THOUGHT FOR TODAY Many a woman expresses that which cannot be said because it is impossible to keep silent. dhe Oshavon Time WEATHER REPORT Cloudy Sunday, with scattered showers and thunder - showers during afternoon and evening. Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy VOL. 90--NO. 175 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, JULY 29, 1961 Authorized 'as Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa SIXTEEN PAGES - | [workers will be recalled. TOMMY'S WELCOME IN OTTAWA Premier T. C. (Tommy) | some 25 supporters and one | the New Party's Founding Douglas of Saskatchewan | dog when he arrived at Ot- | convention. (centre) was welcomed by ' tawa airport Friday night for --CP Wirephoto Castro's Private War With Advertising Man By BEN FUNK ists and investors. Then, Harris which included his court costs MIAMI, FLA. (AP) -- This says, Ernesto (Che) Guevara and expenses. By that time, week's hijacking of an Ameri-| "assumed control of the eco-| Cuba had the money out of can airliner gave Fidel Castro nomic life of Cuba, made it a!Harris' reach. a desperately needed weapon in|Communist satellite and began| Harris began his court - ap- his war with Erwin Harris. frightening tourists away." proved, one-man guerrilla war In effect, the Cuban premier| Harris got out of the deal, but by attaching a $3,800,000 Brit- said in his 26th of July address he had already booked more|jsh-made turbo - prop in which that he would gladly give up the than $300,000 in newspaper and Castro himself flew to a United $3,500,000 Eastern Air Lines/magazine ads--debts for which Nations meeting in New York. propjet if the United States|his agency was responsible. | As it turned out, Castro never] would take Harris out of his| Letters from the Cuban gov-i,. 4 paid for the plane and Har-| whiskers. ernment acknowledged thati io nouidn't collect. But he was He called attention to the Harris had the money coming, | oo warming up : {only g up. seizure of 10 Cuban planes inibut he was told that he would Until tt Cuba. bad. bee the United States by Harris, a|have to collect later because pu a oh B x . Sen} Miami advertising man. And he|Cuba was short of U.S. dollars. perm) 3 ¥ OD ac Dia if said that business- were| "They had dollars, all right," |Macxec by elo ors an ow | he would . return : the| Harris said, "but they were go-/into Floridx. Harris began slap- stolen airliner. ling to Czechoslovakia for arms ping Juachments on them 25 Harris has been grabbing and|and ammunition." they an © rc e got re 5 "i selling Cuban property to satisfy] Harris went to see Castro, 0n€ mi itary -essna, a 1X all a debt the Castro regime won't|was referred to Guevara, and three crop dusters -- anc el spent 81% hours cooling his|28ain got Castro's goat. { pay. "The difference between Cas- heels outside the office of the ypgs CASTRO land by the end of August an es-| Call-Back | Unrevised GM Says There has been no change in Oshawa Times Friday that the General Motors of Canada's Toronto newspaper story was previously announced plan to|inaccurate. The company later start calling plant people back|issued the report that there had to work on Aug. 8, the com-|been no change in the call-back pany said today. plans. The GM statement was made|qyMES CORRECT in reply to reports published A story in The Oshawa Times| in Toronto Friday that the two-|o¢ july 14 under the front page|? week vacation period at heading "GM Releases Holi-|~ had been reduced to one week day Plans" was "correct in all |in order to speed up the start of| details", said the spokesman -- {new model production. lit told how the production of The call-back begins Aug. 8/1961 models had been concluded. | 4 - | Production line at Ford of leg 250, TOL of Platt) anade's Oakville plant halted September, the company at 3 pm Friday for & 3, Week pects that the remaining plant| 12 loz ay ors ail start to return at the end of {that period and by the end of August the full 3,000-man work force is eapccted to be back on| the job. Inspector [REPORT INNACURATE Inaccurate reports in a To- ironto evening paper Friday claimed that GM was recall- ing a 'substantial part" of its 12,000 workers immediately, in a crash program to get new models into the showrooms by learly fall. The same paper also quoted GM officials as saying the two Got Gifts | (5 week holiday, which began July ot Ul S 21, would be chopped to one | i : Judge Told | The topline banner over Toronto story read: "GM Calls| Back Thousands From Holi days" A GM spokesman told The|qu MIMICO (CP)--A judicial in- iry into this suburban Tor- ' | Joos town's Inlding pescloes SOLEMN COURT yack Book, } GETS THE BIRD | whistle at an attractive police- Jack Book, Mimico building in- Spector, was kd Toney and noo International of 1962 git by. Realtor Ariwr Tama, iorey-o Stanny van Baer of WIMBLEDON, England | (AP)--Smokey, a talking par- rot was hauled into court here | Friday as exhibit No. 1. Gaz- | ing around the august assem- | bly, he shouted "hello baldy" | at one of the magistrates. | Told to "shut up" by a red- faced court official, Smokey retorted in strident Cockney tones: '"'Cor blimey." Still, he did have some re- spect for the law and he was reasonably well behaved. But when his case ended, he again burst into full voice with a shrilled: "Oh, I have been a good boy" and gave a wolf woman. Real estate salesman Lindo| Holland -- poses with Miss Latini, formerly employed by| Brazil, Vera Marie Brauner, Iamarino's firm, testified that| one of the runners-up at the PAIR OF BEAUTIES completion of the Miss Inter- national Congress in Long Beach, Calif., last night. Fifty- two beauties competed in the affair. --AP Wirephoto his commission and told him it was for Book. Latini said Iamarino told him: "We have to look after Mr. Book for favors done. If it wasn't for him we wouldn't get Iamarino deducted money from ' Leaders Battle this (building) permit." Danger To Party Latini said he understood the permit should not have been is- sued because the lot in question| _... By ROBERT RICE was too small'or a bylaw was| Canadian Press Staff Writer being broken in some way. = | OTTAWA (CP) -- Saskatche- The salesman said money was| premier T. C. Douglas deducted "six or seven times." | tro and me," says Harris, "is that he seized American prop-| erty illegally. I have attached) Cuban stuff by due process of law, with court orders." | Their feud dates back to Feb-| ruary last year, when Harris cancelled a $1,600,000 advertis-| ing and public relations contract with the Cuban government. TURNED TO REDS When the contract was signed, got a ruling that Cuba could be bound for Cuba. Castro was making friendly] economics minister. When got in, Harris said 'Guevara laughed in my face." GOT COURT ORDER Back home, Harris got a court order impounding $1,600,000 in Cuban deposits in Florida funds by ruling that a foreign government couldnt' be sued. On appeal, however, Harris sued on a commercial contract, he, In a July 5 radio - television speech, Castro threatened to re-| taliate by keeping any Ameri-| can planes which were hijacked| and flown into Cuba, Harris attached a $1,000,000 | shipment of tobacco from Cuba {banks. Another court freed the but released it when he learned| that American companies al-| ready had paid for it. He seized| 42 tank type diesel engines Now Harris turned his atten-| gestures toward American tour- and he won a $429,000 judgment, | {ion to the port of Palm Beach, UK. Wins Okay On Market Plan By TOM OCHILTREE GENEVA (AP)--Britain has taken the first step toward membership in the prospering Common Market by winning the approval of her partners in the rival European Free Trade As sociation. Diplomats reported that min- isters of the EFTA nations are sympathetic to the view that Britain's troubled economy can be 'cured if she links up with the 200,000,000 potential export customers of the Common Mar- ket. Britain told the EFTA Friday she would seek alignment with the Common Market, presum- and is reluctant to share power weighs 114 pounds and me ably under terms that would not harm the economies of Com- monwealth countries and EFTA members. The other members--Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Switzerland, Austria, Portugal and associate member Finland--approved the move in principle. Edward Heath, No. 2 man in| Britain's foreign office, outlined the British stand to EFTA dele- gates at a meeting here. They] drafted a statement to be is-| sued Monday, when Prime Min- ister Macmillan will formally customers to reverse Britain's unfavgrable trade balance, Mac- millan faces many potential blocks on the issue. Elements in his own Conser- vative party oppose joining the Market if it means surrender of any British sovereignty. The Commonwealth countries are opposed If it means losing their special trade privileges with Britain. Moreover, French president de Gaulle is not eager to see the British join. Some feel he 'views the Common Market as a means to unify continental Eu- rope under French leadership with Britain, ifrom which American supplies | were going to:Cuba by railroad car ferry. He grabbed. a lard shipment just before it was to (8 aboard the ferry. [ "Lard is important to Cuba," |Harris said, "not just for food, | | but to be sent to Czechoslovakia for use in making nitro- glycerin." i Canadian Fourth | In Beauty Event | LONG BEACH, Calif. (CP)-- A brown-eyed beauty from The Netherlands, Stanny van Baer, 19, Friday night was chosen Miss International of 1962. Edna MacVicar, of Galt. Ont. last year's Miss Dominion of Canada, was fourth behind Miss Brazil and Miss Spain. Miss Iceland was fifth. Stanny, employed as a fash- ion and photo mannequin, asures 35-23Y%-36. CANVASS FOR SIGNATURES Hike For New Flag By BOB TRIMBEE Canadian Press Staff Writer VANCOUVER (CP) -- "It's bury and more than 300 other residents here. The trio, paying their own ex- The parrot had been in po- lice custody for a week since [sale gift supply house, in whic Kenneth Hoskyns, 17, was ac- | cused of stealing it from his father. Latini and Iamarino were part-| gi ive Iners, were paid for by Iamarino. | |He said the gifts ranged in value from $5 to $30. PROBLEMS FOR NAVY Torpedoes Can't The 56-year-old CCF premier launching a soft-sell bid for the __|leadership against CCF National Leader Hazen Argue, made an appeal for party unity on arrival | |here for next week's New P| | founding convention. | "We have always been able to have arguments and then close |ranks and go to work again-- |and I think we will do it this ridge, Kootenay West; purchased by Book at a whole- |, ih jf the two-way leadership|Argue is being discourteously fight becomes personal or vin-|shunted into a subordinate role at the week-long convention. MIGHT HURT PARTY A fifth MP -- Harold Winch, Vancouver East--said their pro- test will "bring about disunity and hard feelings" which will hurt the fledgling party. "I don't think there will be any lasting disunity caused by any differences of opinion--un- less we allow them to get out of hand and descend into per- |time," he said. | ri : | lities,"" d Mr. las. Catch Atom Sub mime... wu somites sia dr ous |the wide-open split among CCF | By DAVE MacINTOSH hunting exercise. The group|MPs over the role allocated to| Canadian Press Staff Writer |comprised the aircraft carrier|Mr. Argue at the national con-| HALIFAX (CP) -- One of the Bonaventure and eight destroy-|vention. | starkest problems facing the|ers. "I think honest differences of | Royal Canadian Navy is that| The exercise showed the navy opinion are good, provided they| the standard acoustic torpedo|lacks some of the weapons it/don't become personal and we can't catch a nuclear submar-|needs, but that it operates well|indulge in any vindictiver leadership contest right to the finish, but will stick to his be- lief that the office should seek the man, not the man seek the office. "I haven't campaigned and I am not going to," he said. Frank | Howard, Skeena; Douglas Fis- her, Port Arthur and Arnold Ae i |warned Friday night that the|Peters, Timiskaming -- have Latini also testified that items | yo Party could be scarred at|complained piblicily that Mr. By A. 1. GOLDBERG UNITED NATIONS (AP) France stood pat today in de- fying any United Nations at- tempt to interfere in her dis- pute with Tunisia as the Secu- rity Council neared a vote on the Bizerte crisis. Speculation mounted that France might break her boycott of the debate and use the veto to block an Afro-Asian resolu- tion accusing her of flouting the week-old cease-fire call in Tu- nisia. Secretary-General Dag Ham- marskjold told the council Fri- day night he had received evi- dence during his recent trip to Tunisia that France had vio- lated the council's cease - fire and assumed functions on Tu- nisian soil "normally reserved to a sovereign state." US. Ambassador Adlai Stevenson conferred for 50 min- utes in Paris Friday with Presi- {dent de Gaulle on the Bizerte {crisis which has put a strain on |the three - way relationship be- |{tween the United States, France |and Tunisia. | Stevenson, chief of the U.S. |delegation to the UN, told re- {porters later he hoped "there {will be a mutually satisfactory resolution to this unfortunate af- fair." Tunisia wants the United States to make good on its pro- nouncements of friendship to newly independent nations and FRANGE DEFIES UN ON BIZERTE Order Violated Secretary Says The United States has been reluctant to offend de Gaulle at a time when Western unity is vital in dealing with Soviet de- mands on Berlin. France has made clear it will not be bound by any decision the Security Council makes on Bizerte. The de Gaulle government is- sued a statement in Paris Fri- day charging Tunisia with try. ing to obtain through UN inter- vention what she had failed to get by force after four days of bloody fighting in Bizerte. WON'T TAKE PART Before Friday's council ses. sion, Armand Berard, French delegation chief, announced he would not take part in debate on Tunisia, Berard said France was ready to discuss cease-fire details with Tunisia at any time but that Tunisia had failed to agree to such talks. Berard stayed away from the council chamber, but his dep. uty, Pierre Millet, showed up and sat silently in his place. U.S. delegate Charles Yost told the council the United States still felt the final solution lies in direct negotiation be. tween France and Tunisia on when France will pull out her troops. Soviet delegate Platon Moro- zov lashed out at France as a ~ violator of council decrees who must be made to toe the mark. back Tunisia's demands that|He accused France of "colonials France pull out of . her big air- lin the Commons--H. W. Her-|naval base at Bizerte. ism . . . backed up by its NATO partners." By GODFREY ANDERSON PARIS (AP) -- President de Gaulle's France stood increas- ingly alone today with her long- {time North African problems |apparently in worse shape than before. Talks aimed at bringing peace to troubled Algeria, where she has been at war with nationalist rebels for nearly seven years, broke down again over the is- sue of who should control the oil - rich Sahara -- France or an independent Algeria. There was no indication when the talks would be resumed. Further east, in Tunisia, French paratroopers, ranging Sahara Wealth Bars Agreement out from their base, still held the city of Bizere against bitter Tunisian opposition. Across the ocean, the United Nations Security Council was discussing possible further ac- | tion after France had ignored the council's earlier demand that French troops be pulled back to their original positions inside the base. The de Gaulle government's attitude is that the Bizerte af. fair concerns France and Tuni- sia alone and only they can set- tle it. The French see Tunisia's new appeal to the Security Council as an attempt to inter- nationalize what they regard as a purely bilateral affair. ine. |with what it has. then you make scars you can't On a recent exercise, one of| The carrier kept 12 tracker heal," he said. y pedoes dropped by RCN planes|ercise Tarian except for one 12-| there is no assurance it will be|verted to shore. - Kills Two. submarines. {Mark 111 version of the tracker. | the United States Fleet's nu-|planes on submarine patrol| and outran them. {hour period when she was) able 10 catch a nuclear sub ei-! The Tracker hasn't room to Some naval officers believe] If the RCN acquired wh Critical clear subs "heard" practice tor-|night and day throughout Ex.| Four of the eight CCF MPs The RCN has on order a more| Wrapned in fog that closed in so| C C ash advanced U.S. torpedo, but|fast three planes had to be di-| al I |ther. Western navies assume carry the latest sub-detection| Russia has nuclear - powered gear carried by the new U.S.| the only solution is acquisition slightly longer Mark 111, it of U.S. naval weapons with nu | would have to redesign the Bon-| clear warheads. |aventure to accommodate it--| The nine - ship Canadian task jor obtain a bigger carrier.| Group 302.6 steamed back here | There is no doubt the navy fa- | Friday after a four - day sub-ivors a new flattop. crash near here today. The dead were children of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Francis Jones of St. Clair Shores, Mich., near Detroit. One was an about three months, the other a boy of about six years. Mr. and Mrs. Jones, another which reached the final round by the Natianal Youth Move-| Vere severely injured. Another of eliminations in 1946 before a ment in Toronto, the Native parliamentary flag committee. Sons of Canada in Winnipeg and The flag is divided diagonally, the National Flag for Canada cuts. In the second car were Gerald ' : SARNIA (CP) -- Two children|f | were killed and five other per-(f | sons critically hurt in a two-car |} infant girl of|® Jones girl escaped with facial|§ of their children and the two i occupants of the second car|§ announce his government's de- time we had a distinctive Ca- penses, will touch eve ro- : 8 p ouch every pro the top half red and remainder|League in Ottawa. May, 18, of Sarnia and Daniel cision to the House of Com-| mons. The Common Market mem-| bers are France, West Ger- many, Italy, Belgium, The Neth- erlands and Luxembourg. They are working toward free trade among themselves and a com- mon tariff barrier against the rest of the world Though many Britons feel the nation needs Common Market CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 3 | pointe, La- one of three spirited Montrealers who left here this week on a 3,000-mile hitch-hik- nadian flag," says Paul vincial capital between Van-| iw \couver' and Montreal on the "rite. A green maple leaf is| Miss Forget, a physical edu- |two-week trip. They will stay| Placed at centre. The Montreal . . trio is carrying one of the| |and eat with friends enroute. Haas on ie th oi "We hope to have 50,000 sig ags on its trip and also a plac- ard which reads: of Montreal, and Miss Pepin, cation student at the University rally secretary and a commerce ing trip across Canada to gain 1,000,000 signatures for a flag natures when we get home,' ow 3 io . student at Sir George William e need a distinctive Cana-|ynjversity, Montreal, are not supported by the Canadian Na-'said LaPointe. "Along the way dion Tie No Red Ensi N tional Rally. we will leave copies of the peti- CAR A 5 Fleur-deLis NOlthe first in their families to join | . . «fel 5. = Isuch a movement. |E. Taylor, 19, of Guelph. The Jones vehicle was east- bound on Highway 7 when it was met by the westbound car carrying the two teen-agers. Little Hope Now |signature of Mayor Tom The group, formed seven tions with friends and they will months ago on the 29th anniver- add the others and mail them sary of the declaration of West-|t0 us in Montreal. We expect minster, seeks to take the issue 1,000,000 signatures before the out of the realm of politics and opening of the next session of to the people in its drive to ob- Parliament. tain "our own flag before the| "The petition will be given) centenary of Canada." Prime Minister Diefenbaker LaPointe, 28, the rally's and every member of Parlia- cause they are only using the|Canada to have its own flag, founder, headed eastward with m~nt will be told of it." Lise Pepin, 19, and Joce'vn The rally, organized in Ot Forget, 19, after gaining the tawa last December by 40 uni-| Als. versity students, supports a flag! In a test hike last March be- tween Ottawa and Gaspe, Que., association members collected 32,450 signatures in 34 days. In-| cluded were the names of 26 Quebec mayors. "We have remained independ- ent of all political parties be- issue for vote-getting,"" said La- Pointe. The flag supported by the rally is the same as that backed! | More than 20 years ago their| FOr A {parents plumped for recogni- {tion of a flag bearing a red,| VATICAN CITY (AP)--Nicola white and blue cross with a|Cardinal Canali, gravely ill, green maple leaf at the centre. (head of the Vatican City's ad- a a i. |ministrative comission, sur. Because 1 am a Canadian) ved the night under an oxygen tent, but doctors said there is sa} ice Papi litte hope for his recovery said Miss Pepin. The 87-year-old cardinal is Miss Forget added: "We need |sufering from bronchial pneu-| something for unity, something|monia, complicated by a circu! to respect." latory ailment. gell Cardinal land proud to be one, I w a / a 3 4 i ] 3 a oo Janet Sue Rabinowitz, 13, of Miami, Fla., tries on a rep- lica of the Crown of Scotland, on display at Niagara Falls, { Ont. Holding the crown, first duplicate ever made, is Cay Lee Cowan, 14, of Toronto. In the same display are replicas FIRST DUPLICATE OF CROWN of the Coronation Ring, the Order of St. Andrew and the royal sceptre and mace. --C PWirephoto