1 THOUGHT FOR TODAY ' All some girls expect of the busie ness world is a husband to take them out of it. dhe Oshawa Time WEATHER REPORT Little change is seen in the pattern of unsettled, muggy weather over southern Ontario. Hot, with some more rain. Price Not Over VOL. 90--NO. 164 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, JULY 15, 1961 Post Office Authorized as Second Class Mail Department, TWENTY PAGES , Ottawa THE DRIVER WALKED AWAY -- Trujillo Jr. Doesn't Fear Castro Men CIUDAD TRUJILLO (AP)-- Gen. Rafael L. Trujillo Jr., who took control of the armed forces |after the assassination of his dictator father, says he believes {the Dominican Republic is safe {from pro-Castro forces. "It would be a serious prob- lem if partisans of the Cuban |prime minister try to take over |by force or win in free elec- |tions," said the 31-year-old com- mander-in-chief, "but I do not think it will happen." | Trujillo expressed confidence {that the dominant Dominican party, 'founded by his father, {will win the presidential elec- {tions May 16, 1962, if it "mod- ernizes its methods." He did not elaborate but added | that certain social reforms must jbe made. REBEL JAILED He also disclosed that former) defence minister Jose Rene Ro-| {man had been sentenced to 30 years in prison for complicity | in the assassination of his father | May 30. He said Rene Roman, a for- mer major-general, had planned to take over the government. Trujillo said the trial of civil-| ians in connection with the kill- ing has been delayed pending capture of the last two men still hunted. Luis Amiama Tio and Antonio Imbert. Trujillo insisted he will not be | Ave., was trapped for almost two hours in the wreck, his foot jammed between the door and front seat. Duguay suffer- ed a fractured pelvis and rup- tured bladder. He underwent emergency surgery at Oshawa General Hospital, and is in only fair cgpdition. The lower picture sl s Duguay's boot, which had to be removed be- fore he could be freed from the wreck. --Oshawa Times Photos Starved Gunman Finally Surrenders CRAIG, Colo. (AP) -- Weak, Spooner had stopped his car and famished from two days of near Kremmling, Colo., wheres candidate for president next | flight through rugged moun-|la passing Colorado game and| year and said he doesn't think tains, a pint-sized gunman sur-|fish department employee, Rob- his uncle, former president Hec- rendered Friday and admitted|ert Hoover, 35, saw him and of- tor Trujillo will be either. he shot four Colorado officers/fered aid. Hoover became sus- : -- because "I just didn't want to!picious when he noticed a rifle go to jail." and ammunition in the parked Delmar Spooner. 25, was im- car assive when captors told him a Le fas of his victims were dead.SPOTTED RIFLE "I saw my chance and State Patrol Lieut. Hiram grabbed it," police quoted himiShort, 49, and Sheriff Chancy as saying. "I'm not sorry it vam Pelt, 55, arrived shortly and happened." searched Spooner. He moved to The blonde former soldier was the car, drew a hidden gun and seized as he crouched behind a began firing. rock near a railroad spur at| All three officers were woun Bond, in northwest Colorado 2, Short fatally, Lis ait t . : e. Spooner fled, but his trail was ; State Pa rol Cpl. Jy aurice hic up by. Sheriff Henry salmon in an e rock, gun in hand, 'and Knuth "and Undersheriff John CGrilse, fi al ome a "Give it up or I'll blow|Clark, 68. In an exchange of rine assigned to the. Pacific your brains out." shots which followed, Clark was|Coast in almost 50 years, wil "Spooner hesitated, then fatally wounded. give these men a new joy in the dropped the loaded weapon A warrant charging Spooner job they have been doing for Under questioning he told with Short's murder was filed years. about the violence last Wednes-/in justice of the peace court at| An important duty of the day in which the four officers Kremmling even before his cap- Royal Canadian Navy's Pacific were shot. ture Command is submarine detec- US. Canadian Fleets Manoeuvers Ended NEW YORK (CP)--A force of ishment ships to keep the force ing Fleet Atlantic said a mobile 53 United States and Canadian self-sufficient. force like this one could not be ships headed into Eastern Sea- Despite the size of the force, considered a good ballistic mis- board ports today after four it didn't make a big target. The sile target. The enemy would days of manoeuvres that tested ships were spread out over some have to know too much--course the NATO fleet's muscles. 30,000 square miles of the At-|speed, exact location--in order Although it may be weeks be- lantic as the attack carriers{to be sure his missiles could fore the final score is in, one made a high-speed run in to- damage it. thing appeared certain--a force ward the Eastern Seaboard for| This leaves an enemy with like this one could land a Sun- a series of simulated aircraft the problem of hitting the force day punch on any enemy any- strikes on targets from Florida with more conventional weap- Two men somehow escaped with their lives early today from the tangle of metal shown in the top photo. City police say that the car, folded almost double around a large tree at King and Rowe streets was driven by Gene Allan Peters, 19, 480 Fairleigh Ave., Oshawa. He walked away from the wreck with minor bruises. His passenger, Jack Duguay, 19, of 446 Fairleigh Hunters VICTORIA (CP)--The crews d. of the escorting frigates gazed | at HMCS Grilse the way a fish- erman looks at a 50 - pound aquarium. The % piv n subm 1 where in the world to Ohio. ons. It's a big problem. The heart of the striking ~~ RADAR PLANES BUSY forces were planes from the PLAN S SWITCH SIDES - Radar planes with relay fa- U.S. carrier Independence, a U.S. submarines labelled '"'en- cilities range high above the 60,000-ton monster which is the emy" stalked the NATO fleet. NATO fleet, greatly increasing and Planes of the North American|the range at which any attack. Air Defence Command flew in-line force can be discovered tercepts designed to destroy the Their information is fed back attacking aircraft. The fleet/t, USS Northampton--Ricketts' planes returning from their land cruiser flagship--and necessary strikes acted as "enemy" --mak-| counter action is initiated ing simulated attacks on their! Aboard the attack carriers own ships before changing their | 4re swift jet interceptors colors to land on the carriers|equipped with the Sidewinder ai again. to-air missile. It 'homes' on at- It seemed a good bet to most tacking aircraft by flying tow- observers aboard the fleet ships'ard engine heat sources that manv attacking planes Far - ranging twin - engined CITY EMERGENCY =H wus 4wmot through in any (tracker aircraft such as those PHONE NUM ol TECHMCOLY: DYALISCOPE WINER 5, ~_ |carried by the Bonaventure are cmmem---- d Feature Attraction Yr. Rick-| equipped with the latest anti- POLICE 725-11 of o " at submarine weapons -- homing FIRE DEPT Ar] ATTACK {ae torpedoes. bombs and depth HOSPIL ¥ MILLS and SYLVIA SIMMS world's biggest warship, the Intrepid, 37,000. tons. Helping provide them with de- fence from simulated enemy submarine atacks was HMCS Bonaventure, the 20,000-ton Ca- nadian anti-submarine carrier. Fleshing out the fleet were cruisers, destroyers, including HMCS Athabaskan, and replen- es charges. They also have the best in sound location and radar Is:ik-'gear to pin down subs. | In Chicago CHICAGO (AP)--Negro youth gangs attacked a white man with ax handles and hurled ex- plosives at two young white girls as racial violence erupted for the third successive day in a tense, mixed neighborhood on the southwest side. Beefed up "police patrols cruised the streets as the toll of white persons injured by rov- ing gangs of young Negroes rose to 18. Fred Vaughn told police four Negroes belabored him with ax handles early today as he re- turned from a cigar store to his mother's home. He was taken to hospital with head cuts and bruises. 2 Md Q bd | O 0 in BE O = or five young Negroes stopped fon the sidewalk, hurled a few {remarks and then a home-made | bomb containing steel pellets. | Both girls were taken to hospital | with cuts. | ROUND UP SUSPECTS Sixty four Negroes were] rounded up by police Friday. Police said 19 of the 64 Ne-| groes in their late teens or early | 20s were charged with aiding a| riot and breach of the peace. Twenly juveniles e home to their parents, 20 others| were charged with unlawful as- | sembly and disturbing the peace] and five were sent to a juvenile] home. | Police said 45 of them were 16 we sent UAW DEMANDS GIVEN TO GENERAL MOTORS Chrysler, Ford Submissions Next DETROIT (AP)~--The United stage of negotiations. The talks Auto Workers Union has com-| started 2, weeks ago. {pleted presentation of its now | Woodcock declared union pro- |contract demands at General posals for a wage increase {Motors and plans to wind up [based on economic growth, ex- {arguments for wage and benefit| pansion of supplemental unem- (improvements at Ford and ployment compensation and im- Chrysler next week. {provements in the pension plan | Then it will be the union's/would cost the companies only {turn to listen to any counter- 3 few more pennies an hour. proposals the companies may| The union's demands, Wood- have in mind. So far they've cock said, could be met out of {offered nothing. |GM's big profits and would be After bargaining talks were no more inflationary than the {recessed for the weekend Fri- bonuses paid GM executives, |day, GM Vice-President Louis|He said GM's 310,000 hourly Seaton told reporters the un- workers got less in wage in- lion's demands could be de- creases last year than 14,000 GM |scribed in one word--"more." |executives got in bonuses. Seaton said the demands Seaton said the demands' three "make up the most expensive years go would have increased {package submitted to us in the wage costs 73 cents an hour. |25 years of our bargaining rela- |The union called this figure fan- | up our licence." The girls, Linda Rivers, 14,|or younger. and Alice Ramos, 12, told offi- The cers they were sitting on the. Ramos front porch when four A MAN CAN CHANGE HIS MIND violence was stirred, po-| speculated, by the unsolved| killing Wednesday of Matthew| Tolber, 16, a Negro. Tolber was| waiking home from summer| school with friends when he was struck by a bullet. Police | say they still do not know who DAYTON, Ohio (AP)--Floyd fired the fatal shot. i ad E. Chapman Sr., 39, who took "| James Tare out marriage licences with two women in two days, mar- BODY, BRAIN BREAK Mary Goodneighbor, known professionally pictured Friday after surgeon at the University of [tions with the UAW." | UAW Vice-President Leonard {Woodcock replied: 'Absolutely untrue." He said there is no {mechanical way of figuring the cost of UAW demands at this |tastic. It settled in 1958 for {what it estimated was a pack- |age of 28.6 cents an hour spread over three years. The 1958 contracts expire Aug. 31, Michigan, on grounds of ment- al cruelty. The marriage last- ed 18 months. Irma says her real future is in burlesque and she intends to work up a whole new act. as 'Irma the ivorce from Dr, n, staff neuro- ried No. 2 Friday. - 1 Said No. 1: Floyd and I | * changed our minds. We tore Veto Red Riot Thus was laid to rest a bit | of concern around . probate court. The flurry of worry came when Chapman, after getting a licence Wednesday to WASHINGTON (Reuters) | po) ield, 31, AR -- i msde The United States told Russia with Carolyn Jean Baum, 28. [Friday it will never accept the Troika' Plan To Sea Strikers For Seco CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP)--Steak and baby food, Act Read Spacemen Set nd Flight gan a low-residue, high energy diet to reduce possibility of exe medical checks, star gazing, cretion and provide quick-burns is made of. | Virgil Grissom and John ST. CATHARINES (CP)~The ping Company of Toronto, was Glenn had these items on sched-|eream of wheat, . bacon, |Riot Act was read to disperse brought to Port Weller a week ule today as they entered the|boiled eggs, toast, jelly and cof- members of the Seafarers' age for repairs and minor fit-/final phase of preparation for make - believe space rides--|ing reserve that's what an astronaut's day flight. An official outlined this strength during typical one-day menu: Breakfast -- in juice, two |fee. Lunch -- broiled chicken, Chapman declined to discuss | the fuss. He said only, "the judge married Miss Baum and me yesterday. "I don't know what all the Soviet Troik , .{International Union (Ind) picket- tings. 3 trol of the United Nations wer: {ing the vessel Northern Venture LEADER HELD ing in a statement that it is pre. at Port Weller dry docks Fri- pared to apply the veto against 94Y night. {any such plan. Mayor I The US. police arrested nine men, Ivan Buchanan for a After the Riot Act was read, in- read cluding Paul Gagne, SIU busi-| daar: {the act as St. Catharines police ness agent in the Thorold area, rejection of Mos: chief James Anderson and 40/and charged them with unlaw- for the flight, with Glenn, 39- America's second manned space baby food - type peas, bread flight, scheduled Tuesday morn-|without crust, cottage cheese ing. salad, ice tea and sugar cookies. Grissom, 35 - year - old Air Dinner -- broiled steak, boiled Force captain, is reliably re- potato without skin, baby food ported to be the No. 1 choice|vegetable, sherbert and coffee. Both astronauts were to don | going beyond previous American fuss is about." cow's proposal Carl E. Beisel, chief deputy headed directorate was con- in probate court, said there is tained in a statement issued by nothing illegal about taking |State Secretary Dean Rusk. { out two licences--as long as | U.S. officials said the state-|Court of Ontar only one is used ment is a major policy move, forbidding the b picketifig or -------- Opposition to demands by Soviet|yessel . with fir |Premier Krushchev that ex- ives | ecutive control of the UN be in the hands of a group represent- heen picketing the measure The mayor three-| constables stood by to enforce ful assembly. junction issued by the Supreme midnight and were remanded in When the members, who have|forbids SIU members from in-| year-old Marine lieutenant-Col- onel, standing by as backup pilot as he did on the Alan i aah : + . Shepard flight. io earlier Friday jail until Monday. | ; : > union from In addition to Gagne, the in-|¢ The Nations] Dotousuties and aproaching the junction names Harold C.| Dace rig is re. earms or explos- Banks and Leonard J. Me- a ie Chosen hlin, b : t . aughlin, both of Montreal. It The flight will be a near the crippled ship|timidating or interfering with|duplicate of Shepard's trip May The nine men appeared in ma- first read an in- gistrate's court shortly before "'Grilse' Gives Target tion but until the Grilse ar- rived in Esquimalt harbor 'ri- day the fleet was like a basket- ball team practising without a ball. t8 § oe them watching ns all the way," said Grilse com- mander Ft.-Cmdr. Edmund G Gigg, of North Bay. "They were glad to see us because they were thinking of the days when they'll get us out there and try to show us up." The 37-year-old commander is confident he has one of the finest submarine of its type. He became commander of the Grilse when it was obtained from the United States Navy on loan in May. Formerly the USS Burrfish, the submarine was commis- sioned in 1943. It conducted six war patrols and sank two enemy ships. RECALLS HISTORY Acquisition of the submarine recalls one of the most colorful chapters in British Columbia's history. At the beginning of the First World War when Sir Richard McBride, then premier, became concerned about the lack of coastal protection. He learned aiild that two submarines had been 2 built for the Chilean navy in the Seattle, Wash., shipyards and that Chile had failed to keep up the payments. Sir Richard bought them for $1,150,000 without prior author- ization from the provincial leg: islature, He would have been in a difficult position had the fed- eral government not agreed to buy them from the province The sale of the vessels jeop- ardized United States neutral ity, so the transfer was kept al strict secret. Civilian crews took delivery of the submarines, which were turned over to the RCN and patrolled Canada's West Coast for three years un- til 1917 when they were trans ferred to the East Coast Since then, 'only U.S, subma- irines have yisited these waters. (found in the park. ing the Communists, neutrals| since Monday, refused to dis- the Northern Venture crew. and Western factions. band the mayor took recourse, Clyde Clattenburg, 5. A Redstone rocket is to boost space suits and run through practice missions while seated in the actual space capsule atop the Redstone. They also studied charts of the heavens and the earth beneath the planned cap- sule path so certain features will be recognizable. Medical men gave the pair a series of physical and psycho- logical examinations before and captain|the manned capsule 115 miles|after each simulated flight. Rusk said Khrushchev had|to the Riot Act, an 18th century |of the vessel said his company high and 300 miles down range| The astronauts have picked described the Troika proposal as|civic official fears a riot. the an "'outrageous demand." | The secretary declared: by Island Shipping Company of Workers (CLC). | "there is no way that the Soviet| Hamilton, Bermuda and man. = . Union can impose his proposal." aged by the Upper Lakes Ship-| He said the U.S. would not! Canadian Forest Fires 8 'Moderating PORT ARTHUR (CP)--Forest travel restrictions were being porarily 1ift ed throughout| ) { uch a move, requir ing an amendment to the United! Nations charter. Nor would the necessary twd- thirds of the General Assembly support such a Russian move, "The United Nations will not destroy itself," Rusk said. American officials said US. policy statement Wi aimed at rebutting repeated itoba and Northwestern On- viet demands for the Trolka@lgho today as the combined ef- principle, and also to head OMf{fois of man and rainfall mod- any compromise or "middlefarateq the forest fire situation. ground" proposals between the saci A : The Ontario department of Russian and American views ONilands and forests announced the structure of the United Na-| that travel bans had been re- tions, {moved from the ravaged Ke- {nora and Sioux Lookout dis- Hricts, meaning timber and min- ing operations could return to normal. However, forestry officials in both provinces warned the haz- ard will remain high all year in some areas no matter how much rain falls Traces of rain fell in most areas of the Kenora and Sioux On Despite Bad Weather: i nos 5 Laden skies didn't deter Local showers Friday. No new fires| i 22UAW members, their yere reported. wives and children as they in-| Forty fires were reported Fri- vaded Lakeview Park early gay in the Sioux Lookout dis- this morning for Canada's larg-|trict, compared with 51 Thurs- est picnic. day. Twenty-two of these were More than 25,000 persons are| considered out of control but all epxected as two cars, a boat|were in unpopulated areas. | {and motor and numerous small- I - er prizes will be given away. On- tario Federation of Labor nresi- Bank Loses Cash dent David Archer will make i And Girl Teller the draws for the cars. Mayor Christine Thomas will i arive at the Park by helicopter,! TORONTO (CP)--Officials at about 1.15 p.m to officially open|the Bank of Montreal branch at the picnic. She will be ac-/King and Bathurst Streets Fri- companied by Malcolm Smith, day reported $14,000 missing Local 222 president, and her(from the bank and police husband, T. D. Thomas, MLA|launched a search for a woman for Oshawa Riding. teller who went to lunch and did Baseball games, a stage not return GM Picnic show, trap shooting, fly cast-! Police have not released the ing, horseshoe pitching, golf and name of the girl. They said she Pakistani President 10 rides for the kiddies will be had worked at the bank for Khan, standing in first car, 'about a month. § receives New York City's |made an "assault on the integ-|English law requiring citizens to has signed an agreement cover-|in a test designed to train an-|the name Liberty Bell 7 for the rity of the United Nations." He|disperse within 30 minutes if aling the crew with SIU's rival, other space pilot and build ex-|spacecraft. Brotherhood of perience and confidence for fu-/was Fr The Northern Venture, owned| Railway Transport and General{ture orbit missions. ! Shepard's 7. The represents the total membership vehicle ts A | "Grissom and Glenn today be-|of the mercury astronaut team. PRESIDENT Ayah | traditional ticker tape parade along Broadway today as he | arived for a one-day visit. | PARADE Thousands lined the parade route to greet the 54:year-old president. --AP Wirephoto ESAT ce