step ¥ THOUGHT FOI. TODAY Propaganda is pre-digested food for thought, consisting mostly of baloney. Oshawa Times 2 Mainly cloudy WEATHER REPORT and. continuing ~* cool Sunday. Winds light. VOL. 91 -- NO, 222 © / abe OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1962 Second Class Mail Post Office Acuthorized as Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash. TWENTY PAGES RETURNS TO NATIVE RUSSIA left. The 80-year-old musician Igor Stravinsky, Russian- returned to his native «land * born American composer, in hat and dark glasses, is pic- tured today on arrival in Moscow with his wife Vera, after a 52-year absence. He will be in Russia three weeks for a concert tour. Right is Baffles By JOHN LeBLANC TORONTO (CP) -- Vincent Feeley, slow-moving and slow- talking, has been showing. On- tario's: royal commission on crime why he's rated a standout in the fast world of high-rolling Ontario gamblers. For three days the heavy-set kingpin of the gaming joints, Tikhon Khrennikov, head of the Soviet Composers' Union, Dief Hits Critics Of London Talks By ALAN DONNELLY OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis- ter Diefenbaker flatly denied Friday that Canada was in an isolated position at the 10-day Commonwealth conference on British membership in the Eu- ropean Common Market. "Canada's isolation was an isolation along with 13 other prime ministers," he told a press conference, referring to some press reports--notably in British newspapers. Mr- Diefenbaker said that if Canadian news correspondents could have been told the whole story of what went on at the London conference, "I think any, fair-minded person would con- ciude our government's position | ionwealth. They couldn't be told this, he said, because of his promise' that briefings given Canadian re- porters by the Canadian dele- gation at London would deal only with the position taken by Canada at the closed confer- ence, Other Commonwealth del- egations, he implied, didn't keep to his undertaking. He didn't tions to the idea of a broader| trade arrangement that would) include other countries. The former Liberal govern- ment before 1957 had opposed measures for expansion of Com- monwealth trade he had pro- posed while in opposition. Mem- bers of that government had "suddenly become devoted ex- ponents of that which they once spurned," Mr. Diefenbaker said that al- though his free world trade con- ference proposal wasn't sup- ported at the London confer- ence, there was implied support for it in the Commonwealth dec- laration of readiness to back "comprehensive interna- tional efforts" to support world "Asked aout some reports de- bing him as utterly opposed ritain entering the- Common Market, he replied: i "At no time did I make an rower which could be so in- The decision was one for the British government alone and other Commonwealth members had no right to say whether or hot it should do this. specify which. REPLIES TO PEARSON Mr. Dietenbaker also replied sharply: to Liberal Leader Lester B. Pearson's criticisms of his proposal at the London conference for a free - world trade conference to reduce in- ternational tariff barriers. In an apparent reference to the Liberal party, he said that ' some Canadians who advocated an Atlantic trade community now were raising strong objec- Queen Mother Fractures Bone In Left Foot BALMORAL, Scotland (Reut- ers)--The Queen Mother, 62, stumbled Friday and fractured a small bone in her left foot. The mishap occurred at Birk- hall, her house on the royal family's estate here, an an- nouncement said. She planned to stay at Birkhall for the time being, it added, under the care of four doctors. Power Chiefs May Discuss Berlin Issue WASHINGTON (AP) So- viet Premier Khrushchev is re- ported to have hinted to for- eign visitors recently that he might like to have a talk with President Kennedy on the Ber- lin situation late this year. U.S. officials at present are cool to such a meeting because of the danger that sharp dis- agreement at the summit level would inflame East-West ten- sions. There has been persistent speculation in diplomatic quar- ters here that Khrushchev may decide to attend some sessions of the UN General Assembly in New York in late November. In- formed diplomats now believe that if he does, his purpose will be not only to appear in the assembly but to create an op- portunity for a meeting with Slow-Talking Feeley Crime Probe criminal record -- including a $4,000 fine this year after a guilty plea to running a major feut of the take in various il-| legal and legal gambling enter- | prises, including a highly-legit- limate and plush one in the Ba-| gambling house at nearby hamas last winter. |Cooksville--and some' items - of The question of the morality|ancient history such as skim- of gambling, he explained to the|/ming gravy off a few now-de- commissioner, Mr. Justice W.)funct Toronto crapshootipg and es ' Red Shipments UNITED NATIONS (CP) -- Russia and the United States accused each other of risking war over Cuba in a head-on clash Friday night before the |General Assembly. | Soviet Foreign Minister _|Gromyko brought up the explo- |sive Cuban issue in a 90-minute general policy speech delivered alleged corrupter of police and) D. Roach, Friday, depends on |the point of view. | The gambling. boss tossed his | paperwork idea in as a possible explanation for his presence around the college--where the OPP anti-gambling squad was formerly located -- at times when two feminine employees of the OPP have testified he tried to strike up an acquaint- ance, | Feeley--accused of getting in- |side raid information from. po- jlicemen, although denying it all | Ftiday--said the room near the |police centre was one of many jhe retained in Toronto over the \years where he would drop in jto "do my sheets."" Tuesday, he jsaid he used banks' coupon- |clipping cubicles for the same | purposes. |FIND BINOCULARS | The commission had heard jearlier evidence that a relative of his partner, Joseph McDer- |mott, once rented a room across from the college and that later |a pair of binoculars were found in it. | Feeley's admissions cover nothing more than, his known |bookie joints, But he has persistently denied jever buying protection from po- jlice or politicians or peddling jit to gamblers, the allegation the commission is trying to pin on him, He said this week he never dispensed a nickle this way. However, as he testified, he jand partner Joseph McDermott |were under an 18-month sen- tence following a conviction last March of conspiring to obtain DECLARES EMERCENCY President Kwame Nkrumah today declared a state of emergency in the Accra area of Ghana. The move followed recent bomb explosions. --CP Wirephoto = on the eve of a meeting with |State Secretary Rusk arriving jin New York for a week's stay. Gromyko accused the United States of aggressive acts to- wards Fidel Castro's regime and said a U.S. attack on Cuba would mean war. U.S. chief delegate Adlai Ste- venson, replying immediately, said the Soviet Union is threat- ening peace by supplying mili- tary aid to Cuba. police information illegally, a charge based on an allegation of payoffs to a member of the OPP anti-gambling squad. The case is under appeal. | Skindivers Post Underwater Mark MARSEILLE, France (AP)-- | Skindivers | Claude Wesley surfaced in Andre Falco an bright Mediterranean sunshin British Peer Quits Country Over Tax Row LONDON (AP) -- A British peer announced today he is | Friday after seven days and |nights of living 35 feet under- wat in the sea." The big barrel-like container was anchored to the seabed by heavy chains. er in a cylindrical "hous Physicians said the two me had apparently suffered no ill effects. "We are not taking and will not take offensive action in this hemisphere, neither will we per- mit aggression in this hemis- phere," Stevenson said. "The threat to peace in Cuba comes not from the United d|States but from the Soviet United States is at liberty to mount military action against Cuba and that it will itself de- cide when to deem it necess: to start an invasion." Already, he said, "'the United States is practising aggressive acts" against Cuba by provid- ing arms and equipment to Cu- ban refugees for "pirate sorties" against their homeland. The United States does so, he said, because the Cuban system "is not to its liking." PP By Nations will be le this pol 7 he said. anal a ahaa But, said Gromyko, nowadays States. possess rocket nuclear weapons" and "the Soviet Union and the socialist pos- Sess, at the least, the same means as the c 4 tries" apitalist coun Second Member Of Downed UN " Union. The threat arises from the extraordinary and unneces- sary flood of Soviet arms and military personnel pouring into Cuba." HITS KENNEDY REMARKS Gromyko told the 108-member bly~ Presid dy's Sept. 13 press conference state- ment on Cuba meant "that the le ie n quitting his English homeland to death duties that could WASHINGTON (AP) -- The United States appears to be making headway in its drive to get Allied co-operation in cut- ting down Communist shipping to Cuba. The West German govern- ment has agreed to take steps to prevent its ship owners from putting German flag vessels un- der Soviet charter. There is nope that Britain, Norway and other North Atlan- tic treaty allies whose ships have sailed for the Russians in the Cuban buildup also will co- operate. Britain, Norway and West Germany are each believed to have a dozen ships engaged in the Communist effort to bolster the Red outpost in the Carib- bean. : : The United States, -- arguing that the Cuban situation is an extremely serious problem-- has pressed its allies to deny shipping to the Soviet bloc. USE OWN SHIPS U.S. officials say the Russians have been using their own ships to carry arms and military per- vessels have brought in food and industrial equipment designed to strengthen premier Fidel wh greeted Stravinsky. via radio from Moscow |public officials, has been giving Robs 15 Banks, acrobatics as inquisitors sought |to pin down some of the more Montreal Man jelusive aspects of their long in- They got little change of Fee- ley. When he went back to jail Friday to rest up for Monday's MONTREAL (CP) -- Anthony) listeners baffled. Singer, 23, who esuccessfully . the three meyprs - rs geo robbed 15 banks of $25,000, was|to have managed to avo penitentiary. | nder a barrage of questioning Singer, who comes from a| based on 45 daily volumes of wealthy family, was arrested|earlier transcript. steal a dozen eggs. He was car-|Of admissions of a sort, includ- rying $1,500 at the time. ing Friday's sly confession that he used to do some of his bookie A mel gi gg "Town of 2c70S8 the = eo the On- _|tario Provincial Police College eee eee ef land an admission that he has He had been spending the last} _. nine months in preventative de-|Since the late 1940s. tention. MAKES MONEY WORK He has admitted putting his W.G J Currency Rift VV. Germ By HAROLD MORRISON day world monetary conference has opened a disturbing rift be- tween Britain and the United rencies should bear in financing future world trade and eco- nomic aid. its dwindling gold reserves, ap- pears to be moving towards re- duction of American' dollars ain wants to expand the world flow of acceptable currencies, including the U.S, to prevent a ling. Arguing that he doesn't want. to hurt the American dollar and be an increase in the official gold price, Reginald Maudling, Britain's chancellor of the ex- of a radical new international deposit bank in which accounts would be fully backed by gold. Douglas Dillon hurriedly at- tempted to squelch the idea, apparently feeling it may raise strength of the dollar in terms of.gold. But at a press confer- ence Friday he admitted the Kennedy. --AP Wirephoto a display of sprightly mental jeer. Gets 10 Years lreturn bout, he' looked fresh, his sentenced Friday to 10 years injing any culpable _ admissions last December while trying to| He has, though, made plenty Singer pleaded guilty to the work in the oulet of a room spe sondage nadie ea jnot done any orthodox work US B 'it s money to work for him for a -- WASHINGTON (CP)--A five- States on the burdens their cur- The U.S., anxious to shore up flowing around the world. Brit- possible future strain on ster- maintaining there never may chequer, has called for a study 'US. Treasury Secretary new questions about the idea has not died. \Castro's wheezing economy. MINE, MILL -- STEEL LAUNCH COMPLAINTS Labor Board Attacked TORONTO. (CP)--Two giant! unions battling for contro} of Canada's biggest local ich fired blasts Friday. at ' /YOn- tario Labor Relations F The United Stee! America (CLC) sen Premier Robarts the board has in terminable del the victor of resent som@"/g nickel work?'% "Sustice df"% nied." s*% oO The J* Miney' "9% of to he fing Z "in- a wiiding in Sp rep: is wipoury And | ained de- memorin of ent andWork- attack Way ride an Court to force the board to hear alle- gations of fraud against senior Steel officials. It complained the board is "denying natural jus- tice." Skirmishes have raged be- tween the unions since a ceritfi- cation vote was held in Sudbury Feb, 27-March 1. It gave Steel an edge of 15 votes in its bid) to take over as bargaining agent) for most of the workers in Mine- Mill's Local 598: On July 19, the labor board ended two months of hearings into allegations by Mine-Mill of irregularities in the counting and casting of the votes. | EXPRESS CONCERN In Friday's letter to Premier Robarts, Steel said: board to hear the allegations of fraud: The union claims. that "proven forgeries submitted by three Steel officials' in another Sudbury campaign cast. doubt on union membership cards sub- mitted by the same officials in \the Inco campaign. This is a reference to a bid by ers involved in the. dispute are|Steel to wrest control of Falcon. émployees of the International|bridge Nickel Mine Limited Nickel Company of Canada|workers in Sudbury from Mine- Limited (Inco) which last week|Mill. Steel threw in the towél announced a substantial cut in|last month when it agreed cer- production for the last quarter|tain signatures on its union of the year. |membership cards had been It says the workers are being|forged, but it denied any of its left without effective union rep-|officials were responsible. resentation during a critical pe-| Both campaigns were riod when it is reported 2,500\ducted simultaneously. employees will be laid off in| On Sevt. 14, the labor board bor Relations Act to. low re- pute: 3." Steel urged Mr. Robarts to use the full influence of his of- fice to obtain a decision from the board immediately. The letter was signed by Wil- liam Mahoney, the union's na- tional director in Canada. Steel noted that all the work- con- any Cuts 'Cuban Shipments | First word of the West Ger- |man move came in a speech in jthe House of Representatives Friday by Representative Raul G .Rogers (Dem, Fla.). | "I hope the action of the lokes German government will be immediately adopted and im- plemented by the other NATO allies and friends,"' he said. Rogers told the House that friendly merchant ships have transported goods to Cuba, then loaded up with cargoes at U.S. ports for 'profitable return trips." Said Rogers: "This situation in effect had the United States helping to support a portion of |the Soviet-Cuban buildup con- | tay to the best interests of our |nation." | cripplé his family's 'fortunes. | The 76-year-ol' Baron Astor jof Hever said he has decided |to spend the rest of his life abroad to save his properties jin the United States and Brit- jain from near extinction from |taxes after he dies. A new finance act, introduced |this year, imposes English es- tate duties on real property abroad owned by people domi- ciled in Britain. Lord Astor announced his de- cision in The Times, the news- paper of which he is chief proprietor. Lord Astor said his family has an interest in a trust in the U.S. created by his father--the first Viscount Astor -- who or- iginally was a U.S. citizen. Lord "Astor said: "As a result of the change introduced by this years fi- nance act the capital of this American trust fund would be- come liable to English estate duty on my death at the top irate of 80 per cent. t Morning Could Be Deadly | By GORDON TAIT sonnel to Cuba. The chartered) SYDNEY, Australia (AP) --/taking excess phenacetin suffer {The harassed housewife might |take a powder or two before |she starts to prepare breakfast . and perhaps the business- |man when he feels in need of la lift. | They're not taking illegal jdrugs. The powders are an as- ipirin-phenacetin - caffeine com- bination that -Australians can buy by the dozen at any drug store--or at a tobacconist or 'service station. In the last few weeks the users have been warned they might be taking a potential habit- forming killer. A survey at Sydney Hospital attributed 53 of 1,350 deaths in jtwo years to probable phenace- \tin poisoning. Of these, 42 were women, the youngest 23 and the jemiest 75. |SCARES TAKERS | The report of the Sydney Hos- jpital investigation threw a seare into these people. The report, by Dr. jaecoys, said the kidney disease |that might result from taking }exeess phenacetin could reach the chronic stage without a doc-! tor being aware of it. Last year, Sweden banned the general sale of phenacetin after ja survey by Swedish doctors Lionel] Argentine Feud Tables Reversed By SAM SUMMERLIN BUENOS AIRES (AP) --The navy moved today to halt Ar- gentina's drift toward civil war by proposing that a three-man military junta take control.- Rebel leaders refused to at- tend a top level meeting called to discuss th plan and said President Jose Maria Guido was resisting navy pressure to re- sign, Political manoeuvring hem civilians. The navy early today sug- gested a cease-fire and that Guido be replaced by a junta con- tinued through the night as troops of both the rebels and so - called loyalists were de- ployed throughout the capital. Scattered clashes during the rebellion, now in its fifth day, have killed six persons, five of |Carlos Sanchez Sanudo, Army) Lt.-Gen. Arturo Ossorio Arana,| and Air Force Commodore Os-; car Lentino. Soon afterward the navy said Guido had offered his resigna- tion to the council of admirals. But Guido's secretary denied he was quitting and a spokesman at the rebel stronghold of Camp de Mayo near Buenos Aires said the president had notified them he intends to remain at his post. The meeting of top leaders was held at a heavily guarded building of the navy secretar- iat. 5 A rebel spokesman said their leader, Gen. Juan Carlos On- gania, turned down an invita- tion to attend because he felt any such meeting should be held at Campo de Mayo, 10 miles from Buenos Aires. Plane Dies LEOPOLDVIL E, Congo (AP)--A second member of the Swedish crew of a UN recon- aissance plane shot down in North Katanga died, the UN announced t y. Another crew member died Thursday, tion of gunners who shot the twin-engined Dakota Thurs. day with 10 men aboard. Four others were injured, a UN --" of inquiry is investiga. ng. Fleming Goofed 'Over Attack On Quebec-Lesage QUEBEC (CP)--Premier Le- sage said Friday Justice Min- ister Fleming had "'put his foot in his mouth" with a statement that the Quebec Liberals' pro- posal to take over 11 privately- owned power companies would not help attract foreign capital to Canada. He said Mr. Fleming "should remember that the province of Ontario has spent hundreds of millions of dollars for its na- tionalized electricity system and that all this has not affected its credit, at all." Bracer jthe majority of the patients kidney disease, But it is a war- ranted assumption from clinical evidence and from overseas re- ports that abuse of phenacetin can, and often doés; lead to chronic kidney damage." The president of the Ethi- cal Pharmaceutical Manufac- turers' Association, E. J. Wil- lis, says there is no need for any restriction on their open sale. an "These drugs are not harm- ful if taken in moderation," he . In Washington, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's chief of medical review, Dr. Howard I, Weinstein,asid: "The danger is the misuse and abuse of the drug, which has caused severe kidney dam- jage. Those people who use the | Product as directed on the label | have nothing to fear." YOU'LL FIND INSIDE... Civic Survey Report Gets Secret Study .. Page 13 Kiwanis Hear Road Safety Speach Page 5 made up of Navy Rear-Admiral U.S. ATTACK ON CUBA | MEANS WAR-GROMYKO_ | Adlai Decri fae down "Our members at Sudbury|the immediate future. \refused an application by Mine-|which was more comprehensive | have worked diligently against great odds to rid themselves of; Steel also complains that the company has refused to sign a | Mill that all cards submitted by|then the Sydney survey. The Steel officials be examined and|Swedish survey reported that Three Injuried In 2 City Accidents ...... Page 3 new contract with its Port Col-|that the officials be called be-|most' users were women who borne local until the Sudbury|fore the board.to explain their|claimed 'they needed a. powder dispute is settled. jactions in the Inco campaign. |whether they were in pain or Mine-Mill's action Friday was) Mine-Mill now seeks a court|not. an appeal to the Ontario Su-jorder to quash the board's de-| Dr. Jacobs said in his report: preme Court to force the labor! cisian. : "Tt must not be assumed that --__2 Communist-run union. They now have expressed their con- cern at the interminable delays which have beset this case and which have brought the admin- fetration of the Ontario La- OLD MISS OFFICIALS AT COURT Duck Hunters, Track Fans Clog 401 Dull Skies Mar Drum: Head Parade ...... contempt for not registering | are: Dean Arthur B- Lewis; James H. Meredith, a Negro, | Chancellor John Davis Wil- at the 'University when he ap- | liams; and Registrar Robert peared Thursday. Left to right ' B. Ellis -AP Wirephoto University of Mississippi of- ficials go into Federal court at Meridian to tell judge why they should not ee cited for zy