THOUGHT A woman smart enough to ask 2 man for advice seldom is fool- ish enough to FOR TODAY "take it. ~ @he Oshawa Tin ' WEATHER REPORT The weather is slowly improving, but the threat of rain still hang8 over Southern Ontario. "weice Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, APRIL 25, 1961 VOL. 90--NO. 96 ACCIDENTAL CANADIAN Minneapolis housewife Mrs. Lou Dykstra had a busy day in Winnipeg Saturday. She led a barbershop quartet to vic- tory in a singing competition at 4 pom. and at 6 p.m. gave Latin Ame Laos | i | VIENTIAN--The pro-Western government of Prince Boun Oum accepted today the joint British-Russian call for a cease- fire in Laos. There was still no word from the pro-Communist Pathet Lao rebels, but a royal government spokesman expressed the hope # that the fighting would halt by 'noon Wednesday. | (A British spokesman in Lon- '|don said he understood the So- viet government "is taking ac- {tion as far as the Pathet Lao |is concerned."') | Britain and Russia were send- |ing out invitations for a 14 {power conference to work out | arrangements for a neutral, in- dependent Laos. The invitations said the conference would open '(May 12 in Geneva. The Laotian government an- ' nounced its commander-in-chief is "ready to establish contact at any moment with the re- "sponsible head of the opposing [forces" to fix the "day and hour of an effective cease-fire." REBEL HEAD IN HANOI Prince Souphanouvong, head of the Pathet Lao, flew from Communist China to Hanoi, North Viet Nam, today after a visit to Moscow and Peking be President of the United States, but he can always try for Prime Minister of Can- ada," The baby was not expected until next week. --CP Wirephoto birth to a 7%-pound baby | boy shown above at Winni- | peg General Hospital. Hus- band Robert, University of Minnesota student and teach- | er, said: 'Perhaps he won't U.K-Russ | Peace Plan Likes |day. The United Statés has served notice that it will not attend the Geneva conference , fuitorzed, Jocona. Clas Mol EIGHTEEN PAGES FRENCH ALERT AVAL FORG until a truce is in effect and has been verified. The flurry of peace moves, came as the royal government was airlifting troops' to the northern front to meet the threat of Pathet Lao troops who during the weekend drove gov- ernment | Vieng, until then a key govern- ment military headquarters 70 f~ {miles north of Vientiane. |MAJOR ATTACK CLAIMED The Laotian government § |claimed that the leftist forces| |attacked "on all fronts" in the |48 - hours before Britain and [Russia agreed on their appeal {#8 for a cease-fire in this South-|H east Asian kingdom's civil war, Chao Sopsaisana, secretary of | state for foreign affairs, said || {Monday night the Communist- | backed leftists had made a con (certed drive to seize as much |g | territory as they could before a cease-fire Western defence sources said supplies had been dropped to a| | government army force cut off {north of Vang Vieng. forces from Vang|} Fleet Headed Toward Algeria? night of tense vigil here but a rebel invasion that had been ex- pected at any moment did not materialize. The troops crossed into east- ern France at Strasbourg and were loaded aboard special trains to take up their defence assignments, France has some 60,000 troops |stationed in West Germany. All {their leaves were cancelled last |Saturday after the bloodless right-wing coup in Algiers by four retired generals. TAKES FULL POWERS The government's move to build up its defences came shortly after it had taken on ad- ditional sweeping powers to combat the rebellion. The government assumed im- PARIS (Reuters) -- France's Mediterranean fleet set sail to- day as Premier Michel Debre warned arms will be used # against the Algerian rebels "if _ |they do not speedily surrender." The navy ministry said the fleet--about 25 warships includ- ing two craft carriers--sailed "from Toulon "for an undisclosed i | destination." TRANSFER TROOPS '| The government also began bringing troops and armored % |units home from West Germany and put an infantry division on a war footing. SE 4 i v Debre spoke after the assem- : i" f ? y ; bly president, Jacques Chaban- di 3 :|DEImas read aloud a message " |from President de Gaule calling for the support of the country's |] with Prince Souvanna Phouma, | Fl . | his. half-brother and the neutral.| uorine + list ex-premier still recognized 1 I T1CQA | by the Communist bloc as the {head of the Laotian govern-| e 0 ment. The three-power control com- BURLINGTON (CP)--An anti- |legislators. Debre declared: do not speedily surrender." "The arms destined for fight- ing the Moslem insurgents will % have to be turned against the : rebel officers and men if they mediate powers to requisition property and to call up all classes of reserve forces to de- fend mainland France. At the same time, President |de Gaulle cracked down on the right-wing leaders of the upris- J ! H : De Gaulle's message, also read to the Senate by Speaker G a ston Monnerville, assured +. i|legislators that he had assumed dictatorial powers only because "dswsof a threat against the nation's lindependence by "certain mili- ing, stripping six generals and four colonels of their military ranks. The government also slapped . an économic 'blockage on Al- geria Monday night, suspending all movements of funds, all . | mission--India, Canada and Po-.|fluoridationist appeared before |land--which will 'supervise the|the Burlington finance commit. truce is scheduled to hold its|te¢ Monday night and submitted first meeting in New Delhi Fri. document claiming fluorida-| §= shits Aobaliaicloe ~ |tion is a Communist plot to|f attack part of man's brain, The submission was made by Of Kennedys Stand WASHINGTON (CP) -- While|Miro Jose Cardona may soon 'The White House issued a major Latin - American coun-|be ousted from his position as! statement saying: tries publicly avow their oppo-|head of the Cuban revolution-| "President Kennedy WERE COMPLAINING? has sition to communism, there isjary council which sought to stated from the beginning that a marked reluctance by most to rally behind President Ken- nedy's appeal for a united front against Fidel Castro. Well - informed Latin sources so . many Latin countries is so un- certain of the Cuban issue that the U.S. state department hes- itates to press for a showdown in the Organization of Ameri can States. Meanwhile, quarelling and de- ] ney are slowly cracking the flimsy shell of Cuban rebel unity. The morale of Cuban ex- jles in Miami and New York is reported to have been dropping as the days pass. Reports from Miami say Martin Greenberg. It was in the {tary chiefs." bank operatifhs and all mari- unite a number of rebel Cuban|as president he bears sole re-| factions. sponsibility for the ts of th | In despair, the rebels Jook to eT fe Ss. Re stalca - | Kennedy. for action agai#/st Cas-|it on occasions and he re Final Atom 7 US| [tro. But those close to iff now so that it will be! Bomb "Tes . intelligence so grossly uiideres. The president is strongly op- a now with finding out w timated Castro's support ameng Posed to anyone within or with-| pARYS (Reuters)--France ex- the Cuban people and his mil-| out the administration attempt-|ploded its fourth atomic bomb ary strength to withstand at-/ing to shift the responsibility." in the Sahara today ek. .|brought to a its Interior Secretary Stewart The statement came, No- g Et reat Udall attempted to shift some ever, after Senator Everett M. oping a of the blame from Kennedy to|Dirksen (Rep. Ill), Republican|yeapon. former president Eisenhower, |leader in the Senate, proetsted The bomb, described as be- but Kennedy made it clear Mon-|a remark by Udall that the ining of "low power," day night he takes full respon-|vasion had been conceived dur-| BD |sibility for whatever part the|ing the Eisenhower administra-|a¢ the Reggane testing site in U.S. played in the invasion. tion. lthe Sahara. tactic A nuclear yy 'ALL PRO-CASTRO' Harry Dolansky of Mont real, Canada, talks with reporters on arrival from Havana at New York today aboard the first Cubana airliner to come here since last week's inva- sion of Cuba. Dolansky said "Before the invasion 50 per cent of the people were for Castro, but after the invasion the country was unified be- bind him." --AP Wirephoto Remilton Police Seek Gambler HAMILTON (CP)--Hamilton and OPP officers are combining in the hunt for Hamilton gam- bler John Papalia A scarch in a Lake Erie cot- tage spot proved fruitless, but police are continuing to follow up every lead. Papalia, also known as Johnny appas, is wanted in connec- sn with the March 21 beating ok Toronto gambler Max Blue- stéin in Toronto; HONE JOMBERS (TY GENCY 5-1133 . RA 53-6574 FAL RA 3-2211 D 2 { At Royal York "| tion, land workers at -other hotels|the union negotiators did their|tion" blast said that it had ended France's program: of tests above ground in Africa. The next stage in French atomic |expeciments is expected to be |an underground explosion at a site being prepared in the southern Sahara. Do-It-Yourself TORONTO (CP) -- A strike] He said about 60 non - union by a union representing some|employees were expected to ar-| 1,200 of the Royal York Hotel's\rive by plane today from other| 1,350 employees has turned a|CPR hotels to bolster the be- stopover at the Common-|leaguered corps of supervisors wealth's largest hotel into some-|and non - strikers. thing of 'a do-it-yourself opera-| Mr. MacKinnon said he didn't|3 France wa ited tensely {know how many union members| throughout \ the night for a would ignore the strike call. But{feared invasion by right - wing he felt many would remain on|generals who have seized power operating elevators, the hotel|the job. in Algiers. sent out a call for temporary| Onofrio Zambri, secretary and The announcement of the help from Toronto's unemployed| business agent of Local 299, said|blast said that "every precau- | was taken to prevent ra- owned by the Canadian Pacific|best to reach an amicable settle-|dioactive . fallout from endan- Railway. Patrons faced the task ment, |gering any of the people of of toting their own luggage and] Mr. MacKinnon said the hotel Africa. Previous tests brought perhaps making their own beds. was prepared to resume "at a|strong protests from African | The stike, first to hit the/moment's notice" the talks| leaders. 1,600 - room hotel! started atsponsored by Louis Fine, On-| France is not taking part in [4 p.m. Monday after negofia-|tario's chief conciliation officer. current talks in Geneva among |tions between the hotel and Lo-| The strike came at a time|the United States, Russia and {cal 209 of the Hotel and Clubjwhen the Royal York was op-| Britain aimed at banning nu- employees' Union (CLC) broke erating close to capacity. Mr. {clear tests down. MacKinnon said everyone| Recent French experiments Angus MacKinnon, the Royal|checking into the hotel is being have been directed mainly at {York's general manager, said{warned of the walkout and its|producing a smaller, tactical the hotel will be able to oper-| consequences. "But 95 per cent{nuclear weapon. Today's suc- te "a long, long time" despite of them are going to their|cessful explosion aroused spec- the walkout. rooms." {ulation that she had succeeded. 'EICHMANN TRIAL velop its own hydrogen bomb but the date for any H-bomb test is still considered remote. Today's test was carried out ! As supervisory employees turned to wielding brooms and JERUSALEM (AP)--A wispy, |27, 1938, bearded little man wearing ajmany. black skullcap recounted a Nazi - nightmare today and testified | SEIZED BY POLICE x Some people died, he said. in the trial of Adolf Eichmann.| Grynszpan told of a police: "They died of heart attacks." "It was the first time I ever|man rounding up Jews and tak- saw the wild barbarism of the|In8 them to a concert hall HERDED INTO POLAND Germans." where some 600 already had| The Jews were herded across The witness was Zinder |PeeN herded. "They kept us forithe border into Poland. The Grynszpan father of a Jewish| 2} hours until Friday night." [Poles put them in a military ay =n killed a Nazi Embassy! Grynszpan said they were camp. Two days later, on Sun- | fficial in Paris i 1938 SSY taken by train to a point near day, the first food arrived--a ol an > ay allot hele Polish border. Trains were|truckload of bread for the 12,- he Nazis larriving from many other 000. crystal night" followed the as-ipoints in Germany, and he "Some were lucky," sassination, by 17 - year - old|estimated about 12,000 Jews fi-|pan said simply. "They in. Hannover, Ger- saw the wild barbarism of the Germans." Grynsz- Vom Rath, Nazi councillor of, The SS guards allowed each| He said he wrote a letter to {In the widespread outbreaks!'marks. {synagogues were burned, Jew-|taken. ish homes and shops were| He did not know where they said dramatically, broken into and. some Jews were being sent. shel Grynszpan?" were killed. The guards marched the Jews| "Yes," said the father. The elder Grynszpan was a abont a mile and a half to the. This was the last question. thin, frail little figure of 75 as'horder Eichmann"s lawyer, Dr. Robert he testified in Yiddish His 'voice shrilled .as he recounted Grynszpan went on. the events of the night of Ocf.|was blood on the road. Any other money was! "There ine: the witness. French Fire |series of tests aimed at devel ! Britain and Russia, ot ground of the case but that the Hershel Grynszpan, of Ernst|najly assembled on the border. some bread. Others were not." interrogation was inconclusive. | {At a recent trial in Germany, | the German Embassy in Paris. | person to keep only 10 reich- his son in Paris. {testimony was offered that "And this son," Assistant At-| wer his father testified today that|definite and three months in- torney-General Ya'akoy Bar'or perished in a Nazi death determinate in the Ontario Re- "was Her-|he {form of a folder bearing the] | name of the Citizens' Committee for Pure Water and entitled "the case against fluoridation." The folder quotes an article With snow drifting to the | not familiar with the - geo roof tops spring is still far | graphical location shown, note away for Canadian airmen | the signpost: Moscow 3.210 stationed 8 ion. at. Resolute | miles, Washington 2,250. miles. --CP Wirephoto* De Gaulle's message con: cluded: "In the hard and de- plorable experience the nation) is now 'going through 1 on all 'your help to carry" ¥ the de. time traffic. ! Experts Experts calculated that, ina" ; | published bythe Freedom dation of Canada, Toronto, a letler from Charles Elkoot Perkins, de-| scribed as a top industrial chemist, to the Lee Foundation {for Nutritional Research of Mil- | waukee, Wis, Mr. Perkins says a small area of brain tissue in the rear oc- | ciput of the left lobe of the brain) is responsible for the power to which quotes was _ex- Qi i i i | resist domination and repeated president {ploded from the top of a tower| joes of small amounts of fluor-| Katanga province walked out|all the people of The Congo." | power by "poisoning and nar-| 0 coticizing" the area, { The process will make him "submissive to the will of those {who wish to govern him," Mr. | Perkins says. The finance committee with- {held a decision on introducing [fluoride in drinking water in this town near Hamilton, pend- idte will gradually reduce the France also is working to de-|ing a report from 'Dr. A. F. with the central government un- {Bull, medical officer of health| |for Halton County. i US. Sees In Laos Proposal |" Selt-confident and unyielding, WASHINGTON (AP) -- Top, [the Laos cease-fire plan 'that |could let Communist - backed rebels spring another military offensive before the proposed {14-country peace conference Istarts. They emphasize that this haz- ard is one of many which wilt| have to be surmounted in the long and uncertain struggle to |get an effective international |agreement for a neutral, inde- pendent Laos. as co- Jew Tells Of Nazi Attack that Hershel Grynszpan,| then a boy of 17, decided to| protest by a public demonstra-| {tion, | He waited on the steps of the |German Embassy in Paris, | {hoping to kill Ambassador Count Johannes Von Welczek. Instead he was met by Von| Rath. He shot and killed him. | Eichmann has said he met Grynszpan during the war to interrogate him about the back- | Grynszpan was still alive. But camp. : | Earlier in today's session the| court accepted in evidence a controversial statement hv for- "Thev were whipping "ns." Servatius, did not cross-exam- mer SS Major Dieter Wisliceny Lawrence Hutchison, 34, of Osh- 7 . "eseribing Eichmann's role injawa. His It was agajnst this harass-/the Nazi anti-Jewish campaign. will be held today. | U.S. officials see a large gap in|settlement which created Laos, on Indochina, then a l4-power lada and Poland make up the {Bank at Bethany last month, Court. . y tn Tee dd ys NWT. In case"you are » [the functions given to me by the| Paris waited tensely through- constitution." : out the might for an invasion Meanwhile, the first shots|which did not come: It was the were fired in Algeria since the|second false alarm in 24 hours rebel junta seized power in a but government officials still bloodless paratroop coup last|feared today that the rebels Saturday. would uy 4 take the French capital in, their revolt against REBELS REPULSED G 's Navy ships stationed off the 26 Gaulle's Algerian palicies, huge base of Mers el Kebir in| MUST TAKE CITY western Algeria fired warning] 'The rebels know they -must shots when paratroopers ' at-/capture Paris soon of they are tempted to take over. The right-|10st," a government source said. wing rebels withdrew after the] Tanks rumbled into place at burst of gunfire. strategic spots throughout the Tanks and troops streamed|city and obstacles were dragged across the border from West|across airport runways minutes Germany to bolster the coun- after Premier Michel Debre try's defence. Border police warned for the second straight said two battalions of French|night of a danger of invasion. Tshombe Breaks Talks On Congo COQUILHATVILLE (AP) --|with the UN command--an ac- Moise Tshombe of|cord Tshombe said 'humiliated on the rest of the political lead-| Tshombe's walkout end ers of The Congo today after least temporarily, Jul Snged the accusing President Joseph Kas-| confederation of Congolese avubu. of the Leopoldville cen-istates which all factions except tral government of selling outantoine Gizenga's Stanleyville the Congolese people to the regime agreed on in principle United Nations. (last month at the Tananarive With sarcastic and stinging |round-table conference. insults, Tshombe refused fur-| AIMED AT BELGI Is y » ANS ther co-operation and discussion Tshombe's chief objection to the Kasavubu-UN agreement obviously was its call for im- mediate withdrawal of all for- eign advisers not engaged un- der Kasavubu's authority. This was clearly aimed at Tshom: be's large contingent of Belgian advisers and the foreign mer- cenary officers of his Katanga less Kasavubu denounced the accord he recently concluded Gaps Tshombe mocked the promises of financial aid from the United Nations to the Kasavubu gov- ernment. "I wonder how the United Na- tions is going to afford this when they have their own fi- nancial troubles," he scoffed. chairmen of the 1954 Indochina | called Monday for a cease-fire to be checked by the three- motorized i nf ant ry stationed with NATO forces in West Ger- » many had crossed the Rhine alC ers Find into France. The build-up came despite a L » statement by Information Min- ost ermen ister Louis Terrenoire that only about onedfifth of the 400,000) OTTAWA (CP) -- Three Of- French troops in Algeria had tawa fishermen missing since joined the revolt against de|Saturday in bush country 30 Gaulle's policies for the North iles north of here were found African territory. ound and air search was Sets Who had jvncd He xe. organized Monday for Donald thoughts, Terrenoire said. Dube a The ministry of information|. ane fishing Friday night and said 10,000 reserve members had|yere to have returned late Sat- U been recalled to duty by mili- urday three-power control commission : % A 4 tary suthorities, and, the oth in The three anglers were found parley on 5 war fooling. . near Lake Provision, some The recall of the troops from Su Wiles rum. Broly are West Germany followed another : : Joos' future to start in Geneva ay 12. India, Can- control commission. 4 (The ' pro - Western Laotian government of Prince Boun Oui today accepted the cease-|f fire, a Vientiane dispatch said.) SIGNIFICANT omission || The cease-fire gap showed in| the text of the proposal as pub- lished Monday night. The plan set no specific date for a halt to the fighting, beyond sayin, it should stop before the Gen-' § eva parley begins. is U.S. authorities portray the Laotian government forces as being ready to stop their shoot- ing promptly. But they fear the "It was the first time I ever|ment, involving his own par- repels, backed by mounting So- |ents, ' vietairlifted supplies, would opeh a final push to seize addi- tional important parts of the small Southeast Asian kingdom. |} Nine Months For Robbery Found guilty of armed rob- bery of the Toronto-Dominion Robert French, 24, of, Rosehill boulevard, Oshawa, was Mon- day sentenced to nine months formatory by Magistrate R. B. Baxter in Cobourg Magistrate's Jointly charged was James al ill preliminary hearing)