THOUGHT FOR TODAY Anybody can be thoroughly ob- jective and sweetly reasonable about something that could not possibly concern or affect him. he Osha Tunes . WEATHER REPORT Sunday mostly cloudy with sunny intervals, a few snow- flurries, little change in tem- perature, winds northwest. Vol. 89--No. 18 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, SATURDAY, JANUARY. 23, 1960 Authorized os Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa SIXTEEN PAGES Conciliation | Bhead For BIRTHDAY PICTURE the royal palace in connection with her third birthday today Prince Albert will be two years old on March 14. They are Princess Caroline of Monaco shows toy dog to brother, Prince Albert, who holds small pan, in this picture released by | the children of Prince Ranier | and Princess Gr: fcrmer | screens actress Grace Kelly --AP Wirephoto Mystery Dee pens In Crash Puzzle Rail Unions MONTREAL (CP)--The federal government will be a<ked to ap: noint a conciliation board to look nto union demands for a $65, 000,000 - a-vear wage boost Canada's 120,000 non - operating railway employees A joint 16 - union negotiating |committee headed by Frank Hall {made the announcement Fri {after contract talks with the rail- ways broke down Mr the two sides is and Labor Minister Starr will be asked within a few days to set up conciliation proceedings. In Ottawa Mr. Starr said he will have to set up a board "with all possible dispatch as soon as we receive the request." The board would comprise a management nominee, a nominee and a chairman, ably government appointed. Hearings would be public and ager of the federation, was crit- bounties are a waste of taxpay-|$1,000,000,000 worth of ship con- lical of some issuers of hunting er's money which could be better| struction, including three nuclear. | most likely held here. Hall said the position of accidents 2 irreconcilable|15 »f which were fatal. This was| abor prob- Safety Drive For Hunters NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP)-- licences who paid little attention Stricter control of issuing of to regulations. He said licences hunting licences and a stepped-|are being issued regardless of up education campaign to make{the age of the applicants or| hunters more careful were urged whether they have hunted in the Friday as the Ontario Federation province before, of Anglers and Hunters opened| He suggested that the federa- its annual convention here. tion recommend to the lands and | B. Young, supervisor of forests department 'that permits| hunting training for the depart-/of licence issuers who consist: | ment of lands and forests, told|ently refuse to co-operate in the| delegates there were 90 hunting safety program be rescinded in- ts in Ontario during '1959, definitely. Mr. Sutton reported that more the lowest number of fatalities|than 4,000 persons passed the since 1954, federation's hunter training pro- Even as he complimented the gram last year and said Lands federation for its promotion of Minister Spooner had assured safety, Mr. Young said it must|the federation the program would | take a more active part in teach-|be made compulsory next Sept- ing safety through its training ember: clasges. | Federation President W. Lee i Saunders of Brockville recom- CRITICIZES ISSUERS mended the abolition of 'bounties H. V. Sutton, secretary - man-|on predatory animals. He said | a FRENCH TROOPS RUSH 70 SUBDUE ALGERIANS 1 Settlers Resent General's Firing -- Combat. today was called to a face-to face (AP) fanned meeting with President de ALGIERS armed French troops throughout Algiers today as a Gaulle general strike protesting the) The meeting came as the first ouster of popular Gen. Jacques angry reaction showed up in Al Massu spread through the tensc geiia where Massu is the hero city. of the right-wing Europeans. Massu is the hero of the Eu.| Massu was dismissed following ropean right-wingers in Algeria,'a newspaper interview--which he and the news of his being fired later denied--in which he was from his Algiers command quoted as criticizing the leader. spread swiftly. ship of de Gaulle and the presi- Authorities reacted immedi- dent's Algerian policies. ately to the general strike. Police] Massu was recalled to Paris carried tommy-guns and army|Tuesday by the aloof French patrols wore steel helmets and president and allowed to cool his combat uniforms. heels. ie arrived at Elysee Pal- In tne Belcourt suburb, mer- ace without any prior announce chants said the strike order was/ment, and was immediately ~ passed by armed territorial taken into de Gaulle's office. |guards--a militia of local citi- MAY BE SENT FAR jpets, 4 The government announced {URGES CALMNESS |Friday that Massu would meet Delegate-general Paul Delouv-|W ith de Gaulle before his new [rier took to the radio to urge|Post is decided on. The mass- |calmness among the residents. circulation daily France - Soir Delouvrier termed the dismis. [speculates that Massu may be |sal regretable, but added: 'You gesigued a Jost either in West understand. that authority must|Africa or the island of Mada- |be affirmed. The government will{82scar. GENERAL MASS! Strike Halts Ship Building QUINCY, Mass. (AP)--Work on| (used for research. {powered surface vessels, halted | Either would remove him far Between 1947 and 1958 Ontario|today as a strike by Bethlehem ot retreat. from rebellion-torn Algeria, and WASHINGTON (AP)--An air- common kind Jey plunged into the Gulf of tale traces. exico Nov, 16. Another crashed ¥ ; ras as. cause in North Carolina Jan. 6. To- py x Se Lu cath Er by gether they make one of the most|Ropert V, Spears, an ex-convict' intricate mysteries investigators|ye was listed as a passenger or have ever been asked to solve. the plane, but the FBI found him More pieces of this human jig- alive Wednesday in Phoenix, saw puzzle keep coming, but|Ariz where the pieces fit is as baf- : fling as ever. Here are some of TAYLOR HYPNOT ; the questions that haven't been/ 3. Who took Spears' place as a answered: passenger on the gulf plane? Was 1. Were it w il 1i am JA Al Taylor, which a total of 76 perso: Spears' old pal? Dil Spears hyp which leave tell the two crashes in died | first plane is at the bottom of |" I a the Gulf of Mexico. Of the sec-/tiSm and his wife, Frances says ond, the latest word is that any she 1s sure someone could be so explosive must have been an un-/hyptnozied. There is no evidence More Immigrants Needed In Canada OTTAWA (CP)--A measure of {he reular refugees and heir agreement between Progressive families merited the applause of Conservative and Liberal mem- every Canadian but bers has been reached in the|a drop in the bucket Commons throne speech debate. | Barlier Arthur Maloney (PC ~Toronto| p20 Reade Parkdale) and Hubert Badanaif ° '"9W5% '0°C a Ques (L -- Fort William) both spoke(EOvenment 1s cont/atiy Friday in favor of increased im- (Ee a come to Canada it was only Minister oner g to offer Immigration he loans to unspon vishing to migration to promote Canadian| growth. Both said immigrants became| law-abiding citizens when estab- lished in their new land Mr. Maloney, a lawyer, said he had noticed 'how rarely new-| comers appeared before the criminal courts charged with ser- ious breaches of the Criminal Code." More Poles should be allowed into Canada. '"They would make excellent citizens and they have! friends and relatives here." SUPPORTS ORIENTALS Mr. Badanai, a former mayor of Fort William who came to Canada from Italv as a youth, urged a freer policy for Japa- nese and Chinese "They make excellent citizens. In the city of Fort William, we never had a police case against any of our Chinese or Japanese citizens." Both said immigrants could as- sist in opening up the Canadian North. Mr. Badanai said the govern- ment's immigration policy has been a hit-and-miss affair despite Immigration Minister Fair elough's keen interest in the de- velopment of a realistic program. Unemployment during the last| two years had caused a reluct- ance to boost the movement of immigrants. "But if we are going to wait for absolutely ideal conditions be-| fore adopting a more realistic] immigration policy based on the| need of developing the country, there will be no immigration." | NEED MORE CONSUMERS He said there has been much emphasis on immigrants] competing for jobs and not| enough on increasing the number of consumers. More consumers] created a demand for goods] which in turn created more jobs| and more customers for farmers. | The admission of 100 Furopean| CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 too AMERICAN ENVOY, right, walked into Cuban Foreign Min- istry today to say good be- fore flying Washington to report to his government on de to regime. vr teriorating relations with Castro | His escort is pony- | that Taylor was on the plane, but he hasn't been since the crash 4 seen Carolina suicide a the North crash traced toa bomb? Julian A. Frank, 32 heavily insured W Conn. law been an object of suspicion unproven theory in a public con- Frank exploding taking 33 with him believe this. Can be er, nas An mentioned gressional. hearing is that committed suicide by a bomb on the plane to th first deat wife wont others Frank's h hig Notize him into taking the plane Now there appears to be doubt! The witnesses: Premier i, 'a bomb caused the erash at 'and President Bisen atl. 5. Was there some link beiween these trag- edies? There some evidence that Spears and Frank had met, |but it is-not conclusive. {DENIED SABOTAGE In Dallas, Tex., Mrs aid Friday that her husband had enied to her that he sabotaged f airliner, in which 4 when he made a in Dallas Jan ndestine two is died visit to her ie is 7 ing the period he o be dea She disaj FBI refusir peared from her hut nu hom: with urne: later ers In Washington, it ars had electric tape an atteries along with dy ting Spears| paid $554,223 in wolf bounties and $96,080 in bear bounties. POLLUTION PROBLEM George Bukator, Liberal mem- ber of the Ontario legislature for Niagara Falls, said he will in- troduce a resolution in the forth. coming session asking that drill- ing for oil and gas in the Great Lakes be halted until it is known t Defence Policy Defended By PM OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis-|nology is rapidly shifting the ter Diefenbaker has called two|/main threat from manned bomb- disparate witnesses in defence of ers to missiles." whether it causes pollution. his government's action in a vital) Ay this leads to the question:| He mentioned heavy pollution area if Canadian defence policy. will the Bomare missile follow|of the Niagara River and in the the Arrow into oblivion? {Windsor area where hundreds of| \ "The Bomare Is only flan fish have been f ame as "thar tor. which. the w SEDAN CHAIR WINS OVER CAR row was designed. Defence Minister Pearkes has said that the two 30-missile Bo- marc bases in" Canada -- near LONDON (Reuters) Re- lays of liveried law students carrying a sedan chair proved Friday that 18th « century trans- hower. The government action: {Cancellation of the Arrow jet in- | terceptor program 11 months ago lon the grounds that the main threat to North America by 1962 |would be a long-range missile Irather than manned bombers. In the Commons this week Mr. |Diefenbaker twice cited Khrush- |chev in defence of the junking of North Bay, and Mont Laurier, Que.--will go into operation in 1962. f Steel Company shipbuilders over| contract nine Bethlehem plants are exX-| spokesman said that "reaction P out which began Friday at Ho-| boken, N.J., and jumped to West Milton, N.Y., and Quincy today. Some 12,250 employees were in-|Massu, | volved by this morning. dur-| presumed | 14: "Almost the whole of the air 2| {the Arrow. The Soviet premier said Jan. force is being replaced by rocket e! equipment. We have by now cut| d|/down sharply and it seems will] ) talk to report- continue to cut down and even|any time on the government's discontinue the manufacture of learned bombers and other obsolete ma-|Phase never fully explored d | chinery." And Mr. Diefenbaker also| caps in his lug- quoted Gen. Eisenhower in his| gage when the FBI picked him budget message to Congress Mon-| 1p at a Phoenix hotel. The ing of the blasting caps had bee reported a couple of davs ago pre Bi ap Gg | ditional Cuban-American tailed beared Lieut Danza Diaz, deputy chief of protocol. Ambassador | Phil Bor s 20-minute meet ing ith Cuba's acting foreign minister was reportedly 'cool'. --AP Wirephoto Richardo Cuban find- day "The substantial progress be- |ing made in ballistic missile tech- Situation n | | never make up its mind on just But the government hasn't yet committed any funds for Bomare purchases and it could change its mind as it did in the case of the Arrow. | You can get an argument here |cancellation of the Arrow. One is that the RCAF inadvertently de-| feated its own end WAITED TOO LONG Officials say the air force could what to put into the plane. It couldn't decide when to stop de-| velonment and, go ahead with| production. The RCAF, naturally, wanted| | with an ace racing driver at port is still the best way of getting through traffic-choked London streets. They beat a sleek sports car the wheel in a race from St. Paul's Cathedral to Johnson's Court, off Fleet Street--less than a mile. Lunchtime erowds watched the students, dressed 'in ser- vant's costume of the period, cover the course in nine min utes 12 seconds, beating racer Graham Warner by 20 seconds. Warner had an early lead but got stuck behind a truck un- loading merchandise. The students, carrying film actress June Thorburn, won a £5 bet for Dennis Pitts, editor [the best. It agreed to cancella-| {tion of the missile - carrying] |Mark VI CF-100 jet on the under-| |standing it would get the Arrow. of Lilliput magazine, that he colleague. had made with a Fleet Street He warned that violent reac- tion to the dismissal might bring chaos to Algeria. Most right-wing leaders re- ained uncom m u nicative. A [ preclude any of the comment or jeriticism which lost him his job {as commander of the Algiers re- |gion. News of Massu's dismissal set off demonstrations by mobs of youths in Algiers 'early today. They. poured through the streets shouting for a general protest strike. Othérwise, initial reaction was subdued. or 5 disputes spread along| he United States east coast | More than 17,000 workers at), ected to be affected by the walk-| needs to ripen, but I can assure you it will come soon." PARIS (AP) -- Gen. Jacques fired from his job as {commander of the Algiers area, | In Cuba t Near Climax WASHINGTON (AP) -- United| States Ambassador Philip W. Bonsal was due back from Cuba toda" to report on Fidel Castro's mounting anti-American cam- paign. Some observers here feel the fiery premier wants to wreck tra- friend- ship and eventually oust the U.S. from its key Guantanamo naval base. The situation has reached such a stage that some Americans and Cubans have even been asking about a possible diplomatic " | h expected to department. Observers say Castro's cam- paign is aimed at breaking up ties between Havana and Wash- ington in order to fit Cuba into a new international scheme. They say the plan is not Communist- directed, but it follows closely the pattern of Communist coun- trie These observers give this-out-| line of Castro's general goals: | He wants to gain possession of nearly $1,000,000,000 worth of] American agricultural and indus- | trial investments in Cuba in line| with its nationalization of the Cu- ban economy. Eventually he hopes to oust the Americans from the 45-square mile tract that comprises the| U.S. Guantanamo 'base Castro has brushed aside US. | protests against Cuban seizure of from the state American property without due|pending upon behavior and re- habilitation outlook, the boy may recourse to law. Unless the U.S. finds some way of stopping him, a big raid on| American propertv is expected in the next few months when more than £200,000,000 worth of Amer ican-controlled sugar is gobbled, {up bv the Castro government's lagrarian reform program. "sentence. nounced death sentence to life imprison. It ended up with neither. | TRUSCOTT CASE | Training School For Young Lifer OTTAWA (CP)--Steven Trus- cott, 15-vear-old convicted mur- derer, will be moved early next! week from Goderich jail to the Ontario Training School at| Guelph to begin serving his life| How long he will be in custody/| for the rape-slaying last June of| 12-year-old Lynn Harper near| Clinton RCAF base was uncer-| tain. But with good behavior it| may be as little as 10 years. | Solicitor - General Balcer an- in the Commons that cabizct had commuted the boy's ment. Justice Minister Fulton said in an interview Friday night that Steven will be held in pro- vincial rather than federal cus- tody KEPT WITH YOUNGSTERS This means he will start his sentence in a training school with other youngsters rather than in a federal penitentiary with adults The custody decision was reached late Friday at a meet- ing of Mr. Fulton and Ontario Reforms Minister Wardrope. De- remain in provincial care even after he is 16 The boy's father, RCAF WO Daniel Truscot!, says he can't believe his son is guilty. "I'll never believe It unless' he tells me so himself," he told report- RESCUE WORKERS crowd | around the collapsed ventila- tion shaft in this air view of the Coalbrook, South Africa, coal mine where hope was slim for more than 500 miners en- tombed 600 feet underground. FRESH AIR DRAFT | | The night of the slaying, Steven | had come home with "no change in his expression or bearing. '"He was the same old Steven. I can't see a kid home and acting like that if he'd been guilty." WO Truscott was transferred to Ottawa shortly after the slaying. His family came with him. PROMISES CLOSE LOOK National parole board chair- man George Street said the board will look into Steven's case "very carefully." There was no set minimum time a person sen- tenced to life must serve. This was something that would be es- tablished in the future. In the past, persons sentenced for life have been released within 10 years for good behavior. Steven, who turned 15 Monday, was sentenced at Goderich last Oct. 1 to be hanged Dec. 8. He received a reprieve unti' Feb. 18 to allow time for his appeal. The Ontario Supreme Court rejected the appeal Thursday. The Progressive Conservative| cabinet has commuted 32 death sentences since it came into of- fice in 1957. It has always com- muted where, as in this case, the jury recommended mercy Parliament now has hefore it a| COALBROOK, South Africa (AP)--Word that fresh air was reaching the area where 406 coal| miners are entombed; 600 feet be-| low ground spurred fresh efforts today by rescue teams hacking through a wall of debris almost a mile thick. While teams spelled each other in a round-the-clock battle to reach the trapped men, some workers on returning to the pit- head brought reports that fresh| air was blowing toward the en- closed section across the rubble, barrier. Veteran miners said that if the] v --York Scarborourh) callin~ abolition of the death sentence|S0me might survive except for treason or piracy with violence. Glimmer For Burie ern Airlines Constellation plane with 27 passengers from Miami, trapped men were not killed in|Fla., aboard landed safely today the two rock falls that sealed after circling Pittsburgh airport ate bill of © ank McGee (pC them underground Thursday, (for more than two hours with ap-|the passage into sections. for(there was a glimmer of hope that|pareni landing gear trouble, The collapsed roofing of the ventilation shaft, at upper cen- tre section of the arched hous- night. Mine spokesmen today said all attempts to reach the ing leading from the dark | €htombed men had been un- pithead at lower left, started | sucessful and that it would take the massive rock fall that | at least one week to reach the trapped the miners Thursday | buried. ~AP Wirephoto Of Hope d Miners or hunger, Water seeps continu-| Thirty pit ponies were bi: 1ght ously through the rock walls and|to the surface this morning. Res- 45 horses trapped with the men cue workers said if the ponies could provide food. could live in the area where the One miner estimated that the miners were trapped, so could men -- six white and the rest/the men if they had not been Negro workers--could stay alive|smothered to death at the outset. for three months. The horses were found in an area of the mine where the dane ger of deadly methane gas was believed to exist. There is little chance of reach- Constellation ing the men soon, however, as Lands Safely gas pockets, rising water levels PITTSBURGH (AP)--An East-/and new rock falls have threat. lened the rescue workers and hampered their efforts. Rescuers suspect there may be a number of cave-ins dividing "We will be lucky if we break Airline officials said that the through to where the men are They expressed belief that the plane landed without incident and entombed in a week," said one men would not perish from thirst/that there were no injuries. 'rescue worker,