Durham Region Newspapers banner

Oshawa Times (1958-), 27 Feb 1963, p. 1

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

THOUGHT FOR TODAY A good reputation may be ac- quired more by exercise of cau- tion than of conscience. Bh Oshawa Gime Cloudy tonight but clearing and turning cooler Thursday. Winds northeast 15 Thursday. VOL. 92 -- NO. 49 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1963 Authorized os Second Class Mail Post Office Depertment, Ottawa and for payment of Postege 'Cash. I GRAFT CHARGES MAD IN B.C.'S LEGISLATURE TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES ADE - TORONTO (CP) -- Police to- iit day set a valuation of about $350,000 on diamond and sap- phire jewels stolen Monday in : as : EROBATS lan armed robbery at a million- ing the Paris Aero Show in jaire's mansion, dropping a Jone previous estimate by $150,000. --OP Wirephoto from Deputy Chief George Elliott British Information Services |of the Metropolitan Toronto po- <<< | lice said the new f gure was ob- Higher Whisky Tariff 222025 Plan Seems Doomed "ss sai in Florida, whose home here | carrying bandits who slugged her son. By HAROLD MORRISON Dorfman asked representatives! Publicker, which was joined|Boylen jewels--some of which WASHINGTON (CP)--Whisky|why it had taken them so long|by Schenley Industries Incor-|are in Florida--total $685,000. : nds 2 a, = Z BRITAIN'S NEW A Flying in perfect formation are Lightning jet interceptors of Britain's famous No. 56 Squadron _ named _ as the Fighter Command's aerobatic team for 1963. The team will perform at air displays in Britain and overseas, includ- "There is still some confusion over the actual amount of jew- elry stolen," the deputy chief may go the way of lumber injto complain that Canadian|porated, National Distillers and| Police said there was no over-| the intensified scramble for the|whisky-makers are about to U.S. market. The tariff commis-;crab off the entire American sion rejected demands for|market because of tariff con- higher protection against Cana- cessions granted long ago. dian lumber and indications are) 'It took us a little time to it may do so in demands jor|feel the pain but we finally did," higher tariffs against Canadian said Leo Vernon, secretary of become "captive of the Cana-|criminal records. whisky. i Publicker Industries Inc. of/dian distillers." "There. just haven't been any Repeatedly during the one- Philadelphia which initiated de- ---- ee ere day whisky hearing Tuesday, mands for quadrupling the pres- Commission Chairman Ben ent $1.25-a-gallon tariff to $5. en enmin cuatass "Twenty-four years?" asked |Dorfman with « quizzical look which seemed to imply dissatis- faction with the reply. | The original $5-a-gallon tariff had been cut to $2.50 in 1938 and the last rate cut-to $1.25-- |Was made more than a decade Chemical Corporation and the|night progress in the hunt for U.S. Bourbon Institute, main-|the robbers. They said they sions were so generous that if|as a special force of detectives nothing is done the entire|under three inspectors inter- American whisky industry may|viewed scores of persons with Tribal | Headman Hacked To Death ENGCOBO, South Africajthe Confimvaba district of the | we a | (Reuters) -- Negro tribal head-|Transkei, is due to become Fla.|ag0. But all during that time,/man Jonginamba Deliwe was|South Africa's first bantustan-- ened said Dorfman, Americanjhacked to death by a band of|an internally self-governing N Nork\whisky - makers hadn't regis-!about 40 Negrocs Tuesday as he|gro state, join-| tered any plea for tariff before'dashed from his burning hut] It was reported word reached gure the. commission. near Confimvaba, police said|Deliwe that the gang was hid- today. ing in a nearby plantation and Mantle Signs For $100,000 (AP) -- Mickey Mantle si bis .contract, _ New "Yankees for 100.000 today, ing Willie Mays in the six-fi Salary class. Mantle's 1963 pay is about $15,000 more than he reportediy| rectived last year. He was named the American Leagues' must valuable player and led the Yanks to the pen- nant despite a series of crip-| | ' pling injuries. sist victims of the Reesor Siding Three other greats of the shooting near Kapuskasing in Fund For Victims Of Bush Shooting | OTTAWA (CP)--A fund to as- 0 AS Fugitive's to be the same men who tried|to search for them, leaving 10 to kill Deliwe two weeks ago injin a nearby hut. = He was alone in another hut when the attackers, armed with jaxes, surrounded the body- |guards and set his hut on fire. tained that' the tariff conces-|shook up the local underworld The attackers were believed|he sent 30 of his bodyguards) )... When Deliwe ran out, he was| Stolen J ewels Value Cut Down To $350,000 developments, period," said Det, Insp. Harold Hodgson. COMMENTS CRITICIZED Meanwhile, a storm broke out over post-robbery statements by |Mr. Boylen, 55, a farmer's son who became one of Canada's "foreign-born" thugs robbed the mansion and that "'if we got all our foreigners, we'd get rid of 90 per cent of our crime." Mr. Boylen sounded off an- grily after flying back from Florida but later retracted, though not in time to stave off counter-blasts from public fig- ures here. "To make a broad sweeping statement of that sort is the height of nonsense," said Mag- istrate C. 0. Bick, chairman of Bodies Of Four Found In Wreck ~ Of Light Plane CALGARY (CP)--The bodies of four men were found today in the wreckage of a light air- jcraft which crashed southwest of here Monday: A reporter from the Leth- bridge Herald radioed from the scene that the aircraft, piloted by a Calgary man and) carrying CBC television crew, recked. The bodies were still in -he aireraft, found on a_ hilltop jabout 18 miles west of Clares- |holm and 70 miles southwest of was The plane carried pilot Bill Prentice, 27, of Calgary and a |CBC television crew from Tor- jonto of Norman Caton, Len |MacDonald and Charles Reig- jler. richest mining magnates, that Member Claims Estimates Padded VICTORIA (CP) -- Charges that graft in excess of $135,000 was paid im connection with a 13-mile stretch of federal high- Way near scenic Rogers Pass were made in the British Co- lumbia legislature Tuesday. Gordon Dowding, New. Demo- cratic Party member for Burn- aby, told a hushed House that an affidavit and other docu- ments show falsifying and pad- ding of estimates in connection with a Trans-Canada Highway project at Craigellachie, B.C., about 20 miles west of Revel- stoke. His charges were followed by demands from Liberal NDP members that the SociaF Credit government either set up a royal commission investigation or call in the RCMP. Mr. Dowding tabled docu- ments, including an affidavit by Montana contractor Dick Holz- worth, alleging that: 1. Highways Minister P. A. Gaglardi influenced a highway contractor to pay off a $6,702) mortgage for Vincent L. Gresty, a highways employee, and promised the contractor would be 'well rewarded." 2. L. and. M, Logging Com- pany had been paying $350 a month to Mrs, Florence Gresty, one-time Social Credit candi- date and an official in the Kam-' loops Pentecostal Church of! which Mr. Gaglardi is minister. 3. Estimates on a road project show $100,- phone to Chicago where he is on business, denied any suggestion of wrongdoing by himself or by members of his department. "This is another one of these great smear campaigns that the opposition has been trying to put on for a number of years," Mr. Gaglardi said. Mrs. Gresty, owner-manager of two children's clothing stores --one in Kamloops, B.C., and another in the town of North Kamloops -- also denied the charges. She said: "Everything I have I've worked hard for -- for wages." The Vincent L: Gresty re- ferred to in the documents was not further identified in the leg- islature. Robert Strachan, NDP 'and opposition leader, in a state- ment outside the legislature, called for a royal commission investigation. Alan MacFarlane (L -- Oak Bay), who spoke following Mr. Dowding, said the RCMP should be called in. Metrecal Ruled Pharmaceutical Not A Food the Metropolitan Toronto Police Commission. ; Attorney-general Cass said he had no comment but "it wasn't! a very wise statement for any- one to make." Casimir Bielski, lawyer and Toronto president of the Cana- dian Polish Congress, com. mented: "Arrogance of the highest or- der, coming out of the top of Mr. Boylen's bejewelled fe- dora." ; Mr. Boylen, whose grandfa- ther came from Ireland, raged against the foreign-born "'unde- sirables" on learning that his 'son Phil had been slugged but took back his complaints when 24-year-old Phil assured him a 1%-inch scalp wound from a pistol-whipping was not serious. But he said he would like to see the stocking-masked gang return--I've got quite a score to settle with them," Mr. Boylen offered a $5,000 reward for recovery of the jew- els, and Deputy Chief Elliott said insurance companies likely jput up another $10,000. The financier, who admitted the jewels should-not have been left in the home, said none of his. rich art collection was taken, though some pieces were damaged as the thieves looked for wall safes. | Police said the gunmen knew the senior. Boylens were holi- ; Florida and. appar- s aware the two resi- dent' servants were at a movie. Neither..of the watchdogs that normall guard the 16 - room home in suburban Etobicoke were there. Not Possible ' To Increase APPOINTMENT Dr. A. W. H. Needler of Nanaimo, B.C., has been ap- pointed Canada's deputy min- ister of fisheries, Prime Min- ister Diefenbaker announced Wednesday. Director of the biological station of the Fish- eries Research board in Nanaimo since 1954, he suc- ceeds George R. Clark who died earlier this month while on departmental business 'n Tokyo. --CP Wirephoto oS ---- Red Carpet (Sacer For Queen In Tasmania arranged by falsifying data on | HOBART (Reuters)--Tasma- an estimate sheet. Mr. Gagiardi, apprised of the jnia today rolled out the tradi- \tional red carpet twice for Had the weight-control com- pound been ruled as a base or concentrate for food, it would have been tax-free. Mead Johnson appealed to the Tariff Board against the rev- enue department's ruling that metrecal was subject to sales tax .during the period from April, 1960, to May, 1961, charges by long-distance tele- YOU'LL FIND INSIDE... PC Candidate Opens game eared $100,000 in one|Northern Ontario has been es- season. They were Joe DiMag-|tablished by the Canadian La- gio, the old Yankee Clipper, Ted|bor Congress Williams of Boston Red Sox and| President Claude Jodoin said Trial Of 15 Arrest Upsets jhacked to death. eg so to aid him. | Deliwe was rescued from the earlier attack two weeks ago by His brother| jhad a hand chopped off while| Doctors Confine | Offer: K MOSCOW -- Premier Khrush- chev said today it is "impos- |Queen Elizabeth and Prince |Philip at the start of their two- day tour of this mountainous island. The royal jacht Britannia Prov. Campaign .. Page 13 Lodge Marks 'Wallace Night' ......c0..... Page 18 Stan Musial of St. Louis Cardi-|an appeal to all CLC affiliated nals. ' organizations has been author- Yankee officials in a state.\ized by the CLC executive coun- ment signed by co-owner Danicil. PARIS (Reuters)--The arrest of another top Secret Army Or- | Wilkes To Bed | CORTINA, Italy (CP)--Cana- jdian hopes of retaining the Menta! Iliness Problem sible" to expect Russia to in- Cited crease its offer of three on-site inspections annually as part of a nuclear test-ban agreement. came to rest about a foot from the anticipated position, which meant that 25 brawny Tasman- Chief Kaiser Matanzima who went to his aid with his body- Housewives Trap Mail guard. Thi Gabeede cabnas< PRG Topping and General Manager The fund will be used. to help) ganization fugitive today threw] Matanzima, who is due to be Roy Hamey, said they were/the families of three glad to pay Mantle $100,000 andiwere. killed in hoped that other Yankees in the|among loggers-- future would be worth as much. Fortier, | which a French policem2n w-s School Religion Cases Appealed * 0". WASHINGTON -- (AP3 -- The U.S. Supreme Court today "Congress shall make no law plunges once again into the respecting an establishme emotion-charged issue of reli- religion, or prohibiting the gion in public schools. It begins exercise thereof hearing arguments on two cases Amendment, adoptex 36 5 . pted in 1868,\sn. arby Paric rg 3 which may have impact in imposed these redtpotions de the nearby Paris police head- classrooms all across the land. the states as well as Congres sae tae ht : eress he right - wing newspaper Before the nine justices are| In the Maryland case, a state|;> . line aie' : , pode esting asic ? L'Aurore said French secret} The charges involved failure Lord's) Prayer "and readings ciation ofthe Lord's Prayer gens, tay, fave Kianped theo take 8 medical examination d BS | i vores Frayer|terrorist leader fr: Sst Gor-| wh ins P § from the Bible in schools in|did not violate the Constitution. | many . arid "areteetiongt ™ tee eee wn ta *Maryland and Pennsylvania. | Federal judges, in Pennsylvania, complications" over his er' 4. bane or te Soke ole an: It's been estimated that|"0Wever, said the opposite tion, ~ | sociation pi throughout the country more) ~ eae 3 : - practice '« morning aevouonat| RAPS K's 'DOUBLE DEALING' China Read come head of the first bantus- tan, is regarded by some 'Afri- cans as a '"'puppet"' of the gov- ernment of Premier 'Hendrik Verwoerd, men whojinto a turmoil the trial of 15 the gun battle} men accused of trying to assas- Leo and Joseph sinate President de Gaulle last and Armand Drouin | August. Gyula Sari, one of six defend- ants being tried in their ab- sence, was arrested after -a weekend shooting incident in Council Upholds Conviction Of PCs OAKVILLE (CP)--The con- viction of two police officers cn charges of disobeying orders The annouricement of Sari's arrest followed the capture Tuesday of Antoine Argoud, a former colonel. The top secret army leader was found. tied nt of\hand and foot in a truck near he free/Notre Dame Cathedral after an The Mth anonymous telephone tipoff to The First Amendment states cil, The officers were asked to resign. Constable Donald) Thompson and Alan Reulens were found guilty by Police Chief Fred Oli- ver at a departmental hearing Feb. 15. y lo of attempts to ease the quarrel.|had concluded with a fraternal ents and able| contracts are to be counted, not jin twos or threes or in scores, but in hundreds." Prayer Interest in the. Pénnsylvania, and Maryland cases sharpened after the Supreme Court's 6-1 decision last June 25, declaring unconstitutional the use in New icypenes ape Srinis written! TOKYO (AP) -- Communist|Peking's conditions for peace|country. These agreem a ; \China said today it is ready to| talks are clearly unaccept CRITICS HIT DECISION ting P chhbas prong bts the So-|to Moscow. That decision brought down a '©! "Mion on the ideological is-| wewagnc iw storm of criticims. ome critics Sues splitting the Communist! MENTIONS ncaa As for Yugoslav saw it as the first step in an blog. But it coupled this offer, The Chinese for the first time Tito, the paper called him 2 : ; mier Khrushchev for "double|sia's supply of Mi-G-21-jet fight-liny; " us heritage ir ; " 8"liation with him was "absolutel o The SS. 'aocder ee dealng" and demanded apolo-|ers to India, (2) the Tearing up| ation with y ceived support from those who 2°* Cui ae ll prea gl at Although Khrushchev was contended the "official prayer' The Chinese Communist party); ;. Sitter eueealtion a 'Chinese! Tever arconnes by See ie was a breach of the first and made this condition for | Chairman sia6 Meo tinc's S€) statements attacked were those 14th Amendments to the Con- Peace talks proposed by 1 "| programs--the istrial leaplc i Cow i a 7,000-word editorial injrorward and the peoples' P/Communist who staged the the Peking People's Daily ba and the peoples" com-' spectacular reconciliation with also demanded that the Russian| si President Tito. TT ME. Communists repudiate their re-| Without naming names, the . in) <a Cc E RGENCY newed friendship with Yugosla-|paper charged that in 1960 "cer- -- pF nel Khrush- PHONE NUMBERS via and cease their attacks on|tain comrades" put economic chey of starting the 'squabble in POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. HOSPITAL ' usually in the form of the Lord's' York public schools of a non By JOHN RODERICK assault on the' country's reli.| With a slashing attack on Pre-|took public notice of (1) Rus- "renegade" and said reconcil- .| : : pet|made by him and he was the aitetion, industrial }Peking's tiny Balkan ally, Al-|pressure on China. This WAS} the Communist camp: by pub- bania | clearly shchev's Si r ; learly Khrushchev's Russia. | icly taking sides with India on "Disregard ing international|/Sept. 9, 1959, over the then de- wractice,"" it said, "they perfi-| veloping China-India border dis- diously and unilaterally tore pute The editorial and its slashing }criticism indicated the. Chinese-| | pSoviet rejations are as angry a ever despite recent public signs a ney 725-6574 723-2211 has been upheld by town coun-| agreements and contracts they! This apparesitly referred to a\This will never work." os jworld figure - skating world jchampionships for pairs faded |today when doctors confined 16- year-old Deborah Wilkes to her |bed after. a fall from the shoul- |der of her partner, Guy Ravell while posing for photographers on the ice. | She was taken to a hospital jbut was later discharged and put to bed at her hotel. Her coach, Bruce Hyland, said she was suffering from concussion and shock and was unlikely to be ready to take part in the world championships opening here Thursday. "Tf she feels any better she} may take a practice spin around the rink tomorrow when I ex- pect to make a final 'decision. But I don't think she will be in a position to undertake anything as nerve-raking as a_ world championship so soon" Miss Wilkes and Ravell, 21, jare the North American pairs | champions this year and ex- jperts here regarded them as |strong contenders for the world title Talk {Tass statement issued that day jurging both sides to settle the {quarrel but refraining from giv- jing full backing to China. It was |published just before Khrush- President}chev left for his tour of the} | United States. | Peking said Soviet attacks on {China and Albania picked up following the "Camp David talks'? -- between Khrushchey and President Eisenhower--and jhave continued ever since. "At present," the Chinese] A party paper said, "certain com- rades of fraternal parties, while talking, about a halt to the pub- lic polemics, are themselves continuing to attack the Chinese Communist party and other. fra- ternal parties. This double- faced attitude actually implies that only you are permitted to attack others and that it is im- |missible for others to reply. Khrushchev was speaking to voters from his Kalinin election district of Moscow at a meet- ing in the Palace of Congresses in the Kremlin. He said Russia was following a policy of peaceful coexistence with the West "under compli- cated conditions." But Russia would go on, not giving way to the difficulties, to ensure that the world fol- lowed the line of solving vexed international issues by means of negotiations. Khrushchev is a candidate to) the Supreme Soviet (Parlia- ment) of the 'Russian Federa- tion. Elections will be held Sun- day. "In the age of rocket-nuclear weapons, the policy of peaceful coexistence is the only sensible policy," the premier said. His coexistence theme clashes with Peking's views of a tougher policy in dealing with the west. "The general line of the for- eign policy of our state," he said, "is to uphold and strengthen peace, to assert the principles of peaceful coexist- ence in the relations between states with different social sys- tems." | Canada Death Toll Higher OTTAWA (CP) -- The death toll on Canada's streets and highways in 1962 showed an in- crease of 13.2 per cent over 1961, the bureau of statistics said today. Motor vehicle traffic acci- dents took a record 3,878 lives in the year, as against 3,426 in 1961, the previous high. total of 111,125 persons were injured in traffic acci- dents, up from 99,263 a year earlier and property damage amounted to $92,559,000 as against $84,696,000 in 1961. The |property damage figure' in- ens all provinces except Que- ec, Fatalities in Ontario were 1,383 compared with 1,268 in ians had to move the elevated ssscceseeeeees Page 5 dais on which the Queen was to step as she disembarked. It also meant that the red carpet, carefully glued to the wharf, had to be taken up and re-laid a foot away. The mixup drew laughter from thousands of Tasmanians gathered at the wharf to greet the Queen. Broker Urges Investment In Canada .......... Page 5 Nine-Month Term For Break-in ......++6... Page 5 Bowmanville Hotel Sold aeeee Page 18 eeeeeeesens In its Feb. 25 judgment, made public today, the board noted that for sales-tax purposes a pharmaceutical is defined as a substance for treating or miti- gating an 'abnormal physical state" in man. Overweight is such a state, the board said. Metrecal was advertised as a "dietary plan fo weight control," The board said weight control means control of excessive weight, Therefore me- trecal was a pharmaceutical and subject to tax. The same ruling was applied by the board to the minvitine, made by Ovaltiné Food prod- ucts of Peterborough. 1961. Ex-Canadian To Head Space Satellite Unit WASHING'SON (CP)--A for- mer Canadian with his eye on the sky has been picked by President Kennedy for a job that may help bring more en- lightenment to the world's dark spots and a better picture in your living room. With a reported $100,000-a- year salary, Dr. Joseph V. Charyk, undersecretary of the U.S, Air Force, will become president of the fledgling Satel- lite Communications Corpora- tion, to set up a network of: space satellites for faster around - the - world telephone service, high-quality transocea- nic news photographs and pos- sibly worldwide television net- works, Picked from some 50 candi- dates, the 42-year-old native of Canmore, Alta., says he is "'tre- mendously excited by the chal- lenging undertaking." Father of fcur children, Charyk's career has been rock- eting spectacularly over the field of aerodynamics and mis- siles. Now he believes he can help bring troubled parts of the world closer together. "By means of better commu- nications, international under- standing may become ex- tremely significant," he said in an interview. "I am sure that : satellite communications will have a profound affect on the entire world" Charyk is one of those Cana- dians who couldn't stay put. Son of a OPR roadmaster, Charyk was educated in Lethbridge, >

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy