PE in Es Sige THOUGHT FOR TODAY Live within your income and you'll live without worry -- or much of anything else. The Oshawa Cimes WEATHER REPORT Mainly cloudy with a few show- ers and thunderstorms Satur- day. Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy VOL. 9I--NO. 198 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, AUGUST 24, 1962 Authorized as Second Cless Mell Post Office Deportment Ottewa ond for payment of Postage EIGHTEEN PAGES in Cash, Mounting -- Tensi n Algiers ALGIERS (Reuters) -- Ten-| sion between Algeria's civil and! military leaders ran high today| over the seizure of Algiers radio} station by the. soldiers and a} violent demonstration Thursday} by 20,000 ordinary Algerians de- manding work, bread and houses The radio station was still in the hands of soldiers from the Algiers military command early today, but Mohammed Khider a member of the National Lib- eration front's ruling political bureau, told a press conférence Thursday night that if they did not give it 'up "we shall tell the people to take it." Khider's press conference was reported only briefly in Algiers papers today after army cen- sors accompanied by armed sol diers were reported to have vis- ited newspapers and told editors Poets 4 what to print = oct | Khider said the soldiers had ARGONAUTS' LOU AGASE ee ae oe ee ee e | tary command had also said Argonauts Fire Coach Lou Agase fines mnoscen In the midst of the wrangling |they would withdraw their can- jdidates from next month's elec- }tions--the first in independent street in response to calls from Algeria. a, between civil and military lead- ers, Moslems surged into the street in response to calls from TORONTO (CP)--Lou Agase,| financial terms were disclose head coach of the Toronto Ar-| it was reported that his salary gonauts of the Eastern Football| was somewhere around the $20,- Conference for the last three| 000-a-season level years, has been given his re-| In his first two years as Ar- iease gonaut head coach. Agase - Argonauts managing - direc.| loted the team into the East- tor Lew Hayman made the an-|@™ Conference final. But both nouncement here today after| times Argos lost the two-game the team returned from Winni-| tot@l-point finals ' peg where they were deefated| 10 1960 the Argos finished in 33-13 by the Winnipeg Blue the playoffs for the first time Farmer's Wife Slain In View was they Britain's told down to choose he would rejected cause jected by States to accept Bombers in a Canadian Foot-| 10 five seasons when they wound Of Young Son night They gained a bye into the fi-'4 rifie-wielding assassin fatally nal but were beaten 21-20 by the shot a 37-year-old farmer's wife mention of who would take over! on to win the Grey Cup and a neighbor 16 miles south head coaching duties of the Ar- (tact year Toronto finished of here' Thursday The 37-year-old Agase joined/feated Ottawa in the sudden-| pitching grain onto a wagon Toronto Argonauts in Decem-|death semi-final and then took pith her son, Gordon, and a two-year contract after jeaving|first game of the final against ine man stepped out of the Michigan State University Hamilton Tiger-Cats. In the sec- nearby bush and fired three He signed a new two-year con-/fought back to tie the ea in the back tract last fall and although no|27-27 at the end of regulation' 401. sting the shots the | i verti taking) man iy ena W t R t ne pot Binge Pag secu Biast sheaves you'll pitch. '4 1 1 Robinson diec shortly r nto lost its first Es es eques s | This year Toronto St otter arriving at Shelburne Dis- jThurday night, and. is the only trict Hospital. oe '\CFL team without a victory Hayman said in his announce- ® Be li C ss ment that a successor to Agase rug Ossl € s S ture.' : MOSCOW AP)--The Western). The release of Agase leaves Allies today asked the Soviet|ATss with two assistant Union to join them in a four-|coaches, obby rkowski an LONDON (Reuters) -- Thalid- lin situation club's coaching staff less than a omide, the trenquillizing drug In similar nots delivered to month after Agase hired thousands of babies, is being There has been speculation the Soviet foreign ministry, the that if Agase' were gree a tested here as a possible cure United States, Britain and {3 ! pe : s : ' The drug is being tried on : 1ead coac' ition for the ; to hold the meeting in Berlin. a Pres pcb Bae animals with tumors at two The purpose of the meeting, )|----------___ FM 2 saa C the notes said, would be "joint Beatty Cancer Research Ins consultation with the Soviet au- Girl Dies In Fall tute and the radiotherapy de- ing furher deterioration of the pital siuation in Berlin." : Some doctors believe thalid- The notes made no mention of the Kremlin's decision to} EAST MEADOW, N.Y. (AP) unborn babies after being taken Twelve-year-old Frances Santo, by women in the early stages ant in Berlin, a move Western with a en.in her hands,/of pregnancy officials believe was designed/raced out of her home Thurs-; Medica! observers believe it sponsibility for recent incidents! to her friends certain types of cancerous along the Berlin wall A sister, Julia, 7, ran after' growths "The responsibility for the wall through the glass of a abi- cil spokesman said: "There and for its consequences rests nation storm - screen door andino results yet, It is much too ment." pierced her heart any hopes at all." LONDON (Reuters)--A Brit-\the House of Lords, Stephenson said it was also ish High Court judge today ruled! highest appeal court clear that the court could not ing convicted Soviet spy Dr. Ro-|that Soblen will be in Britainor act as a court of appeal bert Soblen to the United States/until at least the first week in| against it as long as the order Jusice Sir John Stephenson's; Stephenson rejected all four T Gi é ; a The. judge also rejected the ruling came at the end of a)arguments submitted by Sob-| contention that since Soblen was len's desperate fight to stave off application for a writ of habeas pa...) > deportation to the United States,/corpus to win his release from he could not be deported ri REJECTS ARGUMENT for spying The 61 Sobin's lawyers eport-|sat in court flanked by guards the law or in logic and com- mon sense to support the argu- appeal already had been ar-| Stephenson turned one ranged for next Wednesday. in of the most import argu-; The fourth argument, that the there, they plan to take it to/he ruled that the government because Soblen had no oppor- and not the person being de- v to 2 against it, was CITY EMERGENCY what ship o already been re- be put on a lower court . a deportation order directing earlier in the hearing that this POLICE 725-1133 Soblen to be put aboard a piane| principle made it impossible for FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 amounted to dition or-|the argument 'but reserved the ball League game Thursday UP first in the league standings.) MOUNT FOREST, Ont. (CP) The announcement made no; Ottawa Rough Riders, who went in view of her eight-year-old son -- tHird In the standings and de-- Mrs, Beatrice Robinson was ber,..1958, when he signed a/a commanding 25-7 lead in the) neighbor Frank Zaluki, 44, when where he was line coach, ond game, however, Hamilton 451. The third shot struck her time and went on to whip Ar- said, "These will be the Mrs three games, including one Meeting On will be named "'in the near fu- power meeting on the tense Ber: Steve Sucic Both joined the that has caused deformities in 1. for cancer Tart yee toon ¢ France said would prefer Wirkowski would be given the _jLondon clinics, the Chester thorities with a view to preven- partment of Hammersmith Hos- Into Glass Door omide destroyed some cells of abolish its military command- to absolve the Russians of re-'day night. to show the new petimay have similar effects on The notes said poiniediy: her and tripped. Julia p But a medical research coun- solely with the Soviet govern- was killed when a shard early to say whether it holds that a government order deport-| The legal manoeuvres ensure interfere in a deportation order is valid September was issued legally three-day court hearing in Sob-|len's lawyers in the form of an not legally admitted to Britain whereh e faces a life sentence' Brixton prison year-old psychiatrist} He said he found nothing in ers after the decision that an/as the ruling was handed down ment the Court of Appeal. If it fails) ments by Soblen's lawyers when deportation order was invalid ported had the right > High Court be PHONE NUMBERS Soblen's lawyers argued that Soblen's lawyers admitted bound for the United the High Court judge HOSPITAL 723-2211 an ext der and lextraditable offence. 'in any appeal. Of the rival sides for demonstra- tions, The political bureau's call was stifled by the army-con-) trolléd press and radio, but ob-| servers said the demonstrators |_ eventually showed overwhelm- TEST BAN TREATY TO RESUME ing support for the politicians | against the colonels At one state in strations, po turned fire hoses on the crowd as i the main administrat ing where the civil leaders e barricaded, shouting Enough talk, we want actior The demonstrators down the gates, stoned and tried to rush the bu put were turned back by the police hoses They were protes widespread. unemp! resulted from the departure of the French with independence July 3 and worsened as the na- tionalist leaders manoeuvred for control of the country, shattered by a 7%4-year nationalist insur- rection. ° the demon- Sweden Getting Reports About 'Mystery Sub STOCKHOLM (Reuters) -- Swedish naval authorities. today | were receiving reports on an un- identified submarine spotted and fired on by edish destroy. ers during naval manoeuvres Thursday The destroyers sub on their ra hydrophones--whik derwater noises oeuvres in Swedish Gotland Island in the tic. Sea od to surface internationa destroyers dropr depth charges and fired anti lsubmarine shelis but the. sub quickly sped out into interna- tional waters and safety Defence officials said the de stroyers had good hydrophone contact with the sub for more than one hour and that during the same period radar contact was also established Though it is Swedish-owned,| Gotland Island almost mid- wavy between the Swedish main- land and the Soviet Union's Bal- tie "republics"--Lithuania, Lat via, and E It is also within distance of Leningrad Unidentified thought to be Soviet have frequently been picked up on the radar screens of Canadian and U.S. nava sels during manoeuvres in the Atlantic Legal Abortion | Idea Backed By U.S. Authority MONTREAL (CP)--Dr. E. J Lorenze of New York, a prom- inent U.S. authority on rehabil- tation, says legal means should be provided for abortions of mothers who don't want to give birth to babies they fear may be deformed Dr. Lorenze told the annua meeting of the Canadian Asso- ciation of ysic Medicine and Rehabilitation Thursday the parents concerned should have their own say on abortions "If on the other hand it is ob- vious that the Id will be born not only deformed but also inio jan unhappy home, then abor- tion would be appropriate.' Dr. Lorenze is medical direc- tor of the Burke Foundation Re- jhabilitation Centre in White Plains, N.Y., and president of the New York Society for .Phy- sical Medicine and Rehabilita- tion Dr. G. Gi as of the Mont- real Rehabilitation Institute called abortion a sin against na- ture accordance flaw, the easy sea subs ves Fumes Kill Seven In Tannery Pit BEPINAI France (AP) Seven tannery workers were dead and two others were in critical condition Thursday after being overcome iby fumes in a 10-foot pit used for curing hides Police said one man climbed down Wednesday to clean the pit. He was overcome by fumes and a co rker went down to help him, Each man in turn was knocked out by the fumes as he tried to help the others When the rescue jrived nine men la t vit esplonage is not an right to raise the point again|Siw were dead. The seventh died for any clue that might lead to) eral Synod of 'the in hospital | - hours, "in the smashed | windows ding! 'itl, sa | Nuclear Powers Meet Tuesday GENEVA (AP) -- The threeja ban on underground explo- nuclear powers agreed today to sions.. jresume negotiations Tuesday, Dean and Kuznetsov at for a test ban treaty. /nounced to the conference, how- Arthur H. Dean of the United|ever, their agreement in pri- iStates stressed, however, that|vate talks to undertake new ne- ithe gap between East and West'gotiations. Dean said Britain, on the nuclear test ban issue|the other party to the talks, had has not been narrowed in pri-|been fully consulted on the de- vate talks with Vasily V. Kuz-| cision. j au é > baer Soviet deputy forelg URGED PRIVATE TALKS ; ' | India's Arthur Lall and Ame | The 17 « nation disarmament/pascador Fattah Hassan of the conference's nuclear test/tnited Arab Republic had urged |ban subcommittee suspended its.nean and Kuznetsov to hold pri. meetings two weeks ago be-\vate meetings with a view to |cause of a deadlock over Soviet getting the nuclear talks |refusal to accept the principle) started again. Lall claimed the | jof onsite inspections to police qgitterences had narrowed to @ German machine gun fire as he scrambled under Commu- nist barriers in attempt to reach freedom in West. --AP Wirephoto OMMUNIST border | is, standing behind tank following last night's shoot- | ing of escaping East Berlin ades on the Boose/ youth. The young man, an ge, peer through binocu- | East Berlin railway police- | ars into West Berlin today ' man was cut down by East ' U.S. Trucks, Troops Alone In E. Germany BERLIN (AP) -- More than/a young East German railway; He fell 190 U.S. Army vehicles loaded|policeman as he _ scrambled|chine-gun bullets, apparently hit with troops moved through East)through the wall seeking free-|just after he had Germany to West Berlin unes- corted today despite a Soviet)second such slaying in six days.|at the station. He was shot in threat to convoy U.S. velricles| An angry crowd collected in|the head and stomach. through Communist occupied the French sector at the scene) Police, searching in the dark- German territory of the latest shooting. French|ness after hearing the gunfire, Contingents of the 6th Infan-|soldiers and West Berlin police|found him 15 yards inside Wes! sion's 2nd Battle Group|quickly dispersed the crowd and|Berlin. He died on the way to men in 108 vehicies, there was no violence a hospital trucks--cleared without) West Bertin Mayor Willy| He had his gun but had not through the Soviet|Braridt reached the scene al- fired it ' kpoint at Marienborn, On|most immediately and helped! Later, at least 30 more shots the border between West and! persuade the crowd to break up.;were heard in East Berlin East Germany The victim of the East Ger-|These were not explained Th first group of 35 vehic'e@/man guards was Hans Dieter Public has been at a rived in Berlin after 3'4|/Wesar, 19, a policenian at East high pitch in West Berl n ainke ference anger in West The US under a hail of ma- the U.S. state secretary planned} H slipped| 2 weekend holiday in the Ot- ome 8] ay /point where an agreement was | within reach. But Kuznetsov said Dean's at- titude during the conversations "did not lead to any progress toward harmonizing the posix tions" of the two nuclear sides, Kuznetsov said Dean re In Ottawa For Talk jected his suggestion that Lall and Hassan be invited to assist OTTAWA (CP) -- U.S. Secre-| the co-chairmen in their private tary of State Dean Rusk ar-|discussions. Dean said he did rived here today for informal/so after Kuznetsov refused to ac- talks with Prime Minister Die-| cept the U.S. delegate's proposal fenbaker and External Affars'to invite also the delegates from Minister Green and for a short)/Brazil, Mexico and Italy, who j|Canadian holiday, -- had made proposals on the test He was met at Uplands Air-'pan issue. Dean said he felt | port following a flight fromithat Britain, as the third nu- |Washington in a U.S.Air Force |clear power, also should be rep. ! | Rusk Arrives jjet Star aircraft by Mr.Green.|resented in the co-chairman's Mr. Rusk told reporters his discussions. { visit-was to confer with the Ca-| nadian leaders and to "take ad-| Black Eagle Of Harlem |vantage of some of your cool| | Canadian air." | His meeting with Mr. Diefen-| baker was scheduled for 11 a.m./ |EDT at the prime minister's residence at 24 Sussex Drive. | Following talks in the capital, | | NEW YORK (AP)--Col, Hu- vs PLAY GOLF bert Julian, the Black Eagle of e expected to play some|Harlem, returned home today | golf but his time would be spent after having been held by the jmainly in "loafing." He is re-|United Nations in The Congo on gig: ar cee an accusation of aiding in the a e $ ° r bet Jeor j the Canadian capital since he rea 7 on? became secretary of state early; «7 can make no statement un- rag te fh gad Stay is expected ti) I consult the presidential ee = th DES |candidate of 1968," the 63-yeare n external affairs depart-|oiq aviator told reporters at Id« ment announcement said the|tewild Airport discussions with Mr. Green will] "Asked to elabora ' ry : f te, he said be on questions of mutual con-\he meant U.S .Attorney-General cern, particularly disarmament| Robert Kennedy, brother of }and United Nations problems." president Kennedy. an oe peli hot og Julian said he wanted to con- tion that the eeanion of 2 NATO galt tie. attorney. - genera! on og ene "whether my constitutional nucléar deterrent and the Ber- 4 "i Glin situation also will be eo abridged by my cussed. | He said he would go to Wash- | ington Monday and "'picket the Six Die, 33 Hurt tee oe inane: at news- . |papers which put quoiation In Gas Explosion jmarks around the rank of col- onel. He said he did not care MEXICO CITY (Reuters)--At|what he was calleg but the fact least six persons were killed|was that he was made a colonel and 33 injured, many of them/while fighting for Ethiopia in seriously, in a gas explosion! 1930. He said he also was a cap Thursday in a residential sec-|tain in the Finnish Air Corps. tion of Mexico City, police said) Julian, arrested last April and today jreleased Thursday, commented Firemen today were still/indirectly on the accusation that searching the debris of twoj/he was a mercenary for The apartment buildings, fearing Congo's secessionist Katanga more victims. | province. Police said they still did not) 'I have received no pay from know the cause of the explo.|the government of Katanga,"' jsion Julian said. "The government | Two apartment buildings, 11;owes my firm- $35,000 for med- |private homes, 27 other prem-jical supplies and shoes shipped jises. and 10 cars were damaged.|in March." dom Thursday night. It was the'through the barbed-wire fence t@wa area. . rae F anata lint a : ' "ee tg bined "eee Berlin's Bornholmerstrasse rail- the slaying | Friday of an man _ sai 4 pt S\way station 18-year-old refugee, Peter Fech. were returning to duty with the g . yards "an-man- Wack Berlin cartiagn after" an yard from an American man 5 0 ned crossing point through the a y st said Y P a rmy spokesman Ss : : : medical aid Army sedans also were| HAVANA (AP)--The Commu- any Soviet attempt to escort han exiles in the United States iy Soviet buses and shouted them that thousands of Russian sol-| Dr criticisms at U.S. troops 7 z te eral x travelling in East Berlin terri-|sive arrivals of Soviet ships in '"8® dying boy tory would be escorted in re-/Havana, creating a lot of talk,| U.S. authorities said no aid sent into West Berlin the Havana press as saying but they have since stationed an In the city, meanwhile 1,000 Soviet technicians was given when they came A declaration, Thursday from = ht the U.S., British and French Assist Soug press conference in Washington|responsible action at the wall & 0 Search For arrived in Cuba but the United|man authorities" who have au- |States had no information about thorized shooting to prevent es- BEETON, Ont. (CP) -- Insp. men. affiliated with rod and gun clubs, anglers clubs and various join in the search for Thomasina the search, asked that men with the weekend off aid the approx- ¢ for the 10-year-old girl ng the countryside around this town 30 miles northwest of Tor- t going to be just a made to escort them a ase fd The 2nd Battle Group troops er He was shot down on the Paper Ridicules st side of the wall only 200 annual two-week training period _ "aan ' wall and lay moaning and bleed- Germany ~ - ng for nearly an hour without touring t Berlin today aS\nist party newspaper Hoy ridi- For three nights angry West usual and he had no reports of culed Thursday claims by Cu- Berlin crowds protested. They A Russian officer threatened diers have been landed in Cuba ee ge detail at hte check- Thursday that all U.S. vehicles), There have been recent mas-/P0!"t did not go to the aid of taliation for U.S. insistence on; Agricultural boss Carlos Ra- Was sent because they did not escorting Soviet armored cars fael Rodriquez was quoted in Wish to create a new incident East were ambulance detail at the check- German machine-gunners killed)here to help farming. No date! point. President Kennedy told his governments attacked "ir- Wednesday an increased num-\by East Berlin guards" and ber of Soviet technicians have) 'the brutality of the East Ger- . . : Kidnapped Ir |Russian troops. there. 'capes. James Harris of the provincial police today issued a plea for other outdoor organizations to Baker Insy Harris, in charge ofj imately 700 men already look- He said it was his goal to have at least 5,000 men scour- and Sunday inspector should not onto Satu V "This i i outing," the warned, "Children be ncluded id Indoor sleeping will not be available, he said, but overn tcamping space and food will be supplied to searchers Meanwhile accommoda tion from , are (from left) Rt sions at the current 21st Gen- O. Anderson of Winnipeg, Anglican | Archbishop W. L. Wright of | Church of Canada at Kingston, | Algoma, Ont., and Rt. Rev. huge farm swamp home ched intensively Baker's Taking a break ses+ | On Rey, was being sea the girl's whereabouts. SYNOD SESSIONS { W. G. Burch of Edmonton, | administration for at | The Synod last night shelved | three years. | @ plan to streamline church | . . least --CP Wirephoto 4, 1 | ; |