Ontario County Continues EMO W === @he Oshawa Times If you're waiting for sometaing to turn up, you might start with . Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash, Portuguese Face Ste UN Rebuke Before the vote in the Gen- eral Assembly, Poriugal served notice it would ignore any UN action on Angola on the ground the world organization had no jurisdiction .over 2 domestic problem. This stand was sup- ported by South Africa and ith Oshawa- P.5 WEATHER REPORT Partly cloudy and cold with a few snowflurries today. Cloudy and milder with occasional snow Thursday, TWENTY-FOUR PAGES Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy VOL. 91--NO. 26 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 31, 1962 Road Deaths Blamed On Frigid Wind By THE CANADIAN PRESS jand ice on many. Many rural|members got thiough to an Some respite "rom frigid)schools were clesed, and a|NDP meeting on farm policy,); winds blamed in at least four|school bus was stranded near|which was postponed. Some| id road deaths is expected in most/Dundalk untii a plow came to) Georgian Bay villages were iso-| parts of Oniario teaay. |the rescue. lated by snow. ; The weather office in Toronto| cy 9g¢ HIGHWAY Re ges oog higgins pe has forecast lighter: winds in ; ' ' é | ; place of the gales that Tuesday] , Highway 4 north of London|parts of Ontario, Quebec and| jes sent snow whippiny across the) province's highwzys, obscuring sf drivers' vision. | A Mitchell. Ont.. minister and) his wife were killed when their) car was involved in a collision! near Stratford. An auto parts| salesman died in 2 head - on} collision in the Dryden area| when his vision was reduced by) drifting snow, anc a transport) UNITED NATIONS (CP) -- Portugal, humiliated last month by India's takeover of Portu- guese Goa. was faced today with the sternest rebuke it has yet received in the United Na- § | tions. The 104-member UN General Assembly endorsed 99 to 2 with ; |one abstention Tuesday night an Afro-Asian resolution demand- ing that Portugal end "repres- sive measures" in its West Af- rican territory of Angola where revolt flared last year. The vote climaxed two weeks of debate in which country after country condemned Por- tugal's policies. Nigeria and some other African countries threatened to take concerted action if Angola isn't freed. Portuguese Premier Antonio critics of Portugal in the debate just concluded. In other developments at the UN Tuesday, the West squelched an attempt by the Soviet Union for an immediate debate on The Congo in the 11- member Security Council. The council was called into Spain. session at Russia's request but) Portugal had termed the reso- after a long procedural wrangle it upheld the contention of lution "mischievous" and such United States Ambassador Ad-|Countries as the U.S. and Brit- lai Stevenson that debate now|#in tions would only complicate the trou- 'bles in the new African country. The members voted 7 to 2 with two abstentions for an in- definite. adjournment Only Ro- mania joined Russia in the vote. Ghana and the United Arab Re- Salazar threatened after the public abstained. Goa incident to take his coun- hg Kh A Hig h Wire Act Falls, 2 Die bate'on Angola, which Portugal claims as an integral province, not a colony. Only South Africa and Spain opposed the 45-country Afro- Asian resolution which urges P Portugal to institute social, po-| DETROIT. (AP)--Two mem-|jother to die was Richard litiéal and economic reforms|bers of the famed Wallendas|Faughnan, 29, performing for aimed at independence ~ = family eae, Sree =~ bn the first time in public, gola, a terriotry of 5,000,000.\over, fell to their dea' es+ Portugal and Iceland were ab-|day 'night from the high wire|#URTLE is eons , sent and France abstained, jwhen the troupe's pyramid act}, Schenp Shbucies"t S eiine The UN took. no action when|came apart without a net. fléor: Ag Coli sin is India seized Goa and two other| Two others, including the Mari Wallenda, a auay dai Portuguese colonies on the In-jgraceful beauty, Jana Schepp, ith" Sch na 5 in dian subcontinent last month,|17, were injured, one critically. de thea a in" a a India was one of the harshest|Jana's brother was.one who bear" scr as 4 very crit- aed a mtg Ag Others of the troupe, clinging : to the wire about 40 feet in the a and internal injuries, uP air, caught Jana and saved her, Bg the (eae ceo The Wallendas met with their men tried to run tate the Ting. Women wept. Others, including Girl, Brother Critical After sec .rrvaiottance tors SeaTac Re . Shrine circus at the Michigan Hit By Blast A circus. clown, Ernie State Fairgrounds Coliseum be- fore 7,000 adults and children.) A Jana's brother, Dieter, 23,)(Blinko) Burch, was eredited BRANTFORD (CP)--A young|who had known freedom with|with bringing calm: Burch, gro- brother and sister are in criti-|her for only a few months afterjtesque in his makeup, stood in cal condition from burns suf-|they escaped together from|the ring centre pleading for or- fered Tuesday*when an explo-|Rast Germany, was killed. The|der and the people heeded him. sion and fire turned them into Accounts of witnesses varied human torches in the basement) as to exactly what happened. of their home. 7 s f the Wallend rand soeous, 4, aoa no) Urban Affairs |, thets's warts Ros sister, Linda, 2%, were given aK Plan Submitted the group, in a chair, was Jana, emergency treatment for more as closed while police sorted/Manitoba, and no more than a| out 20 minor accidents in one'few degrees' moderation. wa parts} | 1: tretch. lexpected today. In most At Walkerton, oniy Provincial|of Southern Ontario the mer- Leader Denald MacDonald and|cury wasn't expecied to climb Hands raised, U. S. Secre- | favor of resolution calling for tary of State Dean Rusk, right, | free elections in American and Brazilian Foreign Minis- | nations. Later at the confer- ter Francisco San Thiago Dan- | ence in Punta dei Este, Uru- tas voted Tuesday night 'n'! giay, the United States and The assembly vote of 26 to 43 z tions a Soviet-bloc resolution calling on the Security Council to consider sanctions against Portugal. 13 other American nations voted to expel Fidel Castro's Communist Cuba from parti- cipation in inter American af- fairs. (AP Wirephoto) a full 50 feet above the floor, |approaching, such reports could |be expected with increasing| frequency. He advised a re-| iporter- not to pay too much} attention to them. | Several developments di tion considerably. but the show of t jthat with de Gaulle's speech} 5, . > |tually no. alternative. b -|\they would accept stiffer fed- were withdrawn) erg} controls to trim acréage or , h yet ns price support at all. Ken- opera-|picket line will have to reassess |strength obviously was aimed| ne To Curtail Wheat (AP)-- -WASHINGTON* D.C. 'aced with a flood of surplus |food, President Kennedy gave |}Congress his farm message to- lay, asking it to curtail wheat and other production under a| Powerful U.S, farm lobby is pre- | long-range plan that would shift gave | millions substance to the reports of an! other uses, of farm acres into It was the toughest program ver proposed by a president e the hotel had changed its posi-| The French Army rolled/since the depression years in jstrong detachments of troops|the 1930s and undoubtedly will "Continuing the strike means|and armored cars into the cen-|be hotly debated in Congress. leave farmers vir- Either It would dy noted that 'no price sup- |ports would mean.a sharp drop 'in market prices. reducirg is desigued surpluses, to 'save Besides he plan taxpayers about, $1,250,000,000 al Announcement of an accord'year in lowet federal price-sup- three New Democratic Party!above 15 degrees this afternoon driver was killed under propre pe circumstances in a_ collision) with a snowplow on Highway t W lk t with a snowplow 0 | Continue aikou Police said. Tucsday night) TORONTO (CP)--A proposal;come back to work at-the hotel, visibility was almost nil on| nS W | ; fi h : 4 some highways.. There wa s|Py Labor Minister W. K. pari bod union officers ave lied all snow on almost every highway|render to end the Royal York/along about the hotel's posi- e - =|strike was defeated Tuesday by/|tion." ja vote of 344 to 15 at a meeting} A. R. Johnstone, international ease 1re gre o i y 1en Bl of the strikers. | vice-president of the union, read bie $ F aze The labor minister told ajthe proposals to the strikers at press conference after the meet-/Tuesday's meeting, amid de-| e ® ing he believed the union lead-jnunciation of the points by| Hits tores ers had violated a pact with him|speakers from the floor. | u H i ore i l eT1d ._ |by using inflammatory language| Finally, Union President Jos-! QUEBEC ssa ne -- cir-|to incite the strikers. jeph Chapelle rose to say: cuit in an elecirical appliance) He said the union had agreed| "I would say that this is an PARIS (AP)--France's capi-jwith the rebel National Libera-;Monde, Paris-Presse and tent * $800,000 We goon that bE ao he ang ---- fee ool Gites io Bhp Pcie aig buzzed today with reports/tion Front is certain to infuriate|France-S oir published what swept through six stores andlagainst and let the issue be de-|as this unless you directed me tliat President de Gaulle's goy-/Algeria's Suiceear Population, jthey Saggy Pos adv: BB, warehouses before it was con-|cided by secret ballot |to. You've been out nine months beg ese aie . 7 7 agg Te wpe Beg Se ne sak tae ae " s ' ; . 2,|elS are near agre oe . an is- S wo 200 Gtramint tock' twe TE nee Boag m, wi : beige ma bag rel ae ben make it /have reached one -- on a cease-| To guard against any attempt |major point remained--the na- hours to control the blaze, punc- matory language designed to| «7 oj 4 you g '/fire and independence in the|at a putsch in Paris itself, the |tionality status of Europeans in tuated by explosions in a paintiturn the strikers against m Let's fight to the end and if|war-torn north African _terri- government brought strong re-|Algeria after independence. warehouse vanouate, lagu ei Yiwe have to Surrender, we will|tory. jinforcements for 'its anti-riot} } One explosion did heavy dam-|? bt fg Walrond S hial i cenit down fighting." | The Geneva corréspondént of/forces in the Paris area. The! ALGIERS (Reuters) -- Mili- age to a nearby house, knock-|jeaders haa ear fm fair ent The proposals were made bythe Belgian radio, quoting an|government announced 30)tary officials reported today ing down a wall and breaking|+o¢ in future h 1d h |Mr. Warrender in meetings last|authoritative North African|squadrons of mobile gendarmes|that at least 25 persons were windows. Leet etatt ne atte eee eel wektd With management of|source, said complete agree-|totalling more than 4,000 men,|killed and 38 were wounded The fire flattered a business| rape tie althouth we ia cengithe CPR-owned hotel and rep-ment on an Algerian settlement\have been placed in' a police|Tuesday in terrorists attacks R |picket line, although in the past _~ Orel AD FP: | rm ; or is| : block in the north - end Stada lhe had ctonsed. it only once,|Tesentatives of the Hotel and|had been reached at a_ secret|"strategic reserve" 'in the Paris|by Moslem insurgents and Eu- cona district and caused heavy] shortly alter the Perini began |Club Employees Union (CLC), . |meeting in Vevey, Switzerland. |region. : ___|ropean extremists, loss of electrical appliances,} Empl f the CPR 8 d| Basically they called for 30! Paris newspapers Tuesday| On the rebel side, Foreign] The high death toll brought to paint, varnish and. other ma| p eae nowne per cent of the strikers to be|Might carried prominent stories|Minister Saad Dalhab left Mor-|748 the number of persons slain terials. [Royal York struck last April. hired by March 31, another 3o|that an agreement was near,|occo four days ago and has not/throughout the territory in the Establishments dest royed|CPR CRITICAL per cent by June 30 and a fina]|22d various sources in Paris|yet been reported in Tunis. This}wave of violence that began were E. Roy Industries Lim-| Following Mr. Warrender's|39 per cent by Dec. 31 had the impression crucial de-/could mean that Dalhab, one of/New Year's Day. In addition, ited, A. Ramsay and Sons Com-|criticism of the union's leader- Pensi ight ! id b velopments on Algeria wouldjthe rebel negotiators, hadj1,420 persons have been| pany, Dulac Potato Chips In-|ship, Ian Sinclair, a vice-presi- fied hg ther De guar-\come this week. stopped over in Switzerland for|wounded. : : corporated, Hector Lavigne and|dent of the CPR, said in a state-|2%¢ed and ot ih grievances There was no official confir-|a decisive meeting with French) However, these figures did| Sons store accessories, Hamelin|ment: would be arbitrated if they mation of the various peace|representatives. |not include either French or Brothers Limited furniture deal-| "We are not going to enter|:0uld not be settled in negotia-| Tr erent reports, and none| The Paris newspapers Le'insurgent army casualties. ers, and Refrigeration Distrib-|into negotiations. with people woe was expected from French. of-| "= =: utors Limited, |who break their word with a| The back-to - work proposal|iciais before Monday night. If Spokesman for the six firms|minister of the government,|WaS the key stumbling block tO\agreement has been reached, estimated loss at $800,000, in-/This confirms what we have|® Settlement. |President de Gaulle presum- ongress S e cluding $300,000 in paint. heard from strikers who have! ACCUSES UNION ably will announce it in a radio- mute ger Rene ence eee er ~~ | Hotel Manager Angus P. Mac-|1V speech scheduled then. Kinnon issued a statement ac- DISCOUNTS REPORT Oc et Tou eS cusing the union of an "unreal-|" 4 'spokesman at de Gaulle's ie te ee vee nal Elysee Palace discounted the lgone isu bas tantiatly beyond" |oeuzian ee ee: eee, |what it considered equitable so ew a ays a settlement could be reached. | Union leaders told the strik- ers at a membership meeting CAPE CANAVERAL, _ Fla.jdays--only to have a faulty At- earlier that the proposals were (AP)--John H. Gienn Jr. now |las guidance system cause ex-/an insult. S pac a mart 1% nape days gueuve Z peed which sent} one, Mane', the vo or his fight into space because/ Ranger 3 into soiar orbit in-|minister told a press confer-|' ; "li ; of troubles with the Atlas soma of to the moon. _* jence he thought his proposals | impending ae heen a: . - Glenn's flight. cannot be re-|paa been reasonable, and that |!4" 5S shit 'he prob:em turned up Tues-|scheduled so quickly, because pod -- ones op ene = the the A eget gate Py combination| Atlas, an 1e National Aero-| must be man-rated This means| . 7 nautics and Space Administra- everything possible must be/that this blot remains on the|tre of Algiers Tuesday night tion announced 'he oft-post-/done to muke it safe for a man|community, that millions of dol-|for "any eventuality," army| poned launching was off until to ride. jlars in salaries are being|sources said. The troop re Tuesday, Feb. 13 at the earliest.. With the posiponement, ajwasted and that many persons forcements As sagen -- og 24 navy ships was re-|who normally would respect a\this morning way to start the final two-day) calle from recovery countdown aimed at a Thurs-|tions temporariiy. Most of the/their attitude." jat the right-wing European set- day morning launching, a leak/more than 600 newspaper men| Refusal of individuals andjtlers in the city and their ex- developed in the fvelling sys-here to cover the launching|groups to cross picket lines out-\tremist Secret Army Organiza- tem and kerosenc spilled over' went home. jside the hotel has kept' the|tion waging a campaign of ter- on to vital parts of the missile., This was the sixth postpone-/strike in the spotlight almost|Torism to keep Algeria French. Glenn ~ agree 7 ers ment for the shot since Dec. 20.|since it began in April, 1961. penement o ne launching wi SUG CRS OMT oT = eae a shrug. He was quoted as say- . sure, Ym disappointed, oo 4HMERICAN STATES' FINAL SESSION this is a complicated business." The 40-year-old marine lieu-| tenant-colonel planned to take a} few days off to visit his wife i lose Vote i O Oust Annie and two teen-age children in Arlington; Va., before return- ing here for exacting prepara- Be fe ee tions for the fligh! designed to PUNTA DEL ESTE, Uruguay| The ministers adopted a four-|Dominican Republic Colombia, send him three times around|--Foreign ministers of the Or-|point compromise resolution at Nicaragua, Honduras, Salvador, the world in four hours, 50 min-|8anization of American States|a four-hour committee meeting/Costa Rica, Guatemala, Peru utes at altitudes up to 150 miles,|today formally adopted a final/Tuesday night after five days|and Paraguay. TROUBLE. RECURS report on their resolutions) of deadlocked secret sessions. Six countries abstained -- Ar- JE RECURS against Cuba, including a vote] The resolution condemned|gentina, Brazil, Mexico, Chile, The Atlas troub!e is. believed for ouster of Fidel Castro's pro-|Marxism-Leninism and Cuba's'Bolivia. and Eeuador, Only hag i Mg Mterteallegay 8 2 |Cammnniet regime. jadherence to il, said this ex-|Cuba voted against. Tk of thee eenement last) Cubans were absent from the|Cludes Cuba from the inter-| Argentine Foreign Minister week of the Ranger 3 moon plenary meeting and the report| American system and decreed) jj cal Angel C. - id h shot. Then, the Atlas booster ees slg eS aac ea hie oneal ang stled. cleaned|W25. approved 20 to 0. Cuban|that all OAS organs should] opposed the expulsion on and fuel srt 4 ce romete President Osvaldo Dorticos and|@uickly adopt "the necessary] grounds the OAS bad no author. material chk i Carin mg\his aides were holding a press| measures." jity-to take action and that the| aa reat ; Si conference elsewhere as repre-| But the resolution was ap-|move established "a dangerous tbe: Vehicle read: vith setting sentatives of the rest of the na-|Proved in committee by only 14 precedent "" icle ready within a feW/tions in the OAS convened. of the 21 ministers--the neces- The .OAS, formed in 1948 C Though State $ ecretary aes hoe i ee be composed of 21 western hemis- ITY EMERGENCY | Rusk s bid for unanimity on the/OAS resolution failea to get at| Phere Bee gioco soeatat PHONE NUMBERS jouster issue failed earlier today,|least 20 votes at ministerial | + > Hacisens" oS take pty the United: States had mustered|level. lure be! bi 'twothifds ines POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 e | c ; sted |ures must be by two-thirds ma-|¢ the necessary two-thirds major-| FAVOR MOVE jority. p ity for the vote directing the| Voting in favor Tuesday night' The resolution Tuesday nightic Castro regime's speedy expul- were the resolution's 14 sion from the councils of th¢ sors--the United States, Venez- promise between US State Sec-|' IOAS. spon- was adopted as part of a com-'tary aid only uela, Panaina, Haiti, Uruguay,|retary Dean Musk and Colom-|Uni Cuba bian Foreign Minister Joaquin Caicedo Castilla on one side and Uruguayan Foreign Minis- ter Homero Martinez other, |HAS OPPOSED on the Uruguay had been among the ight countries opposed to tak- ing action ayainst Cuba now but the Uruguayan minister reporiers the four-point formula would be acceptable Haiti also fell into line told Sole speaker before the vote . |Was Cuban President Osvaldo) Farm Equipment Limited to the 1S! Dorticos, legality of who challenged the the expulsion with a jlaim that it required an amendment to the OAS charter.|Hazen Argue, House leader for He said nothing can deter uba from its revolutionary ath and claimed Cuba has ac- epted extra-continental -- mili- to protect itself ggression of the against the a " ted States. than three hours by a team of doctors and nurses for burns to more than 50 per cent of their WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pres- ident Kennedy sent to Congress Tuesday a plan to create a new cabinet-rank department of ur- ban affairs and housing. A Ne- gro would head it: The fate of the plan is uncer- tain. It becomes law in 60 days unless either house of Congress vetoes it, but the measure has become embroiled in racial and partisan controversy. Senate rejection of the plan is considered unlikely but the prospects in the House of Rep- resentatives are uncertain. bodies. port outlays, which now total). The children of Mr. and -Mrs. | about $3,000,000,000 annually. /Carl Speichts, they were play- | s : ing in the basement when a |FARMERS OPPOSE _ kiddie car knocked over a can Under the plan -- which thelof gasoline. It is believed the fumes were ignited by the pilot light of a gas water heater. Mrs. Speichts heard the explo- sion and ran to the cellar door where she could see the chil dren at the bottom of the stairs. "They were all on fire," she said later. She started down the stairs but was halted by smoke and flames. The children managed to climb up to meet her and she rushed them outside and rolled them in snow. There was only minor dam- age to the basement from the fire. |paring to attack--more farmers |would be encouraged to get out | of farming and retrain for other |work. Under government finan- cial and» other inducements, more of their land would be |diverted to soil conservation, parks, wildlife sanctuaries, ru- ral housing and ifsh ponds. Some farmers complain this is not good for farmers who have invested heavily in new Machinery. They would get a smaller return on their invest- ment by applying the machin- ery to smaller acreages. | But Kennedy maintained that} ja lot of U.S farmers are mar-| |ginal producers. Ct some 3,500,- Navies Probing "y ie ggg acl er cent o e country's Mystery Of Shelled Village food, the other 2,000,000 only 13 per cent. Acceptance of the Kennedy plan might eventually prove a boon to Canadian wheat grow- OTTAWA (CP) -- The Royal Canadian and the United States navies are investigating a com- ; plaint that Canadian shellfire struck a west-coas! community, ers. As the U.S. surplus is whit- tled down, world markets might Defence Minister Harkness said Tuesday. « become unclogged and brighten He replied in the Commons the future for sales. jto Paul Hellyer (L- -- Trinity) But there is little likelihood the president's proposals will who raised press reports that the town had been 'peppered make headway in this congres- with shrapnel." sional election year There was a complaint that Starr Will Check Sale Of Cockshutt shells of some sert fell, Mr. Harkness said. OTTAWA (CP) -- Labor Min- d The small logging town of 4 ister Starr said Tuésday the facts will be checked before he|Clallam Bay, Wash., on the |makes any comment or consid-|shores of Juan de Fuca where Jers any action about unemploy-|four Canadian navai units were |ment following sale of Cockshutt}conducting gunnery. prac tice|? |Monday, has been named as | White Motor Company of Cleve-|the place where the shells fell. land, |The strait is 'a reguiar gunnery He replied in the Commons to) range. It was possibly the first time|F the CCF New Democratic|in almost 100 years that shells Party group, who mentioned re-|from Canada have exploded ports that large numbers of em-|over United States land. | |ployees have been dismissed at} (Reports from Clallam Bay} |Brantford and that the mana-|said there were no injuries but ger of Cockshutt had resigned) residents said there easily could lin protest. have been. | Siti. Prague balance," said O. 50, a spectator. "They held for an instant. Then suddenly they piled down like a cascade." There was an apparent slip by one member. The pyramid began collapsing. FALL LIKE 'CASCADE' "There was a slight loss of C. Hansen, Still on the wire were Her- man Wallenda, 60, Karl Wall- enda, 57, and Gunther Wallenda, 42, descendants in a family which has kept the troupe's name before the public for nearly 90 years. The three Wallendas caught Miss Schepp as She fell. KARL WALLANDA, 57, Spr aaa CTP cpurtie havin PORE nN