Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 6 Jul 1961, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY A conference is a meeting al which people talk about things they should be doing. She Osha Times WEATHER REPORT Clear sunny weather is expected to continue for hours. the next 48 Price Not Over VOL. 90--NO. 156 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, JULY 6, 1961 Office Ottawa Authorized es Second Class Mail Department, Post a TWENTY-FOUR PAGES a 2 or ; OLD ENGINE OUT TO PASTURE ton, N.B., and will be officially | bulldozers lift a length of | the track is moved up in front handed over to the city in a | track into place. The engine | in the tricky operation. ceremony July 12. Here rail- rolls over a track length and | --(CP Wirephoto) way workers wait as the two Sword Killer Hanged In Britain LONDON (AP)--Edwin Albert Bush, a 21-year-old Anglo-In- dian, was hanged today for kill- ing the woman manager of a curio shop with an antique sword. Bush's victim was Mrs. Elsie Engine No. 35270, the last steam locomotive on the At- lantic region, is being moved into Natural Park at Monc- Minefield For Border As Iraq Forces Build Six British warships started|the U.A.R. and the Soviet Un- through the Suez Canal, bound jon joined Iraq in demanding| : : for Kuwait. U.A.R. President] | 4 Batten, 59, wife of a prominent ; |the immediate withdrawal of|sculptor, Mark Batten. Nasser aa, Seized ihe chnal the British forces that went to| She was stabbed to death May 1956, made no attempt to block| Kuwait after an appeal from|12 in her shop in Charing Cross them though he is opposed to|the country's ruler, Sheik Ab- Road. A jury decided Bush at- the British force in Kuwait. |dullah As - Salim As - Sabah. | tacked her with intent to rob, a The convoy, comprising the| There were hints the councilicapital offence. under British carrier HMS Centaur, three de-/might ask the Arab League to/law. Bush contended he stabbed stroyers, a tank landing ship| settle the crisis generated by|the woman in a fit of anger KUWAIT TOWN (AP) -- Brit- ain's commander in Kuwait has ordered the desert frontier mined, charging Iraqi forces across the border appear to be building up at an increased pace. Brig. Derek Horsford, defend- ing his decision to mine the frontier, said: "I have been or- dered to come in and organize Iraq's claim to Kuwait Ships Sail, Strife Stays NEW YORK {AP)--Ships con- tinued putting out to sea today as a result of a court order halt- ing the national maritime strike, but they left further labor troub- les behind. Local 88, the largest local of | the International Organization of | Masters, Mates and Pilots, voted | Wednesday to reject an agree- ment won by the union with the American Merchant Marine In- {stitute and the tanker labor serv- |ice committee. The Master, Mates and Pilots Union has a national member- ship of 11,000, of which 2,000 are in Local 88. A spokesman for the labor group said the pact has been accepted in Jacksonville, Fla.; Mobile, Ala., and Balti- more. A majority membership count will decide the issue. Members of local 88 said the |vote represented dissatisfaction |with the lack of a wage review in the four-year contract and with some of the vacation pro- visions. In San Francisco, there were indications there that the rank and file of the Marine Engineers Beneficial Association might re- ject an agreement signed Satur- day night with the Pacific Mari- OTTAWA (CP)--Bank of Can- ada Governor James E. Coyne today lled Prime Minister Diefenbaker "the evil genius be- hind this whole matter" of his by battle with the government. In a blistering statement, Mr. | Coyne said "it was his unbridled malice and vindictiveness" which seized on the issue of a pension increase for the bank governor "as a clever stick with which to beat me and intimidate me." . Mr. Coyne's statement, which hit Parliament Hill during a lull in the hot and heavy Commons debate on the government bill to fire him, also said Finance Minister Fleming "deceived and misled Parliament" over a ques- tion of monetary policy that arose in the winter of 1957-58. DEMANDS HEARING The 50-year-old governor re- newed his demand for a hearing before a parliamentary commit. tee and rejected a statement by Mr. Diefenbaker in the Come mons Wednesday that Mr. Coyne's letters and statements made public hearing the dispute constitute the record before Par- liament. "It is a very incomplete rec- ord," Mr. Coyne said. "I should" be glad to produce more letters, many more." Niagara NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP) A plan by United States officials to place a line of anchored buoys across the Niagara River, 2% miles from the brink of the falls, was revealed Wednesday Buoys Will Mark Danger J. Miller and Reeve Edward Weightman of nearby Chippewa said RCMP who check boats in this area for proper registration and safety equipment are not empowered to stop boats from COYNE BLAMES PM FOR BANK BATTLE. Dief Called 'Evil Genius' a entering dangerous water. After the Americans an. nounced their plan for buoys, the Canadians formed a coms... mice iy Th ont participa ments to the Act. f yor Miller said he will confer = _. with the Niagara Parks Com- A mission, which has in the Aver to the tional night at a meeting called to draft safety measures for the river. Charles Gorman, safety direc- tor for Niagara Falls, N.Y., said his city will have its half of the line in place within a week. The } Fi international bounda Ty runs down the middle of the river at that point, The was called by Ni- agara Falls, Ont., city ii as the result of a boating acci- DEMONSTRATORS IN ALGIERS It wasn't. Thieves walked in through an unlocked door and took the contents. Police said burglars invar- iably smash vases and sugar bowls when they rob homes, because they are favorite places to hide money. | ALGIERS -- Strong security forces guarded a dozen trouble spots throughout Algeria today in the wake of bloody clashes |year-old girl, undergoing psy- chiatric tests, faced a kidnap- ping charge today in the June 22 abduction of Richard Edgington, 5, of Buffalo. Police said Wednesday night of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Jolls, was picked up Monday in the ing of three-year-old Andrew Ashley. Twice before she had been questioned by police, but both times was released. | A heavy-set girl with brown {hair, Chyrel has a history of mental illness. She was com- | mitted to hospital for tests Mon- am caught with my pants down|canal only a few hours after the then I would deserve the sack."| United Arab Republic demanded ® British military sources said/immediate withdrawal of Brit- Hoffa 1 es Les the Iraqis, despite their con-|ish troops from Kuwait. COOKIE JAR tinued insistence that they] A U.A.R. government state- tl And Own Salary [ISNT SAFE means, appear poised for offen-|to the people of Iraq and the en- TORO (CP) N H sive action. use Arab bee. in. Bis. staeti B he thought. a (The Iraq news agency re- ssem said in his staet- al e rules, adopted b ranscom ed that Iraqi Premier Abdel ment that Iraq will combat MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP)--| These new Pp Y| flower vase was a perfect rim Kassem, after a plane/British imperialism "by all Hoffa consolidate control over office must serve at least two the British reports of Iraqi troop|tries in the gulf and until Ku. She Juternational Brogetioogiyears i eal Sihice i a concen id "Th it, the stolen part, is save fe ae | : Brien Know that to on pl restored to ts homeland,| Hoffa dealt his minority op-|least 50 per cent of local union Iraq has not moved a single(Iraq." |position a series of setbacks meetings. {dent. Si _ (he called for decisions on a Hoffa scored his biggest tri-|series of proposals that would {umph in gaining approval of a hyild his union power. |$12,000,000 annual increase in . * N Radio Station SE BUFFALO KILLING Hoffa rammed through the LA PAZ (CP-AP) -- Several|/Que., broadcast a running ac- convention a 50-per-cent raise persons were injured in a fight/count of the bombing and fight in his own salary to $75,000 a between Roman Catholic and|that followed. year from $50,000. It made him a radio station operated by Ca.| In Montreal, Rev. Herman cided over the biggest U.S. nadian priests was bombed. | Morin said the radio station was j,;.01 organization with 1,700,000 The battle took place near Si{ built Hite YeSIS ag0 to =hswer| Veinte tin mine. The number|the need o € miners in the . ioe emit Elo. Veinse was not disclosed. area who were serviced only by| Milton Liss, president of the avi inct'c| Similar attack about a monthielection, lost a series of con- pladed Bear ihe parish priest's] Ei Father Morin added, "but| vention floor battles to limit his Doce (Pius XII) which is oper-| 6, were advised hn Lie and program. i iste |9, miners came to defen e| Liss and others argued Sate Fathers of Mary. Imma. Station when Father Grenier aP- the To ee ad other| against Chyrel Lee Jolls, but he bombs broke windows and | iyi ; y t Troy doors of the buildings. livian ning area abou} 200 right to serve as national union tal tests. A 28% LIVGULASE DECUZLL 0 els A Padus Of abou "200 HIiles. zat man Catholic workers to defend] Father Grenier has been a|83!es: ; the residence and radio station missionary in Bolivia more than, The convention shoved Jocelyn Grenier of Victoriaville, year. fice and future conventions. Eich Def day with parental consent. Ld F ° uotes azl 1les | her out as his abductor. Another | youngster, Susan Benedict, also had been lured from her JERUSALEM (AP) -- Adolf tion of Israeii Attorney-Generalmann. K alte nbrunner sum- home and like Richard, bound Eichmann reached into the SS Gideon Hausner, who urged the/moned Mueller (Gen. Heinrich|and gagged and left by a rail- nate Europe's Jews. __pelled President Judge Moshe|the arrest of Eichmann was out|abductor in an ensuing police But in the process the Je Landau to observe, "You are|of the question hecause Eich-|lineup. branded Eichmann himself as trying to burst through an open/mann was fulfilling a special, 2g i " ; the chosen "head of the na don. sere ancion ive fo Tm BY ym he neo chinery that resulted in 6.000. ven SPECIAL UNIT |the fuebrer himselt." |slaying. District attorney Car- Servatius put Eichmann on the|that Hitler conceived the exter-|fice in the Gestapo -- 'Jewish v stand for the 13th and probably| mination plan and used a special| ; faire was te and in.|other cases. : last day of the defence and|unit to carry it out. This was a|genendent and had the job of| Chyrel's aunt, Mrs. Estelle made a bold move te cast all|Small group of "only several transporting the Jews Ott of Welland, Ont., said Wed- the blame for the holocaust on|hundred" which got its training|jeath camps : nesday the girl was sent to 4 hospital in Rochester for obser- davits made at the Nurenberg| Eichmann listened in rapt at-| Morgan maintained that difficulties in foster homes." trials by Maj. Konrad Morgan, [tention as the Morgan affidavit| "Eichmann was the head of the, She said that when the girl a judge in the SS (Elite Guard) blamed Hitler, police commissar| whole sanction." was released from hospital, she legal branch. + [Christian Wirth, SS'chief Hein-| Eichmann was named as the[tried to bring her to Welland to {ment shifted to Eichmann. Mor- officer with all Reich security| move because Mrs. Ott had too gan said as an SS judge he felt {units in the field, and as a ne- many responsibilities with her CITY EMERGENCY he had to act when he discov-|gotiator with governments of other children ered the extermination plot and|occupied territory for roundups| The Ashley boy's body was PHONE NUMBERS he tried to bring Eichmann be-|and deportation of Jews. Judge/found in Delaware Park lake POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 would get control of the oil-rich/ ment said British forces in the A dues increase and broad new the convention, require that place to hide his $1,450 in survey of areas near the Ku-|legitimate ways . . . until the soldier.") (In the UN Security Council/and cleared the way to a new| Hoffa obviously was in full |dues at an all - day and night Communist tin miners that the highest paid union official a C i ion." yark, N.J., Local 478 and Homemade bombs fashioned|? Communist station. Newark Oblate Fathers of Mary Imma- He € pealed to them. {Hoffa proposals would limit lo-|Would be held in abeyance, against the Communists. The|five years and came back to/through new provisions to limit As she was being brought in files today to show that Hitler three-man tribunal to acceptMueller, Eichmann's chief).|road track. 000 deaths. The documents e's t a b lished| , Z2ter in the statement Mor-| man Ball said no charges were the fuehrer. {first by liquidating the mentally| vation "because she was having Servatius introduced the docu- ich Himmler and others. man dealing with all problems live with her but Canadian au- |fore a special SS tribunal in|Landau asked Eichmann if this| June 25, two days after he was A the defence of this country. If 1/and a fleet tanker, entered the after she called him a "nigger. [time Association in New York. sheikdom only by peace ful|sheikdom constituted a danger powers today helped James R. candidates for national union] 'oagh. wait border Wednesdqy, denied}liberation of our Arab coun- {five-year term as union presi-| charge of the 2,000 delegates as |session of a special Teamsters broke out Tuesday night after BUILT 3 YEARS AGO in the United States. But he from sticks of dynamite ex- . The Communists planned a|Hoffa's only opponent for re- culate. The station is located in a Bo di letion of th hon 8 "ical union autonomy and the|P€nding completion of the men- station, which is run by Rev.|Canada for several months last, members in national union of- for questioning, Richard pointed invented the plan to extermi-|them in toto. His eagerness im-| They declared to the court that] Susan identified Chyrel as her West German counsel Robert gan said Eichmann's IV-B-4 of-| planned immediately in the This was done through affi-|ill in Germany. {HEADED OPERATION ments to the evident, satisfac-| Then a portion of the state: involving the Jews, as a liaison|thorities would not allow the 11944 {was a true descri "This was referred to Kalten- function. brunner (Gestapo chief Ernest, The former Kaltenbrunner), who received ant-colonel 'my order for the arrest of Eich-|and replied: feet had been tied. Gestapo lieuten- leaped to his feet Edgington boy's jungle helmet 'were analyzed and police said {hat |that a warrant would be issued | 5, Kidnap Charge For Jolls Girl BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP)--A 15-|they bore the same character-| istics as those of the Jolls girl. However, the tests, conducted at the FBI laboratory in Washing- {ton, did not conclusively state {the hairs to be Chyrel's, the {report added. Richard told police his abduc- tor had worn his helmet for a [short time and then returned it to him. Wednesday between troops and Moslems demonstrating against partition of this North African territory. . At least 86 persons were killed and 300 wounded in the clashes. The death toll was ex- pected to top 100 when all vic- tims have been reported. The French reported six of their men dead and 20 wounded. Most Moslems returned to work *today after the midnight expiration of the general strike order from the insurgent Na- tional Liberation Front. Algiers was bustling with ac- tivity again. Reports said con- ditions were normal in other coastal cities and in most of the interior. But precautions were taken in fear of further disorders dur- Chyrel was questioned by po- |was found. Neighbors had com- |plained that she was offering | ductor of the two five-year-olds had done. ing the funerals of those killed. More Rioting Feared In Algiers French officials said that for the first time in Algeria uni- formed insurgents appeared openly in the' streets to egg on the demonstrators to attack troops with stones, iron bars, knives and other weapons. They said the death toll placed another obstacle in the way of a workable association between the European and Moslem com- unities in an independent Al- geria. The 24-hour strike, called to protest President Charles de Gaulle's threat to partition Al- geria into European and Mos- lem enclaves, was 90-per-cent effective and bolstered the exile rebel regime's prestige and bar- gaining position with the French. dent June'11 in which three per- sons were swept over the Horse- shoe Falls and a fourth carried into a power intake above the cataract. The Canadians at the meeting criticized federal re gu] ations controlling pleasure craft in Canada. Donald Steward, commodore of the Greater Niagara Boat Club here, said the Canada Shipping Act does not require boats 18 feet long or less to carry an anchor. The boat in which the two men and women were riding was 14 feet long. It upset in the rapids. Mr. Steward said the 50 feet of line stipulated by the act or anchor-carrying boats is not suf- ficient. He said the act should be revised to make it manda- tory for all boats to carry anch- ors and lines suitable for the area in which they operate. CAN'T STOP BOATS Mr. Steward, Mayor Franklin Cova Duke Goes West After All LONDON (AP)=The treasury has decided against making a grant of £140,000 ($392,000) to prevent the Goya painting of the Duke of Wellington from going to the United States. An American millionaire, Charles Wrightsman of New York, purchased the Goya at auction last month for £140,000. Many persons in Britain called on the government to get the portrait for the National Gallery as it can do under law. Wright. man then offered the picture to the National Gallery for what it The slaughter came, when {French {troops opened due Oh demonstrators at a string of investigation of the kidnap-slay-|their children candy, as the ab-|centres in Algeria, mainly at |Constantine and towns west of Algiers. EDMONTON (CP) -- The Ca- nadian Prairies are on the brink of a drought disaster, Manitoba Agriculture Minister George | Hutton said Wednesday. | "July 15 is D-day," he said. "If we don't get rain by then, we've got a disaster--a serious {one." Mr. Hutton said the Manitoba cabinet will ask the federal gov- ernment to declare the Prairies a disaster area if the drought situation is not eased in the next few days. Meanwhile, in Ottawa, H. H. Hannam, president o fthe Cana- dian Federation of Agriculture, said the Prairie drought is as- suming the proportions of a na- tional calamity. He said crop insurance schemes are not sufficient to meet the emergency and called for immediate government con- !sideration as to what steps |should be taken to meet the | "income crisis" drought - hit farmers will face. {MANITOBA WORST HIT Manitoba has been harder hit ption of his|reported missing. His hands and|than Alberta and Saskatchewan. ti Mr. Strands of hair found in the would be lucky if no more than|Saskatchewan 50 per cent of its crop is lost. " Dates have been set by the 'West Drought Near Disaster provincial government for re- gional meetings with municipal officials to learn the water, feed and seed requirements of the districts. Wednesday's light rains which raised hope of relief in Alberta and Saskatchewan failed to reach Manitoba. Weather fore- casts are for widely - scattered showers over the Winnipeg and Flin Flon areas, but chances of a badly-needed downpour still seem poor. The United States weather bu- reau, in its long-range forecast issued last month, predicted the Prairie region would remain dry, at least until Mr. Hutton's D-day of July 15. SHOWERS ARE LIGHT In Alberta and Saskatchewan, Wednesday's light showers pro- vided a largely inadequate an- swer to prayers for rain from congregations of almost every denomination. And showers fore- | cast for today seemed likely to do little more than settle the dust. Effects of the drought con- nued to spread. More claims crop insurance board, largely from east-central parts of the province. Four fishing vessels from Hutton said the province|were received Wednesday by the| the fleet of the McNeal Co., Inc., of Reedville, Va., had room to spare when they were brought into a huge drydock REPAIR PARADE at the Bethlehem Steel Co.'s Baltimore yard for routine re- conditioning and repair. Work on all four ships, used for catching non-edible fish for manufacture of fish meat, oil and solubles, was completed in three days. ~(AP Wiggphoto)

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