THOUGHT FOR TODAY Life is not a cup to be drained -- it's a measure to be filled. dhe Oshavon Time WEATHER REPORT Warm sunny weather is expect- ed to continue for the next few days. , VOL. 90--NO. 150 Price Not Over OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, JU TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES Authorized as Second Class Mail NE 28, 1961 huthorized : 10 Cents Per Copy Yor Old Man Beaten To Death 2 HULL, Que. (CP) -- An el- Provincial police sent out a # derly garage owner was found call to all police units in east- beaten to death early today, his ern Canada to search for the skull crushed by an axe and the missing car. : body tossed into the basement A motorist who stopped for of his garage at Ironside, three gasoline discovered the interior miles north of this capital area of the garage in a shambles and Adrien Desjardins, 65-year-old telephoned police. Provincial bachelor, apparently was slain constable Glen Murray discov- in the kitchen of his adjoining ered Desjardins' body, a blood- home by a killer who looted the smeared axe lying a few feet place and escaped in Desjar- away. dins' car. Police said Desjardins is be- 1 lieved to have kept a large sum : : of Money 1 the building hs the 'ould find' trace of it. De Gaulle co tine"oo racer Pushes For . Algiers Peac rebbery and murder," constable Murray reported. PARIS (AP) -- A stepped-up drive by President de Gaulle § a | EUROPEAN CONTESTANTS Simone Darot. The girls leave today for Miami where the finals will be held for Miss Universe. --(CP wirephoto) New! York. Left to right are Miss England, Arlette Dob- son; Miss Germany, Marlene Schmidt, and Miss France, Three aspirants for the title of Miss Universe get together on the roof of the Hotel Del- monico during a stopover in Farm Tractors Block Port | PARIS (Reuters) -- Farmers|River Orb. police intervened fo sealed off the channel port of{avert a battle between farmers Calais with hundreds of tractors and hundreds of angry tourists today as renewed peasant dem- and truck drivers at a road- onstrations broke out in the|block which had been in place north of France and the wine- for 34 hours. growing south. Tractors barred the main The roadblocks, set up after| Paris-Nimes road near Nimes) I gers on the night ferry!and virtually isolated the town from Dover had left for Paris, of Bethune, in the industrial were removed two hours later north. and the farmers headed for the, With farmer's organizations town hall to lodge protests in central France taking part, against government agricultural demonstrations in the farm re- policy. : volt were the most widespread The farm revolt continued 10 since the movement started in cause serious disruption of tour- Brittany over potato prices. ist traffic in southern France, -- - - bs To Enter Berlin Talk ch nicer, LONDON (CP) -- Britain is/day night in a battle for control willing to negotiate with the So-|of the railroad line at the wine] Arabs Oppose MN L ] Claim To Kuwait oii vee tie fe jon Beer ove te CAIRO (Reuters) -- Most of nition of your homeland." he lan said Tuesday. : Sd the Arab bloc today appeared told the crowd This was the first official indi-| y I} " lined up in opposition to Iraq's' The state-controlled Baghdad cation by Britain that she would £ 1 n claim to Kuwait. radio claimed "a wave of ter-/enter negotiations over the Ber- The United Arab Republic ror has been unleashed by im- lin issue since the conference of . ' Tuesday night announced its op-|Perialist agents in Kuwait" foreign ministers on Berlin Berlin Pact ity Mr K Warns The federation's executive LJ LJ | : council said in a statement that 4 ' : retarv-ceners 4 3 LONDON (Reuters) -- Nikita] Moscow has spurned all friendly The oil - rich Persian Gulf secrelary general vi Be Aah Soviet Union over this problem. Khrushchev warned today that|gestures by the United States sheikdom also has received Soule. , | "But they must be negotia-|p, io" wouid not submit to in-|and has accelerated a drive for backing from Saudi Arabia, Jor-* a tions, not asking us to submit to} " : Wert bolstered by British troops 3 reiterated the pe have Collinuiications with) 2then sur country's capacity for Han xay 32 g demonstrators whose withdrawal after Kuwait|{ernment's view that Britain and | oye vhody, But the freedom of : gathered in front of his palace. gained independence last week her allies have no intention of | on ic tions must be settled visiting North Vietnamese Pre- mier Pham Van Dong and his delegation, Soviet government e report today criticized the navy and the designers and builders of the radar "Texas '0DD BIRD HAS TIN ROOF BLUES TAMPA, Fla. (AP)--Bird watchers have the rare op- portunity of observing a crazy, mixed up woodpecker who dislikes wood but just loves metal roofs, Seems this disoriented bird prefers to pit his bill against the metal roof of the Joseph Canto home instead of the nice soft trees which abound in the area. Mac Wants late Investigators said they believe dins. The garage owner kept . night for a quick end to the seven- A neighbor, Mrs. Mary Car- way today. most of Tuesday working on a with rebel leaders and a re- . : t eric F newed threat to partition ALP he Service station . lem sectors if negotiations fail Man Beaten months -- one way or another-- in order to make French forces men, is tied down in Algeria |i" ¥ hat appeared to be a gang- Their absence has weakened land revenge beating, under- Algerian drive at a garden tion today and police said they see, Will question him as soon as he for the return of one division ing of the Chez Paree night club from Algeria. Without fixinglon downtown Stanley Street. ! the killer was known to Desjar- two watchdogs chained outside the rear of the building and resi- dents in the area said the ani- mals made no noise during the year i jar wi le year Algerian war was under riére, said Desidrdins spent It includes bringing French ¢, nit 4 d xc) SA b mmer cottage at a nearby | Edi flivisions back from the North jake, He returned home around | rican territory fo the conti-lnine o10lock Tuesday night and nent, resuming suspended talks was seen shortly after closing geria into European and Mos- again. De Gaulle's aim, according to informed sources, is to break I M t ] the Algerian impasse in three n on rea 'G Vi . avaliable by fail for ihe loom. ANG Victim ing crisis in Berlin. ets a i The bulk of France's armed , MONTREAL (CP) Michel forces, an estimated 500.000 Listorti, his face mashed to pulp the North Atlantic Treaty Or- Cn an emergency operation ganization ' defence position in '@'° Tuesday night. Western Europe. The 356 - year - old night club De Gaulle disclosed his new Owner was in satisfactory condi-| sii residantia Ely: iy Fhe ay night. In an gets enough strength to talk. informal discussion with report., Listorti was one of three men ers, said he had issued orders charged last year for the wreck- dates, he added he would order Tuesday night, he staggered others back as well. A French into a rooming house in central division is about 15,000 men. Montreal and collapsed UNITY HOUSE, Pa (AP)--| AFL-CIO leaders say the world situation is so serious Congress should arm President Kennedy with powers fo mobilize the| economy "to meet any eventual- as y « 15 * ree bb v Katanga will Stay Independent Congo (Reuters) President Moise Tshombe today declared |Katanga Province will remain | independent of The Congo. | "The government and I will never retreat,' the Katanga | ---- |leader told a press conference | four days after his return from two months' imprisonment by | the central government at Leo-| poldville | | Mayors, Reeves Rap 'Truth Squad' Scheme LONDON, Ont. (CP) The! squad proposal in a preface to reeves association and similar president of the Ontario Mayors his address, and said his depart-| groups will be asked for opin- and Reeves Association spoke ment will probably seek thelions on the need for local au- out Tuesday night against gov-lopinion of the assoeiation's ex- tonomy, on conflict of interest ernment ruth squads' which ecutive on it and on equalization of land might rove the province fo in ; as value assessment vestigate the affairs of muni MAY INDI ATE During business sessions del- palities. . Later in his speech egates approved a resolution Municipal Afairs Minister that while municipal scandals ypar the municipalities 10b by a Warrender earlier had told del- have occurred i Oni five ori{heir provincial representatives egates to the association's con-| Six of Ontario's 900 municipali-| jp, electoral groups to convince vention that his department is|ties, these few incidents havelinom that all primary and sec considering forming roving in-/indicated to some extent that| ondary school costs should be spection squads "to drop in on|political mordlity in Ontario| 40" provincial responsibil- A ! any municipality at any time to! was at a low ebb ity men--to their deaths. see how you are conducting! He did not indicate whether "Approval was given a resolu- The report--which added that vour business." the roving squads had been pro- tion seeking an amendment to the air force must also shoulder Mayor Garnet Newkirk ofjposed because of this,, or the Municipal Franchise Ex- its share of the blame--referred Chatham, association president,|whether they would specifically tension Act to give those now|!0 "buckpassing" and. '"'the said he did not think elected/seek evidence of corruption entitled only to vote for mayor|hodge-podge of indecision." representatives would appreci-) Mayor Newkirk said electediand aldermen the vote for] The terrific forces of winds ate "a truth squad m ov in g|representatives have not shown|school board members and pub- and waves were clearly miscal- swiftly through the province concern at evidence of malad-|lic utilities commissioners, and'culated, the report said. "1 know the representatives ministration in a few munici- on all matters except financial The 5,000-ton steel structure. would not like to be regarded as|palities because they know most! questions and bylaws perched like a giant three- criminals. They do not feel they elected officials are honest The convention adopted a res- legged stool in open sea 80 are criminals." He said there must be more olution requesting establishment miles off the New Jersey coast, The minister made the roving respect for elected represent-| of a special commission to in- sank last Jan. 15 during gale atives, and added i Peo-lquire into "the effectiveness of winds and waves. CITY EMERGENCY ple are not going to seek mu-|our educational policies particu- Earlier this month, the air| PHONE NUMBERS nicipal office and stay in it ifilarly in secondary education." a | 1 | they are going to be slandered."| The resolution was coneerned/force ordered Col. William POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 During his address Mr. War-|that secondary schools did not Banks to stand court martial, HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 | position in a statement saying against pro-Kassem elements. ended in deadlock in 1959 it could support Iraq's move In Beirut, the deputy ruler of| Macmillan told Parliament he only if it was "a complete ex- Kuwait and former security|would like to "see us back" to pression of the will of the Arab chief, Sheik Abdullah Mubarak, the position of two years ago people based on freedom of headed back for the sheikdom when there seemed a chance of choice." Tuesday after talks with the friendly negotiations with the ; A spokesman for the league A timidation and a German peace World domination. San, 1ram and Lebanese news. coun in Cairo said the gu bisickmall, . He It ime roiiser treaty would be signed, Moscow The government should act| p " Ki t. raline: Sheik Sir plans to meet in emergency ses- ay oa an artificial radio reported. immediately, the union leaders n BUwail, ruling sheik NIrigon goon to discuss problems ©! manu hose of gaining There will be no blockade of said, to arouse the American) Abdullah as-Salim As-Sabah re-l arising from Iraq's claim crisis for the purpose of gaining o Berlin," the Soviet Pre- people to the gravity of the in- peated. Tuesday his determina-| Kuwait's 2.400 - man_garrison, their ends. mier said. "West Berlin willl ternational crisis and "stren- SiS G5 claim : - tad; "If things develop for the was cancelled following Iraq's abandoning their obligations inlhy a treaty with the German worst, Allah forbid. then vou move. Four British frigates lie preservation of the freedom of pemocratic Republic" (East are the protectors and ammu-'in thé Persian Gulf the people of West Berlin Germany) : EEL g ---- - Khrushchev spoke to a Soviet- Vietnamese '"'friendship meet- ing" in the Kremlin attended by and party members, and more than 2,000 Moscow workers. Navy Blamed For Texas Tower Tragedy WASHINGTON (AP)--A Sen- he said Tower" that collapsed in a bliz- zard and carried all hands--28 ad JOHN'S, Nid. (CP) = ewfoundland firefighters, their spirits lifted by a steady down- pour of rain, prepared today for any surprises the province's for- est fires might throw at them. Deputy Resources Minister Stuart. Peters said Tuesday the fire-threatened community of Gambo, 110 miles northwest of | here, had tons of equipment on! hand and firefighters were pre- pared to put up a stiff fight. However, - Mr. Peters said, seven evacuated communities along Bonavista Bay, 120 miles from here, would remain evacu- ated for at least two more days until officials were sure the flames would remain under con- trol A co-erdinating render said his department re-/prepare those not going on to| charged with being derelict in spects local autonomy and has|university to enter directly into/duty in connection with the no intention of forcing its atten-|husiness or industry : tragedy. Banks was in command centre was set on unwilling municipali-L. An Ottawa proposal for pen-|of the Boston air defence centre up at Glovertown, 15 miles from sions for municipal councillorsiand the tower was part of its/Gambo and 35 miles from Trin- He said the mayors andiwgs rejected as impractical. [radar network. lity on Bonavista Bay to keep) » tions ties Labor Would Give JFK More Power Rain Welcomed By Firefighters JFK SPEAKS ON BERLIN RIGHTS 'Nothing Can Change Position' WASHINGTON (AP) -- Presi- around the word '"'crisis" in ref- dent Kennedy said today that erence to the city. nothing Russia does can affect Ang, saying Khrushchev had the West's rights in Berlin. He (hreatened to sign a peace told a press conference the|ireaty with the Communist re- crisis over Berlin is "Soviet gime in East Germany, he used # manufactured." Iquotation marks again around t Kennedy said the Western al p treaty. 5 lies formed alliances after the gy. ch hav has said this Second World War that are, end Allied rights in West wholly defensive in nature. He pain warned in a statement at his! ot : press conference: lateral "The Soviets would make al; grave mistake if they supposed! that allied unity and determina-| tion can be undermined by! threats or fresh aggressive acts. "There is peace in Germany and in Berlin. If it is disturbed Many Dead | In Japanese | Rainstorms TOKYO (AP) Torrential rains pounding central Japan for the fourth straight day brought devastation and death to a widespread area today. Eighty-eight persons were re- ported killed, 86 missing and 136 injured in the downpour which began Saturday and has contin- ued with little interruption. In- termittent rain was forecast for the rest of the week. Thousands w ere evacuated from the lower reaches of the flooded Tenryu River, 100 miles west of Tokyo, as gales were opened in two of Japan's largest dams to empty dangerously high reservoirs. Communications were dis- rupted and streets and fields flooded or buried by landslides over a vast area stretching from Sendai in tlic northeast to Hiro- shima in the west. Parts of the| major cities of Kobe, Osaka, Nagoya and Tokyo were af-| : fected. 5 is clear that such uni- action cannot affect these rights, which stem from the surrender of Nazi Ger- many," Kennedy declared. In response to a question, Kennedy said no plan for partial mobilization has been pla and 1 | {before him so far but various it will be a direct Soviet re-|groups are considering the prob- sponsibility." {lem created by Berlin, and "of In his statement on Berlin, | course we will be considering a Kennedy put quotation marksiwhole variety of measures. Eichmann Story Brings Laughter JERUSALEM (Reuters) -- A spite persistent appeals by the hushed courtroom burst into(Italian government, the Italian laughter today as Adolf Eich-|fascist party and even the Nazi mann characterized himself as [foreign ministry. a mere clerk unable to do any-! «it was all in vain," Eich. thing about the transfer of an|mann said, "and my depart. Recognize China' Jap Group Urges | HONG KONG (AP)--A five- ; member group from Japan's JEK MEETS PRESS ruling Liberal Democratic { arty returned from a two-week talian Jewish: . visit to Peking today and called 2 » fialian Je a nies a, ent had to inform the gn foi the establishment of diplo- oug as 1 tests by Haly's fascist regime. sty gat Hie Jewess matic' rélations between Red The court was silent as the fon yey sent fo a concentra- thila and ov by Tokuda former SS lieutenant - colonel : e group, hea in bis ow in utmanro t tey otand For (85 seo poi bape relations committee, conferred tified only at Kotsi. aos Strongman with Premier Chou En-lai ur- But laughter erupted among ing its visit, an unofficial mis-| New Party the spectators -- including for | Leaves For U.S.A. Sion. mer concentration camp prison. REGINA (CP)--Premier T. C. ers--when he said: GENEVA (Reuters) -- Gen, Douglas announced today that, "I myself did not order the Phoumi Nosavan, strongman de- he will allow his name to stand transfer of the Jewess Kotzi to|fence minister and deputy pre- for the national leadership of a concentration camp. . , , I|mier in the government of Laos, {the New Party {only transmitted orders." jist hele BY i Bas He said he would not cam-| This was in keeping with {a0 Dean Rusk in Wash Secre- aign for the leadership. "I|Eichmann's steadfast theme in Son. have always said the job should his testimony, now in its second|, \0savan left the l4-country seek the man, not the man the|week that he was a mere cog L20lian conference a day after national defence in all possible job," he told a press confer-|in' the machinery of Nazi bu. American delegate Averell Har. emergencies." ence |reaucracy riman himself returned to Wash- George Meany, AFI, - C10 Mr. Douglas said: "It seems The § head of the @ iington for consultations. president, said he personally|to me that the issues at stake The former head of the Ges: prince Boun Oum, premier of wants the United States to go|today are so vital to the people(t8P0's Jewish department, who ihe Laotian government whe further and resume full nuclear|0f Saskatchewan, whose cause I/iS charged with complicity in|delegated Nosavan to go te testing. have championed for over ajthe killing of 6,000,000 Jews, de-|Washington, earlier left by air He said the present test ban quarter of a century, that I must|scribed how the woman was| for Luang Prabang, the royal is a gentlemen's agreement and|d0 everything I can to ensure|transferred to a concentration|Laotian capital, to report to that the U.S. has no way of lie successful launching of the camp from the ghetto in Riga, King Savang Vatthana on plans Kt owing whether the Russians N°" Farty." |Latvia, and refused release de-|for a coalition government. are observing it. DIDN'T ELABORATE The AFL-CIO foreign policy| resolution adopted Tuesday did| not elaborate on the standby powers recommended for Ken- nedy. Presumably they would include wage-price conirvis as well as economic mobilization powers. { One de velop ment Tuesday| came with the arrival here of President Paul Hall of the Sea- farers Union, who promised "a hell of a fight" in court to try to block an 8¢.day Taft-Hartley law injunction to end the U.S. maritime strike. Hall came here to confer with members of the executive council. In talking with report- ers afterward Hall said his un- ion plans to oppose an injunc- tion on the ground that it is un- necessary. mre | track of thg supply needs of firefighters and evacuees. The fire, although contained | by a light drizzle, was still burn- ing a "lot of forest," Mr. Peters said, and the threat was still quite real. He added: "We've made a net gain today and that's something we haven't been able to do lately." Earlier Tuesday, Mr. Peters announced a magisterial inquiry would be held into the fires, many of which are believed to have been the work of arsonists. He said names of suspects had been turned over to the RCMP who are expected to make arrests shortly. The| RCMP also is inquiring into the| Japanese Prime Minister possibility of equipment sabo-| Hayato lkeda, wearing a tex- tage. During the weekend straps, as (10-gallon) hat tries on a from portable pumps being used pair of cowboy boots present. | to' Honolulu. Dr. W. H. Jack- | for Gov. Price Daniel of the in the Hare Bay area disap-| ed to-him along with the hat | son, Jr. (right) ~Aboline, | Lone Star state. { peared. on him arrival at Travis Air | Tex., Southern Baptist mis- --(AP. Wirephoto} EASTERN WESTERNER 60 miles North of San Francisco today Force Base about sionary, presented the Texas gear and declared the premier for a refueling stop enroute | an honorary citizen of Texas