THOUGHT FOR TODAY More people have been killed by cars than by war, but they doubtless died happier. The Oshawa Time WEATHER REPORT Sunny and cooler. Much less humid tonight and Saturday. Winds medium to light. Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy VOL. 89--NO, 204 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1960 Authorized eos Second Class Mall Post Office Department, Ottawa SIXTEEN PAGES Ng ft é STORM DAMAGE IN WINDSOR A typleal scene in Windsor | miles an hour swept the area, | rooted, many branches broken, late yesterday as a severe Widespread minor damage was | Areas of the city were without windstorm with winds up to 90 | inflicted, A few trees were up- | electricity for short periods, Death, Destruction New Drug ON ARMED UN TROOPS OPEN FIRE Deny Conspiracy [2/0 Killed In Sarnia Deal aT A flareup of fighting be- TORONTO (CP) -- Allegations|an agreement with Dimensional, tween Congolese soldiers and se- of criminal behavior against A,| Mr, Pepper contended Thurs- cessionist partisans in Kasal J. B. Gray, Metropolitan Toronto|day tiiat Mr. Gray was speaking| province has claimed at least 270 assessment commissioner, were the truth when he said there was lives in the town of Bakwanga,| imade by counsel for the Ontario|no agreement because the agree- the United Nations reported to- Liberal Party and the CCF on ment was never completed, day {the orders of their political| The $275,000 fee was to be paid UN officials reported scores of |parties, Mr, Gray's lawyer said Mr, Gray, Mr, Pepper said, be. Corpses strewn on the streets of Thursday, lcause of his intimate knowledge Bakwanga, capital of the seces P. B, C. Pepper, counsel for|of land values and legislation in. Sionist so-called mineral State in Mr, Gray, told the Royal Com-|volved in the transaction, Kasai, Many were mutilated by mission inquiring into a Sarnia| Earlier the commissioner, Mr blows from knives and mache es, land deal that counsel had no Justice McGillivray, described The UN spokesman Se bik levidence when they claimed Mr. |gifts given to two Hydro property| UN Pp! an . Srausports rey {Gray was involved in a conspir- agents as "a very disturbing Wounded ODODE iets on acy to sell the Ontario Hydro-|thing turned up by this commis the §opne dl Cs 1 on Horn Electric Power Commission land sion," {commander, Gen, Carl von Hd y ¢ of Sweden, ordered all such tran at an excessive price, B. J. MacKinnon, counsel for sport stopped Mr. Pepper denied his client Saul Sigler, a Dimensional part. *PO™ ¥ was involved in a conspiracy or|her, ac cused the CCF and Lib-| perjured himself before the hear: eral counsel of irresponsibility in ing attacking a reputable business- Mr, Gray was unwilling to re- man on the basis of suggestions I T : S h ir dos of his OE There was no evidence to prove n rain mas $275,000 consultant fee because he he was engaged in a dishonest] CASTLEGARY, Scotland (Reut- felt Metro council would object|transaction ie lors) Seventy persons were to his outside work, Mr, Pepper| Mr. Justice McGillivray sald reated for minor injuries and sald there was nothing sinister in any| shock today after a fast diesel | Previous evidence was that of Mr, Sigler's actions except for| {pain rammed into the back of (Mr. Gray had an agreement with|{his connection with the agree: sn empty steam train going in Dimensional Investments Lim. 10€il to pay Mr, Gray $276,000. |the same direction near here ited to collect the fee for his part] The hearing was adjourned| About 200 persons were on the lin the land deal. Mr, Gray testi- until Sept, 12, when the last|diesel travelling from Glasgow to {fied he had no such agreement, three counsel to submit argu- Edinburgh when the crash oc: |collected no fee and was acting ment will be heard, leurred on a bridge, FOPOLDVILLE, The Congo Investments sold Living Cost In Congo Town | ~|the record high of 128.3 last Nov, | June 30, Seventy Hurt § "| household operations and the mis. | F d P » | LEOPOLDVILLE, The Congo| 00 rices |attacking armed civilians south at Gemena in Equator province monthly gain this year in Can-| It was the first time UN troops|ters of Bolikango's Party of Na- climbed 0.3 per cent during the! Few details concerning the ac- #0.vear-old political leader into yardstick of living costs Is based| The attack occurred at Moe-| start a secessionist movement in level of 126.4, but still short of dependence was declared here ers were picked up Thursday in {largest component of the over-all were trying to disarm the civil. Position, was about the usual seasonal in| a secessionist movementy such as more than offsetting a substan. the opposition Puna party had at- With Tshombe, Kalong)i and | The index showed marginal| Puna leader Jean Bolikango "ie" 0 rumba was pre- Moroccan Bullets Kill [and a group of followers were | (AP)--United Nations Moroccan arrested, OTTAWA (CP)--A one-per-cent © Thysville Thursday and killed and brought to Leopoldville by rise in food prices in July was one person, a UN spokesman a ada's cost of living, the bureau have opened fire and the first tional Unity, officials sald Lu- of statistics reported today, {casualty attributed to UN soldi-|mumba himself went to the air. A . tha | eusotdy, month to 127.9 Aug, 1 from 127,5/tion are available, the spokesman, Lumumba charged two weeks {on 1049 prices equalling 100, berck, south of the garrison town Equator province, The gain pushed the index 1.2 of Thysville, where Congolese! Pupa party officials in Leopold. | Coquilhatville, the capital of Equ~ | The spokesman said the Mor- ator province, They charged Lu. |index rose to 121.7 from 120.5 he-|{ans, They fired in the air first] tween July 1 and Aug. 1, an but finally were forced to shoot THRUATENS ARRESTS ol he orense. [SAY ASSASSINATION TRIED Prices were higher for eggs,| On the political front, the Con- Albert Halong ih Koil prove tial seasonal decline in prices of tempted to assassinate President 4 4 most domestic fruits and vegeta. Joseph Kasavubu and Premier Rasavib, Dol iiaigo Is among {Increases in costs of shelter, 4d pared to support Bolikango as president of the new republic, He Raised By | One Civilian Congolese [troops opened fire on a group of| Bolikango was seized Thursday the main cause of the third Pounced today, At the Leopoldville headquar- The consumer price index ©'S serving in the Congb; port with gendarmes to take the July 1, the bureau said, This | said, | ago that Bolikango was trying to per cent above the year-earlier [troops mutinied shortly after in-|ville sald six other of their lead~ "The index of food prices--|occans deployed in that area Mumba is trying to smash all op- advance which the bureau said|at the attacks, will arrest anyone trying, to start beef, pork, bananas and oranges, golese government charged that tanga province, bles, | Patrice Lumumba, political opponents, later threw his strength behind cellaneous group of "other com. | Left By Storm By THE CANADIAN PRESS Buildings, boats, power and telephone lines and trees damaged over a wide area by a thunderstorm which swept over southwestern Ontario and of lower Michigan late Thursday At least five persons killed and six injured In Michi gan, where the storm, "y blew the roofs off houses. igh winds swept Traverse Bay on Lake Michigan and flung|burg, 20 miles no |ham, about limb wrecked one car and badly dam- aged angther some boats up on the shore, SAVED FROM LAKE Jack Marian, 55, of Windsor was rescued after he clung to the mast of his boat for two hours in Lake St, Clair as it was buffeted by the storm which swept the Windsor area. Gusts up to 90 miles an hour were reported More than 30 calls for help many from Canadian boats, were received by the United States Strike Halts Grand Trunk DETROIT (AP) -- The Grand Trunk Western Railroad's first strike In more than 40 years stopped all its trains ih four mid west states today. The stoppage on the Canadian. owned line left 2,550 auto work. ers idle at Flint, Mich, and threatened layoffs of others Some 900 members of the Brotherhood of Railroad Train. men walked out in a dispute over work rules dating back over a period of months. Chevrolet division Motors Corporation sent Flint workmen home Thursday because of a pileup of motors of Genel UNITED NATIONS, N.Y When Nikita Khrushchev makes his second appearance on the General Assembly stage thi month, he will have an impres sive supporting cast of gover ment chiefs from the Soviet bloc Eastern Europe's Communis brass is going to accompany the Soviet Premier to the assembly opening Sept. 20. This led to speculation some Western lead ers might attend, Khrushchev had gugge the heads of as many possible attend the disarmament debate, ence, along with Soviet bloc chiefs, is sure to bring leaders, but diplomats expresse doubt there will be a full-scal summit meeting of the sort Khru shehev proposed, President Eisenhower appeared CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5.1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 sted that ations a assembly's His pres other Coast Guard. Several reports of were €rs parts! out lowed were power lines moving cruise down from the northwest, reported missing for several | snapped power lines" and trees hours in Lake Erie, but eventu-| {ally landed near Merlin, Ont, Chatham, a 20-foot section of a pac. ll road Soviet Brass Coming With Khrushchev (AP) almost | Outdates Penicillin | LONDON (AP)--British doctors today hailed what was termed the outstanding achievement of medical research in developing a new drug, celbenia, described as a super-penicillin soon to be available all over the world, The British Medical Journal cautions tht vouch more experi mentation will be necessary be residents in Wallace. fore the full capabilities of the rthwest of Chat-|drug can be assessed, but it has were without power for|already proved capable of killing two hours when a tree EE€rms fhat sre resistant to ordi: able ) op | DATY penicillin, ent cables, A falling tree dene completely abe gorbed into the bloodstream when linjected and Its use is entirely free from toxic side-effects," sald a spokesman for Beecham sarch Laboratories, develop hotel roof was ripped off and a ers of the drug. fire door was smashed. About! phe Medical Journal publishes 10,000 area residents were cut off geyen articles on the drug and from power for about 2% hours says editorially: "Its discovery is an important step forward , | and it is encouraging to entertain {the idea that something even | better may yet emerge." swamped boats in Canadian wat were Investigated by the RCMP, Parts of Windsor were blacked when the storm, which fol tornado warnings, broke Detroit was also hit A man and four children on a from Euclid, Ohlo, were Many ROOF RIPPED At Ridgetown, 15 miles east of ical results of tests during the {last nine months U.S. Sprinter ere, won| BTCAKS Record n Detroit, supervisory person. nel took a New York Central lo-| ROME (CP) Wilma Rudolph comotive into a Chevrolet gear of the United States today won and axle plant when the NYC's the Olympic womne's 100-metre regular crew refused to take the!dash final, engine across a Grand Trunk, After a hasty check the judges picket line to pick up cars, announced that the Tennessee normally shipped via the Grand Trunk to assembly plant else where, The auto industry generally girl had broken the world's rec-|shell exploded among them dur-|vincial forest protection service, took a quick check to determine ord with an amazing 11 seconds ing a training exercise here, the [said "the fire is not what effect a long Grand Trunk flat strike and a Pennsylvania Rail walkout might have on it by Shirley Strickland de la Hunty but there was no immediate re- of Australia, and was equalled port of findings, Pennsy workers earlier today by Miss Rudolph in ican force stationed in Germany. last week walked out Thursday. a semi-final certain to appear and Communist North Korea or North deliver a reply to Khrushchev's viet Nam speech before the assembly "There were indications in Lon Neutralist leader, don after Khrushchev made his @8 India's Prime Minister Nehru, announcement that Prime Min- gave a chilly reception to the ister Macmillan might - change idea of holding high level talks his mind about attending. When at the UN when Khrushchev first Asian such oh The Journal describes the clins| lonly in an advisory capacity, | | Dimensional |Hydro 176 acres of former Chip-| |pewa reserve land for about %7, [000 an acre. The Toronto firm [had paid the Sarnia Indians |about $2,000 an acre for 3,100 acres, | The charge of perjury, made [Wednesday by CCF counsel An- |drew Brewin, was based largely lon Mr, Gray's denial that he had 'ELECTRIC GUITAR TALKS BACK DONCASTER, England (AP)--Brian Senior stopped strumming hig electric guitar when it suddenly started talk- ing to him. The words from the guitar ~loud and clear--turned out to he police calls, then a | message from an RAF plane, modities and services' and a ,06 decrease in clothing prices. | FIRES RACE Gaspe Towns average industrial wages and sal. Integration jhe July rise in living costs! followed an advance in industrial | wages during June, The index of Pace To Be Kasavubu, The Bangala people are numer ous in Equator province, Large numbers have taken up residence in Leopoldville, At one time, the Belgian-trained Congolese army South communities of St. Gabriel de Rameau aad Val d'Espoir were evacuated for the second time in less than a week early today as a roaring forest fire drew menacingly near, | area of 35 square miles, propelled by a strong wind reach- ing near-gale proportions, ters were 'vying to slqw the ad- The 20-year-old draughts. man explained a quirk in the wiring of the guitar's ampli- fier must have turned it into an occasional radio receiver for broadcasts on certain fre- | quencies, | | 'Explosion Kills 15 U.S. Troops GRAFENWOEHR, G e rm any| (AP) were killed and 28 injured today when a large calibre artillery | (U.S, Army announced The world record was 11.3, held| It was the worst training acel |There is still a lot to burn dent for ground troops ever reg- istered by .the 250,000-man Amer- | An army announcement said [the shell landed outside the "'ar.| tillery impact area' and exploded | in a tent camp in this training area SERIOUS CONDITION Several of the injured were in| serious condition, army officials] said. All the Injured were flown| by helicopter to army hospitals An immediate investigation was ordered by Maj.-Gen, Fred: |erick Brown, commander of the | ard Armored Division, which was | undergoing routine fall training| in the area at the time, The Grafenwoehr region Is the | US. Army's biggest training] ground in Germany, It is in north Bavaria, about 30 miles from the e Soviet premier first raised put forward the idea, the possibility several weeks ago border with Czechoslovakia, | that he might go to the assembly, Macmillan told Parliament he had no intention of going. But a British official said Thursday LATE NEWS FLASHES situation has minister cer the situation ly a new prime look at Bank Holdup In Londo LONDON, Ont, (CP) Po who held up a branch of the R won, The away car is beli bank, located on Wellington Ros Details were not available, The will again." A presidential spokesman said n Paris de Gaulle has no inten tion--at least for the present--to ittend the assembly and added: "1 doubt he will decide later There was speculation Cuba's Fidel Castro might attend. Re ports had circulating in Havana Castro would make the r to New York if Chrus did sources many to the get session gly if str Storekeeper Kidnapped CORNWALL (CP) to go' 0 go 20 been Dennis Downes, 23, and Geral that sion he Informed expressed that Asian leaders ld ed Red China is not eligible since it dges not belong to the UN. Neither Joi TORONTO (CP) doubt W me session a path through Canadian Natic n lice are searching for two men oyal Bank of Canada this afters eved still in the vicinity of the ad at the edge of the city limits, By Convicts Cornwall storekeeper Robert Leroux, has identified two men who kidnapped him Thursday as d Martin, 30, escaped convicts from Joyceville Penitentiary near Kingston, | Gang Beats Up Garbage Men A gang of youths Thursday night at tacked two garbage collectors who sounded their horn to clear mal Exhibition crowds. Russell Dow and Nelson Scovill were treated at the CNE hospital after being kicked about the face and body, p! | by the minute of rich and twusands of cords of cut day of destruction, that the wind might die down or the villages, provinces Evacuated QUEBEC (CP) «~~ The Gaspe stalled a few of the 100 fires that have raged for wlays in the four but little real was provided. Scanty reports from the re. mote Newfoundland communities ; of Garnish, Caplin Cove and Old| The fire, now burning over an/ perlican said more than op. Li | munications Nearly 600 exhausted firefigh-iout by flames, to vance of the blaze in the hope| RAIN HELPS P.E.I, Rain hindered a dozen major W change direction before reaching fires in western Prince Edward| Carpenters and Joiners of Amer. {Island for about two hours but|i¢d | Observers at the scene sald the| residents continued to move out|conditions at a Hydro develop- | situation seemed to be worsening of the 100-square-mile farming | land lumbering area declared a| voe Laforce, president of 'the Camille Pouliot, Union Natlon-| disaster area Wednesday, ale member of the legislature for| Gaspe South, described the situa-| tion Thursday night as "very| serious," HARD TIMES THREATEN He said: " ing the people in fear and misery and leaving them without jobs." He planned to make recom- mendations to the provincial gov-| was under control, Henri Kieffer, chief of the pro- moving any| more, but it's not going out, there." : The fire was considered dead to life Saturday by a warm, stiff| breeze. In the past few days has destroyed 13 buildings, burned out some 100 square miles forest--mostly spruce wood, Heavy rain is needed, sald Mr, Kieffer. The Quebec weather of- fice said none was likely in the next three or four days. The area has not had heavy rain for almost a month, Two smaller outbreaks were reported at the end of the penin- sula, some 330 mile Quebec City. One was burning over an area of 10 square miles just north of Douglastown while the other was situated between Peace and Mur- dochville. Both were described as "potentially bad." HALIFAX fighters in the Atlantic provinces braced today for another grim Scattered showers Thursday Canadians Win Wrestling Bouts ROME (CP)--Two Canadians] were winners while a third lost in first-round bouts Thursday in Olympic freestyle wrestling | Kurt Boese of Kitchener scored| 2 fall over Doug Blubach of the] United States to win his welter-| weight bout and Ray Lougheed, | lightweight from Moose Jaw,! Sask.,, won by decision over| Roger Rielle of France | Bob Steckle of Kitchener lost a decision to J. Guries of Hun- gary in the heavyweight class,' s northeast of (CP)---Forest fire- | A situation described as ."pan- icky" of western Prince Edward Island | dyrest fires sweeping out-of A province-wide appeal by town | jects next week in support of the nearby Grand Bank | bushworkers. |were arrested in a melee which but was brought back Spruce the This by Jlofficials of it/only what they could was a northern Nova Scotia lumbering village of Collingwood was eased in the evening as a half-dozen The millions of dol-| bulldozers and 300 men, aided by lars "going up in smoke are plac-|a light rainfall, controlled a blaze {half-a-mile away, Newfoundland reports sald the {women and children of Garnish,|union, | a lobstering village of 900 on the | ernment for relief as soon as the Burin P Fifteen American soldiers] inferno, now entering its 16th day, of st, housewife eninsula 130 miles west| construction unions are reported aw Which opens cafes, restau. John's, fled the fire on|peady to strike 10 Ontario Hydro-|rants, movie houses and hotel |foot, on bicycles and in boats, t yg |called for all available men and |cars to help in the evacuation, High winds were reported driv-|jects in a bid to bring decent con-|dah of a hotel here Thursday ing the flames through parched stands so fast that many|dense timber at Little Long Rap-(crowd of whites who pelted a villagers retreated with ids, site of a power project 41/police truck with carry, relief | 1,000 ] Ws people fled their homes as flames advancing towards the villages raced in from dry timberland, Telegraph and telephone com. the areas were in . the aries at July 1--latest figure! available --~ was 176,1 compared with 175.4 June 1 and 171.6 a year earlier, The index is based on 1949 average wages equalling 100, Workers Drink Swamp Water SMOKY FALLS (CP) -- Lum- ber and Sawmill union officials {will meet Wednesday in Toronto] with the United Brotherhood of was sald to be 60 per cent Bang. a, Bollkango politically favors a United Congo with a large meas. ure of provincial decentraliza. tion, He always had worked flonaly the Belgl Stepped Up WASHINGTON (AP) -- The U.8. Supreme Court has moved to step up the poe of publie school | n integration several ar af the "start of the seventh "iho year since its desegregation ing, The court Thursday rejected pleas for delay at Houston, Tex, the largest segregated school sys- tem in the south; at New Orleans where state and federal officials have been at odds for weeks; |and in the state of Delaware. | Dr, Henry Petersen, president | of the Houston school board, said he hoped Governor Price Daniel of Texas would forestall integra. tion of the first grades, Tear Cat Used On White Mob KITWE, Northern Rhodesia (Reuters) Police used night. |sticks and threw tear gas bombs "We will discuss what type of three times Thursday night to |serious action we wil take break up white crowds angered against Hydro," said William |at 8 new Northern Rhodesian law Stenfanovich of the Carpenters' Agata pucial discrimination, | uniol Sawmill | number of white police offi- | union, parent body of the Sawmill ors ware ramandlon. by the [mobs demonstrating against the Pan-Aricans Explain Beatings « LEOPOLDVILLE, The Congo (CP) -- The Pan-African forei ministers' conference whic ended here Thursday has taken quiet diplomatic steps to prevent the. recurrence of incidents in which Congolese soldiers attacked and beat Canadians and Ameris cans, The Congolese explained at the time of the disturbances at l.eo- poldville and Stanleyville airports that they attacked the North Americans In the belief they were Belgian paratroops or com- mandos, Conference delegates, headed by Justin Bomboko, the Congo's foreign minister, met Wedneaday with United Nations civilian and military officials to discuss closer liaison and the exchange of more information between the UN and the Congo government, A UN spokesman said the Afri. can delegates used the phrase "turning over a new leaf" fre. quently during the meeting and stressed the need for frank and loyal co-operation, (CLC) to discuss working |ment project here. | Sawmill union, said: Thursday the men are living in tents with dirt] (floors, eating from tin cans and| "| drinking swamp water at the pro-! Ject in this community 120 miles | northwest of - Timmins, . The Toronto Telegram says | Electric Power Commission pro- dining rooms to all races, | Several whites and Africans | The paper sald workmen will [resulted when a number of Afri {walk off the jobs at Hydro pro-|cans were thrown off the veran- | ditions to loggers also working in| Police threw tear gas at a stones and bottles. miles north of Kapuskasing, wo St FOREST FIRE DEVASTATION IN MARITIMES a farm home in overrun by one of a series of | control through the province's | veered away from the brush countryside. Iropically, after | and woods in the back nd, | detroying the house, the flames | (CP Wi 1)