THOUGHT FOR TODAY No matter how much a person may fear the future, he hopes to live to see quite a bit more of it. dhe Osha Sones cold with WEATHER REPORT Freezing rain changing to snow tonight, Thursday cloudy and furs ind northeast and northwest. THIRTY PAGES Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1960 Authorized os Second Class Moil Post Office Department, Ottawa Vol, 89--No. 33 Nazi General Believes In TORONTO (CP)--Kurt Meyer, [they get generals -- unless they the Nazi German general of the take the criminals." Second World War who served in| In the interview with Gordor a Canadian prison as a war crim- Donaldson, Meyer made these inal, says there'll be ano her war points: and he'll be in it. On anti-semitism: "I don't be- Canadian Today an interview was given lieve there is any form of anti-| semitism in Germany. The mass murder of Jews is a hideous bur- den on the conscience of each of us." by the former general in Bonn where he now lives in retire- ment and heads an organization of veterans of the Nazi Waffen Population Sub Found By Radio Approach BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) -- The Argentine navy today was the gulf has been heavily mined. Local radio stations Tuesday t t Disc Jockey reported to have made radio con- broadcast miles south of here. unconfirmed reports that food and supply dumps had been found near the gulf, pre. sumably to supply the mysterious intruder. One report said the sub act with a foreign submarine rapped in the Gulf of Nuevo, 700 On old soldiers: "The Germans have nothing to be ashamed of in| their military record. A good sold- ier must have pride in his father- land." As to how many of the estimated 900,000 former Waffen) S8 men in his new organization, | he said only "ycu can say it's a lot bigger than the Canad.an leg-| ion." | On the lagt war: "The Canadian 8S he once commanded. "Every day the West loses an- other battle in the economic war with the Eastern bloc," Meyer is quoted. * y don't nced to at- tack on the Eastern front. They're moving in econcinically through the Middle astern countries. This is the new-style revolution without bar 2s but just as 17,678,000 OTTAWA (CP)--Canada's pop- ulation reached 17,678,000 on Jan 1, the bureau of statistics said today. This estimate was an in- crease of 2.3 per cent--or 394,000 --from Jan. 1, 1959. This compares with increases of 397,000 in 1958 and the record | gressional Local radio stations, quoting "responsible sources," said Capt. Mario Lanzarzarini, chief of the Argentine naval force which has been hunting the submarine for 11 days, had made contact with Admits Extra Pay ris WASHINGTON (AP) -- Con-| The Gulf of Nuevo area today was hit by a bomb dropped from a plane last Friday. Rear-Admiral Eladio Vazques, naval undersecretary, has said that the navy would keep up "in- timidating operations" to force the submarine to the surface. It was detected by sonar soundings payola investigators/was closed to all sk called a second former disc| Depth charges and bombs have 543,000 in 1957, jockey. today after hearing a col- been dropped and the mouth of Lenin planned." He said he considers 1939-45 war the second battle of a war begun in 1914 and "there'll be a Army only fought for six mon hs| The population has increased and against worn - out German hy 1 597,000, or 9.9 per cent, since troops: If fresh troops like these the 1958 census. had been used with the tired Ger-| The Jan, 1 figure is up 196,000 third." |man armies, they would have from July 1 last year. ' "I'd still be the youngest of|{gone through the worn-out Rus-| them if I went back. The general [sians. One day you will find out NEW ONTARIO HIGH staff is too old. But where canlthat you lost the war in 1945." | time, reaching an estimated 6, 040,000 compared with 5,887,000 Jan. 1, 1959, TOPS 5,000,000 Quebec's population had passed {the 5,000,000 - mark for the first i [time at the bureau's mid - year estimate when it was placed a' 5,011,000 on July 1. At Jan. 1 it was estimated at 5,070,000. com- pared with 4,955,000 a year pre- viously. Ontario had the largest numer-| ical growth in population since the 1956 census -- 635,000. The other provincial increases were Quebec 442,000, British Columbia RBANDONED BA This three-month-old baby boy, called Peter John X by Ontario's population exceeded| nurses at Oakville-Trafalgar Me- | Whinney returned to. his parked the 6,000,000 - mark for the first! morial Hospital, was found | car after visiting a friend and i, A iy. ons bh" abandoned Tuesday at Oakville, a suburb of Toronto. Elmer Mc- found the baby on the seat of the car. The baby is in excellent and believed to be lurking on the seabed. Jegaue tell of receiving $15,500 in side payments over a two-year period. { Joseph Finan, who said he ~ A ceived the money as a consult ant, and Wesley Hopkins, today's| witness, both spun records for | condition and has blue eyes and brown hair, (CP Wirephoto) If Queen Gets Girl Public Wants Mary LONDON (CP)--1f the royal|few angles have been overlooked |a tone out," he once said, "it {baby is a girl, a British newspa-|A few examples: per tells its readers, 24% per cent of the British public wants {hurts me." The Queen's choice of yellow All the items in the baby's lay- |and white for the cradle proves ette are white and trimmed with Cleveland's radio-TV station KYW until they were fired last Dec. 3.| Hopkins has denied that he took payola--under - the - table pay-| OTTAWA (CP) -- The armed ments or gifts for promoting rec- forces are dismayed at the $99,- ords or products. He was called 000,000 reduction in the 1960 - 61 before the House of Representa-|defence budget. tives oversight subcommit. | The consensus is that the gov- tee, which is looking into payolalernment's thinking on defence {on the ground that such payments|policy is governed by money and fool the public as to a record'sinot military strategy. jy or popularity. A survey of opinion in the |armed services -- those express- | PAID $15,500 id lie b A od |in8 views naturally cannot be Finan, 32, said he had receive |quoted--indicates they feel the $15,500 from 15 record firms in|gouernment should be spending 1958-59 for his opinions on which "Mimore instead of less on defence, records would be hits and which| The administration obviously rmed Forces Rap Budget Cuts ment have been steadily rising. With a Jotceuting ceiling on de- fence budgets, less money is available for new Pp And each year new weapons cost more. The defence budget tabled last week allots $1,118,353,453 for pay, operations and maintenance, a reduction of $10,000,000, but only $280,000,000 for weapons, a vut of $44,000,000. The funds available for oi ons have to be spread among the services and the re- sult is that no one service can i | would flop. He said he listened t0|qoesn't share this view. It cut that she is. Indy a moder the records and played on the airithe defence budget to $1,596,272, the ones he liked. |266 for the fiscal year beginning In addition to that money, he April 1 from $1,695,194,006 in the said, there was his annual salary|current year, from KYW of up to $40,000 and| Progressive Conservative mem- {almost $2,000 a year additional bers of Parliament say their mail for presiding at 'record hops" 2ad sits to us tucncles indi- for teen-agers in small townsical public s Canada is around Cleveland, spending enough, if not too much, 195,000, Alberia 145,000, Manitoba, | 44,000, New Brunswick 41,000, Saskatchewan 25,000 and Nova| Another 10 per cent of the) Scotia 24,00, cross-section questioned by the MIDWIFE LOVES BABY British Columbia's 13.9 was the paper's opinion poll favor Eliza-| The Queen's midwife, Sister highest percentage rise since beth. Percentages prefer/ Helen Rowe, wears uniforms of kingfisher blue because "its much 1956. The others: Alberta 12.9,|Victoria, Margaret, Caroline, Ontario 1L7, Quebec 9.6: Ne w- Jane and a variety of other|nicer than that nasty old grey." 7.4, with a_ signifi Sister. Rowe loves babies. found, a 17 anitol ed as undecided. blue or primrose. The Queen is not fond of pink. adequately equipped. Senior officers say neither the government nor the chiefs of staff committee has -yet able to come to grips with problem of priority. Shap is, should be done first A er to be called Mary. bert y mother. There is a general trend | nowadays to break away from| the usual pink-for-a-girl, blue-for-| a-boy scheme. Princess Anne is doing hetter than her mother at producing tiny ts. The Queen is not an knitter. rd T- [cent register The Queen has developed a sud- {den fondness for honey and has some for tea mearly every day. Another report says her real weakness is avocado pears. The bobby of Sir John Weir, the Queen's physician-in-ordinary, is music. "If an instrument is half SPECIAL PAGES FOR BIG SALES anitoba 5.2, ce land 40, Nova Scotia 3.5, Saskai- It its a boy, George noses ont chewan 2.8 : - _{Philip, John and Edward by a Other Jan. 1 population esti nalTow rgin, mates by provinces with Jan, 1,| 1959, figures in bracke's: New-| In assisting the press by vol- foundland 454,000 (443,000), Prince |unteering such information, the Edward Island 103,000 (101,000), public is offering a modest return Nova Scotia 719,000 (715,000), New |for a wealth of detail about the Brunswick 596,000 (584,000), |impending royal birth in which| room outside the courtroom at Suffolk County Court House in Boston today before the opening of his trial for murder. (AP Wirephoto) WILLEM VAN RIE, 31, of Utrecht, The Netherlands, re- laxes with a cigaret, as he posed for photographers in a Criminal Charges Over Toll Bridge OTTAWA (CP)--Justice Minis-| The largest sale, held at the Oshawa Shopping Centre, since 1959, is advertised in a special section of today's "Times". It is called "Big '60 Savings". This section will display more than 10 pages of values available at the shopping centre Feb. 11, 12 and 13, Commons Tuesday shortly after ter Fulton says there's "a de-|its railways committee suspended cided possibility" of criminallits bridge toll inquiry in the charges as a result of evidence wake of a series of RCMP raids And from one fearless paper: According to a sworn statemen! ately--about what will go on in| the royal nursery, T can tell you|on the air for fees. {one thing that I KNOW the Queen| they both gaze down at their new|dependent Clevel baby: | distributor, were to have been "How Tiny! I'd forgotten the weekly from his firm for every other two were ever so small!" record plugged. 'OFF GOLDEN GATE Wine Tanker seized by the RCMP in its in-jon homes of collectors and. for- vestigation of bridge toll collec-mer collectors on the Jacques tions at Montreal. Cartier bridge. He made the statement to the] The rads were made on 25 Radio Man On Trial For Murder | crs vc. BOSTON (AP) -- A handsome| oq ing segregated policies at t di erator went on t ; eo ite ig charged | lunch counters resulted in serving Lunch Counters homes in the Montreal area and another dozen places ranging as far afield as Trois-Rivieres, 90 miles northeast of Montreal; St. Johns, Que., and the Laurentian Battles Storm Say FRANCISCO SAP) gall |unavle to haul the tanker through jors fought the sea today for the|the gale alone. 197,000,000 Angelo Petri, the Hundreds of spectators lined world's largest wine tanker. the beach in a pouring rain to A powerful storm that raged in watch the Pelri's ordeal from the Pacific Tuesday left the e 5 orcen'. : 520-fdot 21,800-ton tanker power-| Crew members who were air- "As the whole world speculates|read at the hearing, both Hopkins --often quite madly and inaccur- and Finan once agreed to push|privately that they think Canada selected new RCA victory records should get : | | The fees, according to the state-| will whisper to Prince Philip as|ment by Byron Burneson, an in- NO PRE and RCA victory tion defence. | business, SSURE The Liberals have not advo- |cated any increase in defence ex- Ipenditures and the CCF more than once has called for a heavy cut. In the opinion of armed forces officers, the services aren't being given the equipment to carry out properly the roles assigned to them by the government. They feel the government should make this choice: Cut down on some of Canada's mili- tary commitments or put up more money for necessary re- equipment programs. Canada's military commit- ments have kept growing in the last decade. Rapid scientific ad: vances have made weapons obso- lete. . Since the Korean War buildup, successive Liberal and Conserva- tive governments have taken the attitude that the public in peace- time won't stand for heavier de- fence outlays. Some Conservative MPs add Rail Contract out of the air defence Efforts Made LONDON (AP)--A government peacemaker today tackled a deadlocked labor crisis which threatens to halt all Britain's railroads and bring the country under an officlal state of emer gency next Monday. Leaders of the National Union of Railwaymen were called to 8 conference with the labor minis try's chief industrial commis sioner, Peter St. John Wilson. Wilson was under orders te seek a way round the impasse created by an NUR ultimatum to call out its 355,000 members at midnight Sunday night unless they get a "substantial" pay raise in the meantime, Average earnings are around £10 a week, The NUR has refused to wait for an inquiry commission to complete its investigation into the wage elaim. The commission promised Monday to rush out its report in three weeks' time, but the NUR said that was not soon Arouse Negroes LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP)----A home-made bomb shook the home of a Negro student Tuesday night {in a new outbreak of violence |over integration of Little Rock's with killing an alleged shipboard [counters at eight stores here high schools, paramour, {closing Tuesday. | The 16-year-old girl, Carlotta William Yan Rie, 31, of Uthecht, | Charlotte thus became the Walls, and three other members The Netherlands, has been in jail] etamis + i» (of her family were asleep in the since last September in the death|fourth North Carolina city house but escaped injury. of Lynn Kauffman, 23, a pretty| volved in the movement, whose| She is one of five Negroes at- divorcee from Chicago. | backers say it is spon:aneous and tending Central High School Miss Kuffman"s undressed bat- without organized support. |where integration of Negroes was S r islan 4 : i oo {after mob violence, { last September, the day after Van test action started eight days ago, |r the original nine Ag bri Rie's ship, the Dutch freighter Gordon Carey, white member ofiden:s admitted to the school that Utrecht, left Boston for Newja group galled the Congress of|year, York. |Racial Equality, said the Negro : i | y . It was the first violence di- The prosecution contends that demonstration may spread soon|..oioq"o¢ on h she and Van Rie engaged in a % a city in northern South Car-|\ oe 3 te 5 the 44-day Shipboard Jomatee hal oa: first over integration since bomb- began in Singapore endediniay SPREAD FURTHER ings on Labor Day last year. iS ne io Wg Mn Mig Carey also said his group plans| Police began a search for two Mountains. | Mr. Fulton said the Montreal | raids produced "a great deal of| additional information and a number of documents." | SEIZE BANK BOOKS Montreal reports said the RCMP seized documents relating to the financial situation of the men concerned, including bank| books, bank statements and prop- erty accounts. earlier RCMP investigations into toll collections on the Jacques Cartier bridge where toll rev- enues rose sharply following in- stallation of automatic collection devices last year. January tolls were $206,000 compared with $130,000 for the same month last year. The Montreal Star said Tues- day that information from ex- tremely reliable sources indicates some bridge toll collectors in the Montreal area were able to pocket from $50 to $700 a day before automatic devices were in| {to organize picketing of F. W. cars reported cruising in the area PICK JURY FIRST | Woolworth Company stores in|shortly before the explosion, stalled. The first order of business in New York City Saturday in sym-| = the trial was to pick a jury. pathy with the North Carolina Police originally listed Miss/ movement, which involved Wool- SI EET SNOW Kauffman's death as due to acci-|Worth outlets in Charlotte ' ' +dent or suicide, but medical ex- Greensboro, Durham and Win- aminer Michael A. Luongo over-|ston-Salem. ruled the finding, saying her| The Charlo'te protest began death was not due to drowning, when an estimated 200 students but to violence. [from Jchnson C. Smith all-Negro Mrs. Van Rie, loyal wife of the university marched in orderly defendant, came here last Octo-/fashion on the downtown stores| ber to wait for her husbands and asked service at the same trial. They were married 22/lunch counters where whites are months ago in Utrecht. She is/served sitting down. convinced be will be acquitted. A Charlotte Negro minister and| editor, Dr. J, S. Nathaniel Tross, {objected to the demonstrations, {calling them "'uncalled for, unne- cessary, ill advised and inexpedi- jent." . | Saying bitterness between the {races will increase, Tross urged "a meet'ng of responsible' per song, white and colored . . | io resolve th's prob'em because the t hr the seeds of a explosion." ] TORONTO (CP) -- today as the area. Light snow moved across of the storm Tuesday night early today. during the day. to turn to snow. Parts of Northern Ont storm proceeds. In the Chath: m-Windsor a during the night, gradually tap tures rose. Vinds in Sc mor > than 30 1 CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 38-2211 | les silva disastrous ) ROLLING ACROSS ONTARIO Freezing sleet, snow, and rain mixed with freezing rain is falling over most of Southern Ontario a storm from the midwest United States rolls across Heavy rains, with the threat By this evening ICY RAIN the and Toronto area in advance changed to freezing rain of flooding, are expected the downpour is expected | will get heavy snow as the | rea .three inches of snow fell ering to light rain as tempera- hern Ontario are not expected to exceed per hour. feavy snow is exnected to reach as far north as 'Geo rgian Bay with falls of up to four to eight inches anticipated. The raids were a renewal of less and rudderless, adrift off the Golden Gate. Her anchors finally caught bottom 3.7 miles from the San Francisco coast. The coast guard responded to the Petri's distress calls and be- gan evacuating the crew by heli- copter. Fourteen of the 40-man crew had been lifted from the Cardinal Dies | Tito regime, died today in his {native village of Kraswc at the |grade |early this morning, |vie Iness was not serious. heavily rolling vessel when Capt. Edward A. Lehn of San Mateo, Calif., decided he might be able to save his ship and cargo-- 2,500,000 gallons of bulk wine, POSITION PRECARIOUS Two coast guard cutters and two tugs steamed to the Petri's aid and found her in a precarious position: The storm was still raging. Waves 30 to 40 feet high were crashing over the rolling decks. And the Petri, with a 30-foot draft, was in less than 40 feet |of water. Two sandbars were nearby. "Even under' ideal conditions, it would take sharp navigation to get her through that without trouble," a coast guardsman said. "As it is, it's real work just keeping her from getting slammed onto a sandbar." | One tug, the Sea Cloud, fired a {tow line to the tanker. While the second tug, the Sea Wolf, wis CARDINAL STEPINAC Yugoslavia's | p |line, the first line parted. BELGRADE (AP) -- Aloysius|QNE TOW LINE Cardinal Stepinac, spiritual The Sea Wolf got its tow line to leader of 7,000,000 Yugoslav Ro-ithe Petri and it held, But Sea man Catholics and a thorn in the|Cloud was unable to send another {line over and the Sea Wolf was age of 62. News of his death reached Bel- this afternoon. He died Wealthy Brewer He has suffered for several Vanishes In Colo. years from a blood ailment,which| GOLDEN Colo made him susceptible to throm- (Coors III : h hosis (blood clotting) attacks, industrialist, Seven years ago a thrombosis of blood-flecked car on a rural road his lef* leg required surgery. | Tuesday, touching off a vast man- Tuesday he was reported suf- hunt in the Rocky Mountain foot- fering a cold, but his personal hills west of Denver. phys'~ian, Dr. Branislav Bogice-| Sheriff Art Wermuth said the said he thought that his ill-|44-vear-old Coors may be a kid- tnap victim, wealthy brewer and vanished from his lifted" from the Petri said it ap- peared at first that the ship was going to break up. The stern and engines were salvaged from an cil tanker, the Sacketts Harbor, which broke in two off Hawaii in 1946, The stern was incorporated into the Petri when it was built in 1957. 000 servicemen and their equip- Regardless of whether this gov- ernment judgment is accurate, defence spending has been eon- tracting since 1953. COSTS RISE STEADILY Costs of maintaining about 120, enough. Plants and offices throughout Britain meanwhile are making arrangements to get employees to work if the threatened strike starts. Many firms are arranging car pools or hired buses, | ter hovers over sterm of the | reparing to fire a second tow' (AP)--Adolph| | A US. Coast Guard helicop- | 21,800-ton wine tanker Amgelo Petri as the vessel drifts off San Francisco's Ocean Beach today, ! Helicopters shuttled over the sea to rescue her 40-man crew. (AP Wirephote) x