WERTHER REPORT Snow mixed with some freezing rain tonight, Thursday cloudy and a little colder, winds southe easterly, light. THOUGHT FOR TODAY Mixing ardent romance with gasoline is almost as bad as : mixing liquor with it. Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa TWENTY PAGES OSHAWA, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 27, 1960 Moslems Dety Strike Order Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy Vol. 89--No. 21 Mine Men Barred From CLC OTTAWA (CP)--A bid for af-| Apart from the objection on the 57 aes | Insurgents Requested filiation with the Canadian Labor! grounds of the constitution clause Congress from the leftist-led In-| bearing Communist-led unions, ternational Union of Mine, Mill{Jodoin set out these objections: and Smelter Workers (Ind.) has| 1, «pt js exceedingly doubtful been rejected, the congress ex-|that the present executive of ecutive council announced today.| Mine-Mill is in fact desirous of CLC President Claude Jodoin| affiliation at this time." said in a letter to the 25,000-meth-| 2, "There is little reason to be. ber union made public today that|jieve that, under its present lead- one of the grounds for rejection|ership, your organization would was that the Mine-Mill body is|pe likely to accept in good faith not eligible for affilation because!the policies of the congress." of anti-Communist provisions in| The M ne-Mill application was the congress const.tution, made last year after a national The Mine - Mill union of its membership. evicted from the old Can , Jodoin said: Congress of Labor several years ago for alleged Communist dom- CERTAIN CONDITIONS ination and has never been in| to the form of the CLC since its formation in| thé apy it is noted that 1960. you attach certain conditions to affiliation which indicate a de- ANTI-RED CRUSADE sire to reserve on certain por- Mr. Jodoin 'sent copies of his| tions of the congress' constitution, letter to national president Nels |It is the policy of the congress to Thibault of Toronto and Don Gil- require unreserved acceptance of lis, who last vear led an anti-|the constitution and policies of Communist crusade to snatch the the congress granting af- | presidency eof the 16,000-member | filiation, You appear to be Sudbury, Ont., loc unw g to make an uncondi- Mr. Gillis has been making un|tjona] application | official overtures for separate af-| "Secondly, the Canadian Labor | filiation of his big local with the| Congress has noted that the bal- congress, and Mr. Jodoin 0-1 1ot noted in the referendum spe- formed him that Tuesday's ex-|cified similar conditions and: ws ecutive council meeti assured apparently designed to arm your| ed th him of co-operation, though no dll executive with terms to be used| title « rect mention was made of for- in bargaining with this mal affiliation. | ' "Noting that you favor principles and policies of CLC, and with the assurances of the CLC in future endeavors, we before >» Oshawa curlers retain- Ontario Ladies' Tankard an. 26 at Barrie, but an end final was needed to | de the CLC president -- d, "it is the opinion of the ex ecutive council that the present] RB t wish you all success," Mr. Jo-! 4 h Juror epor S ed nor submitted in good » Bribe Offer pplication has neither been pre-| doin wrot. to Gillis. f He also said the executive 'd!" ine - Mill locas . : - hoped other Mine - Mill locals\yNrEpNAY, PROBLEM Lig agi : would "follow your fine example "It appears to. us. that. it is! TORONTO (CP)--A member of reorganization. rather a technique devised for an Oniario Sy rome Cou ] STIFFER TONE the purpose of solving an internal|CATINS 8 COMPA DES teen But. to the union's national pres-| problem that exists in your or-{100 Joyce Jot Cay ident the CLC head adopted a ganization at the present time nfl on a he stiffer tone. jand which is public knowledge a i 10 -- | ACQUILTAI, William G. Spratt said the {caller told him other members of night caller vote of- for the Sudbury rinks. Front RETAIN TITLE IN CURLING | from F. | lead; Mrs. D; Jacobi, lead; and |poard, to affect Canadian mem- | 'Mrs. A. N are Mrs. Mrs. from left vice-skip; | Hezzlewood, skip; Mrs. Fordham, skip; and Mrs. C. Jenkin, vice-skip. Back row Tow Robins, UAW Summons Oshawa Members| PARIS (Reuters) Agence, w France - Presse reported shots |were fired in the west Algerian port of Mostaganem today after 1,200 Moslems marched to the town hall shouting "long live de Gaulle." - They had earlier defied young A number of Local 222, United|board indicates how serious UA Auto Workers officials have been! leadership regards the allega- notified they will appear belt Mr. Burt is the oply Can- 'an international UAW commitiee adian member of the 'executive investigating charges of consort-' board. ¢ (ing with officials of the Canadian| If the executive stick to prece- | Communist party. Mr Burt will not take part French settlers who had ordered | A top-level committee from the the hearings. Normally the topli, 0." orec to close in accord- |international executive has been) officer of invoived region)... with a general strike call is- appointed to hear charges that|doesn't sit on the committee. 10 ~o by the leaders of the Algiers {some Canadian members holding] Charges and evidence will be insurrection. |high office in their locals, con-|heard by the committee. It willl AFP said the settlers hurled |sorted with officials of the Cana-' then decide if any members said stones at the store fronts when |dian Communist party. to have attended the meetin he owners refused to close them. A finding that members had should be placed on trial for_aet/ |violated their constitution could ivities detrimental to the union. {lead to their expulsion from the cioR' The. FERS : ars com- musts, or subservient 0 con TWO RETAILERS from holding elective or FEEL UNHAPPY munis | appointed office in the union. The NEW HAVEN (AP)--Irving Rosner operates a food mar- same restrictions apply to Fas- cists or Nazis, kef. His neighbor owns an auto parts re on dent, in the the PARIS (AP) -- President Charles de Gaulle's chief repre- sentative in Algeria pleaded with insurgent Frenchmen today to lay down their arms and end a general strike against the policy of self-determination for Algeria. Delegate general Paul Delouy- rier, the civilian administrator in the North African territory, de- plored the four-day uprising in a broadcast over army - controlled radio Algiers. Even as he spoke, the thou- sands of armed insurgents were strengthening their shoulder-high . IFIRST OF KIND E. Stone, | The hearing is the first of its Campbell, |kind, initiated by the executive are Mrs. Mrs. G. left store. Rosner displays some of his merchandise on the sidewalk. | Some of it flows over to the space in front of the auto parts Lawrence, second --CP Wirephoto A. {bers. It will be held Feb. 2 and 3. Evidence from the hearing will Defence Policy «Debate Proposed | OTTAWA (CP) -- Dr. Richard] Dr, Preston Says of national {A. Preston, professor of history at Royal Military College, has| ticked off Canadian defence de- partment officers and officials who, he says, oppose public dis- p chiefs of staff committee." chiefs are concerned with mili-| {be taken back to the executive board for decisions. y Malcolm Smith, president of Local 222, said he would prefer) not to make any comment until after the hearings. | The hearings supposedly arise! crales from incidents that led to the dis-| front of missal of "Paul Siren, top aide| He hung a sign over the : to Canadian UAW director, crates. It read: "nuts and "the initiation George Burt. | snails in front of this window ap-| Mr. Siren was dismissed by Mr | free to all passersby. Help the! Burt on the grounds he had at- yourself." tended a meeting in company : Ani iran | (Bosner looked and pedestri- | eh Comet cals. STh ans looked but no one did any. [FIRST ADMISSION { thing, Store |barricades im the streets of Al- |giers. 4 Delouvrier said no one in Al- |giers wishes secession or a gov- lernment crisis. "Certainly I un- derstand the motives of those who, with the courage of despair, have entrenched. themselves to bear witness for French Alger ia," he said. "I know that these motives are shared by most peo- ple here, must know this." Harry Carafano, This makes : the auto parts | manager store, unhappy Tuesday Carafano found of nuts and snails in his store. of security policy to rest largely with ears He adds, however, that the| Metropolitan France This was the first official ad- To Lay Down Arms As the deadlock went into its fourth day, rumors spread that the president might evoke con- stitutional provisions that would iv 've him dictatorial powers if he his France's integrity is men- aced. | Reports also persisted that |Fremier Michel Debre would re- |sign as a result of the crisis in |which 25 persons died and about 150 were injured in a battle last [Sunday pitting Frenchman against Frenchman. Debre's |aides denied the report, | The barricaded insurgents dn |Algeria--fearful that de Gaulle's moderate self determination {policy will lead to eventual ine {dependence for the country--de- mand that the largely Moslem land remain French, CONTINUE TALKS Debre conferred hurriedly this morning with Jacques Chaban Delmas, president of the Na- tional Assembly, on the tense situation, They continued discus- sions begun Tuesday night when both met de Gaulle. There was no announcemnt on what deci- sion they made, if any. As the deadlock persisted, un- rest in other Algerian cities was growing. Demonstrations were held Tuesday in Bone, Constan- tine, Oran and other cities in sympathy with the Algiers insur- gents, There seemed to be no doubt that the government could crush the insurgents any time it chose. Government troops are vastly more powerful than the few hun- .|dred die-hards huddled behind barri and barbed wire in the heart of Algiers. | cuss f defence policy. : 4 cussion of defence policy tary affairs only while othe yl Yeats sud was former Torouto, Rosngr said he didn't plan to [mission that rioting Sunday in Al- So far the army apparently the jury had been approached. Spratt said he was first of-| . 'The promotion of intelligent giers, in which 26 persons died and about 150 were injured, was a. reflection of widespread senti- area director. The meeting took 1 1 public discussion is imperative; as 'civil: defeliee. and place nearly five years ago. Es merchandise. ie implicati of SEEN SERIOUS 5 Law Intervenes aspects of national security, such the eco- hat remained loyal to de Gaulle, by - Wild Cat Hunt ISLAND (CP) ~ This) (Wninl Code has provisions for the protection of domestic anim- als but nothing specific on cats {that ae jeil {makers It also has, the township coun-|loose by cettagers. lush little island in Lake Erie has| one of North America's richest] concentrations of ringneck pheas- ants. cil thinks, a: goodly population of stray cats. Next to hunters, who swarm here by plane and boat every fall and enrich the island by about $35,000 during the annual two-day season, the worst enemy of the pheasant is the cat. Tuesday, the council, which has domain over this eight-by- four-mile plot of land, agreed with Reeve Creighton Hamel that vagrant cats were making trouble for the pheasants. The gaudy birds thrive on Pelee Island's big corn and ve- getable farms. The prospect of shooting a dozen or more in two days--elsewhere in Ontario the limit averages three a day draws hunters from north and south eager to pav a fat licence fee to the township and room and board in the homes of the is- land's 600 residents. i RAISED BY FARMERS | In addition, many farmers raise pheasants for sale to the| township in order to keep the] ring neck population stable { around 10,000 birds. Mr. Hamel Tuesday organi a hunt to reduce the number marauding cats. Residents were warned to keep their pets in- doors. | In a matter of hours word got| £3 to the Humane Society in Wind sor. Inspector Kenneth Harper arrived on the scene and consultation the shotgun - cat hunters were Spurred on though they were by a 25-cent bounty, they had slain only six cats. A sympathetic Mr. Harper con ceded "They have a problem with cats. Within a week I will return with a trap to try catch- ing them alive for later dis- posal." The legal basis for the defence appeared vague after | toting cats The Russia Urges Men | To Go To Siberia | MOSCOW (Reuters) The| 1,200,000 officers and men being demobilized from Russia's armed forces Tuesday were urged to "go east" and help populate Si- beria. | A state decree said special commissions will be set up in| Siberian towns to help ex-service-| men and families adjust to civil-| ian life in factories, building sites and farms. CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 | HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 | that store," they have to do in he shrugged. Yaa it! was the first/dem .|eabinet and its defence of policy, are the concern be! The act the committee Is made up of i of the i of attempted jury bribery nal SY rnd, fsecaltthere. Feo { > 01 3 Mr. Spratt is oa a jury hearing) Dr. Prejton does nol name arly | the charge agains officers pr officials but jt #& e charge against Bruno Mores, | wn tat the members of the have gone wild--and coun-|37, in connection with a fatal col-| ioe of staff committee have maintains that the trouble-|lision on Highway 27 last June.|q. ined to talk with reporters or: are felines left on the Mrs, Gordon Gagnier, a driver| ive public speeches for more \in one of the cars, was killed. | 4.1 a vear. | They are understood to have 0 LATE NEWS FLASHES [fi is=e's criticism in November, 1958; of Air Marshal Roy Slemon for say- {needed a new jet interceptor. Air recalled. | * ing publicly that the RCAF {Marshal Slemon is deputy chief |of North American Air Defence |Command. The chiefs of staff are Gen. Charles Foulkes, chairman; Car Transport Missing In Area An automobile "transpert truck carrying five new cars was reported missing at noon today by officials of Auto Haul- away Transport Company, who believe the truck is in the Oshawa-Whitby area. Ontario Provincial Police are search- [Vice Admiral Harry DeWolf, ing Highway 401. The transport driven by Philip Daze, left [chief of naval staff; Lt.-Gen. F. Oakville Monday with a load consigned for Moncton, New |S. Clark, chief of the army gen- Brunswick and has not been heard of since. eral staff; Air Marshal Hugh Campbell, chief of air staff; and 4,000 Workers Idle In Detroit Dr. A. H. Zimmerman, chair- man. of the Defence Research / DETROIT (AP)--A sudden wildcat strike closed the three |B0ard. | Detroit area planis of the McLouth Steel Corporation today, leaving more than 4,000 workers idle. Picket-line violence, including the overturning of a foreman's car brought police | { hautfeur to all tires plants overnight. Windows of a second car were smashed, Plans To | [] ' Wed Heiress Electricians Strike Threatens BMC NEW YORK (AP'--Ex-chauf-|** LONDON . (Reuthers)--A strike by threatened today to close down all some 50,000 |feur Andre Porumbeanu said-to- day his wife has consented to a Motor Corporation plants and affect The company has warned that it will stop produc- divorce and there "is no doubt] in my mind" that he will marry! unless the 55 men at its Birmingham plant go back to Gamble Benedict, 19 - year - old New York heiress. Commenting on the Benedict] family's efforts to break up the] romance, he said: 'I don't think anv power can destroy love." The 35 - year - old Romanian-| born Porumbeanu made the] statements at a press conference 55 maintenance elec- 11 car production icians Gas Export "NEATLY KILLED' Opposition Mystery Man fiero Withdrawn Mutders Four arriving from Paris. He said he ' : 3 (CP) irthe - plans to make arrancements for], OTTAW A cp Norther On an early meeting with his wife tario Natural Gas Company, 7 - J bucking an export applicatic J NORTH Helma, 29, whom he has not seen |, A y "Ti : 2 if Wo. vears ns-Canada Pipe Lines Lim- (Ap)--_A Porumt oh nu. appearing nerv. ited: abruptly announced before "hihi 2 Ppearing yey the National Energy Board today means" to. visit Mics SRR zal a plan to withdraw that opposi- a sol : : ie tion am pfuses st him see! om \ i Jer fa ily Yous 8 jo J t hi ™ 5°€| The company said that if it can bho: { i ag Ls hat she tele-|gion agreements for new gas con- > i go ! ie Jay after she Te: itracts with Trans-Canada within | urnes ws - 101 From i aris, few days, it will with-|ies of the doctor's y 3p e phoned her the following|jraw its intervention on the|two women servants and the only Say ked al Trans-Canada application to ex-|cab's. driver, All had been shot/terious pass ii po out y bY | sort 1,410 billion cubic feet of gas|neatly through the left temple. |@ handful of rambie's er ouglas, | sr 20 veare The Norther A " pattere \ 1 that she is no longer inter.|o. or. 20 years. The Northern On-| Police issued an alarm today| 3% ered over ested in him. Porumbes taro president, Ralph Farris, for a pespectacled man about : i yam, rumbeanu. re-isaid the gz involved would who was seen driving off ¥ he motive plied "I am sure her feelir dy ho was n driving off in "yp A amount to more than 300 billion! The cs a aD 1 about me are just the same now cubic feet axi le cab was found ear as when they were in Paris to-| i. {today not far from the scene g the murders. k | SACKE er dec g they would find way to get married. The three women were Mrs.| > Before the press conference L : [Edith Clarke, in her 60s, wife of to Ke orumbeanu consulted privately F B d M (Dr. Francis Clarke; a maid, | pe with Phi'ip Handelman awe] or urie iners Mrs. Cora Thaddies, 29; and Miss he representing Miss Benedict, who] JOHANNESBURG (Re ters) -- Dorothy Moore, Mrs Clarke's| was forced by a French court or-| Rescue drilling equipment was|elderly housekeeper and compan-| der to return to her family after|flown here from New York today ion | she ran away to Eurone with her|and rushed by truck 45 m NEAR FORMER SLAYINGS sweetheart on a small tanker |Coalbrook, where 435 coal mir BODIES IN BED | The Clarke y Bi a /e been trapped Thurs-| eir bodies were found side bY southeast day 500 feet underground. {Side on a narrow bed in Mrs home of her millionaire] The equipment, three 250-pound|Clarke's room. They had been mother and legal guardian, [tung ipped drill bits, will be|tied- hands and feet with belts Kafhegine Geddes Benedict. [used to speed up dr'! , 13-|ties and strips of cloth. who opposed the girl's associa-|inch shaft in an attempt to con-! tion with Porumbeanu, tact the miners. HOME OF DR. CLARKE IN AIR BRUNSWICK, murderer invaded wealthy doctor's country estate 8 |Tuesday, bound and killed four| They | victims, then drove away the red lar} > § and-black taxi that had brou whapin, him, home He left behind the trussed bod- invalid e, N.J.|other al floor, sheet bedroom his body on the covered by were found by had the left day on ho in Sho! » next Na y 3%. *alibre sl the vish I lv i new," of | Prose et closets had been 8 but nothing of value Drilling Equipment ep valuable gems or cash cording to an. autopsy report. large, 21%-storéy {framed by fir trees, she has heen in sc ten s of EX-( HAUFFEURY ANDRE PORUMBEANU ¥ second pping trip with her daughter, [sai s were the mys-|nation. | n the cab and | carpeted said county! tor Warren T. Wilentz. S| missing. Clarke was not known! house. The women had not|clash between settlers and troops been sexually molested and|Which left 26 dead and about 150 showed no signs of struggle, ac-{Wounded has caused general re- miles | New York City is ajof getting the insurgents to lay colonial house|/down their arms without giving an orchard|in to their demands for a French and a red barn. It is only a few|Algeria. 'miles from the scene of the Ha The cab driver, Morris Michi Mills murder, one of the mos ael, 58, of Newark, was in an-isensational crimes of the 1920s. VIEW Barricades Problem ForDeGaulle PARIS (AP)--A handful of des- perate men manning barricades n Algiers pose a crucial question a for Charles de Gaulle. | Should the harried French pres- MIS. ident order his troops to attack er, Mrs. Cornelia|the hb, thela m a|alg arricades, he risks sparking uch bigger explosion among Algeria's million-odd Eurvpean rs already enraged over his| professed policy of self-determi-| | The government's vastly supe T- | ior military forces seemingly could crush the insurgents in a of hours, but de Gaulle] might lose héavily if more blood] {were spilled | morale couple The of the French my already has been damaged y the conflict which has pitted init against Frenchmen. Sunday's [vulsion, [DIFFICULT PROBLEM Thus de Gaulle faces the task I-| The settlers a'» eonvinced that, | given a chance, yje 9,000,000 hing llems would choose independence. n of a rela- bp formas in ts tht 0% promised not to fire on the in- This would mean the die-hards either would have to be per- ded to lay down their arms or be starved out of their strong- holds. -- NO TROUBLE GETTING FOOD , So far, according to reports re- |ceived in Paris, they have had ittle trouble getting supplies thnough the cordon of paratroop- ers ringing their redoubt. And they have showed no sign of giv- ing in to persuasion. De Gaulle was said this morn- ing to be unwilling te take on dictatorial powers for fear of magnifying the erisis, Debre, who returned from Al giers Tuesday after a quick pre- dawn conference with leaders there, warned that "all can be lost" if order is not soon restored to the turbulent North African territory. C ications with bat tled Algiers continued to be sporadic. Cables were held up for hours and attempts to telephone the city were useless. In Paris, police details were reinforced for the first time since the outbreak. The force was bolstered after an appeal by rightist deputy Jean - Marie le Pen for a strike "to protest against tyranny and withdrawal" (of Frenchmen in Algeria). Associated Press correspondent Godfrey Anderson, in an Algiers dispatch delayed by censorship, said the city rem ained sullen and brooding. "Fathers of families kissed wives and kids goodbye, donned khaki territorial uniforms and went to take their turn in the insurgent ranks. Others re. turned home to rest. Foreign Legionnaires and paratroopers encircling their positions let them pass without hindrance. . . Freezing Drizzle Forecast Tonight TORONTO (CP) A storm centre over Missouri early this morning was expected to pass just 'south of the lower Great Lakes later today bringing snow mixed with freezing rain or drizzle to Southern Ontario, Two or three inches of snow were forecast for most sections. Thursday was expected to be cloudy or partly cloudy and a little colder. Temperatures would range from 25 to 32 degrees. The weatherman said Toronto may get 'up to four inches of snow and possibly some freezing rain. But he said there was not enough moisture in the air to re- peat last month's ice storm that felled hundreds of power and telephone lines leading to thou- sands of Southern Ontario homes, However, 540 girls got an un- expected holiday when a power breakdowr. cut off heat and light at St. Joseph's High _ 'chool in suburban Etobicoke.