THOUGHT FOR TODAY Custom grants girls the \privi- lege to propose during Leap Year, and during the other years they assume it. fie Oshawa Sime Little cha: WEATHER REPORT Cloudy with sunny periods and a few snowflurries Thursday. nge in temperature. Winds northwest. Price Not Over oie Not Over OSHAWA, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1960 Authorized as Second Class Mail Pogt Office Department, Ottawa TWENTY PAGES ol. 89--No. 15 LAB | LAY-OFFS ATTRACTIVE £ Benefit Under Study Plan Guilty Plea On Stolen TORONTO (CP)--The Ontario| Federation of Labor says in a submission presented today to LJ » Securities Premier Frost that its recom- {mendations NEW HAVEN, Conn, for new legislation Testimony in the trial of Fran-| covering hours of work, mini- (AP)--| FEDERATION ASKS LAW CHANGE Submission To Premier take immediate steps to set up retraining programs and extend other types of assistance neces- sary to re - establish displaced workers. | The brief savs the employment {picture is further clouded by a A V {considerable reduction in house Ontario residents and apartment building during cesco Ferrara ended abruptly|n,,m wage and vacations would |Tuesday when he pleaded guilty improve the purchasing power of to two charges concerning secur- thousands of OTTAWA (CP)--Company lay- from his company program. If it off-benefit plans that could make | disapproves, benefits the worker ¥ being out of work more attrac-|collects from his company will | a sie This is ground view of the | stretch of farm wreckage of the Capital Air- 2's tail section lines plane which cra . tion are shown Holdcroft, Va., in a swampy | gers lost their lives in land. The and wing 50 passen- the WRECKAGE IN SWAMPL ND | crash. The ill-fated plane burst | hot mass of twisted metal at into flames after the crash and | their arrival, | rescue workers found a white. | --AP Wirephoto tive than being at it are under | be considered earnings as far as study by the Unemployment In-| the commission is concerned. surance Commission, | Thuis i cut Je amount he can i i lect from the commission. The situation has come about| CO €C 3he i i S tt 0 through a gradual increase in| The Soumission ho sg levels of supplemental unemploy-| i > i a, regular and supplementary bene- ment benefit programs drawn up, 58 podipiagin ngin rk in some company-union negotia- ) 2.8 A tions, a commission official said fecting the man's incentive Js Tuesday night in an interview. [find another job," the officia said. Malnly affected are auto mak-| It also must consider workers ers and their feeder companies--|.. © qe not come under supple-| often subject to slowdowns or mentary programs and those in- layoffs. jured in industrial accidents-- ities stolen from Canadian 5pq boost the country's eco- banks, [nomy. Ferrara, 58, a Boston racing] The recommendations are: sheei publisher, made the sur-| That a basic minimum wage of prising move shortly after testi-|$1.25 an hour be set for men and mony resumed after a weekend women, regardless of the type of recess, {industry or location; A witness had told earlier of] That every employer observe making a bank loan to a Wor-|eight specified holidays each cester, Mass., priest who had|year and work performed on put up as collateral what were|statutory holidays be paid at the later found to have been some of |rate of time-and-one-half; the bonds stolen in the burglaries| That the Ontario labor code be at Montreal and Brockville, Ont.|amended to provide two - week Ferrara pleaded guilty to con-|annual vacations after one year 1959 and the probability of a con- tinuing downward trend in 1960. The federal and provincial gov- ernments should make funds available for "socially necessary projects" that would otherwise be held up by the prohibitive cost of borrowing, the brief says. It urges top priority be given to programs of urban redevelop ment and construction of low- rental housing in the built - up sections of the larger cities. The federation' strongly urges the government to undertake a ' Canadians Among Company Jetliner Victims ANKARA, Turkey (AP Montreal librarian on a v trip abroad was amon persons killed in the cr Scandinavian airliner Turkish capital Tuesday passenger list showed another Canadian among dead. Searchers today reported s ing the wreck U.S. Navy plar aboard on a moun ana, Turkey, Tu § said there was no sign of life The Canadian vacationist was/ 0! i cal ri sht the death toll for 1 aviation this year to plane that crashed here ench-built twin-jet Cara- It was the first commercial ash for the Caravelle since Air| nce and the Scandinavian line| an using it more than a year| plane encountered heavy| and wind as it approached a, but airport experts said h "was caused by tech- easons--not the weather." Mariel Laurendeau, 20, an as-| sistant librarian for the CBC in of y rmation ¢ A passenger list Scandinavian SAS airline listed the other Canadian as James Hopkins but gave no home ad- dress or further identification. U.S. ENGINEER The Associated Press in New York, however, reported that Hopkins was a chemical engineer pc for the Pfizer Corporation sta-|r tioned in Istanbul. His home ad- dress was given as Birmingham, Mich. The Ankara crash aboard died, was of a commercial 1960 began less than three weeks ( ot in whic he third airliner since Whi gy we Bll In Senate bill was introduced in the Senate of bor r Commission ion to manage and develop rbor at Oshawa e corporation would consist three commissioners, two ap- yinted by the federal -govern- and one by the city. Its wers would be similar to har- commissions operating in| her centres sioners would hold of- r a maximum. three years. e may be a member of the y City Council. Senate Proposal alive, but they commercial the U.S. A Capital Airlines plane|; crashed near OTTAWA (CP)----A government Monday, killing 50 persons, O Jan. 6 a National Airlines plane Tuesday night to establish a cor-/exploded in the air near Bolivia, D President Arrested |They gave no further explana-| MONTREAL (CP) -- John C.|AUTO CONTRACTS tion. The Turkish air force be- Doyle, president of Canadi | The situation had grown out of gan an investigation. pg Ltd., has been arrested negotiations in the U.S. between .e and charged with theft if com-|the United Auto Workers and the SUDDEN SILENCE pany shares, Rene Gaithele manufacturers. The union About five minutes before helcrown prosecutor, said today. was seeking a guaranteed an- was to land here, the pilot asked| Mr, Gauthier said Mr. Doyle nual wage. Ankara control tower for landing|was arrested at 4:30 p.m. Tues-| clearance. He reported an alti-|day, as a result of complaints by f the worker's wages were tude of 6500 feet, then went shareholders and three peel dl ol] Hg and some rs silent. Airport workers saw alwere laid against him. An|contributions were added to this. bright flash, amount of $4,800,000 was involved |pyring a layoff the worker would Rescue teams found half of thelin the case. |draw on this fund to supplement plane on one slope of a hill about| Bail was fixed at $100,000. Mr. [his regular unemployment bene- 5 Lars igh. The Filo Doyle remained in cells overnight | site . but his legal counsel was under- s first drawn strewn over 100 yards. stood to be arranging for his re- ar Tada, ; the first four an! " i oThere Lave been "oui oi {wo with compensation limited to 75 a worker--if he could collect both commission and company bene- fits--would do better off the job than on, the official said. Full commission bene its in these cases were refused. per cent of regular wages. Eisenhower Starts On Last Term spiraqv to pledge, receive and |of service and three weeks after transporting $30,000 worth of se-| curities from Boston London, Conn., on Oct. 30, 1958. A court official who asked that] |Ferrara had said he wanted to eral authorities wrongdoing. WASHINGTON (AP)--Dwight eighth and final year as presi dent of the United States. He's looking forward eagerly to pri- vate life, but there is one thing he wants much more, He would like most of all to see his crusade for world peace bear real fruit in the next 12 Three persons were found jonge today. weeks of a I auto compan- se tiomed Seedy SS in N10 Bolts icy wih ste commision 4 » - whic re, r com xtensive iron ore mining rights|penefits would aap to 65 per |i Labrador. Its executive offices! pent of the man's pay after taxes. n|are in New York. The commission was not con- {| Mr. Gauthier said charges of cerned about the company pro- |thett, Sonspiasy 24 fraud were|gram at that stage, the official {laid against Mr. oyle. |said. | He said the complaint charges| {that Mr. Doyle had company/NEW PROGRAM shares sent to Switzerland for use| Since last September, however, as collateral i a $4,800,000 loan|c omp 28 y Supplementaly Fo: from a Switzerland bank. igrams have en submi 0 Shareholders, said Mr. Gauth-|the commission. ier, are inquiring about what| If it approves them, the laid-| happened to the proceeds of the vif worker will collect both full] loan. 'commission benefits and those plane disasters in e Richmond, N.C, killing 34. WELSH ACCENT DISADVANTAGE LONDON (AP)--An English- woman won $12,500 damages Tuesday for injuries that left her with a Welsh accent. At least, that's what her lawyer contended. The judge remarked that she sounded to him more like a "Cockney. Mrs. Marion Evans, 49, was in a car collision 3% years ago and sued George Bates, driver of the other car, She lost five teeth and her | tongue was cut. When she started talking again, she didn't Motorists Launch Safety Campaign OTTAWA (CP)--Canada's mo-|15,500 in 1937 despite increased torists are launching a courtship| population. May OTTAWA has been which legal ment Hill say would place hibition on divorce in and Newfoundland Quebec Liberal Francois Pouliot day night that Cut Divorces | (CP) -- A made in the sources on petitions to Parliament 1sfer of parliamentary juris- 1 over divorce to the prov- Id end this right. Pouliot said if Parlia- were free of divorce, mem- Senate divorce com- make more profit-| proposal en Cor Parlia- a pro Quebec ment mittee could é 1se of their talents. marriage and divorce be tran present practice is for ferred from the federal Parlia-|T to grant divorces) ment to provincial slat ly on grounds of adultery. Jean Tue ov Senator proposed jurisdiction eral The 1 oy | with the country's pedestrians to| |reduce traffic fatalities and im- prove traffic flow The Motor Club Movement, co-| lordinated by the Canadian Auto- mobile Association, said today it is launching a competition among | municipalities with populations of {10,000 or more based on which do the best job of reducing pe- destrian deaths. Within the next two weeks, | provincial and municipal motor |elubs will approach leaders of sound like the same woman, '""Her speech," testified hus- band Edward Evans, a Welsh- man, "now has a different in- tonation or brogue. Also, she is unable to kiss me because her mouth is too tender." Leonard Willmore, an expert who gave her speech treat- ments, said she had "a most peculiar accent, like. nothing I had ever heard before." He told the a ing a brief di his proposal tion over mar where it "should the first place." No one would say that riage and divorce did not fall der civil rights, a field clusive provin d SAYS BNA ACT UNFAIR "1 say that it was un the time of the drawing up ¢ the constitution (the Briti North Act) to give jurisdiction over marriage and divorce to the ald ple and div been have juri at air Parliament of Canada." Legal sources here said the suggestion would have no effect except in Quebec and Newfound- land. All other province divorce courts, most of t der federal legis them the right to grant di However, legal sources said that if Senator Pouliot's sug- gestion were carried out Quebec and Newfoundland | tablish divorce sources said the would never sanction th lishment of divorce courts WOULD LOSE RIGHT Residents of the two seeking divorces CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 11 pr now must pr A bulldozer builds a dike in | | an attempt to. save Kapoho | | village on Hawaii Island from | by molten lava destruction from Kilauea volcano, In back- ground the glowing lava busts | Y 99 Old - 137 communities to seek their co- operation, The program is based on a system introduced in 1937 in the United States. The American au- tomobile Association plan is cred- ited with helping reduce pedes- trian deaths to 7,800 in 1957 from Minister Resigns From Post OTTAWA (CP) -- Poor health| has taken away another member | of the Progressive Conservative| cabinet--the fourth lost in two years. Prime Minister Diefenbaker an- nounced in the Commons Tues-| day the resignation of State Sec- retary Henri Courtemanche, 43, who stepped down following ad vice from a cardiologist | Mr. Courtemanche, MP for Quebec's Labelle constituency, said in an interview his heart condition is not severe but his} |doctor told him to avoid over-| | work. Mr. Diefenbaker said he| DIKE hopes the former minister will| hundreds of feet into the air [be able to continue in public life. and forms a dense cloud. The | For the time being, he is to flow was headed for Kapoho |continue as Commons member. | o {There has been speculation he] today. may be appointed to the Senate| or to the bench. 3 4 --AP Wirephoto | There were about 3,300 traffic Ferrara is A program was adopted where py 'miconhower today started his|Pond while awaiting sentence. | He faces a maximum of five| {years and a $10,000 fine on the {first charge against him, and 10 |years and $10,000 on the second. Assistant Prosecutor Francis M. McDonald recommended that four other counts be which is tantamount to them dropped That is the way Eis T's aides sum up his outlook on this seventh anniversary of his taking over as president, Eisenhower planned no formal observance of his inauguration anniversary, but it has been ap- year-old president is ticking off the days until his second term ends. Despite all that, close friends say he has enjoyed his second term more than the first. Much trations of various kinds--not se- rious enough, however, to cause him to decide against bidding for another four years in the White House. from seeking a third term. At the start of this friends report, Eisenhower made up his mind he would not be la- belled as a "lame duck" presi- dent in the sense of playing & the Democratic-controlled Con- gress. Popularity polls report the pres- ident is riding high these days-- parent for some time that the 69-| of the first was marked by frus- F Eisenhower is the first Ameri- | can president in history barred |: term, | : passive role and abdicating to!g§ The burglaries in which the securities were stolen occurred Nationale d'Economie of Mont real, and on May 4, 1958, at the {Brockville Trust and Savings |Company. The first job produced about| $1,789,000 in loot, the second| about $3,500,000 worth, | possess stolen securities, and to|five years; to New |be reduced 0 i |time-and-one-half work in excess of this. he not be named told reporters RETRAINING PROGRAM {avoid implicating the priest, Rt.|says the Ontario department of Rev. Armand Barrette. However, education has shown little inter- the assistant prosecutor said fed- [est in using funds allotted by the are convinced federal government for the pur- Msgr. Barrette is innocent of any pose of {workers free on $100,000 Training Act. program of bursaries for needy students. ASK AMENDMENTS The submission recommends several amendments to the On tario Workmen's Compensation Act and suggests the minimum benefit for temporary and per- manent total disability be set at $25 a week. The brief also asks: A universal, ¢ o m pr ehensive plan of health care under gov- ernment sponsorship, covering and treatment of physical and mental illness, That the maximum work week to 40 hours and be paid for On other subjects, the brief] retraining unemployed under the Vocational It urges the government to on Jan. 25, 1958, at the Caisse|® Provisions to prohibit discrimi. nation against workers on the basis of age. That workers be allowed to ac- cumulate pension rights through- out the 'period of active employ- Dow Chemical Co. Hit By Blaze ; (AB)--A pre- ing tower of the Dow Chemical Company today after a reported xplosion. That Yquor amined by a non-partisan com- mission and that its recommend- i 4 . ations be made the basis for a Fifty firemen, including the thorough revision of the present Bay City department and othersilaws. from nearby communities, fought] A compulsory, go ver nment- the blaze for an hour before sponsored automobile insurance bringing it under control. plan. No injuries were reported.| Prohibition of trading stamps There was no immfediate esti-land prosecution of firms which mate of damage. presnote. and use them. | ation be ex- deaths in Canada last year, 29 per cent of which were pedes- trians, Municipalities will be asked to fill out forms indicating rates of pedestrian fatalities in recent! years and what they 'are doing| to improve the situation. A committee of safety, enforce- ment and traffic engineering ex- perts will evaluate performances. Awards will be announced at the CAA annual meeting May 25- much higher than at some other points the last seven years. to boost his popularity than his recent world travelling in behalf of "peace and friendship--in free- is much more such travel ahead. Huntsville Youth's 28 at Niagara Falls, Ont., with| Appeal Dismissed municipalities divided into popu-| lation, categories of 10,000 and| TORONTO (CP)--The Ontario over, 25,000 and over, 50,000 and Court of Appeal Tuesday re- over and 200,000 and over. |Jected an appeal by Marvin Mec- CAA experts afterwards will | Kee, 20-year-old Huntsville youth make suggestions to municipal-|under sentence to be hanged Jan. ities on how to improve their|26 for the slaying of taxi driver traffic-pedestrian programs. Bruce Spiers. The association announcement] McKee was convicted of mur- said it is hoped this first nation-|der Nov. 7 after a trial at Brace- wide campaign of its kind will|bridge. Wayne Sluman, 17, was establish a national safety stand-| given 15 years on a reduced ard. icharge of manslaughter, LATE NEWS FLASHES Canadian Curlers Six Down GLASGOW (CP) -- Touring Canadian curlers opposed . six rinks from the Scottish Ice Rink Club in exhibition matches to- day and wound up six points down at the end of the morning session. The Canadian were up in three and down in two with one even. Scores included: Albert J. Parkhill, Oshawa 5; W. H. Roberts-Aikman 12; Colin A. Campbell, Toronto 7, H. Begg 6. | Aneurin Bevan Condition Worse LONDON (Rueters) The condition of Aneurin Bevan, 62- year-old deputy leader of the Labor party, "causes much anx- ety," a hospital bulletin said today. The bulletin was issued from London's Royal Free Hospital where Bevan underwent a major abdominal operation Dec. 29, Fasting Rules May Be Relaxed TORONTO (CP) -- Relaxation of fasting rules is expected to be announced in most Roman Catholic dioceses in Canada before Lent. This was indicated today by a spokesman in the chancery ofifce of James Cardinal McGuigan, Archbishop of Toronto. The spokesman said the bishops have been trying to achieve uniformity on fasting rules throughout Canada. The relaxation already applies in Toronto, r 5 |masquer Likely nothing has done more : § dom," as he puts it. And there|: f I / SEEN SITTING on the knees of the new warden of Ontario County William J. Heron, their grandfather, are Lynn Heron, 7, and her sister, Dale, 5. Lynn Monarchy Attacked As 'Bromide CAMBRIDGE, England (Reut- | | | | Warden At the first session of the On- |tario County Council for 1960, Ield in the Council Chambers, ers) -- student A 'Cambridge University Tuesday night attacked n chy as Britain's cow" and a "national bromide," but he lost out in a un- iversity debate. Student speaking in the Cambridge de-|{of Brock Township, bate on the motion that "prov i- {by acclamation as warden. sion for the Royal Familv is ex-| The session started with the cessive and ought to be reduced." |county clerk-treasurer reflecting The otica a5 Sateated by alon the accomplishments of the 56 t . {105 oi Support for Saunders came 1959 gounell, and. thet he called from a Labor member of Parlia.| ©! {Romingtions Jon tie covelel imrys Hughes. Defence of |POSition of warden. v was 'led by L. G.| The nominations were as fol- Pine, editor of Burke's Peerage. |/0WS William J. Heron, Reeve He thought Britain was making|0f Brock, Howard McMillan, "a shabby, dishonest attempt to Reeve of Reach, Sherman Scott, as a great power Reeve of Pickering Township, when we are really a second-rate Earl G. Dowsell, Reeve of Ux- power dressed in the mantle of |bridge, Anson Gerrow, Reeve of imperial majesty." Scugog, and John McCrorie, a David Saunders was| Whitby, William J. Heron, Reeve withdrawing their was elected|the list, Reeve William J. Heron | and Dale are the daughters 8f | Mr. and Mrs. Robert Heron, | of Euclid street, Whitby --Oshawa Times Photo. . Ontario County Elected Reeve of Beaverton. The six Inominees addressed the council, and as a result of the latter five names from |was acclaimed warden for 1960 He has served three y as reeve, two years as deputy-reeve |and two years as councillor in {Brock Twp. Following the swearing-in cere- mony, Warden Heron called upon Rev.' David Marshall to conduct | the initital devotional service, {which turned out to be his 20th. The session finished when the {past wardens, in turn, addres:ed {the council and wished Warden Heron and his council every suc Icess for 1960. A