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Oshawa Times (1958-), 24 Feb 1962, p. 1

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' THOUGHT FOR TODAY One thing abou that you can your own friends. t being poor is at least pick he Oshawa Sines WEATHER REPORT Colder tonight, mainly sunny Sunday but continuing cold with decreasing winds. VOL. 91--NO. 47 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1962' Authorized as Second Class Mail gs Office Department, Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cosh. EIGHTEEN PAGES ARGUE WITH LIBERAL LEADER PEARSON Argue Gets Official Welcome As Liberal | OTTAWA (CP) -- Hazen Ar- gue, who was parliamentary leader of Canada's socia list party a week ago, is a Liberal today. Last Saturday he participated in a Saskatchewan council meeting of the New Democra- tic Party in Regina. He con- ferred with NDP National Leader T. C. Douglas about the coming election campaign, Mr. Douglas says. Sunday he resigned abruptly from the NDP, charging it was financed and dominated by a Traffic Snarled By Snow Drifts By THE CANADIAN PRESS |three feet choked roads on the): Snow blew into southern On-|northern fringes of Toronto, itario and western Quebec dur-|snowing in some commuters' | jing the night and Saturday from|with Saturday jobs. 'an Ohio-centred storir that r plugged rural roads and snarled/ern Ontario befere dawn and city traffic tapered off to flurries further The fall ranged from almost east. '\four inches in Toronte to six! Clear but cold weather from northeasterly wind piled upjin behind the storm, dropping drifts of more than three feet|/southern Ontario temperatures lon a deep base from a series|from a high of 20 degrees du lof earlier storms. jing the day to a low of 10 in the St. Lawrence valley were|range further east. in the path of the storm, pushed|-- Ba aCe aise by winds up to 30 miles an hour, but most of the rest uf Canada recorded clear, cold weather. Almost four inches 0: snow in Toronto in 10 hours raised the} The five-day transition from|more sober-faced. When asked|total fall so far this month to} jfront-bench Commons leader of| by photographers to pose with) 28.2 inches--the heaviest Febri| jone party to third-row member|his arm around Mr. Argue, Mr.jary fall since 1924, when 32) of another--one which Mr. Ar-|Pearson hesitated. He protested|inches fell. The averaze Febru-| gue had attacked bitterly on|that Mr. Argue Joey's Changed Child Since ite poise ithe fel the avert Neore| GOUt Ruling some occasions--left the 41-year-|more a special MP than any| The storm dumped. some four! TORONTO (CP)--Joey Lamb old Saskatchewan farmer sha-jother member of the Liberaljinches of snow on Sarnia andjis a changed boy since the \ken by the _ personal strain.|caucus, |the fall was heavier as it merous pete re: wae Ontario court Friends were advising him to) Questioned about Mr. Argue's|@ast, piling six inches on Belle-|Uecision. last November that al- take a rest. st marks in opposition to} Ville. j\lowed his Protestant foster par- | rb ihe dat Pree | sear | While morning buses ran on/ents to adopt their four-year-old |SHAKE HANDS fete. erence yep agricutare | chedule on the 40 miles be--Roman Catholic ward, the Mr. Argue grinned broadly at ea tk at a Rea re tween Toronto and Oshawa, the|Lamb family's minister said a press conference Friday when | ted ul -% he = ight . i arterial 401 highway further|Friday night. |Mr. Pearson said Mr. Argue|"ided rege ict mali ®least was hazardous in drifts jhad been accepted into the Lib-|Principles and policies of the leral caucus without any quali-|Liberal party, and work as a inches in Kitchener, but a stiff|the north was expected to move| § The Maritime provinces and|western Ontario and in the zero Rev. Joan Huntley of Chal- |Some 30 big transport trucks onjmers United Church in South! : clique of big labor leaders. |fications--"'in exactly the same|/0yal member of the party." Friday he conferred briefly|(capacity) as any other mem-| Mr. Argue declared he had with Liberal Leader Pe arsonjber." He shook hands warmly/been offered no special induce- and a few hours later was wel-|with Mr. Peagson and with Sen-|ment and asked for none--such comed publicly into the Liberaljator John J. @onnolly, president/as a cabinet portfolio if the Lib- party. Mr. Pearson said Mr. Ar-|of the National Liberal Federa-|erals are returned to power, gue now subscribes to Liberal|tion, and thanked them. CITES FACTOR overnight runs pulled off the) highway in a 40-mile siretch be-) |tween Cobourg and Peijeville to wait out the blowing snuw. The department of highways reported roads in southern On- tarie mostly snow-covered to bare and icy. Morning visibility River, 38 miles south of North Bay, said Joey has lost a ner-| vous twitch and gained a great deal of confidence since County Judge Walter Little's decision | that the Lambs could adopt him. Joey was placed as an infant The storm petered out in west-| | P, ~ FROM RED STAR principles and policies. Mr. Pearson, however, with Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Lamb Touchy Moments On Space Flight | CAPE CANAVERAL (AP)-- Astronaut John G!enn sought se- clusion today after boing in the! public eye for threc mouths. Friday he returned to Cape Canaveral where ais Atlas rocket was launched Tuesday} on its journey three times around the world in space. 4 ane|Tetro-package (braking rockets);mer prime ministers Mackenzie own ges agg hg ao . I thought at)King and Sir Wilfrid Laurier. Turk Island, in the Bahamas, he|the time, however, that the retro : yes greeted by his wife Anna,|Package had already been jet-\who had first proposed in the | that brought him from Grand his daughter, Lyn, 14 and his son David, 16 | President Kennedy then pre- sented Glenn with the National Aeronautics and Space Admin- istration Distinguished Medal. "Our boosters may not be as large as some others," Presi- dent Kennedy said, 'but our men.and women are." TELLS ABOUT TROUGLE of South River because no Ro- man Catholic foster parents were available. The Child Wel- fare Act states that a child's re- ligion must be protected under any arrangement for his foster care. said that one of the factors RCAF Veteran prompting him to join the Lib- organization. His principal com-| |plaint against the NDP was that} Had ey Role Was! The former CCF-NDP leader|Was rated poor to nil. Drifts of jeral party was that its consti-} {tution is based on constituency} its constitution put too much} capsule," Glenn said, "because \ , Z there were large pieccs -- any- leader, and Mr. Pearson, his Marshal Adelard Ray where from pieces as big as 'the|new ¢ Pipisd , end of your finger to pieces\conference in the oak-panelled|Velopment of the RC4i during power in the hands of delegates/ sent to national conventions as |representatives of trade unions Mr. Argue, the one time leader, held their press probably seven cr eight inches|Liberal caucus room in the Cen- in diameter--breaking off thetre Block on Parliament Hill. edge of the capsule and coming|They sat at a table in front| ack up past the wirdow of a portrait of Mr. P: "Well, that ubvious!y was the flanked by brorze busts of for- breaking up . tisoned. earson for| j Neither seemed able 'o recall| | affair which led to marriage.) "So there were some mements|The banns, however, were writ-| of doubt whether the hcut shield|/ten when Mr. Arguc te'ephoned| had been damaged ai.c¢ whether Mr. Pearson Friday moning.! it might be tearing up itself and|They met for 10 to 15 minutes Service| this--this could have been a bad|before jday all the way around if this}11 a.m., had been the case" Monday, after with his family somewhere, Glenn will ret@#&n to Washing-|involving Ross Thatciier, ton for a motorcade at his weekend|at 2 p.m. the Commons met at hear the banns withuut protest) | Mr. Argue shied Lib-} eral provincial leader in Sas-| t /11:15 a.m. from tne White House] katchewan, as the matchmaker. der of the Britich I After the ceremony Gienn and) {o the Capitol. There he will ad-|Mr. Thatcher, a former CCF|1944, Air Vice no aenanwie : his family and a few guests re-|dress a joint secsion of the|room mate of Mr. Arzve in the/mond also was honored by)70 affidavits by workers that In Two Wars MONTREAL (CP)--Air Vice- one of the key figures in the de- the Second World War, died Fri- day after a prolonged illness. He had long been associated with the Queen's Hole! here and was its president. A veteran of the Ruyal Fly- ing Corps of the First World War, Air Vice - Marshal Ray- mond was called on ex:riy in the Second World War ta help or-| ganize training and manning} depots that turned out thou-| sands of pilots and air crew for| RCAF planes. When he retired in 1945 to re-| | and the 'calieas shel to turn to private business, he was| Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter in charge of the No, 1 Air Com-} mand at Trenton, Ont., Canada. impire in} Masha! Ray-| Judge Little's opinion was that religious provisions in the foster care section of the act could not be inferred to apply to the section dealing with adoption. Miss Huntley said two other Protestant families with Roman Catholic wards in the Parry Sound district will probably at- tempt to adopt the foster chil- dren. However, she declined to go into details about the new cases, | Local President Faces Libel Suit TORONTO (CP) -- Norman | Jacques, former financial secre- | tary of Local 598, International Workers (Ind.) Friday took out This is a copy of a picture appearing today in Russia's official military newspaper Red Star. Caption carried by Red Star said in part: "Pic- ture shows an underwater rocket-carrier. Here it is as it appeared on the surface". The description indicated that the submarine cannot fire from underwater like U.S. Polaris submarines. CP from Reuters-AP MOSCOW -- Soviet officials today awaited an Anglo-Ameri- 4ican reply to Russia's renewed bid to open the forthcoming disarmament conference in Ge- neva at summit level. The reply was expected to be another rejection of the Soviet summit proposal but much inter- est centred here on the word- ing and timing of the Anglo- American notes. The interest was aroused by the new stern tone of the brisk East-West diplomatic exchange 4 |over procedures for the 18-coun- try conference opening March 14 The exchange opened earlier this month with a polite Anglo- American bid to open the con- ference at foreign ministers level. Soviet Premier Khrushchev in turn presented his counter-pro- posal, also couched in polite terms, for a summit. meeting as a curtain raiser to the United ; |Nations-sponsored conference. The United States and Britain i subsequently rejected the Soviet ; |counter - proposal but left the . |way open for heads-of-state par- ticipation in the conferéfice at a later stage of the disarmament negotiations if developments warranted it. HE'S 'GRIEVED' Khrushchev replied to the al- i |lied rejection with his latest note which in much stronger terms declared that he was "grieved" by the "negative at- titude"'" of President 'Kennedy and Prime Minister Macmillan. The latest Soviet note, handed over in Washington and London Thursday, was followed Friday by a Soviet press attack on the U.S. state department for its speedy "rejection" of Khrush- --AP Wirephoto chev's renewed summit appeal. WEST PONDERS REPLY TO STERN RUSS NOTE Reply's Timing Keenly Watched The Soviet government news- paper Izvestia, edited by Khrushchev's son-in-law Alexei Adzhubei, claimed the state de- partment rejected Thursday's note "without bothering to get acquainted" with it. In his latest message, Khrush- chevy emphasized strongly that any break through toward dis- armament could come only from the heads of government because they bore supreme re- sponsibility to their peoples. But the message contained no clues on whether the Soviet leader planned to travel to Geneva for the opening of the conference regardless of the Kennedy-Macmillan refusal. Peterborough Family Bids Sad Farewell PETERBOROUGH (CP) -- A family of five made their final farewells to Canada Friday night. Mark Carlin, a 38-year-old bricklayer, his wife Mary, 33, and their three children, Pate rick, 9, Clare, 8, and Mark, 6, left for their native Ireiand by plane. Mary is incurably il) with multiple-sclerosis, Pb! emigrated 2 -- ir years ago, ing r Northoranievntad acme: bua pt: Newtownstewart where Mark and Mary grew up and married. Mark came first and, after sav- ing the fare from his job as a steel erector at Prescoit, Ont., sent for his wite and children. A year ago, Mary was stricken with multiple sclerosis, Her husb Airline Plans Fare Increase MONTREAL (CP) -- An in- crease in most passenger fares to go into effect April 1 pro- vided there is governnient ap- proval has been announced by publicly-owned TCA. G. R. McGregor, dent, Friday in disclosing the airline incurred a substantial joss last the presi- year although passenger traffic increased: by 20 per cent. The deficit will not be known until the annual report is tabled in Parliament. The reason, he said, is that more passengers: than esti- mated were travelling economy the) a writ suing Local 598 president; class in preference to first-class, awzy from|largest RCAF training centre in| Donald Gillis for libel The fare increases -- ranging Mr, Gillis and a reform slate|from $1 to $16--were designed Made a commander oi the Or- assumed control of the local fol-/to narrow the price gap be- lowing a long strike in 1959. The executive claims to have} | |tween first-class and economy- class travel. Mr. McGregor said TCA also tired to Hangar S for iunch./House of Represcutatives and|days when M. J. Coiawel' was|France for his services in both|they did not receive full strike|plans to reduce first-class ac- That is the same hangcr where! Glenn trained for the space flight, the Senate. Tuesday, he speaks to the|bolted from the CCF an' joined|made a chevalier of the Legion records. at ajthe Liberals when he became/of Honor and awarded tie Croix) House space committec national leader of. 'ie party,| world wars. In 1947 he was/telief payments shown in union|commodation trend towards economy - class! old-guard officers have) travel. The in line with the Later, after the presizent had) critic. ime--when tic space dissatisfied with socialist theo-\de Guerre by the French gov-| described the accusations as an! Mr. McGregor cited a number critical time--whe ie spaced d departed for a weekend at Palm Beach, Glenn told senators, con- |- gressmen and a tent nearly full of reporters about th. only inci- dent that caused him "major concern" during the entire flight. On the third orbit ground con- trol warned him not to jettison the braking rockets afver they fired, These are rockets wiich slow the spacecraft for its plunge to earth. They are at the bottom of) the bell-shaped spacesnip. Immediately below tiie rocket package is the shield that pro- tects the spacecrait and the space pilot from burning up in the enormous heat of re-entry into the earth's atmosphere. LIGHT GIVES WARNING The men below placed on the alert by a warning light, felt that this heat shield might have come loose. The rocket pack age, held in place by metal straps, also could hold the heat} shield in place until tie danger) period was over \d During re-entry "it became apparent something was tearing up on the heat shield czd of the CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 / FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 budget is submitted. The end of the seycn-year war in Algeria appears to be in sight, but the fighting may not be over. In this story Dave Qancia of the London bureau of Tre Cana- dian Press, who went to Al- geria, discusses prospects for achieving peace alter a truce is reached By DAVE OANCIA ALGIERS (CP) -- Barring last-minute hitches, the French government and the Algerian National Liberation Front will announce a cease ays. Officials are optimistic that it will end the murderous war that/ers to discount the official op-|a stone wall. In 30 seconds all for seven year@#has ravaged a land stretching from 'he palm-|nouncement wi!l bring a quick|mess. Some of the Europeans fringed Mediterranean, across the snow - capyed Atlus Moun- tains and deep into the Sahara. The announcement will launch the North African territory on|as much as half e decade and/ tematic campaign of terror both ndependence.|the flight of up to 400,600 Eu-|in Algeria and Metropolitan the road to fuli ~ fire, within) lries. Hatred Will Survive Algerian Settlement |Moslems, Their hatred of Pres-| ident de Gaulle and iis sup- porters, who have taken the de-| cisive step in granting the Al-} gerians. self determination, could hardly b» more intense. And desperation born of fear| and hatred has led them to sup-| port either actively or passively} the extremist Secret Army Or- ganization dedicated to main taining -European rule in Al-| geria. PEACE NOT CERTAIN This' provides the seeds of the new conflict that appears to be shaping up This is what indicates observ- jtimism that a cease - fire an-| jend to strife in this volatile community of 9,600,000 Moslems) and 1,000,000 Furopeans. Some estimate it miay take} jidential area of the angry Eu- ernment. of America (CI) SHAGGY DOG STORY lattempt to swing the workers|of one-way fares to show the -|to the rival United Steelworkers!comparison be t ween present land proposed rates. ing between the Moslem and European communities bear out this view. In suburban Bab-e!-Qued. res- ropean working ciass, « white- robed Moslem weman tried to throw a grenade under a school. She fumbled anc it exploded severely injuring her. Enraged European mothers who had been waiting to take their children home kicked and clubbed her to death. In Belcourt, a mixed residen- tial area, a Moslem heaved a grenade into a cafe. A mob seized and battcted him against that was left was a_ bloody spat on the remaivs. The Secret Army Organization headed by ex - general Raoul Salan has engaged in Sys- a This is precise'v what the Pied-|ropeans from Algeria to restore|France. noirs -- Europeans borr in Al- geria -- are striving to prevent They fear an independent Al-|streets of this whitewashed city! sometimes a semblance of The terror tha! une .ees in the Pare Its people killer commande down in 'he while locai mow streets, police geria governed and poiiced by'and the deep cieavage develop-|look the other way. '] | bledon magistrates court Fri- Timothy's Just LONDON (AP)--After four years of faithful friendship thrust on him by a liquid-eyed black mongrel dog, John Shaw has had enough. The trouble is, he told Wim- day the dog isn't his. "I'm fed up with its mani- acal affection," said Shaw, 59, a locomotive engineer. The dog, a nine - year - old cross - bred Labrador named Timothy, firt became inter- ested in Shaw's mongrel fe- male. But it soon transferred its affection to Shaw. "Then everywhere I went, Timothy went.. Everytime I came out of the house, he was there. Everywhere I turned there he was waiting for me," said Shaw. The dog left his own home a mile away and hung around outside Shaw's house. At night it would howl under his window. | Crazy For John Shaw complained: 'He fol- lowed me to work. He jumps into the locomotive with me. I've even missed work sev- eral times because of him. "You know, I couldn't even | go for a drink. As soon as he realized where I'd gone, Tim- othy would be sitting outside the bar waiting for me and howling." It was jealousy that finally | wrote finis to the friendship. One day another dog fol- lowed Shaw. Timothy got an- noyed and attacked the inter- loper. In the scuffle Shaw was knocked over and Timothy ac- cidentally bit his fingers. "IT know he didn't mean it," said Shaw. "He thinks far too much of me." Shaw appealed to the mag- istrates,. to order Timothy's owners to keep the dog under control, The magistrates granted his request. made the announcement PEKING (Reuters) -- Com-| munist China today calied on} Russia and Britain. to ci:minate| by peaceful means '"'the serious| danger of war' in South Viet Nam which it accused the United States of fomenting. It said the present "state of af- fairs cannot be allowed to con- tinue." | The "call came in a Chinese foreign ministry statement, quoted by the New China news agency, which said that in China's view the co-chairmen of the 1954 Geneva conference which ended the war in Indo- China -- Britain and Russia-- should consult imiediately "with the countries coucerned" and take @ppropriate ineasures for peacefully ending the war i threat. The statement said the U.S. |must "stop at once its armed jintervention in South Viet Nam jand immediately withdraw all) jits military personne] and} jequipment there,"' | |SAYS WAR.PREPARLD | The Kennedy administration, it said, has been '"'actively pre- |paring to wage three kinds of |wars: Nuclear, conventional] jand the 'special warfare' de- signed for coping with the na- tional liberation movements." It added that the current) |"armed U.S. imperiasst inter-| jvention" in South Viet Nam} came under the heading of! "special warfare" waged by "special forces " | "If this new war scheme of| U.S. imperialism should suc-| ceed in South Viet Nam, not} | | Russian Rockets | As Launch 'Pads' | WASHINGTON (AP) -- Rus- |sia may have developed 4 sys-| |tem using manned rocket planes) jto launch spaceships. satellites and intercontinental missiles, lsome U.S. intel igence special- lists report. Their conclusions, based on analysis of available Russian publications, were maae public Friday after having been kept |secret for nine months. The accuracy of their findings is not fully accepted by the gov- ernment. And some sources |point out that the system, if the | | | wa completely new. U.S. Withdrawal Demand By China only all peoples striving for freedom and independence will suffer, but the danger of wars of a bigger scale will be greatly increased. This is absolutely impermissible." 'DIRECT THREAT' "The armed U.S. imperialist intervention and aggression in South Viet Nam constitutes a di- rect threat to the security of the democratic republic of Viet Nam (North Viet Nam). It also seriously affects the security of China and the peace of Asia. . . "The war flames lit by U.S. imperialism singléhandedly in South Viet Nam are raging. The Chinese government and people cannot but express their gave concern at this... . "U.S. violations cf the Ge- neva agreements, which have been going on since 19£4, have developed to an extremely dan- gerous stage. This state of af- fairs cannot be allowed to con- tinue." d told her last No- vember she had the incurable disease and they made plans, on the doctor's advice, to return home to Ireland where she could be given the continual nursing care that Mark's wage as a bricklayer was unable to provide. Telegram Faked To Affect Stock TORONTO (CP) -- Howard D. Graham, president of the Toronto Stock Exchange, said a fake telegram was sent in his name Friday to the London and Dublin exchanges stating that trade in Northgate Exploration Ltd, shares had been suspended here. Mr. Graham said the ex- change would investigate the telegram, filed by telephone, but it would be difficult to trace. Meanwhile he has ~" 1 telegraph companies not to ac- cept future wires without con- firmation. Mr. Graham said it was -t the first fake telegram sent in his name or the names of o%!:-* Toronto Exchange officials. "People do it when they want to influence the trading in a stock," he said. TORONTO (CP) -- Attorney- General Roberts moved Friday to remove part of the outside burdens from judges in the province. Introducing a new bill with the unwieldy title, An Act to Provide for the Approval of Im- partial Referees and Arbitra- tors, Mr. Reberts told the legis- lature it is designed to provide a pool of suitable persons to act in labor and other arbitra- tions now handled in large measure by the _ provinces judges. The act sets up a three-man board --composed of Chief Justice J. C. McRuer of the On- tario Supreme Court and two members to be appointed by the cabinet -- charged with form- ing a panel of impartial refer- ees. Mr. Roberts explained that members of this panel of ref- erees could be used by. parties in dispute, although there would be no obligation to use panel members. arbitrators has Fen extensive Plan To Provide Arbitrator Pool in the past, and indicated the new bill is aimed at freeing more judges for courtroom work, The attorney - general added, however, that disputing parties would still be able to use judges as arbitrators if they desire. REPORT DISCONTENT There have been reports of growing discontent among some of the Ontario judiciary about the present system -- probably unique in Canada -- of using judges almost exclusively in ar- bitration. Some judges are understood to complain that their col- leagues are accepting paid ar- bitration posts which prevents them from filling their role on the bench, while at the same time accepting judicial pay. The bill would, in effect, get the ball rolling to present alter- natives to parties seeking an ar- bitrator. Since judges are used so frequently as referees, par- ties seeking an arbitrator have contended in the past that they Russians have developed it, is) He said the use of judges as|know of no other person to seek as a referee. \

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