THOUGHT FOR TODAY For those who can't eat between brushings, a new toothpaste contains food particles. WEATHER shower. It will be REPORT Hot weather has finally arrived, with a risk of the odd thunder. slightly cooler tomorrow -- in the low 70's. dhe Osha Times VOL. 90--NO. 130 Authorized Authorized EIGHTEEN PAGES Price Not Over es Second Class Mail 10 Cents Per Copy Department, Ottawo OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, JUNE 5, 1961 HINT PROVINGIAL OFFIGER GAMBLED BAREFOOT BRIGADE STEPS OUT Temperatures in the Kitchen- | warmth beguiled these Men- er, Ont., area soared to near 80, and the belated spring Ten Algerian nonite school children into doffing their shoes in a warm- Killed In Paris PARIS (Reuters)--Ten Alger- ian insurgents were and grenade battle through the heart of Paris early today. Four of the dead in the big-/in a truck in a nearby street head tc Jackson. gest flare-up of violence in Paris| threw hand grenades at a pass- The clashes Algerians were shot to death. Minutes later, Moslems riding| up for the summer ahead. The youngsters are on | their way home between Mac- | days | ton west. of Kitchener: and Wallenstein, north- to) --(CP Wirepho S | More Freedom Riders Set Out For Jackson JACKSON, Miss. "Freedom Riders" in Mississip- killed|after midnight with a machine- dOWn to serve their sentences n ; and several policemen were gun attack on a police patrol quietly, while a fresh flow of movement to test federal laws/buna Ludu, said the meeting wounded in a wild running gun|car in the centre of Paris. Four|Negroes and whites challenging "Jim Crow" barriers of . the deep south were expected to During the last 13 days, 65 in recent months were Algerian ing police car, injuring three bus-riders have come to Jack-| members of the French armed forces. It was believed to be the first time in France that Mos- lem members of the armed, forces have joined the rebel ter-| rorists to back Arab demands for independence. The biggest clash of the four-| hour battle was at the entrance of a subway station. Police and| the insurgents sniped at each other while bystanders scurried for protection from the hail of gunfire. | | {northern Paris, injuring about 10 Moslems. | insurgent peace talks, Alps Tuesday. policemen. Police took 10 insurgents alive during the Soon after the battle, a plastic omb exploded in a hotel usu- ally occupied by Algerians in| The new Algerian vioience| cast a shadow over the French-| due to] resume at Evian in the Frenc! hit found guilty, {given 60-day suspended jail sen- {tences son with the announced inten- tion ot violating the The remaining 13--the latest] group to arrive--go on trial in|y, {municipal court this afternoon |(;, and are expected to receive the |g same sentence. All previous groups have ben find $200 and Two leaders of the of non-segregation on inter-state traffic said in Cleveland Sunday the rides will continue and will | ternational situation." include ""fly-ins" into Jackson! within the week. Marvin Rich of New York, an o|organizer for the Congress on state's| pacial E ? century - old segregation 1aws| jerome rly morning battle. ary g |and customs. Subsequently, all| | 65 have been jailed and 52 were convicted on breach of the | peace charges. quality (C.O.R.E.), and Smith, a former univer- sity student from New Orleans, made the remarks on a televi- sion program in which viewers telephoned questions. Rich said the rides" would be' ade despite U.S. Attorney- eneral Robert Kennedy's plea or a period of calm and an injunction against activities Montgomery federal judge. the riders' in Alabama by a So far. 14 riders have been riders | munist Press Hails K-K Talks "Good Start' LONDON (Reuters) -- Com- munist, neutralist and Western ' |nations were in agreement to- ' |day in expressing satisfaction : lover the first meeting between President Kennedy and Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev. Communist newspapers hailed the "good start" made in rela- |tions between the two men. Of- |ficials in Western European cap- |itals saw positive factors emerg- |ing from the weekend talks and | in neutralist India, Prime Minis- {ter Nehru said he welcomed the outcome of the meeting. In Moscow, the official Com- | munist party newspaper Pravda said "the Vienna meeting gives hope to men of good will who (AP)--|wave of arrivals in Jackson, hate the cold war, to all those joined the fast. The other 12/craving for lasting peace." began shortly pi's capital city today settled were reported eating. In Warsaw, the Polish Com- party newspaper Try- {was a "good start to the neces- | sary change in the strained in- NUTS ARE NUTS TO SQUIRRELS OAKVILLE, Ont. This squirrel figured nuts are nuts, regardless. sr nPOIEE, on -the watch for an intruder who had been rifling one type of package at a bakery, caught him in the act. | | Contents of the packages: | | Doughnuts. | | | Mac, JFK Discuss Vienna Outcome cp) --| Still On TORONTO (CP)--A Supreme Court jury today heard evidence that a member of the Ontario Provincial Police anti-gambling squad was transferred to other duties because it was alleged he was gambling at a Toronto gam- ing house. Sgt. John Anderson, head of the squad, said the officer is still with the force. He was testifying at the trial of Joseph McDermott, Vincent i|Feely and former OPP con- stable Robert Wright on charges 'lof bribing police for tipoffs to raids on gambling joints. | He identified the man only as] a constable Kobelka and did not indicate his present duties. As the second week of the bribery trial opened, Sgt. Ander- son expressed faith in previous testimony of Const. George Scott who gave evidence last week that he acted as a double agent on behalf of OPP superiors in gathering information about po- lice tipoffs to gambling houses. Focus of the trial has been on a fat diary in which Scott : |for several weeks last year re- corded conversations with the accused. Hecontended that Wright paid him to slip warn- - lings to McDermott. SMILE, HANDSHAKE AT VIENNA {" "1 'believe that what Const. Scott wrote was the truth," the sergeant said on cross-examina- tion. However, he said that some of the things told to Scott un- doubtedly were not true. In other evidence, Anderson testified today that during - nce e LONDON -- President Ken- visit to France and his busy Vets Re nedy briefs Prime Minister Mac-|sessions of summit talks in Vi- pe and other members of his millan for three hours today on|enna during the last five days. | Band Drowned his summit talks in Vienna with|Kennedy drove to the Ameri-| Soviet Premier Khrushchev. |can Embassy to meet the staff Kennedy and Macmillan met and then headed into his talks privately for two hours and 20|with Macmillan. released from jail, 13 by posting $500 appeal bond, and one pay- ing a fine of $197. The rest are Accused Trujillo Eichmann S | Free For 20 Years | minutes, then called in advisers Fate Poses | {CHEERED BY CROWDS | The U.S. couple received a {tumultuous welcome when they | arrived from Vienna. Crowds of {for the last 40 minutes of the |meeting in Admiralty House, |Macmillan's temporary resi- dence in tentral London. Lifer Gives Up At Death Camp Murderer Shot aft: ma CUIDAD TRUJILLO (AP) --jing after pursuing security Weakened Saturday night when Soldiers and police shot downl|agents had given chase. No po- all Negroes in Hinds County retired Gen. Juan Tomas Diaz, |lice casualties were mentioned. Jail ate supper. But at the city the accused assassin of dictator Rafael Trujillo, in a gun battle Sunday night in the heart of this city. An alleged accomplice was slain with him. Diaz; 52, was ripped by ma- chine-gun fire and died on the street. His companion, Antonio de la Maza, died soon after in a military hospital. The two had been trying to find refuge in the neighborhood when a house-to-house search squaa of 100 men, acting on a tip, suddenly came upon them Authorities said de la Maza was carrying the gun that Gen- eralissimo Trujillo had with him during his fatal ambush Tues- day might on a road outside the canital Diaz had been a friend of Trujillo during much of the slain °n€rs continued their hunger has captured, tried and will cer-| Michigan prison here. tainly convict Adolf Eichmann, Jailers said an eighth white but is deeply perplexed about| hat to do with him then. dictator's 31 years of power. Gen. Rafael L. Trujillo Jr., who took over as armed forces chief when his father died, said Diaz led the assassination plot be- cause his forced retirement from the Dominican army had made him bitter, three - day hunger strike jail, a hard core of white pris- strike man, arrested in the latest W Belts Could Cut Highway Disasters Big Problem JERUSALEM (AP) -- Israel himself up Saturday at Southern |nedy How can the punishment of | JACKONS, Mich. (AP)--A 61-| |year-old man who had escaped] {from a life sentence for murder | |more than 20 years ago gave| Frank Soules pulled up to the | prison's front gate in a taxi and| told acting deputy inspector| one man possibdy fit the enor-|P. W Pachman he was tired of mity of his crimes? "Eichmann is an anchor around our necks even yet," in 1939 while serving a life term |running. Pachman said Soules escaped office workers and tourists were | out again this morning to cheer | the president as he left the| Radziwill home, where he His| The prime minister's regular residence, 10 Downing Street, is| being redecorated. JERUSALEM (Reuters) -- A| Polish Jew told today how the Germans forced bands to play The extended talks made Ken- his wife spent the night, on his|to drown the sound of gun shots and Macmillan late in|way to the American Embassy. (as they slaughtered Jews dur- joining their wives at a lunch- There were shouts of "Good|ing€ the war at the Maidanek eon in Admiralty House at-|,14 Jack as he drove by. Of- death camp. tended by 16 guests. fice windows along the route| The witness, Yosef Resnik, Kennedy is to leave on sched-|were jammed with men ang | testified as the prosecution| ule tonight, but his stopover in women | neared Te a its case Goose Bay, Labrador, has been| The president will hav against 0] ichmann, ac-| extended to about six hours to ywitp Fie Wi dinner with| cused mass murderer of 6,000,-| allow him to get some sleep nae ; ; [ ews, i before arriving in Washington. poco Elizabeth at Buckingham | Resnik said that in Novem- : | ber, 1943, a German sonderkom- Force Sergeant Says squad watched "substantial amounts" of money change hands in dice games. Three games had been legal, with no house rakeoff. The Vets was one of the clubs alleged to have been getting police tipoffs through McDermott. Sgt. Anderson also told Mr. Justice W. F. Spence and the jury that Constables Carmen Lawrence and Kenneth Lamorie of the anti-gambling squad had been suspended May 30, 1960, the day before they resigned from the OPP, Scott testified last week Law- rence had told him he and La- morie were on some gamblers' payroll. Other evidence by Sgt. Ander- son: 1. He once applied to his su- periors for permission to sue an unnamed lawyer who accused him and another officer of being "stooges" for gamblers but got no reply. 2. He had a University of Tor- onto professor make a machine which, when held outside a house, would pick up telephone numbers being dialed. But it never worked. Two Arrested In Knife Death TORONTO (CP) -- An argu- ment over the relative merits of judo and boxing preceded the stabbing of a 25-year-old former navy gunner at a young people's party here Saturday night, in- formants said today. Norman Saunders of suburban Scarborough, discharged from the navy last September, died of several knife wounds and po- |lice today were holding five Machine-Guns {men, two charged with murder. The men charged--Dennis No- land, 20, of Toronto and Ray- mond Mark Rowe, 21, of Scar- horough--were arrested Sunday night at Blind River, 100 miles west of Sudbury. Two other men in an automo- bile with them also were held. They were William Railey, 18, charged as an accessory after the fact, and Alexander Mac- Farland, 51, of Guelph, a hitch. hiker, who was detained as a material witness. Police in Toronto also booked James Honberger, 18, as a material witness. The stabbing took place at a said an official of the Israeli/in the slaying of a fisherman in| OTTAWA (CP) -- The Cana-| court trying the former Gestapo|1091. { an Highway Safety Council|officer w charges of master: ----------.. et Tog odie said today that the annual death/ minding the murder of 6,000,000 Trujillo's slaying. toll on Canada's highways and Jews. | : Balin Joaquin Balaguer streets could be cut by at least Many Jews in Israel are 1 i as promised new government|one - third if motorists used against taking life, no matter] taking off for Washing: | mando ay ht, Kennedy also willl rounded up Jews in the Lublin Of be godfather at the christening|area of Poland and took them |&ir! whese mother was visiting {this afternoon of the daughter|to Maidanek. |friends. Saunders was the oldest of Princess Radziwill, Mrs. Ken-| As the band played, the Jews|at the party, and guests said nedy's sister, with whom Mrs.|were marched to open graves he almost stayed away because The president was up early to-| Before |day despite his hectic three-day ton tonig Optimism A brother of de la Maza is on the army intelligence list of di those wanted in connection with inati |party made Imost entirel, extermination group)|Party up a ntirely ( z P| ot teen-agers, at the home of a policies in the wake of Trujil-|safety belts. !what the reason. All want Israel lo's death--including free elec- tions next year. No surprising politica! news is likely to be| announced, however, until after| The council welcomed the|to come out of the case with news that Canadian automobile honor. manufacturers will equip 1962 models with safety belt brack-| capital Before the Eichmann case, punishment had been At Laos Talks Kennedy will visit for a week. |and machine-gunned. he could not get a date. An army communique said the nine-day period of official Diaz ana de la Maza jumped mourning for the generalissimo from their car and began shoot- end: Thursday. ets. use the belts. abolished despite the Old Testa-! The council urged motorists toment rule of "an eye for an chief Russian delegate to the eye, a tooth for a tooth." | {day the summit meeting be- GENEVA (Reuters) -- The|He said "we trust" the Soviet- : American stand at Vienna "will Laotian conference here said to- now enable the conference to STR VIENNA SUMMIT b S rennit | : jet back to work." ween Presiden ennedy and - Soviet Premier Khrushchev had | LAOTIAN AGREES a "favorable influence" on spokesman of the right- TALKS Mr. K VIENNA (AP) Nikita Khrushchev stuck to the hard lines of his anti - Western poli- cies during his talks here with President Kennedy. But U.S. of- ficials hope that as a result of time diplomacy, make on the the Vienna conference the So: viet leader may yet modify his course. Kennedy is reported to have told the Soviet leader emphat- ically that if he forces a show- down over West Berlin, the al- lied powers will defend the city. He warned Khrushchev against miscalculating West- ern intentions. More broadly Kennedy sought to assure the Soviet leader that in spite of recent setbacks in Laos and Cuba, the United States intends to. fulfil its de- fence commitments to other countries around the world. The president left Vienna Sunday night nourishing the hope that Khrushchev will weigh his words seriously. CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 i \sulted from a discussion of €js- ence {world problems. | wing Laotian delegation termed Georgi Rushkin said his gov-|the Vienna communique as "a LJ ernment hopes the Vienna sum. (800d thing which might speed | mit meeting will help break the UP a really effective cease- 1 © deo in the conference on|fire. | Laos. The negotiations here stalled |} o- : y i |on th sti ive- The end of the informal sum-|armament, including | poinetyier. Commmanist owski, ne. Ee aw ban GETTING ACQUAINTED mated 10,000 persons lined the route of the parade as sume mer weather came to the city Lynn Fleming, 21, gets ac- quainted with "Daisy", the mount of Sergeant-Major A.J. |4Davis, a member of the Gov- ernor-General's Horse Guards taking part in the Annual To- ronto Garrison Church Parade in Toronto Sunw#y. An esti- : 9 I . the nu-|The Congo. He blamed the UN|Poland's Je Mi i, ness of a cease-fire in the Lao- Bh nesting ert withoul Bnswericlear test conference at administration for a loss of So-|agreed with Britain's Mateols tian civil war. a I aid ihe a i Jj Geneva. viet influence in The Congo last MacDonald that the two-day] Tk BaD? yy yea 0 Khrushchev suggested to Ken-/ year. He said he had decided summit talks which ended Sun-| . y, I 10 Big-inedy that nuclear test negotia-|there was no such thing as a|day night prove useful to the| Santa Monica 3 veteran, toaghini dod PL be merged into a gen-|neutral man, Laotian conference. | old Roush 2 eral disarmament conference! Khrushchev said that any But Michalowski supported Ad due to open at the end of July. man who could be appointed to| Communist demands that the| eac arty MADE NO ULTIMATUM {The president rejected this, at/a higher international position| conference stop arguing about Kennedy was reported encou-|!¢ast for the time being, by|as a neutralist would certainly| Whether a cease-fire is effective) 3 raged by the fact htat Khrush-|S3Ying the United States, Brit- be non-Communist. When faced|in the Southeast Asian kingdom| Goes Wild chve discussed his aims for|2in and Russia should continue|with a critical decision, he said.|and get down to discussing So- Berlin without trying to im. the Present Geneva negotia-la non-Communist would rule| viet plans for Laotian neutrality. SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP) press the president with their tions. against Communist interests, 2 Wester source described 2 beach party erupled ite 2 i urgency. He did not give an Y SIDE. RSTS a the tone of Communist speeches h among ihousands of} § ultimatum, it 'was sail, ntl SONSIDEE TESTS _ | AGREE ON LAOS |at today's meeting as moderate|Youths Saturday night, and 50| withdrawal of U.S., British and peared to be something AP In the brief communique but added that the session "had|Dolice were pelted with rocks,| French forces from the city by par ro k sys ons Of a|Kennedy and Khrushchev is-|produced absolutely nothin g bottles and cans before they a specific date, hope for a muciesr reoressed sued at the conclusion of their|new." The source was a spokes. |controlled it. 5 Nevertheless. Khrushchev has he This Reine i es K an meeting, only specific man for the French delegation.| "It was a milling, drinking, indicated he Will make x sepa |Ladt: 3 NS ay Lor Pp os agreement reported was on| Both Communist and non-|ugly crowd of 25,000 to 30,000 rate peace treaty with Comin the Yotes Sins Ol Whe eri Laos. Even this did not repre-| Communist delegates Sunda y|young people doing everything nist East Germany late this|sune fost 1 ToS né oF Ec) re- sent new policy for either the|night welcomed a reference to/imaginable on the beach in the year. The treaty Y biesumably nig plosions ucleari president or the premier but it|Laos in a joint communique is- dark; Fighting, attempted would recognize Bost Conan 5. ; did seem to commit Khrush-| sued by Kennedy and Khrush-|rape, girl beating--you name it SOVerdine ae erly yen At the centre of this threat | chev personally and publicly to chev. and they did it" said Capt. from Wert Corti or tie rib disarmament prospects is ala Laos settlement, The two leaders reaffirmed Kirby Temple, in charge of the! 10 miles nay East Ger. Soviet demand that the nuclear, pe two leaders, the commu-| their support of international northern division of county man border. If the Kast Ger. CS! inspection system be con-| . id 4 : |agreements for the neutrality|lifeguards i 2 \ e East Ger-itrolled by a three- nique said, "reaffirmed their : g |" A 4 | mans tried to enforce their|ironed by ree-man board. : {and independence of Laos. The| Fourteen persons were ar- treaty rights to prin alliaq| The board would consist of one Support of a neutral and inde-| communique said that "in this rested. pe: military traffic, a shooitng war| Communist, one Westerner and pendent Laos" and "recognized|connection 'they have recog-| The trouble flamed late in a might Test. one member from a neutral na-|the importance of an effective nized the importance of an ef-|party sponsored by radio sta- The. most. clearly discouts Yon, ar ait cease - fire." Soviet Foreign|fective cease-fire." tion' KRLA, when many of those gp nst i i h discourag: rushchev is said to have|/Minister Andrei Gromyko then| A Soviet spokesman here said present were intoxicated, offi- he Outcome ie conference, told Kennedy that this plan arranged to fly to the 14-nation|Sunday night the communique cers said. The radio station said om the U.S. point of view, re- grew out of Russia's experi- Laotian peace conference at|was "very important" for the the crowd was much larger this weekend. with the United Nations in|Geneva. » 1 |tuture of the Laos conference. than it had expected. ® --(CP Wiréphotad