THOUGHT FOR TODAY "In ten centuries man will have no teeth," says an evolu- tionist. Even if so, he probably won't gum up things worse than he's doing now. dhe Oshawa Times WEATHER REPORT Sunny with cloudy intervals, not much change in tempera- ture; scattered thundershowers Sunday evening. Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, SATURDAY, AUGUST 5, 1960 VOL. 89--NO. 181 Authorized as Second C Post Office Department, lass Mail Ottawa SIXTEEN PAGES lt UN Meets On Threat In Congo UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) -- Dag Hammarskjold proposed today that the United Nations Security Coun- cil assure dissident Katanga province that UN forces have | In his capital of Elisabethville, | Tshombe issued a statement say- [ing: "I rejoice to see that Dr. Ralph Bunche and, through him, the \ 1 no intention of taking sides | UN have taken cognizance of the in the Congo's internal con- |Xatanga people's resolution not flict. |to accept anarchy and chaos. ! This is encouraging because we LEOPOLDVILLE, The Congo see there proof that the right of (AP)--Three Congo ministers de-| people to dispose of themselves cided today to follow Secretary- as they want is recognized by the General Dag Hammarskjold to| UN. Many problems remain to be New York for Sunday night's UN|settled but I remain confident Security Council showdown on|that the right of my country wili dissident Katanga province. triumph." On the way they plan to confer| 1, propping up Tshombe and with Premier Patrice Lumumba frustrating the UN effort to re- now touring West African coun-|store order in the Congo, Belgium tries, He may abandon his trip.| has taken the risk of making the turn around and return to New Congo an important issue in the York for the council session. cold war or The decision to send the min- : isters to New York was reached AN ABOUTFACE The Russians are eager to get at an emergency cabinet meet- ing after Hammarskjold scrapped a foothold here, either by provid- ing massive technical assistance| | pler: to send UN troops into Ka- |tanga--the rich province which to the tottering central govern- | apy {has declared its independence ment or sending Communist EX-MOUNTIE S SCULPTURE | from the Congo. troops into the Congo operation. Three Orange, Calif., police | Abbott, now a private detec- | Harold Richardson. Witnesses | pl mareciad s SD, Joule The Congo government was at officers examine a bust of a | tive, originated the technique | to the $14,800 robbery said the |S1C0ter In the Longo, Undersec-|the point of requesting Russian bust strongly resembles the |Fetary Ralph J. Bunche, warned troops last month but Lumumba, | gunman, who had spread white ointment over his face, (CP Wirephoto from AP) wanted bank robber sculptured | while with the RCMP in Tor- by a former RCMP officer from | onto 10 years ago. Left to right: information supplied by wit- Det. Richard Griffith, Lieut. nesses to "the robbery. J. R. | Carl Krueger and police chief Divorce Bill Appeal By Husband Rejected |after a visit to Katanga that|in a startling aboutface, asked for sending UN troops to the prov-la UN operation. ince might provoke bloodshed. The Congo ministers going to |the New York are Foreign Min- BEHIND CURTAIN ister Justin Bomboko, Deputy \ |Premier Rene Mwambe, and| Thomas Kanza, the Congo's min- |ister-delegate to the United Na- Secret A nn | tions. { ge CY Although leaders of Lumum- ba's government have been press-| bd ing the UN to bring Katanga E under control of UN troops,| Xper S anis their reaction to Hammarskjild's| OTTAWA (CP)--The Commons|riving unannounced any time bills approved by the Commons yhackdown on Katanga was mild. | REITING { : 3 private bills committee Friday during the day and frequently committee, waiting only for fi-| This indicated they prefer to go a ASHINGTON 0 - ui might have gone to or by what night rejected a plea by Edwin at night in response to her calls|nal debate in the commons be-|along with a UN solution of the iy he (os ais meses, toiomant. sail Tiesto 8 A wi Leavy Freeman of Montreal for|for help. {fore being given royal assent. roblem rather than risk Soviet d : ; ail dismissal of his wife's divorce. 'My husband constantly broke| At present, 451 other bills are|Mnterventionthreatened by Lu- 0S) io, have gone nehind the had worked "in limited areas petition. into my home," she said, "He|standing on the order paper, mumba--to restore order. | The two are Bernon F. Miich ob Communic ations statistical | The committee put its recom-| 2S exijemaly intoxicated and Tieng Sudiestions ste tha 3 oon The view in both diplomatic ell, 31, and William H. Martin,| The department confirmed ear.| mendation of approval on the am completely terrorized by blockade of them will collapse and government circles is that 29, employed since 1957 as mathe-|lier reports that Mitchell and petition and sent it back to the Dim." . Jif there is a promise that Com- the spotlight now has turned on|/matical analysts at the National Martin had been traced to Mex-| Commons where it becomes the Mr. Freeman said he had of- mons divorce procedure will be/ Belgium and pressure will be on| Security Agency at nearby Fort|ico City and then to Havana. 452nd divorce bill awaiting dis- fered to move from Montreal to| studied by a new House rules Brussels to comply with earlier| Meade, Md. | In Eureka. Calif., Mitchell's position, {Toronto or Ottawa in order to|committee next session. Security Copncil resolutions call-| NSA is a supersecret defence| father said "I certainly don't be-| Phe comimitiee's 'rehearing of get away from the influence of This session, the rules com- ing dor withdrawal of Belgian unit which intercepts radio sign-|lieve" the Pentagon's assumption| the petition of Mrs. Freeman his father-in-law, whom he ac-|mittee struggled with the thorny troops from the entire Congo-==4n-| nals and works on communica-|that his son had slipped away to, was brought on when her hus. cused of constantly interfering | problem in private but came up cluding Katanga. tions intelligence 24 hours a day.| Red territory, eu tue ili Ww ith the family. with no solution. ; Without Belgian support, Pre- Mathematics is one tool used for| Emergy F. Mitchell, a Eureka | They Were Hviny together ci tie The Freeman case .was the! CCF members Frank Howard|mier Moise Tshombe's Katanga breaking secret codes. lawyer, said "I'll never believe it| ho A St he last to be reheard in detail this|of Skeena and Arnold Peters of regime probably would collapse| The defence department broke unless Bernon told me so him. | tee Heard the case last Jan 28 session. Committee ch airman Timiskaming are campaigning quickly. |silence late Friday on the where-|self, and I have been with him| The affidavit forties nbmittad Robert J. McCleave gave notice|for a change in dealing with di-| {abouts of Mitchll and Martin, long enough to know that he was that Mr. Fioerian' was Siprve- last week that no more appeals|vorces for residents of Quebec |who mysteriously disappeared) in sound mind." | y os could be entertained after Fri-land Newfoundland, which have + {June 24. ATHER GRIEVED erly served with notice of the Japanese | A statement said it "must be action and. also that Te had roa. day no provincial divorce courts. | Martin's father, an Ellensburg, | : ; 2! The Freeman case, like at|Residents of the two provinces assumed that there is a lLkeli-| Wash. meat packing -xecutive,| son to believe it had been drop- | ...i" four others, had been now petition for parliamentary | hood" that the two "have gone|said "We are deeply grieved over| ped. passed by the Senate and the|divorces. | | behind the Iron Curtain." the information we have and we! Mr. Freeman repeated in test- -- - { _ It added that an investigation|can't undrstand it. . . . We hope| imony before the committee his indicated "information in their| there is some other explanation." | contention that he was living ° ° possession if revealed could be| U.S. government sources ex-| with his wife at the time the oronto Buildin om IO in no way prejudicial to the se-|Pressed belief that Havana, un- case was heard. Freeman T curity of U.S. communications" |der ihe Castro regime, has been| {and neither man had '"'access to| increasingly replacing Mexico] denied it, saying dn't TOKYO (AP)--Japan observed ™ lived as husband and wife si LJ today the 15th anniversary of the | Classified April, 1959. ir 6 ea oC dropping of the atomic bomb on The petition had been ap- Hiroshima with pleas for banning f information about|City as a centre for Communist| | American weapons or defence|Operations in this hemisphere. | | plans. And lack of co-operation from |Castro officials has made it proved by Senate and House : ; nuclear weapons. DECLINE 8 | . committees and passed by the TORONTO (CP)--About 3,000, At Friday night's meeting the| Crown Prince Akihito attended | A a SAY csiuon doe Ln , genie 0 teaek Senate before the rehearing immigrant construction workers union leaders repeated their de- and delivered a message at a clined to say whether the pair] Wa gienieans BPE: is | move. and 400 contractors remained mands for higher wages, shorter government - approved memorial had other information of i t Noshne ons investigation got deadlocked today as the city's hours and better safety condi-|service in Hiroshima. Some 30,-|the Reds such as on U.S find i) log ris: Je ivy backer HAVE FOUR CHILDREN building industry strike entered tions. The meeting was punc-|{000 persons attended the rally in breaking 'techniques and on NGA los al return from leave Mr. and Mrs. Freeman, who its sixth day tuated by shouting matches be-|Peace Park. |operations. Nor would he say| Mitchell had il have four children, both told the, A meeting between the con- tween contractors and union rep-| Meanwhile, in Tokyo, the Com-|what Communist country oylatrie ne hota niet poe. resentatives. muist - dominated world confer-|-- Mr, Irvine told the contractors, *ce against atomic and hydro-| many of whom are themselves gen bombs opened a four-day immigrants, they will be told by conference at Tyko Metropolitan a S Gas telegram to appear before nego-| Gymnasium militantly denounc- . . tiators for the strikers. ing the United States and its I "Until we get agreements with allies as the "force of war." WASHINGTON (CP)--The Fed-, The FPC conditioned its ap | committee of a series of separ-|tractors and union leaders last ations and reconciliations. He night turned into a verbal brawl said he left her last one week and was closed after 22 hours ago, but was willing to return by Charles W. Irvine, a co-direc- and try to make a success of tor of the walkout. their 17-year-old marriage. "We'll never get anywhere to- She said that during the last Sigh fe way we're going," he 0 Vv a ju la two years, they never lived to parler in the. dav tout cme gether as man and wife, al NE onasted y Zon. though he stayed overnight in were arrested after a constable her house on occasions when he was attacked while arresting a : s { the contractors we're staying out| 'bout 100 police scuffled briefly on strike," he said Yih 50 extreme rightists who 4 > emonstrated ins . One contractor warned: "If our against the confer: N ing | ence. One policeman was injured | 3-4 | 9€ man for creating a disturbance employees don't go back to work! and three club-swingi | ast Hid would arrive late at night 3", construction site Police said a quarter of the contractors here strators 2 Slusswinging demon-| eral Power Commission Friday proval by limiting Pacific Gas drunk. He also accused her of the prisoner was driven away in Will go broke. We're under con- i av {approved the import of nearly Prime Minister Hayato Ikeda 600,000,000 cubic feet of natural|!0 6%-per-cent rate of return in. sent a message to the Hiroshima|gas daily from Canada for use|Stead of the 6% per cent the rally expressing regret 'that de-|in five western states. company had sought. drinking excessively, and said 3 car containing three other men she had fits of hysteria fearing! peter Quattrocchio, 52, his two tracts and we've got equipment tied up." her father would find them liv- sons Guilio, 21, and Fra 7 Sti Pp % bed | i sons Guilio, 21, rank, 17, Strike leader Bruno Zanini|spite Japan's repeated appeals| In Vancouver, Frank ! : an ] A Ja E | or, Frank McM S ng together, : : and Antonio Baldassaro, 27, were flourished $12,000" in cheques he|there still was no halt in the | president of Westcoast MeMahon, MUST FILE. REPORTS Mrs. Freeman's father, S. J. arrested on charges of assaulting said were bogus and were used manufacture, stockpiling and sion Company, greeted the 'an.|, It also directed that the three Kearney, said he visited his a policeman to pay construction workers. testing of nuclear weapons. [nouncement as "a great boost to|\MPorting companies must file -------------- (the gas industry of Canada and| Ports showing monthly and [the economy of the entire West." |P€ak - day volume and average McMahon said the authority Monthly prices of Canadian gas. for Pacific Gas Transmission] It did not impose the stringent | House D 1vision |Company of San Francisco °8 | conditions daughter's home every day, ar State Honors Sharp For Meighen which its examiner, | distribute 584,500,000 cubic feet Robert Weston, had recom- of gas a day in California, Idaho, | mended to protect consumer TORONTO (CP) -- Full state honors will be given to Rt. Hon. EA, " a mean the flow: oF Lunireds/the piglie Jniorast Jt Concaed Arthur Meighen in 2 siete ful OTTAWA (CP)--The sharpest would have announced long ago|would be fully effective without a Pi ons of dollars into Can- | that problems will arise during neral : the . federal government post-war division on Canadiana firm decision to obtain nu- nuclear warheads. If the RCAF ada from the US. ta the 25-year lifetime of the Cana. 1 for Mond. id 0 defence policy between govern- clear warheads if it had not|didn't have such warheads if McManon exbecis Droimiuary|dian gas contracts, If expressed ar pans io -- = % 8 , ment and opposition has devel- been for Mr. Green's resolute would be inferior to the U.S. York on Hie $400,000.40) scheme|considene these problems canbe A toa) bo held. in St.loped in the Commons. opposition. Air Force. et a ans Eo Mr. Meighen, twice prime min-|p Opposition L eader Pearson Mr. Pearkes Friday night] Replacement of the two 30-jinaq Jate next year. of the two countries. ; ister of Canada. died Friday ar friday declared that Canada gave the standard government Missile Bomarc stations atl Westcoast is one of five Cana. ---- 86. should keep hands off nuclear|reply on the question when he/North Bay and La Macaza,|dian and three U.S. firms In i weapons. The CCF already had|/said Canada is seeking i Que., with interceptors would volve id > : : His finer ly 7 we 3 8 §8 g joint wh Pp volved. Ei Junersl oa be ot tam, taken this stand control with. the United States/cost $360,000,000. Canada's share -------- i ; ne 1851 e at the family plot in St Mary's The government maintained Over American nuclear war-|of the Bomare bases was $12,- > 4 about 10 miles southwest of Strat-| that nuclear warheads are re- heads stored in Canada jo that|000.000, The U.S, share, wr. Small Girl Dies ¥ ford, Ont. quired to provide Canadian they could be made available|Pearkes has said previously, is| 1 S no er Honorary pallbearers will be forces with the most modern! if and when required." $90,000,000. : In Blazin Bam drawn from the ranks of the weapons The Commons approved the S SS Sial stence in stot 9 WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pro A hen - | Though everything t6/$1.596,000000 defence budget >¢V'8nY said the Bomarc would] AgpgoN/ (CP)--Scheryl £ress in military rocketry was present government and Mr hough everything pointed to ce budge provide defence ARKONA, Ont.. (CP)--Schery] dramatically portrayed in de- against manned yun Legoate, three, died Friday in her father's blazing barn while after an 1lth-hour opposition at- Meighen's former colleagues. A it, Defence Minister Pearkes did ' ill military guard of honor and band Not say definitely, however, that/lempt to off the Bomarc bombers. Jones Aspartment photographs re leascd today showing one missile will be in attendance. the government will acquire nu- anti - aircraft missile program. OTHERS NEED DEFENCE her mother made several vain ,.; i clear warheads ] The Bote Was 3 to 21 fo sustain) Harold Winch (CCF--Vancou. | 3emPts fo Tosme her, ge "mir Sow c EMERGENCY fai is Sie sio External af vo : ver East) said in that case taker to i on Lege. Jagr The photos, taken at the army's ITY airs inister Green is battling] Liberal Leader Pearson said there are Canadian places other|,> i a . fino White "Sands missil Sr in the cabinet--with consider-/the Bomare program should be than North Bay and La Macaza burns and shock, saw flames New Mexico J Ss . Tafige a PHONE NUMBERS able success against arming junked. If this were done, "'we|which deserve to be defended. spurting: from the barn. Proyine Hawk g ided vy = Canadian forces with atomic would be rejecting thé use byl Mr. Pearson also said:. 'It iC] police Said sne raced to res. Fine a t gas lle, i § eapons he ETOL anv 2 OAR a aaa : pei "aa 4 . was y ycs-eye 2 : Stag POLICE RA 5.1133 weapons on the grounds thisjus of any form of nuclear weap- my view that Canada should Bue or dougie: hs By Juried Little John rocket Bot Spey ¢ 5-1133 country is opposed to nuclear ons for what is mistakenly categorically reject the proposi- Police pb: aA eS 56 The Littl I "5 ia a FIRE DEPT. RA 35-6574 away and has been plugging d the defence of our terri-tion that her NATO forces (in|jjeved to have been playing with rang frog fig oe > . RA 95-6074 away for an East-West disarma- oy |Europe) should be equipped| matches : 5 Si cul an pn eg pi Bg HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 {meat agreement Mr. Pearkes said neither the|with nuclear weapons of any, Arkona is 30 mil y lose - A das It is believed the government'Bomarc nor m | » / 9 miles west of close - up support for ground| 8 ; r jet interceptors! kind. London, Ont. v | troops. b VICTIMS OF FATAL SHOOTING y |Oregon, Washington and Mon-| Prices. | uc ear ar ea S tana will create new permanent! The commission found that an- § industries throughout the West thorization for the project was in E | Farmhand Arrested In Murder | Little Brother Dispels Doubts HAVANA (AP)--Raul Castro left no doubt today Cuba has) moved solidly into the Soviet economic camp as he welcomed Moscow's aid offers and hurled defiance at anyone objecting. He| also hailed Russian pledges of| military support, | "We don't have to fear an| economic blockade," said the| younger brother of Prime Min- ister Fidel Castro in a midnight speech that ran nearly three hours. "They (the Russians) buy all that we sell them and they sell us what we need." Appearing on Fidel's usual Friday night TV spot, the de-| fence minister aimed a slap at the Organization of American States which is slated to meet Aug. 16 to discuss Soviet inter. ference in the Western hemis- phere and other problems. "We are grateful for and ye accept -- we accept -- disinter- ested aid of Soviet artillerymen (rocketeers) despite what the OAS says," Castro told a loudly cheering studio audience. TOP PRIORITY Fresh from visits to Moscow | and Prague, he said Soviet and| He implied this meant military material as well as other goods. No strings were attached to Soviet aid offers, he declared, adding that the United States had never given help without demanding concessions. Castro blasted the U.S. capit- alistic system which he said demands that Americans "throw food into the sea" to maintain prices. rather than share it with the world's starving mile lions. Frequent bursts of applause greeted Castro's high praise of Soviet Premier Khrushchev and the Soviet Union. Applause also accented Raul's warning that "enemies of the revolution" would soon feel the "punch" of ailing Prime Minis. ter Fidel Castro. "They will understand that we are going to have Fidel around a while," Raul declared. The younger Castro said the prime minister will address the closing session of the Latin American youth tonight -- "na- turally making an effort." The latter phrase indicated Fidel is not completely recove BRUCE MINES, Ont. (CP)-- Czechoslovak officials had|ered from what has been de- Paul Bordeleau, 29, a farmhand| and former mental patient, Fri-| day night was charged with mur-| der in the fatal shooting Thurs-| day He was. arrested Friday by a heavily-armed posse of provincial police and taken to the district jail in Sault Ste. Marie. Jacqueline Dumond, a pretty high school junior who celebrated her 16th birthday Thursday, was, found dead in the cab of a truck parked on a lonely sideroad near this town 40 miles east of Sault Ste. Marie. Her boy friend, William Bre- chin, 16, later was found lying beside the road about 500 yards away. He died ir hospital at the Soo at 11 am. Friday without regaining consciousness. Both had been shot in the head. There was no known mo- tive for the slayings. The discoveries touched off one of the most intensive police hunts ever staged in this section of Northern Ontario. Roadblocks were set up and armed groups of police searched bushland and farm buildings all through the night. Several farmers in the area sent their wives and children into town in fear. Others kept farm- house lights burning and loaded rifles at hand. Russian Spies Outstrip Nazis BOSTON (AP) -- The infiltra- tion of Communist spies into the United States is much larger and more effective now than the es-| pionage network laid by the| Nazis in the Second World War, says the chief of army intelli- gence, Maj. - Gen. John M. Willems said the Communist spies are not promised him that all Cuban| scribed officially as a lung orders would get top priority. infection. night of two teen-agers. | Eastview Result Awaited | EASTVIEW, Ont. (CP) -- The three-week long. provincial in- quiry into this town's financial affairs has ended and towns- people who Friday climbed to windows to watch their mayor testify now are awaiting the out- come, Commissioners Charles W. Yates and F. G. Blake, municipal experts assigned to the probe by the Ontario government, told the| packed council chambers that their report will be submitted to| Municipal Affairs Minister War- render, Townspeople will have a 10-day or two-week wait for the results, which will be announced by Mr. Warrender. | The inquiry was called after a| citizens' league circulated a peti- tion through the town's 23,000 population, demanding an investi- gation into municipal finances) and land sales. | Some 125 persons Friday squeezed into the tiny first-floor chambers expecting marathon testimony from Mayor Gordon (Gordie) Lavergne. TALKED FIVE HOURS The mayor, member of the legislature for Russell County, | testified for five hours and then the commissioners, who had pre- viously announced a night sitting, Probe |of poor administration, bribery, | theff, and. carelessness. | The commissioners heard tes. {timony, on "bonus" assessments given an Eastview hotel and an iron works; of a councillor be- ing bribed with $100 before giv- ing out a building permit; illors dividing them- selves $3,200 in money earmarked for entertainment of distin. guished visitors," of the mayor and treasurer Mrs. Adrienne La- roche trying to cover up a $1,900 shortage in town parking meter revenues and fines. They also heard testimony on the mayor's interests in a local investment company; of a local construction firm manager who paid $1,000 for a lot later deco- rated with an expensive house and swimming pool; that most lots sold by the town were many times more valuable than the asking price. APPEARS UNRUFFLED The mayor, 48-year-old men's clothing store operator, appeared unruffled when questioning com- missioners brought up some of the charges made in earlier tes- {imony. He had watched most of the hearing through the three weeks, He admitted splitting the "guest" fund, but offered no ex- said that the hearing was over. They gave no reason for calling| off the night sitting. | The greying Eastview mer-| chant, member of council since| 1944 and mayor since 1948, was | only much better trained than the Nazis, but there are many|the heels of testimony that had|itely untrue," fired in the direction of his coun- cil and town employes charges more of them, EASTVIEW'S MAYOR LAVERGNE (LEFT) IN FIRE the 61st witness. He followed on| planation, He had taken $1,600 and each of the eight other Jaemberg of council had received $200. He had not tried to hush up a shortage in parking meter reve enues in fines. This was "'defin- said the stocky mayor first elected to the legis- lature in a byelection of 1954. FIRMER SOVIET GRASP ON CUBA ~~