THOUGHT FOR Too many people think that a tender with a soft head. TODAY mistakenly heart goes dhe Oshawa & 4 mes WEATHER REPORT Cloudy with a few sunny inter- vals Saturday, A few showers and scattered thunderstorms. VOL. 88--No. 201 Price Not Over 0 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 1959 Authorized As Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa TWENTY PAGES Labor Out Of Tie-Up V V | 1t WINNIPEG (CP) President Claude Jodoin of the Canadian] Labor Congress today splashed | cold water a CLC close tie-up| with the CCF party. i In the stro statement vet | CCT was supposed to do earlier. It was carefully explained by officials of the three-day seminar § of some 300 people that the com- mittee report 'is being presented for discussion purposes only." on the projected tie-up with the | "The material should be treated || socialist group, Mr. Jodoin sug-'as ideas thrown out for purposes gested the congress should have pothing to do directly with a political party 1 su ot that such as the CLC come liated ith a par Mr n said. It has been known time that the head of the 1,100.- 000-member congress w the idea of a tie-up with but this was the first has spoken out for publication LOOSE TIE-UP ONLY What he suggested to a seminar of con CCF and others was that there should be a loose 'tie- up with the CCF. "The Canadian Labor Con- gress," he said, "is a central la- bor body composed of many un- fons, some of which will obvi- ously want to exercise their dem- ocratic right to abstain from any form of political action." "This is a right we intend to protect--and because of this it is quite proper that we as a con gress should abstain from any form of political affiliation. At the same time we as a congress have straight trade-union func- tions to perform. We will con- time to perform these functions." As a meeting of CCF and labor politicians opened here today to set up the foundations of the party, it received a report sug- gesting that the CCF will have to throw away thoughts of national. izing industry in Canada if it] wants CLC and other political support at the polls. A report from a sub-committee] on the new party, presented to- day to the opening session of the CLC-CCF "'seminar" struck out at the old socialist idea of na tionalizing industry to get votes. central bodies should not be political for some "16 seems," it said, "nothingig. i 100 per cent." be done by nationalization to! ineonce. wealth qo meeting here is whether--and| how much {may have to kick into the finan-| cial kitty of the new party. Another sub-committee will be|precide {recommending that all members his diploma of unions affiliated to the CLC to contribute $1.20 a year. But thei, the more money spread report adds that this would be around from the federal treasury strictly Lthat cannot be done much more "easily and equitably by other de- vices, particularly tax a tion, transfer payments and the provi-| sion of social capital." | FEDERAL REDISTRIBUTION Boiled down this seemed mean that would do the trick that socialism ¢ " [it of discussion," it was stated But meanwhile of the congress said there doubt the CCF is going to h to back away from the old soc ist doctrine if it wants the and maybe of the big labor body. IS. no SPLIT IN CONGRESS There is a split in the congress, became known here, on the proposed' tieup with the CCF in the new party. While it was endorsed at the congress's biennial convention here last year, many top men in big congress unions are unenthusiastic, privately One of the most unenthusiastic Canada's labor strongman Hall of Montrea is Frank H of head the bargaining commitiee for the railway unions in their peren nial big scraps with the railways tough Mr. Hall on a joint CLC-CCF committee en gaged in working out the new party basis. He was here earlier this week. He will not I'he is be presen a high officer | moral |} financial --backing |: highly today. He found he had busines To in Cincinnati 65-35 FOR TIE-UP One high congress officer says the congress membership is about 65 per cent for a tieup with the CCF and 35 per cent against The result, he said, will be, not a direct political tieup, but a lia- ison and with individual unions being suggested that they might] support the party. | Hazen Argue, CCF leader in| the Commons, asked about this| Thursday night, said he would| like to see the CLC snooting the| |works for the CCF "but I don't] think the congress is going to go| One question coming up etore} congress members voluntary. membe: ould "elect out." Any MRS. JOHN Hay wife of the U.S. ambassador to Britain shakes hands with Prime Minister Harold Whitney, | Mac- | Indian Troops Battle Chinese SKUNKY THE CAT TRAVELS Nehru Declares: 2000 MILES BACK HOME ALHAMBRA, Calif, (AP5)-- | "A year and a half ago 'We Will Fight' After travelling 2,000 miles in | a year and a half, Skunky has millan, as she welcomes Presi- | dent Eisenhower and Macmil- lan to the Whitney residence in London. Macmillan rode with | Ike on the 16-mile-long motor- cade trip from London's airport to the Whitney home. AP Wirephoto, PRINCE PHILIP WAITING Ike In Scotland To Visit Queen By EDDY GILMORE BALMORAI > nt Ei AP) land "Well, well, I'm geught to see -lident to Princess Margaret, enhower hroke into atic mission to Western Europe today with a social visit Royal Family at Balmoral Castle. The Queen made a com- Tipletely unexpected appearance at the gates to welcome him. ja castle ball--presented the pres-jelbow. Philip, hatless despite the {rain, smiled broadly. The two got into a black limou- sine for the 50-mile drive to Bal- moral Castle, where the Royal Family is vacationing. Eisenhower flips back to Lon- don Saturday, then. drives Chequers, county home of Prime Minister Macmillan, for a The Queen wore a powder blue suit with short jacket. She had on a white hat and wore black gloves and black shoes. On her| right arm she carried a large black pocketbook. Both she and Princess Mar- garet, dressed in a mauve-colored turned up at his old home in | Minneapolis. Ralph Morie, who 'came here | three years ago with his wife | | and three children, tells the story: "We left Skunky--a black cat with a white stripe--with | sister-in-law, Mrs. Joyce John- | ston, in Columbia Heights near | Minneapolis. The kids put up a fuss so we had him shipped out | | to us by air. Skunky disappeared. Now we | NEW DELHI (Reuters)--Primejand had established camps on In my | Minister Nehru said today the Communist Chinese troops have crossed the Indic i are fighting an troops at-| tempting to drive them back. | Speaking in the Indian Parlia-| ment, Nehru accused China of| aggression against India, | He disclosed that Indian and] Chinese forces are fighting on the| borders of the Subansiri frontier) |division of Northeast Frontier| |Agency. He announced that the Indian] army has taken charge of the get a letter from my sister-in- law saying the cat is there-- skinny and starved and foot- | sore, but alive, "I don't know how he did it-- {he came out by air so he | couldn't have seen any 'land- marks to travel by." Is Moris going to send for the cat again! "I think we'll leave him where he wants to be," Morie | said. "He's earned it." | MUST BE PREPARED ear as | While stating that he could not| |imagine that this and recent in-| E . Little Roc | |cerned we should be prepared for | LITTLE ROCK, Ark, (AP)- Choking fumes from tear - gas {bombs thrown by two white | women: broke up a meeting of the {Little Rock School Board Thurs- |day night. Two bombs were tossed into the foyer of the downtown school headquarters while the board was meeting upstairs. Fumes and smoke spread quickly through a rear exit. | No one was hurt. The only | damage was small charred spots where the bombs landed. The gassing was the first phys- ical attack on the board, which has been under verbal assault from segregationists for fostering a token plan of integration of Negro students in Little Rock inside. LEFT SHOES BEHIND |sible to trace. 3 | The board took the incident « Newcastle open the front door and toss the bombs Willig sald he ran to the door and watched the women flee in a waiting car. Both women fell on the rain-slick steps. One lost both shoes, the other one. Police |said the shoes would be impos- calmly. Members wiped away | you," said the Queed, slim and elegant though she is expecting her third child early next year. Eisenhower bowed and said: mR PEI Tories In Promising Mood "5: ie, wi wen {beginning for Eisenhower's over- night visit to Balmoral. It had CHARLOTTETOWN (CP)--Lib- for national hospital insurance heen believed she would avoid eral Premier Alex Matheson said plan and education costs if a Con- public appearances entirely until last night that with only a few|servative government were after the birth of her baby. days left to campaign the Pro-|elected was raised by Health suit, wore a string of pearls. Scotland (AP)---Presi- dent Eisenhower landed in Scot- land today to visit the Queen. An RAF Comet jet brought the American leader from London for a social interlude in his har- mony mission to Europe. Prince Philip was waiting at the airport near Aberdeen as the Comet landed in cold, windy weather Rain started pelting DYCE, weekend of talks about the ap-| | Fide frontier area. to "the | he| |cidents were anything more serious, |added: precurs "But so far as we are con- {any eventuality." Nehru said that an Indian out- post almost encircled by invading | Chinese was running short of ammunition, | | The Indian Afr Force had tried {to drop supplies to the 38 men {but had failed because of the |tears and walked two blocks to {high schools. | Leonard Willis, a Negro jan- |itor, said he saw the women push the offices of the chamber of |commerce and resumed their [meeting behind locked doors. The |meeting concerned school finan-|mountainous terrain. |cing. | A strong force of Chinese | : troops attacked the post Tuesday, | he said, after capturing 12 men | Ike To See of an advance patrol. Eight men | lescaped back to the outpost. Nehru said it was considered | | Mont ome {too risky to try to drop para- i g Iy (troops. ekeble. $e} | Despite considerable ring LONDON (Reuters)--President there 8 no account so far of Eisenhower will see Field Mar-|any casualties. shal Viscount Montgomery at a/WARNS CHINA dinner party here Tuesday, it| Nehru warned China that any was amnmounced today. aggression on the Himalayan buf- Montgomery, in his post-war fer Sales of Bitutan and Sikkim Titi nhow- | Wo regar as aggression werliings, ie Sacked Kise on India, Deputies thumped their desks in approval. Apart from the present fight War's, climes Dut ho isl $0 To, pee, srt been [Chinese also had attempted to Hghting could have ended fe back an Indian frontier post in the Kameng frontier division More recently Montgomery pro-lof the Northeast Frontier duced transatlantic controversy Agencv: had twice arrested In- with criticisms of American East (dian patrols in the Ladakh area West policy. lof Kashmir which adjoins Tibet, LATE NEWS FLASHES proaching exchange of visits with Soviet Premier Nikita Khrush- chev. Eisenhower got an early start today, leaving U.S. Ambassador] John Hay Whitney's residence at Towne 7:50 am. Macmillan made the 161% mile drive to the airport with him. Hundreds of Britons] NEWCASTLE (Staff) -- Mrs. going to work cheered the motor-| Eva Mae Burford, a Newcastle cade. | widow, aged 46, drowned while The first sour notes of Eisen-|SWimming in Lake Ontario here hower's visit sounded as he anc Widow. 46. {| Thursday night. She had appar- gressive Conservaitves | promise anything in their bid to| take over the Prince Edward Is-| land government at the polls Tuesday "We map get the vet," he told 300 persons at Liberal rally at Montague, 30 miles from here. "We may gel anything." Premier Matheson said the Conservatives were wrong in calling themsdves "the party of the causeway.' Improved trans- portation to the mainland, now linked by fer "should not be a political issve'" whetl it was a or er im- engin- in causeway Twa Diefenbal TIVE rd le and eco- micall* Fducation said a Conservative pledge to take over part ers' alaries paid varying scales by | boards would cost would cost at $2.000.000 which would double the of educa- tion in the province.' The possibility of a sales to pay Field Aviation Given Centract OTTAWA (CP totalling $7,906,810 were in the firs 8 by the defence ment and Defence (1951) Limited A cor Field A Keir Clark platform of teach- cost Contracis, awarded August 'tion depart Construction two weeks of $249,060 Tad or went to Or 8 vation of awa CITY EMERGENCY | PHONE NUMBERS | POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 | HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 | Shaw Crapaud causeway descended to "contemptible" tac- altics to deceive the electorate. He mited Mr. Clark. Conservative told a that leader party rally the Liberals said allegations in a Liberal pam- phlet that his party had com- itself to a sales tax "'for any purpose' .is '"'a deliberate un- truth." Pos BROKEN HOME COURTROOM DRAMA Nine-vearold Karen Roath from the neck of ¥ » Roath, left, after es judge ordered her returned to her mothe custody. She shouted 'No, no, her | may Minister M. Lorne Bonnell and GREETING ON TV She not only came out the first broadcast Eisenhower had driven 50 miles with Prince Philip in a car from the cheers of crowds along the we Scettish airport at Dyce 1y The Queen--who danced no' as the judge pointed out the ary period i expired. At right, S. as mother, 'erna Jo Tatum, pulls the courtroom. The tempq h n ter her Ss. V her from to see Walter | Eisenhower but did it on televi- at | sion- had |from Balmoral ever to until ithe early hours this morning at of down as the planet axied up to the arrival strip. A crowd of 500 Scots, wrapped in topcoats and mufflers, sent up a big cheer as Eisenhower walked down the steps from the plane and lifted his hat. WARM GREET Eisenhower gave Philip--twice his guest in Washington--a firm handshake and patted him on the Macmillan left Whitney's resi- dence, A louaspeaker truck parked outsice denly blared out: "The Empire Loyalists ask why Harold Macmillan has invited to London the great victor of Suez. Why has Macmillan placed us militarily entirely in the hands of a traitorous allv?" |_ The League of British Empire {Loyalists feels U. S. pressure forced the halt in the 1957 British French intervention in Suez, when Sir Anthony Eden was prime minister. As Eisenhower and Macmillan drove through the Marlebone district, another member of the league shouted through a mega- : "The Empire Loyalists , 'When is Harold Macmillan : going to issue a British declra- ¢ [tion of indevendence?'"' "I count én this being one of i (the most enjoyable and most : fruitful journeys I have made in many countries of the world," he told Britons. the gates sud-| ently been swimming alone in |about six to eight feet of water |when she drowned. Another swimmer, Harry Wor- iral, of Newtonville found the |body floating about 20 fo 30 feet |off and dragged it to the beach| | where three other swimmers, R. {C. Wagar, George Chard and Ken Coates, ail of Newcastle, failed in their attempts at artifi- cial respiration. Durham county coroner Dr. C. J. Austin and provincial police from Bowmanville were called to | Bowmanville. Mrs. | five daughters: Calvert (Alberta) of Omemee; Orono; Mrs. Paul Riddel (Grace) Peterborough; Mrs. Don Henry, Lakefield; and Jacqueline of Orono; and one son, Winston of Peterborough. It is understood that Mrs. Burford formerly lived in Pontypool. "TRIL-LIGHT NEON" Reds Build Mars Comets By FRANK CAREY WASHINGTON (AP)--The Rus- sians say they are close to de- veloping new and more powerful "artificial comets" that could be seen if they reach the planet Mars, at least 50,000,000 miles away. The 'idea, a Russian report translated herc says, would be to provide a space-probing with a kind of tail-light consisting of a cloud of chemical gas hav- ing high reflective powers for sunlight ( é Russians visually signal the val of the rocket in the vicinity of Mars even if radio communication as such a great distance failed. The cloud o/ gas, automatically court decision was necessary because Roath said the 1 I fused to return to her mother's custody. The parents were di- | vorced in 1954 --AP Wirephoto lalso allow. new tests of the density |and temperature of the gas that| {fills interplanetary space. Soviet {scientists say. [TRIED SODIUM GAS | The Russian report, transiated |and distributed by the U.S. de- [partment of commerce, declared the new possibilities result from {initial success with a form of "ar- tificial comet" arrangement used in the Russian sun-orbiting rocket {Mechta launched last January. Mechta was equipped with a| the scene. The body was remov- g ed to the Morris funeral home, Burford is survived by: Mrs. Theodore: Head-On Crash On Highway 2 CORNWALL (CP)--Two cars collided head-on during a heavy rainstorm on Highway 2 about six miles west of here today, killing a woman and injuring four other persons. The woman was not immediately identified. Two of the injured were her husband and son, riding in a west-bound car. Two men in the eastbound vehicle were also injured. Two-Alarm Fire In Toronto Restaurant TORONTO (CP)--Firemen had to hack way through three ceilings to put out a two-alarm fire early to- day at Fran's Restaurant on St. Clair Avenue near Yonge Street which caused an estimated $75,000 damage. Three cleaning men in the restaurant owned by Francis Deck fled unhurt. The fire is believed to have been caused by a hot plate. their | Berlin Crisis Solution Denied LONDON (AP)--The Soviet government's newspaper fo- day denied reports that Soviet Premier Khrushchev had hinted the Berlin crisis might be solved by giving West Ber- lin to West Germany, along with a connecting corridor through East Germany. dian territory in Ladakh. Defence ministry sources said border patrols were intensifying their vigil to prevent future Chi- nese incursions into Indian terri- tory. Sources seid "certain other measures' aiso have been taken to guard against future incursions but declined to disclose their na- ture for security reasons. Asked whether troops were moving up to the border, sources said "no." Members of the Assam Rifles --a militia officered by the In- dian Army. but normally under the control of the Assam state government -- are continuing to man border patrols, sources added. Nehru told the House that India protested to the Chinese over the outbreak of fighting but that the Chinese had replied that the In. dians opened fire first. Addition- ally, the Chinese accused India of collision with the Tibetan rebels. Nehru was answering a spate of questions from members de- manding to know details of the border troubles, PROPAGANDA ASSAILED He assailed reported Chinese propaganda claims that Sikkim and Bhutan were part of Chinese territory in the past and "were bound to return to the Chinese mgtherland within the next few years." "Such reports are naturally been occupied by Chinese troops. He explained that a large Imountainous area there is prac- tically uninhabited and the few police posis are some distance from the border, SIX-MAN INDIA PATROL He said a six-man army patrol was sent in last month to inves- tigate Chinese incursions. 'As the party was proceeding toward Khwrnak fort, it was ap- prehended by a strong Chinese detachment on July 28 some miles from the border inside our territory," Nehru said. Indai's northeast frontier agency is a rough forest-clad mountainous area and one of the world's most isolated regions. In places where Tibet, China and Assam meet the borderline runs through unmapped and un- charted country covered by thick jungle and inhabited by savage tribesmen. C i are non-existent and there are neither roads, railways nor airfields for {hundreds of miles around. It was {through this territory that the Dalai Lama passed on his flight from Tibet to India last March. 4 1 ab, Mrs, Robert Black, (Barbara) of| | < |device that spewed out a cloud |: sodium gas which the Rus-| sians say they spotted while Mechta still was heading for its solar orbit. The Russian report added: "The selection of more effec- belched from the rocket, woulditive substances now is being| York beams |made," J 5 SIRS BE co Mrs. Judy Stivars of New happily at 'her newly-born twins. The birth of the baby girls occurred "aboard a Trans-Atlantic airliner, 3000 feet above Newfoundland's TWINS DOING FINE coast. The plane was enroute to New York City. ~CP Wirephoto