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The Oshawa Times, 5 Jul 1960, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY Whe least surprising headline in "Cost of Livi June: Again." ng Rises ' ¢ Osharon Time \_ WEATHER REPORT Mainly sunny today and Weds nesday, winds west. VOL. 89--NO. 154 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, TUESDAY, JULY 5, 1960 Authorized Post Office as Second Class Mail Department, Ottawa SIXTEEN PAGES ailways | May Boost Fare OTTAWA (CP)--Canadian rail-| ways were granted authority to- day by the board of transport commissioners to boost passenger rates to five cents a mile from 44, an increase of .6 cents a mile. An order issued by the board requires the railways to publish the rates they propose to incre in the Canada Gazette and to an- nounce the date they will be ef- fective. i A board official said the order gives the railways authority to in- crease passenger fares by a max Negro Pledges a | Ways Rate imum of .6 cents a mile if they desire to do so. Commuter fares are not included in the order. It was expected here that the railways would increase rates only in areas where such action would not adversely affect cur- rent traffic, The order also gives the rail- authority to continue to charge a minimum passenger fare of 25 cents, exclusive of com- muter tes hrushchev Lambastes To Stick It Out PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) -- A Negro vowed Monday he will never be driven from the all-| white neighborhood where his partially - completed hotise was doused with gasoline and set afire Sunday night. "We're going to tear down the burned part tomorrow and start rebuilding," said Rowan M. Wiley, a 41-year-old sheet metal worker. "If they keep burning the house down, I'll pitch a tent. But I'm definitely going to live out there," he said. Wiley estimated the damage to his uncompleted, split-level home! at between $7,000 and $9,000. He said it was covered by insurance. When completed, the house wil be worth about $20,000. Pickets Try | T B ttl U |all the consequences resulting |, issued when President Eisen- Rubber Plant KITCHENER (CP) ~-- Pickets an umsuccessful attempt Monday to prevent a shipment of rubber footwear leaving the Kauf- man Rubber Company warehouse | in nearby Waterloo. This was the only scuffle re- ported as the company's strike- bound Kitchener plant re-opened| under the protection of a court| injunction limiting pickets to four| at each gate. Picket-line violence io joker with startled pedes-|their shoes." was blamed for the closing of the plant Thursday, the day the in-| junction was granted. | W. Germany comnts seams ur ~ STORK WINS RACE TO OSHAWA GENERAL HOSPITAL Soviet Premier Khrushchev con- 1 : | 0 tinued his attacks on West Ger-| Mrs. Dan Normoyle proudly many Monday night, raising the| displays her five-day-old daugh- spectre of a new anschiuss that ter, Sandra Denise, who was would return Austria to German | born late last Thursday night | Gedardale Fire Department. The above picture was taken | today in the maternity ward of the Oshawa General Hospi- Khrushchev 1imit on his domination, In contrast to the lighthearted tone of his motorbus tour through Austria's lederhosen and yodeling country, Khrushchev warned that the Soviet Union would not sit still if Austria's neutrality is violated. He used these words to revive the memory of Hitler's takeover of Austria in 1938: "There are quite a few (in West Germany) who have not given up plans for the creation of a greaten Germany, who are not satisfied with the existence of an independ- ent Austrian state." He also repeated the Soviet threat to sign a separate peace treaty with East Germany "with from that," if the West does not agree to peace treaties with both Germanys and to make West Ber- lin a demilitarized, so - called neutral city. As in the past, did net time This is the sixth day of Khrush- chev"s nineday state visit to Austria and the Soviet leader is playing a variety of roles, Some- times he issues stern warnings to President Eisenhower and West German Chancellor Konrad Ade- nauer, His voice husky with emotion, he talks of his great strivings for world peace. He is also a critic of modern art, a judge of Austrian livestock trians he walks, meets on morning in her father's car outside the tal where mother and daughter | were preparing to depart for their home at 717 Stone street. oth are in tip-top shape. { (Please turn to page two, col- umns one and two for story). --Oshawa Times Photo, HAVANA (AP)--Fidel Castro's cabinet, ministers met into the |early morning hours today. They |were believed drafting orders for |seizure of American property to Ee om |hower cuts the Cuban guota. i sugar was expected to act promptly on the authority Con- gress gave him Monday to sus. v all: or part of the still une Eiserhowe? can also reduce orf suspend the American purchases of Cuban sugar at premium prices for the first three months of 1961, In retaliation, the bearded Cu- ban revolutionary has threatened to take over the property of |Americans "down to the nails of While the ministers sonlorselt] FIDEL CASTRO Conrado Becquer, head of Cuba's|500,000 sugar workers, told his About 208 workers entered the| plant without interference, apart from taunts from about 200 strik- ers outside the plant. Normally | about 550 workers would have reported. Floyd Nafziger, president of the| United Rubber Workers (CLC) local, "claimed the attendance at the plant proved as '"'utterly false "the company's argument that only a minority of employ- ees supported the union. He said this argument had been advanced by the company for not meeting * with the union. A union meeting attended by about 160 approved plans for con- forces to stand ready to seize the 36 sugar mills in Cuba owned by | Americans. Jesus 'Soto, left wing organiza- tion secretary of the Cuban Con- | federation of Labor, told a TV audience workers are ready to [take a wage cut or evén donate |part of their salaries to keep the |sugar industry going ii ihe U.S, |closes off its market to Cuban | sugar. The government newspaper likened Congress to a "vulgar thief" for its action on the sugar quota. Castro's official family and the ranks of labor were confident tinuing the strike, Mr. Nafziger said. Company President A. R. Kauf- man said production is not back | to normal. He said the company] will ask to have the injunction cover the Waterloo warehouse as well as the Kitchener plant when the Supreme Court hears an ap- plication in Toronto Wednesday for an extension of the injunction. | § The scuffle outside the ware- house started when pickets tried unsuccessfully to stop a leaving the warehouse to transfe: the footwear to a railway freight car across the street, truck | 22 JOAN JOHNSON SIMPLE METHOD {that the government would over. come the threat of an oil shor- tage arising from the seizure of the island's three foreign oil re- fineries and the companies' cut- off in Cuba's normal supply of Venezuelan oil. Castro To Seize All US. In Sight TO GET RUSSIAN OIL The country was told that many tankers have been offered to bring Soviet crude oil here un- der the oil-for-sugar barter agree- ment * signed with the Soviet Union, : Alfonso Gutierrez, the Mexican engineer who heads the Petrol- eum Institute, said in a television Srl rou Bees 1 Fara He cited press reports of an agreement calling for Stavros Niarchos, the Greek shipping magnate, to rent Russian ships to carry oil to Japan and Europe, thus freeing Russian tankers for the run to Havana. Authoritative sources said eight tankers, owned or chartered by the Communists, already are carrying a total of 60,000 tons of | Russian crude oil to bolster the |dwindling stocks at the refiner- |1es. |LITTLE ON HAND | 'This represents about a week's {supply for Cuba, which has little {hydro-electric or coal facilities and depends on oil for most of its power. Last Saturday the Petroleum Institute reported only about 17 days' supply of crude foil on hand. | One of the ships, the 19,500-ton big Communist tanker Pekin, was in a collision in the Mediterran- ean and may be delayed, but the seven others are due in Havana this month. The Pekin collided with a Nor- |wegian tanKer off the coast of Tunisia. French officials at Bi- zerte said the Pekin damaged its bow and was proceeding on its own power. The Norwegian ship, the 15,067-ton Rondefjell, was be- ing towed into Bizerte. TV Licences OTTAWA (CP)--The board of Broadcast Governors today rec- . Interview Admitted cation by publisher Roy Thom- 7 bell of Port Credit, Ont., to pur- chase television station CKGN- TV North Bay, Mrs. 'Campbell, who has inter- Recommended | ough; 20 per cent of the company | operating her father's Canadian ommended approval of an appli-| newspapers; and 15 per cent of | thinks of the good old days before | Thomson International, which son's daughter, Mrs. C. E. Camp- |operates his British and Ameri-|gaid. | can' papers, Kenneth Thomson told the gov- ernors it is the basic policy of "our organization" to re - invest UAW DEMANDS AUTO INQUIRY Liberals Rule Car Industry Challenged To Make Canadian Model a In Quebec [ner « carrying delegation of 200(the UAW's Canadian director OTTAWA (CP)--A lively, ban- members of the United Automo-| bile Workers (CLC) today won| After the cabinet ministers left, George Burt told the group that chances are good for a special ine QUEBEC (CP) -- Premier An-| cabinet meetings for this morn- prime Minister Diefenbaker's in-| vestigation. He said Mr. Nowlan tonio Barrette and members of ing. Mr. Barrette said he would (ovact in a full-scale royal com-| whispered to him after Mr, his cabinet today handed their|tender his resignation to the lieu-| icin investigation of Canada's|Diefenbaker's remarks: resignations to Lieutenant-Gover- nor Onesime Gagnon. | Mr. Barrette called on Mr, Gag- | non following a cabinet meeting that lasted nearly two hours. | Mr. Gagnon immediately called | tenant - governor following his party's last cabinet get-together. | Mr, Lesage said a press con-| ference would be held after his cabinet holds a morning meeting. He would present his list of cab- Liberal Leader Jean Lesage to|inet choices to the lieutenant- whether he was ready to form a government, | Liberal Leader Jean Lesage is to be sworn in as premier shortly | after Union Nationale Premier | Antonio Barrtete, whose party | met defeat in the June 22 Quebec | election, turns in his resignation |to Lieutenant-Governor Onesime| Gagnon. | The new cabinet is to be sworn in at the same ceremony. The Liberals are taking over after 16 years as the opposition party. At a press conference follow- ing a brief meeing with Mr, Barrette, Mr. Lesage said the swearing-in ceremony would be held at 3 p.m if the lieutenant- governor approved and in the legislative council chamber--the provincial upper house. Both party leaders scheduled | HYPNOTIST 'GOES TOO FAR LONDON (Reuters)-- Housewife Mrs. Jean Dyke .. told a court Monday that a hypnotist asked her to imagine naked girls dancing on a sun-drench tropical is land--then told her to take her clothes off and join the girls, She said she broke off her treatment for a nervous dis- order when hypnotist Victor Vinmar of Dublin tried to kiss her. The court' ordered Vinmar to pay back Mrs. Dyke's £53 ($145) fee. It rejected his claim that it was part of the treatment for tight clothing to be. loosp ened for relaxation and easier breathing, | | his office, presumably to ask him governor immediately after Mr. | Barrette had resigned. | It is expected Georges La- | palme, Liberal leader before the election of Mr. Lesage to that post, is in line for appointment as provincial secretary or attor-| ney-general, { ailing automobile industry. Mr. Diefenbaker told the UAW | delegation in a crowded Com-| mons committee room that the| idea of a government inquiry into the problems of the auto industry was "worthy of the most serious and immediate consideration." "I'm with you if there's action that can be taken," said the prime minister, who met the un- ion leaders together with Revenue| Minister Nowlan and Labor Min- ister Starr. . TRUMAN ONSLAUGHT To Quit NEW YORK (AP) -- Senator John F. Kennedy has replied with an emphatic "no" to Harry |S. Truman's suggestion that he drop out of the presidential race for 1960. "I do not intend to step aside at anyone's request," the Massa- chusetts Democrat said Monday. "I was the only candidate to risk my chances in all the primaries --the only one te visit every state." came from quarter, Two supporters of Senafor Lyn- don B. Johnson, the Senate ma- jority leader from Texas, said Kennedy is suffering from Ad- dison's disease, which is defined as a chronie ailment usually re.- sulting from tuberculosis, involv- ing insufficient production of adrenalin, A Kennedy aide called this '""despicable tactics." TV ARPEARANCE Kennedy told a nation-wide tel- evision and radio audience he is Kennedy Refuses otal BC hte) another : |ready for the presidency because Contest hi y JACK KENNEDY "Well, George, it looks as' # you're going to get your royal commission." In the Commons later, Mr, Diefenbaker said the government will give immediate considera- tion to the UAW request for a royal commission into the car in. dustry or a tariff board survey. The union brief, bolstered by impromptu speeches by union leaders from key centres in the automobile and auto parts indus. try portrayed an ailing industry hampered by foreign car imports and hurt by growing unemploy- ment. It also ticked off the auto ine dustry itself for not meeting small « car foreign competition with a smaller, cheaper Canadian model of its own, While rejecting any suggestions to "take over" the auto industry, Mr. Diefenbaker told the delega- tion: "I will not give any support or tolerance to any industry that does not have regard for the pub- lic interest." He also indicated that Canada plans to revamp some of its oblie gations under the General Agree- ment on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) when it comes up for dis- cussion in September, WARNING NOTE S| from union les yd times unless something is don quickly to protect the auto indus "We don't want to draw unem- ployment insurance," said Gor don Lambert, St. Catharines. "We want jobs." "This country has become an importer's paradise," added Bill Rutherford, Oshawa. Mr. Burt read his 11-page brief to the three cabinet ministers in is needed to cope with new prob- lems and new opportunities, After reading a prepared state- ment, he answered questions at al press conference. the commons railway committee chamber, "Our whole point in being in Ottawa today.is that we believe | that if the government acts--and a new generation of leadership Orillia ORILLIA (CP)--A union-man- agement contract dispute may sound the death knell of this Sim- coe County town's second largest industry. In danger of being closed is the Otaco Limited farm ma chinery, plant, hit by a strike since June 1. Shortly after picket-line vio- lence flared Monday, company owner R. W. Phelps said "It is pletely close it down." The statement was "ridiculous" by James Robertson of Toronto, a representative of ica (CLC), whose members are involved in the squabble, "It only proves that he hasn't kept up with the times and still trade unions," Mr. Robertson | POLICE ATTACKED | Police Chief E. W. McIntyre {said his officers were "kicked Battle Pickets termed 5 the United Steelworkers of Amer-| | Police The union says Otaco wages are 50 cents an hour below those paid by other industries in Orillia, The company offered a six-cent hourly increase to employees earning lgss..than $1.20 an hour and three cenfs to those earning Thus 'the front-runner in the/Management co-operates -- the Democratic party nom in ation| Canadian autmobile industry can race replied to the former pres- Produce a car which will suit ident's statements that he is too| Canadians better than any now young and inexperienced for the| on the road at a price which will country's highest elective office, Increase sales and considerably "7 bave encountered and: sur back the serious inroads that vived every kind of hazard ana Small Joeign cars lave made Every {into our industry," said the brief opposition," Kennedy empha-| from George Burt, UAW Cana- sized, "and I do not intend to|gian director ' withdraw. my name now, on the| "He told Mr. Diefenbaker to get eve of the convention. after the automobile manufactur- Truman made his charge Sat-/ers and let them know t.%a urday and threw in the implica-| great deal of the cure lies within tion that the party's nominating| industry itself and that Canadians convention, which opens July 11|expect the industry to act like a in Los Angeles, seemed rigged in| Canadian industry and do every. Kennedy's favor. To that, the senator replied: "To the extent that I have any- more. The tnion membership rejected this. thing to do with it, it will be an open convention." thing in its power to compete from a Canadian base." Text of his brief was released to the press in advance of de- livery. my present intention to sell the|: assets of the plant and com-| i Heart Beat Help Found BALTIMORE (AP) -- Johns in surgery and professor Emeri- Hopkins Hospital doctors have tus of electrical engineering, in- developed a simple method for structor in surgery, restoring heart beat by applying! Their technique has Become pressure on the chest. standard procedure in the Hop- need for opening the chest and used on more than 50 patients massaging the heart of a person ranging in age from one month when the vital organ has stopped to 82 years. beating In 72 per cent of the cases pa- It merely takes a pair of hands tients were restored to their for- search ordered by Attorney-Gen-|certain market conditions that! be mer condition and survived. firemen have been the method and recently them restored the heart r-old man. and know - how that iearned in a few minutes Local The Johns Hopkins team which taught worked out the method included tw Dr. W.B. Kouwenhoven, lecturer of can 0 of a 67-ye kp {way it is don CITY EMERGENCY | The o rat 4 places one of his hands over the other, with the PHONE NUMBERS heel of the lower or resting on > lower part of the patient's) POLICE RA 5-1133 thone. Firm pressure is ap- FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 orea |plied about once a second, using body weight if necessary to move] the bre: me' down about an| {inch toward the spine. Big Hoax TORONTO (CP) -- A Toronto newspaper says the unidentified woman who appeared on a CBC TV show claiming to be a pro- fessional divorce co-respondent admitted today she had made it |all up. The newspaper says in a story by Phyllis Griffiths the woman's {has used the name Joan Camp- bell for several years. The 27-year-old Toronto model; {subject of a provincial police eral Kelso Roberts, said she concocted the interview she gave the CBC program Close-Up for a |fee of $150. The story says she insists the sort of rigged the show does take place the material in the interview was false. She said she bases her claim on experience working for a licensed private investigator. At first she denied she was the woman sought but today said: "I want to get this out in the open." The report says it~ Hewbest Purdy. S|June 23-28, Mrs. ests in four existing broadcasting stations as well as in her father's |Canadian and other newspapers, owns 91.47 per cent of Northern | Broadcasting Limited which al- ready operates radio station CFCH North Bay which Mr. Thomson set up in 1931. Northern Broadcasting will i purchase CKGN-TV from the Tel- {Ad Company Limited, originally |Bay businessmen. They have {operated the TV station at a | profit for five years but told the |BBG they didn't want to "face |operation of the station under may develop." | In the North Bay application, {heard at the Ottawa hearings Campbell, a mother of three, was represented The doctors said this is the divorce evidence she described onlhy her brother, Kenneth Thom- although | son. He listed these among Mrs. | Campbell's ot her broadcasting and newspaper interests: A 16-per-cent interest in Fronte- | nac Broadcasting Company Lim- {ited which operates radio station {CKWS and television station CKWS-TV Kingston; 16 per cent pany Limited = which operates CHEX and CHEX-TV Peterbor- JThey say it does away with the kins operating room. It has been name is Joan Johnson, but 1S established by about 40 North, money earned from broadcasting./and bitten" in a scuffle at the The organization never had paid company property Monday when dividends, and was under no obli-| they made a path for a truck to gation to pay them. {leave the plant with a load of On the other hand, G. A. Alger, |castings. He said charges of ob- speaking for the present CKGN-|struction and assaulting a police TV owners, said the Tel-Ad com-| officer are pending against a} | pany is frightened that the TV number of pickets. | station might not be a continuing| Mr, Phelps said the firm has profitable enterprise. He said the peep operating on a marginal company faces a large capital in-| basis for years. The plant re- vestment for video - tape 'equip-| cently employed 300 persons but ent. [there are only about 20 at the I "We , want fo take out: div-| workings now. Otaco manufac- idends, he told the BBG. "We tures farm implements, boat {don't want to put it (the profit) trailers, pumps, toys and power |all back in. | lawnmowers. OTTAWA (CP)--Operation of a, In negotiations before the walk- new Ottawa television station by a out the company and union were company headed by E. L. Bush- | unable to agree on the question nell, former CBC vice-president,|of union security, the first-of 27 w. : recommended today by the|items in dispute. Board of Broadcast Governors. | The BBG also recommended INSULTS HURLED sti operation of a Halifax television welve members of Orillia's 13- station by CJCH Limited, a radio | broadcasting company expanded {from the plant. Mr. Roberts, to include British interests. Jad Jere Nore When the. RE -- OTTAWA (CP)--Provision of | returned for a second load, about television service to Pembroke 100 pickets were on hand. They (through a privately-owned local were supported by a number of {station rather than by a CBC wives who hurled insults at the she of Kawartha Broadcasting Com-|satellite was re d i 5 ell Tie: Steere OPS fopec sting Com-|s e commended today officers. Mr. Robertson told the | by the Board of Broadcast Gover-| pickets to let the vehicle pass and "mors. there was no further trouble. {man police force led the rug n | Tunisia's entry in the Miss Universe eontest rests on a s¥a after fainting from the heat today when the tempera- ture at Miami Bgach climbed to the 90-degree mark. She is MISS TUNISIA FAINTED attended by; Miss ' Moroc Marilyn E oh bar. : --AP Wirephoto

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