THOUGHT FOR TODAY Many people have so little religion they evidently feel they will deplete the supply if they use it more than once a week. WEATHER REPORT "# Suriny with cloudy intervals 'and A few 'showers Sunday, little 'change 'in temperature, i \ winds light. J LI . 89--NO. 141 Price; Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy 3 Authorized as Second Class' Mail £ Post Office Department," Ottawa EIGHTEEN PAGES JAP GOVERNMENT STAYS IN POWER OSHAWA, SATURDAY, JUNE 18, 1960 JAP MILITARY FINALLY RAT 'CHOKED AFTER FIGHT TOKYO (Sunday) (AP)= Japan's ratification of its new : ° Murder: Police lit ith it . | BEVERLY HILLS, Calif, (AP) May Pact with the United] : i --atl CLEVELAND (AP) -- Toronto| Ede and Mrs. Scott quarrelled Municipal Judge Adolph Alexan- Stéies became final tocay--a detectives hope they can arrange (one night (the date of the slaying der Friday dismissed misde. J i quickly today for the return to|was estimated at May 3) in a meanor charges of vagrancy and midnight. Lewdness lewd conduct against television| ~ Judge Ousts | Month Of Riots Cook Admits |Charges Of | Ended B vy Treaty complaints, originally initiated by the Japanese leftists now rioting, that the old treaty was unequal and imposed by the American past Saturday occupation. The main provisions are: U.S. bases will rémain in Japan br { Leonard Ede, also|Toronto bar, and after they re-| ha Only ratification by the United| Santa Mey to face charges turned to their rooms Ede choked actor William Talman and seven| |at least 10 years. After that either |States Senate and an exchange! i lin the slaying of Mrs. Marjorie her. The next morning he found 0th nd B€ party can terminate the agree- ers arrested in a raid March| Btn IE. Scott, whose body was found 3 on a West Hollywood apart-|of ratification documents, periment after one year notification. lin a trunk. [bottles of wine, Ede put the body ment. [her dead. After drinking several |haps June 27 or 28 in Tokyo. |must be accomplished before the|s,rte 10 ie, Sites will defend MASSED JAPANESE demon- strators march in front of resi- dence of Premier Nobosuke Kishi in Tokyo today, waving placards calling for downfall of his government. Signs in top Acclaimed Hero Branded Crook | picture says, "Resign At Once, Kishi", and 'Kishi, the war criminal". In lower picture the banner identifies carriers as be- ing from Senshu University's Social Affairs Research De- LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Resi-/share in $50,000 insurance and dents watched in horror as a twin-engined plane roared over- head, trailing flames. The pilot opened his escape | hatch, but didn't jump. He stayed with the fiercely burning craft until it smashed) into a.remoté canyon--and died] what was called a hero's death. That was three Years ago. Police Friday tarnished James Gibbs' claims to. glory: Gibbs, they said, took the plane up t- crash it on for a onservative member kaming in the Ontario" Legisla- ture, died today at his home in this Northern Ontario town. Mr. Herbert apparently suf- fered a heart attack after return- ing from a sportsman's show at Englehart. Mr. Herbert, serving his third term in the legislature, was com-| missioner of the Ontario North- land Railway. He was first elected in 1851. Born in jHailevbupr, he was educated at Haileybury Publie School and Haileybury School of Mines. He was vice-president and general manager of the Herbert money. And Gibbs' boss, they said, deliberately sabotaged the plane, arrested : it wouldn't|Cleveland police to make sure that return safely. Detectives Friday booked Rich- ard E. Loomis, 45, on suspicion|lance here, ( of murder. Police said he col-|they were suspic lected $47,000 in insurance after tions. the crash--and refused to share it" with Gibbs'. survivors. Did Gibbs, 32, know going to die? " "He «certainly didn't go up there to commit suicide," said Tetective Sergeant Pierce Brooks, who worked four months on the bizarre case. "Appar- ently he just didn't get a chance to jump." The plane was a de Havilland bomber, ule, $a Brit- "flaming coffins' he was quick to burn. {UNCOVERED AGREEMENT Detectives said they have in their possession an agreement signed by Loomis and Gibbs two days before the crash, in which Loomis agreed to pay Gibbs 10 per cent of insurance proceeds if the plane crashed. Four - days before the crash Loomis insured the plane--pur- chased in England for $8,000-- for $50,000. Lloyds of London paid him $47,000 430 days after the crash. / | or the plywood was! so' nk containing the body|in a trunk, put the fictitious ad-| The judge said he acted "in ko EE had dress on it and paid a driver $5/the interests of justice," adding reaty takes effect. been shipped collect to a fictic- (to take it to a warehouse. the prosecution had failed to| Japanese mobs demonstrated ious "'Mrs. Williams" at Argentia| Ede took a train to Cleveland prove its case. He said no testi-|for more than a month against Nfld. |May 5 and was working in a tav- mony had been offered which |the treaty. Cleveland police said Ede, 38, ern as a short-order cook, living showed the defendants had vio-| But Japan's approval became who told them he was at one time in a west side rooming house. [lated the penal code. conclusive under its constitution married to Mrs. Scott, admitted] The trunk lay unclaimed at Ar- Talman, who after his arrest|30 days after the lower house 'of choking her to death last month|gentia from May 16 to June 7,wag fired from his role as the| Parliament ratified the treaty at hipping the body to Ar-iwhen it was opened. Mrs. Scott district attorney on the Perry|a tumultuous May 20 session. gentia. ; was not identified until last Tues-i Mason TV show, said he was| This means that U.S, military The sportily - dressed Ede was day. "overjoyed." {bases will remain in Japan at Friday shortly. after PHONE CALL CLUE A sheriff's deputy had testified|least another decade, assuming received pic- Toronto lice. wrote to Cleve. in the trial that he was invited|the government can end - the tures from Toronto police. it.liand ig after a friend of fo the apartment party by some-|chaos: the month of rioting has Ede had been under surveil-| and repoeldl Ede had tried to One who told him: "Man, we got|created. police said, because | : hil la crazy scene going here." | ious of his ac- telephoe Nim. from Cleveland | Deputy Hapry Stameisen testi- DEEP RUMBLINGS Washington reports say the U.S. : . {fied that he observed this scene| T 1850 when eed mh apr, Sle may sly hres Jackman ready had a husband. jumient: {Monday: Bu there gle gesp rum, Police in Kingston said Mrs Talman and Peggy Flanigan, blings of concern in Congress The United States will consult the Japanese government before |deploying forces from Japan or |bringing in new armament. NO VETO POWER The new pact removes pro- visions in the earlier treaty for using U.S. forces in quelling in ternal disturbances in Japan, The principal Japanese objec. tions to the alliance are that it antagonizes Japan's Communist neighbors; Japan has no veto power over movement of U.S. forces and arms into and out of Japan--only a vague right of "prior Itation:" President Eisenh has Japan that America would take no ace tion contrary to Japanese wishes, 4 : ¥ 30, were on a bed in a room oc- over the indefinite postp t " r.| 30 ; r ried Clement Soo Na viel cupied also by two other nude of President Eisenhower's trip to | viet, who died in New Westmin- ster, B.C., in 1958. Ede, a ma- |chine operator, and Mrs. Scott {both had police records Cana- |dian authorities said. - Giant Cleanup SARNIA (CP) -- A herculean cleanup 'operation is unter way in Lambton County in the wake of the most vicious storm ever to strike the area. Damage to erops, buildings and hydro lines was es- timated at close to $1,000,000. Although high winds and tor- rential rain was general through- lout the county Thursday night land early Friday the high winds at the centre of the storm left a well-defined path of devastation sen said Mr. and Mrs. Peter rioting, and the Japanese govern- Haspelt were in a bed next to|/ment's failure to deal with it. This Talman and Miss Flanigan; might affect the timing of a vote. {Miss Lolo de Witt, 31, was nude| The treaty is a short docu- {on the floor, and James Baker, 39, and Mrs. Jean Donovan, 26, 'were nude on rig. rsp It ow EDE'S STORY Detective Clarence slaying: » PORTSMOUTH, England (Reuters) -- Princes Margar- | hame £ six-w ribbean. : { The royal yacht Britannia, channel in fog, anchored off Spithead, the entrance to customs clearance. The newlyweds arranged to noon and catch a train for London -- dispensing with the Thousands of sightseers were at the waterfront to said he gave this account of the RETURN HOME et and paar Antony Arm- \ neymoon cruis¢ in the La. after steaming up the English Portsmouth harbor, to await come ashore early this after- usual royal formalities. greet the couple. from Courtright on the St. Clair River across Moore, Sarnia and Fuel Company Limited, and an executive of several other district companies. . ring the Second World War, he served in Europe with the Al- gonquin Regiment, rising from bury Canadian Legion, a curling enthusiast, and an angler. Mr. Herbert is survived by his wife, Taimi Edith; and two sons, Alexander and Brian; and one partment ~AP Wirepholos daughter, Valeri. 200,000 Howling Students In Tokyo TOKYO (CP)--Police threw up barrieades around the Diet (Par- liament) tonight as 200,000 howl- ing, leftist-led students and union members demonstrated , against the Japan-United States security treaty due for automatic ratifica tion at midnight. With several thousand of the demonstrators converging on the Diet itself and calling openly for the death of pro-Western Premier Nobusuke Kishi, tension crackled through the area as police erected the wood-and-barbed wire barri- cades in the Diet compound in a bid to block an attack on the building. The cabinet attended an emer- gency meeting in Kishi's nearby official residence as a 'sea' of anti - treaty demonstrators hun- New demonstrators swelled the! crowds as the day wore on. They poured into the centre of Tokyo by train, truck, street car, subway, bus, on foot and by taxi to join a tremendous surge to- ward the white stone Parliament| Building. Tension mounted as they zig- ,.zagged through the streets way- Five of the seven entrances to Oldest Graduate {Plympton townships ' to Lake Huron, west of Forest. This broad corridor today was| a maze of fallen hydro and tele- phone lines, splintered and up- rooted trees, damaged or demo- lished barns and farm buildings, couples, and a woman. Stamei-|Japan" because of the continued ment of 10 articles that replaces similar; 1951 agreement with reviged to. mee The obj s also i U.S. planes could be used to attack any nation in the treaty's area, vaguely defined as the "Far East," thus inviting retaliation. They say the treaty demands Ja- pan increase its armaments and perinits war<provoking U.S. aer- iak L : N Lt the rank of private to major. He was a past president of Hailey-| (9) ourg fallen chimneys, twisted TV aeri- als and flattened grain fields. *BLACKSTOCK (Staff) neral services will be held here at 2 p.m. Monday for the late {Rev. Richard Pinch Bowles, DD, whe died in Qshawa General Hos- Fu- ; pital Thursday. Rev. Bowles was in his 96th year. The late Mr. Bowles will buried by fhe same church in which he married the late Annie Devitt in 1888: At that time .the church was known as the Black- stock Methodist Church 'but has since become Blackstock United Church. be Born in a small hamlet called {Mono road, near Brampton, on {the farm on whieh his grand- (father settled sometime before the parliament. compound were|1826, Mr. Bowles was the son of closed, their wooden gates rein- forced by poles and wire. The two gates at the rear were still open but guarded. |ity, said 4,000 police have been called in from neighboring areas { Kanichiro Ishihara, state min: Victoria ed as a ister in charge of public secur SKA Ce Minister in 165 the late Mr. and Mrs: George 3 Bowles. | He was believed to be oldest living graduate ofthe old College in Cobourg, e was ordai {IN MONTREAL ing giant red banners and chant- to help about 10,000 Tokyo police.| After his ordination in 1885 ing "Down with Kishi," the security pact." POLICE MOBOLIZED Police were mobilized for aec- tion in the event of violence. The demonstrators want Kish t~ quit and dissolve the Diet be fore ratification of the pact auto- matically becomes final at a mo "Crush | ment past midnight They sweated profusel: under dreds of yards long surged forthe hottest day of the year, #1 ward toward the Diet shouting|degrees at mid-afternoon; as lead- "Kill Kishi" and "Down with] ers whipped them up with con- Kishi." Five hours before midnight the orderly, well-controlled but noisy demonstrators had attempted no violence. The opposition Socialist party, violently anti - treaty and anti- Kishi, - appealed _to the demon- strators late today to stop short of assaulting the Diet CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 stant reminders of Michiko Kamba. She is the 22-year-old university co-ed who was tramp- led to death last. Wedne left-wing 'students in the Diet grounds. Nearly 3,000 students and pro- fessors marched to the parlia- ment from Tokyo University after attending a funeral there for the girl, a student at the institution. several thousand other students swarmed angrily to the building! from Memorial servicees at near- by Hibiya Park GROUNDS GUARDED Inside the Diet grounds were 2500. to 3000 police with four armored cars, 40 trucks, five am- bulances, two fire trucks and two! hoses. the demonstrators were trying to treate a revolution. "But if the demonstrations con- |danger they could lead to revolus {tion," Ishihara added. tinue for a long time, there is a|ferred to Metro Methodist Church! moved to Winnipeg and was min where he remained for some time as mimister of St. James Method. Methodist, Toronto. |ist Church and "was then trans- lin Toronto. From Metro Methedist, he mov- Bush Searched For Missing Plane VAL. D'OR, Que. (CP)--About for a light aircraft missing with | three men aboard. { |covered the rounding this Friday but failed to turn up a clue as to the Beechcraft's where-| | abouts. | Three RCAF aircraft searched until early today for flares in an radio signals were Thursday night shortly after the plane vanished. miles north of Ottawa while try- Aboard were owner of the plane and of La- and co-pilot John Reid, 21, Hudson, Que. of the | Ishihara $aid he did not believe Mr. Bowles moved to Montreal ed to Clinton Street Methodist in| of the wide gap between the West. | sday (35114 civilian and RCAF aircraft ing to 'make an emergency land- | battled police yore to resume searching today ing. 4 eight miles Most spectacular- damage was | ° " on Brigden Road, rg east of here, where 100-mile-an-| hour winds wrenched down seven| 220,000 - volt hydro transmission g towers. The village of Courtright, about| 10 miles to the southwest, was| the first hit by the full force of| the storm, The winds. tore into] two lines of giant oak tress lin- ing Highway 40 about a mile south of the community, leaving] heavy limbs strewn across the| road and on the lawns of homes. | U.S. Seeks Arms Plan Gap Bridge WASHINGTON (AP) U.s.| | disarmament ~ strategists today | sought a plan for bridging part . "BRUTAL TYRANNY IN CHINA' Ike Pledges RIV. R. P. BOWLES ern and Soviet proposals for end-| Toronto then to Sherborne Street| |ing the arms race. | he! Washington's intent was to find _|an area of common interest be-| ister of Grace Methodist there Ween the rival proposals and pre- sent this at Geneva in an effort for sometime before returning she! S | to move away from the deadlock| Toronia Sherborne Street, again | that has stymied the 10-nation dis- for Biot her year. ; armament conference I tod fri d A After serving about a year al|"qpe US, disarmaent dele- ini Pod on aling defend Sherborne Street Methodist, Mr. gate Frederick M. Eaton, was|Quemoy against any. Communist Bowles went to Victoria College, recalled from Geneva for con-|attack which seemed a prelude which had since his graduation) gyitations starting today and ex-|(o invasion of 'Formosa. moved to Toronto from Cobourg, pected to continue into next week.| Eisenhower personally assured From Sherborne Street, TAIPEI (AP) President Eis-|the slightest lessening of our 'de-| termination to. stand wiih you, and with all our free neighbogs of the Pacific, against aggres-| sion." } The Chinesé Communist guns that plastered the Nationalist off- and became president and chan- cellor aftér about two years on the staff. He remained in his capacity as president and chan- cellor of the college until his re- Dan LaMothe, |'irement in 1931. Upon his retirement, he moved | Aircraft and ground parties Mothe construction company of|!0 a home he built on the shores rugged terrain sur-|Rouyn, Que, pilot Wally _Me.|of Lake Scugog, near Nestleton, mining community | Broom, 33, of Pointe Claire, Que. and remained there until his i death Thursday. He is survived by one son, Wil-| The plane left Montreal Thurs- fred G. of Nestleton; two broth- day afternoon for Rouyn. ers, Rev, N. E. Bowles of Bramp- aircraft from the RCAF Search/ton and John Bowles of Souris, area. where various unidentified|and Rescue upit at Trenton ar-|Manitoba, and one sister, Mrs. s these planes and droned through the overcast skies|children detected| rived Friday to lead the seareh.|John Smith (Una) of Edmonton, others|Alberta. In addition three grand- and eight great-grand- y J The . plane disappeared in bad forestry "officials and provinelal|children survive. He was a first other trucks equipped with water weather after it overshot the run-| police _1éd ground parties over cousin to Liberal Leader Lester way at the Val d'Or airport 250'rocks and treacherous muskeg. 'B. Pearson. I Secretary of State Christian Herter, due back from r vacation was slated to take part in a strat- egy meeting Monday along with his disarmament advisers and representatives from interested agencies such as the Atomic Energy Commission, the defence department and the Central In. telligence Agency. CO-ORDINATION NEEDED After he returns to Geneva next week, Eaton plans to co-ordinate the U.S. proposals with the four Western allies before the plan is presented to the conference. | The allies were reported anxi-| ous to have a more foreceful| Western response than the turn-| {down given to Sowiet Premier| Khruhciev's ment offer. 4 > ad Generallissimo Chiang Kai-shek of this only a few hours after Red Chinese guns raked Quemoy with a record-breaking barrage of shells, a White House spokes- man said. The .U.S. leader earlier de- nounced Communist China as a brutal tyranny bent on enslaving hundreds of millions of mainland Chinese. SUPPORT CONTINUES He pledged, before thousands of Nationalist -Chinese hailing his visit to Formosa, that the United States would stand firm behind them in resisting any Red Chin- ese aggression. "You may be assured that our shore island of Quemoy Friday killed seven persons and wounded 41 others. : Peking had said it would shell the island to show its contempt for Eisenhower, The guns 'were silent today be- cause this is an even-numbered day--and the Reds have confined| their shelling to odd-numbered days. PRESS ON FOR PEACE In his speech the president ex- pressed his determination to press on in searching for what he called an "effective means to outlaw war and to promote the rule of law among nations." Such a quest, he said, is not continuing search for peaceful revised disarma-(solutions to outstanding interna- by weakening defences against tional problems does not reflect| v aided by yielding to threats or potential aggressors. } a CHIANG KAI-SHEK MEETS IKB he us. Quemoy Defence "Indeed, such weakness would increase the danger of war." Eisenhower's denunciation of the Peking regimé was his sec ond in seven hours after arriv- ing won the Nationalist island stronghold for an byernight good- will visit. Two hours'after landing, he la- belled the savage Red Chinese bombardment - of Quemoy, 100 miles away, as a "deliberate ag- gressive act by the -Commu- nists." LASHES PEKING In his formal address, Eisen- hower did not mention the Que- moy shelling. But he struck out again at the Peking regime. "The United Stales does not recognize the claim of the war- like and tyrannical Communist regime in Peking to speak for all the Chinese," he said. "In the United Nations, we sup- port .the Republic of China, a founding member, as the only rightful representative of China in that organization,"