. 1G THE OSHAWA TIMES, Pridey, Februcry 1, 1963 OBITUARIES KIMBERLY ANN GRAY The death of baby Kimberly Ann Gray occurred suddenly at Oshawa General Hospital of Mr. and Mrs. James Gray, Brougham, she was two months old. Surviving besides her parents are two sisters, Cynthia Alea, 2 and Brenda Louise, 1. The body is at the McEachnie Funeral Home, Pickering. The funeral service . will be held Sunday, Feb. 3, at 1 p.m. In- terment will be in Whitevale Cemetery. f, Kimberly Ann Entered into rest suddenly at Oshawa Demara Facing Fraud Charge |From 1958 BOSTON (AP) -- Ferdinand) Demara, known as the Great Imposter because of his many "loccupations under various names, was indicted by a fed- eral grand jury Thursday on a charge of using the mails to defraud. The jury charges that in July, 1958, Demara used the fictitious Me-|name of Jefferson Baird Thorne LOCKE'S FLORIST Funeral arrangements and floral requirements for all occasions, OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE 24 HOUR PHONE SERVICE 728-6555 -land supplied false records to obtain a teaching post at Winch- endon, Mass., High School. Conviction could mean maxi- mum penalties of a $1,000 fine, five years in prison, or both. Demara, formerly of Law- eral authorities to be in Cali- fornia. Royal Canadian Navy doctor and performed surgery in IN MEMORIAM Korea. The man who taught at Thorne resigned by telephone BOYNTON -- In loving memory of « Gear father, Frederick Boynton, who esed away January 30, 1953. Calm and peaceful he is sleeping, follow: miss after another teacher saw De- mara's picture in a magazine and showed it to his superiors. The high school principal ex- teach anything. ; Demara now works for the Union Rescue Mission in Los Angeles. The mission cares for and rehabilitates down-and-out- ers. Demara, informed of the charges, declined comment. For Criminal Negligence TORONTO (CP)--<Antonio Vic- ario, 25, of Toronto was sen- tenced Thursday to two years less a day on criminal negli- gence charges relating to the death of his former sweetheart. Vicario, a dollmaker, was charged after Mrs. Diana Ric- cuiti, 23, also of Toronto, was killed by a car in a gas station lot Oct. 2. Chief Justice J. C. McRuer of the Ontario Supreme Court told Vicario that although his "Seckless" driving had taken a woman's life there was no evi- dence he made a deliberate at- t tempt to kill her. 'A jury convicted Vicario last week after hearing evidenc that his car suddenly shot out of the lot and struck Mrs. Ric- cuiti and her husband Quinzio. Mr. Riccuiti testified Vicario had threatened him several times since he brought his bride te Canada from Italy last year. . Riccuiti's brother, Ser- , told court Vicario admitted was the father of the preg- Three Actions Filed In Three Fatal Mishaps LONDON, Ont. (CP)--Three civil actions have been filed be- -|fore the Ontario Supreme Court for general damages claimed as a result of three separate fatal accidents. Mrs. Barbara E. McRonald of London is claiming $100,000 damages on behalf of herself and her two children as a re- sult of an Aug. 20, 1962 Toronto traffic accident which resulted in the death of her husband Ian F. McRonald. Defendents are Victor Kozyn and Theodore E. Woodburn of Toronto. Mr. McRonald, a teacher in *|Toronto, died Aug. 21 of injur- lies suffered when he was struck by a car driven by Mr. Kozyn and owned by Mr. Woodburn. Joseph Maycock of Princeton, e|Ont., is seeking $75,000 dam- ages for himself and his wife as a result of a July 24, 1962 .|traffic accident im Burford rence, Mass., is believed by fed-| Con Gas Demara once posed as &/p, Winchendon under the name of | Dofasco Thursday, Jan. 31. A daughter] trom F f 3 8 8 % 3EE = § 8 FF a? 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BESe 2e5etydeste! ii se = gbtclegecduby - 588e238 BeaBeek 4 ghidue + s $2 BoSassekea 1 Bo BanssheakeastaS * BoSagesbsoseokse' eiefislies --"% +3 -- u% Wh 1% 0 @ +1 #0 Th h % 312 2 2 190 190 130 sesyPFsghieu!s gis r-] ma su% iw" "wo 40 40 200 «200 399 ® Wstn 6 pr 103108 18 106 --% geleetie 103 - 103 stings Stock High Low a.m. Co'ge 0% 0 Wh-I% 1% 2% % +h 19% --l%4 % § 1 se888e 2 bs agaursB¥se » e88 3 ~ So8E Sgeblge¥a,82altst 8237 33ee83 esdus8audwbag es ~ 3 butts) te 2 ghgisé SaeSeohsbskussusdey gee hsgesog bei skusdue8aus wiagge = ages. ee eR SF Baogss Baugseg +I PeBstorseBeu ND FES ++/)+ Estat L S Sil Miller Siscoe Steep R Sturgeon Taurean Territory Tormont Trin Chib Vandoo Violam Werner W Malar Willroy Wiltsey Sales to 11 a.m.: 1,056,000. Meir cee g British Press | Gives Dief Prominence LONDO N (Reuters)--British mewspapers give prominence to Prime Minister Diefenbaker's attack on what he called United States intrusion in Canadian af- fairs, Both The Times and The lead story. The Times correspondent in Ottawa began his despatch: 'In one of the strongest statements ever made here against a friendly nation, Mr. Diefen- baker, the Canadian prime min- ister, bitterly denounced the government of the United States this afternoon for 'am unprece- dented and unwarranted intru- sion into the Canadian affairs'."" British newspaper headlines: The Times: "Canada accuses U.S. of interference; sharp re- tort to muclear arms charges; Mr. Diefenbaker refuses to be 'pushed around.' "' The Daily Telegraph: '"'Can- ada accuses U.S. of 'intrusion'; nuclear arms note warning re- sented." Daily Express: "'Dief lashes out at Kennedy." Township, Brant County, which resulted in the death of his son, i| Donald Maycock. Defendent is Andre Lammer- ant of RR 8, Woodstock, driver of the car which collided with a vehicle driven by the son. Mrs. Mary C. Leitch of Glen- .;coe, Ont., is claiming $75,000 damages as a result of am April 3, 1961 car-transport truck col- lision which claimed the lives of her husband, Malcolm C. Leitch, and daughter, 16-year- old Bonnie. Defendent is John Hnatyk, Glencoe garage owner. Two other persons also died in the accident, Mr. and Mrs. Neil Gillies of Glencoe. Sole sur- vivor was William Simpson of London, driver of the truck. Minister Asks 'Silent City' TORONTO (CP)--A_ former professicnal football player, now a minister to the deaf, appealed Thursday to Metropolitan Tor- onto to help him create a 'silent city" where deaf people with special problems--age, infirmity or retardation--can be cared or. Rev. Robert Rumball of the Evangelical Church of the Deaf, a former halfback with the Uni- Dymond Assails Public Apathy BRANTFORD (CP) -- Health Minister Dymond of Ontario says public apathy is keeping 3,500 mental patients who are capable of being rehabilitated in hospitals across the province. Some patients have been kept in institutions for 35 years be- cause of public disinterest, he told the 56th annual meeting of the Victorian Order of Nurses Thursday, No one wanted them. It was a bad day when the health department st oppe d charging communities for the care of mental patients, thereby creating public apathy. He said 700 patients have been rehabilitated and placed in Suitable jobs during the last 1% years. The province's 1963 rehabilita- tion budget is only $600,000. he said, adding that it costs an average $1,250 to prepare one person for departure from an institution. Annual maintenance of the Ontario hospitals totalled $56,000,000 One of every 10 persons in Ontario will suffer some degree of mental disturbance during his lifetime, he said. Daily Telegraph make it their | BRITISH BRIEFS London To Build | By M, McINTYRI HOOD Special to The Oshawa Times LONDON -- Plans to build 6000 homes this year, 2000 more than in 1962, have been a2nounc- ed by the London County Coun- cil, The council is to take over the upper storeys of new office blocks for use as apartments, and homes wil Ibe built over a number of LOC buildings. QUADRUPLET CALVES BURTON-ON-TRENT -- Quad. ruplets, weighing a total of 156 pounds, have been bora to an eight-year-old Ayrshire cow at Brookfields Farm, near Burton- on-Trent. An agriculture minis- try official described this as "'a rare and exceptional event". PARSON REBUKED STROUD, Gloucestershire -- Grocers have. protested to a Congregational minister at Stroud who asked his parishion- ers to shop at the local co-op- erative and give their dividends to the church restoration fund. Rev. John Ricehurst replied that he did not know there were such animosities in the grocery busi- ness. SEEKING NURSES . LONDON -- R. J. Smith, wel- fare commissioner of Toronto, has come to Britain seeking to enrol 300 nurses to help staff a new 800-bed inospital which is being built there ROMAN BARN FOUND ST. ALBANS, Hertfordshire-- Archaeologists have located a Roman barn of unusual size near Bricket Wood, between St. Albans and Watford. There are prospects of other finds. The barn was 122 feet long and 16 feet wide. At one end, tiles and pottery suggest the presence there of slave quarters. IMMIGRATION EVEN LONDON -- Immigrants e2- tering Britain in the last six months of 1962 numbered 183,- 418, but the net inward move- ment was only 2503. In the same period, 180,913 people migrated from the country. MALE NEEDLEWORKER IPSWICH, Suffok -- Ipswich housewives have formed an em- broiders' guild to ensure that traditional hand stitches are not lost with the passing of time. versity of Toronto, Ottawa Rough Riders and Toronto Ar- gonauts, made his plea to Metro council's committee on welfare and housing. He described a "silent city' as a building or facilities where the "aged, infirm and retarded deaf can get the help and guid- ance, the psychological and so- tilaGtival anatae woman's and wi to marry her in 1961. Tobacco Growers Sales Reported "TILLSONBURG, Ont. (CP)-- The Ontario Flue - Cured To- bicco Growers Marketing Board Thursday reported sales of 1,613,069 pounds of tobacco at ab average 51.60 cents a pound. be date, 39,918,107 pounds have sold at an average 48.73 e e they need." There is no such place in Toronto now, he said, nor even in Canada. He estimated that more than 1,000 deaf people live within Metro Toronto's boundar- ies. Mr. Rumball said both previn- cial and federal governments have given him to believe they would be willing to help if he could interest Metro council. The committee instructed Wel- fare Commissioner Robert j. Smith to study Metro's facilities and report on the situation, "with recommendations for care of the Y Rail Line Blocked By Train Collision INGERSOLL, Ont. (CP)--The Montreal-to-Chicago line of the Canadian National Railways was closed briefly here Thurs- day when a freight train col- lided with a transport truck. The driver of the truck, El- don Westman, 27, of St. Mary's, Ont., is in hospital in fairly good condition. The line was blocked for about two hours when the diesel, pulling about 80 cars, sheared off the cab of the truck, owned by" Hutton Trucking Company Limited of Uniondale, and tossed the driver about 50 feet. The front of the diesel was smashed, pushing' the body against the wheels. Ingersoll is about 15 miles east of London, Ont. Lt. Commander 0. R, Stilwell, himself and expert "needle- man", has been invited to pre- side at its first meeting. BLANK ON MAP SEVENOAKS, Kent -- Seven- oaks Rural Council has been told that the ordnance survey maps it uses are over 25 years out of date. These 1936 maps show open country where there is now 600-house estate. AVERAGE WAGES UP LONDON -- The average wage for manual. workers is now $48 a week, including over- time and bonuses, the ministry of labor reports. This is an in- crease of 1.4 per cent in a per- iod of six months, F -- For Fog Sign BIRMINGHAM -- New auto- motive road warning signs which flask a large red "A" for acci- Council Homes yellow "F" for fog are to be tried out on a stretch of the M5 motorway from Bristol to Birmingham between Twining and Lydgate Ash. PALACE STAFF UNION LONDON -- Buchingham Pal- ace is to have its own branch of the Civil Service Clericai As- sociation, it is announced, The 140,000 - member union on a membership campaign, sent let- ters to royal clerks and typists at the Palace andi Windsor Cas- tle. So far, six employees have joined. SITUATION REVERSED LUTON, Bedfordshire -- La- ton, which for years has had 1000 vacant jobs to offer every month has had its situation re- versed by the growth of unem- ployment. The town 'now has 1300 men and women out of work, with only 143 jobs listed as available at the Labor Ex- change. TUBBY RESIGNS LONDON Rev. Philip (Tubby) Clayton, 76-year - old founder of the Toc H movement, is resigning from the living at Al Hallows, Tower Hill, where he has been for 40 years. He intends to concentrate on Toc H work. REVIVE OLD FAIR SOUTHWARK -- Southwark's ancient fair is being revived and will be held this year on June 8 at Nelson Square Gardens, For centuries the Fair was held in the borough but in 1756 it was banned by the City of London al- dermen because it had become too ribald. YOUNG FARMERS' TOUR LONDON -- Six young men and women are to visit Canada and the United States as young ambassadors of British farming Their trip will be made under an exchange scheme organized by the National Federation of Young Farmers' Clubs. WOMAN TO WOMAN ST. ALBANS, Hertfordshire-- St. Albans, which 'has Britain's only woman town clerk, has received New Year greetings from its sister town, St. Al- bans, West Virginia, .U.S.A, where the town clerk is also a woman. a ' Toronto's Man's . i. . Family Missing TORONTO (CP)--Eric John Bastin, a Toronto electronics engineer released after three months in a Cuban jail, arrived home to find his wife and five children had disappeared. Decertification Vote Requested By Mine Men MERRITT, B.C. (CP)--Wally Neufeld, leader of a group 'of mine workers asking for a de- certification vote, said Thurs. day Craigmont Mines Limited had signed a "sweetheart" con- tract with the International Un. ion of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers (Ind.). In a statement, Mr. Neufeld said the company took advan. tage of a jurisdictional up. heaval to force an unsatisfac- tory demnd. He is secretary of the Craig. mont Workers' Committee, a group of workmen which he says numbers 211 out of a work force of fewer than 300. Mr.. Neufeld said the work- men were underpaid at the start of company operations here nearly two years ago. As an example he cited the heavy truck driver's rate of $1.50 an hour. When a contract was ne- gotiated 18 months ago, the rate went to $2.12. Similar work in the construc- tion industry pays nearly $3 an hour, he said, He said the "sweetheart"' con- tract was for four years and gave the men such fringe ben- efits as four statutory holidays a year compared with nine or 10 in other union agreements. "I believe the contract was written for the company and not for the men," he said. The secretary said the Steel- workers can't do anything for the men until Mine-Mill has been decertified as bargaining agent. But, he said the Steel- workers have offered to give the workmen all the help needed after decertifiaction. ' The dissident body has asked for a decertification vote, but the Labor Relations Board has ordered a hearing for Feb. 12 to give all parties a chance to make representations. Police Investigate Cyprus Stranglings NICOSIA, Cyprus (Reuters)-- The RAF and Cyprus police to- day pressed a full-scale investi- gation of the midnight strangl- ings of two British women. A police spokesman said "it looks like murder" when Joan King, a civilian employee, was found dead-in bed Thursday in her bachelor-girl apartment in Limassol, on the south coast of the Mediterranean island nation. Miss King, about 30, was wearing only a nightgown. Po- lice said she was strangled and then had her throat cut. Tuesday, Mrs. Christine Wright, 21, of Glasgow, wife of a British airman, was found strangled. She lived with her husband and three . month - old baby in a Nicosia suburb. Mr. Bastin, who says secret police arrested him without lay- ing a charge a month after he began work for the Cuban gov- ernment, searched for two hours without success Thursday for his family. He went first to a house in downtown Toronto and was told his family had moved to a west- end address. When he checked the second one, he found there was no such place. Of his three-month jail term, Mr. Bastin says: "It was rough. I thought my number was up deat, "I" for-ice in blue, and a a couple of times." Thomson Kernaghan & Co, MEMBERS OF THE TORONTO STOCK EXCHANGE OPERATING DIRECT LINE To TORONTO - MONTREAL ontanio 725-1 104 No Stairs To Climb RES.. MGR. ERIC R. HENRY, 725-4305 By DAVE McINTOSH OTTAWA (CP) -- Thunderous applause rolled through the Commons Thursday night when Defence Minister Harkness rose to take part in an emergency debate on nuclear weapons pol- u icy. Fellow MPs sensed the strain he had been under in recent y|days and the applause was a tribute 'to his courage in fac- ing the House. : The view of the Canadian mil- itary is that Canada requires defensive nuclear weapons for military reasons. The government has pur- chased $700,000,000 worth of nu- clear carriers but so far has not announced acceptance or re- jection of the 1 warhead Harkness Greeted By Long Applause on Monday he put out a press statement stressing the pro-nu- clear portions. This statement go farther down rals immedi ately jumped in with sugges-|' tions that Mr. Harkness resign. On top of that, the U.S. state department issued a statement Wednesday night which took is- points made by Mr. Diefenbaker and, by im-! lication, took sides with Mr. sue with man: larkness. The defence minister Mr. Diefenbaker and the three opposition leaders as 2) unpre- 4 for them. As minister of national de- fence, Mr. Harkness, 59, has been caught squarely in the middle, Last week, Prime Minister Diefenbaker made a speech in which he discussed the pros and cons of the nuclear issue. SUGGEST HE RESIGN Mr. Harkness fe't some news- paper reports wrongly emphas- ized the anti-nuclear parts 0° Mr. Diefenbaker's speech and dian domestic affairs. Neither could he renounce the position of his own department. TAKES THE FLOOR It was in these politically cruel circumstances that Mr. Harkness took the floor Thurs- day night. The m'nister is no orator. He finds speaking difficult at the best of times and his voice nearly cracked several times. He referred to the "terrific mass of rumors'? that he was feign to e nuclear road than the ime minister ob- viously couldn't support the U.S. statement, condemned by|ha intrusion into Cana- to collapse." : : It was not true he had contradicted prime minis- ter. He-had not said anything not conta"ned in Mr. Diefen- panes outline of gener' ree icy. Liberal allegations cont rary were "completely He was laughed at by the op- experience for him was more rrowing But, in the end, it turned out that Mr. Harkness had not dis- avowed his statement and that he had not denied the tin that he had threatene? dur- ing last weekend to resign. Will Mr. Harkness continue the battle within the cabinet for nuclear wi ? j The here is: Yes. ae ee Bonsai, or Japanese dwarf controlied that years. SOCIAL Just Phone 723-3492 And Ask For An Adwriter ATTENTION! CHURCH GROUPS SERVICE CLUBS GROUPS YOUNG PEOPLE'S CLUBS, ETC. Be Sure To Advertise Your Activities In The Oshawa Times COMI NG EVENTS CO If your organization Is holding a bazaar, bingo, turkey shoot, dance, rummage sale, business meeting, fair, tea, bridge, euchre, fashion show, or in fact any event which you wish to let the general public as well as your members know the date, place and time, etc. ... YOUR QUICKEST, MOST ECONOMICAL AND EFFICIENT WAY IS TO HAVE THE OSHAWA TIMES PUBLISH YOUR MESSAGE IN THE COMING EVENTS COLUMN YOUR COMING EVENTS -- NOTICE REACHES OVER 19.000 HOMES DAILY LUMN