THOUGHT FOR TODAY 1 ip to any June bridegroom who is already having trouble ruling roost: Get Bible, it off, Titus 2: 4-5 to your insubordinate bride, the out the dust and read rice Not Over po p 73 10 Cents Per Copy , 89--NO. 1 medals in Air mm with were awarded air ceremonies at Hickam Force Base near Honolulu mediately aller landing the nose cone, Ill, plane commander of the C-119 Flying Boxcar which nagged Discoverer XIV's pace capsule from the air Fri- The nine crewmen AIR FORCE Com mmett tinguished Harold Bloomington, PACIFIC mander General | O'Donnell Di Flying Cross on ( E. Mitchell, of First Aerial Capture Of Satellite Capsule Washington. It is packed with in. Vandenberg Air \ : d equipment de- Calif, Thursday truments wi) d Yip ment of Guided by radar signal to the signed to speed developm dropping capsule 200 miles south pace spy and missile warning of the predicted fall area, Mitch. ell's C-119 made three passes. The first missed by six inches, I'he second failed by two feet "For gosh sakes, don't hurt it," pleaded Mitchell The third try succeeded "A good hit, we've got it," a yelled Staff Sgt. Al Harmon, 28 pins a apt AP Wirephoto day other $ Force Base, (AP The 1 celebrated HONOLULU Air Force today tory's first aerial caich of a cap sule ejected from an orbiting satellite The capsule, snared by a dang ling device which hooked into it parachute shroud was plucked from the sky 8,500 feet over the Pacific Friday by a C-119 Flying Boxcar after its ejection from Discoverer XIV over Alaska "1 don't see why we can't rate II from now on' a aur sssiul plane's the sky hunt, made the recovery goISTEROUS RECEPTION i Jjeut. Robert Counts, 3%0 miles southwest of Hawaili Gen, Emmett O'Donnell, Paci Foi Bp of the 10-man|while flying at 227 miles an hour. | fj» air force commander, was raw Wak 'decoeaiéd on srrivall Dikcoverer XIV, (he ejectinglynioug » cheering crowd of 200 back in Hawaii. iatellite, had been triggered Inloi¢ gyper the successfil C-119 on A plane sped the 85-pound, releasing the capsule on its 17th the arrival back at Hickam Air gold-colored capsule from Hawaii encirclement of the earth while yor0e Base, He personally pre- to the Lockheed Laboratory at orbiting at between 116 and 502 gented Mitchell the DFC "in rec. Sunnyvale, Calif. scientific miles up. The satellite and its/ognition of a vital feat of na- analysis before it continues on to capsule were fired aloft from tional significance." Dog Astronauts' [is tae Condition Good pass had failed they might not have had another chance. Had animals maintained satellites COMMANDER & With the capsule Harold Mitchell, 35, plane's commander newly bestowed I'lying Cross. The C-119, one of 10 planes | 8S DFC went Capt the catch. wearing his Distinguished for the catch at 8,500 feet not been made the plane might have had trouble with a cloud layer at 7,000 feet The crew hooked the parachute with a trapeze.like catching de. vice strung from two 36-foot-long con- yellow poles, 'BANK ROBBER TOO OBEDIENT NEW YORK (AP) Bank teller Estelle Vonosinski the would-be bandit's note and informed him "We don't handle that at this window." The robber--wearing a purple cap, checkered shirt and grey suede shoes--obediently walked to the next window, By this time Miss Vonosinski had sig- nalled guards and they closed in on him, Arrested Friday at a Chase Manhattan bank branch in the heart of the financial district was Glen Sewart, 26. Sewart's note read "Give me all have lye, Don't unnamed aboard being Russia's other MOSCOW (Reuters) fwo dog astronauls were in satisfactory condition Saturday as their "TV zoo" satellite beeped ils way around the earth he ightening Soviet drive to put a man in space, Soviet scientist id they p to get the Sputnik back to earth At the 10th since the "cf vas launched announcement Strelka had a and a respiration minute while those figure other dog, Belka, were 40, respectively Telemetered data, | confirmed the normal functioning of all equipment aboard the 4% ton satellite which had made revolutions of the earth by 10 a.m. local time (3:30 amv. EDT 9 I'he announcement t States, Officials said the total in conditions required for the "vital cludes satellites, rockets, and so processes' of the two dogs and called 'space garbage." reported were tantly The announcement, by the offi. news agency Tass, record of the ani. mals showed that at certain moments their *'motorial activ: ity" increased. | Soviet the film said hoped while, Soviet scientists aying they hoped to get the satellite back to earth, How- they gave no clues on when return bid would be made BEDFORD, Mass. (AP)--Rus ia's newest space satellite, and 1e rocket which carried it aloft, wave boosted to 37 the number of man-made objects in orbit about the national space sur centre says. { hour o I SIT Friday, a aid, the pulse rate rate } hip were pace Soviet dog Over { 106 30 for the 120 and eo ol th continued the earth veillance control I'he centre said 10 of the ob vere sent into space by the and 27 by the United jects Russian your money, I aid " cry | Powers Family Tries To Soften Sentence iid, the family would follow up case hecame International with a direct plea to Khrushehev. issue We will stay here and fight The family sat around a table Gary as long as our money 0 & room in the Hall of Columns and the Soviet govern. Scene of the trial lets us," said Oliver Pow The table was laden with of Pound, Va., the pilot's caviar, sandwiches, tea and cof her fee, but they were unable to eat. An appeal through the courts Several Soviet guards were pres could be based on points of law ent . and made to the president of the Rogers described the meeting, ipreme court or the procurator which was attended by Powers' prosecutor) general, But this is Wie and parents; his sister Mrs lengthy, complicated process Jessica Hileman of Washington, 't would be simpler fos Bar: D.C, and his mother-in-law, Mrs : Monteen Brown of Milledgeville, bara Powers, the pilot's 24-year. Ga, old follow the plan she outlined Friday to a Soviet re: WELL TREATED porte Powers told them he had been treated especially well during his pre trial imprisonment. "The guards were very kind," he said Then Powers explained the de- tails of his sentence as he under stood it. He said it would be broken into three years in prison ~minus the time since his cap ture May 1-and another seven years during which he would be sent lo live somewhere in the Soviet Union and be given a job Soviet law provides that prison ers sent to such "assigned resi dences" may live with their wives, There was no indication this possibility was discu the family reunion. (AP) 1] Gar) an family 2 [or a di nel MOSCOW Power forces today for for ola spying against . Russia They ment pianed their hopes on Sovie! gpg Premier Khrushchev {a Sustained by seeing Powers alive and well at a tearful relief filled reunion Friday his conviction and sentence Soviet military court, the kin secluded themselves in hotel suites Their Ame { planned conference 3l.year-old pilot counsel, Mikhail Frank Rogers ginia Bar Assoc Powers' three-day machinery for granting would be set in motion After the initial appeal duce his ear entence out but after hy a pilot' their 4 a vife, to SON t Gi ent nin she would appeal for directly to Leonid president of the Soviet oday Union, whose duties are mostly Rogers teremonial, and the Presidium (parliament) of the Soviet Union, rich always follows the policy CITY EMERGENCY Jig by the Communist PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-113 FIRE DEPT. RA 5.6571 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 prota She said d the tlemeacy emency Brezhnev ation to ob down TEARFUL REUNION n 3 wroke down erind wife hour was the family's Powers' U.2 recon: plane crashed on So- viet territory May 1 and his spy and 1 k ' Jay afte a The re » Minutes nee ance nion pasting one read | sed at | She Oshawa Time OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, 1960 Variable storm, Authorized os Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa WEATHER REPORT cloudiness with -#howers and chance of thunder- not temperature. much change in TWENTY PAGES CONGO STRIFE GROWS: Senegal Control Dakar DAKAR, Senegal (Reuters Senegal today broke ay from | the newly-independent Mali Fed | eration, declared a state of emer- gency and applied for United Nations membership as an dividual nation Censorship wi Senegalese troops con. trol of this West African port, The move followed an overnight erisi splitting Senegal [rom the former French Sudan The Mali Federal formed In April, 1959, by ger of the two territoric the French community in mposed afte took over on a mer within was Official sources here announced Senegal had abrogated all law and decrees passed by the Mali government and was lodging it request for admission to the UN | Senegal proclaimed ils seces sion alter bitter rivalries flared | between Senegal and Sudanese leaders on the eve of nomination day for elections 10 choose a Mal president Wildcat Strikers Get Jolts LONDON (Reuters) The 11 day wildcat strike of British sea men suffered setbacks both at home and in foreign ports Satur. day Biggest jolt came when the 184,000-ton Cunard liner Caronia left the English coast port of Southampton for New York with only one man short in her crew of 800, Wildcat strike leaders failed ipo their pleas to get the vessel's crew to walk off for even a one- day token stoppage But 106 ships still lay idle in British ports for lack of crew and fresh waterfront troubles piled up with a day-old wildcat strike of longshoremen in London and the Liverpool arca. The departure of the 25,000-ton Canadian Pacific liner Empress of England for Montreal Friday was cancelled The company sald it would have some 700 passengers air lifted to North America Abroad, there was a drop-off in "sympathy" actions by British seamen showing solidarity with the strikers at home, In Sydney, Australia, more than 100 seamen walked off the 28,400 ton Orient liner Orcades before she was due to leave for Mel. bourne on the voyage to Britain But the vessel got under way on time and the strikers mostly cooks, stewards and engine room {hands--agreed to abandon (heir walkout Sunday and rejoin the Orcades at Melbourne, 'Strike Could Reach Oshawa TORONTO (CP)--An to organize construction spread from here to Friday and may reach parts of the province In Brantford 12 lathers em. ployed by E. and A. Fanelli of Toronto, lathing sub-contractors, walked off their jobs at a $500,000 apartment project. Joseph Grossmuck of Local 97, Lathers' International Union (CLC), said similar strikes would take place against projects in Ottawa, Montreal, Oshawa and Windsor The lathers and electricians sheet-metal workers, plumbers steamfitters and heavy.construe tion laborers are joined in an organizing drive under the Tor onto Building Trades Council attempt workers Brantford other Troops | LEOPOLDVILLE, The (CP)--Economic and political un- rest was rising Saturday in this tormented Congolese capital where strikes brought police ac- tion and the opposition Abako party warned that it intends to ride the country of Premier Pa- trice Lumumba "by legal or illegal means." Lumumba himself, bitter at the actions of Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjold in insisting on maintaining a neutral position in the dispute over the secession of Katanga province, demanded that the UN pull out all its white troops from The Congo Despite a stiff note of protest {from Hammarskjold over the manhandling of Canadian UN personnel at Leopoldville"s main | airport, Lumumba said that white troops with "bad intentions were | the cause of the trouble He said the Canadians, and not the Congolese, were to blame, They had refused to show identity cards and had "behaved badly,' % Lumumba said a A wwe | The charge was {UN spokesman Canadians "di tity cards badly." NO APOLOGIES So far there has been no expla- nation or apologies to the Cana- dians from the Congolese govern. ment. Officials here said they did not expect any apology--especi- ally in view of Lumumba's state ment despite Canada's sharp protest Thursday, (In Ottawa Friday ¥xternal Affairs. Minister Howard Green declined Lo"Comment on Lumum- ba's criticism of the Canadian Dakar remained calm, with Congo truckloads Senegalese troops standing by at key points in the city of Senegalese rolled authorities the two radio Senegal and Radio Mali broadcast announcements from con Radio Wil h of Sen- the fed egal breakaway eration Mobido Keita, Sudanese mier asd prime minister of the two-state federation was re ported to be held a virtual pris oner by Senegalese troops in the federal pre paiace I'he vith dramatic night after a the Mali cab- broke Friday crisi uddenne pecial session of inet, headed by Keiat, stripped Senegal Premier Mamadou Dia post as federal defence and minister Ita assumed defence and se curity powers himself and pro- claimed a state of emergency Radio Mali I'he peril of hi ink ecurity K over tence of Mali ex he Federal troops--including Sene-| alese--~were ordered to take up| positions outside official build he" . CONFER ON AMENDMENT pold Senghor who Is as Senegal's candidate in Harold left, Aug. 18 on Canada's proposed Aug. 27 presidential elections, is on py Amadeo amendments to U.S, Resolution Ariantina Nations presented to the UN Disarm. sued statement later saying Keita "has tried a coup agains! ; ament Commission | Headquarter York | (AP Wirephoto) Hurricane PACE-SETTER Birthday Party [Heads For Nova Scotia troops. vit wil came up af the NEW YORX (AP) Hurricane! and they'll be dealing with the husband. toured the night Cleo moved northward over open Whole matter there," Green told spots with actress Suzy Parker. sons Saturday headed toward a press conference.) Suzy's escort was Blly Nallace, Nova Scotia, | On the economic front, early argaret's *' ' : cort Rater 4 y Marg iret LL "oid Jaithre sco Storm warnings were out along| Saturday morning grey-uniformed pre-marriage day ro the Atlantic seaboard from Mas-|Congolese police swooped down and Tony will spend sachusetts up as the blustery lady | the iy al Balmoral, the from the south pressed steadily | Royal Family's Scottish holiday | on { bureau said fit home, | The weather LEARNS TO RIDE expecied » confine her wrath ry / fo the off-shore area as she Tony, not notably an 5 a type, has learned to ride to keep moved up along the U.S. coast, Margaret and Queen Elizahot! in the Atlantic fleet de-| company on the horseback ex force were warned to cursions the safety of ports if He has made too al suouiing, Philip's | sports Back in London, the newlyweds denied by a who said the display their iden . they did not behave Green, confers Mario United New tand of a at n LONDON (AP Princess | her Margaret reaches her 30th birth- day Sundav---happily married at last--and still a lively pace-setter on the royal merry-go-round. This has been Margaret's year First came the surprise of her love match with her untitled photographer, Antony Armstrong Jones, Then her dazzling beauty on her vedding day Now, suntanned Caribbean honeymoon, the Prin ces 18 bringing a new note ol informality into royal affairs ON THEIR OWN The highlight came this month, Margaret and Tony called a cab and went off by themselves to see a rowdy musical about Lon. don"s underworld All Margaret's previous theatre outings had the protection of a large escort of guests, This time she and Tony pushed their own way through the crowded foyer and sat In the orchestra shoulder to shoulder with the mob Next evening the Princess and people snap their fingers Gloomy Pointer To Russ Policy LONDON (AP)--~Western Euro Britain's Daily pean countries Saturday summed mented up the Powers trial as a propa "Powers was sent over Russia ganda - showpiece that failed to because America needs to know Hammarskjold sent a strong impress them, what is going on there and could | note to Lumumba Friday threat. The verdict never was in doubt, not find out in other ways The boat. owned by Lakeshore Shing Jo, ak the Sone to call The 10-year sentence generally| "The more the prosecutor Lines Lid.. suffered about $2,000 unless attacks on UN troops stop was regarded as lenient, sought to materialize President damage : Ba Aes * ps ¥ Throughout the continent there Eisenhower in the dock at Pow suckled was sympathy for the accused ers' right hand, the darker grew when its bow plates at once. { It was this note that Lumumba | U-2 pilot, Francis Gary Powers, the shadow of Mr. Khrushchev on Ys wife and parents his left.* They were seen as an ordinary Many ohservers believe the pat family caught up in the elash 000 Go vial may given between the two higgest the West a pointer to powers future Rus But there was little sympathy wry i with the Russian bid to put US by MN 5 4 0h itn thing is that policy in the dock alongside the PV USING the final stages of the platform for bitter trial as American flyer $ y attack on America, the Russians suggest that they do not think of from her open-air stroyer head for necessary. Cleo, born Thursday about 510] delegation miles off Cape Canaveral, Fla, for behind-scenes talks on the was centred some 220 miles Ve of the emergency Security outheast of Cape Cod, Mass., in| Coungil session on the worsening have settled comfortably into the early hours, erisis, heir home in Kensington palace! Heavy rains pelted the New| Delegates awaited though not without some stall York city area Friday as Cleo councd session with growing anxi- troubles Butler Thomas Cronin marched coast complaining of a "clash of aid it UNITED NATIONS (CP)---The arrival of the disgruntled Congo soms one of progre Prince avorite Bul the weather bureau|©! the Congo continued to widen was the result of a low-[the breach with blackmail personalities" with Tony. He said pressure disturbance not con. fy Saas Sec relay. oa: he was unaccustomed to having Mected with the hurricane. The|€ral Dag ammarskjold and " at him. City caught 3% inches of rain, a| mands for withdrawal of al f weord for the date white troops from the Congo Lumumba capped his latest] |outbursi Friday by saying that | Excursion Vessel [iti "th, ate Kaen . because 'Slams Into Pier : the Congo 'is nobody's | MONTREAL (Cp Fifty-two property.' Delegates of nine African mem persons were Injured early Satur. day when the excursion boat Is. ber countries have been confer land King slammed nearly head. ring daily here since Lumumba criticized Hammarskjold for not on into its berth at Victoria pier None of the Injured was hurt forcing breakaway Katanga prov: seriously and most were dis. ince back into the Congo feder- ation, charged from hospital after being yo treated for cuts and bruises, out l'elegraph com have world's gloomy tan policy a LATE NEWS FLASHES they have anything to gain from being on speaking terms with the West at the moment," said the London Times Two Killed, Two Hurt In Collision NORTH BAY, Ont persons. were injured car collided on Highway in the car was Raymond St cm today w troops armed with French embassy here Saturday | refuge in the embassy from Solution Near In Bizarre Murder (AP ey are - KIRKCUDBRIGHT community believe 1! lighthouse murder mystery of Hugh Clark, 64.vear-old 17 about Jean hiker Killed in the transport has not UN Troops Rush To Guard Embassy LEOPOLDVILLE, The Congo (Reuters) sub-machine-ghns armed Congolese nearing They ai vin keeper lighthouse off the Kirkcudbright coast the id of the trial was to upon the 'criminal Spi onage organisa In Rome Messaggern The place accent American e tion.' But 11 Independent 11 and two : and a Killed hitch wo men were killed hen a transport. traile: 10 miles east of here Fimmins, A been identified 23, of Messa prosecutor added that tudy o Rudkenko's final statement reveals 'state ments so strange, falsehoods evident and distortions of truth artificial as confirm once again that with Soviets it is impossible to discussions and dere vel a $0 United Nations rushed to guard the a Belgian civilian sought 0 to the have alter police on tl ordinary vith." dealing we level of good ) aden equally wa he Scott Fre hy nuneiatic ( l otherwise the Swedes Soviet handling of satislying surprise.' Detective n thi sh prosecution oho WINS Hayward, as he approached the finish line way ahead of the pack, to win the first heat | solution of. a bizarre S 3 to find the killer New Ross Scotland. t. Canada's only the Harms piloted by Bob found Superie entered worth race, the lonely in of southwest of the case paved the way today | Suaday's| | Canadians for Thursday's jnci- moved slowly past, east of the!€ly as Premier Patrice Lumumbajdent in which 14 Canadian" UN Counell this weekend," he said. SIS IN 2ND NATION | Premier Faces Quster Threat on a crowd of 400 workers whe walked out at the Portuguese Madail oil plant asking for a 60- per-cent wage increase. Leaders of the strike were beaten down with rifle butts and dragged to giant police vans, Police charged & screaming crowd which then dispersed, A labor ministry spokesman shouted that unless work resumed Immediately, all strikers would be replaced by unemployed. At noon the plant was still shut down, Grim-faced workers huddled in= side while police, their rifles at the ready, kept a cordon around, "There is no limit to these people's demand," the labor min- istry official said angily, (Bitterness and dissatisfaction were felt distinctly in the native city of 300,000 Congolese, a stronghold of the Abako party, AP correspondent Andrew Boro. wiec reported, Congolese shouted Lo reporters that "the government is bad, we want work," Borowiee said.) PATROL STREETS Congolese police walked into another strikebound factory and marched off the strikers at bay- onet point, y In threatening to oust Lu- mumba, Abako Vice-President Vital Moanda said the party in. tends to censure Lumumba's policy and his attacks against the United Nations when the Congo- lese parliament meets in 10 days, "If Lumumba is not voted out of office, we shall strike by other means and it will be right on the target," Moanda said in an inter view, Moanda Is the vislual head of the party whieh controls the lower Congo region and has been demanding autonomy within a federated Congo, The party's traditional head is President Joseph Kasavubu, whe has been silent ever since Lu. mumba opened up fire at Ham. marskjold, Behind Scenes Talks On Congo denounced as blackmail. At a Leopoldville press conference, the premier reiterated his demand that the council send a 14-nation Asian-Afrian observer team to the Congo in place of the UN setup. The 'premier angrily blamed soldiers were manhandled by his troops, ' The Canadians had refused te show identity cards and had "be- haved badly," he added. A UN spokesman in Leopold. ville curtly denied the charge. "They did display. their identity cards, They did not behave badly," he said. UN headquarters said Friday afternoon there had been no ex- planation or apologies to the Canadians from the Congolese government, Officials here said they did not expect any apology-- especially in view of Lumumb statement -- despite Canada's sharp protest, In Ottawa, External Affairs Minister Green declined to com- ment on Lumumba's press con- ference criticism of the Canadian troops. "It will come up at the Security raced on Long Reach near Pies ton Friday. -AP Wirephoto