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The Oshawa Times, 10 Aug 1960, p. 1

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WEATHER REPORT Cloudy weather will clear, give ing way to sunshine Thursday. Quite cool. THCUGHT FOR TODAY It's bad enough that jazz brings out the worst in music, but it is even more deplorable that re- cently it brought out the worst in thousands of college students. dhe Oshawa Time OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 10, 1960 CCF SPEAKERS BLAST NFLD.'S LABOR MOVES as_Second Class Mail Department, Ottawa ' Price Not Over Mthorized EIGHTEEN PAGES 0 Cents Per Copy VOL. 89--NO. 184 NEW PARTY DISCUSSION Ont. | from Hamilton, Ont., discuss | contender for ieadership of the the proposed new labor-CCF | CCF with the announced re- Ron Freeman, Galt, | Security Council | the Congo. Threats Fly Over Katanga LEOPOLDVILLE (Reuters)--| Officers of the UN force told| Premier Patrice Lumumba today reporters they expect orders to| handed a letter to United Nations move into Katanga before Satur-| representative Ralph Bunche an-day. Commanders of the 12,000- nouncing his "fullest collabora-|man group were confident a de-| tion" in executing the latest tachment will enter without any| resolution on shooting. The fledgling Congolese army | At the same time Lumumba stepped up efforts to consolidate announced a wave of arrests will|its police powers, Jeeps with Con- be carried out shortly among golese soldiers of the new com-| Europeans 'plotting against the mander, Gen. Victor Lundula, | Congo." |eriss-crossed Leopoldville, where| s is letter of as-| | Lumuribg sent bis letter o | theoretically is in UN hands. (left), Alistair Stewart a, for- mer Winnipeg MP (centre) and | Bill Bowell, a trade unionist Cuba Assures Church Freedom HAVANA (AP)--President Os-| applauded only by those who valdo Dorticos assured the Cuban| have interests that demand that people early today Premier Fi-| applause." [J] Disturbance del Castro's regime will continue| The president accused "'cour-| "respecting all religious cults" |ter-revolutionaries and pro - im- GRAND FALLS, N.B. (CP)--A despite "provocations." | perialists™ of "wielding religious routine check on a disturbance Speaking at a post-midnight Ja.| Sentiments against the Cuban re-|in a house near this northern or Ea did not specifically | volution." |New Brugewick gommugily Tues 2 pr nl {da ) in death for mention last Sundays Romesh MUST BE DEFEATED I¥olice Chief Bert Corbin, 57. Catholic pastoral letter, read at|""ippay are useless manoeuvres) : d RCMP Co t Ed most Catholic churches in €uba, | 4nd will destroy themselves, All| Corbin an R ons 2 warning of the advance of com-| is will have to be defeated . . .| Hamilton were gunned down as munism in the country. {sur energies must be reserved for|they approached the house in Neither did he refer to the greater battles." [Falls Brooks. Hamilton, who ar- threat Tuesday by the archbishop| Dortoces spoke a few hours|rived here a few days ago from coadjutor of Havana to close all {after a demonstration outside|the Northwest Territories, es- Catholic churches on the island|Havana Cathedral sent Most Rev. |caped with a head wound and and suspend church services un-(Iivelio Diaz hurrying to the pres-|was reported in good condition in less the government stops pro-|idential palace with a warning (hospital. Castro demonstrators from har-|that he would close all Catholic] RCMP said they were holding party at the CCF national con- | tirement of M. J. Coldwell. vention here. Mr Stewart is a --CP Wirephoto = Chief Dies Checking tor. The latest Sir Charles is a cousin of the second baronet and received the title because his cousin had no direct male heir He was born in Halifax in 1880 but has had little active conaec- tion with politics, having worked as a civil engineer until retiring in 1957. prescription has been filled. Dorticos made only this a church "in silence" --|jaid. ent reference to the pastorali{the Vatican's ter for the| be letter: '"Those imputations will church's restricted operations ia), COIDIE was called from 3 Roel fall into a void and they will be/Communist countries--unless the 8 + government 9 p.m. to deal with the disturb- guarantees the saf- ety of churchgoers. |ance. About 10 minutes after T t M . | Msgr Diaz has taken over ad- [leaving the meeting, he placed a oron 0 an | ministration of the church incall to the Madawaska County {Cuba as a result of the poor|['CMP detachment for aid. I B net | health of Manuel Cardinal Arte:| Corbin is survived by his wife S aro (222 80. and a son, Dr. Raymond Corbin n informed church source of Edmundston, N.B., and a V (CP)--! Ee y , S ROTO Jon om Vaoueley isi, A however, the churches daughter, Miss Florence Corbin, Confederation has passed to a would not be closed today. [an Ontario nurse. Toronto man. THIRD INCIDENT i Charles Tupper, 80, of Toronto] The demonstration outside the| - said Tuesday that he has -suc-| cathedral Tuesday was the third | 1SS ala a ceeded to the baronetcy held by|since July 17, when anti-commu- | Sir Charles Stewart Tupper, who|nism was manifested publicly at| died in July in Winnipeg. The|a church service in the cathedral. | Co t t St rt latter had been the second holder| A gang of yc assembled n es a S of the title, originally held by Rt.|outside the building during a high| BURLINGTON (CP)--Twenty- Hon. Sir Charles Tupper, the mass in honor of Cuban priests. Three Canadian beauties Tues- man who brought Nova Scotia" TT |day night began a tough, three- into Confederation. = 32. [night contest of talent, personal- The first Sir Charles, long an Wrong Prescription i; and poise for the title of Miss ally of Sir John A. Macdonaid, [Cosas of 1960. was prime minister of Canada| For most of the girls the pag- for a brief spell in 1896. His Con- May Prove Fatal |eant at this lakeside town near gervative party was defeated by § . ._..|Hamilton is the c¢'imax of weeks Liberal Sir Wilfrid Laurier. TORONTO (CP) -- Provincial| rehearsals and preliminary From the first Sir Charles ti poli e sald ay Jey re irying contests. title vassed to his grandson, Sir|,2 Tb AC & VENI COURT VACA" This year's contest offers a Charles Stewart Tupper, Winni-|,, gy Bualtio, 10 le total of $30,000 in prizes and peg lawyer and company direc-| cy Were given a wrong pre-|scholarships. scription by a doctor At an opening 'diner given in Mrs. Harry Esley got the pre-|the contestants' honor by Bur- scription for a blood clot in her|jin+ton Mayor John A. Lockhart leg, but the doctor later realized|and his council, the judges began he had prescribed the wrong their appraisal by moving among drug. It's use, he said, might|the girls and chatting with them. have a serious effect on her and| Later 12 of the girls paraded could possibly cause her death. |in evening gowns and 11 in swim- olice do not know whether the suits. Tcnight the order: will he Ireversed. Oust Foreign Troops In Laos Revolution SAIGON South Viet Nam, Lae said that infiltration by| The committee proclaimed its (Reuters)--The leader of a Jay. "a great power" was iacreasiog| allegiance to King Savaag Vath. Id revolutionary regime in Laos every day and "every organiza-|, ¥ A bole notice today that all for- tion in the country has a group | AMA The king, pro Western eign troops must leave the king- attached to it." Premier Prince Tao Somsanith dom and foreign bases will be! Ie went on to specify: "Fven/and most of the cabinet were liquidated. my own battalion has 10 Amer- reported to be in the royal capi- Paratroop Captain Kong Lae, icans whom the governme,it has tal of Luang Prabang when the who seized control in the Laotian ajlowed to infiltrate us, and apart [coup was staged in Vientiane, capital of Vientiane early Tues- day, indicated plans to rid the small mountain nation bordering Communist North Viet Nam and China of American influence "We will expel all foreign sol- diers from the country immed ately," said Lae, commander of the paratroop battalion based in Vientiane J new regime will not toler- 1y foreign interfere i affairs, he ique broadcast by Vien radio. CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 many other cases rites for the late King Sisavang About 500 French troops were Vong who died last October. «tationed in central Laos under | In Saigon, the coup was not the Geneva agreegient which|regarded as an accomplished ended the Indochina war in 1954|fact while the king and premier and 78 Americans have arrived were in Luang Prabang. since July, 1959, to help the| 'Apart from Vientiane ro other French train the 30,000-man Lao- {Laotian cities were zmown to tian Army. {have joined the rebels The Laotian broadcast moni. I the: temen fored here quoted Lae's revolu- Lar anoher, sta ement Tuesday tionary committee formed by| 3%. said: We will vestigate the rebellious 2nd parachute bat-} lier ud ail, servants who talion--saying the 10, Americans "2ve been making Buge profits in this battalion also would have ®ve" and above their salaries. to go. | The coup was under way before There are 753 Americans in|dawn Tuesday and citizens woke Laos, 261 of them connected with|to find the army's revolutionary jcommities headed by Lae in command of the airfield, the post | |the U.S. military air program. Diplomatic sources in Saigon " A |said there was no sign from Lac- office and power station. {tian broadcasts that the revoin.| Roadblocks commanded strate- | tionary committee is work in g/gic road junctions in the city and {with pro-Communist Pathet Laola few shots were fired. "Bul the rebels. who control pockets of the shooting was understood to have country, been "not serious." churches in Ciba today and de-|a man but po charges have been Congo's provinces had any right {to proclaim independénce from the authority to maintain order surance in reply to a message] [from UN Secretary-General Dag| The government prepared a de-| |Hammarskjold Tuesday night|cree banning seven French-lan-| asking for his { in carrying guage newspapers, including the| |asking for his suppor carrying Conservative Paris daily Le Fi-| fa aro, and expelling 10 corres-| umumba said in a statement: on hy Xp 8 | express in the name of the government my lively recognition to the Security Council and to al} nations who belong to it for the fact they have invited the Belgi-| ans to withdraw immediately their troops from the province of Katanga." DENOUNCES TSHOMBE Lumumba's statement was also coupled with more bitter denunci- ation of Katanga Premier Moise] Tshombe as the battle lines were drawn between the central gov- ernment and the breakaway | province. Lumumba declared: "I have always said and I say again that Tshombe is entirely dictated by | Belgians in all his statements and |{in all his actions. Without Bel- |gians he does not exist. He is nothing." He said no one in any of the lout the resolution. : { Li [eg |local press. In recent weeks Leo-| several newspapers financed by (various political movements. |Some have attacked the govern- | ment, In the Katanga capital of Elisa-| bethville, Tshombe consented to) the entry of United Nations that they did not come from "Communist - dominated coun- tries" and did not enable "Lu.| mumba's people to come here." SWANKY SNAKE SELECTS SABLE NEW YORK (AP) -- Who ever saw a snake in a fur coat? Hereules - Cheropodlis did Tuesday as he opened his fur processing plant in lower Manhattan. "I didn't want people to think I was crazy. I wanted a witness," Cheropoulis said. So he summoned a friend who confirmed that Cherop- oulis' eyes weren't deceiving him. Then Cheropoulis called police. The snake, a seven-footer of undetermined species, was found among coats piled on a table. It ducked under a radiator as patrolmen ar- rived. But they got a noose around its head and packed it off to the American So- ciety for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. the central government, "Any- body trying to do so will be im- mediately arrested." The premier said that diploma- tie relations with Belgium might be re-established as soon as the last. Belgian soldiers had left their bases in the Congo. In an interview, Information Minister Anicet Kashamura [threatened general mobilization for invasion of Katanga unless UN troops enter Katanga before the weekend. troops on the main conditions| | | Information Minister Kasha-| | mura said severe and drastic| } |sanctions also are planned for the| f poldville has seen the birth of| Caroline Lecerf, 18-year-old brown-eyed blonde from Brus- sels, Belgium, poses with her trophy on Long Beach, Calif. last night after she was named the most popular girl in the In- ternational Beauty Congress POPULAR BELGIAN | Condemnation By Convention REGINA (CP)--Premier Small-| train unemployed workers with {wood of Newfoundland was de-| uninterrupted rights to unemploy- [scribed today as a totalitarian pion: infurauce while undergoing BD | . jdietator by the mover of a resolu | 2. Pressure on the government | tion adopted by the CCF national | for an agricultural program to in- | convention condemning the fed-| elude deficiency payments for | eral government for "failure" to farmers, egiablishment of mare | disallow _ certain Newfoundland | keting boaris with producer rep- | labor legislation earlier this year.| resentation to control marketing Esau Thoms, provincial CCF|of agricultural prodticts moving leader and president of the New-|into inter - provincial or export |foundland Federation of Labor, | trade, 'adequate' short and long charged that Mr. Smallwood con-| term credit at low interest rates, |nived with "a powerful corpora-|crop insurance, establishment of {tion" to bring about decertifica-|a world food pool and vigorous tion of the International Wood-| action to sell surplus products. | workers of America, (CLC) the| 3. A national health plan, ad- {sort of action, he said, "you find| ministered by the provinces, to |enly behind the Iron Curtain or|provide medical, surgical, opti {the Bamboo Curtain." |cal, dental and hospital care, es- The resolution, originally pro-|sential drugs and corrective ap- {posed by the Saskatchewan CCF |Ppliances and to include a compre- |association, said the convention hensive program of preventive | "regrets" and condemns the fail-| medicine. Air Attache parade. The parade was held last Sunday and contest offi- cials said Caroline was chosen by popular vote, Competition for Miss International Beauty start- ed last night, (AP Wirephoto) DISARMAMENT COMMISSION | disallow bills one and two passed {by the Newfoundland legisla- Russi | cil member and an official of the ussians | United Steelworkers of America. the national convention callediof photographing military objec- for: tives. . | ture." The brief debate on the resolu- |SEZ P.C.s FAILED Moscow (AP) -- The Soviet | Mr. Diefenbaker, Mr. Sefton Union today ordered the expule 1.-Free training courses to Te The Russians said that "com- petent Soviet organs" established Talks Called On Geneva Flop tion produced sharp attacks om Prime Minister Diefenbaker, and | the Progressive Conservative and {Liberal parties from Stanley | Knowles, CCF vice-president, and | said, claims to be a champion of sion of Col. Edwin M. Kerton, {civil rights but his government air attache at the U.S. Embassy, when i* had a chance to disallaw| and delivered a warning to his the Newfoundland bills failed to| assistant, Capt, Irving T. Mace that Kerton "has been engaged Mac In Germany in: activities which are incompat- " lks"" ible with the status of a member of the diplomatic staff." For Peace Ta "Recently, together with his as- { William Sefton, a national coun- agt. | Donald. Other resolutions approved by| The government accused them BONN, West Germany (Reu- sistant; I. T. MacDonald, Kerton ters)--Prime Minister Macmillan was apprehended while photo- UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP)|gates from. the neutral nations|arrived here today to discuss graphing military objects during The 82-nation UN disarmament countries that the nine Soviet- "the unity of Europe and the|a trip to Kurgan," a statement commission has been called to bloc nations would boycott any peace of the world" with Konrad said. meet next Tuesday afternoon to| disarmament commission meet-| Adenauer, consider the failure of the Ge-| ing and hoped they would do the|chancellor. neva disarmament talks, Luis Padilla Nervo of Mexico, | |the chairman of the commission, Most neutrals are expected to at- in re- tend the session, and some West- sponse to a request the United ern diplomats think the Co: scheduled the meeting States made July 22. Canada sup-| poried the move. Soviet Deputy Foreign Ministe Vasily V. Kuznetsov told dele-| "MacDonald has been warned |by the U.S.S.R. military of for. "These are our aims," the|eign affairs." British leader said in a statement| Kurgan is an important rail- |at the airport. "It is easy to set|way junction in the southwest mmu.| hese goals but we must work part of the Russian republic. It ts will show up also. hard and patiently to 'achieve is near Sverdlovsk, where Fran- The Russians proposed that dis- them cis .Gary Powers -- now facing r| cussion of disarmament be de-| Adenauer said he and Macmil-|trial as a U.S. spy--came down ferred until the general assembly|lan were meeting again "to dis-jon a flight in a U-2 reconnaiw the West German | same. | Despite Kuznetsov's urging,| | nis 'Dateline' Believed | | | peared eight days ago, is belie Ontario. | lieves he saw Sandra at Port Bur-| well last Sunday. | He said he and his wife spent the weekend at the Lake Erie CONGO COMMANDER Maj. Robert C. Bindoff of Kingston and Ottawa will com- mand the newly formed 57th Signals Squadron that was as- signed to go to the Congo. The Signallers will be broken up into 12 mobile. wireless de- in hand with a red-haired boy. She answered the description of | Sandra, who is known to have| met a red-haired youth on the day she disappeared, Aug. 2. | Girl Seen TORONTO (CP)--Sandra Pen- system of dialling telephone com-| rose, 13, of Toronto, who disap-|Pany test numbers. A number of sembly and would consider it a ved people dial the number and shout! great honor to pe present for the|ton, | : over a busy signal. A girl and boy| disarmament discussion. |to be somewhere ir southwestern exchange telephone numbers and| The Soviet proposal for a sum- dates are set up. Mervyn Hunt of Port Colborne| Lorraine Martin, 13, of Toronto, | cold reception from the U.S. gov- phoned the missing girl's father, a friend of the missing girl, said ernment that was generally ex- Neil Penrose, to tell him he be-|she and Sandra used the "date- Pccted in the wake of Khrush- They obtained the number ¢hev"s walkout on the Paris sum- line." of an east-end restaurant quented by a large number teen age youths. She sai town, 16 miles south of Tillson-|Sandra's date with the red-haired burg and saw a girl walking hand|boy resulted from a call to the| restaurant. opening Sept. 20 and that the 82) cuss our worries and our hopes." sauce plane May 1. heads of government attend to provide a summit discussion of disarmament and other major world problems. on Tac S orce Soviet Premier Khrushchev plugged this idea again Tuesday in Pravda, the Soviet Communist | party newspaper. Khrushchev | 0 on arges said he would lke to represent the Soviet Union at the fall as OTTAWA (CP) -- George Bol-{sign a contract with the union or president of the Ottawa|he would lose CCEA business. | i :. |The contractor sighed. | Electrical Contractors Associa- Mr. Bolton said the association the| tion, charged Tuesday night con-|will combat signing of union tractors are being pressured into| electricians by non - association [signing contracts with striking| contractors by signing non-union electricians. electricians themselves. Mr. Bolton said after a closed| Earlier Tuesday striker Joseph mit meeting, his cancellation of meeting of the association one|Buckland, 24, was slightly in- | mit assembly meeting got be President Eisenhower's visit to|contractor was told by Central|jured when a car drove through 4/Russia and the recent Soviet|Canada Exhibition Association|the picket line at the tri-service vilification of Eisenhower. general-manager Jack Clarke tolhospital being built here. taghments once they arrive in the Congo. --CP Wirephoto from National Defence LER] LJ > Criticism Her parents are convinced she| ran away with one of her "date-| or LATE NEWS FLASHES Program The "dateline" works through a | TORONTO (CP)--Public Works Minister Connell today told Lib- | Schedule Further Talks At Timken from my own regiment there ave They were attending last funeral | | ST, THOMAS (CP) -- The | Timken Limited broke off tod Further talks are scheduled for Thursday. If no settlement is reached at that time the workers may legally strike at midnight. | Laborer May Win Fight For Freedom MONTREAL (CP) -- Lab | freed today after spending 41 | Montreal's Bordeaux Jail. | ficials have decided to release uled presentation of a writ of him freed Sauve, alias Pierre Dupont, alleges that he was held illegally for the 1,247 days. Another Candidate For NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP) -- Rev. Dr, William Fingland, retired United Church minister, seek the Liberal party's nomination in a federal byelection to fill the vacancy caused by the death of William L. Houck. No date has been set for the byelection, but four men and one woman have announced their i nomination. Other candidates Miss Judy LamaPsh, a lawyer; Councillor Allister McBain; lawyer Harold Morton and Al at averting a strike by 320 production workers of Canadian Informed sources said prison of- eral leader Wintermeyer that his| department is in a better position| to judge the needs for govern! ment buildings than anyone else. | He was replying to a charge by| Mr. Wintermeyer that the Frost government was "playing poli-| ties" with its public works pro-| gram. The Liberal leader said the| government is building a $1.348,- 000 girls' training school at Lind-| say because that is the hometown of Premier Frost. The charge is "completely un- justified," Mr. Connell replied. "The Lindsay training school for girls has been urgently requested | by the department of reform in-| stitutions for many years . . The land was already owned by the province." ! Mr. Connell also defended the| decision to build a $689,789 gov- ernment building at Sault Ste. Marie. Space of the type that is| C. D. Kent, assistant librar- needed to house five government| lan at London Public Library, | departments and a liquor control| contemplates Paul Robeson board store is at a premium in| record which, along with a Rus- the Soo, he said. ! sian documentary film, was to third in a series of talks aimed ay after 20 minutes discussion. orer Robert Sauve, 23, will be months in the mental wing of Sauve on the eve of the sched- habeas corpus seeking to have Nomination today announced he would ntentions of seeking the Liberal for nomination announced are d. Ian MecCallum, » RECORD HEADACHE have been part of a park pro- gram Monday. He cancelled the as many callers profested the cancellation, and the program program after about 12 tele- | now will be presented in the phone callers denounced it, as | park next Monday. Communist propaganda. Twice | ~CP Wirephote

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