The Oshawa Times, 20 Jul 1961, p. 1

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Avda J3a3 ' THOUGHT FOR TODAY ' Not only does money talk, but it has the largest listening audi- ence. ¢ Oshawa Gr WEATHER REPORT There is still no sign of change in the hot, humid weather. As usual, it may thunder today. VOL. 90--NO. 168 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, JULY 20, 1961 Authorized as Second Class Post Office Mall Department, Ottawa THIRTY-TWO PAGES rm 43 PENITENTIARY BURNS IN OHIO Firemen and inmates battle | walls of Ohio Penitentiary. a fire, which destroyed the Firemen on aerial ladders planing mill from the roof tops of adjoining buildings inside | fought the blaze from outside the walls. Late last night pris- on officials said the building was being razed. JFK Sure Of Peace But Ready With Army WASHINGTON (CP) -- Presi-|/American military manpower, dent Kennedy today begins the equipment and tactical air second half of his first year in|power is to be brought into full office confident of maintaining{co-ordination with Western Al- peace and yet ready to expand|lies. the massive militar power of ; i FEELS NEED URGENT the United States to drive home Vorriet cbout the state of the to Soviet Premier Khrushchev there will be no yielding of 15 - country North Atlantic Al- ground in Berlin. Assessing the balance of power between the West and Communists, Kennedy called in the National Security Coun- liance, Kennedy told a press conference Wednesday he feels there is urgent need to strengthen the NATO consulta. tive process. He will inform the cil Wednesday and, informants|Allies of his. new program as said, got formal approval of his|soon as the National Security new defence plan to be unveile Gove compleies itsifieliberfi~ before the public Tuesday night. ns. Still to be decided--and this| "We will try to work out pro- Americans have been sub- jected to widespread specula- tion that Kennedy may call up between two and 10 divisions of reserve soldiers to plug defi- ciencies created by the failure of allies to meet their full NATO commitments. There also are reports Ken- nedy may declare a partial emergency, to arm himself with extra standby powers in the event Berlin boils up into a shooting war. Anticipated extra defence ding may plunge the United tes into heavier debt. 'New Cars Don't Need Enough Oil' TORONTO (CP)--K. W. Lang- don, executive director of the Ontario Retail Gasoline Associ- ation, says long service war- ranties by car makers are ruin- ing service station business. | Mr. Langdon said in an inter- i view the warranties and long |oil-drain periods stretching to 30,000 miles are forcing service station operators to do more repair work. ""The service station has had o become almost a complete garage," he said. Up to 1961, manufacturers recommended oil changes every 1,000 miles, but | they changed their policy radi- cally this year. At $1.75 per chassis lubrica- tion, Mr. Langdon said, the service station operator loses $52.50 a motorist used to pay for 30 1,000-mile oil changes. He also blamed the influx of small - engined imported cars and smaller crankcases for the serious reduction in motor oil electricity supplies cut. jl latest report from the unde- La cover for thrusts Radio Tunis BIZERTE NAVAL BASE, KEYSTONE OF TUNISIAN FIGHT demand in recent years. Dealers' warranties granting free chassis lubrication might be a boon to new car buyers but they were another worry for Iservice stations. | cedures which will permit close harmony in the actions of all the countries which bear e- sponsibility as members of NATO," Kennedy " The alliance, he added, "is ng to move through very cult periods in the coming months . . . if this alliance is going to move in concert, in m Bon we have to improve our consultation." Kennedy was particularly criitcal of the length of time it took the Allies to agree on the language of the Western reply to Khrushchev"s Berlin de- mands. "But I think we should real- is ti i lize, as anyone who has studied Yas Hy Central American the history of alliances, how sme, : enormous a task it is to have The junta claimed Wednesday |x countries moving down the that he plot had been '"nipped|giroam altogether over an issue in the bud" with the arrest of|yhich involves the security of several Communists and the them all. So we will inform seizure of large quantities of|ipom and then the Congress of Marxist propaganda. : what we plan to do." Communist cells, the junta/ said, had planned to launch a/BUILDS TENSION ; series of terrorist acts Wednes-| Kennedy's reluctance to dis- day culminating in the over-| cuss Stalls of his Jou Play be- throw of the regime July 26,|fore it is disclosed to the Al- anniversary of the start of Pre-|lies has tended to build up a mier Fidel Castro's revolution feeling of tension and expecta- in Cuba. -'tion among many Americans. is to be done by the National Security Council today--is how the reported plan to increase El Salvador Commie Plot Nipped In Bud SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (Reuters) -- Security forces to- day continued a roundup of sup- porters of an alleged Commu- nist-backed plot to overthrow the ruling right-wing junta of Mimico Probe YELLOWKNIFE, N. W. T. (CP) -- Prime Minister Diefen- baker Wednesday threw Can- ada's weight behind the Big Three rejection of Russia's de- mands for altering the status of West Berlin. He told a luncheon meeting of some 150 at the Sir John Frank- lin High School that serious days lie ahead for the Western world as threats by Russia be- come more ominous. Mr. Diefenbaker referred to increasing international tension over the Berlin crisis. Earlier, he announced a federal grub- staking program to encourage prospectors to search for new mineral deposits in the Cana- dian North. | Mr. Diefenbaker, first prime minister to visit the Northwest Territories, visited the Consoli- dated Mining and Smelting | Company gold mine in this com- {munity of 4,000. {TEAS CAMPAIGN: AIR Mr. Diefenbaker's trip to Ura- nium City and here has taken on| Canada Rejects W. Berlin Change ing this opportunity to meet and talk to people. Commenting on the new note to Russia by the United States, Britain and France, Mr. Diefen- baker said the Western world has made clear to Russia its at- titude to a problem that affects the future peace of the world. If there ever was a time when unity was needed among the Western powers it was today. Mr. Diefenbaker was obvi- ously pleased over the wording of the Big Three notes. He later described them to reporters as "marvellous." 401 Highway, New Section Open Today i CUBOURG ~~ An additional 28 miles of Highway 401, be- a definite ait of pre - election|tween Highway 28, at Port campaigning. It is not likely Hope, and Highway 30, north of that he would have time to Brighton, was officially opened visit the Far North during an|today in a colorful ceremony election campaign and he is us- To Go Deeper MIMICO (CP)--Town council he had purchased property for © » Wednesday night voted to ex- $260 from the town before he fii so iid i tend the judicial inquiry into became a council member. ; i building practices in this Tor- Later, while a member of the} onto suburb but blocked onejcouncil, he traded the property|: councillor's efforts to bringifor another municipally-owned | | town land purchases by Mayor owned lot and subsequently sold | Hugh Griggs under scrutiny. [the second lot for $1,020. The g At the request of Judge J.money was used to buy the Ambrose Shea, who is conduct-|privately-owned lot on which ing the inquiry, council broad-/his house stands. ened the hearing to include the, Mayor Griggs said he had no| closing of the Rex Theatre last idea when he ruled Mr. John-| March and the opening of cer-ison's resolution out of order, tain tenders for roadways inithat it concerned him person: | June. ally. He had made his ruling : During the meeting, Council-lon the ground that special y : lor Cecil Johnson was ruled out/meetings of council could not| ' f | new highway. {lon Highway 2, west of Napa- 4 'nee. The section opened today 7 miles. Other sections of 401 now of order by the mayor on pro-iconsider matters outside their cedural grounds when he soughtiagenda. to present a resolution extend- ing the inquiry further. ter the meeting, Mr. John- {| Mr. Johnson later admiited his resolution was in error but added that the mayor's trans- son showed reporters a copy of|aations were a violation of the the resolution, which alleged that Mayor Griggs acquired the property on which his house stands from the town while he was a member of the counci INVITES INSPECTION The mayor then invited Te porters to inspect his files, which showed the lot had been Municipal Act. Mayor Griggs said he would not oppose an inquiry into. the 1 | matter if Judge Shea asked for| "lit {LEFT ENVELOPE Earlier, the inquiry was told |that a builder left $80 in an Cecile Dionne Gets Twin Boys QUEBEC (CP) -- Cecile Di- "|way 401- will provide 510 miles here at the interchange for [Highways 401 and 45. Opening |of this section fills in the pre- vious "gap" on Highway 401 between Port Hope and Brigh- ton and will relieve traffic {through the towns served by the (See other story and pictures) on Page 4.) | Completion of the 28-mile sec- E | tion makes possible a through |drive of 178 miles on Highway| |401, without a traffic light, |from Highway 8, between Kitch- {ener and Preston to Marysville, brings the total mileage now in service on Highway 401 to 330 in use from Windsor to Tilbury, 31 miles; Highway 4 to East- wood, 38 miles; Highway 38 to Highway 16, 67 miles; and the Morrisburg By-pass, 16 miles. When completed in 1963, High- of toll-free freeway across the| |face of southern and eastern On-| tario from Windsor to the Que-| {bec border. [ | The Warden of Northumber- {land and Durham County, Bruce Ashton, was chairman of the afternoon ceremonies. Also envelope on the desk of Build- onne, one of the four surviving participating were B. C. Thomp- privately owned. The mayor's records showed ing Inspector Jack Book. Joseph Teichman, the builder, {Dionne quintuplets, today gave son, MP for Northumberland {birth to twin boys at St. Sacre- and Dr. R. P. Vivian, MP for testified he left the envelope on CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 {HOSPITAL 723-2211 ing inspector approved en- {triplexes were to be built. know the contents "of the sen- | he said that Mr. Book did not [cao iment Hospital here. Mr. Book's desk after the build-| Her husband is Philippe Lang. Hon. W. A. Goodfellow, MPP |lois, a civil servant. croachments on two lots where] The boys, both weighing about ter of agriculture; Highways six pounds, were born at 9 a.m. But under cross-examination They and their mother were re- Carruthers, MPP for Durham, ported well. The boys are the couple's third and fourth children. Durham. | for Northumberland and minis- Minister F. M. Cass and A. H. cut the ribbon. Several antique cars led offsa motorcade over |\the new sediion of highway. PARK PIN-UP PAYS PENALTY LONDON (AP) -- The sun came out in St. James's Park and waitress Irene Newton stripped off her jeans and two sweaters and started sun- bathing in a makeshift bikini. The bikini top was her bra, the bottom was a small yellow silk scarf that she wrapped around her. Park keeper James Curtis told a court Wednesday Irene got up and started dancing her yellow scarf flapping in the breeze. He told her to get dressed. Instead, she ran off. Irene, 37, was fined £2 for behaving in a manner likely to offend public decency. JERUSALEM (AP) -- Attor- ney-General Gide Hausner concluded | Ha coset nation of Adolf ann today, forc- ing a final confession from the ex-Gestapo officer that he was part of a Nazi conspiracy to camouflage the mass slaughter of the Jews behind a blanket of lies. But after two weeks of blister- ing attack, the former head of Jewish affairs for the SS main- tained to the end that his actions were done on orders from his superior officers. | Hausner took Eichmann back Mother Drowns Baby Burns On Lake Erie BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) -- A seven - months -old girl was burned to death and her mother apparently was drowned Wed- nesday night when flames from a gasoline explosion shot through a small outboard motor- boat -in Erie off "Buffalo harbor. | The father, identified as a Baptist minister, and the fam | ily's two small boys were res- | cued. One of the youngsters was burned critically. The body of the litle girl, Dorothy Dubose, was found in the charred hull of the boat, po- lice said. The mother, Mrs. Pearl Dubose, 25, is missing and presumed to have drowned. One of the boys, Steven, 1, was taken from the flaming 16- foot aluminum craft by people aboard another boat nearby. Lake to an incident in Slovakia when the defendant blocked an appeal of local authorities to visit the death camps to see if Slovakian Jews were all right. "You signed the letter to the Slovakian authorities, saying there was no need for them to worry about Jewish authori- ties?"' Hausner asked. | "Yes. I was ordered (by SS| | chief Heinrich Himmler) to use| {that language," Eichmann sid] | swered. 'Nazi Covered Up Slaughter Of Jews "You said stories of extermi- nation, were only gruelling tales?") "Yel, 1 was ordered to say that, too." "And the Red Cross was al- lowed only to go to Theresien- stadt?" the prosecutor contin- ALL-OUT FRENCH RAID Heavy Losses In Air Attack TUNIS--Radio Tunis said the French launched a co-ordinated attack by land, sea and air to- day against Bizerte. The broadcast reported the city of Bizerte badly damaged in the attacks and its water and The French were silent on this clared war aimed at forcing the French out of the big North African base. cades set up to Isolate the French base. Tunis radio said that "may; children" had been wounded in the new clashes. . Official French sources dis- closed in Paris that the gover nor of Bizerte, Mohammed ben Lamine, had asked for a truce to enable dead and wounded to be removed from around the ase. But, they said, the French ad- Tunisian troops and civilian|miral in command at Bizerte volunteers resisted the French attack "heroically," the radio said, and they suffered numer- ous dead and wounded. ROCKETS FIRED Radio Tunis said French planes from the carrier Arro- manches fired rockets in low- level attacks on the barricades. It added that the planes were backed up by the big guns of the cruisers Colbert, Bouvet and Chevlier Paul. This reported ar- tillery barrage appeared to be said were being made by French armored cars and tanks. At least 33 Tunisians and three Frenchmen were killed and scores of others were wounded. Another 130 Tunisian soldiers were missing and French officials reported that their troops had taken more than 50 prisoners. The French announcement of the action said that "several" Tunisians were killed and more than 50 taken prisoner. Tunisian President Habib Bourguiba set the Tunisian death toll at 33 and said nothing had been heard from another 130 Tunisian sol- diers since French bombers and artillery fire wrecked a station where they were camped, that his government was break- ued. "Yes, that's why Himmler created it." "This was the apparatus of camouflage in dealing with for- eign nations, inside the German Reich and even with the Jews themselves?" "Yes," Eichmann said, "with one reservation. I discussed frankly and openly with Jewish functionaries . . . No, no, I must ing off diplomatic--but not con- sular--relations with France be- cause of the crisis. Tunisian officials said the gov- ernment would seek an early meeting of the United Nations| Security Council to discuss the| situation. planes had made waves had replied that a truce could be discussed only between sol- diers and demanded withdrawal of women' and children from around the base. There were several explosions around the base this morning as the French planes swooped in. A Tunisian army truck burst into flames after being hit. HUDDLE IN TRENCHES Tunisian soldiers huddled in slit trenches for shelter from the atack but pointed toward the Bizerte base, A machine-gunner tried unsuce cessfully to shoot down the French planes as they swept in, kept their rifles Hunt On For Armed Boy Escapees COOKSVILLE (CP)--A seach for two youths who escaped from the Brampton boys' train- ing school was intensified after two housewives were threatened at gunpoint Wednesday ngiht. Mrs. Margarte Morgan told Bourguiba also announced police she was feeding her 10 month-old son when a youth armed with a revolver de- m family car. When she replied she had neither, he went to a neighbor's home. anded food and keys to the Mrs. R. F. Barrett said the youth approached her at gun- $ point and ordered her into her Bourguiba charged that the house where she made him a of sandwich. He ate it and left, rocket and bomb attacks on asking directions to the nearest correct that, with only one Jew- ish functionary." GAVE PROMISES Hausner went on: "You promised the Jews in Budapest in March, 1944 that after the war things would be back to normal, and you prom- ised they would not be deported to Auschwitz?" W. Virginia comes civilians and against the barrl-| railway, she said. Storm Kills 10 | CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)-- |A sudden summer storm stalled lover Charleston, Wednesday Inight, turning suburban brooks into raging torents that hurled houses, trees and trailers into |piles of kindling and rubbish. | Ten persons were confirmed dead. A score or more were "missing. Six of the missing--two MAD GUNMAN DEAD Shooting Spree Wounds ST. LOUIS (AP) -- A former mental patient grabbed a po- liceman's revolver and began shooting at 15 persons in the receiving room of City Hospital today. Two policemen were wounded and the gunman was killed in a running gun fight with an- other officer. Police said the dead man, Richard Shackleford, about 26, was identified by a relative as a_ former mental patient. The relative didn't know why Shac: kleford was at the hospital. Cpl. Raymond Oberlin, Police adults and four children--were feared drowned. Small creeks that usually dry up mid-summer became roaring rivers that picked up buildings as though they were children's] § blocks and dashed them against each other, The storm, in less than four hours, dumped more than five inches of rain on the area--a record for the city. It came so suddenly that some persons still were in their homes as they were swept off their foundations. Virtually all the of the dead were drowning victims. One man stepped from his stalled car, was swept underneath it|: and drowned. Search parties, soaked from p and went down. head to toe, searched the sham- bles along the dozens of creeks when the shooting b 8: began, at for storm victims. {12:30 a.m. Roland Williams, 31, were writ. | houses up there in_the middle of the street," yelled one rescue ing reports on persons they had group to another at the height | brought to the hospital. 4 | of the rampaging stream. |SEIZES REVOLVER "don't get caught up there." Police said Shackleford sud-| That street, a few hours be- denly jumped from a seat, fore, was a pleasant residential snatched Marshall's revolver, district from its holster and began to homes. Today it looked as fire wildly. though a sodden tornado had Page and Oberlin were hit|swept down the hollow. Charleston, a city of some 85,- 000, lies in the relatively narrow Patrolmen Earl Marshall andl] "My God, man, there are lined with modest] § Patrolman Williams dropped behind a desk and pulled it over 45 (as a shield. Screaming hospital/is joined by the Elk River. Its Kanawha River valley, where it shot in the groin, was reported/employees and patients dived/steep hills on every side pro-| in critical condition. Patrolman Virgil Page, 51, was wounded in. one leg. {for cover. Shackleford ran outside. Williams got a riot gun from | vide one-sided funnels. The hills quickly dumped the rainfall into the narow troughs At least four policemen were his squad car, fired five times|/The water built up force and among the 15 persons in the re- with his revolver and Shackle- ceiving room of the hospital'ford fell dead. s momentum swept everything its path. COOL "Youth is such a precious thing, what a pity it is wast- ed on the very young". When one sees pictures, such as this of 17 month -»ld Steven O'Grady, cavor ng on Lake- View Park Beall, one might CAPER doubt even the wisdom George Bernard Shaw, any rate, this is one yor man out to prove that veritable old'man of Hi could be wrong. Oshawa

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