THOUGHT FOR TODAY There are two reasons why we mistrust others; we don't know them; we do. Mra [~ he Oshavon Times WEATHER REPORT Cloudy today and tonight with rain and the odd thundershower, Price Not Over 10 Cents Per VOL. 90--NO. 157 Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, JULY 7, 1961 Authorized as Second Class Post Office Department, Moil Ottawe EIGHTEEN PAGES PEDIGREE PARKER of Loridon, far from her fav- orite pasture. Winnie was waiting outside a London ho- tel before appearing at a children's party in aid Invalid Children's Aid ty. Jersey cow, seems rather un- disturbed at being tethered to a parking meter in the heart | US. Jets Carried Winnie Wilts, a wa --(CP Wire Gunman Gets Five Years A 28-year-old Toronto man! Hope said he fired ahead of was sentenced to five years in|Mazar in an effort to keep the prison Thursday when he was grill manager from dashing found guilty of shooting with in- away. tent to wound an Oshawa res-| Ati the beginning of the trial, % |taurant manager on December| Crown Attorney Bruce Affleck 1 120, 1960. and defence council E. R. Love- : | Harold William Hope was con-|kin of Newca:ile agreed that | |victed of the charge by Judge Hepe shot Mazar. ! |Arthur R. Willmott who pre-| Crux of the trial was, there- { |sided at the Ontario County |fore, intent. Hope testified he { |Court at Whitby. |fired the shots in an effort to i | Hope, it was learned during prevent Mazar from calling for : |the trial, fired five shots from help. None of the shots were : a .38 Special when he became aimed directly at Mazar but ! linvolved in a fracas with res- were directed in front of him, | |taurant manager Victor Mazar he said. * of the Oshawa South End Grill.| The four rounds fired off out- Two of the shots fired by side, testified Hope, were aim- Hope struck Mazar's midsec-ed ahead of the fleeing mana- tion. ger. He did not intend to hit The incident arose during the the man, { early hours of Dec. 20 when| Mazar was cut down by two Hope entered the grill. He order-| of the four shots, the court | ed a sandwich, milk and coffee, |learned. the court learned. In his summation to the photo) | Becoming annoyed when re-|Judge, Crown Attorney Affleck ---- |peatedly asked by the night said there was a conflict of evi- manager Mazar to hurry up and |dence given to the Court by the |finish his coffee, Hope started/two men, Mazar, said Mr. to argue. | Affleck, testified he was taken | Mazar told the Court he then outside, stood up and fired at by went back to the phone and| Hope from a distance of six to | dialed for the police. Hope testi- eight feet. {fied he followed Mazar to the| Judge Willmott, in handing phone, whipped out his revolver down his decision, said that he of the Socie- and motioned Mazar away from the phone. Thinking that Mazar was re- luctant to move from the phone because the gun "might not be real", Hope testified he shot a Hundreds To Death WASHINGTON (CP) -- Onelso far this year there has been|when suddenly the mechanism day last spring a four-engined|no fatal crash of these jets op-|unlocked and the jet started | i American-made Douglas DC-8|erated by U.S. carriers. {down. It dove for 29,000 feet be- round into the floor. jetliner took off from Lisbon, | But that doesn't include the|fore the pilot could pull it out] Mazar clung to the phone and| Portugal, on its way to Ca-/crash of a 707 on an American|and bring the passengers in'was struck by Hope's fist, | racas, Venezuela. Minutes later|Airlines training flight last Jan- safely. The jet showed it had| Ordered outside by Hope,| was accepting the evidence of the wounded grill manager. Dr. H. L. Hutchison, chief psy- chologist &t the Toronto Psychi- atric Hospital testified Hope had a "neurotic tendency to develop depression". Hope, he said, is unable to master environmental stresses, He does not have a sadistic Redlands, Calif., Thursday for burial of three genera- HOLIDAY SEQUEL Nine caskets are lined up in Montecito Memorial Park, the jet crashed and all occu- pants perished. A few months earlier, a Boe- ing 707 commercial jet with 73 persons aboard, including 18| American Olympic skaters, ap-| proached Brussels for a land-| ing, circled erratically and then plunged into a farmyard. Death came to all those aboard as well as a farmer on the ground. Causes of these and some other major accidents in which the 707 and the DC-8, were in- uary when six died -- three in- structors and three trainee pi- lots. PASSENGERS SURVIVE | There have been other acci-| dents on American territory. An| example was the Jan. 19 flight of a DC-8 operated by a Mexi-| can line. It took off in a blind-| ing snowstorm from New York with 106 occupants and crashed | moments later, killing four crew members. All others volved remain unexplained. CRASHES COSTLY About a half - dozen of these emerged alive. Five weeks earlier, another DC-8 was involved in the worst |disaster in aviation history. structural strength. In that ter-|Mazar said he was lined up and attitude towards other people,| tions of the Wilburn C. Gibson family. They died in the na- tion's worst holiday traffic accident Friday. Two others '|strong enough to interfere with ACT ON TCA TACTICS JODOIN ASKS STARR Airline Attitude 'Concerns' CLC OTTAWA (CP) Claude Jodoin, president of the Cana- dian Labor Congress, said today he has asked Labor Minister Starr to use his influence to halt "intimidation and strike-break- ing tactics" by the Crown-owned Trans-Canada Air Lines, A federal mediator is in Mont- real now holding meetings with company and union representa- tives in an attempt to avert a strike of TCA flight attendants scheduled for July 21. The talks--in their second day --were initiated by Mr. Starr. Mr. Jodoin said that plans be- ing initiated by TCA in its dis- pute with the Canadan Air Line Flight Attendants' Associ- ation (CLC) threatened the safety of passengers. The president of the 1,100,000- member CLC issued the text of his letter to the press. In the letter he said the CLC is becoming "increasingly con- cerned' at the attitude and poli- cies of the Crown-owned TCA. "We have before us clear evi- dence that the management of TCA has adopted policies which are in direct contradiction to the intent of your government's la- bor legislation and are a viola- tion of the right of Canadians to bargain collectively through a union of their choice." Mr. Jodoin accused the com- pany of "threatening to fire any employees who exercised their legal right to strike." "At the same time the com- pany started enlisting strike breakers from within and out. side 2 the company," he said. Mr. Jodoin said the union has been negotiating with the com- pany since August, 1960, The company had violated the prin- ciple of federal legislation by making the threats and hiring the strike breakers before the conciliation board appointed this Spring had reported to Mr, tarr, OTTAWA (CP)--A Commons committee said today it doesn't believe present competition is the economical operation of Trans-Canada Airlines. The committee on govern. ment - owned railways, airlines and shipping declined, however, died in the same accident. --(AP Wirephoto) rifying episode it withstood shot at by Hope with the re-/added Dr. Hutchison. pressure equivalent to 6%, times|maining four shells in the re-| A Toronto psychiatrist, Dr. R. the force of gravity. volver. {E. Ball, said the shooting inci- |dent related to Hope's back-| | ground. Hope, he said, needed {a minimum of two years psy- {chiatric treatment. | ENGLISH STREET | REAL EYESORE ROMFORD, England (AP)--The people of Brock- ley Crescent walked weep- S. Africa Fears Angola Invasion JOHANNESBURG (AP) --!| The South African government South Africa has moved troops contends that its racial segrega-| and ajr and sea forces into the|tion policies in South-West Af-| UNITED NATIONS (AP) -- Russia is expected to demand that the Security Council set a deadline for Britain to withdraw her troops from Kuwait, Soviet delegate Platon Moro- zov made plain he would seek Reds May Seek Kuwait Deadline huge territory of South-West Africa to guard against any Negro revolt or invasion from strife-torn neighboring Portu- guese Angola. At the same time, South Af- rica ~--which rules South-West Africa under an old League of Nations mandate -- has barred new American jets which went|After a loss of communication into operation about two years/between the jet and New York| ago have been involved in fatal airport controllers, the DC - 8 crashes which brought death to|went off course and "collided some 240 persons. In addition a|with a propellor-driven passen- number have been damaged ex-|ger plane. Flaming debris tensively or destroyed in non-|plunged into a crowded Brook- fatal crashes with costs esti-|lyn neighborhood. A total of 135 mated at more than $100,000,- persons met death nine days ¢ a 000. before Christmas, including 128 entry to a United Nations com- Causes included pilot training|in the two planes. {mittee instructed to investigate problems, weather conditions,| A contrast was the intense| charges of racial discrimination. landing and takeoff control,|drama of a Boeing 707 over the] The UN investigators are some initial mechanical defi. Atlantic hack in 1959. Cruising|touring other African countries Ciehles and he Wiknowii. Gi wo UUl--teet, the jel 8 aulo-|.U- LLELLIEN dvaldinng, 1b The U.S. Civil Aeronautics matic pilot had been locked and|from South-West Africa. Board feels these problems are|the chief pilot took a breather] The committee, in a telegram under control. It observes that'in the passenger compartment{to UN Secretary-General Dag Liberal Raps rica as well as South Africa are |a domestic matter and no con-| (cern of the United Nations. | South-West Africa was a pre-| {First World War German col-| ony. It is 317,725 square miles| in area and has a population of] about 415,000 Negroes and 50,-| 000 whites. | It represents a buffer state {between white-ruled South Af-| {rica and Negro independent] |states of Africa : The main concern at present {is the 900-mile frontier between {South-West . Africa and Portu-| {guese Angola. A unit of South| Africa's mobile watch began pa-| | trolling this border after the out- {break of the African rebellion| against Portuguese authorities| {in Angola, Planes and helicon-| ters of the South African Air ing through their little street today. And it looks as though they will go right on weeping until some ge- nius finds a scentless sys- tem of skinning onions. Brockley Crescent is hard by a local pickling works. Many of its housewives pick up pin money skinning on- ions at home for this enter- prise, at 10 shillings ($1.40) a sack. 4 Brockley Crescent and pas- sers-by weep. The weeping nonskinners urged the city council Thursday night to stop home skinning as a public nuisance. But the council held that the monetary benefits to the skinners out- from all African peoples . . . Force are working with the mo-| are bound soon to reach the bile watch over as much of this| breaking point." {border as they can manage. [UN to get it into South-West Business Tax weigh the inconvenience to the innocent bystanders. |Africa and said unless South Africa's racial policies in the territory are alleviated, '"'gravely explosive re a c tions TORONTO (CP) -- A Liberal the problem was to find a means member of the legislature said to reimburse the municipalities Thursday that Ontario's busi- if the tax were dropped from ness tax is not only inequitable the assessment act. but leads to secret deals be, The tax, based on the per- U.S. Prepares ONE ADVANTAGE ee mente ow cs a tid For A-Test | Drought Cone to couse tne er on na aster Tg 1k Failure York Centre, told his colleagues taxed 10 per cent and distillers YUCCA FLATS, Nev. (AP)--| on the select committee on mu-| 150 per cent. It was introduced {Despite the 32-month ban on nu-| EDMONTON (CP)--The Prai- nicipal law that some munici- in 1904 on palities use the tax as an induce-| The committee, reviewing the clear tests, the Atomic Energy|yje drought may provide South-| Commission is busy building un-|ern Manitoba farmers with a ment, He said they forego col- Municipal Act and related stat- lecting the tax if an industry Yes, ead brief trom the Jycates In the musicipaiity. Tor vail Sey grodbii i derground tunnels at its Ne-|costly victory over another pe- i ED Yo TO SA SAT fairs, said he knew deals were|th¢ business tax against whole-| 7% 05% 8 Ye Aki La a made, particularly with the salers by at least 25 per cent. prep: me in! Gh Maturing 'hoppers are spread. | ' fa 4 Roy Bainard, president of Na-|.* "1! © . AE {ing through the arid southern head offices of mining compan- in discord. But some experts|soctions of the province in| say the subterranean labyrinth|search of green vegetation. They lo {tional Grocers Company, said the council felt the present 75| miles northwest of Las Ve-|aren't finding much gas someday may be the site y Mr, Carter said also that the or cent tax against wholesalers for testing of an ultimate| A government official found tax, optional for the manicipali- las a form of discrimination. Joa = , Er od The department store which weapon: the neutron bomb. |the bright spot in commenting] HE ble. buys as a wholesaler and sells| rp. neutron device, years|on the twin threat: "If it doesn't| 5 as R yelailer JE only tested 50 away from the testing stage, is| rain, there won't be any crop to FAVORS DROPPING IT Per nt, he said, and t € manu-|enyisioned as a weapon which jose to the grasshoppers." He said he favored personally acturer who sells direct to the would destroy people but spare the abolishment of the tax, but retail trade, in wholesale quan-| property. The official added that if it ? {tities, is assessed at 60 per cent. | Scientists theorize that the does rain, the grasshoppers may The committee read into the, triggered above ground destroy whatever crop results. CITY EMERGENCY [record a resolution from the|py 5 smal blast, could loose a, Some farmers feel spraying y City of Windsor, endorsed by | deadly y PHONE NUMBERS {Woodstock city council, calling penetrating several feet of are useless this year--that the i} {on the provincial government t0|earth or concrete to kill or|drought . scorched crops aren't SLICE 725-1133 amend the Municipal Act to en-| maim. But it would leave fac-|Worth saving anyway. / RE DEPT. 725-6574 / JISPITAL 723-2211 able municipalities to adopt by-|tories and homes virtually un- businesses "specializing i'|goal for any theoretical bankruptcy." in a thermonuclear war. 11948. The height of grasshopper| / [ \ May Kill Grasshoppers outbreaks in the other two Prai- rie provinces has passed. Many Prairie farmers have abandoned hope of harvesting crops and are turning livestock into the grain fields to make the best possible use of what growth there is. Cattle prices have dropped because buyers are hslding off in anticipation of heavier runs. Record Flight : For Atlas ICBM CAPE CANAVERAL (AP) -- The United States Air Force Thursday night fired an Atlas missile on a record-shattering rain of radioactivity, | operations to control the insects|9,054-mile flight past the tip of| South = Africa Ocean. It was the longest surface-to- into the Indian Atlases last year. I to amend a British resolution calling on the United Nations to guarantee the independence of the desert sheikdom claimed by Iraq. The Russian diplomat charged that the British resolution was a manoeuvre to justify the pres- ence of British troops in the oil- rich little Persian Gulf territory "and to legalize them there for an indefinite period of time." In the council Thursday Brit- ain again promised to remove her forces from her former pro- tectorate the moment Kuwait's ruler, Sheik Abdullah as-Salim As Sabah, considers Iraq's Iraq Premier Claims Support 'From All Arabs | BAGHDAD (AP) -- Premier {Abdel Karim Kassem of Iraq says he believes practically all |Arab people--except the sheiks --support his claim to the newly independent sheikdom of Ku wait. But he pledged once more not to use force to get Iraq's tiny oil-rich neighbor to the south. Kassem gave his views Thurs- day in his first interview with Western reporters since an- nouncing last Sunday that he regards Kuwait as historically part of Iraq. He appeared in excellent spirits. | "We will never use any {means but peaceful means," he said. "We will never resort to aggression." "Again I must assure you Kuwait will return to the motherland . . . but we do not live in barbarian ages when brutal means are used to defeat the well-being of man." Though Kassem told corres- pondents he was sure Iraq would get Kuwait without going to war, 'he didn't say how. He hedged on the question of a plebiscite among Kuwait's 320,- 000 inhabitants. "The Kuwaitis are Iraqis," he said. "There are some non- Kuwaitis. Would it be fair to ask the Indians in Mecca if Mecca should be Indian or, The current grasshopper in- surface missile flight on record|Arabic? If you eliminate the laws to regulate and control scathed--apparently a desirable festation has been described as/--12 miles farther than the 9,042-| foreigners the Kuwaitis would victor the worst in the province since mile course covered by twollike a chance to return to their homeland." {border are still being reinforced threat to take over his sheikdom has been removed. Sheik Abdullah has appealed to the British for military pro- tection. Kuwait Education Dir- ector Abdel Aziz Hussein, rep resenting the sheik in the coun- cil debate, said Kuwait would to make any recommendation concerning the effect of possible increased competition on domes- tic and international routes. TCA officials maintained be- fore the Commons that the pub- No Competition Threat To TCA $2,900,000, its first deficit in eight years. This was largely due to heavy investment in new, planes and other capital equip- ment, the committee said. The committee recommended that Canadian National - Rail. ways consider selling its lines in the United States, preferably to a buyer who would accept in arrangement for the onward movement of freight over CNR lines in Canada. licly-owned airline would . "lose its shirt" if domestic competi- tion by Canadian Pacific Air lines was permitted a substan- tial increase. TCA now has a transconti- nental capacity of 1,000 seats one way a day while CPA's ca- pacity is 124 seats. The committee said in a re- port to t he Commons that it noted "with concern" that TCA last year showed a loss of ask the British to withdraw only after the UN affirms Kuwait's independence, declares Iraq has no valid claim and admits Ku- wait to UN membership. Iraqi delegate Adnan Pacha- chi called the British resolution "entirely unacceptable to us," declaring it did nothing to meet Iraq's complaint that the pres- ence of British troops near Ku- wait's border threatened his country's independence, Pachachi told the councii his government never had any in- tention of trying to take over Kuwait by force. But Hussein of Kuwait told the council: "Iraqi troops on the and are on the move . . . My government finds it difficult to trust any statements from FBI Captures Phoney Lawyer WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Federal Bureau of Investigation early today announced capture of a 50-year-old ex-convict who impersonated a lawyer for 18 months in Washington FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover said Daniel Jackson Oliver Wendel Holmes Morgan was arrested at a YMCA in San Francisco, where he registered July 3 under the name of John Donald Clark. Morgan, under the name of L. A. Harris, was one of the most active members of the Quints Born In India Press Says NEW DELHI (AP)--Two New Delhi newspapers reported to- day the birth of quintuplets in a north Indian village. The reports said three boys and two girls were born Tues- day at Dabra, about 780 miles south of New Delhi. Mother and children were said to be in good health, but no further details were given in the reports, which were unconfirmed. I afernity home 3 the quintuplets were said to have been born could not be reached by telephone. The world's only living quin- tuplets to have lived more than a few days are the Dionnes, born in Callander, Ont., and the Diligentis, born in Argentina. One of the Dionne quints died Iraq." District of Columbia bar. several years ago. REBEL IN MOROCCO Ferhat Abbas, in dark suit, leader of Algerian rebel gov- ernment, waves to crowd along road in Rabat during his current official visit to Morocco. Standing with him is Morocco's King Hassan IT. ~--(CP Wirephoto) »