THOUGHT FOR TODAY "Anybody who uses profanity is bound to go to hell!" shouts an evangelist. The Sheol he says. / She Osharwn Times WEATHER REPORT Sunny and warm with increas- ing humid ity Sunday; scattered thundershowers Sunday after- noon and evening, VOL. 89--NO. 158 Price Not Over Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, SATURDAY, JULY 9, 1960 Second Cl Authorized os Post Office Department, lass Mail Ottawa SIXTEEN PAGES | | New Congo |SOVIET ARTILLERY AID T0 CASTRO | Province In Rebellion The Kongolo refugees were|Belgian officers from the armed LEOPOLDVILLE, Congo Re- ; y public (CP)--An armed rebellion} halted this morning at Kabali, 50|fo rces. broke out in the copper-rich prov-| miles along the river from Kon-| An all-night curfew was im-| posed on the capital, where the Congo Republic was born only nine days ago. This morning, it ince of Katanga today just as|/golo on the way to Albertville, tension was subsiding in this when African soldiers fired on| 'Just Fight" capital city of the nine-day-old their' boats. Congo Republic. The two killed were a Portu-|was "business as usual" --except| Two Europeans were shot 'to guese settler and\a Belgian ad-|that all white officers and admin- death Friday night by Congplese ministrator. Several troops as they tried to flee from the boats were wounded. Kongolo in Katanga province. Three Belgian officers are re-| Virtually all the other white ported to have remained with an residents succeeded in escaping|African' bishop and missionaries by boats down the Luluaba River who refused to be evacuated from| cupants of| istrators had vaniched. Streets were crowded with weekend shoppers. Many whites who Friday remained were back at work this morning. Several thousand others have fled indoors to Mabalo, according to an offi- Kongolo, 625 miles from Elisa- across the swirling Congo River cial statement issued in Elisa-|bethville. to bethville, capital of the province. (A government spokesman in CROSS INTO RHODESIA Brussels said Rhodesian troops n are marching tober the Katanga bethville by car to cross theim frontier.) borders of Katanga into neighbor-| WEALTHIEST PROVINCE {ing Northern Rhodesia. A 12-hour rule of terror by a {mer French Congo colony, ) ._ |panic and fear at rumors of rape Many Belgians have left Elisa- and riot sparked by the troop Brazzaville, capital of the for- in utiny. |FERRY STOPS RUNNING The ferry to Brazzaville, closed Katanga, the wealthiest prov-'mutinous army in Leopoldville|down Friday to halt the exodus ince in the Congo, lies southeast Friday ended with an agreement of of Leopoldville on the border of between Premier Patrice. Lum-|sk Europeans with administrative | ills needed by this new repub-| the British protectorate of North-' umba's government and. the mu-|lic, was still not running in the ern Rhodesia. tineers to dismiss all white morning. : | Thousands of Belgian women and children anxiously awaited aj sumption of the ferry to leave| the country following Friday's U.S. Democratsi=: Meet In LA. To LOS ANGELES (CP) In Hollywqod parlance, it promises to be a super-colossal production, a veritable Roman epic. Supercharged by geographic and religious fireworks, it may The first planeload of refugees) from the Congo, described by fel- low French passengers as "ter-| rized people," arrived in Paris |today en route to Brussels. Most! were women and children, Belgium rushed troops to the Congo. A detachment of 164 Bel- gian infantry volunteers, carrying automatic weapons and dressed in combat fatigues, flew from Brus- sels Friday. be one of the fiercest gatherings the feuding Democrats ever staged. The Democratic national con- vention opens Monday in this city's huge new sports arena, Space is at a premium. Hotels are jammed with armies of dele- gates, reporters and onlookers. But crowds are important. The Democrats want the greatest pos- sible attention as they wrangle 2 and debate and build up their forces for the crucial presidential battle next November. But so bitter is the wrangling inside the party that out of the melee may also come ammuni- tion for the Republicans during the presidential war. The fight is centering on two dominant personalities. Haid-core supporters on either side depict the depth of the party split--the tendency of the South to line up against the North; the conservative element lining up against the liberal wing; and to mt M th Rail Dispute Conciliation Board Meet MONTREAL process of conciliation in a labor dispute operating railway employees en- tered its second stage today after final attempts to bring the com- panies and the umions closer to- gether apparently failed Friday. the federal conciliation board report they will present to Labor Y Mr. Justice J. V. H. Milvain of said Friday he expects to deliver Pedesjrians ' take advantage of the jaywalkers" jamboree at (CP)--The slow affecting 120,000 non- CAVEAT G1 JAYWALKERS' JAMBOREE IN ORILLIA Orillia, being held July 7 to July 9. The main street of Orillia was converted inte a mall for the three-day test period as an example for a permanent shopping mall being 'consider 'by the cham- ber of commerce, --CP Wirephoto LONDON (Reuters) -- Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev said in Moscow today that Soviet artillery could give necessary support to Cuba. if need be, Mos- cow radio reported. Speaking to an all - Russian teachers' congress in the Krem- lin, he said all people will sup- port the Cubans in their "just fight" and no one will be able to defeat them. The speech, broadcast and. tele- vised, was Khrushchev's first public statement since his return Friday from a nine-day state visit to Austria. "Don't forget that the United States is no longer far from the Soviet Union, and Soviet artillery can give necessary support to Cuba if need be," he said. "WE CAN HIT TARGET" "Let the Pentagon remember the last (rocket) tests in which we proved that we can hit a tar- get at a distance of 13,000 kilo- metres (about 8,000 miles). "This, if you want, is a warn- ing to those who might want to solve problems by force and not by reason." "The peoples of the socialist Khrushchev countries will help their brothers in Cuba to defend their independ- ence in order to make a failure of the economic blockade now announced by the United States," the Kremlin leader declared. "Not only we, the working peo- ple of the socialist countries, but peoples of all countries must be vigilant against the intrigues of American imperialism. "Everyone knows that an eco- nomic blockade by American monopolies may be the beginning of 'an intervention against Cuba, Therefore, we must raise our voice in defence of Cuba and warn that now imperialists can no longer plunder the world as they were able to do before, PEOPLES "RISING" . "Now the peoples of "colo- nial and dependent countries are rising and fighting to free them- selves from the shameless im- perialist yoke, from the enslave- ment of the United Statse ime perialists. "'And we on our side shall make "juse of everything to support Cuba and her brave people in the struggle for freedom and national independence which they have won under their national leader Fidel Castro. '100,000 MILITIRMEN Today the three members of eet for preliminary work on the inister Starr. e Supreme, Court of Alberta {the report to Mr, Starr by the end of July; but it might well {not be made public then. NO COMMON GROUND Mr. Justice Milvain and his colleagues, union nominee David Lewis of Toronto and company nominee Philip Vineberg of Mont- some smaller extent, Protestant lining up 'against Roman Cath- olic. Before them all is the magic number 761--the number of votes required to win the nomination-- a simple majority of the 1,521 votes eligible. Acknowledged front-runner is a Boston-bred war hero with a dy- namic personality--Senator John F. Kennedy of Massachusetts, real, held three closed meetings | ; ly: 2 Jarges Friday with representatives of|0f public mischief and causing the unions and the companies to/ indignities to human _ remains see if there would be any point|28ainst Ede, arrested in Cleve- Trunk Murder Charge Dropped TORONTO (CP) -- A murder noticed a peculiar odor. When he ago in New Westminster, B.C. charge against Leohard Ede, 39, opened the trunk he discovered; During the last 10 years she is has been 'dropped after a coron- Mrs. Scott's body among clothing believed to have been a close |er's investigation found no evi- {dence of external violence in the | death of Mrs. Marjorie Scott, 36, | whose body was found last month lin a trunk in Argentia, Nfld. | Police today laid new charges and sheets. The woman's identity was es- tablished June 14 when RCMP matched fingerprints with those on file at Ottawa. Mrs. Scott, ajsued a murder warrant against | associate with Ede, born in Delta, Ont. After a massive hunt and in- | vestigation in Toronto, police: is- Two Bandits Surrounded SHERBROOKE, Que. (CP)-- | Provincial. police said {there is a good chance of cap- | turing two men--believed to be armed -- who - are trapped in dense bushland about 125 miles east of Montreal. But a spokesman at headquarters here added search that peroxide blonde, was a native of Ede. He was arrested by Cleve-| darkness was hampering efforts Napanee, Ont. and had worked in various Ontario 'cities as a wait-| Mrs. Scott's body was taken to! men, armed with revolvers and| ress land police. the RCMP crime laboratory at Sackville, N.B.: No cause of death by the police posse of 20 to 30 |two sub-machine guns. In Bushland. today| del Castro's aggressions and a warning by Soviet Premier Khrushchev that Russian rockets could hit the American mainland if the United States moved against Cuba. In Moscow, Khrushchev in a bristling speech warned the United States to keep its hands |off Cuba. And in Havana, Castro declared that he now has at his command "100,000. militiamen with hun- dreds of thousands of rifles," plus new automatic weapons on the way. In Washington, U.S. Secretary of State Christian Herter planned to confer today with Undersecre- tary of State Douglas Dillon in preparation for a policy meeting {on the crisis with President Eis- Cuban- U.S. 8: : Crisis High HAVANA (CP) -- The sharp country will not be harmed, and United States-Cuba crisis was| heightened today by Premier Fi- chargse of new that they will end all intervention in our economic policies," CITE EXAMPLE Castro said U.S. handling of the oil problem was an example of American mistakes. Despite re-. fusal of American-owned refiner ies to process Soviet crude oil-- the refineries were seized becanse of that--he said Cuba will have plenty of oil. Riots Flare In India CALCUTTA, India (Reuters)-- | Troops were reported in action today in Assam, northeastern In- dia, to quell riots that resulted in She had been separated from | : The two men are suspected of enhower Monday. her husband, who died two years! was announced until today. D Jne suspec ey of killings, looting and arson in th a $1800 bank holdup Thursday or. BLOCKADE " . 43, Kennedy is the only major : ati last few days. aspirant to have fought his way h ol {to further talks. It was clear noland June 17. Ede appeared in court today through the state primaries, the {common ground had been dis | and was remanded to next Friday . | springtime pre-convention popu- STUART SYMINGTON |covered. larity contests. | ia 5 i c , seems re i | hearings : : Hard at Wis heels is big, burly sees 2 little out of place in He ads, neither side had|imum sentences of five years in Lyndon B. Johnson, 51-year-old ferocious infighting. Senate majority leader. This con-| Perhaps even more out of focus gressional powerhouse is backed|is 60-year-old Adlai Stevenson, m! by another party giant, 78-year- hanging around for a draft call(last November. i ; 3 ; Ao oid Sam Rayburn, Speaker of the but with no intentions of Inaking| House of Representatives. any fight for thé nomination. | when direct negotiations opened) apart. During the 25° days of public| With bail set at $10,000. The new the board which| charges each carry possible max- : jail. oved from the stand it held Mrs. Scott's body, cramped into la small trunk, was discovered by a CNR agent at Argentia June 7 | after being shipped express col- They could hardly be farther : i lect from Toronto. The coroner's These' Texan buddies, it seems, | are getting the indireet support of former president Harry Tru- roan also 78, who tossed a bomb- shell in pre - convention ma- noeuvring by demanding that Kennedy step aside in the fight, ostensibly because he is too young. - Truman has charged and John- son has agreed that the conven- tion is rigged in Kennedy's fa- vor, a charge that Kennedy has pared to get tough with left-wing|provincial elections Oct. 23. Italian Riots Ease Slowly ROME (Renters) --Italy's frail proval of the country's budget minority government. today pre-| and clear the way for local and HIGH SCHOOL | report said no cause of death other than asphyxia could be determined. TRUNK UNCLAIMED The trunk, sent- from Toronto May 4, lay unclaimed at Ar- | IN ROBERTS" LAP No Answer To CBC Hoax' TOROKTO (CP)--The case of the girl 'Who bared her career as) a divorce co-respondent to a tele- may close where it began--in the| lap of the Ontario' iattorney-gen- fiths of the Toronto Telegram 9.55 p.m. {identified the woman as Joan| look" at them when they darted] "Cuba's interests and aspira- | eral. in the village of Ham Sud, half- way between Victoriaville and Sherbrooke. They are trapped in a dense wood about 10 'miles deep be- tween the Eastern Township vil- lages of Sts. Martyrs Canadiens, St. Gerard and Garthby, about 15 miles from the scene of the holdup. PLANE SPOTTED MEN Provincial police, aided by a Alphonse Ouimet, CBC president. In a letter to Mr. Roberts, the) CBC head said the only name the| gentia, 80 miles west of-St. John's vision audience, and then told|CBC had for the woman was an| for three weeks, until the agent newspapers her story was a hoax, | alias, Mercedes Hunter. 4. Last Tuesday' Phyllis Grif-| small, private plane which combed the area until dusk, twice caught sight of the men but both times they ducked back into woods and eluded searchers. The first time, at 4.30 p.m., police opened fire on them and at they had a 'good After a week of sensational dis-| Johnson, a Toronto model who|across a road. closures, denials, charges and| uses the professional name of The search area was narrowed The new tension came in the wake of a sharp cut by the U.S.|1 in the Cuban sugar quota and a | suggestion of an oil blockade in |retaliation against Castro's move in nationalizing foreign-owned re- | finerise. | In New York, Standard Oil of New Jersey indicated it will con- sider blacklisting Western tanker owners and brokers who carry Soviet oil. Castro, speaking confidently on his weekly TV address Friday night, said Washington could not have good relations with his gov- ernment unless it promised pub- licly not to attack Cuba. These were the conditions he laid down for good relations: | tions to carry out its own policies | must be respected. They must A curfew was imposed in Shil« ong, the capital. Eleven persons died and "hun dreds" were injured in the riots, the leader of the Assam socialist party, Rathindrangth Sen, re- ported on his arrival here from Assam. He said the area was "'virtually cut off from the rest of India." Local Assamese have been clashing with the large Bengal- speaking minority which objects to a demand that Assamese be declared the state's official lan- guage. More than 1,100 Bengali "refu- gees" were reported to nave reached towns in neighboring West Bengal Friday. Twelve persons were injured |when "hooligans" set fire to | houses and looted property in the 'RESULTS INSIDE cosures, deni Results of examinations of comely 27 - year - old Toronto divorcee, told police, newspapers all three Oshawa high schools |model, investigation into the May|and radio listeners she faked her the O'Neill Collegiate and Vo- [26 Close-Up show neared an end |TV role as a professional divorce cational Institute, the Osh- | co-respondent for a $150 fee and| northern Bengal town of Alipur- Duars on the Assam border Fri- day night, reports reaching here said. ' The rioting in the Sicilian cap- ital of Palermo, involving 20,000 persons, came after police with fire hoses and tear gas attempted | tovbreak up a crowd gathered to) denied. agitators in the wake of demon- The odd feature of Truman's strations Friday in which three charge is that the party's elder persons were killed and at least statesman is supposedly backing|137 injured in clashes with po- a feliow Missourian, Senator/lice in Sicily's two main towns. centering 'on a|Joan Campbell. Miss Campbell a/down from about 350 square pledge before the world they miles as police closed in on the won't hurt us militarily. They men and threw up cordons to must renounce that commitment. block all exits. | They must declare positively our Stuart Symington, for the nomin- ! ation. tinued left-right tension as a 10- Symington, trailing a bad third, hour general strike called by ci Communist - led unions caused |in Pickering Tot | of the country. A week of rioting already had The clashes came amid con- hear a Communist legislator. lence, throughout most of the rest,as she came out of a beauty parlor, awa Central Collegiate Insti- tute and the Dr. J. -Donevan Collegiate Institute are pub- lished in today's issue of The Oshawa Times. Please turn to Page 9. A total of 72 policemen and 63 vilians were hurt in the clash cluding a woman seriously in- red when she was hit by a bullet » | demonstrations, but little vio-| ju Tossed 30 Feet PICKERING (Staff) -- Struck,' by a car while riding a tricycle | juries to police, and led to hun- reds of arrests. | Premier Fernando Tambroni's| cabinet made clear it was deter: caused seven deaths, scores of io) | LATE NEWS FLASHES near his home in West Rouge| subdivision here yesterday, Robin MeMullen, aged six, is still re- ported in critical condition in Scarboro General Hospital. Police report the child was mined to prevent street rioting| from taking over the functions of elected government. A bid to ease tension and re- |store order was made Friday | thrown 30 feet by the impact with night by Senate President Cesare a car stated to have been driven Merzagore, who called for a 15. by Alastair Learmouth, 30, of) 9ay truce. 5 Most leftists quickly accepted ed a Sca BE A Kennedy od, iSaren 0 Rove the truce offer. The Communists i |at first rejected it but then re- Hilt Drive. versed themselves, But Tam-| roni's three-month-old regime Rustralian Wins British Open ST. ANDREWS, Scotland/ (CP) -- Australia's Kel Nagle won the British open golf title today with a 72-hole total of 278. Arnold Palmer of the U.S. was ope stroke back at 279. Nagle won on the last hole after Palmer had staged a late bid on the final nine holes to catch him, Palmer closed with a four-under-par 68 to Nagle's 71. The Australian hit his second shot on the 18th to within 24 inches of the cup. There was a groan from the gallery of 20,000 when he missed his first putt for a birdie but the par 4 was good enough for the championship. Nagle's scores were 69-67-71-72-278 and Palmer's 70-71-70-68-279. with all, or perhaps--ae, ques- tions answered. | In trying to assess the truth, | even with the aid of lie detec-| tors, investigators have few more facts than before the case hit the headlines Tuesday. Since then the model, the CBC, police, pri-| vate detectives, two newspapers, a federal cabinet minister and the| provincial attorney-general's de-| partment have been involved. | The undisputed facts: [ 1. The CBC filmed and broad-| cast an interview with a woman| who said she was paid $100 a night to post" as a co-respondent| in 120 divorce suits, During the show her face was shaded and| she was not identified. 2. Attorney - General Roberts of Ontario requested a private] viewing of the film May 31 fol- |lowing mixed, vociferous com-| ment on the controversial broad-| cast. He said his department was {has never been a co-respondent,| | paid or unpaid. "Unknown to the CBC it was which she spoke does take place. | She based her knowledge on a part-time job she held with a pri-| vate detective bureau, Dale In-| vestigation Agency. 5. Mr. Nowlan and Dr. Andrew| Stewart, chairman of the Board of Broadcast Covernors, which regulates Canadian | television, said an investigation would be made into the CBC's handling of the show and pos-| sible action would be taken if the CBC was found guilty of decep- tion, 6. Provincial police questioned [entirely a hoax," - said Miss| Campbell. "I've always wanted to] be an actress and 1 was--for the| duration of that program." | But she added the type ofl rigged divorce evidence ahout| Cure-All Wanted For Auto Industry OTTAWA, (CP) -- The federal government is under heavy pres- sure to find a cure-all tonic for Canada's ailing auto industry. Workers, community leaders, small parts manufacturers 'and government action to avert al serious crisis in one of Canada's key industries. , | They blame their troubles They proposed remedies rang. | ing from higher duty valuations on foreign. cars to tax conces- sions to woo overseas automakers to build plants in Canada. i Indications are Prime Minister] radlo andthe top brass of the auto industry | Diefenbaker may order a special placed in a position inferior to |have swooped intg Ottawa in re-|foyal commission inquiry into the| othe |eent weeks all pleading for quick/!ndusiry's plight, an idea he seemed to favor when it was of- fered Tuesday by a 200-worker delegation from the powerful United Auto Workers Union |largely on rising imports of small|(CLC). And in an even wider field, the government may press for some. orm of escape clause in the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade to permit freer play n Canada's aute tariff policies. "We don't want our .country couptries under the agree- ment," said Mr. Diefenbaker | when the union workers called on him. Any Canadian move in this direction would likely emerge when GATT negotiations open in September at Geneva. investigating the program and Joan Callwood, a freelance wirter ; ¥ hy three weeks later sought the who conducted the interview, European cars. But the , government is also| The industry's problem is woman's. identity from Revenue George Ronald, assistant pro.| hey warn 'that tough times--|looking at how the revenue de-|summed up simply by a few fig- | Minister. Nowlan, who reports to ducer of Close Up who. first met | S3E8INg business, more layoffs, [partment sets values on foreign ures, In 1956, British and Euro- {the Commons on the CBC. The Miss Campbell for the CBC, and|Breater unemployment--lie ahead|car imports for customs duty|pean cars took 7.6 per cent of case was also turned over to the|Cy Verge of the Dale Investiga-|for the industry, which employs collections. It has an eye as well|the Canadian market. In 1959 criminal investigation branch of|tion Agency, who introduced Miss/more than 45,000 workers and|on the British market, protected|the figure jumped to almost 24 a memorial service was held at City Hall cenotaph, when . [the provincial police. | Campbell to the CBC with Tor-/turns out more than $1,300,000,000 | by tariffs on Canadian car ex- per cent and early trends this heads of the various Orangemen's organizations placed 3. Mr. Nowlan referred the|onto Star columnist Pierre Ber- worth of cars, .(rucks and auto|ports while British® cars enter|year show imports still incpeas- wreaths in memory of former members . p 'attopney-general's request to J.'ton acting as go-between. party in a year, |Canada duty-free, i ! CITY EMERGENCY feared accepance of ne ee PHONE NUMBERS | {Yaw and order. | Tambroni's goal is to bring his | POLICE RA 5-1133 Christian Democrat government | FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 Orangemen March In Toronto TORONTO (CP) -- Orangemen marched to the tune of 60 bands today to celebrdte the Glorious 12th, celebrating both the 270th anniversary of the Battle of the Boyne and the 100th anniversary of the Grand Orange Lodge of Ontario. Earlier through the Oct, 31 deadline it set, for itself when it was formed in| April after weeks of political Crisis ing. His aim is to complete ih