. THOUGHT FOR TODAY Another reason for drawing the ~--eurtains at night; a™néw radar ~ device scans the ent ire earth. : . 4 d Hot, humid weather to continue tonight and Tuesday with scate_ tered thundershowers and light winds. ¥ WEATHER REPORT » VOL. 88--No. 191 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, MONDAY, AUGUST 17, 1959 Authirized 2S stcond Clots Mai TWENTY PAGES RESEARCH ROCKET LAUNCHED BY U.S. FLIGHT FOR SERUM Labor Bill | Orange Cloud 5 i Cobra Bites Disliked By| Sweeping East | Snake Guard LCI0 som ms aE oi | FOREST PARK, Pa. (AP) -|gearch rockets today. It left a| the strange cloud in the sky. The Leaders of organized labor gath -/yellow-orange cloud that was vis-| rocket was launched at 5:18 a.m. ST.' JOSEPH Mo. (AP) -- A fos stood by a T-33 jet trainer, cred today to nurse political|jhle over much of the U.S. east-' EDT. and its and cloud 'were four-foot-long Indian cobra bit an 4 coast guard helicopter picked wounds from their recent labor-| seaboard : visible about 30 employee of a reptile gardenjup the serum at the serpentor- bill defeat in Congress and to Th Ket. ras fied fib the) near here Sunday but the man ium. Miami police blocked traffic|consider inter-union conflict, he roc w 5 P| 3,500 rockets is expected to live because of aloff a highway so the helicopter] Members of the AFL-CIO ex- (National Aeronautics and Space bg a Wallops sincd the instal 1.300 - mile serum flight from could set' down beside the ser- ecutive council--the federation's Administration station at Wallops| lation was set up in \1945. Miami, Fla pentorium. The helicopter made high command--mapped plans to|1siand on Virginia's eastern shore| Recent operations. "| The coast guard and the air|@ 13-minute hop to the air base.|try to salvage the best bill possi- land emitted a 100-mile sodium | dea" ceding up d a force fle i-cobra serum irom, The jet covered the 1,300 miles ble from the union viewpoint be-lyapor trail beginning at an al-| (aociies early test models of the Miami after 32-year-old William |from Miami to this city in north-ltween Senate and House of Rep-|titude of about 50 miles. It was| vehicles men will ride into space, a § AE RA Sime . a A es or as West Missouri in three hours, 48 esentativ sions. i LABOR MINISTER AT GREENWOOD PARK PICNIC imine x hoe ir the mies" TT en Tenders ke mother 2 So and fn Solos | Fle m1 10 wack out recovery Bill Palmer. 80, (right) of | ter Michael Starr a few point- horse shoes at the Starr- | Dymond picnic at Greenwood accident. "|one, but prefer the- Senate bill] | 400 people attended the annual |" "nore drop of cobra venom {sponsored by Senators John Ken-[DOUBBLE PURPOSE ne ay elo | picnic at the park. »an be fatal. And usually it takes nedy (Dem.-Mass.) and Sam Er-| The rocket had two objectives: | . Claremont, gives Labor Minis- | ers in the fine art of pitching | park Saturday. Approximately | Photo by John Mills a four hours to kill, said Wil- egrega e lvin Jr.,, (Dem.-N.C.) over the| 1. To determine wind direction 1I OITl {liam H. Haast, operator of the | House bill by Representatives|/and velocity over the wide range | {Miami Serpeatorium. |Phil Landrum (Dem.-Ga.) and covered by the trail and cloud. | re - | " | . | Put the cobras fangs pierced a |Robert Griffin (Rep.-Mich.). The| 2. To measure diffusion or the 0 Ri li P T'SO | | . | 1 ured Farm Boy sdck of heavy Material Jeter asses n |House bill is the one supported|rate at which matter spreads out | Nn Ir ner ® | {they hit White on a thumb he s President Eisenhower. in the upper atmosphere. . e ] Ibag apparently absorbed some of by Presi on ise er e uppe! MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) -- Suz- = ame Ector was born Sunday 10 days ahead of time and 9,000 feet . {the venom. Littl R k 4 o Dies Near {CHANCE TO RECOVER in 1 e oC ' B th v Says sheaf A few minutes after midnight, t 9 | rain I as lpr. C. C. Dumont said Whites, LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP)--A Cas TO oe] TO 9 Mes, Suge Botor, 2, o Av. . iki U |condition was satisfactory. new weapon was unlimbered in genta, B.C., & birth GULL. LAKE, Sask. (CP)---At pital treated 69 passengers after on its side. Eyewitnesses said the least 69 persons were injured and /the wreck. Noue of the nine de- passengers had to be taken out pine were still in hospital today tained was in critical condition| through the windows. after a rear-end collision early|though there were serious injur-| ope unidentified witness said Sunday between a fast freight, baggage and passenger train and ies, [ A hospital official said several ithe injured engineer of No. worked like mad in the rescue the crack passenger train, the|of the 11 patients in the hospital | operations' though his head was Dominion. . Both Canadian Pacific Railway trains were eastbound from Van- W. 'McCracken, CPR superin- tendent of the Medicine Hat divi 4 ) About four persons were believed! Mr. Breen said the Dominion father said that the boy was| After White was bitten a tele |in , said it was a miracle no to have been sleeping in the car, | bad backed into the Gull Lake h io > one was killed. The crash occurred about 5:35 before the: wreck were dicharged | to make room for the injured. | J. Breen, of Brandon, Man., said the tail car of the Dominion | 'was d gashed and blood streamed down his face. "Finally he weakened anc took him away." to smith, " { "1 don't know how people that | {were in there are still living," he! aid. "It really is a miracle,"! Earlier reports said Dave Kal ston of Medicine Hat, the engin- eer, suffered head lacerations. The second-last car was tossed Station yard after stopping east {of it. | am. as the D No. 8, made a scheduled stop at Gull Lake, 190 miles west of Regina. The train was about five hours "A green signal light was on CIGARET LIGHTER u's fini thats wis tne res fats eacting Resa ster we CAN BE TOO HOT REAR-END SMASH The last three cars of the Dominion were wrecked when the other train, No, 6, crashed info CROYDON, England (AP) --Iris Bevis, 16, took a jaun- diced view of life today from { under one eyebrow. the rear. The first diesel of No, 6) 10 the cinema Saturday was demolished and its second night, the boy friend offered i X fier cigaret. He smart] engine and a coach were dam-| [7 ret Ns y aged. 5 lighter and Iris collapsed screaming -- her The tiny 18-bed Gull Lake-hos-| left eyebrow in flames. Prostitutes ) After 'hospital treatment, she went home with the star- board eyebrow intact but | nothing to port The film was Marilyn {train hit us." | The injured included Mrs. Beu- {lah MeIlvraith, Toronto. - xbridge "He has a chance to recover,' ithe Little Rock schoo] battle to- eight-pound, four-ounce girl in an - {said Dr. Dumont. "I think he'll|jav._ segregated classes in an in- At onference pictues with he siewaldest asd UXBRIDGE (Staff) -- Harvey|be O-K. tegrated school. C : midwives. ich 3, Ux.| The doctor sad White has ex-| Soho] officials rescheduled | Mother and daughter were James Jannick 8, RR 3 Ux-| . = School gfficials reschedulec . 3 bridge died at 6 a.m. Sunday. |perienced some symptoms Of accag for Ann McLeod, one of taken to a Memphis hospital after He was believed to have swal-|c0bra poisoning -- particularly zoo" (rite students at Hall High, SANTIAGO, Chile (AP)---Fidel campaign. against Castro andj. Delta Airlines plane landed 6 lowed soldering flux [stiffening of the joints in 1815chool, so she won't have to sit Castro's brother Raul flies iio Castiv's against Trujillo. here and are doing fine. at ee lin 3 mith [legs and low blood pressure. with anv of the three Negro girls Santiago today as the foreign| The resolution balances this cil police In Nuithes| The per of the fertile gan o on began attending Hall pT ISS o Latin America fd fire-prevention agency urged by rid 1 wr Has auiden,: John inchpaugh, sai {¥ the United States argue out final| .S. with. vision meet (at te 5 ne ater, Harvey ypie's job was caring for the] WeBk. ther, lawyer John A details of a oh Bk 210 plan to Bo S50 by TN Ade + Sr, Wa > i ¢ instrument| ' a : 3 {barn on his farm Saturday at giuakes, Using 2 Jong end" White | McLeod r.. - invoked a little. calm a climate of crisis in the for emphasis on strict observance | (Pm. when he heard a noise. had put thé cobra fn the heavyihoted statdlaw fo get segregated Caribbean. \ of Husian Sights Al Tepresen: { He found bis zon tolling on the, : alee i its| lasses fot his daughter, School] The younger Castro's impact onjtive democracy a economic wrong. i 3 «bag preparatory to cleaning itsjciassi g y ! ; ground in a stall, and beside him| FFE CH Lt rad done officials agreed the law, passedthe foreign ministers. talks--pow help. for underdeveloped lands. | a hotfle of soldering flux, partial.|ca5¢. fires. with other segregation measures in their sixth day--was likely to{ The U.S. is chairman of the. t Memphis, since that's the ly empty, with the top off. The Man" times. the 1958 special legislature, be light. It was not ever certain peace committee at present. | : : si was vi y say - : the con-!| jo p 'mally hone call was made to the was valid. The law says no stu- he would appear before p " hasdicapped and ded mally un- mi Serpentorium, only dent can be forced to sit in the ference. [PAYS OaS ISHLES was going den in the Missouri bootheel. 3 a una I ti {source of anti-cobra serum in the |same classroom with a person of, However, it was understood ing, Santiago to convey the good-| doe: He eam the goo United States. The (Serum: 1s another race. A {Havana that he was" bringing iy) of the Cuban people. But! : seemed to rR but that he made in Bombay, India ¢ | A lawyer for the National As-jocuments purporting to lnk the| 4 ring a stop in Caracas Sunday 4 Persons On woke at 6 am Sunday fo find, While air force lieutenants sociation for the Advancement of|pominican Republic's dictator, v x - oh ¥ ight he described the conference the child dead beside him in bed,James H. Ahmann and Larry|Colored People, Wiley Branton, Generalissimo Rafael Trujillo, ne = nd said His ; Constable W. L. Smith investi. - said the NAACP will go to comt with the' anti-Castro conspiracy|iy oie is not interested in it. He, Lake Unharmed Violenc In South | DURBAN, South Africa (Reut- |ers)--Violence flared again today (throughout Natal province follow- ing a weekend of rioting and ar- | son by African natives protesting government regulations. Trouble hit communities in In UK. Look --_-- Some Like It Hot. (Reuters)--Hufidreds prostitutes began look- South Natal and exira police ing for jobs today as the courts| . cracked down on streeftwalking| Admir 1 under a new law aimed at wiping vice off city streets in Britain The first two prostitutes ar rested under the new law, which President enhower led FISHERS ISLAND, N.Y. (AP) went into effect at midnight Sat- United States today in mourning urday, were fined £5 today, with the death of Fleet Admiral Wil- the option of 14 days in jail econd offence could cost liam F. (Bull) Halsey Halsey. 76, died here Sunday of and the judge ecould/d heart aftack while vacationing Jail for a third An attractive red-haired prostit tute fold reporters as she emerged from court that "this is the end of this for me.' ' She said she now earns between £200 and £300 a week but has taken a job at a hospital paving £6 a week because of the new law. A blonde with her said: "I "don't want to give it up hut I am afraid I will have to. 1 ha got a job lined up. . . ." Both women had heen arreste before midnight Saturday and had paid a £2 fine, the maximum under the old laws. Until now, the girls had referred derisively to the fine as their "income tax." London's streets, where thou- sands of streetwalkers normally solicit, were bare of streetwalkers Sunday night--even the Soho dis- trict in the heart of the city which had been dubbed London's "square mile of sin." Only two women were arrested after the new law took effect Normally there are between 20 and 60 in th courts every Mon- fleet a telling weapon. His motto|804. enemy pianes, sank or dam- day morning. CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-657 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 e gained fame as the admiral who chased the Japanese fleet to its death in the Pacific during the Second World War Eisenhower, who heard the news of Malseys death at Gettys- iburg, Pa., said he had lost a warm personal friend, and the US. one of its "great natural leaders SHINING EXAMPLE Only four men have held the title of fleet admiral--a life rank. Halsey"s death leaves Chester W, {Thitz as the only one surviving. erkeley, Calif., Nimitz said tht Halsey "has left for all of us a XMhining example of courage and service." Halsey was born in Elizabeth, | N.J., the son of a ship captain. | He graduated in 1904 fzom Anna-| is Be | When Haisey took co and of avy forces in the South Pagific| |in 1942, the tide of war was/run-| ning heavily in favor of Japan. | "We had rothing but a shoe-| string," he =aid later. "We were| told to hold on and we held on--| from Guadalcanal to Tokyo." | His daring made the shoestring {was simple--"Hit hard, hit fast and bit often { "A few months after taking {command, he led his forces deep) {info the Paeifiefor a strike at the Marshall and Gilbert isiands, the {first big naval offensive of the Pacific war UNORTHODOX WARFARE Répeatedly he scored against superior enemy forces. 'Ike, U.S. Mourn Halsey the ; Z iwere keeping men unemployed. | Queen chased after them. vidual employee, management| The other occupants of the hoat gated. to fight any attempt to segregate|the Cuban regime says it uncov-| & i 1garen -- Samm -- | Negro students in class. He said|ered Jat week. {also described the OAS as "use ORILLIA (CP)--Two men and 11 e ay ine US. Supreme Court had The foreign ministers mean. |'®5* Ghd ; p [two boys rwho.. failed io relums ruled in an Oklahoma case that | hile hammered out agreement Nobody in it realizes or will ) p | i i \ th $ boat on the { a Negro, once admitted to an in-\on a set of resolutions, expected| deal with he foal piotiism in the et J ey wen) ing a | tegrated school, could not be seg- to be signed at a final conference, Caribbean and in An SMmeT. | arly Friday turned up unharmed 0 at er regated within the school, session Tuesday, ica, which is the economic prob-{23Y PY | School board secretary Ted L. lem," he said. | . ' |Lamb said McLeod's request was|TO STUDY INVASIONS 2 He also charged that the OAS| The four, ail of Toroito, had Tica | ; {the only one received so far. He| The key resolution would give|"frequently is used by certain| apparently camped in Jie busi . 0 a a Y {said he hoped not many othersjthe already existing inter-Ameri-| people for their own needs." Hojovernight. They were ent would follow. can peace committee of the Or-|asserted that Trujillo wanted the|as Raymond Steel, 24; Roger Lu- (were moved to the area from | Hall is one of two high school ganization of American States|conference held to coincide *'with|casick, 38, and Mr. Lucasick's Port Shepstone and Pietermaritz- BALMORAL, Scotland (AP)- | integrated last week when public|temporary powers to studyithe plot to invade Cuba." sons Reg, 11, and Bill, 10. {burg. » |The Queen smiled and waved) nc opened for the first time| "methods and procedures to pre-| Castro, who is commander-in-| Provincial police were about to More than 100 African women bappily Sunday during her first| since Arkansas Governor Orval|vent activities originating abroad|chief of Cuba's armed forces, |begin searching the lake when were arrested at Umtwalumi|public appearance since Buck-lp, uo" closed them after the designed to overthrow constituted was accompanied by his wife and|the party turned up in their near Port Shepstone on charges|ingbam Palace announced she is yo 1057 integration dispute. governments." 40 other Cubans. rented boat. of creating a disturbance. The|expecting another child. ~The aim i8 to prevent such women were reported to have] A crowd of several hundred got (things as the invasion of Panama | built roadblocks, stopped seven|a fleeting glimpse of the I3year-| , last April by about 100 men, | buses and demanded to be taken |old Queen as she drove from Bal a or 0 e mostly Cubans; recent invasions {to Durban or Pietermartizburg to|moral Castle and entered nearby of Nicaragua from Costa i Rica I scue Africans imprisoned there. |Crathie Church for Sunday serv- ow land Honduras, the Dominican Durban city officials sent to the ices. | SS ---- | suburb of Cato Manor to deal | Dressed in a bright lemon] Revision - | with health services were forced! short coat and skirt with match-| Six Burned [to leave again because of "the at- ing hat, the Queen stepped from| i | titude of the Africans." her car unassisted by Prince Advocated . | | Police left the south coast re-|Philip or Princess Margaret. | In Boat Fire | Isort of Port Shepstone for a com: |Prince Charles and Princess OTTAWA (CP) A pressing munity store in Ifafa village/Anne, who was nine years old AY -- A pres | n | after a crowd of demonstratingSaturday, came along in another need exists for modernizing the | ORILLIA (OF) gi Youngsters natives cut telephone lines. {car and followed their parents federal Jaber code, J. pe Har. suffer a Bhs oarne Salutaay Police arrested 84 women Fri-|into the church through a private £ HE 03 Se ont ha A ep of him To Wve uo Jeo Home| day and another 42 Saturday for entrance screened from public( 1¢ anna iy Tuction. As%0 {Bay about 40 miles northwest of (creating disturbances at Ifafa infview by a row of trees. aon. ion Td tire Rotars here on Georgian Bav. the Isipofu area, | Saturday, the Queen took Prin-|cq uy 0 cid Canadian labor leg-| The vessel's tank had just been Two armored cars carrying 18|cess Anne on a birthday picnic in| | xi 9 J . | islation 'has permitted a marked |filled with gasoline when a spark | policemen went to the South Na-|the forest near Balmoral Castle. imbalance between the economic |from the starter apparently fired| |tal community of St. Faith's Mis-| Anne pranced through the woods power of certain unions and other [gasoline fumes. | |sion following reports that alin a game of hide and seek with| sections of the Canadian econ- ~ Mary Anne Henderson, 15, of crowd of about 1,000 converged|10-year-old Charles. |omy." Toronto suffered slight burns and on the mission and refused to pay| "Come and play with us,| «qn the past the unions needed | James Leckie, 20, of Stoney Creek | due today because South|Daddy," they called to Prince| protection," Me. Harrington|who started the engine, suffered | Africa's racial segregation laws| Philip. The prince did, and the added, "but today it is the indi- [scorched feet. and the public who need it. Irre-|were: Margaret Joan Leckie, 16, sponsible union acts threaten the|of Burlington, Diane Henderson, economic life of Canada, especi-|12, of Toronto, Barbara Allen, 16, LA HE [ally in view of our reliance on|of Burlington and Bill Ogilvie, 20, | the export trad "id of Stoney Creek. ' | ADMIRAL HALSEY explained, "because we violate all traditional rules of naval war- fare. We do the exact opposite what they expect us to do. Most important, whatever we do, we do fast." Finally his forces gained con trol of the Pacific and in 1945, during a 35-day period, his com- mand destroyed or damaged 2,- aged 148 Japanese combat ships and sank or damaged 1,598 mer- chant ships Historians expressed mixed views of his role in the 1944 battle of Leyte Gulf. Sir Winston | Promoters Licence Suspended \ 'Mom's Troubles NEW YORK (AP)--The New York State Athletic Commis- sion today suspended the promoter's licence of Rosensohn ! Enterprises, Inc., and matchmaker's licence of Bill. Rosensohn. | Rosensohn promoted the June 26 heavyweight fight at Yankee | Stadium in which Ingemar Johansson won the world title from | Are Explained | TORONTO (CP)--Mrs. Bertha Last ooo ried the} Pope John Sends $2000 Gift | (Mom) Whyte, campaigning to re- sisiuren Were feglecied ed, Sdoly ! OTTAWA (CP)--Pope John has made a gift of $2000 to [open her Whytehaven children's TOW % NAAR So Eiutin ob vee help the families who suffered losses in a storm that hit the |mission .at Bowmanville, said Peierborough. def fishing fleet at Escuminac, N.B., last June. The Canadian [Sunday night her troubles stem Mrs. Whyte has said she will Catholic Conference said today the papal donation has been [from "a battle between Christ) NTS 2, + ita ** |underta country-wide speak- received by' Most Rev. Norbert Robichaud, archbishop of [and the anti-Christs. seniake 3 oo ey for a new Moncton, N.B She added: "Soon we will see | Floyd Patterson. who will look ater the children-- "ie 0 0 ad dur Three Oshawa Youths May Be Charged God or the government." own high school," she said Sun. "THEY GET TIRED' PETERBOROUGH (CP)--Provincial police said today | Mrs. Whyte spoke to Sout 90/day night. "But first we must get charges are being considered against three juveniles from |al the Missionary Tabernacle. |our children back. That's what. Mrs. Gloria | alarm when Bradley, 3%, fell Churchill said 'Halsey was de- coyed intn a trap. But Halsev maintained he was right, The Japanese sarrender was signed on his flagship, the battle-| Missouri. "We get away with it," be once/ship } * from the Serpent Mounds excavation site &ght miles South. |vincial officials removed 107 chil- said his department "will take| Fla, told newsmen as her cfil- | land slid down a rope and east of here. Police said 10 pieces of bond were recoverd |dren from her mission after giv-|another look at the "matter" if! dren slept today after 'a hair- | braced herself against the sides before the boys and their families left the Provincial park |ing evidence there was over-/ Mrs. Whyte applies to open, raising adventure. Christina, | of the well, holding the boy until where' the excavations are located, Other park visitors: had [crowding and illness at Whyte-| Whytehaven in accordance with 21, being patted om the head | firemen arrived. notified field director Richard Jobnston, who called police, haven, provincial laws. : by her mother, raised the | > - Oshawa alleged to have pilfered prehistoric bones\Sunday | More than two weeks &go pro-| Welfare Minister Cecile has| Moreland, 29, of Miamisburg, | down a 40-foot well. Mrs. More