Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 30 Jul 1962, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY One time a man doesn't call a spade a spade is when he falls over it in the dark. Oshawa Gime WEPTHER REPORT Scattered thundershowers to- night. Partly cloudy and cooler Tuesday with light winds. VOL, 91--NO. 177 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, JULY 30, 1962 Authorized as Second Ottawa and for payment Class Mail Post Office Department, ot Postage in Cash. SIXTEEN PAGES TRADE MINISTER George Hees (left) and Sir Roger Makins discuss a $127,700,000 uranium purchase contract be- tween Canada and Britain Ben Bella Troops Occupy Algiers ALGIERS (AP) Algerian The guerrilla command an- guerrilla troops held Algiers to-;nounced it took control to re- day after a bloodless coup be-/establish national unity It lieved to favor the quest for pledged to "open the gates" of power of dissident Vice-Premier| the capital to all factions seek- Ahmed- Ben Bella ing a solution to the political Several opponents B en! problems Bella were arrested. Among np ' mae them was Amar Oussedik, poli-/ MAY SET UP BUREAL The announcement was con ey ; hing eels pase A ocosovemgecelig hie Bap 2 ae sidered a prelude to the installa- guerrill ers said-was dis-| tion in Algiers of the seven-man solved, political bureau that Ben Bella Premier Ben Youssef Ben|!§ SP0nsoring. Khedda and officials of his.gov-| In Paris, Ben Bella's right- ernment were not molested. Two thousand guerrillas of the} told Willaya' Zone IV _ surrounding|Political bureau would be in Algiers occupied the city at|Algiers Thursday or Friday. It dawn Sunday. Their com-| Was set up in the west Algierian mander, 27-year-old Col, Si Has-| city of Tlemcen under Ben san, said he hopes to form a/Bella's control junta of Willaya commanders to; But Khider also warned: head the government until elec-| 'The situation is very grave. tions are held in the newly in-|If stability is' not established dependent state. Elections for ajwithin a month, I fear the constituent assembly are sched-| worst." uled Aug. 12. owned Eldorado Mining and Refining Limited of Canada, and Sir Roger, chairman of f or hand man, Mohammed Khider, | told @ press conference the} U.K. OKAYS PURCHASE OF CANADIAN URANIUM 7 Scouts Sought As Trip Overdue | = . ende: aid iseven boy scouts from Buffalo,|superintendent sai | | | | signed at Ottawa today. Mr. | the United Kingdom Atomic 1120 Hees signed for the crown- | me Energy Authority, signed for Britian (CP Wirephoto) | Two More Charge In Abortion Ring (CP)--Two more|the boys, but that et least one! |, TORONTO persons were charged Sunday} with procuring abortions and conspiracy to procure abortions as police continued an investi-|returned to nearby Tea Lake on! gation of what they said: may be a $50,000-a-year abortion ring. Mrs. Adeline Churchill, 52, and Harry Simpson, 74, both of Beaver planes were kept away ~ Toronto, were arrested by pro- vincial police in Walkerton Metropolitan Toronto Detec- | tive Douglas Walton said the ar- rests were connected with the} arrest July 16 of Mrs, Thelma Eloise Blackburn, 50, of Picker- ing. She was also charged with) procuring abortion and conspi-| racy. i Police "arrested Mrs. Black- burn in a raid on the Ninga Kennels outside Pickering, after they had taken to hospital a/was shot to death Sunday night) woman bleeding as the result of) a crude operation. Det Walton said an investiga- tion had been going on for about two weeks. He said detectives) had travelled through . Ontario and part of the United States to find material witnesses He said a ring operated in Toronto and Pickering, about 20 miles east of here Reds Want Body Of Mystery Lady | LONDON (AP) -- Communist] delegations have demanded the body of a Romanian woman who died in a hospital during] the weekend after an explosion at the home of the Romanian} minister in London Two other women and a man,} all Romanians, were injured by the blast Embassy officials said the} body of the woman, who was in her '20s, will be flown back to self-styled former RCMP anti-| score The women's group is a Romania. They indicated they} would object to any request for an inquest Romanian diplomats day which shattered a ground- floor reception room at the Bel-| grave Square residence of Min-lthe signed statement from Mr.|lowed a five-hour talk with him (CP)-- for CANOE LAKE, Ont air and ljand search N.Y., overdue two days on a gonquin Park. The boys, alll teen-agers, were identified today as: Barry Sehgar, Bruce Small, James Hiff, Howard Goldstein, Sheldon Mocks, David Amet and John Heuston They are members of , Beth Zion Synagogue U. W. (Yorky) Fiskar, park superintendent, said he was "Not too concerned" about the boys because they could have decided to wait at a campsite for a break in the fog which has prevailed im the area for several days He said he was not how many leaders were Troop certain with experienced guide accompanied); them, They were travelling in three canoes and should have Friday after their seven - day trip. Until Sunday, the park's from the area by high winds "Just two weeks ago there was a party missing for two days and while we were out Doctors Save Baby As Girl, 16, Shot BETONVILLE, Ark. (AP)AA 16-year-old pregnant housewife), and a short time later doctors delivered her baby by caesar- ean section. The infant girl, born within 10 minutes after her mother's death, was reported to be doing fine Deputy said Mrs. Sheriff R. D. Arnold Myrna Joyce Red, eight months pregnant, was shot at her home. Details the shooting were not immedi- ately available SIGNS STATEMENT of} out, they turned! Lake," the them Canoe for at looking jup here The missing filed al party canoe trip, is under way im Al-/route plan, had good maps and good equipment. The wilderne ark is about 200 miles th east of Toronto. | Mr. Fi said the party set) out from Tea Lake, about 30) miles west of Huntsville, and was. {o have travelled some 20 miles north to the Tim River) before turning back Stalin Blamed : For Farm Lag MOSCOW (Reuter Pre- Khrushchev has accused late dictator Stalin of hav-| a "perverted understanding alist production." his voice rising y crescendo, made the in a speech broad cast Sunday by Moscow radio the opening of a hydro-elec- Kremenchu Dnieper i s) mier he of sox Khrushchev bk stiine SELF-STYLED have follow- by Calvin to Angry denials | ed the statement M. MacDonald (above) Ottawa, self styled under- | cover RCMP agent, that Com- Referring to shortcomings inj} ric station. at on the ive the | Ukraine of | Contract Price Below '57 Bid : illee RCMP AGENT ious organizations including the Voice of Women. Mrs. Helen Tucker, president of the Joice of Women, said in To- nonto the statement was a lie. ~--CP Wirephoto) | OTTAWA (CP) -- The United Kingdom will buy 24,000,000 jpounds of Canadian uranium at ja price of $127,700,000 under iterms of a contract signed here today after protracted negotia- tions between the two govern-| }ments, The contract was signed fol- lowing renegotiation of. 1957 let- ters of intent in which Britain signified that it was prepared to buy this amount of uranium at a price of some $192,000,000. That meant a price of $8 a ton but the price disclosed today is $5.03 a ton. Deliveries under the contract, signed by Trade Minister Hees for Crown-owned Eldorado Min- ing and Refining Limited of Canada and by Sir Roger Ma- kins, chairman of the United Kingdom Atomic Energy Au- thority, will take place over a period extending into the early 1970s. While the letters of intent were exchanged between the two Crown agencies in 1957, then did not become public knowledge until March of 1961. After their disclosure, Britain asked for renegotiation of price and delivery schedules in view of changed uranium market surplus. effect the letters of intent be- tween the two organizations ex- changed in the spring of. 1957," said a joint statement. Britain will pay a basic price of $5.03 a pound compared with $8 originally envisaged. How- ever, this figure will rise under a provision providing for prem- iums- and carrying charges to be paid by Britain for deferm- ent of deliveries. The statement said the con- tract. will have the effect of ex- tending the period of operations of Canadian uranium produc. ers by about 1 2-3 months be- yond the dates by which they will complete deliveries under existing contracts with Eldo- rado. Signing of the contract gives a new lease on life to Cana- dian uranium communities, par- ticularly in the Bancroft and Blind River areas of Ontario. Its terms are designed to en- sure the continuation of a healthy uranium industry in Canada until the early 1970s when uranium is expected to be in demand again for nuclear power stations and non-nuclear uses. The 1957 letiers of intent called for a price of $8 a pound, conditions, with a heavy world|or a total of some $192,000,000, with deliveries to take place be- "This contract will carry into|tween 1963 and 1966. | | munists have infiltrated var- electric power supply to farms, |~-- i Fcc Khrushchey said these were "survivals of Stali non-com- S prehension, because Stalin for- Police Praised bade the joining of collective! farms to the (electrical power) lgrid, even when the grid passed) jover the territory of collective farms and state farms. 'He had a perverted under- standing of the system of so- 'cialist production," the premier said. : land (AP)--A prosecutor told a | Khrushchev went on court today that 250 policemen "But Stalin has been dead a/prevented a full-scale riot Sun- long time, and we have criti-;\day when crowds clashed with cized what was negative in him,|members of Sir Oswald Mos- but there are still survivals of|ley's right-wing British Union his heritage. We must root them|Movement order to unbind 'the| The judge fined 30 persons a agricultural produc-|total of £75 and continued the leases of nine others who ------|pleaded innocent. Some of the defendants were accused of dis- orderly behavior and others of obstructing the police. Fines Fascist Riots MANCHESTER, _ Eng- in jhands of 'tion."" 'Agent Admits No Reds OTTAWA (CP) Mrs. Char lotte McEwen, chairman of the Ottawa area group of the Voice lof Women, said today she has gets for statement MacDonald, signed M obtained a from Calvm Communist agent, which says: "7 do not know of any Com munist member who holds a would position on either the natiohal)'" not discuss.the explosion Satur-|or any provincial committee of HOLD FIVE-HOUR TALK the Voice of Women." Mrs: McEwen said she got iwere £2 to £5. i Mosley, 65-year-old pre - war fascist leader, was battered to the ground during the disorders about 40 of his supporters marched through Manchester In VOW He said VOW, the New Dme.| Stes © a@ meeting place. ocratic. Party and the ban-the.| Running fights developed as bomb groups all are prime tar-|the procession moved through Communist infiltration|hostile crowds, prosecutor Da- communist secret mem-| Vid Grandy said. He added that VOW by the/the police performed ¢heir du- ; ties coolly and efficiently even though some of them were hit nu-|by eggs, cabbages, stones and |pennies. and that bers had joined relatively new organization op-} posed to nuclear testing, clear armament, racial discrim- ation and anti-semitism Consicted Ser Mrs. McEwen said the state- ment by Mr. MacDonald fol- such children, said they would "do anything to 'help others who have gone through what have--or will be going through we; ister Alexandru Lazareanu iMacDonald Saturday after hejand it was signed in the pres- Offered Asylum Detectives who investigated|held a second press conference/ence of a colleague with her,| were told a tin of cleaningjto discuss his claims of Com-|at the home of a friend of Mr.! Robert : " LONDON (/ -- Dr. fluid exploded munist infiltration in various MacDonald. LONDON (AP) f | | | GENEVA (AP) -- Lt.-Gen. E. L. M. Burns, Canada's chief |delegate at the 17-nation dis- jarmament talks, told the' con- jference today that Soviet pro- posals for ending the arms race are "unrealistic and impracti- cable." Speaking on behalf of Gen. Burns Hits For Preventing Red Peace Plan calling for the simultaneous destruction of foreign military jbases and delivery vehicles for jnuclear weapons--were carried However, the letters were ex- changed at a time when wor uranium supplies were sh and Britain needed the metal for its weapons and atomic power programs. This picture changed drastic- ally with the discovery of large uranium resources in many countries and the realization that no substantial mounts of uranium would be required for power until the late 1960s or early 1970s, jout, it would be impossible for any nation to launch a surprise attack. Burns rejected this, saying the|that Zorin's statement proposal) Western powers, Burns told the|"'gives a very misleading ac-| conference's 63rd plenary ses-|count of the strategical fac-| jsion that if Russian disarma- jment plans. were. carried out, the strategic position of the {NATO alliance would be con- siderably weakened vis - a - vis that of the Communists' War- jsaw treaty bloc. Burns' speech was described jby Western diplomatic sources jas the West's answer to a that occurred while he and|speech Soviet delegate Valerian! Wester |Zorin made last Friday. | Zorin told the conference that jif Russia's disarmament plan-- | 'Thieves Set Fire To Oshawa House Members of the Oshawa Po- lice Department are conducting an investigation into a Sunday __|night fire at the home of Rob- jert Jarman, 425 Grandview jstreet south. |. Mr. Jarman, who is an in- |spector at the R. D. Wemer 'Co, plant, left Oshawa on vaca- tion on Saturday. At about 9.30) \p.m. Sunday, the house was jfound to be on fire. The Oshawa Fire Depart- tors involved." | He said Zorin's proposals |would leave Western Europe at jthe mercy of superior east-bloc jforces by requiring all troops jto be withdrawn within 'their own national boundaries. | This means Russian troops |would only be within about 400 miles striking distance from n Europe, whereas the United States would have to transport arms and msé4p.,a- transport arms and men across the Atlantici n any operation to jaid Western Europe against a | surprise attack. Oshawa Team Rally Winner TIMMINS (CP)--Don Hamb- ley and his navigator John Wilson, both of Oshawa, brought the winning car across the fin- ish line Sunday in the 800-mile golden jubilee sports car rally. Doug Hickmott of Sault Ste. Marie, Mich., and navigator Jim Callon of Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., were second. The cars ran over a course of back roads and fields going through Chapleau, Sudbury, Sturgeon Falls, New Liskeard, Kirkland Lake and finishing at Timmins. | as the sai |A. Soblen has been offered asy-' with it in the future." Common- CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 oP aia eB The 'guerrilla troops rolled e decked trucks that brought MacContinues si tm the nearsy ita plain, Tory Shakeup Algiers, which beamed their appeal to the population for LONDON (Reuters) -- Prime|"calm and support." : The city remained quiet. The tinued the Piadecg oh ~ inject-| only sign of the coup were sol- ing young ood" into his Z0v-!diers in splotched camouflage ernment's image. up in some streets in predomi- whose Conservative party has nently NV dg suffered a big popularity dip in|_~ y Moslem areas recent months, followed up his relatively young treasury chief Help Sought For --Reginald Maudling, 45 -- by more changes giving younger treasury and 'elsewhere. TORONTO (CP) A young 4 treasury spokesman said Toronto couple, parents of a Sir Laurence Helsby, 54, will babe deformed after the mother recently reached the normal re-'day stepped from behind a cur- tirement age of 60, as jointitain of anonymity to help other permanent secretary of the parents in the same situation. domestic civil service ____|who believe the federal covera. ment should help parents of ments from a time bomb ripped through the floor of a hotel room here Sunday nar- ily of six, The bomb, planted in a steel locker, wrecked the coffee shop, on er the main floor at the Willow Inn biel minutes hae acts od LONDON (AP)--Prime Minis- te] employees wa asi 'e\ter Macmillan's. bid to lead Ape goon hod ed the |}Common Market faced its worst iy Ug sa SS aie pay ait {crisis today with the Brussels pied by Mr. am TS. ¢ id "|negotiations apparently bogged to 10, from Burnaby near Van-| Cause of the trouble: Refusal ge picak }of the market's present six- RCMP said bits of a dry cell wembers to provide written watch found at the scene indi-| open markets for cate the explosion was the work! wealth farm products of Sons of Freedom Doukhobors) Britain has virtually accepted Columbia Kootenays with bomb-|,., pie preferences by 1979, but ings and arson for decades she still insists that : Borope jmust provide "comparable out- |cheese and meat which Canada, jAustralia and New Zealand {have hitherto sold in Britain. they call a reasonable -- price policy for farm products which should enable the common- ~~ jinto the capital aboard flag. They first seized Radio Minister Macmillan Sunday con- The 68 - year - old Macmillan, uniforms and machine-guns set two-week-old appointment of a men top permanent posts in the Deformed Babies succeed Sir Norman Brook, who used the drug thalidomide. to- treasury and official head of the Mr, and Mrs. Carl Beeston, KELOWNA, B.C, (CP)--Frag- oe Market rowly missing a sleeping fam- kitchen and two washrooms on locker. __ |Britain into Europe's booming floor) lie and their children, aged twol ann, in deadlock battery and a cheap pocket guarantees that they who have terrorized the British|;,, ending of Commonwealth jlets'. for the wheat, butter, The six have offered iat wealth producers to compete. 'cleaned a floor will keep!' Canadian organizations. Negotiators With Winnie acceptable because it is too un-) specific in its. effect on Com- monwealth sales. With an emphatic '"'no,"' Brit-| ain's top negotiator, Edward Heath, flew back to London Saturday. He took his troubies,| Sunday to a. respected elder) statesman, the ailing Sir Wins-| ton. Ohurchill, who has. weath- ered worse storms in his time. For a half-hour the two chatted about Britain's problems in the} former prime minister's hospi-; tal room Macmillan has staked his po- litical reputation on leading Britain into the Common Mar- ket. But he is pledged io his! Commonwealth partners too. Failure in either direction could be disastrous. The cabinet is therefore ex-| ket food production kept down by low fixed prices, so Com- monwealth producers will have a chance to sell in Europe too. And, if the Commonwealth farmers are hurt, she wants some provision for talking things aver and making adjust menis There is a feeling in London that President de Gaulle seeking to turn the Common Market to the benefit of French farmers at the expense. of the Commonwealth. Meanwhile a founder-member of the Mar- ket, France is already claiming special treatment for the over- seas territories she once ruled, Some of the. six France, West Germany, Italy, Belgium, The. Netherlands and Luxem- bourg--are reported to have s as She said Mr. MacDo aldijum in an unnamed Europea could name only three persons|country, friends said today. jhe said were VOW Communist] the man under life sentence jinfiltrators and that he pre-jin the United States as a So- |sented no evidence for his al-| viet spy cannot take advantage legations lof the offer without the ap- "He offered, however, to try|proval of Home _ Secretary jand get some names from two|Henry Brooke. Soblen now is in janti-Communist organizations inja London prison awaiting last- Ottawa with whom he was go-|ditch legal moves. to free him- ing to be in touch," she said. gobien's friends declined to =| say whether the country which has offered him asylum is in western Europe or the Commu-} nist bloc. Denmark Sand To Join Market : they jretary to allow Soblen to take up the and. Barnett Stross, said would see the Home sec. later today to urge him en COPENHAGEN -- (Reuters)--!} Denmark should ignore Br and join the European Common |Market as soon as possible says |Andres 'Andersen, agricult council president "We cannot gamble with all our exports," -he added. "if Denmark holds its attitude that our membership should wait for Britain, all our egg offer of asylum, They, too, de- , clined to name the country in- ural volved Big Farm Step <oungeadgbege Taken By ECM four sows." BRUSSELS _(AP)--The Com- Andersen, an opposition party, mon Market today took its most member of the Danish Parlia- audacious step toward iniegrat- }ment, says he was not surpisedjing the 'economies of the six! will for rts »X PC et less pected to insist that Britain can-|given' verbal assurances they|at_ a Common Market refusal to partners -- the three Benelux} not join the Common Market un-| less the Commonwealth farmers get a written pledge. will be reasonable on fixing prices. But London considers verbal promises are not firm The British feel this offer is un-| Britain wants Common Mar-|enougb give special concessions for! countries, Commonwealth farm exports West jwhile Denmark negotiated { membership. : France, Italy and} Germany--since the Eu-| 4% years ago. m 1 Two members of Parliament,| azabor members Scholefield Al-| |ment, two pumper units jand the emergency truck, under \the direction of Platoon Chief| 4 |M Ostler responded to the jalarm. | On their arrival the fire \fighters found the touse had jbeen ransacked and that a fire jhad been set on the premises. |Damage was estimated at ap- proximately $250 to the house and contents. Eiger Peak Beats 4 Swiss Climbers KLEINE SCHEIDEGG, Swit- | jzerland (Reuters)--Four Swiss jmountaineers -- including two women -- returned here safely jtoday after giving up 'an at- jtempt to conquer the 13,926-foot Eiger Peak. Fears for their safety had mounted after the four were hidden by mist on the danger- ous north face of the mountain for 36 hours, The four gave up their at: tempt on the north wall Sunday morning and bivouacked Sun- day night on their way down. Early this morning they 'ar- rived at a tunnel opening for a railroad line- connecting the town of Lauterbrunnen with the get's sister peak. Bimbo, a water skiing. ele- phant, is just one big bundle | of pain from trunk to tummy. She skipped away' from her | Stall Saturday night at the Kay | Bros: circus and devoured 100 | pounds of cotton candy -- it yrjropean community was set up|summit.of the Jungfrau, the Ei-| gave her an elephantine tum- my ache. And that's not all PAIN IN THE PACHYDERM her troubles. She's still not over a cold she got last week in Seattle on a water skiing engagement. Bimbo would like to forget the whole week but you know what they say about elephants.

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