+ Reeves wound + THOUGHT FOR TODAY Sympathy is what one woman of= fers another in exchange for de= tails. lie Oshawa Time or WEATHER REPORT "the weather office predicts the starting today. first heat wave of the summer, Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy VOL. 90--NO. 151 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, JUNE 29,1961 Authorized as Second Class Mail Ottawo Post Office Department, TWENTY PAGES NEW ADVISER day in the chief executive's White House office. Gen. Tay- lor, former Army chief of staff, was called back to ac- | tive military duty by the President. President Kennedy and his new adviser on military and intelligence matters, Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, pose fo- --(AP Wirephoto) Mayors Turn Down Ethics Code Plan LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- After) The code of ethics proposal, elected officials should take a hearing repeated references to submitted by York Township, good long look at their activities! civic maladmipistration during one of the municipalities con-|{to be certain they are within its annual convention, the Asso-/cerned in public inquiries, de- the confines of existing legisla-| ciation of Ontario Mayors and|clared there had been an in- tion. He urged that muricipali- up the three-day b of scandalsities consult the department if meeting Wednesday by reject-/and judicial inquiries among there were any doubts, nga proposal for a municipal municipal governments. He declared, however, that 3 Ss " ow his department is not going to The convention earlier in the PELEGATES CITE ACT i "a Gestapo, snooping a hus ; | However, all delegates pres- seeping" at'm a al bodice, day had been told by J. W. F.lont at the' final meeting, with PeCPI8 bnieiba' bodies Carter, assistant deputy minis-|the exception of York Township In business sessions Wednes-| ter of municipal affairs, that|Councillor Philip White, rejected! 2Y the convention adopted an "There are worse situations in|the proposal, giving tacit sup- Arnprior resolution that council Ontario, to my personal know-|port to a declaration by Scar- members who are professional ledge, than any that have been|horough Reeve Albert Campbell Persons be required by legisla- made public by probes." {that the Municipal Act already tion to disclose their interest in On Tuesday Municipal Af-|sets forth an adequate standard|any municipal matters directly fairs Minister Warrender re-|of ethics. o indirectly involving their marked that while municipall The York proposal would have cHentS scandals have occurred in only had a hoard of ethics to hear five or six of Ontario's 900-odd| charges of corruption or mis- municipalities, hese few inci-| conduct levelled by ratepayers dents have indicated to some - extent that political morality in SHOULD TAKE LOOK Ontario-is at a low ebb. Mr. Carter told delegates that Indefinite Ban On U.S. Atom Tests? WASHINGTON (CP)--Presi- dent Kennedy apparently has decided to extend the volun- tary suspension of nuclear ex- plosions for an indefinite period, B 1 1 P t LJ LJ Simmering using a method that may block criticism at home by those who By THE CANADIAN PRESS | The president said Wednesday have been urging him to resume The "pot in Berlin is boiling|that no. plan for partial mobiliz- underground tests. jation of forces over 1 y had! F with need of again. in had a Prin A President Kennedy called a been placed before him at the decision following Russian re- meeting of his National Security present time. jection of Western proposals for Council for today (3:30 p.m.| Speaking a few hours after 2" effective test ban treaty. EDT) to discuss steps to meet Khrushchey made a Kremlin Kennedy has decided to set up any emergency in the Berlin address on Berlin, Kennedy another panel of scientists to crisis. warned the Soviet leader that determine whether Russia has The NSC is the chief United Germany is no Laos and that|Peen cheating on her own self- States security planning group the West has vital interests on 'MPosed moratorium and, if so, and comprises the president's the Continent. a Russia would gain from senior diplomatic, military, in- He urged Khrushchev not to such tests telligence and civilian defence There is no indication the f : h +... make the "grave mistake" advisers, including the secretar- under-estimating Western deter- ies of state and defence. _. mination to protect the freedom The White House session Wasi ewe Berlin and withstand expected to review contingency pressure 10 recognize the East planning which the US. 108€- Gorman communist regime ther with Britain and France, would put into motion if Russia WARNS WEST tried to implement its Berlin Khrushe : demands with military force or rushchev warned the scientists will be able to come up with any more information than that already available to Kennedy from his huge scien- tific and intelligence apparatus. quiet Montreal we CALLOUSED NERVES' Atom Plant Aloft | In Triple CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP)--The United States has hurled its first atomic battery into space as part of a spec- tacular aerial triple play in which one rocket placed three satellites in orbit around the earth. The Russians never have an- nounced using a nuclear device "MAD DOGS AND ENGLISHMEN . . . LONDON (AP)--A hot sun beamed on Britain for the sec- ond time in two days and this rare occurrence seemed to have made the natives rest- | less. Strange things happened. A male rock 'n' roll singer with hair a foot long eloped to Scotland with a 16-year-old girl, causing the girl's father to tell reporters: "I'm against their marrying. How would you like to have a son-in-law with hair longer | than your daughter's?" | In Nottingham, two Bank of England pound notes showed up with the signature Mickey Mouse written where the name of the cashier of the Bank of England should have been. Near Exeter, Thomas Kahill escaped from jail, but was captured when a, policeman spotted his unusual clothing. Kahill admitted he took the clothing from a scarecrow near the jail. At Romford, a spectator at a greyhound race jumped over the rail and tried to catch the mechanical rabbit. In Hampstead, actor Sir Ralph Richardson's pet ferret escaped and startled drinkers by running up and down the | bar at the nearby Spaniard's Inn. In Birmingham, put this advertisement paper: "For rent--modern flat, two minutes from railway, shops and lavatory." someone in a Montreal Hurts Policeman MONTREAL (CP) -- A time- bomb exploded on the porch of a nightclub figure"s house in West early to- ant Leo Hurl police explosives ex- day, Plouffe, pert. The bomb exploded as Sgt. Plouffe was dragging it off the porch of a house belonging to Leo Scanzano, whose brother Frank has interests in Aldo's cafe and Champ's ShoBar. The powerful introglycerine bomb cracked the house's stone steps, smashed all windows in front of the house, and cracked panes in houses nearby and across the street. Sgt. the blockading of western access|25ainst mobilization and said routes to West Berlin threats of mobilization over Te West Berlin would not stop the S. views the developing 4 ho. sof The U.S. views ; Soviet Union from signing a sep- in crisis as an extremely r S Berlin cri arate peace treaty with East dangerous situation, and Presi- dent Kennedy has made it clear that a great deal of thought is being given to steps that might have to be taken to convince Soviet Premier Khrushchev of the West's determination to stay in West Berlin. President Kennedy declined at his press conference Wednesday to outline the steps under study in Washington HAS UGLY IMPLICATIONS However, there was general agreement in diplomatic quar- ters that Khrushchev might push the Berlin crisis to the point where the United States would have to consider partial| mobilization and the dispatch of more troops to Europe CITY EMERGENCY | | PHONE NUMBERS | POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 | |had opened a policy drive to en- West Be sermany. But Khrushchev did not re- f Ise 0 peat his previous assertion that| Russia would push through such! : . Ar. wa a treaty before the end of this BERLIN (AP)--"Ach, said year. the red-cheeked janitor wit 2 , have : os flowing moustache, 'We Berlin- Kennedy made it plain that oc" wo have callouses on our the U.S. stood ready to negoti- : nerves." ate with Russia on the question "We've lived with crisis for of Germany and Berlin on the vears. It doesn't matter any i ars. @ } basis of self-determination of longer the German people -- and Eu- rope. "We lived through the block- yf : ade. We lived through Khrush- The New York Times re- 2°¢: RE c adminicine Chev's threats in 1958. And to- ported that Kennedy administra- day, we're stronger, and be- tion sources said the president sides, nobody would ever leave gage the Russians on a broad West Berlin range of East-West differences,, The new Berlin crisis whirls rather than the isolated one in around the city but West Berlin Berlin. is unmoved "This policy campaign will The janitor is right. Nobody entail domestic measures, in-|iS concerned. Nobody is leaving cluding civil defence tasks that|--only the refugees pouring into will alert the American people/the west from Communist East to the possible consequences of Germany, and West Berliners a showdown. International ma- off on vacation to the sunny noeuvres are also planned to South impress the Communists with. Prosperous West Berlin, the 'credibility' of the Western linked with the West only by power resources.' ithe thinnest threads, throbs with rliners Crises all the energy of New York, London, Paris and Rome. East Berlin improves as time goes by. War ruins are slowly cleared and replaced by grass squares. There is more in the stores. 3ut in the West, hundreds of workers swarm over new apart- ment houses. Delivery trucks wheel , from busy markets to busy stores. Pretty girls in sum- mer dresses stroll down the Kurfuerstendamm with poodles in tow There are more jobs than un- employed. The statistics say that the 2,250,000 West Berliners have an average of 800 marks ($200) in the bank. In the Eastern sectors, the apartment houses on Stalin Al-| lee--once the pride of the Com- munist regime--are slipping into disrepair. On scores of build- ings, the tile facing has fallen away and nobody is doing any-| thing about it. |with ; p land permit communication, with | Satellite § in their satellites and the U.S. success would appear to give| American scientists a significant lead over Russia in the race to harness atomic power for space| §& exploration. A Thor - Able - Star rocket blasted off fiu.l Cape Canaveral | : Wednesday niglit with the satel- lites stacked in its nose like a three-scoop ice cream cone. Both stages of the 50-ton rocket clicked with drill-like pre- cision and flung the entire pack- age into orbit. Quickly spring devices kicked the payloads i apart and they continued to cir-| ge. cle the globe on separate paths| nearly 600 miles above the earth. Officials reported that the atomic battery was functioning and that clear signals were being transmitted by all three packages. GENERATES POWER The grapefruit-sized atomic unit has a hot core containing a small amount of plutonium 238, a radio-isotope which gen- erates heat up to 1,000 degrees. rods Thermo - electric convert | § the heat to elec energy | | which snds 2.5 watts of power ! to two of four radio transmit-| } ters and some .instruments in the satellite, . Once perfected, these atomic 4 batteries will provide satellites ~ unlimited power supply | FIREMEN carry an uniden- | tified man who tried to enter | vehicles fired deep into the uni-| verse. The 4%-pound nuclear unit was attached to the base of the he had to be rescued him- [tempting to help in the rescue | self. Two children and a man were reported to have died in | British warships were reported heading for Kuwait today amid clashes in the oil-rich sheikdom and the adjoining Persian gulf. British frigates are expected to arrive Friday to guard the oil refinery at Ahmadi abortive plot by Iraqis to sabo- tage it. ian troops arrived in Kuwait to- day and are patrolling the bor-| der with Iraq. More troops are| expected from Jordan Friday. | oritative newspaper Al Ahram British Navy Ships On Way TEHRAN, Iran (Reuters) -- Reports from Kuwait said two after an The reports said Saudi Arab- Meanwhile, Iraqi patrol boats were reported to have fired on Iranian motor launches taking| food to Kuwait. CAIRO (Reuters)--The auth- reported today that Iraqi forces moved Wednesday to the bor- ders of the sheikdom of Ku- Home Blaze Kills Three In Winnipeg WINNIPEG (CP)--Two chil dren and an adult died early wait, to which Iraqi Prime Minister Abdul Karim Kassem laid claim Sunday. Quoting United Arab republic official circles, the newspaper said two Iraqi brigades, fully armed and equipped, moved to the border of the oil-rich Per- sian gulf sheikdom. The British frigates Yarmouth and Llandaff left Hong Kong suddenly today for Singapore, raising speculation they were heading for redeployment in the Red Sea. Britain has offered to go to the assistance of its former pro- tectorate, if asked in accord- {ance with the aid agreement they signed recently when Ku- wait became independent. Meanwhile, U.AR. foreign ministry officials said there would be no reply to the mem- orandum containing Kassem's claim to the teritory because "no reply is required." Kuwait was reported to have placed on the alert its brigade- sized army--2,500 men--in the face of the threatened takeover |by neighboring Iraq. LONDON (AP)--The British aircraft carrier HMS Bulwark is steaming toward the Persian Gulf with 600 royal marine com- mandos, an admiralty spokes- man said today. Three other today when fire destroyed a two- storey frame house in Winni- peg's north end. Two other children were res- cued and at least one man at- was burned. Names of the victims were largest satellite. This is Transit| a burning home in North | 4-A=a 175-pound forerunner of| Winnipeg to rescue children the navy's satellite system de-| trapped inside. The man's | signed to provide ships, planes | and submarines with accurate, all-weather navigation. The other satellites were: clothes were burned off and | the fire. Two other children [not available immediately. were rescued. (CP Wirephoto) Campbell, a Clarence Strong and Alan Winnipeg Free inorthern lights. Plouffe was released A 55-pound sphere nicknamed i ffect Of Greb which carried two detec- ; tors to measure x-ray radiation from the sun. Injun, a 40-pound drum-shaped Hits Milk Trade parcel to measure intense space radiation and to report on EDMONTON (CP)--Effects of auroral phenomena such as the severe drought conditions on the Prairies are beginning to reach beyond the farmer's plowed-un- der fields and fodder-shart cat- tle. First hint of new areas af- (fected came Wednesday from {| Winnipeg, where milk producers | have expressed concern they | may be forced out of business. The producers operate ci: con- from hospital after glass splint-|tracts which they must fill or ers were removed from his lose. Milk-producing herds shoulder. must, therefore, be maintained | > Q : ne at strength. With supplies of| FOLLOW BEATINGS ihe feed. at a premium, the outlook | Tatest A Ient series involv-D® bleak. os poh bg grin Toe Farmers. could take. litle] BE Jught ch a We. © heart from weather forecasts, | characters. Within the last five | TR. tw on hav indicating continued hot, dry| io bi have Boeh beaten weather which over the last few | Bomb months has burned southern | : d, and another > i } | wounded, and another reported Praivie crops. to the brink of being .shot at six times. he "The violence is following a disaster. | pattern," Inspector William| Widely-scattered thun der- Fitzpatrick, assistant chief of storms were tentatively forecast detectives, said today. Until to- for tonight,. but the parched day, police had discounted the-/land needs a steady downpour ories of an underworld war. to recover Scanzano Same home, about! Cattle sales were running dou- 3:55 a.m. and found a box on ple se for » same period | his porch. He flagged down a bie tes cy ame period] passing police car. Police found yards Wednesday. Winnipeg of- El Flamm clock and a can- fais said the condition of cat-| oh tle received indicated farmers] Montreal West police ordered, : wl Ag | Scanzano's wife Do two chil- 2T¢ culling herds of less desir- dren out of the house and asked able stock. Montreal police to send Sgt. Plouffe. Sgt. Plouffe arrived about 6 a.m., hooked a ball of twine to the box, and started dragging the box off the porch. It ex- ploded Scanzano said he did not know why anyone would put a bomb The Saskatchewan Farmer's/ling tariff protection within on his doorstep. Union predicts the' province's EFTA. = "| wheat yield likely will fall be. The ministers represented - tween the figures for the prov- Britain, Sweden, Denmark, Nor- Pair Charged ince's two driest years, when way, Switzerland, Austria and re-------- POT IUZAL. : 'Finland - is' an as. In Shooting TORONTO (CP) -- Two 18- year-olds were arrested and charged with attempted murder Wednesday night after a service station operator was shot wounded in the abdomen Charged were Wayne Taylor and tigation following The prospect of a crop failure also has brought increased mar-|sible or likely to succeed, the ket activity. An estimated 3,000,- communique said. It added the 000 bushels of flax were traded council at the Winnipeg Grain Exchange [question at its next meeting. Wednesday, about 1,000,000 more than usually changes hands. Swastika Raise Over Schoolyard ST. THOMAS (CP)-- was underw: the | today An inves- of EFTA are willing to under- ollo discovery of a|tegrated European market, ob- Nazi swastika flag flying on the|ligations which go beyond those Drought 12.2 and 12.6 bushels an acre were gleaned. i Alberta is in a somewhat bet- ter position than the other prai- rie provinces, with only the southern part of the province severely affected. At Ottawa Wednesday the bu- reau of statistics' crop report said immediate rains are needed urgently to "halt rapid and widespread crop losses" on the Prairies. Co-Ordinate Free Trade Note Urges LONDON (Reuters) -- Mem- bers of the European Free Trade Area. should "co-ordin- ate their actions" in the event of negotiations for member- ship or association with the Eu- ropean Common Market, says a communique issued here. he communique came Wed- nesday night at the end of a two-day meeting of the minis- terial council of the seven- country group. It is premature to judge whether negotiations are pos- will re-examine the The council agreed there would be advantage in speeding up the timetable for dismant- sociate member. The communique said some EFTA countries could not ac- cept obligations of a political nature. But it added: "All members take, in order to achieve an in- | Press reporter, rescued the two children from the second floor. A girl of about 11 cltmbed half | (way down a ladder, then fell. | A boy about 15--his arms and| legs in flames--fell into Mr.| Campbell's arms from a roof. | Both rescued children were se-| verely burned. warships are on the move in the Far East. * 'Speeders Beware, 'Police On Warpath TORONTO (CP) -- Provincial and municipal police in Ontario will launch an all-out grack- down on speeding motorists this Dominion Day holiday weekend. Provincial police will have 600 cruisers and 50 motorcycles on ground patrol and a helicopter in the air, assistant commis sioner Thomas Trimble said to- |day. and William Gregory, both of|flag police of a St. Thomas pub-|which they h ave accepted sik Toronto. In hospital in serious!/lic school among 'themselves in the condition was station proprietor, City police and a public util-| (EFTA - founding) Stockholm] Lou Knoll. ities commission work crew treaty." Police said Knoll was alone were summoned to the Scott| Members of the Common . ; when two bandits entered the Street public school shortly after Market, EFTA's rival trade Guns of the National Guard | station, He stiri ed with one 8:00 a.m. to remove the flag grouping in Europe, are today opened the third an- and the other fired a .32-calibre. Only two weeks ago the Union| France, West Germany, Italy. nual Freedom Festival. The automatic pistol, police said. |Jack was stolen from the flag|The Netherlands, Belgium and| festival, held in Detroit and The two fled without loot. |pole of the school. | "uxembourg. 4 | neighboring Windsor, cele- | ada and BIRTHDAY BANG brates the birthdays of Can. the United States with a week of varied events, (CP Wiréphoto) FN I OR SHOOTING BREAKS OUT IN DISPUTE ON KUWAIT