THOUGHT FOR TODAY Many a man's good fortune is due to the will power of a de- sense relative, dhe Oshawa Times Sunny Friday. WEATHER REPORT with cloudy periods, mainly sunny Friday, eontinue ing cool, winds light, northwest Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy VOL. 89--NO. 82 , 1960 Authorized es Second Class Mall Post Office Department, Ottaws THIRTY PAGES East-West Test Ban Imminent OTTAWA (CP) -- External Af-| "You must remember that the fairs Minister Green said today 10 nations are in the course of ne- that an East-West agreement on gotiating. There is a great deal| a nuclear test ban is "imminent." (of prying and prodding and find- | He told the Commons external |ing out what the other side will Jia sommities that his "very|or will not do." | ac rings great hope to meet-| 5.4 Moin (L--Essex East)! ings of the 10-nation East-West! ;;"ty. aiarmament negotiations | disarmament committee in| Geneva {so far do not warrant Mr, Green's| id OSHAWA, THURSDAY, APRIL 7 Rubber-Hoses For Negroes 14-Year-Old Rap os ------ : Brings Arrest a ---- TRIE CAPETOWN (CP)--Troops and police invaded the mearby Negro Mr. Green maintained that there is "a great hope" for a dis- armament agreement. Mothers Numerous TORONTO (CP) -- Nearly 50 per cent of unwed mothers seek- ing help from the Children's Aid Society are under 20 years of age, the annual - meeting of Metro- Unwed Girl {optimism. The minister's optim-| ism was commendable but the ne-| gotiations had reached the stage {where realism should be asso- ciated with optimism. Mr. Greep said that to say the {situation was hopeless was not |being realistic, He said he thinks it would be| helpful if Dag Hammarskjold,| | United Nations secretary - gen- \eral, could put his views before {the 10-power committee on how # ge UN could " fitted into any| # |d:sarmament picture. | | Canada was more concerned] than any of the other Western ne-| gotiators that the UN not be by- |passed. Canada was in a better {position than any other country |--with experience in overseeing| Hom Ba "DE GAULLE BEFORE PARLIAMENT SYDNEY, N.S. (CP)--A furore 2% |conviction. John Allan Morrison, discour- ago for greener pastures while a } conviction for possession of a still ? was being appealed. Without knowing the outcome of the appeal, he settled in Ham- ilton, got a job with the Steel § "%p Company of Canada and started | Ra climbing the economic ladder. ! » , 2: © | "I had new friends and was | 5 fine on the job and my salary in- creased over the years from $3, 800 to $7,000 a year." Today Morrison is in jail here | Courcel. In attendance in back- | [bas risen here over the jailing of f an Ontario man 14 years after his ' aged by job opportunities in the 7 Maritimes, headed west 14 years ! very happy. 1 was getting along township of Nyanga in force to- made widespread arrests A 3 day, 1 and seized crude weapons, Z| About 200 ; for more political rights. {| Police bundled men and women ilinto jeeps and trucks and took 'ithem to Philippi police station, tlabout three miles away from Ny: 4 anga on the outskirts of Cape id | {town # ported. persons were ar-| ; rested in the township, one of the i{last strongholds of the campaign At the station, a policeman beat prisoners with a length of rubber those if they showed any sign of lowness in getting out of the ve- | |hicles, Reuters news agency re- Homes Raided With Clubs By South African Police and truncheons went through every room of the shacks and shanties which serve as homes for the 25,000 inhabitants of the township. A heavy troop cordon way thrown around the mative district as police and soldiers "invaded" the township in an all-out attempt to break a "stay at home" move- ment which has seriously erip- pled South African industry, Only about 615 workers out of a total population of 25,000 in the township reported to their jobs Wednesday, The district, where there have been several clashes between Negroes and police! in the last week, has been sealed off for the last three days. HUNGER HELPS POLICE Police appeared today to have smashed most resistance in other politan Toronto's CAS heard. . opr i . F. Newman, retiring presi-|truces--in assisting the carrying| French President Charles | testing nuclear weapons if the ther nations of the world will | agree on nuclear disarmament, ' "" | Seated beside deGaulle is his | for today that France will quit | personal aide, Geoffroy de | i | ground are arms, top, and the yeoman of (the possessic the guard, at left on stairs. the gentlemen-at- |to serve his six-month term for on of the still. He was |also fined $500 when convicted 14 (AP Wirephoto) |years ago. CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) dent, said that five years ago|0U! of any disarmament agree- deGaulle tells a joint session of {9 only 23 per cent of uve moth. (ment. | the British Parliament in Lon- ers were teen-age. "This trend] ~~ should be of concern to the people of Toronto." | Reclu Lloyd S. Richardson, CAS ex-| ecutive director, said each year| | finds more and more disturbed Sell For $1,000,000 4 children under the society's care a 9 % He said the physical abuse and| NEW YORK (AP)--The jewels near-starvation cases of former |°f a wealthy recluse who died in| years have been replaced by| her Fifth Avenue home amid a more subtle forms of child ne. |Jumble of milk cartons and old glect. {newspapers were auctioned off] Marital discord or mental in-|' ednesday for more than $1,000,- stability of the parents are the 000. single 28.75 t di d causes of this, he said, and rec- ingle Z./o-carat diamon i ] i ommended more rir oO ree ring sold for $157,500, a world's Sulists one Qanadiat bors, Ravel and specially equipped institu-{record. The previous record auc- en ame Dee ard tions to deal with the problem. [tion price for a gem was set in|gi™ iC STIR, TE CACC Crone "In the last analysis, the com-|London last year when a 23.7-| OF h Oe into an instru- munity itself must decide what|carat diamond brought $156,800. [or "8 the Som form of care it is prepared to| Mrs. Lillian G. Timken, ann ace. are Dr. Leo Szi-| extend to the unfortunate child heiress to the Timken roller bear-|;. er eS rofessor of |F' and family." ing fortune, died last October pion ung at the in os of R. O. Moore, treasurer, said|leaving her jewelry collection tol Oras and co-author of the | ventive services aimed at|/be auctioned off for charity. cag first nuclear reactor; Eu-| eping the child in his own| The purchaser of the big ring wor had Wigner, also a native| home are better for the child and|/was a New York jeweler, Sidney gent fes f the- less expensive for the CAS, IB. Gurfei of Hungaty, Dolssior of ind " . Gruriein. |matical physics at Princeton Un- liversity; Walter Zinn, a Kitch- ener native who is vice-president of Combustion Engineering, Inc., ing Scientists Share Awards ind the was established -- leader in the development of nu-| Four distinguished American sci-|clear reactors i The 1959 award will be shared equally by Szilard and Wigner, while Zinn and Weinberg will di- vide this year's honors. | The fund member of ord and his son Edsel. Zinn, for 10 years director of {the Argonne National Laboratory in ustrialist Henry |at Lemont, IIl., aided in develop- "fast breeder" and the boiling water reactors. He was on the team that built the first successful atomie pile, and he designed. and built the first heavy-water reactor. reactor Last March 28 RCMP picked ¢ |SEIZE WEAPONS #| Raiding police seized sacks of % | knives and clubs after their dawn invasion of the community. A graveyard quiet gripped the {town as the last load of arrested parts of the country. Their tough tactics against the strikers--and hunger among Negro families-- have combined to force most of JOHN ALLAN MORRISON MEN STRONGER, MORE CONTENT LOS ANGELES, (AP) Marriage Wednesday is better than ever, a marriage coun- sellor says. But, he adds, only if a hus- band and wife work at it. A modern girl has says, alone," Peterson says. with his wife." He thinks men are much stronger and more Contented as a . . Tesult. her grandma beat as a life part- ner, Dr. James A. Peterson because today's wile has a bigger hand in things. "When grandfather got un- der the weather, he om "To. day a man can share both his problems and his pleasures him up in Hamilton and escorted, {Negroes moved out in a truck him to Sydney ; { "As a police force we have no|with wire mesh screens. Morrison, 33, was staggered. He alternative but to execute an ex-| Troops carrying rifles with) said his lawyer had appealed the isting warrant," an RCMP|fixed bayonets lined the roads on case and he figured the whole sit- spokesman 'said. "It's a court or-|the edge of town at intervals of uation had been "straightened der and we must obey it." about 50 yards as a drizzling rain out. | Inspector I. 8. Glendenning, fell. USED RIGHT NAME {commanding Sydney RCMP sub-| Inside the town, groups of po- "I didn't try to conceal my division, said: {lice moved silently through de- identity," he said in an interview| 'There was no reason to with-|serted streets. Many carried riot Wednesday. "I used my right hold the warrant. We are always|clubs, long staves shaped like ax- name." {picking up fellows on old war- handles Morrison related how he was|rants, although I will admit 14| Only a couple of women and touched by the long, long arm of years is unusual." {some children could be seen scur- the law: C. M. Rosenblum, who repre-|rving through the streets as the "I was told there were two men sented Morrison at the trial and| last load of arrested left. waiting to see me. I thought they launched the appeal, described] A plane eircled low overhead were car salesmen--that's what the recent arrest as "iniquitous.|and a helicopter under an armed they looked like. |. . . Anything having to do with|guard was parked on the towns "They told me they were jiquor seems to be regarded more|playground. RCMP. One of them pulled out alseriously than any other crime." warrant he had in Jus pocket and| Mr, Gunn said: "This man was|/SHOUT, BORE AN ih aad ut it in my hands. a wi he got x n men a "at they had shot me there sndbie, ia g Br wo. Women Fan. then I wouldn't have any | ha; or the invasion. lworse. {he moved to Hamilton." and Alvin M. Weinberg, a Chi- cagoan who is director of the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in | ALONG MISSISSIPPI Tennessee. The four men will share equally the $150,000 honorarium. The gold si FM CANADIENS, MAPLE LEAFS "READY FOR FIRST GAME them. . . . "My lawyer told me he woul appeal the case on his own. Then he told me to go out and try to get a job and I would be notified medallions symbolizing the award will be presented at the National Academy of Sciences in Wash- ington May 18. Dikes Manned Szilard may not be able to be {present at the ceremony. He is a |cancer patient in a New York |hospital, and last December re- |fused surgery lest it interrupt his work and his writing. He ex-{yoynteers manned weakened lev-| plained: "I have been told that I} oq may not have long to live." | a : of { Dr. James R. Killian, chairman |n,o4 pelt today, hoping to hold|detected danger spots. {of the trustees of the awards,|,..p the muddy waters of the said each of the four has been swollen Mississippi and Missouri|was that the tons of river water = ~~ |would spill through the dikes|release. | rivers. They at surging rivers from further flood-| may b ling fertile farm lands and com-|Seepage. {munities in Illinois and Missouri. | The flood fighters patched the water-sogged earthen levees with Boy-Driver Arrest Error In Judgment TORONTO (CP) -- The chair- man of Metropolitan Toronto's| | police commission said Wednes- {day night there may have been jan error in police judgment in| {taking to a police station a nine- |year-old boy found driving a motorized go-cart in a school yard. He ordered a full report, {hectic 24 - hour period during| of By Volunteers CHICAGO (AP)--Hundreds of signs of possible break-throughs. {thousands the night floodlights searched for| FELLOWSHIP WINNER | Prof. fessor of law at McGill Univer- came| sity is the winner of NATO Fellowship for 1960-61, Profes- | The brief ceremony climaxed a] sor Cohen will study the role which the couple were thwarted| International Secretariate in the {in their efforts to wed at Dillon,| development | European affairs, Patrols of men, some wearing in the most critical section|bright orange life jackets, carried States|aerial flares to shoot off if they the midwest United Officials said the major danger the | winch seemingly appear solid but| to prevent n Pp ¢ weakened inside by the| fought The two big rivers have been jon & rampage for a week. The chief danger spots are still con-| fined to about 150 miles to the north and the same south of St. Louis. | Farmers, townsmen, |fence workers and college stu-| dents made up the hundreds of| volunteers working on the levees. CREST FRIDAY The Missouri above St, Louis has eased, and is expected to crest at 325 feet Friday at St.| Charles, Mo. That height wouid| of sandbags. During distance| civil de-| a a |ce! ; lap water near the top of several vet complete. We are doing| |everything possible to get leleaned up quickly. . . ." reinforced levees, but observers {believe they will hold. { The Red Cross has estimated| {that 31,000 persons have been af-| fected by the floods. More than 1,000,000 acres have been flooded ard property damage is into mil- {lions of dollars. Floods in sections of New Eng-| land, New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania have caused evac- {uations of scores of families, but rivers and streams are receding there now and no immediate ser- ious overflows are indicated. Walking Craze | Comes To U.S. | LONDON (Reuters) -- British | NAT d |marathon walker Barbara Moore of Tan |has packed 16 pairs of shoes in --CP Wirephoto. [preparation for sailing today to Maxwell Cohen, pro- the Secretary-General and York, where he had been working| as a hairdresser, last month and obtained a divorce | Porumbeanu, 32, mother of their the when told oined the of trouble. d of either] Mrs Katherine Benedict, Gam- bridegroom of WILFRID GAGNON 1 » Druggist, 60, CHAUFFEUR wins Shoots, Kills : WwW | ts, lls, Heiress ed Holdup Man . MONTREAL (CP) -- "I knew 1 1 aro 11 1S the gun wasn't real but I still ny Bd orders," said Wil-| HENDERSONVILLE, N. C.|in love," said the 68-year-old Seconds later the 60-year-old (AP)--Heiress Gamble Benedict Roberts. druggist shot and killed one of has married her Romanian-born| The couple skipped off to Paris two holdup men who robbed his|sweetheart after kicking overflast Christmas season and en distriet store of family and legal obstacles in aj Wanted to get married there, but The dead man was identified {Wo-day game of hide-and-seek in ow: Maggs Pr ge as Claude Foisy, 26, the father of|the Carolinas. _ |home. She was made a ward of} two young children. The 19-year-old New York girl|y New York court as a wayward lice escaped with!and Andre Porumbeanu, 35, were, y Y His accomp me forum iy | minor. She was 18 then. Porum- a said the two men en Sy at pig mountain beats, & JorneE Syauffem, . back hi i A gered his drug store and de- lodge near here late Wednesday. ack othe United Staies Ister manded the contents of the cash. The couple slipped into this re- register. sort centre in the afternoon, and VT rh imal ove the routired hysieal sam, S y st ination a ood tests at a loca i ; ' , forced me to the rear of the hospital, S.C. A marriage licence was re store." he said : fused after receipt of a telegram Police said later the weapon At the office of deeds registrar rrom Magistrate Peter Horn of| Was 2 tov pistol Marshall Watterson there was New York who said Gamble is! The bandits then cleaned out SOme question as to whether aja ward of his court and prohib- the till. As: they ran out the door Marriage licence would be legalfited from marrying without the Gagnon fired two shots from his? View of Porumbeanu's Mex- court's consent. 38-calibre revolver and hit Foisy, |ican divorce obtained March 15.| sgist was held up for] Watterson called in lawyer MEXICAN DIVORCE Ks ago. Arthur Redden, who consulted by! said he shot and killed telephone with the state attorney- ho tried to rob/general. That official approved his store 25 vears ago. issuance of the licence ---- CIVIC OFFICIALS ATTEND | CITY EMERGENCY Redden then offered his mount-|child Gigi. ain lodge as a site for the; Mrs. Porumbeanu, PHONE NUMBERS wedding, and Magist Roberts was ¢ . the ceremony. C POLICE RA 5-1133 the coms mm party, but no FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 (the bride or present « 99 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 | "They seemed to be very muchitune, refused to comment. Some Highways Exican pvonce new Still Flooded in Juarez, |severa Mexico, from Mrs. Madi Helma still ur areas menaced by swollen rivers. | The Grand River, which over- rate Fletcher of her husband's new marriage, flowed its banks near Brantford| led to perform said Gamble "is a very poor, un- Tuesday, forcing evacuation of a| r civic leaders fortunate girl" who is in for a lot/ dozen homes, subsided two feet Wednesday. The Was ple's grandmother and guardian! downstream communities without of her Remington typewriter for-|causing damage and rolled into Lake Eri United States. from New York to San Francisco| {next 13,200-mile walk across the coun-| try. | suite and a juice extractor The strictly vegetarian Dr. Moore explained she planned to| I've only on grass and fruit juice while trekking to New York via] Washington She told reporters: } "I have always believed that| mankind eould be nourished on a diet of grass, which grows every- where, but I have never had the opportunity of putting it to the| test under conditions of great ex-| jertion." i Ontario highways were der water early today, but threat of floods eased in crest of the flood. passed ie. WAS RELEASED made May 14, 1946, and that he was released He said he never heard the deci- sion until show the appeal three cities to obtain Morrison's {with the federal {the | Fulton. yond reproach in Hamilton. the $500 fine. the National Parole Board, said | Wednesday night the case is ex- |pected to Bo before the board in It if anything came of the appeal." "1 tried to get a job but it was no use. There was absolutely no work for me here." Morrison said the appeal was pending decision. week. Records was dismissed by a county court Judge Efforts are being made last in Lawyer A. O. Gunn of Sydney, who described the arrest as the 'rottenest thing I ever came across," has been in touch government Don McInnis, Progressive Con- servative member of Parliament for Cape Breton South, has taken matter to Justice Minister considered be- Morrison was Friends there have offered to pay Benoit Godbout, secretary of he near future. : "We are rushing inquiries con- rning the case but the file is it} MONTREAL (CP) -- Both teams were reported ready for tonight's first game of the Stanley Cup final between the National Hockey League champions Montreal Canadiens and the second-place Toronto Maple Leafs. Game time is 8:30 p.m. EST. "We're in good shape and have no injuries." said Toronto assistant general-manager King Clancy. "We have no excuse of any kind." 'Toe' Blake, coach of the Canadiens, aiming for a record fifth straight Stanley Cup championship, said his team, too, is ready after a week's rest since they eliminated Chicago Black Hawks in four straight games. Leafs got into the final by eliminating De- troit Red Wings four games to two. Canadiens are the bettors' favorites to win the first game of the best-of-seven series and the series. Second game will be played here Saturday, and the next two in Toronto next Tuesday and Thursday, The Leafs arrived in Montreal by jet aircraft Wednesday night and were quartered in a down-town hotel Beth teams will ice the same lineups as in the semi-final series, each going with four complete forward lines, The same two teams met in last year's final, with Canadiens winning the cup in five games. Leafs are regarded as a considerably improved team, They finished second in the standings this season while in 1959 they squeaked into fourth place and the playoffs in the last few games of the schedule. the workers back to their jobs. The government is pressing its control over the Negro population by reinstituting the hated pass system, But it has given some indica tion of trying to make the pass system more palatable to the Negroes, whose protest demon- strations against the identity pa. pers three weeks ago drew police fire that killed 72. In the uproar that followed the slayings the government sus. pended its requirement that all Negroes moving about in such 'white' areas the big cities must carry passbooks giving thelr identification, place of work and other personal details, TO CHANGE STRESS a We Minister Bn C. Erasmus 3 consider applying the laws "in such a way as to put more stress upon the advantage they hold for Negroes." He did not elaborate, and it appeared most unlikely that Negro leaders would accept any such argument. Thousands burned their passes in jubilant demonstrations of vie- tory when the pass laws were suspended. Erasmus said police would issue them temporary passes until they get new ones. Scattered violence continued. Two churches were set afire early today in the Walmer Negras settlement near Port Elizabeth, on the Indian Ocean. Police ac- cused Negro agitators of setting the fires to keep alive the race conflict. More than 1,300 religious lead. ers--Protestant, Roman Catholie and Jewish---have issued an ap- real for a day of prayer and pen- itence Sunday by all races to find "the right answer to the problems of our country at this time." DUTCH CHURCH JOINS Among those joining in the ap peal were leaders of the Dutch Reformed Church, largest in South Africa, to which most lead- ers of Prime Minister Hendrik Verwoerd"s National party be. long. The church accepts the party's apartheid (racial segrega- tion) policy, although it does not attempt to justify it on religious grounds. World-wide indignation at the |government's actions has shaken the British Commonwealth. A showdown may come when the make a coast-to-coast walk in the| | The 56-year-old hiker will fly| & week and there start her| ! Also in the luggage of the Rus-| | TORONTO (CP) -- Sections of slan-born dietitian are three ski Burton Bates of Vicksburg, Mich.,, celebrated his 90th | | birthday Tuesday by having his driving licence renewed for OLDEST LICENSEE IN MICHIGAN three more years. So happy | about the affair he went home | and shined up his 1938 Plymouth Commonwealth prime ministers meet in London next month. sedan. Burton has been driving since 1918 Wirephoto