Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 30 Jul 1960, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY The person who figure of Antony Jones may to Margaret to pay hi not to return it. tole the Arm Princess wax trong- get hope $ m a tidy sum lie Oshawa Sine WEATHER REPORT Clearing and cooler this even- ing; mainly sunny and less humid Sunday. Price Not Over OSHAWA, SATURDAY, JULY 30, 1960 Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department, SIXTEEN PAGES Ottowo VOL. 89--NO. 176 10 Cents Per Copy Farm Belt $8 Campaign 8 For Nixon CHICAGO (AP) Vice-Presi dent Nixon moved today to forge new strength.into what some of his strategists regard as his weak est campaign link--the U.S. agri- cultural Middle West, Congress members, governors convention delegates and farmers were summoned to confer with Nixon, the Republican presiden- tial nominee, on the problems the Republicans face in the Middle West which has wandered away from traditional republican ism | I'he its Republican presidential |nominee told a press conference Friday he wants to develop farm program that Republican can run on successfully in the November election Nixon said have suffered the farm belt one a in wi to gains of recapturi fouse of Repre REACT FAVORABLY i i ~NEW STYLE MILITIA member of ist igara, O to (Militia) spor he la . or fon for soldiers unde 3 " Hidden Children Bankruptcy 'Not Monsters' Hits Quebec wipe tes wo po Tak] Owners 5 Ea Het trouble I'he Republican farm plank ts cutting p diction and raising by re tiring land, as well as making use supports, The Demo empha control ho kit mall first al inket aid 1e Republics "great erosion" in and cited that as ch the party had if it had any hope control of the entat es. yaratu a pack CP Wirephoto the score to Ont, (CP idea 1 TECUMSEH ple have the sters. Let them kno Mrs. Shirley I ( ¥ ee different was speaking to 149 sized children apending almost 11 fined to their home In broken tones, the 38 mother related to ne a tearful sto whe it the children this suburb of Windse was born of ne into an obse r children lived nor said: "We hid the moved to Wine because no o house to a ¢ "When we | still kept ] by then were not the : din Gordon | 14 { Ir 1 J : inches tall ( i ( inches tall 1 ma ) De reir ! Vere Ql FRF( CP nsur 1 A { affects Quel price I'oLn n( ¢ ors 1 investi-| cratic plank put wee old t ) ( a by on supports, production and payments; As finally adopted e lican plank smacked more of Nix on's views than those of Agricul ture Secretary Ezra Taft Ben N amd B n ince pric prices v 000 0 : NEVER more nment, Georg their provincial wer re Attorney-Genera ne, palme announced after {ing that an I to oper .a a cabinet inquiry y of I I In| Montreal, ! bank ering the Repub never me lay ; on have di Benson ag the con not asked to the con tet $ wn of on SON Her agreed on | olutions who was in ( vention, wa ference' today declared for 0 disec : Snace Agency "or Plans Manned Visit To Moon 50 inches 1 A WASHINGTON (AP) TAKE VERE RIDICULED endent o nce and rnment agency The ch i ! y disclosed plans to send men the bit around the earth on po ting from two weeks The project started by 1966 the National Aero not nautics Space Administra- ilme | tion crew may be sent He on a week-long assignment round moon and tion of His for meeting superin inspec The space Fri- > journeys la 0 two months scheduled After driver 15 to be their that, and said, a { ~ One M T re in Ca | an Dead r Plunge 55% moon, ot oes 0 back But there's no plan for a man on-the-moon project before 1970 The agency also hopes to gently land a truck-mounted robot lab- oratory on the face of the moon and move it by remote control about a 50 - mile - radius lunar circle, taking moon samples. It will 'be aptly named Project Prospector and the ( lengthy « gave would Leach NO PAPER ON MONDAY ar public will no | and ation resume {American attempts to set foot on the moon. The plans. were an- nounced before 1,500 contractors attending a two-day series of lec- tures here. Many of the contract- |ors will bid for a share in the |space programs on which the agency said it may, in 10 years, spend from $12,000,000,000 to $15, 000,000,000, This program involves 260 ma- jor launchings, including 41 re- |lating to manned space flight. [rma » woma Group Of Ministers Studies Job Problem All this will be done before an| LUMUMBA WITH STATE CRETARY BALCER ympathy And Advice or Congo's Premier OTTAWA (CP) = Premier Pa- irice Lumumba is expected to re- ceive both a sympathetic ear and ome gentle advice from Cana- dian government leaders during his round of talks with them to- informed sources say soft - spoken bespectacled of the troubled Congo gov- arrived from Washing- Montreal Friday night scheduled to meet prime Diefenbaker at noon came here seeking assist- in technical help for the newly - established independent nation of 14,000,000 and to recruit lawyers, teachers, and scientists. No question of military help was raised when he met reporters at Uplands airport on arrival. Canadian government officials indicated that Canada will prob- ably be sympathetic to his pleas, but will channel most of its help through the United Nations or other international organizations. INTERNATIONALLY Canada is anxious to persuade Mr, Lumumba that his govern. ment can get its best assistance through international as- sociations, rather than becoming tied to any great power bloc or 'SEADOG RETIRES ay The eader ernmen ton 14} mir He ance Armed Torpedo a of interest * into grouping withdrawing its narrow nationalist African nations. Interest was high here in the Congolese premier's words about a "United States of Africa," but he spelled out few details. "It represents our political ob jective, sought by all African countries he said. "By attain ing this objective we wish the Af- rican countries to be free and in- dependent." Canadian officials were expec- ted to seek clarification from Mr Lumumba as to whether the project means a close-knit polit ical association, or merely philosophical meeting of- African minds. They read significance into the fact that members of Mr. Lum umba's party includ ed Diallo Telli, ambassador of Guinea to the United States who inad vertently missed the official plane flying the Congolese party from Montreal to Ottawa--and a press attache from the Guinea in formation office in New York, as well as Alex Quaison Sackey Ghana's permanent representa tive to the United Nations. | Guinea has been regarded in Ride Recalled | OTTAWA (CP) -- Retiring sea- dog Harry DeWolf related Friday how he once rode a live torpedo around the deck of his ship. The wild ride saved his destroyer and his crew, The account, previously untold the official navy records, must be one of the most hair-raising per sonal sea stories of the Second World War At Sunday midnight, Vice - Ad- miral DeWolf, 57, a sailor since he was 15, hands over his post OTTAWA oi ) n 1 " S1.000.000 000 to meet regional anning to prepare a nve ment pro- projects st n in public » wanted more vo- equip work nada's automa Inspects HEANTON PUNCHARDON by and! (AP) me Bob" said the the an breezy Canadian on his way to made become an English lord of the {| manor The stood by their plows waiti for their new squire from Kamsack, Sask. Sir Robert Williams is dug weekend The 37-year way brakeman inherited title and the land that Y t from the. eighth baronet Pe { William Williams, who died earl this month Sir Robert arrived in Britain on the liner Homeric Friday have over old family place he's ence never seen--2.000 acres of rolling state | Devon countryside, three manor two half-villages and the heirlooms Punchatdon half And half Wrafton Williams 'was met lis vere| Ruth who arrived a week back Ito take a first look at their in- tion dly of ady of the here old the with Sir 1008 CLARIF what {ier vaker had to look nl CITY EMERGENCY | pm ard Cen PHONE NUMBERS ¥ ; ong am the prime | houses, from {family Heanton seat utter the by fam Wi nearby ly owned POLICE RA FIRE DEP1 HOSPITAL of the his by ms any | village. of too wife nits caused by autom- prime minister Breezy Canadian Manor her valley mce lying in the pleasant of the River Taw Sir Robert, born and bred on the Canadian prairie, doesn't go much on all this "sir" nonsense, and announced to and all "call me Bob." Ruth Williams shé's Lady Williams now 1s coming with her hushand to Devon from Lon Here he will meet for. the time the dowager Lady Wi widow of the eighth bar onet. And here he will find out from the trustees of the just how much his inheritance is worth Its capital value has been esti- mated at around £200,000 ($556, 000). Death duties .are expected to soak up a large chunk of that Sir Bob he doesn't care t inheritance is worth--he end to live the squire's n England one don first says th © I'm a Canadian," he said be le home my wife and kids. I don't want them educated in England." estate | |of chief of naval staff to Vice {Admiral Herbert Rayner, 49, un til recently flag officer, Pacific Coast. The incident related in an inter view by Admiral DeWolf oc curred in 1940 when he was com mander of the destroyer St. Laur ent on Atlantic convoy. It was prompted by the recollection that Admiral DeWolf at the time was in the process of turnir over command of the St. Laurent to Admiral Rayner. | RAN WILD | Admiral DeWolf did not tell of | his direct and courageous part in |the "incident until Admiral Ray |ner brought it up. | The external mechanism of a |live, armed torpedo was being painted by a sailor who lifted hte safety catch to paint underneath and then lifted the firing handle to paint undert hat. "The torpedo fired, and ran wild on the deck," miral DeWolf said "It slammed house, bounced charging around Ad deck kept the and into off wverybody, including me scared. The decks cleared pret rapidly Since we thought up any second Ridge: (PO Sam Ridge Errington, B.C.) and myse cided to try to tame the torp "We got astride it. It was a slippery as a greased pig and thought its propellor might cu! our feet off : "We rode and to the rail and stuck one leg the rail to hold it propellor was makin dous racket on the iron de finally managed to release the cock. (the torpedo was driven 'compressed air). | We Petty We 10Ing we guided it naturally, | f Western circles as leaning far to the left and overly friendly with Russia, SPEAKS ONLY FRENCH Mr, Lumumba who speaks only French although some of his staff are, fluent in English, dined Fri- day night with Leon Balcer, solic tor-general and acting secretary of state, who met him on the cab- inet's behalf at the airport. s conference with Prime Diefenbaker was to be by lunch with Speaker of the House of Com- mons, and an informal dinner with Marce Cadieux, three man in the external affairs department. under External Af. faigs Minister Green | Mr. Lumumba departs Sunday at 10 a.m., en route back to his Leopoldville Today Minister followed Michener capital He came Ottawa ifter a five-hour visit during which he Jover: t's policy was "po- neutralism," willing to ac- cept help from East or West, to Friday to Mont- eal, declared hi itive itive SAYS NO DANGER I'he Congolese premier dis- missed fears that Europeans are in any danger in the Congo.- He was asked if his government had given a pledge of free passage for Europeans who wanted to leave. His answer was: "All Europeans live in security 1 in the Congo While the resource - ince Katanga had declared its withdrawal from the new repub- lic, Mr. Lumumba dismissed this with the statement that it was not backed up by the true feel- ngs of the people of that prov ince, rich prov. of number | FIERCE FOREST BLALE RIMS FISHING RESORT Racing Flames Trap Fighters KAMLOOPS, B.C. (CP) -- The|loops trout, 25 men spent the picturesque fishing resort of Lac night cut off by flames in a Le Jeune has become the scene burned-out section of forest. of a desperate battle against the, They were left at nightfall Fri fiercest of British Columbia's 400 day when a helicopter airlift forest fires came to a halt after 43 of their A 5,000-acre blaze started by colleagues had been carried out. campers last weekend swept over Water bombers doused the sur- a mountain ridge and across sev-| rounding forest and other planes eral small lakes Friday, leaving dropped supplies. . 25 firefighters trapped overnight| Firefighting headquarters here and threatening the Lac Le Leune| said the men are in no immedi- lodge and summer home colony ate danger. An RCAF helicopter 30 miles south of here was to fly them out today The fire reached the shore of, More than 2,300 men are fight Lac Le Jeune Friday night and|ing 259 outbreaks in the Kam- only a narrow stretch of water, |loops forest district, 19 of them three-quarters of a mile across, new fires. separated it from the 40-year-old lodge building Three hundred men assisted by six planes were to launch an all- out attack on the fire today, GL TS TAKEN OUT The 50 guests of the lodge and Appeal Ignored | Rebel Executed PARIS (AP)--The French sent surrounding cabins and residents 8n Algerian rebel to the guillo. of six lakeside summer homes, tine today despite a personal including the family of Justice|@ppeal from Soviet Premier Minister Fulton, were evacuated Khrushchev to President de Friday Gaulle asking him to spare the John Whittaker said he saw no Algerian's life. i hope his lodge could be saved.| Abderramahne Lakliki, 28, was The flames already had leaped condemned by a French military wider stretches of water in their| court for leading a commando wild advance through mountain-| unit which attacked a police sta- ous pine forests tion in Lyons in September, 1958, Farther along the noted fly- wounding several persons with fishing lake, home of the Kam-! gunfire. Socreds Prepare New Power Drive Within a OTTAWA (CP) month of marking the 25th anni- versary of the election of the first Social Credit government in the world, the national wing of the movement headed today to- ward a new drive for power, A revamped Social Credit As- sociation of Canada gave a new lock to the movement and elected fresh leadership at a two-day convention that concluded Fri- day night. And as delegates were urged to. new efforts to elect a Social Credit government, they were re- minded by Premier Manning of Alberta that next Aug. 22 marks the 25th anniversary of the elec- tion of Social Credit in Alberta. Since those days, he said, Brit- Columbia has gone over to Social Credit, rejecting "ortho- dox" political parties and adding to the tangible illustration of the soundness and value of Social Credit principles TRIBUTE Mannirg recalled that both he and national leader Solon Low were elected in the Aug. 22, 935, election and paid tribute to FORESEES DEPRESSION Mr. Low's leadership which the| "It won't be too long," he said, 60 « year - old Raymond, Alta., "before we see the effects of not school teacher and former MP just a recession but a depres- will surrender at a leadership|sion" which would be "a thou- convention this fall or winter, ud times worse" than the de- Newly - elected national presi- pression of the thirties that dent Robert Thompson, a 46-/marked Social Credit's rise to year-old chiropractor formerly of |power in Alberta. DR. ROBERT THOMPSON Red Deer and Innisfail, Alta., said the movement embarks on its new drive to federal power under favorable circumstances. UN Strives | To Doctor dick State LEOPOLDVILLE (AP) The United Nations has the sickest nation has ever nursed on its hands The which, action ently it Congo is facing a crisis without prompt remedial could cripple it perman- even snuff out the re ns of life rn a republic a hout proper prenatal care and ndoned by its sponsors after| at provocation, it can only sur-| vive and prosper through a mas- sive effort by the UN or individ- 1al countrie | The er I ust when h or month will be reached in| ernment pay- vill have te be met from a t | slgian col-| on cheap brains and| sources a Be oil and has because of > crude ( olese to as- authority [ of the new attempts sert their mn KATANGA PROBLEM More than 60 per «¢ niry nt of the came from the vince. of Ka wants to be in dent or at least reduce the central government| gets on its profits. | even mining pre which now dene share weekend pass from his basie {raining course at nearby Lowry Air Force Base. The ap- peal succeeded and the Presie ordered Airman Steed on | leave until Monday. --AP Wirephoto HAS IKE'S E old Texas Steed. 17 Betty bride - year from juite, ent pl Presi- a to on the street his Denver hotel to husband, Norman a makes a fc dent Eisenhower in front get her of

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