NX wee but on the basis of Proceed on the chosen ' 'mot to oppress , but to differentiate and separ- Your Community Chest--Investment In Humani THOUGHT FOR TODAY There's one blg drawback of the jet age -- our distant relatives no longer are. She Oshawa Cimes -- WEATHER in temperature. REPORT Sunny with cloudy: periods to- day and Sunday, little change VOL. 90--No. 244 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, O} NNTARIO, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1961 Author Post Offi ized os Second Class Mail ice Department, Ottawo Dominica Has Night f Riots CIUDAD TRUJILLO, Domini-| The official police report can Republic (AP)--This Carib-|mentioned no deaths but said bean island country seethed|an undetermined number were with hostile anti - Trujillo rum-|injured, including 15 policemen blings today after a night|whc suffered minor injuries of bloody rioting. Prospects|from rock barrages. heightened for a government} a ; ' ARREST 57 PISCIRORHEO OF Bearuat JAW Police announced the arrest Unofficiai sources listed at': 2 of 57 members of youth groups senet pee levees Goad sla hurled stones in clashes nog Gude deur Retew ceil steel-helmeted police units most violent outbreak here |i" downtown streets of the capi- since the assassination of ee ce pease page Po -- Reet SMO IAN rifles, water hoses and tear gas, Claims Win Backs 'Race Separation The exchange lasted about 25 minutes before police drove back the demonstrators and |seized control, PRETORIA (Reuters) -- Pre- mier Hendrik Verwoerd said Friday the victory of his Na- tionalist party in Wednesday's general election showed South Africa's future lay in his policy of apartheid (racial separation). The decision made by the all- white electorate was uniequivo- cal, he said in his first public appearance since his party's sweeping victory. nes In 'what observers {ook Bsa clear indication of a hastening of apartheid policies, Verwoerd added: "Because the govern- ment obtained this assurance, they are strengthened to go for-- A car carrying Ernesto Ru- ward." |birosa, vice-president of the rul- He said his government willjing Dominican party, was road, roe and sped away. and dis- young non - whites|child was at 20 bleeding and weeping injured ted from the scene. Police said) the woman was hit by a rock.| There were reports that at) least three members of the Trujillo family--all brothers of the late dictator--may leave the Dominican' Republic this week- end with Canadian or United States visas. The departure of the family has been demanded by opposition factions before they will negotiate with Presi- dent Joaquin Balaguer on his proposal for a coalition govern- ment. Settle Montreal Building Strike of anti-government demonstra- tions set off by student protests |University accused of being a Trujillo man. Signs of Friday night's im- youths sealed off streets in a two - square - block area which they called the "Free Territory ef the Dominican Republic." Some were seen loading roof- tops with stones and metal ob- jects. |SHOUT FOR LIBERTY Four companies of police moved in later after hundreds of marchers paraded a main street shouting 'Liberty! Lib- erty!" to give rights which are due separation." j Verwoerd's Nationalists in- creased their representation to 105 from 102 seats in the 156- member Parliament when final results were declared Thursday night. The main opposition group. the United Party, also gained seats, winning 49 against 42 in the old Parliament, but its gains were at the expense of the breakaway Progressive Party. The battle capped five days be against the appointment of a| 7 jnew rector for Santo Domingo} ; pending violence came when! 7 CAMEL DRIVER IN NEW YORK Bashir Ahmad, Pakistani | sociated Press _ reporter, camel driver who is visiting | Francis Stilley, that during the U.S. as a guest of Vice | the past week there have been President Lyndon B. Johnson, | so many great things to see smiles broadly during yester- | that it is not easy to remem- day's sightseeing trip in New | ber them all. "I liked every- York. Empire State building is | thing I saw," he said, ; in background. He told an As- _ AP W. Widow Raped And Strangled NEW YORK (CP)--Police be-, 1 lieve that a sex maniac with/tered either through a window "powerful hands" has strangled|or managed in some fashion, to seven elderly women in the last/get through doors which were two years, all in poor neighbor-|bolted and chained. : hoods of Brooklyn. Mrs. -- a a "ifty. detectives launched a|Woman, kept her windows sone for the killer, referred|!ocked winter and summer. Po- to as the "mad strangler,"' after lice said the killer gained entry his latest victim, Mrs. Bessie|{hrough a rear bathroom win- Reibeisen, a 66-year-old widow, |4°W. was found strangled and raped| Her hands were tied behind in her tiny apartment Thursday|her back and a rag had been night. |stuffed in her mouth. The dead women, all of them; Police said she had been at least 55 years old and all|jbeaten and raped. The killer| but one of them widows, lived|/rarsacked her apartment, as he} alone. They all had apartments|did in the other murders. But} on the ground floor. The mur-|this time he fled without $100. derer ransacked all of their|overlocking $370 she had hidden reoms. jin a pillow case on her bed. One detective said the killer} Mrs. Reibeisen had returned "seems to get a line on the oldjto her home Sunday night from folks.'"' Another detective saidja six-week visit with her son-in- "he's worse than Jack the Rip-|law and told neighbors "there's id jno place like home sweet home." er. Police theori/éd that the killer came suddenly upon his victims and strangled them with his hands. Some of the women were killed. in their sleep. Some of No Statement Red Party Chief May Be Ready For By WILLIAM L. RYAN If Khrushchev has won, it will Associated Press News Analyst)mean expulsion from the party The events at the Soviet Com-|and possibly worse for former munist party congress in Mos-|premier Georgi Malenkov, for cow suggest that Soviet Pre-| Lazar Kaganovich, the onetime mier Khrushchev is winning the)commissar of the Ukraine and battle against his enemies in|a Stalin stalwart, for old former the party and setting the scene|foreign minister V. M. Molotov, for an announcement of a!former premier Nikolai Bul- house-cleaning ganin and many others. It seems likely that the purge already is under way. Probably|Russia, too. Those Communists it was started well in advance|jn parties abroad, particularly of the 22nd party congress, at/in the satellite nations, who least at the lower levels. have failed to show sufficient MONTREAL (CP)--A settie-;whether action was taken on al ment has been reached in aldemand by the unions for the! strike by 30,000 Montreal con-|right to negotiate contracts with| struction workers. individual contractors, The announcement was made|of through the exchange. Friday night by Labor Minister} This was a major issue in the Rene Hamel of Quebec follow-|dispute which started Sept. 1 ing two days of talks with un-|with a walkout by members of ion and management. the single union, the Sheet He did not disclose the terms|tal Workers International U: of the settlement, saying unidn| (CLC). | leaders had called wee kend|/SAY MEN FISHING | membership meetinggto deliver, Officials of the union said th "the news personal i it was|men were not on strike. The understood the agr ent in- had simply "gone fishing." cluded a wage increase But the dispute spread to al- cther benefits. lied tradés 12 days ago. Picket Seventeen unions were in-|lincs volved while management wasjhaite represented by the Montreal|projects throughout the city, in- Builders' Exchange cluding several skyscraper de- There was no indication of've lopments. instead! 2 and! PCs Keep Sharp Eye For Frost's Favorite TORONTO (CP) -- With the:convention at Varsity Arena, campaigning nearly over and but only 1,780 delegates have a| the show about to begin, On-|vote. It could become the big- tario Progressive Conservatives|gest political convention ever are keeping a sharp eye on Pre-/held in Ontario. mier Frost to see whether he| The 66 - year - old premier jparty of those he labelled anti-| Me-} nion! e| were set up and work) d on major construction| will indicate his preference as the next leader of their party. Mr. Frost has said repeatedly he will not interfere with the election of a new leader and will let delegates make their own choice at the party's convention! here Oct. 23-25. But Conserva- tives would still like to know who their leader for the last 12 years favors as his successor. Some 5,000 persons are ex- pected to attend the three-day CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 J HOSPITAL 723-2211 did not refer specifically to age when he announced his retire- ment as party leader early in August, but rather stressed the jneed for new ideas to be: given la chance to germinate: MENTIONS YOUTH In a' speech to the Empire Club here this week, however, he referred often to the need for young people to play a lar- ger part in public service. Candidates for the leadership are Energy Resources Minister {Robert Macaulay, 40; Educa- tion Minister John Robarts, 44; |Health Minister Dr. Matthew Dymond, 50; A. W. Downer, 57, a former Speaker of the legis- lature; Reform Institutions Min- ister George Wardrope, 61; At- jtorney - General Kelso Roberts, \63, and Provincial Treasuer James Allan, 66. 1 But Khrushchev wants and/devotion to Khrushchev's inter- apparently needs total victory.|pretation of Marxism-Leninism This means at a minimum the/may be headed for the political expulsion from the Communist] axe A new party declaration--one is expected from this congress --could well cover that phase of the purge, which could bring down such men as"Walter Ul- bricht, the Stalinist boss party in 1957 The congress can provide the machinery for Khrushchev's} purposes. Awaiting formal ap- proval are some new ideas con- cerning the statutes by which the Communist party is sup- posed to govern itself. MAY INVENT SINS The changes may involve new methods for expelling and pun- ishing members who have fallen into disgrace There are indica- tions that new sins will be in- vented, such as failure to show sufficient devotion to the Com- munist cause or lack of faithful- ness to the principle of collec- tive leadership. Oshawa Man Faces Forgery Charges PETERBOROUGH (CP) -- Gordon Perkins, 41, of Oshawa and William Robinson, 27, of RR 2, Blackwater 25 miles north of | Oshawa, were arrested here Fri- day and charged with passing forged family allowance cheques. Perkins was apprehended at a {supermarket after he was seen |passing two cheques at different jcheckout desks. Robinson was arrested by Oshawa police Fri- day night. Police say they believe the cheques were stolen from rural mail boxes in the Millbrook and Cavan area, about 15 miles west Mr, Frost has made no direct|°! Peterborough. There may be shocks outside} On Defection SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) Nenad Popovic, one of Yugo- slavia's economic officials, de- clined to comment on a Bel- grade report that he has de- fected to the United States. Neither would be confirm or deny a report by reliable sources in Belgrade, who said ' |Popovic had decided not to re- and others ftir to his Communist country. Popovic, 52, who served as chief of economic affairs in Yugoslavia's foreign. ministry, is teaching economics at Syra- cuse University. He signed as a visiting professor in August and plans to teach for the re- mainder of the current aca- ldemic year. He was one of the negotiators who obtained' for Yugoslavia last year $275,000,000 in loans and credits from the Interna- tional Monetary Fund, -the United States and several west European countries. Purge East Germany, his stamp. | The sin which may be in-| vented for such Communists is failure to show '"'fraternal sol- tdarity with the workers of the whole world." This phrase al- ready has shown up in the So- viet press, and seems to have ja lot of hid@en meaning. If the Khrushchev purge is unveiled, it is likely to have a shock effect in the ranks. oi world communism, which has been in a state of confusion for several years now regarding the newest revisions of Communist ideological scriptures. Charge Russians In all cases, the slayer en-| # MIKHAIL A. SUSLOV Key Witness Found Shot, Bomb Failed CHICAGO (AP) -- The key witness against a convicted la- bor leader was found mysteri- pad slain Friday. P. car fizzled) The victiia was John Kilpat- rick, 55, sead of Local 300 of the Unit Kilpat. ion since 1959 when he broke with his former associate, An- gelo Incisco. He was the chief witness against Incisco at a trial in which Incisco was con- victed of milking the welfare fund of Local 586. Incisco, who headed Local 286, was sentenced to prison. Capt. Frank O'Sullivan re- ported the break between the two men occurred over Kilpat- rick's refusal of Incisco's de- mand that the union secretary- treasurer be fired. Kilpatrick was killed by a bullet fired at close range. Industrial Workers. Shotgun Wounds Driver Of Tractor WALPOLE ISLAND (CP) --| Peter Williams 17, was wounded as he drove a tractor along a road beside the St. Clair River Friday night. Police said wounds in his left hand, arm and shoulder were Throw 'Arsenic' | UNITED NATIONS (CP) se yet ny 101- _ | \ber special political committee caeens ay rage ena the af ssa General Asembly Friday {Russians don't care about! night. \throwing arsenic into the gar-| The measure was approved 75 dens of their neighbors. \to 0 with 17 abstentions. The External Affairs Minister Ho-|Soviet bloc, which had opposed ward Green used this analogy in lagen abe ar igo ee talking about Soviet Premier Satna is i Saka , Khrushchey's announcement M4 that he plans to explode a 50-|U.S. WARMS TO IT megaton bomb. "They didn't want to get in the The nuclear-test warfare at/path of a truck," said an Amer- United Nations was waged onjican official who himself had two fronts. In one of. them,-75|earlier been lukewarm about countries announced they want|the Canadian scientific proposal, to find out more.about atomic/co-sponsored by 24 other coun- radiation and its hazards for| tries. human health. Khrushchev's announcement This was the meaning of a|that a 50-megaton bomb would move to back a contender, Del-| egates will be watching him! closely to see with whom he! poses for pictures, stands be- side on the platform, or for any sign indicating support of a candidate. Many of the premier's re- marks these last few weeks are similar to statements made} recently by Mr. Macaulay, the} |slon Friday rejected applica- ambitious and pring on energy resources 'minister who has be-|,. : come a top administrator with 10S by Royal York Hotel only two year's cabinet exper-/Strikers. for unemployment in- ience behind him. surance -- two days after Mag- istrate Thomas Elmore ruled NEEDS DEVELOPMENT ithe CPR owned hotel | was Noticeable in) Mr. Frost's| wiihin the law in dismissing speech was a reference to de-|them. veloping Ontario's prodwctivity); A. R. Johnstone, Canadian and trade "if we at to provide| vice-president of the Hotel and increased human betterment."|Club Employees Union (CLC) Mr. Macaulay, earlier this week|which has been picketing: the in a campaign speech, said the|hotel for six months, said jhe only way Ontario can continue| will appea' the UIC decision. to improve its health, welfarc| i: A. Baker, regional claims To 'Hotel TORONTO (CP) -- The Un- employment Insurance Commis- jexpand the 'economy. and other social services is tojofficer, explained the decision lto refuse insurance in a letter UIC Refuses Pay Canadian resolution that did. a|be er soon has caused the deepest concern at the United Nations and this was reflected in committee voting. A Communist resolution on radiation -- introduced by Cze- choslovakia and then bolstered by neutralist India by amend- ment -- also was approved by the committee but only by a vote of 3 3to 22 with 37 absten- tions. Strikers to Mr. Johnstone and the sec- retary - manager of the Tor-| onto local, Onofrio Zambri. The! commission pays unemploy- ment insurance when a firm is operating a 85 per cent of its normal capacity. Mr. Baker said the regional office has been unable to find the resumption of work at the downtown hotel is sufficiently substantial to indicate the work stoppage is at an end. The union is paying strike benefits of $21 to $28 a week to|West of here. | about 700 workers. The unem-' The fire was still burning at ployment insurance application|9 a.m., more than four hours was aimed at increasing thelafter it started, and the two strikers' income before the on-|two-storey buildings were virtu- Fight Heavy Blaze | At Trenton Labs TRENTON (CP)--Fire broke out early today in the records office and the laboratores of the Dominion experimental farm at Smithfield, four miles set of winter. caused by a shotgun. He was taken to hospital where his con- dition was described as not seri- us. olice. said 2s had headed the un- STEP UP ATTAC AGAINST ALBANIA Suslov Leading | Attacks Today MOSCOW (Reuters)--The So- viet Communist party's chief theoretician, Mikhail Suslov, to-| | | day stepped up attacks on Al- banian leaders that were begun by Premier Nikita Khrushchev at the ing of the party's 22nd congréss. Suslov said Albanian leaders were doing everything in their power to spread the cult of per- sonality, which Khrushchev. de- -- at the 20th congress in The Albanians do not/ want to accept restoration of Leninist principles of party life and crit- icism of the personality cult, he said. : (In Belgrade, it was reported that Albanian newspapers today featured a statement by Alban- ian Labor (Communist) Party leaders on "slanders and anti- Marxist attacks of Khrushchev on the party and what they called socialist camp unity.) First Deputy Premjer Anas- tas Mikoyan Friday bore down on the Albanians. Khrushchev delivered his blast Tuesday. Mikoyan said there is-no-pos- ibility of friendship between apd Russia jbasis of which the Albanian leaders are acting now." : 'The Soviet news agency Tass also reported today that Mi- koyan accused Albanian Com- munist chief Gen. Enver Hoxha of taking reprisals against Al- jbanians "'just because they do not want to leave the well-tested ery of Albanian-Soviet friend- ship." RED CHINA ABSTAINS About the only Communist chief not to attack Albania was Chinese Communist Pemier Chou En-lai, He made only a passing reference to Albania in a speech Thursday but virtually rebuked Khrushchev with a call for bilateral contacts to end quarrels within the Communist camp. Albania, which was not in- ited to the congress, looks to Peking for ideological guidance and material aid. The assault on Albania was considered to highlight Sino- Soviet ideological differences. Both Khrushchev and Chou here Action Requested On Bladen Report OTTAWA (CP) -- Immediate government implementation of three recommendations in the Bladen royal commission report on the Canadian auto industry was urged Friday before Fi- nance Minister Fleming by six Ontario communities with man- ufacturing interests at stake. The community auto study committee submitted a_ brief generally supporting the com- plex formula suggested by Dean Vincent Bladen of the Univer- |sity of Toronto economics fac- julty last June | It said auto prices could be |pared by $180 to $300 through |\the report recommendations. A statement after the hour- long meeting said Mr. Fleming promised sympathetic consider- ation but could reveal no con- clusions because many of the recommendations involve changes that would have to be announced in a budget. WANTED MORE VIEWS It also said Mr. Fleming was concerned that he had not re- whole question. He had said in his June 20 budget that he wanted views of communities, labor, industry and others. It's-understood the car - mak- ers, all Canadian subsidiaries of American firms, have made re- presentations privately to the finance department and that the Ford Motor Company of Can- ada is scheduled to make a pub- lic declaration of its views shortly. The brief Friday urged fur- ther government study of the nub of the Bladen report -- en- visaging greater Canadian ex- port volume and hence ex- ,anded production through cer- tain concessions. For example, a manufacturer could import parts or whole vehicles free if he bought a certain amount of parts in Canada. Windsor, Hamilton, St. Cath- arines, Oshawa, Oakville and Trafalgar Township were re- presented at Friday's meeting. The brief was prepared and presented by Murray Elder, Windsor industrial commis sioner. i ceived more submissions on the -- CANNY CARD-SWAPPER Brown Moore of Kitchener is a Scotsman. Naturally, he lives on Scott street. And per- i jally destroyed. haps it's just as natural that | he's exchanged the same- birthday card with his sister, Mrs. J, W. Williams of Bel- mount, Mass., for 38 years. The card began its two-way \tbipain 1923. Mrs. Williams ree Ceives the card oh her Oct. 7 birthday and returns it to Mr. Moore by Oct. 19. --CP Wirephoto