The Oshawa Times, 17 Sep 1960, p. 1

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' THOUGHT FOR TODAY Is the fun you're getting out of living these days commensur- ate with the cost of doing it? The Oshawa Times WEATHER REPORT Rain beginning during the night, cloudy with rain Sunday, little change in temperature, I VOL. 89--NO. 216 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1960 Post Office Deparfment, Authorized 6s Second Class Mall Oftowa THIRTY PAGES RUSSIA SAYS 'NO* AGAIN Soviet Deputy Foreign Minis- ter Valerian A. Zorin holds his pencil aloft as he casts Russia's | 90th veto early today during | UN Security Council vote on | resolution giving UN Secretary Dag Hammarskjold a go-ahead on his policies in the Congo and urging that no military -aid be sent to the Congo except through the UN Veto led to re- quest by U.S. chief delegate, i|try's railway and freight rate Ambassador James J. Wads- worth, for emergency session of the general assembly. Brit ain's delegate, Sir Patrick Dean, is in centre. --AP Wirephoto Close Big Link Ike To See State Heads In Trans-Canada WAWA (CP)--A major link injof right of way, almost continu- the Trans-Canada Highway willlously through 98 miles of thick| 1 ! be on iis today, and this forest, moving 7,825,000 cubic dent Eisenhower probably wuij:aying the work of the royal com- ; in yards of earth and blasting out meet in New York rathre than in| {more than 2,730,000 cubic yards Washington with a number of for-| tiny northern iron-mining com-| munity grins proudly at an acci- dental honor. The little community {of rock; ut| Constructing 25 bridges, many 105 miles northwest of Sault Ste.|of them major structures and Marie, will be host to Ontario and|two of them more than 400 feet federal government officials,/long. guests from Michigan, Minnesota| The $40,000,000 Agawa River- and Wisconsin and visitors from Marathon highway sectivn is one all over come to witness the of the most significant links for closing of one of the big high- Ontario in its $214,000,000 part in way's toughest gaps. the country-wide project that will Special trailer parks, tent sites eventually form 5000 miles of and preparations to feed as many continuous highway, fhe world's as 1050 have been laid up. longest. Premier Frost, federal works| Survey crews and engineers minister David Walker, Ontario/faced almost inaccessible coun- Highways Minister Fred M. Cass/try along the northern shore of and C. Harry Lyons, Progres-(Lake Superior. In the early Jlve Sonservative member of thes evews had to get to legislature for Sault 'Ste. Marie.! wo will cut three ribbons opening thellake shore at the southern end significant 165 . mile section ofjof the project. Trans-Canada Highway 17. Airplanes and boats were used OBSTACLES BEATEN jo take supplies to field camps. To hack out this stretch of BIG CUTTING JOB road, while maintaining high| Gargantuan tasks faced crews standards set by a 1956 federal-|from the initial clearing on. provincial agreement, as many North of the Agawa River for as 3910 workers and engineers| five miles as much as. 70,000 cu- working for 83 contractors faced pje yards of rock were blown tasks like these: | from single cuts, To cut from the Agawa River,| 5 miles north of the Soo to Mar-/300 to 600 feet long and from 55 athon, thro ince's toughest virgin terrain andly 75.foot drilled face some of its highest elevations In the whole gap, 3,165,913 Clearing a total of 2998 acres'pounds of explosives were used. abo Cubans Restrict U.S. Ambassador whipped up a new international furore by ordering the expulsion of an attractive U.S. Embassy secretary, Mrs. Marjorie Lennox, on spy North Americans were ordered expelled on the same, charges They were identified as Mario Nordio, an Italian-born U.S. citi- zen, his wife, Mary, and Robert Neet, another U.S. Embassy em ployee. Foreign Minister Raul Roa told Bonsal he was restricted to the Havana .area where the embassy is situated and to going to and from his residence five miles out- ment side the city. HAVANA (AP)--Fidel Castro's government today slapped tight restrictions on movements of U.S, Ambassador Philip Bonsal in Ha- vana in retaliation for the U.S curb on the Cuban prime minis- ter's travels during the UN Gen- eral Assembly The diplomatic quarantine cap ped a series of anti-American measures taken on the eve of Castro's departure for New York. 1 militiamen Friday night three .American- wned operating on the island, Canadian banks were not affected 2. The Castro Armed seized hanks g areas by hoat up the! In New York WASHINGTON (CP) -- Presi- eign government leaders attend- ing the United Nations Genera! Assembly. 'Diplomatie officials indicated privately today that the idea of (inviting various foreign leaders to Washington for talks at the White House had given way to consid- {eration of the president's seeing {them in New York. | Eisenhower, these informants noted, will be in New York twice | within the next 10 days. | Among those with whom' he | might talk, the speculation has centred on President Tilo of Yu- oslayia aud President Nasser o i including Soviet Prem shehev, plan to attend the {United Nations meeting, | Eisenhower has no present [plans to meet with Khrushchev {who has carried on a campaign {of denunciation against the pres- | ident since the collapse of the | Summit conference in Paris last {May 18. | One of the problems which Eis. Tran Inqui Spor Pressured OTTAWA (CP) -- A powerful jof IY Alberta and Manitoba of +: "" the eel 's or. squeeze play is catching up with Canada's royal co ion on transportation. Time is running out for almost all sides involved in the wide- ranging investigation of the coun- problems, Everyone seems to be under pressure -- the federal cabinet, provincial governments, the rail- ways, their workers and the six der that provincial briefs were to be submitted by Aug. 15. the charge. said the railways are in a dil. Premiers Manning of Alberta and Roblin of Manitoba denied CNE counsel A. D. McDonald emma with their revenues frozen for more than a year and a strike vote under way. "Any delay just makes it im. tell si ea. Informants say the federal gov. ernment is putting pressure on the royal commission to finish its job quickly--a task that has al- ready occupied more than a year and appears to involve at least another six months or so, possible for the railways to where they are going. Commission Chairman M. A. MacPherson, who has tried to keep the hearings from cracking! up in the heat of prairie-railway feuds, sald he is "embarrassed" by the delays. RATES FROZEN The reasons: 1. Freight rates are frozen until the royal commission reports its findings. 2, Some 118,000 railway work- ers will vote in the next six- weeks whether to go on strike to back claims for a 14-cent hourly pay boost, 3. A federal subsidy on freight rates--worth $35,000,000 in the last 18 months to next Aprile may run out before the commis. sion makes its report. This is the setting for a prairie- railway squabble over who is de- mission, CPR Vice-President Ilan Sin- clair accused the two provinces FIRE DESTROYS FRAME BARN A frame barn, owned by George Scott, togethér with 300 bales of hay and the sea- son's. erop of grain were completely destroyed in a fire which broke out about 11 a.m. today. barn was on Harmony road, north of the Oshtwa headquarters station as well as the Sunset Heights station responded to the alarm, They sald the fire might have been caused by a nearby bonfire being used to burn rubbish, down street, came out ond oe that oe rd] Man Held For Murder After Chase BRANTFORD (CP) -- Police Friday night arrested a British Columbia man and charged him with murder shortly after 77- year-old Johm F. Anguish was found beaten to death in his home here. Razso Collar was to appear in court here today. Police said he was arrested after a street chase by two con- stables called by a woman who lived next door to Anguish. The woman telephoned police, a spokesman said, when she be- came suspicious of a light in his house and the fact that a blind was partly pulled down. She then went to Anguish's house and found him lying dead on the floor, thur Halajian, who lives a few doors had. just fled from his house, Constables D, Young and Clint Dickinson went in pursuit and caught a man, Police said the houses of both Anguish, who lived alone, and Halajian had been broken into. | enhower and his advisers encoun {tered in discussions on inviting men like Nasser and Tito to Washington was how to ask some ton without asking all of them-- and Premier Fidel Castro of Cuba. Radar Station Deal Discussed OTTAWA (CP)--The possibility of the RCAF taking over man- ning of some or all of the 20 | Pinetree radar stations in Can- ada now operated by the United Some of the cuts were from government leaders to Washing-| th some of the prov-ito go feet deep. One hillside has apart from men like Khrushchev | | (®) | ong NEW YORK (AP) -- The state| department now may lift the travel ban just enough to permit Soviet Premier Khrushchev to visit the big Russian estate on Long Island, Khrushchev, due here next week to attend the annual meet- {ing of the United Nations Gen- eral Assembly, had been re- stricted to Manhattan Island as a security measure. But state department officials States Air . Force is being dis- cussed here, informants said Fri-| day. | Im 1 buy exchange, the U.S, would some $150,000,000 worth of charges. Three other|CL-44 cargo planes from Cana.|80- The estate is about 20 miles dair Limited, Montreal, and "sup- ply the RCAF with interceptors to replace the CF-100 jet, {| It is understood the govern. ment is balking at spending $120,- 000,000 for American interceptors after cancelling the Canadian su- personic Arrow last year. Canada operates 14 of the 34 Pinetree stations in southern Can- ada at an annual cost of $28. 000,000. The U.S. spends $43,000, 000 a year to maintain its 20 'Pinetree sites. Diefenk aker Appoints 8th, 9th Commissions OTTAWA (CP)-Prime Minis- legislation to be presented to the ter Diefenbaker today appointed next session of Parliament. a three-man royal commission to inquire into the position of Cana-| OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis- dian magazines and periodicals ister Diefenbaker Friday ap facing foreign competition. M. pointed his eighth royal commis: Grattan O'Leary, president of the sion since taking office three Ottawa Journal, will be chairman. years ago. John George Johnston, of the, He was scheduled to name his Toronto public relations firm of ninth today. Johnston, Everson and Charles- worth, and Claude P. Beaubien, recommend changes aimed at a of Montreal, vice-president and more efficient and less expensive manager of public relations ant way of running government. advertising for the Aluminum J Grant Glassco, Toronto busi- Company of Canada, will be the nessman, is chairman of the other commissioners. a commission. The other two mem Mr. Diefenbaker said the com- hors are Watson Sellar, former mission has been asked to report auditor-general of Canad d its recommendations in time for p puna aka, an . Eugene Therrien, Montrea! | lawyer. Mr. Diefenbaker said thé com mission will report in two years and make interim progress re- ports. It will start work immedi ately, The commission to be an nounced today will look into the {position of Canadizn magazines facing advertising competition CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-657 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 The one appointed Friday will an from Canadian editions of for- eign publications. The Glassco commission was instructed to study all aspects of| "|the federal government -- Can- ada's biggest business--including its agencies, boards and corpor- ations, Recommendations are sought how to eliminate duplication and overlapping of, services and unnecessary and uneconomic op- eralion and how to acieve better management Publicly-owned corporations to be examined include the CBC and CNR. CIVIL SERVICE EXEMPT Mr. Diefenbaker said the civil service as such will not be ex amined. It was plain, however, that the 'commission's recommenda- tions will directly affect the civil service. Public servants, together] with employees of government rporations, number nedrly 200,- 000 and thei' monthly payroll is | about $60,000,000, in Washington said Friday they {may permit the Soviet leader to |visit the Soviet estate at Glen | Cove--if he specifically asks to {from the UN headquarters in | Manhattan, Khrushchev could spend a weckend relaxing at the state, but could not hold a reception or make propaganda during any Long Island visit, officials inti- inated. Meanwhile, preparations to guard Communist and Cuban del- jegates to the 15th General As- sembly session were stepped up. Police Chief Stephen Kennedy said 8000 men -- about one-third of the police force--have been assigned to prevent disorders at the United Nations, Apparently their job won't be Mr. K. May Get Island easy, Already one bomb' threat has been made against Khrush- chev, A man with a foreign accent telephoned the Overseas Press Club Friday and told the phone operator he had heard "you are having a visit from Khrushchev" and "we'll bomb the place." A search produced no bomb but a policeman was stationed at the building. Khrushchev has ac- cepted an invitation to address the club at a hotel and not at the club. As another precaution, Com- munist -- and Cuban -- delegates are being notified by the state department that neither they nor their bodyguards will be per- Protestant Statement Not Denied REPORT CONGO PREMIER DEAD Yelling Crowds Hurry Russians LEOPOLDVILLE (CP) -- Com: NEW YORK (AP)---Dr. Danfel Poling says neither he nor Dr.! Norman Vincent Peale repudiate] a Protestant group's statement that a Roman Catholic president would be under "extreme pres. sure from the hierarchy of his church." Dr. Poling, editor of The Chris. tian Herald, agreed Friday that Dr, Peale did not take part in writing the resolutions, from the National Conference of Citizens for Religious Freedom, express- ing fear of a Catholic as presi- dent, "But neither Dr. Peale nor 1 repudiate the Washington resolu. tions," said Dr, Poling in a state- munist diplomats closed down their embassies and headed for home today amid rumors that Soviet-backed Patrice Lumumba was dead. The Russian and Czech ambas- sadors were greeted by catealls as they drove to Leopoldville air- with their entire staffs, fol. by Jeeploads of Congolese troops, "Gety out dirty Communists," shouted anti-Lumumba Baluba| tribesmen as the Communist en- voys drove to a waiting Ilyushin 18 turbo-prop airliner, Several other Congolese waved and smiled. Meanwhile, * Reuters news agency shid a persistent rumor| swept the capital that Lumumba k" Lumumba's night, believed to have come from' Stanleyville strong~ where hundreds of Russian look after Yakovlev, Shorily after police arrived Ar ment. "I do repudiate the manner in which these resolutions have been attributed to Dr. Peale." The New York Times reports Dr, Poling as adding that his statement had and approved by Dr. Peale in a tele {phone call. Dr, Peale, minister of the Mar- ble Collegiate Church here, could not be reached directly for com- ment, CANADIANS HUNGRY Congo Suffers | Food Shortage LEOPOLDVILLE (CP) -- The veal meals this week and no po- food shortage here is nearing the tatoes. A two-day calorie scale a ing the Be was at least a third below Cana- 1 tandards calorie ba- Nations forces holding 15 days Sian, s\ancares gna sis, supplies on hand and. a UN of. A shipload of food arrived at ficer saying he doesn't know the Congo's Matadi port this week when more food will arrive, but UN officers said they don't The low supply is affecting know whether the supplies are particularly the Canadian signals|for Leopoldville or for other contingent, which is asking Can- Parts of the country. The Cana- ada to fly in such supplies as|dian scale calls for two eggs dehydrated potatoes, powdered daily while the UN scale calls milk and dried apples, i for ane, Redsiors has been ply 0 raise the scale to two eggs or aloes aud ost. 1ieh Neo: land has received UN authority from wholesalers supplying UN to prepare a new ration scale, needs in Leopoldville. Canadian| The hungry Canadians fill up supplies are available for about on bananas at two francs each eight days, including field ration|out of the 43 fran daily "pittance" packs, {they receive from the UN, This The UN ration scales are the allowance doesn't permit them to same as for the Gaza force in|80 to a restaurant for meals. the United Nations Emergency| The signalmen received 645 Force. They are described as francs ($13) from the UN Thurs "adequate" from the health day for the first half of Septem: standpoint. ber, VARIETY LACKING ASSIGN PAY TO FAMILY Capt. Mike Kedziora, Canadian! Most of the Canadians are messing officer who "is running married and have assigned most against'a brick wall" in tryinglof their pay to their families, to get supplies, says the scale is|Yet they are trying to get by on not . high enough for Canadians the UN allowance to cover high J. Grant Glassco of Toronto has been named of a royal commission to investi Purpose of the to promote economies and recommend cuts in tenance of essential ~CP Wirephoto mitted to carry guns during their visit here. The ban apparently was aimed against Cuban Prime Minister Fidel Castro and his gun-toting associates, who for variety eat more and Congolese prices such as $8 for, drink more liquids in hot and hu-|a restaurant steak, It is even | mid weather such as that prevail- prohibitive for officers, |1ng in the Congo. The signalmen are grumbling The Canadians had at least six/and wondering if a higher allow- GRAND-DADDY Discover Herd Of Wood Bison |ance will be available from the Canadian government, 'was Tyne! who had taken him, where he had doen hiding or who had lynched ate government efficiency. coon ; 3 commission Is SOURCE bad a good source for a report main. [of Lumumba's death but there tures consistent. with was no official confirmation. taken from hiding and hed--but no one could say One Western reporter sald hé The Communist diplomats Facing Bomb Hoax Charge COOKSVILLE (CP)~A Kitch. The Czech diplomat said he was going to Prague "as fast as I can get there," At the capital's Stanley Hotel, Russian, Chinese and Czech offi cials packed their bags. Several Soviet airlines arrived turned, took off again for Calgary « with Laumas aboard. Mr. Bailey quoled Lauman as saying "I told you I'd get it back." Lauman elected trial by judge at Leopoldville Airport during the and jury. Veto Forces UN Emergency Meet LONDON (Reuters) -- Russia said today it has asked the United Nations General Assembly to deal with the "threat to the political independence and territorial in- tegrity of the Congo republic." The Soviet news agency Tass said the request was made to UN Secretary-General Dag Hammar- skjold by Valerian Zorin, Soviet UN delegate and deputy foreign minister, UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CP) The 82-nation General Assembly was summoned today for an emergency session on the Congo problem after a Soviet veto blocked action in the Security Council, The meeting will be convened Just three days before the sched- uled opening of the regular ses. sion with its all « star cast of top-level leaders. The United States requested the meeting in a dramatic move in the early morning hours as the 11-nation council wound up three The move was triggered by a Soviet veto of a resolution, spone sored by Ceylon and Tunisia, giving Hammarskjold a go-ahead on his Congo policies and urging that no military aid be Sent to the Congo. except through the United Nations. It was the 90th veto cast by the Soviet Unlog, Western diplomats had confi. dently passed the word that they expected the Russians to abstain. But they were ready, just in case. The vote was 8 to 2--the Sovite Union being joined by Poland--with France abstaining, Ambassador James Wads. worth, chief U.S. delegate, took the floor, "The Soviet Union," he sald, "has just shown the lengths to which it will go in opposition to effective United Naitons assist ance for the republic of the Congo." He then proposed formally that the council act under the 1950 "uniting for peace" resolution to call an' emergency assembly meeting, Millionaire OTTAWA (CP) -- The grand-| survey. He passed the tip to N.S. daddy of North American buffalo Novakowski, his successo as fed- a : as been identified alive and|eral biologist at Fort Smith, ul er 1eS kicking in the Northwest Terri-|N.W.T. (tories, scientists confirmed today.| Chief biologist A, W. F. Ban-| TORONTO (CP)--James Fran-| An isolated herd of about 200|field of the museum and Mr.| ceschini, 70, an Italian immigrant|wood bison, bigger, blacker and Novakowski collaborated. on - a {who built .a multi-million, dollar | woollier than the plains species, [paper which sets out proof based construction empire and became has heen located in a remote On measurements of five speci- one of Canada's most controver-losrner of Wood Buffalo Nationai mens, including a 2,300-pound old [Sin wartime internees, died Feb Park, one of the*world's Jargest bull, taken last Years ca au ; i game sanctuaries straddling the] Abou the wo son of eath at his Country Dome Alberta- Territories boundary. No ranged roughly north of the Sask- short illness closed a career in[Others are believed to exist. j3tciewan River in Alberta and which he parlayed 'a Z5-cent an The wood bisun was first spot- Saskatchewan into the Northwest {hour pick-and-shovel job into a|ted in 1795 by explorer Samuel(Territories and westward to the [fortune, which he nearly lost due|Hearne, It is a bruiser which Rocky Mountains. Herds were {10 the misfortune of war. may stand more than six feet,|SPread as far south as Colorado | In June, 1040, he was placed |measure 12 feet or more from and once the plains buffalo were y, (NT ne 2,000 pillaged, the larger animals be. ohi d rire Detaw: {nose to tail and weigh Ee roi EA aa, {pounds or more. The woolly coat 8an to fall to the hunters. After unsuccessful appeals for |is almost black and the animal almost extinct south of the Peace release, including character testi-[1S about 20 per cent heftier than River by 1875 and numbered mony on his behalf by the pre-|the plains buffalo. {about 300 by 1893 when a federal | mier of Ontario, he was freed al It had rong been presumed that law provided protection for them. {year later on medical grounds, [the last pure-blooded animal van.| The exact location of the sur- | His release stirred a storm of ished after plains buffalo were Vivors is on the upper Nyarling {protest culminating in a Com. Moved into the 17,300-square-mile| River, flowing north to Great | mons debate in May, 1942. The park in the 1920s and inter-bred. Slave Lake, in the northwest cor- lquestion was brought up in the| The sleuthing that led to redis- ner of the park. Geography saved House by John Diefenbaker, then Overy was conducted by thejthe pure strain from the outnum- an opposition member, who ques-| Canadian wild life service and bering plains buffalo because 75| tioned the circumstances of Mr. National Museum of Canada. A miles or more of lake, swamp {Franceschini's internment and first conjecture came in 1949/and muskeg lie between the wood subsequent release, from W. A. Fuller after an aerial 'bison and the immigrants, days of futile debate, BELGIAN KING AND FIANCEE King Baudouin I of Belgium and his fiancee, Fabiola de Moray Aragon ride together in | a can entering Laeken Palace in Brussels Friday night. They were to meet governmnet and court dignitaries follawing an- ¢ their | a ment, Baudouin is 30 and his bride-to-be is 32. =~AP Wirephota \

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