THOUGHT FOR If the weather TODAY were not changeable and human beings not peculiar, people would not have nearly so much to talk about, Re ie Oshawa Tines PGP " WEATHER REPORT * pend Mg tered showers tonight, mostly cloudy with occasional showers Friday, winds light, 3 co \ ry J VOL, 89--NO. 139 OSHAWA? THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 1960 rar Class Mol THIRTY-SIX PUBLISHERS and gen- er® managers of daily news- papers from many sections of *"a province gathered in Osh- «a this morning for the sum- mer meeting of the Ontario Producer, Star Accuse Each Other MONTREAL (CP)--New York producer William L. Taub who laid a complaint against enter. tainer Josephine Baker was scheduled to appear in magis- trates court here today to face counter-charges of theft iaid\by Miss Baker's director. Stephen Papich, accused wit! Mise Baker of bringing into Can- pods stolen in another coun- t the charges against anh Wednesday afternoon. Ti was arrested on a theft warrant fn Montreal lawyers' later releaszd The 54-year-old internationally- known singer was prevented from making her first show in a Montreal night club Tuesday when she and Papich were ar- rested on a warrant signed by Taub. Leon Jeanotte, owner of the club. put up $2,000 to free the two and Miss Baker appeared in a later show. Taub charged the two were in possession of $10,669 worth of stolen goods. These included: a mink jacket, four men's jackets, four mens dress suits, four straw hats, 17 full orchestration series of musical selections and airline tickets to France. Papich alleges that while he was being held at provincial police headquarters witn the shapely chanteuse Taub entered his unlocked hotel room and 'ook about $500 in United States cur- rency, plus some sheet music and Jrivonal documents valued at Police Press Suspect Hunt TORONTO (CP)~--Police today sed their search for Leonard ade, 35; wanted on a warrant gL. him with murder in con- nection with the trunk death of Mrs. Marjorie E. Scott, 37. The warrant was issued Wed. nesday following identification of Mrs. Scott's body, shipped ex- press collect last month in a TIMES TOUR Following the meeting Provincial Daily - Newspapers Association, Caught by the cam- era prior to the luncheon, in Hotel Genosha at noon, given by the mayor and members of city council, from left, are 2-DAY GATHERING of the association and J. Ross Bates, assistant publisher of The St. Catherines Standard, who is vice-president of the association, --Oshawa Times Photo Be Active, Thomas L. Wilson, publisher of The Oshawa Times, host to the gathering; Ald, E. F. Bastedo, representing His Worship Mayor Lyman A. Gifford; E. J. Mannion, 'of Toronto, president A large group of the publishers and managers of the daily news- papers in Ontario, with the ex- ception of the metropolitan news- papers, arrived in Oshawa this morning for a two-day business and social gathering. The gather- ing is the annual meet- Dailies Meet Eat Less, Doctors Say In Oshawa BANFF, Alta, (CP)--You will be healthier if you have some party will be guests at a recep- tion and luncheon tendered by General Motors of Canada, Limit- ed. During the afternoon the vis- itors will be taken on a guided tour of the General Motors as- sembly plant. physicai activity--no matter what your age. The only way to lose weight is to eat less. These weré the findings of com mittees which reported Wednes- day to the Canadian Medical As- sociation's annual convention. ing of the members of the On- tario Provincial Daily News- papers Association, The members st: arrive His Worship, the vis- itors toured the plant of The! Oshawa Times. Later in the af- ternoon they paid visits to Camp Samac, the National Stud Farm and the downtown and Oshawa Shopping Centres. At'5 p.m, they will be tendered a reception by Col. R. 8. Me- Laughlin at Parkwood and to- night the delegates to the meet- ing will attend a banquet in Hotel Genosha with T, L, Wilson, pub- lisher of The Oshawa Times, act- mg as host Hon. Michael Starr, federal minister of labor, will be, the speaker E. J. Mannion, president of the Ontario Provin- cial Daily Newspapers Associa- tion, will also speak. Friday morning will be devoted to a business session, At noon the trunk from Toronto to Argentia, |' Nfld. | Toronto detectives today con- | centrated their search for the fus- | pect In a residential district in| downtown Toronto. Mrs, Scott is | believed to have been living in! that area shortly before her dis-| ; "7 appearance. ] Her partially-decomposed body| , was found in a small trunk along with pleces of clothing and linen by a CNR express agent at Ar- entia, a United States naval ase 85 miles west of St. John's. Cause of her death has not yet been established Wednesday in "Kingston, Eades father said he was shocked at the mews a warrant had been issued in Toronto for his son's arrest, Leonard Eade: who has the same name as his son, said the nger Leonard was "a good who attended church and nday School as a lad." He is one of seven children. Rollie Tremblay, a one-| armed truck driver, whose ve. hicle police believe may have | taken the trunk to a CNR Ex: | press office, was questioned Wed-| nesday by police. CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS RESUMES HIKE British hiker Dr. Barbara Moore starts walking again on U.S. Highway 40, west of POLICE RA 5-1133 'FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 : HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 Brazil, Indiana, after being re- leased from the hospital in Brazil this morning. Dr, Moore was hospitalized Monday after being struck by a car. --AP Wirephoto The committee on public health proof is agreed all ages physical in QUEEN WONDERS iS |G enter Bln, report sald that doctors would like to see young people |develop physically to their fullest |capabilities without faddism and carry an interest in games and sports as participants in later years. NEED RECREATION The committee found that Ca- nadians who lead active lives in their daily work need recreation but not necessarily physical ac- tivity. But persons who do not get physical activity in their work should be encouraged to get more lexercise. Qu a television film about the dragon . headed monster re- ried to inhabit Scotland's h Ness. "Her Majesty was very in- terested," said the mayor. "She said she wondered what they would ever do with it if they ever caught it." The Queen is staying at Windsor Castle during the current Royal Ascot races. Jamaican Weed Not Cancer Cure HONEY HARBOUR (CP)--The men behind the microscopes were enthusiastic but medical men saw little to cheer about today as they discussed a 'wild, blue-petalled Jamaican weed. Some 200 scientists, research- ers and physicians devoted the day to VLB--the nickname for a natives there brewed a tea from them to combat diabetes. Would Dr. Noble check? "We were looking for an effect on diabetes," he said. "But the animals we injected got an infection of the bone mar- row and died." Since leuk is char; " TP) compound tagged vi doctors which discovered it. cussions and lectures. and the Philippine islands. LEUKEMIA AID team which found it: blastine by the team of Canadian They were attending the fourth Canadian Cancer Conference which wound up four days of dis- VLB is extracted from the peri- winkle plant found in Jamaica Said Dr. J. H. Cutts, one of . [the University of Western Ontario "VLB is far bteter than any other anit-tumor drug for the ; [treatment of leukemia in anim- by an over-production of white blood cells cancer tests were the next step. TOKYO (CP) -- Japan's em- battled Premier Nobusuke Kishi said today he has decided Presi- dent Eisenhower's scheduled visit to Tokyo should be postponed in view of the increasing rioting here against the American-Japan- ese security trealy. The grim-faced 64-year-old Lib- eral-Democrat leader told report- ers he had decided the United States president's visit should be postponed becaiise of the wave of violence rampant in Tokyo. He warned: "Japan must fight head on" against this. Kishi said he did not know at what future date a president of the United States might be asked to visit Japan, but that when the time came he would be given a warm welcome. He added that the cancellation of the Eisenhower invitation would not affect the plans of Crown Prince Akihito and his bride of a year to visit the U.S. in the fall, WORD SPREADS Kyodo News Agency said gov- ernment leaders had decided to call off the visit, scheduled to start Sunday, because the violent rioting against Kishi's govern- ment had demonstrated that "full security measures would be dif- ficult to enforce." Kyodo said Foreign Minister Alichiro Fujiyama and U.S. Am- bassador Douglas MacArthur II agreed today that under F Present conditions in Japan "it might be on | difficult to guarantee the presi- dent's safety." The word quickly si spread fo | than 15,000 anti-gove: J the streets WL pe senhower's not coming! ing?" announcement after his Sabinet had convened in its second emer- gency since last midnight Jap Premier Bows To Mob that violent left-wing demonstra- tors--'a very tsmall group of people"'--had destroyed the hope of the Japanese people of giving Ei a warm He said the rioting against Eis- enhower's press secretary, James Hagerty, last weekend, and this week's bloody invasions of the parliament grounds, were "'obvi- ous, premeditated violence planned by the Communists," "To protect peace and freedom and the future prosperity of Japan, we must fight this vio- lence head on," he said. Kishi also served notice that he will continue to press for quick ratification of the security treaty. NOBOSUKE KISHI OTTAWA (CP)--An intensive, Senate Launches Jobless Inquiry The committee decided today to + |confident that the on-the-spot investigation of unem-|set up a special research team ployment in various regions of under Dr. John Deutsch to inves. IKE CANCELS VISI TO RIOT-HIT JAP Deep Regret Over E MANILA (AP)--President Eis- enhower today agreed to postpone his visit to Japan because of Left- ist rioting in Tokyo. James Hagerty, White House press secretary, told a press con-|the ference that although the presi- dent "would have liked to fulfill his long-held ambition" to visit Japan, "he fully respects the de- cision of the Japanése authori- Jes that he should postpone his p. The president blamed postpone- ment of his visit on a small or- ganized minority "led by profes- sional Communist agitators." Premier Nubusuke Kishi had said the same thing in announc- ing his government's decision to ask the president not to come. Hagerty said Eisenhower was '"'deliberate challenges to law and order" in Japan will not and eannot wreck Japanese-American relations, Reading a prepared statement, Hagerty paid wanted to make known his "full and sympathetic understanding of the decision taken hy the Japan- ese government." The statement went on to say: tigate what Canada will be launched almost immediately by the Senate man- power committee. to discuss the crisis resulting from the violent leftist riots Wed- nesday in which a girl student was killed and more than 1,000 demonstrators and police were in- jured. Thousands of leftist students and union members were massed LUIS A, B. MEDEROS * Cuban Ambassador again today outside the Parlia- ment Building in a renewal of the demonstrations against Kishi"s government and the new U.S.- Japan military alliance. DESTROY HOPE Twenty members of Kishi's party cabled ®isenhower at Man- ila on their own initiative, saying "for the sake of everlasting friendship between Japan and the United States, we beseech you to postpone your Japan visit at this time of emergency." Kishi told a press conference Seeks Asylum OTTAWA (CP)--H. E. Luis A. Baralt Mederos announced today that he has submitted his resign- ation as Cuban ambassador to Canada and will seek political asylum in Canada. He said in a statement that bis action was taken because "I find that as head of a mission, though a career diplomat as well, I can no longer defend, either effectiv- ely or with a clear conscience, ment, how the labor force is grow- ing and how industrial sectors may be changing. Senator Donald Smith (L--Nova {Scotia), vice-chairman of the spe- {cial Senate committee, said in an interview the study will begin "al. {most immediately" and will likely {take four to five months to com- | The committee also extended |an open invitation to «all federal and provincial organizations rep- resenting industry, management and labor to submit separate stu- dies on the impact of unemploy- ment. Witnesses from key groups-- such as the Canadian Labor Con. gress, the Canadian Manufactur- ers Association, the Maritime Lumber Bureau and others--will likely be summoned before the committee to provide information on particular problems. The committee endorsed an eight-point report outlining the scope of the investigation. A final report on the results of the spe- cial study and the committee hearings is not expected until those major items of policy with which I totally disagree." LATE NEWS FLASHES SEOUL (Reuters) -- Ike's Itinerary Hastily Changed President Eisenhower's new Far East early next year, Senator Smith told the commit. tee that the study will look into "evefy facet" of unemployment so that "we may be able to put our fingers on clues" to itsicause and future trends, The research investigation is to be aided by the departments of labor, trade and commerce and others, as well as by the National "He (Eisenh would like also to express his regret that a small, organized minority led by professional Communist agitators . «+ has been able by resorts to force and violence to prevent his goodwill visit and to mar the cele- bration of this centennial in Jap- T vents 'okyo visit, Eisenhower is going ahead with his plans to visit Chin. ese Nationalist Formosa and Ko- indicated although Hagerty there may" be some revision of timetable. Hagerty said E er would isenhow sail as scheduled from Manila late tonight aboard the cruiser St. Paul for Formosa, where he is due Saturday morning. The visit to Korea had been set for June 22, at the conclusion of the Tokyo stay. Hagerty said U.S, officials are in touch with Korean government officials to find out whether there should be some re- vision of the date. Presumably consideration is being given to an earlier afrival. Hagerty said in replying. to questions that he did not know whether Eisenhower would albe to visit Japan in the ing six months of his presidentisl term. anese-American relations," Despite postponement of the WASHINGTON (AP) ating and costly defeat today in the collapse of President Eisen- hower's scheduled visit 'to' Toky®. proportions. It was the second time in ex- actly a month that a great inter- national event has gone against the wishes of Eisenhower and along lines charted by the inter- national Communist leadership. At Paris May 16 Nikita Khrush- chev killed tht Big Four - The| United States suffered a humili- The Soviet-Chinese Communist conf bloc won a victory of menacing E isenhower, forced the Western Allies closer together and strengthened their resolve to re. sist Soviet threat and bluster. But the cancellation of Eisenhower's trip to Tokyo threatens to under- mine a vital anchor point of the system of anti-Communist alli. ances in the Far East, conference in its first meeting, leaving Eisenhower and his Brit- ish and French allies to survey the wreckage of their hopes for some improvement in East-West relations. Today's debacle in Tokyo is po- tentially more damaging to the U.S. and its allies, and in the long run poses a greater threat to the balance of American-So-|p, viet relations--and therefore to world peace--than did the break- down in Paris. MINIMIZE INJURY The immediate problem pelore Ei itinerary, hastily revamped following the postponement of his visit, will bring him here Sunday instead of Wednes- American Spy Pilot To Be Tried July 1 MOSCOW (Reuters) -- Francis Powers, the American pilot shot down over the Soviet Union May 1, will be put on trial here at the beginnong of July, according to usually reliable sources. The informants added it will be an open trial with journalists, diplomats and even tourists in- J it was announced today. $2 Million Blunder Charged TORONTO (CP) -- A Metropolitan Toronto agreement to buy the University Avenue military armories from the federal government is absolutely worthless, a group of Toronto veterans said today, charging that Metro Chairman Fred Gardiner has made a $2,000,000 blunder. Clues Peter Out In Investigation TORONTO (CP) -- Detectives hit a blank wall today as clues petered out in the brutal June 10 knifesslaying of Mrs. Margaret Bennett, 37. Homicide Inspector Charles Cook, who has been woking day and night on the case, suffered a heart Employment Service, er and Ji i mier 13a Kishi, in Tet, ™ REGIONAL STUDIES, tice in-|how to handle the situation to structed the research team to|Mminimize the injury to U.S.-Jap- produce statistics and other use-|anese relations and to the free ful information on "special con- world's political position and de- ditions affecting the various reg-|fence structure throughout the Kishi's , being com- pelled to "confess its' inability to order, s now to have no Fink ii except to resign. Kishi himself, it was noted here said he would not quit or dissolve the Parliament until a pending new U.S.-Japanese security pact is ratified this weekend. The rat. €|jficatioh process will be come pleted automatically as long as 'arliament remains in session. PRIME TARGET The security pact, rather that Eisenhower's visit, has been the prime target of left-wing and Communist opposition. By hold. re.|ing Parliament in session Kishi has the power to win the form of a victory on the issue of its rati. fication, but it may prove to be an empty victory unless new pol- itical forces come into play is Tokyo now that the visit has been ions of,Canada." Far East, cancelled. | cure." Dr. I. 8. Johnson, in charge of |yiied. attack Seday and was taken to hospital in serious 'condition. cancer research for Lilly Re- search Laboratories of Indiana- polis, the company Jpolycingithe compound: THREE ESCAPE INJURY "As research workers we \be- lieve VLB's most important ap- plication is as a tool to obtain more information on the funda- mona biochemical processes in cells." Dr. 0. H. Warwick, head physi- clan at Princess Margaret Hos- pital in Toronto, who has treated 46 persons with VLB: "We have had temporary re- missions, usually of short dura. tion. We cannot promise a cure at all--we just know that it won't NEWCASTLE (Staff) -- Three unidentified crew members on a {CPR freight train bound for where blood cells are made. All agreed VLB will not cure (cancer. It has caused leukemia to vanish temporarily in a few cases in man, It has had some 4 small success in temporary relief of Hodgkins' disease, They agreed also that #t has some harmful side effects--such as attacking the bone' marrow VLB was discovered-by acci- Montreal from Toronto escaped injury when four cabooses, including the one in which they were riding, were derailed on the CPR mainline approximately a mile west of here Wednesday night As a result of the derailment, which is said to have happened while the train was travelling at the lead caboose's coupling work- ed loose and fell to the tracks. The broken coupling then "jill poked" (hoisted) the front wheels of the first caboose causing it and the next two behind to careen off the track into a8 high embank- ment bordering the track. PARTIALLY DERAILED The fourth caboose, containing the three crewmen, was only par- tially derailed. The front wheels left the track and, according to Train Derailment Near Newcastle appeared to be extensive. All four | were of wooden construction and of an older type. Railway officials insist the car which dropped the coupling was not a CPR car, but of "foreign" § ownership, They "declined to say who owned the car, This derailthent occurred in ' exactly the same localon as one of a more serious nature about a year ago. At that time, a number of box 40 mph. the eastbound track was blocked from 10.30 p.m. Wednes-| day until 6.00 a.m. today. East- dent, Dr. R. L. Noble was working on diabetes and cancer when he { received an envelope of dried per-/bound trains were rerouted iwinkle seeds. They came from a through Peterborough. doctor ia Jamaica who said the! According to railway officials,| cars left the track and: caused considerable damage to both cars jury. {and track. In addition a number Damage {; t= four cars, which of small cars which were being were empty save for the three | transported by rail were de- passengers, ls not yet known but|/molished in the wreck. railway workers, this was the reason for the three escaping in- >»