THOUGHT FOR TODAY The detergent used most brainwashing is soft soap. in dhe Oshawa Times WEATHER REPORT Cold, bright, with some cloud, continuing through Tuesday. Winds light. VOL. 89--NO. 229 ¥0 Cents Per Copy Price Not Over OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1960 Authorized Post as Second Class Mail Office Department, EIGHTEEN PAGES Ottawo BARN FIRE RAGES OUT OF CONTROL f Prize Cattle Die In $20,000 Fire BOWMANVILLE -- An early- East wind blowing away from the morning fire of unknown origin|house. ; Sunday morning razed a barn on, Bow manville firefighters had to the farm of Leslie Welsh, two keep a close watch on the farm American miles east of here, killing 13 house till 9 a.m. Sunday morning, dairy cattle, including prize -|spraying water on it continuous- St winning calves and 14 pigs. {ly. The fire was so hot that fire- Welsh, who lives at RR No. 4, fighters hosing the house had to Bowmanville, estimated the loss|have water sprayed on them. to be in excess of $20,000. When water supplies began to The farm house' about 100 feet/ fail: the Hrenghiers look wales beflarindoid 4 from a nearby creek. When the fom the baa Nas tvesleney bY water in the creek began lo 1im- 5 §2 3 hide hi rallns of efforts of the Bowmanville volun- jnish hey 2m a ving En. teer firefighters and the South 5 " Double Death [%:%: Investigated SHERBROOKE, Que. (CP) -_-- Provincial police today were in- vestigating a double slaying in a hunting shack near Brompton tured } Lake 10 miles east of Sherbrooke. | gwaked She family and turned in Police said the victims, killed| "Destroyed in the barn were 13 by rifle shots, were Ovila Mar- airy cattle and 14 pigs. Some tin, 63, and Eugene Dupuis, 67,0 the calves which were killed both of Sherbrooke. were prize winners from the re- Their bodies were discovered cent black and white shows of a i i a Bowmanville Police Constable e John Bird, While on his rounds h patrol car to investigate. When h he arrived at the farm, the oc- cupants of the house were asleep « and the barn blazing. The con- , stable used his police siren to, Ii Mistake I U.5.-Laos Aid Statement been war partment's director The fire was noticed first by that a broadcast report of Palm- checking doors, he noticed a red- Palmer's intention and misinter- dish glow in the sky, Not hearing preted U.S. a fire alarm, he drove off in his that all U.S. military aid to Laos supplies since the Aug. 9 coup overthrew ithe pro-Western government and| threw ¢/into turmoil, KHRUSHCHEV ATTACKS SECRETARY - GENERAL | PM Visits Ailing Mother SASKATOON (CP)--Mrs, Mary{Oct, 26, 1872, and married Wil- Florence Diefenbaker, 87, mother [jam Thomas Diefenbaker in of Canada's prime mugister, Yas 1893. : fn Sraleal Soldition in Jeapita Mr. Diefenbaker died here in ' 1945, two years after the couple She has been confined to a,.4" coleprated their 50th wed- eee | Wheel chair since 1957 and 18 ding anniversary | months ago suffered a stroke. 8 duis d . | ' Tad z Mrs. Diefenbaker always de- wt oie piste; Sud Fi manded efficiency and urged her day night to be at Mrs. Diefen- we sons to live up to their capa-| baker's bedside. They were : greeted at the airport by Mr. BORN IN ONTARIO Diefenbaker's brother Elmer. The two sons were born in Nor-| The prime minister had plan- manby Township in Ontario's| ned to return to the United Na- Grey County. The family moved) tions General Assembly in New! to the Carlton district of Saskat- York sometime this week but his| chewan in 1903 where Mr. Dief- emergency flight here may force enhaker was a school teacher. a delay in the trip. Officials said| years later the family his plans are indefinite and will went to a homestead about 60] force a delay in the trip. Offi- les northwest of Saskatoon cials said his plans are indefinite in 1910 to allow Elmer and John and will be dictated by his moth- to complete their education. er's: condition, The prime minister always MOTHER RALLIES found a confidant in his mother Dr. David M. Baltzan, Mrs.|and is reported to have tele- | Diefenbaker's p hy si cian, said phoned or written her each day Sunday night she rallied enough|since he grew up. During his to recognize and say a few words| school years he would tell her of| to her two sons. The doctor said| his studies, and while a lawyer| her condition "remains serious "'|he told her of cases he was] She was born Mary Florence handling and the intricacies of Bannerman in Port Elgin, Ont.,'each. | Neither Candidat | * Leading In . . ous bomb explosion in crowded | Times Square theatrical district Laos (AP)--The Embassy said today announcement that United ates military aid to Laos had suspended was a mistake. The suspension--until the situ- tion in the three-cornered civil stabilized -- was announctd n Saigon Saturday by Gen, Wil- Palmer, the defence de- of military VIENTIANE, Two iston ssistance. An embassy statement said HURT IN N.Y James Foley, 73, is helped by bystanders after he suffer- ed head injuries from mysteri- heard here ral r's announcement ad "misrepresented Gene policy" by inferring ad been suspended. "In fact," the embassy said, U.S. military aid to Laos has ot been suspended." It con- eded, however, that delivery of has virtually ceased . EXPLOSION ed in shrubbery plot behind statue of composer-entertainer George M. Cohan. Seven per- sons were injured by flying de- bris. Others in this photo are not identified. ~AP Wirephoto Red Boss Again | Tells Dag 'Resign' UNITED NATIONS, N:Y, (AP) |retariat--resolve « + + Questions to Soviet Premier Khrushchev to-{the detriment of the Socialist day challenged Secretary - Gen-| (Communist) and ne tralist eral Dag Hammarskjold to re-|states, then, naturally, these sign. He threatened to refuse to|countries will not recognize such |recognize UN decisions unless decisions and will rely on their the world organization's peace- own strength to defend the in- {making machinery is revised. |terests of their states, the in- | Khrushchev, addressing the as-|terests of peace, . {sembly under "right of reply"| 'This is the choice that now |procedure, unleashed a mew, faces the United Nations. Either heavy attack on Hammarskjold. We truly unite our efforts and do He is seeking to replace the sec- our utmost to consolidate the retary-general with a three-man | United Nations, thus ensuring co- executive with veto powers, {operation among all states to- "To avoid misinterpretation, 1|ward preserving peace, or else want to reaffirm that we do not|the forces. reflecting the interests trust Mr. Hammarskjold and of the group of imperialist states cannot trust him," Khrushchev Will go on dominating the United said. Nations and its machinery, which "If he himself does not muster Will inflict great damage upon up enough courage to resign, so|the cause of peacé and interna- to say, in a chivalrous manner, |tional co-operation, then we shall draw up the neces-| !'Let those who support the sary conclusions from the obtain- policy of strength and seek to ing situation. impose their will on others "It is not proper for a man|through the United Nations who has flouted elementary just. clearly realize where they stand ice to hold such an important(and what responsibility for the [post as that of secretary-gen- future they are assuming before | eral." {the world. | The Khrushchev attack came "I would like frankly to say to las the General Assembly's 98 the delegates of this session: Do {members waited expectantly for|not submit to the clamorous {new efforts to bring Khrushchev phrases pronounced here by Mr, {together with President, Eisen-|Hammarskjold and the repre- hower. The United States presi. sentatives of the colonial powers dent indicated Sunday night he|in their attempts to justify the is not ready for such a meeting bloody crimes perpetrated in view of Soviet behavidr, |against the Congolese people by "If the machinery which Is|the colonialists and their stooges, {called upon to solve the major! "I would like to say that the {international issues with due re- U.S, president who spoke here gard for the interests of all|was defending all that is old, states, if this UN machinery--|rolten and already collapsing.' |the Security Council and the sec-| Khrushchev rejected the idea WASHINGTON (AP)--Neither|indication Kennedy had an edge| of New York. Bomb was plant- Richard Nixon nor John Kennedy in Ohio and Texas, Ard 3 Wh el ir Kemmty or Nan 4 ? Id take all or most of these] . a e race for president. Experts)! Poison Victims rate the states wi e big tv g |178 votes, he probably would 4 ar Voles 'ag tossups, |win the election. (Still Critical the strategically located] ttle southeast Asian kingdom Sunday by two hunters. A .22- the Orono and Lindsay fairs, Also calibre rifle was found on the burned were 1300 bales of hay. floor. Donald Welsh, 18 a delegate of There were several empty lig- the Durham County 4-H club had uor bottles in the shack. just returned from visiting the Neighbors said sounds of argu- UN building in New York city. ment had been heard Saturday He had arrived home at 1 a.m U.K. Market Ripe For i f the campaign, «sisi NE EE he Sammpan: | There were some indications _ HAMILTON (CP) -- Charles apparently has more electorai| Kennedy's Roman Catholic re-iStoneman, 74, from nearby Cale-| votes in his pocket than Ken. ligion was hurting him, particu- donia, today was reported still in| nedy, the Democratic candidate arly in the south, somewhat Inferitical condition in hospital here But Nixon's lead is slim and California and Illinois, and in- suffering from food poisoning his total far from a majority. creasingly in Arizona. after attending the ¢ County Fair Saturday. Neutrals Split UN Three Ways UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP Caledonia Some statesmen say the United three of a meeting with President Eis. |enhower unless there was what he called a desire to reach agree. ment on the part of the presi- dent. "Some say that Khrushchev and Eisenhower should be locked in a room and kept there until they reach an agreement on dis. armament, but this, of course, is ) replaced with a committee of naive." . . : persons representing re- We may sit together indefin- Nations, like Caesar's Gaul, is spectively "the states parties to|itely, but if no desire to come to but little attention was paid to Sunday, 45 minutes before |fire broke out. them. TREE'S THIRD VICTIM These .are the conclusions that emerge from a survey of 50 - states by The Associated Press TORONTO (CP) -- Britons] The survey showed Nixon lead- now are free to buy anything|ing in 22 states with 161 elec- {they want and Canada is in the|toral votes and Kennedy leading "Canada Goods City Man Dies On Durham Road BOWMANVILLE (Staff) An Oshawa man, James Rosseau, 27 of 260 Oshawa Blvd., north was killed instantly Saturday night, when the car in which he was a passenger failed to ne- gotiate a "'T" intersection and careened head-on into a tree. The tragedy occurred on the Clarke Township 7th Concession, at the Clarke-Darlington Town- ship line. This is the same spot where Mrs. John Broome of Bow- manville and her daughter were killed last November. The victim was a passenger D in a car driven by his brother, Wallace, 33, of Newcastle. The driver is in Bowmanville Memor- ial Hospital suffering forehead lacerations, bruises and a sprain- ed right ankle. It is expected he will be allowed to return home sometime Monday. Apparently the Rosseau car was westbound on the 7th Concession when the driver failed to nego- tiate the "T" intersection and careened into the tree. It is the same #tree which claimed the life of Mrs, Broome and her daughter. It is believed the accident oc- curred sometime around 9 p.m. Saturday. However, police said, | they can not be sure as they re- ceived the call around 10 p.m. Wallace Rosseau, shocked and injured, staggered to a neigh- boring farm house around 10 p.m. to report the accident, His car is a total wreck. OPP Constable Howard White investigated. This is the 11th fatality in the Bowmanville area since the start of the year. The deceased was born in Trince Edward County, near Pic- ton. He married the former Marilyn Lillie Singular, in Trin. ity United Church, Bowmanville, Aug. 31, 1957. He has been a resident of Osh awa for the past two years and before that he lived in Bowman- ville for some time. He was an employee of General Motors Mr. Rosseau is survived by his CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS :ICE RA 5-1133 E DEPT. RA 5-6574 AL RA 3-2211 | youths for $25 each to hold her| Presidents Sukarno of Indonesia, other woman, lother, police said. best position of any country inlin 14 states with 123 votes. the world to supply their needs, Hon. George Drew, Canada's|/A SLIM LEAD high commissioner in the United| The difference is only 8 votes, Kingdom, said today. and neither man comes within . Waa 100 votes of the 269 votes needed He told a Canadian Club lunch-| ty win the presidency. eon Canadians should be conduct-| The survey rated six of ing a vigorous advertising cam-|jargest states -- New York (45), paign to sell industrial products,| California (2), Pennsylvania processed foods and clothes to|(2), Ohio (25), Texas (24), and the new, prosperous and concen- Michigan (20)--among the toss- trated British market, lups, although there was some the | NO FARMER REVOLT At the same time, the issue seemed to be waning in North Carolina and Oklahoma and helping him .in Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, lican party in the middle west 2. There is a major dissat form, particularly the civil rights plank, in the south, Becausé of this, six of Alabama's 11 ele toral votes and all of Missi sippi's eight votes may go another Democratic candidate. to Chance Still Seen f UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CP)|Canada would support it, Ex- The 'United Nations awaited new|ternal Affairs Minister Green efforts today to bring President was scheduled to return to the Eisenhower together with Pre-|UN from Ottawa today. mier Khrushchev as the Soviet leader prepared to make an-|MET WITH IKE other speech before the General! Macmillan talked at length Assembly. with Eisenhower Sunday in Khrushchev put his name on! Washington, Returning to New the list of speakers before word|York, the British leader had a reached him of Eisenhower's re-|45- minute session with Nehru fusal to talk directly with him|here Sunday night. Neither of- "in present circumstances." fered any information on their Eisenhower did not entirely | disc ssion, close the door, however. The | Khrushchev inscribed his name " wl {president's letter to the five neu-lon today's assembly roster by roa, one_sonl baby Harvey tralist leaders who asked for the invoking his 'right of reply." Rosseau. of Torontc. WES. Ma&Y meeting in a UN resolution, said| Technically, this meant that he x 4 : in pari: intended to answer statements Two sisters, Mrs. Jack Holman "If the Soviet Union seriously|about him or his country made (Phyllis) of Oshawa, Mrs. Wil- desires a reduction in tensions|by previous speakers. liam Forrest (Mary) of Oshawa it can readily pave the way for| Macmillan shot a number of and four brothers, Wallace, of useful negotiations by actions in JAMES ROSSEAU Of Ike-K. Meeting sharp-pointed shafts at him in a speech last week. Khrushchev put in a busy. day Sunday at the spacious Soviet | estate at Glen Cove, Long Islanc | where he spent the weekend. | He saw Nkrumah and Nasser in sessions lasting over two hours each. His longest meeting, however, was with leaders of the Algerian rebel regime fighting France. They were Vice-Premier Krim Belkacem, Information Minister M'Hammed Yazid and Finance Minister Ahmed Francis. Khrushchev told them that "resolute" actions by the Al- gerian people would hasten inde- pendence from France, "the co- lonialists know no other reason but the reason of force," he said. | Newcastle, Thomas, of Toronto, the UN and elsewhere." i Robert, of Oshaw obert, of Oshawa and Roy of ppiricy REACTION Ficton also survive, i : Khrushchev's reaction was not The body is resting at the ynown. | LATE NEWS FLASHES Armstrong Funeral Home for| A British official, speaking on service in the chapel Tuesday, hehalf of Prime Minister Mac- Oct. 4, at 2 p.m. Interment willl millan, put an optimistic cast on be at Mount Lawn Cemetery. the picture. He said: Rev. M. A. Bury, minister of "The prime minister welcomes King Street United Church will the willingness which the presi- conduct the service. dent has now reaffirmed to take mem e-- part in any negotiation which he feels is likely to prove fruitful." A neutralist diplomat indicated t efforts to arrange the Eisen- . . { hower-Khrushchev meeting would Acid-Throwing | not be abandoned. He said he ex- : pected the sponsors of the BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP)--Police original resolution to discuss new have arrested a 60- year - old moves today. woman who allegedly hired two| The resolution was signed by LONDON (AP) -- British by lying in a street among the n Woman Held In parently dealing with guided admiralty by a newspaper ma was from the mass-circulation named Ronald Gray Nehru Opposes Soviet UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. J t i D € in effect opposing a Soviet husband Saturday night while she Tito of Yugoslavia, Nasser of the] secretary-general, threw acid in his face because UPited Arab Republic, Nkrumah of Ghana, and Prime Minister Nehru of India. i 2 The Canadian cabinet Tichael S, Kondol, wasgthree hours Saturday and dis blinded in one eye by the acid cussed the neutralist nations' and may lose the sight of the|resolutions. Prime Ministes Die- !fenbaker declined to say whether she suspected he was seeing an- WASHINGTON (AP) comes the oldest president of of Congress. wasn't able to pinp he takes over that distinction f but it is an hour or two after - JP met for 57 Secret Papers Found On Street investigating how seven documents marked "secret'" came to Scho district. A navy spokegman said the technical papers, ap- said the papers were found by Nehru today opposed any basic move Ike Oldest U.S. President security experts Sunday began night clubs and cafes of London's missiles, were handed into the Mrs. Stoneman, 67, and her grandchildren, Judith Walker, 7, and Donald Walker, 14, are in fair condition and im- proving. the fair, The children's parents, Mr, and found the four unconscious when they returned to the Stoneman home from the fair, Pole Charged | With Murder | TORONTO (CP) -- A special commission of the Polish-Cana- dian Congress is investigating divided into three parts, and neutral. The 98 UN members cannot states." easily be filed into these three Other reports from the survey:| The food poisoning is believed pigeonholes because the way Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana has| 1. There seems to be no major|to have resulted from the eating they split up at any given mo- called for farmer revolt against the Repub- of unwashed grapes purchased at ment depends on the issue they front of neutralist countries, and are facing at that noment, But a growing need has arisen of state of Cambodia, has said faction with the Democratic plat- Mrs. John Walker of Hamilton, for such a classification. There such countries should put pres-| " to/sure on the big powers to ease aps ovie | is an increasing tendency break down the UN membership tensions. |along the lines of commitment] -|and noncommitment to the two country is pro-western, which is|King Hussein of Jordan declared great power blocs. IDEAS OF KHRUSHCHEV For one thing, Khrushchev lately has gested. 1. That five 'state to a neutral course" added to the 10-power ment committee that and the military blocs of the Western agreement Ann they call them eastern, western powers, the Socialist (Commu.-|President, and particularly by Soviet Premier| point or another. sug- s adhering] One should be membership into three parts is| chev. disarma- to take countries in Western| At the outset' King Hussein ress ; now con- military alliances, and count said: he arrest in Warsaw of a Polish- sists, as 'he put it, of "states them as pro-Western, take those is evinced by the nist) states and the neutralist|/those quarters that back him, no |smoke will come from the chim- ney as is the tradition when a Pope is elected." Jordan King For another thing, President! the formation of a Prince Norodom Sihanouk, chief| But how can you tell which| UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) |pro-eastern and which is neu. today the Soviet Union has al- tralist? Whatever criterion you|ways tried to destroy the United adopt is bound to fail at one|Nations. The young Jordanian monarch took the rostrum in the 98-nation |General Assembly immediately |SPLIT BY ALLIANCES the UN after Soviet Premier Khrush- way to break "I want to make sure that born Canadian citzen on a war-|phelonging to the opposing mili-|in Eastern alliances and count there is no mistake where Jor- time murder charge. | Sigmud Jaworski, president of |the congress, said Sunday night|p, Polish-Canadians are concerned | about the Aug. 29 arrest of Tad- eusz Koyer of Montreal. tary groupings." 2. That UN Secretary-GeneraP those in no alliances and count should beithem as neutral. ag Hammarskjold {them as pro-Eastern and take|dan stands. in the conflict of ide- | Ologles endangering the peace of the world." Koyer, former member of the| i Polish home army, has been charged with the slaying of at least nine left-wing Polish resist-| | ance partisans during the Second World War, | Mr. Jaworski said the arrest| affects thousands of Polish-Cana- dians who fought in the same army, 'This thing could happen to any one of them if they re- turned to Poland for a visit." 'As soon as all the facts are known, we will spare no effort| to aid thls man," Mr. Jaworski said. Govt. Asks For BNA Repeal OTTAWA (CP) -- 1 government wants eve n Saturday night. The reporter newspaper The People, which a 35-year-old private detective Suggestion (CP) Indian Prime Minister change in the UN structure to abolish the office | of | | resident Eisenhower today be- the United States. The Library oint the exact moment. at which rom President Andrew Jackson, noon. | actment of a wholly: constitution and repeal British North America Act, at present the basic constitutional document, a federal authority in- dicated today. This step might be the final one in a three-stage plan which may be outlined at a constitu- tional conference of provincial attorneys - general and Justice Minister . Fulton startiis Thurs- day. The first step may be a bypass to the long - standing difficulty about whether unanimous agree- ment of provincial and federal governments should be a require- ment of an amending formula. If you think this Ocelot has just captured its next meal, your guess is wrong. This one | is just playing with the white | HOLD IT RIGHT THERE! rat. Ozzie, who is about one | her playmates, pulls their tails, | | pats them with her paws, never leaving a mark of tooth or claw, year old, makes her home in a pet shop in San Rafael, Calif. Her oc wner, Claude Felland, said the cat regards rats as | ~--AP Wirephoto