Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 24 Oct 1961, p. 2

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Your THOUGHT The real boss Communi FOR TODAY is the one who has charge of the controls on . the electric bl anket. 1% Pa ote ' Re or A Bett WEATHER Showers today, evening, mainly s' er Communi REPORT | clearing this unny Wednes- day, not much change in temp- erature. VOL. 90--No. 246 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1961 Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Pepartment, Ottawo THIRTY-SIX PAGES UNION ORGANIZER BEATEN Elie Allard, Montreal union leader, attempting to organ- ize employees of the strike- Find U Boy At UXBRIDGE (Staff) -- Anton fous Laurence Vandenberg, 14 who ran away from home las Friday -- after. he was repri- manded in class and asked to stand in the hall -- was bach with his family today, little the worse for wear and tear after a three-day hitch-hiking jour- that ended Monday night in Niagara Falis, N.Y. when he was picked up by the U.S: Coast Guard and turned over to U.S. Customs. Antonious' companion on the Tun-away trip was "Mickey", his year-old German-Shepherd- Collie mongret. He returned here via car early today with his father, Andran, an Oshawa Red Blast 'Regretted By Queen LONDON (Reuters) -- Queen Elizabeth deeply regrets" the unilateral soviet-resumption of nuclear weapons tests. The Queen, mother of three children, made the statement in i /a government-written address i jclosing Parliament's current ] Session. It was read for her by 4 |a royal commission of peers. '| Queen Elizabeth said: | "My government have work i jed for a resumption of negotia- 4 itions on general disarmament. //They have also striven for in- 4 |}ternational agreement on the 1 |discontinuance, under effective control, of all tests of nuclear weapons. "They regret that the Soviet government should have nitiated the resumption of these tests." | ks deeply 4 bound Murray Hill Limousine men" Service is in hospital after he was beaten up. He claims "hired strongarm attacked him LONDON (CP) 5 ment leaders --CP Wirephoto newspapers in Govern scientists and nations outside the Communist bloc expressed shock and horror today at the enormous Soviet xbridge Border He _hitch-hiked Falls Sunday. "T am going to try and find] out what is troubling my son,"'| said Mr. Vandenberg today: | "I am going to help him in levery possible way. He is a jsensitive boy," he added. Soviet Faces New Red Chinese Snub | MOSCOW (Reuters) -- Soviet leaders were faced today with FRASER NAMED TO COURT POST OTTAWA (CP) -- Twelve appointments to the judi- ciary, including seven in On- tario, were announced to- day by Justice Minister Ful- ton. Edward A. Richardson, 64, of Toronto, and Neil Fraser, 58, of Oshawa, were named to the Supreme Court of Ontario and the Ontario High Court of Justice. | The strongest condemnation of the 30- to 50-megaton blast set off Monday were registered in Japan and western Europe | to Niagara | Hears Tim Buck LONDON (CP) -- Tim Buck, general secretary of dian Communist party, told. the Soviet party congress today that iCanadian imperialist capital is jready to plunge Canada into another war at the bidding of the United States of America." "However, the wofking peuple jareé vigorously opposing war preparations," he said. " 'No war over Berlin' is the slogan supported by all work- g r Can- open and told them disputes be- ada," he hay Agee 7 tween Commu nist countries|norfea by the Soviet news | | | |And India's Prime Minister said today Britain}Nehru said he was "deeply | {pained and shocked." The Soviet government did not report detonation of . the bomb, and there was no word about it in the Moscow press. Japanese were alarmed by a warning from experts there that highly radioactive rain and dust from the blast would reach their shores around Friday. The Tokyo' government called a conference of scientists to de- cide whether the expected lev- radiation would be harm- jful to humans. The experts lsought ways of coping with water and vegetable contamina- tion. CALLS IT OUTRAGE "Japan has been protesting the Soviet tests. If it | | | jels of r Red Bomb Fallout Backtires WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Soviet Union is getting a back- fire of radioactive fallout today from its mammoth nuclear ex-! plosion, U.S. Weather Bureau} scientists reported. They said the fallout was car- is trye|tied on winds blowing south to that a 50-megaton bomb wae seas over Russia. ploded, it is an outrage tramp- The massive blast Monday in ling on our fervent pleas," chief\the atmosphere over the Nov- cabinet secretary Masayoshi Ohira said The Norwegian parliament hydrogen|was debating a proposed reso-|,1, : fies ir vga be e Russians would test. But bomb detonated in the Arctic lution protesting Soviet atmos-|the U.S. Atomic Energy Com-| pheric tests when word of the mammoth blast was received. aya Zemlya region in the Arce tic, may have been the 50-meg: aton Khrushchev imier announced {mission said it doubts the de- ijtonation was that big. Red Congress Berlin Border Tension Rises the Cana | | BERLIN (Reuters)--Tension increased along the border be- |tween East and West Berlin to- day following repeated bursts|bombs at a West Berlin loud- of gunfire during the night und/speaker hi i ja tear-gas battle between Com- |munist and West Berlin police. Repeated shooting was heard during the night in the lareas, particularly those be- tween the French sector and |East Berlin- | West Berlin police, newly jarmed with automatic weapons border} The clash came as the Com- |the grenades for the first time Monday night when the East Germans hurled five tear gas truck, its weapon that Soviet Pre-|f FRED GARDINER Tshombe"s Reaction Awaited ELISABETHVILLE (AP) iThe UN command today jawaited President Moise |Tshombe's reaction to the UN secretariat's conditional ratifi- cation of the Katanga cease- | windshield. The West Berlin |police hurle¢ six 'tear gas gren- jades at the Communists. jmunist East German govern- ment imposed new restrictions on the border to clinch its au- ithority over all civilian traffic \between East and West Berlin. The restrictions fire aegr Mahmoud. Khiari, UN negotiator in Elisabethville, secretariat to Tshombe and hts }ministers Monday. Khiari said he hoped Tshombe would accept the conditions TORIES DODGE LIQUOR STAND Elected Leader Can Set TORONTO (CP) -- A resolu- tion dealing with liquor laws| and administration has been| struck from the draft policy re-| port of the Ontario Progressive} Conservative party because of! Policy from the federal government under its physical fitness pro- gram to establish a provincial program, provide greater assis- tance to amateur teams, ex- pand facilities to train coaches its controversial nature, Fred-|and instructors, grant fitting erick Gardiner, chairman of the|'€¢ Cognition for outstand- party's policy committee, said today. Mr. Gardiner, who later intro- duced the report to the conven- tion being held here, told re- porters that the committee felt it did not want to try and in- fluence the party's new deader in regards to such a controver- sial subject: The resolution recommended that liquor laws be modernized 'so as to make them consistent with the circumstances and conditions which now prevail in this large and cosmopolitan province." It said the large tourist indus- try requires reasonable laws in respect of the sale and admin- istration of alcoholic beverages. Mr. Gardiner said it was felt that the new leader, to be chosen Wednesday, should make his own policy on liquor. |The report of the 150-men- | | each policy se¢tion. the. chief|/ USE FEDERAL AID The committee recommended delivered the ratification andjthat the Ontario government the conditions attached by the/make use of any aid received ber policy committee was read to delegates by the chairman of jing achievements in amateur sport and physical fitness, and provide bursaries and 'scholar- |ships to athletes who enter ed- jucation institutions. Consideration should also be given to appointing a special |committee within the govern- |ment to inaugrate and co-ordi- jnate a comprehensive physical \fitness program for all ¢itizens. On the labor front, the com- mittee urged legislative action to expedite and strengthen the conciliation process, speed up machinery of certification in the construction industry, and pro- vide adequate penalties under the Labor Relations Act for per- sons using unfair practices, STUDY MIGRANTS Another recommendation was for the next session of the leg- islature to establish a select committee to study the working conditions of the migratory worker in Ontario. The committee condemned | litical party which raises mem ip funds through un- ions. It did not'mention names, but the recommendation clearly meant the New Democratic Party. Indicates Effort require allispeedily and would authorize! the exchange of about 190 UN| soldiers captured during the GM employee a new snub from Communist|should be settled in private. agency Tass Antonious was accompanied) China following the sudden de-| Despite the rebuke, Chou was) ~ by two unidentified boys when|parture for home of Chinese|seen off at the airport Monday! | and tear-gas grenades, used foreigners entering East Berlin in civilian clothes to show picked up by the Coast Guard and turned over to the U.S. Customs Monday night The boys and the dog reported to h crossed into the United States from Niagara Falls, via the railway tracks on a bridge below the Falls Antonious is a pupil in 7. at St. Joseph's $ School. A: spokesman for school said the was manded" in class and asked to stand. in the hall, but that he was never sent home as he al- leged to his parents. Antonious slept Friday night in a shack near Maple. He hitchhiked next day to Toronto where he "borrowed" 'money from a stranger and continued to hitch-hike to. Hamilton. He obtained lodging and food at the Salvation Army in Hamilton he said were rade rate "repri- el }que Premier Chou En-lai. Inight by Premier Khrushchev Observers saw Chou's abruptiand other top Soviet officials. departure from the Soviet party, No reason was given for his 'CHARGE MILLIONAIRE jcongress here as a sign of a/sudden departure. Chou arrived jworsening quarrel between the|back in Peking this morning two countries over bitter Rus-'and was greeted at the airport 'sian attacks on tiny Albania for/by Communist party chief Mao following "Stalinist" policies. |Tse-tung and by the Chinese Chou rebuked the Soviet lead-|head of state, Liu Shao-chi. ers last week fer bringing their/yer..s OF MISSILE irrel with Albania into the! As Chou left Moscow, paren: +" ~~ |Defence Minister Rodion Mali- novsky was telling the con- gress that Russia has success-| fully developed a weapon for shooting down missiles "We have successfully coped with the task of destroying mis- siles in flight,"' he told the Com- munist leaders. He did not ela- borate on the claim or indicate what kind of missiles had been destroyed in the tests. Soviet NEW YORK (AP)--A mil- lionaire who used his fortune to help derelicts faced ar- raignment in felony court to- day on charges that he fed and housed six drug addicts in his Harlem. shelter. John §. Cram, 51, a former student at Princeton and Ox- ford Universities, was ar- rested in a raid on the shelter Monday and taken into cus- Maiinovsky repeated Khrush- tody along with six derelicts 'Flames Destroy Large Building THOROLD (CP)--Fire which raged out of control for more than seven hours today de- stroyed a downtown business building here. Only the. brick shell of the three-storey build- ing which contained a variety HELP The Chest CLIM chev's claim that the Soviet) Who were charged with pos- Union has a 100-megaton bomb Session of narcotics. and said that Russia had "con- trolled" a 50-megaton bomb. His statement came a few hours after observa tories throughout the world recorded a blast in the arctic circle which some scientists said might be the 50-megaton wea-| pon Khrushchev said would be exploded before the end of the store, a poolroom and a vacant apartment, remained standing. The fire was discovered by two policemen shortly after 3 a.m. today. Fire departments from St. Catharines, Thorold and Thor- old South, as well as volunteers from the nearby Provincial Pa- per plant, fought the blaze. Damage was estimated at about $100,000. Cause of the fire | college days Cram has been deeply concerned with erty and has devoted bis time and: money to relieving poor. Cram _ told been feeding and sheltering vagrants for about five years. At first, he had handed out last $215,000 $200,000 $175,000 $150,000 $125,000 $100,000 $75,000 $50,000 $25,000 Start pis pov- | the | | police he had | | Used His Money To Aid Derelicts money, but he found that many of the recipients used it to get drunk. So he hit on the idea of the shelter. He said he paid $200 a month rent and spent about $100 a day to care for the vagrants. Police quoted Cram as say- ing he was aware some of the men used narcotics but he did not know it was against the law to shelter an addict. Cram was charged with A friend said that from his | to be used for the congrega- tion of narcotics addicts and with possession of narcotics paraphernalia. As he was led to a cell, Cram told a policeman: "No- body looks out for drug ad- | dicts. There will be nobody to | feed them tonight." | not known, month. 16-Months Bloodshed Fail To Awaken Congo LEOPOLDVILLE (AP)--Six-/Victor Lundula teen months of bloodshed, poli-|Stanleyville. tical chaos and near bank-| The United Nations has flamboyant nationalist leader ruptecy -- not to mention mil-|reached a cease - fire agree-|was slain in Katanga more than lions of dollars -- have failed to}ment in the secessionist prov-\eight months ago while being waken The Congo to reality. ince of Katanga, whose rich held by Tshombe's government. mgolese leaders still cannoticopper deposits are the coun-' Lumumba's top lieutenants-- side tribal suspicions, pre-try's greatest asset. It is des-/Gizenga, Interior Minister ms and ideologies longjperately trying to bring Ka-|Christonhe Gbenye and Cham- h to face their real prob-|tanga President Moise Tshombejber President Joseph Kasongo, ems as a nation. into negotiations with Adoula. all leftists -- are contending for The republic's "government Both Mobutu and Lundula talk his mantle. They hope; too, to of reconciliation" under Prem-|vaguely of taking Katanga with|seize power from Adoula. ier Cyrille Adoula has failed to their armies, although the log- Anti white excesses last reconcile istic problems alone are far be- vear started an exodus of Eur- The backyard government setjyond their capabilities. opeans that almost paralyzed up by Antoine Gizenga in Stan-'. The Congolese parliament|the economy and threatened to ille with Communist help|considers its most important or-|turn The Congo back to the icallapsed and Gizenga joined|der of business is to chop up|jungle. They are coming back jthe Doula government as vice-|the jungle iand into still more|now -- Belgian teachers, busi- | Premier. He contributed little|provinces with diverse tribaljnessmen; technicians. The jand has gone back to Stanley-jurges iville jwhether le will return 'entral government and admin-|inent The army is still divided, with\ister the present six provinces this Gen, Joseph Mobutu command-|properly ing in Leopoldville and Gen.| The shadow of the first pre-|Katanga's rich copper profits. in charge at|mier, Patrice Lumumba, still ey\ hope to operate of 900,000 cannot huge country . ¥ 'Press Message 'Goes To Queen KARACHI, Pakistan (Reut- ers)--Delegates from 14 coun- tries attending the Common- jwealth Press Union conference here today sent a message ex- ipressing "humble duty and lies across The Congo. The tall,|loyal greetings' to Queen Eliz-| The storm capsized a dinghy jabeth. At a brief private session, delegates. also heard a message from the CPU president, Lore | Astor of Hever, regretting that |he was unable to attend the |ninth quinquennial. conference 'in Pakistan and India. The message was read by his eldest son, Gavin Astor, chair- man of the CPU council who was elected conference chair- man at today's meeting. Maj. - Gen. Lord Burnham, |vice-chairman of the CPU coun- jcil, was elected conference vice- chairman, The deputy chairmen of the conference are Altaf Hussain and Tushar Kanti Ghosh, chair- | | ; There are not enough/Congo can hardly survive with-|men of the Pakistan and Indian|1961, which farmers were able Nobody knows when or'skilled Congolese to run thejout them. The central govern-|sections of the CPU, respec-|to get through negotiation with tively Business sessions of the con- isquare miles without a share of/ference begin in Karachi on|Mr. Morden, the union's vice- 1Oct, 30, having permitted his premises | ;\drowned. | passes, proving their identity. Despite the announcement western officials were allowed to drive into East Berlin Mon- day without any special identi- fication: check. J.8. COUPLE STOPPED | The latest Communist move |was linked with an incident at fighting last month. But some observers thought Tshombe might reject: the conditions, which are designed to remove implications that the cease-fire was favorable to Katanga's secessionist regime at the ex- pense of the central Congo gov- ernment in Leopoldville- ithe Friedrichstrasse crossing) point Sunday night in which a \U.S. official and his. wife were) \detained as they tried to enter| Communist East Berlin. The incident drew a formal protest} lfrom the U.S. military com-| jmander. | Ship Breaks-Up 'But Men Safe In Wheelhouse ROSSLARE, Ireland (AP) --| Gales tore a ship in two in the) {Trish Sea Monday and hurled jher wheelhouse on to the rocks with three crew members still) jinside it. | | Men in a lifeboat battling) jmountainous waves to answer distress signals saw the 313-ton Irish coaster Halronnel break in) two and slide beneath the sea| just off shore. For nearly eight, hours the lifeboat searched for survivors. |When light came they saw the wheelhouse perched on a rock jwith seas breaking over it {From the wheelhouse three sur- |vivors waved faintly. A helicop- jter transferred them to a res- }cue ship. At least six persons lost their jlives in another mishap as 90- jmile-an - hour winds pounded Britain and ireland. | | \off the Welsh coast. Six persons, | Council Urges Cut In Prices OTTAWA (CP) -- The Cana- dian Produce Council has urged lower butter prices to cut the mounting butter surplus, with the federal government subsidi- zing the loss to farmers. The council, continuing meet- ings here with today's emphasis on eggs and poultry, set no re- duction targets. But Arthur Wil- son of Moose Jaw, Sask., coun- cil secretary-treasurer, said the government now has 207,000,000 pounds of butter in storage and jdicates the Soviet Union making a major effort to U.S. Polaris submarines. The report by the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission that a rela- tively low-powered nuclear ex- plosion was set off under water south of the Arctic 'sland of Novaya Zemlya was overshad- owed by the rest of the AEC j announcement--that Russia also had detonated in the atmos- phere a nuclear device of high yield. At about the same time, Rus- sia's defence minister issued a statement that "the problem of destroying rockets in flight has been solved successfully." The ambiguous phrasing of Marshal Rodion Malinovsky left in doubt his exact meaning. But there could be little doubt about the significance of the two other Soviet experiments. The big bomb is intended as more is coming. an offensive weapon. counter the mounting force of To Counter US. WASHINGTON (AP)--A Rus- |sian underwater nuclear test in- is | But underwater nuclear weapons and anti - 'missile mis- siles--if indeed the latter have been developed by the Soviets --are designed to repel retalia- tory strikes: FEAR SUB MISSILES The danger from submarine- launched missiles looms large for Russia. At least four atomic-powered Polaris submarines are on sta- tion with range of Russian tar- gets. U.S. Deputy Defence Sec- retary Roswell Gilpatric said last Saturday that six such sub- marines were at sea, armed with 96 missiles. One or two of them may be en route or get- ting ready to head for stations off the northwest European coasts. Eventually, 10 Polaris boats will. be assigned to the |}missile watch. | In the anti - submarine nu- jclear weapon field, Russja ap- pears to be substantially behind the U.S. program, Atomic depth charges now 'are part of the U.S. navy arsenal. |including a family of four, were Asks Compensation For Rabies Losses | LINDSAY (CP) -- Compensa- jtion to farmers for animals ldestroyed because of rabies should be re-established by the Ontario government, Edwin Morden told the 10th annual 'convention of the Ontario Far- jmeérs' Union here Monday. The temporary re-establish- jment of the rabies compensa-| |tion from mid-1960 until March, the provincial and federal gov- jernments, was not enough, said Premier Leslie Frost and Mrs. Frost try out their new station wagon presented to 'president, them in Toronto by the On- « tario Progressive Conserva- tive Association. The premier, who made his farewell speech to the party convention, said. TRY OUT STATION WAGON he has always wanted a sta» tion wagon to use on his hunt+ ing and fishing trips. ' --CP Wirephoto

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