THOUGHT FOR TODAY The trouble with a woman's for. giving and forgetting is that she keeps remembering it. She Oshawa Times WEATHER REPORT Cloudy with a few sunny inter- vals today and Friday, warm and humid, winds light. ? 5 VOL. 90--NO. 162 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, JULY 13, 1961 as _ Second Post Office Departmen Class Mail t, Ottawa TWENTY-TWO PAGES nd ¥ DEATH STRIKES ON THE struck and killed by a bolt weeping on the sand at Re- | of lightning as he fished in dondo Beach, Calif., today as | the surf. Witnesses said he firemen (background) work | was using a metal pole. Mrs on the body of her husband, Dockers' Strike Threat Boosted TORONTO (CP)--Threat of a Negotiations in Toronto be- spreading strike was stronger gan Jan. 1 this year, The union today in the dispute between| representatives agreed to a con- the International Longshore-|ciliation board report recom- men's Association (CLC) and mending a pay increase this stevedoring companies in Tor-/year to $2.10 from $1.98 and an onto and Hamilton. additional six cents an hour In Sarnia it was announced next year, but the union mem- the longshoremen would not bership turned it down because handle cargo on any ocean-go-|of the now - dispute extra men ing ships diverted from strike- and mechanical-lifting clauses. bound ports. The destination of 10 ships Some 700 men were involved heading for Hamilton from Tor- in the Toronto and Hamilton onto was in doubt today. Sev-| strikes, In Toronto 550 men of eral other ocean - going vessels Local 1842 are on strike. |cancelled scheduled Toronto Mrs. Robert Lindeburg sits Lindeburg saw the accident | BEACH | through a window of the couple's nearby home. She is comforted by a life guard --AP Wirephoto (Cities Reveal Cost Variation | OTTAWA (CP)--Living costs in May ranged from 0.3 per cent higher than the previous month to 0.5 per cent lower in the 10 Canadian cities for which con- sumer price indexes are kept. The Dominion Bureau of Sta- tistics reported today that the month's largest increases were in St. John's, Nfld, and Mont- real while the biggest drop in prices occurred in Vancouver. The index for St. John's, Nfld., based on June, 1951, Fast-Draw Killer 'Hunted In Hills KERMMLING, Colo. (AP)--A men, is about 130 miles north- hundred officers, some with sub-| west of Denver. {machine-guns, stalked through| The gunman abandoned his [the rugged northwestern Color-|car after a gun fight in which {ado mountains searching today|Clark was wounded in the jaw [for a fast-draw gunman accused) Officers pieced together this! |of killing two law officers and sequence of events: | {wounding two others. : Hoover, drivinz westward on § State Patrol Lieut. Hiram U.S, Highway 40, stopped to Short, 49, and under-sheriff help a parked motorist. The John Clark, 68, died Wednesday | driver failed to produce ade- night from bullets fired by the| quate identification and Hoover, touslg-haired desperado. becoming suspicious, radioed for Sheriff Chancey Van Pelt, 54, the sheriff and the state patrol- and Robert Hoover, a sais man. ame and fish department offi- EK ot EAae aa gor were in hospital at Denver OPENS FIRE with serious bullet wounds. They questioned the motorist The slayer, in his early 20s,/and decided to take him to was driving a car purchased |Krenuuiing for further exami- {July 3 by a man giving the nation. As they walked towards name of Delmar Dean Spooner |Van Pelt's car the motorist drew of Storm Lake, Iowa. Officers|@ pistol and fired. Short; Van said Spooner left there July 6./Pelt and Hoover were hit. Short| |died later in hospital. MAY BE TRAPPED . | The gunman raced away in Officers said they believed his car. Sheriff Henry Knuth they trapped the gunman in aland his under-sheriff, Clark,|® ravine near State Bridge, Colo., drove north to intercept the| about 15 miles southwest of fleeing man. When they tried to! Kremmling near Piney Creek. stop the approaching car, the] The area, popular with fisher- auto rammed into the officers'| works Minister Walker cuts vehicle. | a caper for the kids at the an- At the same time, a shot! nual Public Works Depart: struck Clark in the jaw. The/ ment picnic at Ottawa. Some Sandys Set gunman fled on foot into dense| 2,000 children made it to the | woods. | affair. The minister is an old i |lious Senate banking committee Hid CAPERS FOR KIDS hand at such gatherings; for years he has been holding an annual picnic for the young- sters of his Toronto Rosedale constituency. and moved on to other/Jume 1 figure in brackets in- prices equalling 100, climbed to| 117 from 116.7 a month earlier. | June 1 indexes, based on 1949] prices equalling 100, with the, To Explain U.K. Ideas men h . 1 strike marked the second time in less than two months that ocean shipping there had been crippled by striking longshore- men. John Kane, business manager for Local 1654 in Hamilton, said there were no immediate plans to re-open negotiations with the stevedoring firms. - The fate of the strike, he said, was with union negotiators in Toronto. He denied the strike ] del Tt oT was called just to support the hope held by construction un-{told Wednesday night thatling and Agriculture Minister deal with the extermination of mination. . . . Toronto longshoremen and said|jons that an end was near in the Teamsters In Hamilton there are 150) c; red. The Hamilton tons of gathering dust. . J cluded: Montreal 128.3 (127.9); argo stood Toronto docks, Ottawa 129 (129); Toronto 1302] OTTAWA (CP) Diintan San (130.2). Builders Reject Peace Agreement TORONTO (CP)--The bright A membership meeting was|Hees, Finance Minister Flem-|if ordered by his superiors to|but I did not deal with ext boss James: Hoffa the locals had rejected substan-'six.week metropolitan construc-|has ordered the drivers not to tially the same things. Union officials in Toronto said Wednesday - the primary dis- agreement centred around juris- diction in calling extra crews on to a job and around the a of cargo to be handled by ing apparatus. The developments appeared to substantiate early fears that the Toronto strike could spread to all Great Lakes ports Meanwhile, in Montreal liam Br sy of New Yor international president, was meeting with union leaders from Montreal and the Mari: times to discuss recent conc ilia- tion board reports recommend- ing a 19-cent-an-hour wage in crease for longshoremen Toronto strike was to receive prin y j meeting lift Wil. ILA Warning tion dispute has faded as con-|cross picket lines at construc- pected that a joint communique| tractors continue to refuse to sign an agreement. The unions hoped that agree- ments with all but a few hold- furn to work today by the ma- jority of the housing and apart- ment industry. Concessions made to contrac- tors in an effort to win agree- ments have been withdrawn, Charles Irvine, international vice-president of the Co-opera- tive Plasterers and Cement Masons Association, said Wed- nesday night Now the unions hope that truck drivers of the Interna- tional Brotherhood of Team- The sters (Ind.) can exert pressure by refusing thi to drive ready-mix los rat the nicket lines of the unions. To R tion projects FISTS FLY Disappointment was evident mount | outs would have permitted a re- when the construction workers to were fold at a meeting that their troubles were not over. Fists flew after some union members, in a militant mood, shouted that many men who had returned to their jobs were at the meeting The meeting was in confusion : y air) ; vine TE i for 10 minutes while several/from Australia, where Britain's S8u ilierveved Saying. 5 It is amid roars from|Possible action met a cool re. Your duty to say here a men grappled, the strikers. Union leaders left the platform to restrain mem- bers and quiet the crowd. victory celebration, was turned into appeal to the men to stand firm a Tittle 'longer. an ussians Given By de Gaulle PARIS (AP) -- President de. De Gaulle told his own people tional unity and which would Gaulle said Wednesday night the West will never let Russia settle the fate of Berlin alone "as if the three great powers had no rights there." The French leader in a tele- vision speech warned the Rus- sians they are creating a crisis over the former German capl- tal that threatens the peace of the world. De Gaulle charged the Rus- sians with calling for peace "while formulating require- ments which threaten to put it in danger." "The Soviets are renewing their threat of unilaterally set- tling the fate of Berlin . . . if Washington, London and Paris do not give up the present status of the town as required by - Moscow," he said. then warned "1 declare once more, there is no chance of this being ac- cepted." CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 that France must speedily pur- chase modern arms to replace the Second World War weapons that most of her forces have Starting in September, the length of French compulsory military service would be cut by an unspecified number of weeks. Funds thus saved would be used to modernize the army. In Moscow, the West German government told the Russians free elections throughout di- vided Germany must precede the signing of any German peace treaty. A West German note replied to a Soviet note proposing that separate peace treaties be signed with West Germany and Communist East Germany. jonn replied that a peace treaty must be concluded with a legiti- mate German government freely elected by all the German people. "A separate peace with only part of Germany would violate the right of self-determination of nations laid down in the char- ter of the United Nations, . . ." the Bonn note said. "The right of self-determina- tion, an inalienable basic right of all nations also is valid for the /German national which is confirm her wish unanimously in a free election." REFUGEE FLOW HIGH West Berlin continued calm as| "2 storm clouds gathered overhead. But refugees streamed into the "escape hatch" from Commu- nist East Germany at the rate of more than 1,000 a day, the highest in eight years. Chancellor Konrad Adenaue visiting West Berlin, conferred with Mayor Willy Brandt and | other city officials. In a com- munique they reaffirmed prin-| ciples agreed upon during Aden-| ayer's last visit to the city in January, 1960. The principles included these points: The Western powers] have a right to be in West Ber-| lin; the legal, financial and eco- nomic ties between West Ber-| lin and West Germany are the | basis for the city's freedom; | free access to West Berlin roust| not be restricted. In Paris, Britain, the United States and France consulted their allies in the North Atlan-| tic Treaty Organization on their| replies to the Soviet note of] June 4 threatening to sign a sep-| arate peace treaty with East Germany this year There was no indication when clinging to its traditional na-jthe replies would be delivered! choppy sea. {dys, Britain's Commonwealth |relations secretary, was ready {to meet four Canadian cabinet ministers today for what he termed "full and frank talks" the Nazi extermination of the|oath as the "greatest off about the United Kingdom's | possible entry into the Common { Market. The private talks were ar- ranged with External Affairs Minister Green, Trade Minister |Alvin Hamilton. When they are over it's ex- will be issued, as was done fol- lowing similar meetings in Aus- tralia and New Zealand. Mr. Sandys' task is to explain the Canadian government the guarantees Britain is prepared to offer to protect Canadian {trade with the U.K. in the event of British entry toms union of France, Germany, Italy, Belgium, land and Luxembourg. He arrived in Ottawa by air West Hol- ception, and was greeted by Ex-|' ternal Affairs Minister Green. Mr. Sandys was accompanied {to Ottawa from Montreal by Sir The meeting, to have been a|Saville Garner, retiring British! high commissioner. Gals Are Gaga Over Gagarin LONDON (AP) -- A pretty British dental nurse kissed So- viet space man Yuri Gagarin Wednesday night and pro- nounced him "the most kissable man in the universe." | "Oh, it was wonderful, just |wonderful," said 23 - year-old Olivia Brayden. "I'm mad about him. I shall remember it al- vays." | Olivia ambushed the five-foot- five Russian as he left the So- |viet Embassy on his way to a {reception. She flung her arms |around his neck and gave him a solid smack on the cheek. Yuri, a married man whose I. 'wife remained in Moscow,| looked embarrassed. So did his Soviet bodyguards. {They grabbed the girl and pushed her back into the crowd {gathered to see the space man. Gagarin recovered his com- posure, climbed into the car and] [rubbed at the lipstick on his|evidence in a 10-year study to cheek with his handkerchief as! the car pulled away. Gales Lash UK. Tie Up Shipping LONDON (Reuters) -- Britain today was lashed with heavy rain and gales of up to 60 miles an hour that tied up coastal shipping. | The liner Empress of Canada was unable to move to its berth at. Liverpool after disembarking passengers because of the | «To 'Cog' Claim into the cus-| | EBichmang Sticks Rain Brings | JERUSALEM -- Adolf Eich-| Eichmann exclaimed that he {mann told his trial today that regarded the breaking of one's |Jews was '"'one of the greatest|crimes." crimes in human history." | Hausner: The former SS lieutenant-col-|than onel also said under cross-|Jews, including 2,000,000 chil- {examination he was certain he|dren?" would have committed suicide] Eichmann: "A greater crime Had I been or- Jews during the Second World|dered to deal with extermina- War. {tion I believe I would have com-| The ashen - faced defendant mitted suicide by shooting my-| clung to his contention that he self." was merely a small order-obey-| Under cross-examination for {ing cog in the Nazi machine, two hours, the ex-SS officer who| {not the arch-criminal respon-| directed the transport of the| sible for the death of millions of| Jews to the death camps refused | Jews as charged by the pros- ecution. Eichmann said he begged to| declared: be allowed to write a book after] "My mind was a welter of the trial "as a deterrent to the|confusion." | present generation and the com-| Hausner slashed at Eichmann| ing ones. . . ." with evidence that his deputy, | Presiding Judge Moshe Lan-|Rolf Guenther, operated in con-| junction with Waffen (combat)! 1I the|SS Maj. Kurt Gerstein to obtain] and deliver tons of the special {in that book, to call a spade a|"cyklon B" gas developed for |spade, ti is your duty not to|the slaughter hide anything." | gage pro go vuior Sontfomed/ Ric p+ ali _| Eichmann wi is pre-trial in-| aacimann tose sity, half-| errogation in which he said he said gravely: |discovered what Guenther was nr 2 {doing and that he railed at him: Yes, alter you call on me|"How am I to explain this fo! to give a clear answer, I must|(ne head of my office. He willl declare that I saw in this MUr-| cand me to hell." : | der, in the extermination of the|" ., . ' wa {Jews, one of the greatest| Said Eichmann: crimes in human history." "It is clearly obvious that my Prosecutor Gideon Hausner, mind at that time was a welter the Israeli attorney - general, of confusion." questioned Eichmann closely on] Then he added that his chief, {whether or not he regarded the Gen. Heinrich Mueller, must | mass murder of Jews in Europe have assigned Guenther behind as a crime, his back. things you would have written| AFTER DEATH Survival Probe By Psychiatrist CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. He was not referring to any (AP)--Are there persons, living organic part of the body, but today who lived another life, in| "to what was called the soul in another body--perhaps in some|the 19th century." bygone century? Parapsychology is the study A Canadian psychiatrist at the of mental telepathy, clairvoy- University of Virginia isn't sure, |ance and extrasensory percep- but he said he has found enough |tion. warrant further investigation. : Speaking of vase Studies of For additional research he is|children who claim to. have leaving Saturday for India and|lived before, Stevenson said: Ceylon, where several children | "Apparent memories of this iy J have memories of an-|ying are fragmentary, and usu- PF me, : Dr. Ian Stevenson, 42-yearold- |31Y fade as the children get native of Montreal, is professor °lder. Such children usually re- of neurology and psychiatry and|member from a dozen to 20 chairman of that department of|l!éms, and these are usually the university's school of medi-| Scenes of strong emotional sig- cine. He will work under a nificance, such as the death of grant from the Parapsychology|® Mother or father. Foundation in New York. Stevenson said he hopes to re- He said "there is some evi- lease a full report within a year! dence that part of the human on one such case--this one in- organism survives physical volving a woman in Philadel- death." phia. Fresh Hope 'To Prairies OTTAWA (CP) -- The rebel, today contested the govern- ment's will by recommending rejection of the bill to fire James Coyne as governor of the Bank of Canada. The vote was 19 to 7 in the Liberal - dominated commtitee. It came at 10:28 a.m. on the fourth day of the committee's struggle over the fate of the 50- year-old governor. The committee was to report its decision on the bill later to- day to the Senate, where the Liberals also hold the majority. If the Senate rejects the bill, it will die. It would not go back to the Commons for sreconsider- ation. 'After its vote on the bill itself the committee voted 16 to 6 to approve a motion by Senator David Croll (L--Ontario) declar- ing the bill '"'should not be fur- ther proceeded with and the committee finds the governor of the Bank of Canada did not mis- conduct himself in office." RESIGNATION EXPECTED Mr. Coyne is expected to re- sign immediately after the Sen- ate deals with the bill, possibly later today. He told the committee Wed- nesday he would leave the bank immediately even if the sena- tors found him "not guilty." For some minutes before the initial vote was called in the committee, senators had been demanding that the question be put by Chairman Adrian Huges- SENATE GROUP WOULD REJECT COYNE FIRING Urge Rejection Of Coyne Bill few interruptions asking for the vote. The vote had been expected Wednesday night but at the last minute was put off until today. Senator Croll moved his mo- tion immediately after the gov- ernment leader's motion was defeated, and Senator Aseltine moved the committee adjourn. The adjournment motion was defaeted 13 to 7, Senator Aseltine then said that in all his experience in the Sen- ate, he never knew a committee to report "on the honesty, honor or integrity of anyone who ap- peared before it." He said the latter part of Sen- plot Croll's motion should be de- eted. VIEWS EXPRESSED Senator Norman Lambert (--Ontario) said defeat of the original government motion "eloquently expressed" the com. mittee's views, and he did not want "to gild the lily" by pass- ing the additional motion. Senator W. Ross MacDonald (L--Ontario), Senate Opposition leader, said the committee had to make some report to the Sen- ate, and the government's mo- tion having failed, Senator Croll's motion should be carried. Mrs. Coyne, the governor's attractive wife who had sat through all the committee hear- ings, walked across the room after adjournment and shook hands with a number of sena- tors, including Senator Croll. sen -(L--Quebec). chorused. EDMONTON (CP) -- Rains The question was the motion of Government Ledder Walter Aseltine (PC -- Saskatchewan) {have swept across the Prairies that the bill be reported back to bringing renewed hope to farm. the Senate without amendment. |drought. southern wan Tuesday. The rain brought a sharp de-| {cline in prices with liberal of- ferings on the Winnipeg Grain GETS FLOOR Exchange. Winnipeg had more than an jeagues demanding that the . . PT I | question be put, Senator Thomas to accept any responsibility for|ported varying amounts of pre-|Crerar (L--Manitoba) asked for {the gassing and several times cipitation and some were by-land got the floor. inch of rain. Other points re- passed altogether. In southeastern Saskatchewan, be dismissed by "pious declar- Fillmore was drenched with 1.30 ations by Prime Minister Dief- inches and Weyburn recorded|enbaker, by speeches by Fi- |nance Minister Fleming or by| Western Saskatchewan and cabinet order." drought-bound southeastern Al- berta had only light scattered|for misbehavior as stated in the leaving less than one- Bank of Canada Act and the an inch of moisture. |bill did not even allege misbe- The rain and accompanying havior. cloudy weather raised hopes .69 inches. showers, third of that grain crop could be saved. | motion. a portion of Manitoba's|the committee room as Senator ICrerar continued. There were a [sticky and packed committee | Clouds dropped the heaviest | room "Of course not, rain in more than two months : er- on Manitoba Wednesday after {skipping across sun - scorched Alberta and Saskatche-| Committee Clerk James D. {MacDonald counted the raised ands. | Seven were in favor of the Nineteen were against. At 10:20 a.m., with his col- He said Mr. Coyne could not He could be dismissed only There was a restlessness in "Question, question," the yl She declined comment with a iwave of the hand when ap- proached by reporters. | Mr. Coyne was not at today's | session. | { - the murder of 6,000,000 ers sweating out a prolonged] At last, it came in the «| Bush Fire Advance Slowing YOSEMITE PARK, Calif, (AP)--Fire fighters today hoped to contain two of California's largest brushland fires of the season, barring more hot winds that have aggravated one of the state's worst droughts in his- tory. The fire advance slowed five miles from Bass Lake resort, just off state highway 41, the year-round route into Yosemite National Park. Crews were slowly drawing lines around 63,000 blackened acres of brushland that flank this Sierra vacation spot. Towns threatened by flames Wednesday were apparently out of danger. STAMPEDE'S FIRST INJURY Thrown by this horse in | the Calgary Stampede Wed- | gary suffered a broken hip, v | saddle bronc competition at nesday, Johnny Ames of Cal- the first serious injury in the | awan t this waar . I ------------------