Spirited Political Forum At St. G THOUGHT FOR TODAY The trouble with the chroni¢ borrower is that he keeps every- thing but his word. She Oshawa Gunes regory's -- Page L' WEATHER REPORT Sunny and warm today and Saturday with light winds. VOL. 91--NO. 140 Price Not Over OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, JUNE 15, 1962 Authorized as Second Class Mail Post 'Ottawa and for payment of Office Department, Postage in Cash. THIRTY-FOUR PAGES OAS Fails To Murder e Gaulle VESOUL, France (Reuters)|tour today amid unprecedented A new European terrorist plot'security precautions aolng his) to assassinate President route. Hidden troops with rifles! de Gaulle involved plans to use and automatic weapons were a booby-trapped dog guided by concealed in woods and bushes. | ultra-sonic sound, it was dis-'As soon as 'he closed today as police continued| passed, they hurried to new po-| a widespread search for the re-|sitions farther along the route. mainder of the would-be assas- WOULD USE DOG area 2 _-- oe & pee Police sources said detectives, ern . who had been tracking the plot-| The plot by the Secret Army| top. several days, found indica-| Organization was disclosed just tions that one Secret Army team aXer de Gaulle began a Pr0-\had planned to use the booby- vincial speaking tour Thursday. trapped dog to carry out their Details became known today. | assassination attempt. The ex- Official sources reported sev-|plosives-loaded dog would be eral arrests, but said a num-| guided into the presidential pro-| ber of agents slipped through) cession by signals from ultra- the police net, One of the ag-| sonic whistles ents picked up Thursday was motorcade) § The sources also said police} 10 Cents Per Copy ee 1OAS TERRORIST BOMB HOSPITAL Meeting Aga TORONTO (CP) -- The two} isides in Ontario's trucking| strike 'were to meet igain to-| FP day despite fruitless govern-| ment-sponsored settlement talks! | Thursday. Labor Minister Starr and his {Ontario counterpart, William |Warrender, arranged the talks ibetween the International |Brotherhood of Teamsters ----~|(ind.) and the Motor Transport Unemployment Lowe Industral Relations Bureau, a5: Than May Last Year \firms affected. But the Teamsters Thursday May April May 1962 1962 1961 REMOVE PATIENT FROM BOMBED HOSPITAL |stuck to their demands for a 30- cenf-an-hour wage and welfare package, a uniform 45 - hour week, improved vacation provi- sions and job protection against rail piggyback, the movement Last month's rate was 3.4 injof transport trailers on rail flat- AWA (C -- Unemploy-| onwe 136.000 in| Ontario and 3.1 on the Prairies.|cards. ment in Canada was 336,000 in The sources said a big break- through in the hunt for terror- ist agents came with the ar- |mid - May, down 249,000 from|Labor Force 6,590 6,492 6,542 |mid-April, the bureau of statis-!Employed 6,254 6,007 6,085) itics reported today. Unemployed 336 «6485 = 457 However, over a full year) And the bureau also held to there were declines in all re-|the pact recommended by a gions. Biggest was in Quebec|conciliation board--a 2414-cent- | Identified as Georges Bougary,|were concentrating their atten-| 28, alias "Lieutenant Colin 'tion on the Lorraine area of| De Gaulle made 20 roadside eastern France. Lorraine has a speeches during a four - hour) common frontier with West Ger- act Te ee ey One SeCret ANny Seens,! ordered to kill de Gaulle, were en Mother believed to have slipped into ue France there e Police said they had informa- Ends Ca ital tion that small, autonomous Se- p cret Army groups were in east- ern France with orders to as- E sassinate de Gaulle at all costs ngagements before Algeria votes in a self- determination referendum July OTTAWA. (CP) A show 1, of Commonwealth affection marked the end of the Queen Mother's official e ngagements in the capital Thursday. rest of Bougary in Nancy. Lists} a With representatives of all the|of names were saps gl nga in Commonwealth countries, she|the seat cushions of his car. attended a garden party at the) --------------______--__ residence of the Indian high] commissioner, spending about! 4 90 minutes sipping tea ster al Prison Escape large canopy. She visits Port Hope today for| 4 ' @ one-day stay with former Tip Received governor-general Vincent Mas- sey. Her 10-day Canadian tour) SAN FRANCISCO (AP) ends Saturday after she attends|Three bank robbers who es-| peat ese of the Queen's Plate|caped from prison on Neatia in Toronto. Island had improvised equip- Earlier Thursday the Queen!ment they emt would float Mother received a warm wel-|them to freedom, The Associ- come at city hall where she was\ated Press learned Thursday told by Mayor Charlotte Whit-| night. pe = oli cdlgy Aiton ad like) "4 source, whose name could) In her uae of waleama jnot be disclosed, said the equip-| Mayor Whitton said royal vis.|™ent. apparently made by itave li : , the convicts themselves in itors "'light up the alleged drab- Part tad be ness of our ways and stirs to|PTson Workshops, ha a Abe unwonted demonstration th e hidden on the roof across which mass of Ottawans, usually com-|the three escaped. parably moved at all only by; The fugitives are Frank Lee encounters in football, hockey|Morris, 35, and brothers John or the excitement. of our mon-|and Clarence Anglin, 32 and 31 ster bingos." respectively. Shortage Of Cars Foreseen In 1962 TORONTO (CP) -- Canadian wto dealers may remember 1962 as the year their show- rooms ran bare before 1963 cars rolled off the assembly lines. Most dealers report. many lines of current models are in short supply and by mid-sum- mer they expect to have a short- age in some models. Dealers of both General Mo- tors of Canada Ltd. and Ford Motor Co, of Canada Ltd. say their models are going so fast they will probably find them- selves relying on their firms' imports from sister factories in the United Kingdom thing left. We're going to try tu hang together until the 1963 models come out. We will be concentrating on selling Envoys (imported from the U.K.) dem- onstrators and used cars." American Motors (Canada) Itd. had sold every car it would make in 1962 production run by the end of April, says its president, Earl K. Brownridge. Chrysler dealers, hurt by the| long strike at the company's Windsor, Ont., plant, are swap- ping models on inventory, Al- bert Bear, vice-president of On-| tario Automobile Co. Lid., says.| 1247,000 between April and May|Was in service and manufactur- where the rate dropped to 6.2/an-hour package as part of a per cent last month from 9.1 a/ three-year contract. year earlier. On a national scale, about}MEET SEPARATELY half of the 336,000 unemployed| The disputants did not come in May had been looking forjface to face Thursday but met work for three months or less./separately with Louis Fine, On- tario's chief conciliation officer, One-quarter had been seeking 4 € jobs for between four and sixjand Frank Ainsborough, senior federal conciliator. The decline in the jobless to-/ The report is based on a sur- tal between April and May wasivey of 35,000 households across described as "a sharp seasonal/Canada during the week ended drop." The mid-May figure was|May 19. The statistics prepared 121,000 lower than a year ear-|hy the bureau of statistics are lier. janalyzed by the federal labor Last. month's unemployment department represented 5.1 per cent of the} he to force, semuend with 7.5;GAINS ACROSS BOARD per cent in April and seven per; May's employment was up in | small firms that broke away| from the bureau, All but one of the interim agreements granted the full Teamster demands, subject to the final settlement with the bu- reau. The exception was a pact between London-based Teams- ter local 141 and Hutton Trans- port Lines of Uniondale, near London, PROVOKE CRITICISM Repudiation of the Hutton agreement by the parent Team- ster organization has prompted sharp criticism from the truck- ers and has been followed by outbreaks of violence against Hutton trucks Gordon Hutton, secretary- treasurer of Hutton Transport, said his firm intends to keep the trucks rolling despite the picketing incidents. About 50 pickets from the Teamster Hamilton local Thurs- day blocked a country road out- side the Hutton offices at Un- iondale and tried to stop driv- ers moving loads of cement or empty trucks en route to pick up cement at St. Marys. } Provincial police stepped in| to prevent a fight after a cock) was thrown through the side) window of one of the trucks. months, and the. other quarter for seven months or more. The talks were also attended by representatives of Teamster Bulk of the unemployment P declitic over the year of 121,000|Local 106 in Montreal, on strike since April 14 or 26 per cent, occurred among men, There were 112,000 fewer] The Ontario strike originally {men without jobs for a mid-Maylaffected 7,200 Teamsters but total of 285,000. The number of|some of them have returned to work under interim union - ap- unemployed women totalled 51,- proved agreements with four cent in May, 1961, _ ,000 or 2.8 per cent from a Overall employment rose by|Year earlier. Most of the gain t f 6.254.000. The bu-|mg industries, though "'contin- ton "eetd © the increase was|ved strength was also apparent "about normal for the time of|i construction and trade. year," On a monthly _-- so = F _jof 247,000 in employment be- Fis gry dante = tween April and May reflected a general upswing in outdoor) : work. About half the gain came) Truckers Said Taking Jobs im construction and agriculture} Elsewhere and in these as well as other in-| dustries, rising employment lev HAMILTON (CP) -- A charge that many truckers supposed to} els 'followed usual seasonal be on strike are working else- patterns." The unemployment rate--the} where for' lower wages than they received in the trucking in- 000 only slightly lower. jobless total as a percentage of! dustry, was made today by a Trade Predicted the labor force -- was higher) jthan the national 5.1-per-cent} LONDON (CP)--The head ofjmore dependent on Canadian mid-May. It was also higher in|day that within five to eight/ metals and ferro-alloys. Quebec with 6.2 and in the'years Canada will be able to} "It would seem clear that a Pacific region at 6.4. prove to Europe that her asso-/close association with Canada , : : geoning community will be an\ean capacity to compete on a Hamilton Md slonaag firm. advantage. long-term basis against U.S. Donald Paton, general mana- "No one can predict tradejand Russian industrial might." ; , $20,000 Stolen Eric W. Kierans, president of|strong support for Britain's company's Hamilton manager, the two exchanges, said in an|membership in the Common said instead of being on picket) OWEN SOUND (CP)--Cigar-jaddress to the Federation of|Market, rejected the theory that duty, many of their striking|ettes worth about $20,000 were E ' d "But I suspect that many will/the Commonwealth and Europe. warehouses, in the Canadian National Rail-|find it useful to consider the ad-| 'The choice must be made by Mitchell Transport has, ways yards here. vantages of adding our raw ma-|the Commonwealth and it is a branches in Hamilton, Toronto Mr. Hamilton said most of|up to the boxcar--parked about|to our potential. new environment or a refusal these men had indicated they|50 feet from the station--and! "At the very least, such a un-|to respond to the new chal- would be willing to go back on| unloaded about two-thirds of the ion could. be useful as an inter-\lenges and so separate our- The union, however, has was apparently the work of To-|must be the West's eventual} He thought the vision of an turned a. deaf ear on recom-|ronto "professionals"? who noted/ goal."' all-embracing Atlantic trading mendations which call for a 2444|the car's number and destina-| Kierans, in an address to Brit-/|community made up of Europe, average in the Maritimes which|the Montreal and the Canadian| sources for the supply of many had a rate of 11.1 per cént in/Stock Exchanges predicted to-jof her needs for non-ferrous ~--------~ |ciate membership in the bur-|would greatly improve Europ- Cigarettes Worth ger of Mitchell Transport Co flows five years in advance,"| Kierans, in stressing his Ltd. and John Hamilton, the rl tReet Mes s : British Industries. |Britain faces a choice between employees were working in| stolen Thursday: from a boxcar City Police Insp. W. E. Need-terial base, agricultural|choice between the acceptance and Thorold. ham said thieves drove a truck|strength and energy resources|of ¢hange and adaptation to the terms proposed by a_ concilia-/ $30,000 shipment. mediate step and hurry along| selves from the main stream of tion board. Insp. Needham said the theft|that wider multilateralism that|economic activity. cents -an-hour wage increase|tion when it was loaded in sub-jain's leading industrialists, felt Canada and the United States plus other benefits. urban Don Mills. confident Europe will become'still is far off. J. §. Kemp, general sales manager at Ford of Canada, Says rae is true that currentty CALLED ELECTION MEDDLING dealer demand for our products is greater than we can supply, and it could well be that by mid - August our dealers will find themselves in short sup- ply of some line."" J. S. Crashley, president of Elgin Motors Co. Ltd., a large Toronto dealer, says his com pany is not physically short of cars but the factory has seven weeks of assembly time remain- ing in which to build for 15 weeks of selling. MAY TURN TO U.K. struggle "Obviously, if we can't get "Colossal effrontery," was domestic cars and can get Brit-/iow Prime Minister Diefen-| ish cars, we will put the em-|baker described the sudden phasis on British cars." statement released here by the! J. C. Wilson, general sales Soviet embassy accusing Can-! manager, of A. D. Gorrie andjada of preparing for nuclear Co. Ad., large Toronto GM! armament dealers, says Liberal Leader Pearson de- "There's not going to be any-|scribed the statement as "'ar- rogant and clumsy." CITY EMERGENCY Both he and the prime min-| PHONE NUMBERS jister were eléctioneering in Tor- onto. New Demecratic Party POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITIAG, 723-2211 OTTAWA (CP) -- Canada's campaigning political leaders, busy scrapping with each other! on the hustings, reacted as one} Thursday against Russia's ap- parent attempt at intervention in the fierce federal election Leader T. C, Douglas, speaking jin Winnipeg, noted that the So viet Union had been "giving some advice" to Canada about nuclear arms. He said Premier Khrushchev should know that | K's A-Arms Note Rejected airing testimony on the opera- Curbs Sought, Girls Lured To Vice Traps WASHINGTON (CP) -- Sen- ator John McClellan says U.S. immigration laws may have to be tightened to restrict cross- border traffic in young Cana- dian girls lured into vice traps in the United States through of- fers of dancing careers. "I will have to study the whole record,"' the chairman of the Senate rackets subcommit- tee said in an interview Thurs- day. "But it does seem that we may need some new legislation, including tighter immigration laws. "The traffic in Canadian girls appears to be an important ele- ment in the prostitution trade, particularly as shown by the ev- idence before the subcommit- tee." "The labor unions can help if they quit conniving with their agents up' there (in Canada) to bring the girls down," the Ar- kansas Democrat added. "The girls need a visa to cross the border to get night club jobs here. Apparently some are get- ting in through fraud and mis- representation on, their visas but that is not always easy to prove." HOODLUMS RUN CLUBS The rackets subcommittee, tions of the American Guild of variety artists (AFL-CIO), has spotlighted another sordid side of the entertainment world -- girls driven into prostitution and pickpocketing in honky- Canadians deplored resumption; The statement said Canadian|There had been calls for massjonly reason could be to attempt} tonky night clubs run by known hoodlums and racketeers in Chicago and neighboring cities. ope' of nuclear testing by Russia|statesmen speak nly about/construction of fallout shelters. last fall. The Soviet decision|preparing for acquisition of nu-| Last year there were two exer- was "callous and contemptuous|clear weapons. It quoted vari-|cises in which a nuclear attack of world public opinion." jous Canadian political leaders| was supposed. 'said Mr. Harkness. | ; including Mr. Digfenbaker and) The statement said it is! Canada's position had not! SAYS ILL-TIMED 7 rile ' i iar RAN Yor' | | In Edmonton. Social' Credit Defence Minister Harkness. | 'quite understandable" why the) changed. It was working for ' se The statement quoted Mr.|Soviet government has been put| | Leader Robert Thompson said) pjefenbaker as saying in the | on the alert. It added: disarmament but if this were) the Soviet statement was "'ill-'Commons that the Voodoo air-| # cms : 2 jnot achieved nuclear weapons timed and nothing more than|craft and Bomarc missiles can} Cation of nuclear weapons| ht be added to th try' Russian interference with a Ca-|pe used to carry nuclear 4 on the territory of Canada can-|Might be added to the country's o carry nuclear arMs.! not but cause a negative influ-|arsenal. nadian election." The question of acquiring nu-\- MENTIONS NORTH BAY ence directly on the Soviet-Ca- However, Prime Minister clear weapons has been one of! Both Mr. Harkness and As-|nadian relation. The Soviet Un-|Diefenbaker in a CBC televi- the big issues in the campaign|sociate Defence Minister Se-|ion, as a state neighboring Can-|sion address Thursday night now drawing to a close. jvigny were quoted as saying|@da, cannot in the least remain|clearly indicated the govern-| The Soviet statement was de-|there are plans to build depots|indifferent towards what is go-|ment does not intend to acquire livered to Undersecretary of|for nuclear warhzads at the|ing on near its frontiers, be- State for External Affairs Nor-/Bomarc bases at North Bay,|cause it touches its security man Robertson by Ambassador|Ont., and La Macaza, Quebec.| In Calgary, Mr. Harkness de- Amasasp Aroutunian, and then| Mr. Dougias was quoted as|scribed the statement as '"'par- released by the Soviets to The|saying the Conservative gov- ticularly obnoxious" and 'ques- Canadian Press fernment alreadv kas pledged|tioned why Dr. Aroutunian It was quickly rejected by itself to accept American weap-| waited a year to object to a re- the Canadian government as in-! ons ; mark concerning nuclear weap- admissible interference in Ca-| It claimed there has been ajons made by the defence min- nadia affairs, and returned to| campaign in Canada recently onlister in the Commons the Soviet embassy. iboosting atomic psychosis." "It would appear that the to influence people in the pres-| ent election campaign immedi-} jately before a vote is taken,"| of war, Premier Khrushchev of enter- ing Canada's election campaign to tell Canadians "that this is/ and disarmament. nuclear weapons except in case! J Thursday on charges of break- Speaking at a big'rally in Tor-|!98, entering and theft and the onto, Mr. Diefenbaker accused| Possession of burgler's tools. le a government with dangerousiresult of a theft from a tele- principles." On the contrary,|phone booth at. Flora Park, the government stood for peace|near Lake 2-Year Sentence For Orillia Man WHITBY (Staff) Bartley Scriver, 34, of Orillia was sen- tenced to two years in pen- itentiary and Ronald Verette, 18, of Longford Mills, to a term of six months definite and one month indefinite in the Ontario Reformatory by Judge A. C Hall this morning | The men appeared in County} Judge's Criminal Court here The breaking and. entering harge was later dismissed The charge were laid as the Couchiching, on Dec. Truck Strikers *ohed Earth Policy Acceleration Planned ALGIERS (AP)--Seven plas- tic bombs heavily damaged three surgical pavilions and the central iaboratory of - Algiers' vast Mustapha Hospital today in the wake of a Secret Army announcement that it was launching an all-out campaign to lay waste to Algeria. Hospital officials said not a single person was injured by the blasts. In recent months, after the Secret Army raided several hospitals, most Moslem patients were evacuated to makeshift clinics. The hospital said the surgi- cal pavilions and laboratory "have been rendered useless." A group from the Moslem National Liberation Front, the FLN, inspected the 2,500 - bed hospital late Thursday and an- nounced the Moslems planned to take it over. That made it a prime target for the Se- cret Army in its plan to destroy everything that might be. use. ful to the Moslems after -inde- pendence. A clandestine radio transmit- fer announced Thursday .night the Secret Army's high com- mand had decided to accelerate its scorched earth campaign be- cause it had failed to obtain more concessions for the Euro- pean settlers from Algeria's fue ture Moslem rulers. ORDERS ALL TO LEAVE ' The broadcast ordered all Bu- ropeans to leave Algeria. But an earlier Secret Army broad- cast from Oran, the territory's second city in western Algeria said European residents o! Western Algeria would regroup in major cities in that area for a last-ditch defence against Al- gerian independence. Along with its desperation fight to leave an independent Algeria a waste land, the Se cret Army mounted a new of- fensive against the French gov- ernment and President de Gaulle. The government . an- Labor Retains West Lothian In Byelection LINLITHGOW, Scotland (Reu- ters) -- The oppositoin Labor party has retained its parlia- mentary seat of West Lothian in a byelection, returns from Thursday's vote showed today. The big surprise of the elec- tion was that a Scottish na- tionalist beat out both Conser- vatives and Liberals for second place. The result was: Tam Dalyell, Labor, 21,266 votes; William Cuthbertson Wolfe, Scottish Na- tionalist, 9,750; W. Ian Stewart, Conservative, 4,784, David Bryce, Liberal, 4,537, and Gor- tat McLennan, Communist, The verdict was a fresh hu- miliation for the ruling Conser- vative party, whose nominee polled less than one-eighth of the total ballot and lost his £150 deposit. The Liberal and Communist -- also lost their depos- ts. Labor's retention of the seat was widely forecast, and the big vote gained by its nominee was no surprise. | schoolteacher, is a local man whose family is widely known in south Scotland. nounced the smashing of a new Secret Army plot to kill de Gaulle the thitd in nine months. Widespread arrests of Secret Army agents 'n France were reported. Former French Premier Georges Bidault, in an inter view with a Brussels newspa- ed the Secret-Army ghting to. take over France, "Power is there to take over; it must therefore he taken over," said the former associ- ate of de Gaulle who fled from France Jast month and. now heads the national: resistance council of the Secret Army. The newspaper, the conservative Derniere Heure, did not say where Bidault was hiding. . Gen. Philippe Ginestet, com. mander of French forces' in the Oran area for only two weeks, was shot and gravely wounded by Secret Army gunmen outside a military hospital chapel, in that Secret Army strongho An army doctor alongside was killed. They ha gone to the chapel to pray at the coffin of a lieutenant-colonel assassinated the day before. The Secret Army broadcast from Algiers said its new alk out offensive would start Thurse day midnight. "What we nave been doing so far was a mere warning," it declared, adding Winner Dalyell, a 29-year-old|that Secret Army stronghold, will even destroy wheat in the fields to starve the Moslem mia- jority. ee | Mrs. John Diefenbaker, wife of the Prime Minister, is shown with pretty Gail Wetherall, 7, at a huge re- ception in the Ajax Com- munity Centre, Thursday afternoon, Also at the recep- tion were Labor Minister Michael Starr with Mrs. Starr and Ontario Health Minister | * Matthew Dymond with Mrs. ' \ DIEFENBAKER IN AJAX Dymond. They greeted more than 1,500 Progressive Con- servative supporters who are: rived by car and bus from all parts of the riding. Gail, whe is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Wetherall of Ajax, presented Mrs. Diefen- baker with a corsage. ~--Oshawa Times Phote