THOUGHT FOR TODAY "The average farmer lives seve en miles from the nearest physi- cian."--Newspaper filler. Many a farmer lives to a ripe old age and dies a natural death. She Oshawa Tine Saturday, WEATHER REPORT Sunny with cloudy intervals not much change in' temperature, winds light. VOL. 89--NO. Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, FRIDAY, AUGUST 5, 1960 Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa SIXTEEN PAGES 180 BIRTHDAY FOR BEAUTY Maria Santos of Portugal, a | sented to her on her 22nd birth- i i i day. The cake came as a sur- competitor in the International A wr ali end other contest: Beauty pageant in Long Beach the playsuits which are the of- Arthur Meighen Dies, 'Old Age' :| TORONTO (CP) Rt. Hon. Arthur Meighen, who became| prime minister of Canada twice witho't winning an election, died quietly in his sleep shortly after 6 a.m. today. He was 86. The distinguished elder states- %& « 'man had been in rapidly failing 4 health for several weeks and confined to bed in his Toronto| 5 home for 10 days. His wife and| . |daughter, Mrs. Lillian Wright of London, Ont., were at his side. A doctor who has attended Mr.| Meighen for several years said: | "He didn't suffer. He had been slipping away for the past few : days." ' A son, Maxwell Meighen, ar- co "|rived at the home a few min- QUEEN utes after the death. He and Mrs. Wright had been in almost con- ficial garb this year. Among [stant attendance at their father's girls in background are Emma |gide since his condition became Belkhodja of Tunisia and Caro- [critical a week ago. line Lecerf of Belgium. "My father died as he would (AP Wirephoto) have wished, peacefully at ants posed for the first time in Calif., hugs a huge cake pre- Russ, Chinese Clash At Labor Conference STOCKHOLM (AP)--A ranking yesterday, the Soviet delegation home," Maxwell said. ) Funeral arrangements are in- Suit Seeks Dance Bill the conference and asked Euro- West European Communist ha: s going to leave the hall." pean Communists to help them. returned from Peking with a re-| Chou did not speak, and the, port of stormy scenes between| atmosphere remained very tense. | Soviet and Red Chinese leaders| Throughout the conference, the| at a labor conference in the|labor delegations from North Chinese capital, |Korea, North Viet Nam, Indo- The conference--primarily an nesia, Burma and most other Asian parley of labor leaders Asian nations backed the Chinese held early in July -- reached a/point of view. Of the Asians, showdown "shen the Chinesejonly the Indian Communists Communist: tried to ram through|sided with the Soviet delegates a resolution approving a freeland the other Europeans. hand for Peking to use any con-| The Chinese Congress secre- flict situation in Asia for war|tariat tried to edit the published purposes, ' The resolution - wasitexts of the speeches made by blocked by stiff opposition from) the Russians. The Russians were the Russians, the West European| infuriated. The Soviet delegation Communist said. |then embarked on a lengthy and The rift between Peking and|thorough check of all notes and Moscow proved wider than any|shorthand accounts taken during The parley ended without any attempt to ease the tension be- tween the Chinese and the Rus- | sians. This was clearly shown in the final phase of the meeting. Solovchov requested a plane from the Chinese to fly his dele: gation home, The Chinese prom- ised to give the Russians a plane but for more than 24 hours none appeared. The Soviet labor leader finally lost his temper and said he would summon a jetliner from the Siberian city of Irkutsk, "but if so it will arrive with an escort of military planes." A Chinese plane was quickly put at his disposal. of the Western Communists had believed. Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev"s theories on peace- ful coexistence were reported condemned by Chinese Commu-| pists of all ranks *andings. SAY WAR INEVIT.. "The Chinese leaders, zefer ring to Lenin's teaching, said a i Raul new world war is not only inevit- MiaMI, Fla. (AP) 3 ; able, it is even desirable from a|Chibas, one of Premier Fidel Communist point of view," the|Castro's top aides in the Cuban| informant said : ho fled to politicall Chinese Premier Chou En-lai| evolution w fled Po ni | stressed repeatedly that "thefexile 1 the United States this capitalistic world will not sur-\week, says a resistance move- vive another great war." ment in Cuba is growing, but it "The capitalistic states will is not yet strong enough to be| break down from inside, and the feared by Castro destruction the Western powers| Fodiotad. However y ici X | e predicted, owever, gan cause the Communist world Castro "won't last six months. is not unmrepairable," Chou was| J y 3 quoted as saying. | Chibas, Castro's treasurer dur- The informant continued: ing the revolution and who helped When the Chinese premier went condemn foes of the revolution an? that | on criticizing Khrushchev in ex-|in the 1959 "showcase" trials,|premier is led by others, such as| tremely sharp words, the Rus-isaid he fell out with Castro over| sian delegation openly expressed the premier's "obvious move| its dissatisfaction. . : toward communism.' | Chou was to speak again the He said in a Hi : re : a Herald interview: | following day. Before he mounted |,,,., . ro the rostrum, the chief Soviet T'wo months ago I was asked Cuban Resistance Movement Grows He refused to resign and from that time on, Chibas said, he was under surveillance by Castro sec- ret police. The 44-year-old army major left Cuba Tuesday with his young wife in a 17-foot motorboat and spent 11 hours sailing to Key West. Chibas said he does not believe that Castro is taking orders from Moscow, but said Castro is aping "the Soviet government's ideas and giving it a free hand in Cuba." He discounted stories that the his brother Raul. '"Castro's decisions," he said, Settlement CALGARY (CP)--A New York dance studio and two former members of a Calgary studio are named in a $40,000 law suit filed here this week by a board of trustees on 'behalf of Calgarian| Howawd Lyons. The trustees claim defendants Margaret Richards of San Fran- cisco, Robert Cofer Bonds of Cal- gary. and the Arthur Murray Dance Studio Incorporated of New York have failed to live up to a $51,000 settlement that had| been arranged last March for Mr. | Lyons. | The case first received public attention in February when Mr. Lyons, a 49-year-old bachelor, be- gan court proceedings to recover $35,000 he said he had paid for dancing lessons at the studio over a six-month period and another $15,000 which he said he had loaned to Bonds, then studio manager. At that time Mr. Justice H. W. Riley placed the financial affairs of Lyons in the hands of the pub- lic trustee, stating that Lyons was incapable of managing his own affairs because he had been "mesmerized" by the Arthur Murray studio. Shortly after the justice's de- |cision, Herbert Richards, hus- |band of defendant Margaret Ri-| | chards, on behalf of his wife and| [the studio arranged the settle ment with the trustees, in which| | payment of $26,000 cash was to| |be made to the plaintiff. An ad-| ditional clause involving the New| York studio guaranteed payment! of a promissory note for $15,000 | covering the loan. definite but it was expected tha! a state funeral will be held here with burial near the farm at St, Marys, Ont., where Mr. Meighen was born. In recent years he had lived quietly in Toronto. Up until a few months ago he turned up regu- larly at his office on downtown Bay Street where he was a fi- nancial counsellor. | ELECTED IN 1908 Mr. Meighen was elected to the House of Commons on his first try from the Portage la Prairie, Man., in 1908. After holding vari- ous cabinet posts during the First World War he became Conserva- tive leader and Prime Minister| following the retirement of Sir Robert Borden in 1920. Fourteen months later he was defeated in the 1921 general elec- tion and for the next five years was opposition leader. When Mackenzie King's Liberal gov-| ernment was defeated in the House in 1926 Mr. Meighen was called on to form the govern- ment. It lasted only a few days and in the election of that summer Mr. King was returned to office, Mr. defeated in his Manitoba riding of Portage during that election and retired from politics to be- gin his financial career. After six years as a financial counsel lor in Toronto he returned to Ottawa in 1932 as government leader of the Senate. He left the Senate in 1941 to become Conservative party leader again but resigned the following year when he was de- feated in a byelection, He never agaig"onght active political of- ice. Mr. Meighen's two prime min- isterial terms totalled 17% months. Only Sir Charles Tupper, Prime Minister for nine weeks in 1896, had a briefer term. Vehicle Output | Lower In July | OTTAWA (CP)--Canadian pro-| duction of motor vehicles in July|a Soo hospital for emergency | seat. dropped sharply to 23,893 units| from 34,280 in the corresponding month last year, the bureau of! statistics reported today. Total production for the first seven months of the year rose slightly! to 278,682 units from 277,210. Passenger car production dur-| ing July fell to 19,105 units from| 27,469 a year earlier and com- mercial vehicles to 4,788 units from 6,811. Seven-month produc- tion of passenger cars.rose to 228,167 units from 227,899 a year ago and commercial vehicles to 50,515 units from 49,311. Meighen was personally| To Give ELISABETHVILLE, The Congo (AP) -- An advance guard of United Nations troops was barred from entering Katanga province _ [today and sent flying back to Leopoldville with UN Undersec- |retary Ralph Bunche. | Thus Premier Moise Tshombe of Katanga, who has proclaimed the secession of his province from the new republic, showed he meant business in refusing to al- low the UN to put his territory under UN control. He has said UN troops would have to fight their way in. Bunche, top fr ter in the Congo for UN Secretary-Gen- eral Dag Hammarskjold, came here Thursday and failed to work out a compromise with Tshombe. Today Bunche went back to the Congo capital of Leopoldville to # report to Hammarskjold. PLANE SURROUNDED But the plane that came to pick him up--carrying 20 troops from Ghana and Morocco to make ar- rangements for the arrival of the rest of the UN force expecied here Saturday--was surrounded by Katanga police and soldiers as it stood on the Elisabethville airfield, Godefriod Munongo, interior minister, went aboard and personally informed the sol- diers they would not be allowed to get out. ash FASTEST HUMAN fastest ever flown by man, in the 15 rocket plane over the | California desert, (U.S. Air Force photo via AP Wirephoto) Joe Walker, ace test pilot for the National Aeronautics and Snace administration, is all | smiles after zooming 2150 mph, TEENAGERS SHOT U Katanga UN'S ADVANGE TROOPS REJEGTED AT AIRPORT | Bunche Returns Report troops would not come until after further negotiations, Just before Bunche left, Tshombe told a press confer ence: "I have gathered all tribal chiefs of Katanga in Elisabeth. ville in order to explain the in- ternal and external situation of Katanga. I have informed them of the decision to oppose the ar- rival of UN troops. The chiefs agree with me, Dr. Bunche has been informed of my decisions and he realizes the situation is dangerous." | It appears that Tshombe has |carried his opposition to UN in- |tervention as far as possible on the . diplomatic level, and the next move is up to the UN. LOOKS TO UN In a meeting with Bunche Thursday, Tshombe appealed for UN Security Council considera- tion of Katanga's announced se- cession from the central govern ment, In a statement issued before his departure for Leopoldville, Bunche said: "I was in Elisabethville on in. structions from Mr. Hammar skjold to hold discussions on are rangements for the arrival of Former Mental Patient Nabbed, » SRY | Two & Munongo told reporters he had warned Bunche that intervention of UN troops would be regarded as aggression and Katanga would then be entitled to take legitimate sures of defence, He said unche had told him that UN hority to report as i to Mr. Hammarskjold. E MINES, Ont. (CP)-- member of Plummer n-agers were fatally shot|council, returned frome Al | T g- | police manhunt today captured a| After a hunt the youth was Thursday night and a provincial| meeting to find his |25-year-old former mental pa-|found lying in a ditch with blood |tient wanted for questioning injon his clothes. At the time Mr. | the slayings. Brechen did not realize his son Jacqueline Dumont, 16, and had been shot but thought he| William Brechen, Jr., 19, wer? had been severely beaten. | found 10 miles apart on district| Miss Dumont's body was found| sideroads near this community|a short time earlier by Art Weir 40 miles east of Sault Ste. Marie.|of nearby Leeburn. He encount- Both had been shot in the head./ered a truck parked halfway Miss Dumont was dead when|across a road, investigated and discovered. The youth, taken to found the girl dead in the front treatment, died today. | Provincial police fanned out The captured man, a hired la-| through the area, searching bush- borer on a local farm, was|land and setting up road blocks. stopped at a road block north of|Today the man was seen walk- Desbarates, about 25 miles east|ing along old Highway 17 near of the Soo. Desbarats with a rifle under his arm, FOUND BY FATHER Police later arrested him after Miss Dumont's body was found he had hitched a ride in a pass- in the front seat of a parked ing car. No charges have yet truck. She had lived on a nearby been laid. farm with her grandmother. Brechen, bleeding badly, was OFFERED HELP found on the side of the road| Neighmors said Brechen and near his father's farm. Miss Dumont had been going to- Brechen's father, James, a|gether during the last year. Miss Kefauver Segregationist captured by police and they were also friendly. Mr, Brechen said the man came to the Brechen farm Thurs- day evening saying his truck was out of gas. Young Brechen went to help him and was not seen until his father found him. Dumont lived opposite the man Whi lis Stands On Labor Issues Compared , WASHINGTON (AP)--In chart-|the big steel strike early this ing the Nixon-Kennedy positions|year. on big issues in the United States| Nixon stepped quietly into the presidential election campaign,| deadlock, warning both sides they one will find the picture is not|faced an unwanted, directed all black-and-white. settlement by Congress unless Many union officials will tell{they got together on an agree- you that, if past records are a|ment. guide, Richard M. Nixon -- the] In secret meetings, many held Republi idential candi-|in his own home here, Nixon to side| chalked out the settlement terms. with employers in any labor-| Neither side got all it wanted but t showdown, and both side were happy that Nixon John F. Kennedy with employ-|go them off the hook. ees. | There is evidence for an argu-| TAFT-HARTLEY ment that the two -presidential] Kennedy has been a fighter for rivals for the November election Organized labor's cause ever are closer together on some la-|Since he entered Congress in bor issues than is generally|1947. That was the year the Taft- imagined. artley law was enacted, over itter union opposition. TO IMPROVING CLIMATE Kennedy, then 30 years old, The newly adopted platforms was among those who kept the of both parties, pledge they will| T-H legislation from becoming cultivate labor-management dis-|worse than it was from the la- cussions toward improving the bor union standpoint. climate of industrial relations. This is a role Kennedy has Sticking out in Nixon's record played effectively and consist. his personal role in settling'ently in Congress to date. | V pr date--can be expected |""are definitely his own." Chibas said he could throw no| light on Castro's present ill condi- tion, saying he hasn't seen him | NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -- Senator Estes Kefauver won a third term with a stunning land- Mexicans Cool | everywhere "in the November| U.S. election. | x amed Solov-|resign as president of the West-| i . | delegate, a man named Solov slide victory in Thursday's Ten- NEGROES VOTE | chov. stood up and declared an-|€rnh Railroad Company because for 1% months. But if anything) 4 he said, lv: "If comradé Chou En-laill had expressed dissatisfaction/should happen to Fidel, AmB same! with the government to persons I the Cuban people would not fol- intends to speak in the tone and the same language as! believed were my friends." To K's Visit | 'low Raul Castro "for a minute."|gjgn ministry said today Soviet | Bill Of Rights Gets Fast Senate Handling OTTAWA (CP) The legisla tive crush on Parliament began mittee today with every indica-|There was a good chance the de- to ease Thursday night, aided by tion that its stay there will be bate would wind up late today. | Senate acquiesence to the Com- short, and that it will be reported |Still facing the Commons are the! mons' apparent drive for week- back to the Senate proper for $1,484,652,224 third reading late today or Sat- end prorogation. The Liberal majority in the upper house held the upper hand {Premier Nikita Khrushchev can visit Mexico on its Independence Day celebration Sept. 6 if he officially invited, | vitations have been issued to for- eign officials of the rank of vice-| president or a similar post, but| |not to heads of state. | | There have been numerous re-| The ministry said official in-|preferred his liberal philosophy nessee Democratic primary, in riding issue. The race, billed as the tightest | of the 57-year-old senator's ca- | reer, turned into his greatest wants to, but that he is not being|triumph as the state's voters| Al {made it unmistakably clear they registered Negro voters cast bal- to that of Judge Andrew T.| Taylor, a strong advocate of se- gregation and states rights, Kefauver, the unsuccessful Democraite vice-presidential can- The bill went to a Senate com-(593,272,266 in defence estimates, [POIs in newspapers here specu-|didate in 1956, led from the out- urday. LET IT PASS lating about whether Khrushchev | would visit Mexico, either before or after a visit to Cuba. Sources | |at United Nations headquarters in New York said Wednesday the i: $70,- Soviet premier had notified the $7,570,421 | Mexican government he would | {represent Russia at the inde- spending estimate of the finance department, 849,241 for trade and for the Privy Council. set. With tabulations from 2381 of the state's 2635 precincts, the vote was: Kefauver 433,097, Tay- lor 218,981. Democratic nomination to the Senate is tantamount to election lin this southern state. In two counties--Fayette and MEXICO CITY (AP)--The for-| Which civil rights was the over- Haywood--Negroes voted in the primary for the first time since| shortly after the Civil War. There was no incidents. Negroes out- number whites in both counties. About 90 per cent of some 400 lots in Fayette County and nearly all of some 200 voted in Haywood. Elsewhere in Tennessee, Negroes| have voted for years. One Blanket Only Clue In Manhunt in a crucial day of debate. It! could have wrecked one major ~H piece of Conservative 'govern- Thursday wrote a finish to the ment legislation and seriously de- Political wrangling over the gov-ision can wind up some time Sat- laved another. But it did neither, ©'iment's contentious anti-com- urday--perhaps with an exten- Within an hour after the Com-|Dines amendments when the Lib-|sion of normal House hours be- s accorded final unanimous|€ral majority, failing to carry|/yond the 11 p.m. adjournment to- t ng susp: v é ah to rik bill of rights after | through its objections with nega-|night or by sitting Saturday even-| ORMSTOWN, Que. (CP)--Four|'ights proposals adopted by the lice for almost a week. weeks of argument, the Senateltive votes, allowed the measure|ing. Others forecast prorogation|hooded men, armed with sub-|P€mocratic national conventions| The blanket, similar to ome re-| began studying the bill and by to pass. early next week. [machine guns, Thursday held up|in Los Angeles recently. Taylor ported stolen from a clothes line the time ifs night sitting broke| The amending bill had been be-| Prior to plunging 'into defence|the Ormstown branch of the Ca-{Shatply Sci ey this Jaton oniside a JAMD house sarlier this up about 10:30 p.m. it had given fore the Commons three months. policy and detail, the Commons|nadian Bank of Cominerce and|f #4 it went a little ton or Be im gurscay oe second reading to the measure. It cleared the Senate in three gave third and final reading tc/ escaped with between $4,000 and ' T a : y Gallant, abou days the bill of rights after Prime|%$5,000. Kefauver, termed his vier yarc : from a densa bush, Aro . 1 " s "3 : om Pa ny i n ", | W, re C 3 i When it came to approving it, Minister Diefenbaker = made a| Manager Rudy Brittain was an emphatic answer to 'the de | Riding Police believe the youth is CITY EMERGENCY Liberal senators shouted their concluding speech, characterized| ordered to open the cash drawers tractors of the South, who tried|hiCIng. . objections but there was no re-|by what Senator Arthur Roebuck 2d jafe and when he refused to v4 fist Ye 2's 2 backwarg y yas the day's only substan. ions t J S { at Se r ft : 3 ople."' i Sei $ ice contin- PHONE NUMBERS [corded stand, The measure was|(L--Ontario) described later as|in€, thugs fired a warning shot|PEOPIE tial discovery as police contin POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574, HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 In the same day, the Senate|CAN END SATURDAY pendence celebration. Many MPs feel that the ses- | WATCHED NATIONALLY ABRAM'S - VILLAGE, P.E.I The oucome had been watched (CP)--A blanket discovered in a nationally for an indication of the| hayfield has injected new life into Hooded Men Rob depth of southern reaction to the|the search for a 15-year-old shoot- Bank In Quebec strongly pro integraiton ecivil|ing suspect who has baffled po- ht Hh : PRT and beat him on the face with a| The senator, who skyroc ued scouring the countryside for oe ied on division. the prime minister's bent for| bistol. im he [to on as Shyigclsted the killer of Joseph Tillman Gal- Meanwhile, the Commons be- grandiloquent phraseology. An unidentified citizen fired his crime-busting .investigations|!ant, 40, shot through the head as gan to knife through the remain-| Mr. Diefenbaker said it is UP|two shots after the bandits' hid by the early 1950s, said Tennessec| he slept Sunday morning. ing departmental spending esti- to every Canadian to see that the| ang the fleeing men returned the by its vote showed the Demo-| The youth, who disappeared mates for 1960-61--the fiscal year fundament; its and freedoms fire, spraying the streets with|cratie presidential ticket, headed |the night of the slaying, is -be- jthat began last April L {recognized and guaranteed by the pullets. They escaped before po-|by Senator John Kennedy, "will|lieved armed with a .22- | The House began with the $1,-ibill never are allowed to erode.|lice arrived. {win the allegiance of Americas Topo ting rifle, calibre| Vice President Richard Nixon gets set to tackle fingerful of poi, Hawaiian staple consisting of thick, molasses-like paste * OR RRA POI F made of mashed taro root, at Hawahian Luau feast in Hilo, Nixon took a breather for lunch on his hectic tour through three major Hawaiian islands in » CANDIDATE his campaigh for presidency. Laua was held at police aca demy at Hilo City, on Hawaii island, (AP Wirephoted F