of legal {miles north of Guelph, may be proceedings. ; {in operation Sunday and will link About a month ago, lawyers Salgy SE MARIE: Aw with a tower set up last week John J. Fallon of Kansas City i ul Siren, international \, hd {near Orangeville. and Daniel P. Reardon of St I ive for the United| mromas Semple we police | * yout 1,250 telephone lines are Louis complained that they had Auto Workers (CLC) in Toronto, : at 2 ign a Tea be fi out in Milton, Streetsville, Hut- not héard from Frank since they|pas been fired from his $8,500-a- ts hind legs on sron 1 ® |tonville and. Georgetown. These turned over to him several thou-|year.job by George Burt, the| SAT they wouldn't go along |... expected to be fixed during sand dollars as an advance fee union's Canadian director. with the story. the weekend. J for a $900,000 loan he was to ob-| The newspaper says the dis-| This is the hibernation sea- | pe 1o4i0'and television trans- tain toward a $2,000,000 hospital|missal was. b of Mr. Si-| son for bears, they told him. |. oy here were interrupted expansion project. ren's "left activity anda" "But Semple insisted and 2 {for 30 eninutes Friday when a hitherto unknown role , With a constable went to the scene. |falling branch broke a feeder line 4 rebel group in the UAW. He found the snow dotted [fom a transformer line north of practise law. It says Mr. Siren may have| with fresh bear tracks lead- Streetsville. Insurance man Edward Boyd, had a role in a group that threat-| ing toward the St. Marys Classes were suspended Friday a friend in Frank's home town of ened Mr. Burt's leadership last| River. tp sciools or the Six Nations In The incident went into the (ian Reserve near Brantford, in police book: "Bear with in- |windnam Township, at Burford somnia. District High School and in An- caster Township. Boyd said he talked Frank into 00,000 life insurance 1 mber. Frank also had a $100,000 accident policy NEW YORK (AP)--Authorities are piecing together the tangled background of Julian Andrew Frank, the heavily insured young lawyer suspected of setting off a suicide bomb in a plane that crashed with 34 persons aboard The Manhattan district attor- pictured Frank as a man enmeshed in financial dealings that could have wrecked his promising career, Friends saw him as a tall, lean man with a pretty wife and two handsome children who lived in an expensive suburban home, a man who could be as happy-go- lucky as he could be darkly| rooding. The district attorney said Frank, 32, was facing investiga- | TORONTO (CP) The Star as "a young man in a hurry" elections for Canadian director, | with a dynamic personality, but] Mr. Siren represented 4,500( who often expressed a fear of union workers at the Massey-| flying. |Ferguson plant here. | ter | People are helped from | suburb of Amsterdam, Holland, | of the North Sea canal broke. | most of its 10,000 inhabitants flooded homes at Oost-Zaan, a | after a dike along a branch | The town was deserted by | 10 hours after the dike break. Cuban Army 'WINDS AND SNOW Toned Into Joy Blasts Rack Leone UK, Continent HAVANA (AP)--Fidel | LONDON (CP)--Britain today night in a garage at Winter-|tents on the snow-covered ground was in the midst of its worst | bourne Gunner in Wiltshire. after a series of earthquakes had freezeup in 13 years, and icy Their cars had been abandoned|driven them from their homes. blasts still were disrupting the!in the snow. | But the weather was just as Continent as well. 160 CHILDREN DUG OUT |bad in France, Germany and The Royal Automobile Associa-| In another incident, 60 school{Sweden, with continuing reports tion reported that about 100,000 children got home a day late|0f transportation tieups and hu- miles of highways in Britain{from school after their bus|man suffering. were covered by ice or snow. {bogged down in a snowdrift near| The big freeze also hit today's| Amesbury in Wiltshire. They| sporting events. Three race were dug out by soldiers from a| climbed above 100 degrees for meetings were abandoned, two nearby camp, 'where they were |second straight day today, ar Rugby League games were called cared for overnight. [the blistering heat wave brou off, more than half the Rugby| The liner Queen Elizabeth left|an outbreak of bush fires Union games were cancelled and|Cherbourg, France, today for Western and Eastern Victoria. at least four Association Foot-|New York after having been de-| Melbourne's temperature hit ball matches were postponed,|layed 36 hours by stormy seas 105 degrees in the late after- with more expected. |and freezing weather. {noon. It hit 103 Friday. elicopter took hot soup and| Italy appeared hjrdest hit off For a second night, teps of ets Friday to a party ofthe European countMes, as some|thousands of residents sought re- labout 40 people stranded over-/10,000 farmers camped out in'lief by sleeping on beaches, Castro nto schools, but at the same time s creating the largest armed Just: how many soldiers this lew '"'people's force" will have is ieved to be .more than double hat of ex-dictator Fulgencio Ba- ista's military machine at its In Australia, the mercury a Instead of fortresses, air cen- res and mechanized units, Cas- ro and his revolutionary support- g to develop a peo- it in o use it. Education Minister Armando invited other Latin-Ameri-