Saturday mainly cloudy with a few showers or thundershowers. Turning cooler. THOUGHT FOR TODAY Those long, skinny neckties pose a problem: Do you tie them or braid them? EIGHTEEN PAGES VOL: 91--NO. 181, " Official On Drug-Babies Gains Impetus . , Phoenix, Ariz., television Sherri Fink- bine was reported planning to Frances 0. Kelsey of the U.S./fly to Europe to seek an abor. Food and Drug' Administration|tion because she took thalido- because the native of Cobble|mide and fears the baby will Hill, B.C., withheld a li for|be defi d- Arizona law pre- thalidomide. vented her from ending her Dr. Gerald S. LaSalle of Mont-| pregnancy, there. real, registrar of the Quebec} Most Rev. Thomas J. Riley, College of Physicians and Sur-jauxiliary bishop of the Catholic geons, proposed worldwide con-|archdiocese of Boston, says in| trol of drugs by the World regard to the Finkbine case that) | abortion on the ground that the| ; vary from|child might be deformed cannot) | ibe justified. | Into Critical Stage Today | turbed" by the political aspects. Britain would be confined in its powers of running its own af- fairs. "Before anything further is done than exploring or making tentative agreements, I hope there will be full discussion in Parliament and I hope the mat ter will be submitted to tht judgment of the country." This was seen as a call for @ general election on the Common Market or not. In the Commons, Prime Min- ister Macmillan said that whether or not the Common Market negotiations succeed, the prime ministers conference beginning Sept. 10 will strive to increase Commonwealth trade. WANTS ASSURANCES The current phase of the com- plex Brussels negotiations was expected to depend on whether Britain obtains assurances that European prices can be kept low enough to let in Common- wealth farm produce. The talks between Britain and the six. --France, West Ger many, Italy, The Netherlands, Belgium and embourg-- have been at an impasse on this key issue since last Friday. Britain has proposed that preferences enjoyed by mem- bers of the Common Market should apply also to Common- wealth farm produce until Jan, 1, 1967, conference sources said. If world commodity agree- ments had not been signed by then, preferences enjoyed by the Commonwealth producers could gradually be reduced up to 1970, when they would end. Germ Warfare By THE CANADIAN PRESS Meanwhile. Official action on behalf of drug - deformed: babies and moves to tighten control over new drugs has gathered impetus in Canada. Five provincial governments --Quebec, Ontario, Manitoba, Alberta and British Columbia-- announced acceptance of an in- vitation issued Wednesday by Federal Health Minister J.| Waldo Monteith to work out) Lae joint programs of care and fi.|H ealth Organization because) nancial assistance. The meeting| 'esting standards of federal and provincial health|Country fo country. ment officials was set for) Aug. 17 in Ottawa. e e Meanwhile, Dr. Jean Webb of neers Prien wore! Britain Orders was attempting to track down) bee of babies born deformed) ecause their mothers took the| tranquillizer th alido mide in| Soblen I O N : oO : early pregnancy to fight nausea. | . " lh a : C Ss Le TOTAL 55 LONDON (AP) -- Britain or- said. "Our men take over on) " Unofficial reports on such dered El Al Airline today to|the plane." } NOT PART OF ACT fly fugitive spy Robert Soblen| The embassy spokesman said| : to New York, but the Israelijin. ty, hal ld k Stuntman Lyle Cameron | cerd" halted abruptly when government appealed to Britain Se ee e| begins his fall to earth over | the planes collided at 5,000 to relieve the airline of this re-|Sure that Soblen was not ap-| Ventura, Calif., on Tuesday | feet. The arrows point to sponsibility. |proached by other passengers| after his attempted mid-air | damage on the wings of the land that he did not have a/ transfer from one light plane | two light planes used in the births put the total at 55, cover- ing ali but the Atlantic prov. A diplomatic source said the her dari he fil taunt, © d the pilot ' " : ; to another during the filming | stunt. Cameron an ie pois levee, aovertipems bad can oar ale eer s of a TV show called "Rip-! of boti planes parachuted inces. Birth of a drugdeformed baby in Quebec City was re- municated its appeal to the for- eign office and the matter is|Soblen when the convicted spy knifed himself on the f light Ei ] t H l } U d r Gun e@ GS During 1Z-rour Vrama ported there for the first time Thursday. The drug, developed in West Germany, was released art a prescription medicine in Canada April 1, 1961, and with- drawn last March. being studied by British offici- als. from Israel July 1 to sé¢cure en- nan eee could make/|try into Britain. it unlikely Soblen will be sent} jz] Al's London office recei to the United States aboard the| the eer cae gee Israeli El Al plane leaving Lon-| mitted them at once to its head) don tonight. office in Jerusalem. The air-| disability compensation for a while, Gorey said, but the cheques stopped in mid-March. John B. Ryan, 63, a court re- porter employed for the hear- ing and-one of the hostages, a bill in Washington that would direct the government to strike t wig a monwealth first, but it was ob- vious the Commonwealth now is second. "We are going to be closer friends with the Italians, Ger- mans and French than with the Canadians and Australians. "We are allying ourselves with six nations of Europe. Four of those we rescued 20 or so years ago from domination by the other two. At this point, Foreign Secre- tary Lord Home interrupted to say Attlee was misrepresenting the government's position. The six ministers also were| "Our idea in going into the due to discuss the key farm ex-|Common Market is to serve our ports question with chief British) old friends better by getting ad- negotiator, Edward Heath. ditional strength for Britain," sip ont Fe gts Home said. |Spaak of Belgium, ai irs. ' |day about the talks, said it is nal oy "difficult for negotiations like pendage to Europe." The Labor these to fail." - f ue Initial reaction to the latest peer said he was "gravely dis British stand, presented Heath, was mixed. French sources said some of the changes which Heath sug- gested were merely new ways of putting Britain's previous stand. The Dutch delegation found the new plan a le and the German delegation leader, Rolf Lahr, said: "One can make something of these proposals." | |ATTLEE CRITICIZES At Westminster, Earl Attlee told the House of Lords that British entry in the Common Market would be "'a step back- ward" whose political dangers were "'very, very great." The former Labor prime min- ister sai dthe Conservative gov- ernment used to put the Com- BRUSSELS (CP - Reuters)-- Common Market negotiators to- day began thrashing out Brit- ain's latest proposals in its ap- plication to join the European Economic Community as the nine-month-long talks entered a critical stage. Officials of the six Market countries were analyzing the British proposals while their foreign ministers planned to dis- : A : j cuss with the British team the | & ee ee, ' effect of Britain's Market mem- i bership on Indian, Pakistani and Ceylonese trade. safely to earth. Cameraman Don Stratman filmed the action in color; the still pic- tures were made available today. Ex-Priest Sues For Divorce, Claims Cruelty SAN FRANCISCO (AP)--De- frocked priest Walter Ryan, 57, whose departure from his New York, state home seven years ago prompted a $2,300,000 suit brought by his wife, Alice, against the Roman Catholic Church, has sued her for di- vorce. He accused his attractive, 41- year-old wife of adultery, deser- tion and cruelty. Ryan married her in Baptist rites in Mary- land 12 years ago under the as- sumed ecupation of free lance oo (AP Wirephoto) and wounded his lawyer in a scuffle before taking command of the room. HAS FLESH WOUND He released his lawyer, Ste- phen 8. Gorey, 46, who was ta- ken to hospital with a flesh wound in his left leg. ne PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) -- An embittered pipefitter, incenscd| by discontinuance of his disabil- ity cheques, held eight men at gunpoint for 12% hours in a state office before detectives disarmed him. Charles Elmer Milligan, 52, of b> ih drtncaa Hem, At that point, Mifligan ré-| NeW DELHI (Reuters) -- A leased all hostages except Don-|nlane missing since Wednesday ald J. Morgan, 47, the commis-|with 10 persons aboard includ- sion's chief attorney, and the ing a Toronto school teacher has two pseudo-reporters. __|been found near the Indian-Ne. What he planned to do with|palese border with all aboard those three wasn't explained.|safe, it was reported here to- Whatever it was, it didn't come) day. to pass. | The Canadian is Miss Clara Sgt. Moore got four glasses of Grindley, 45-year-old teacher at water and the men began to|the Earl Haig Collegiate in talk. suburban North York. " ; " : She graduated 15 years ago RS ag gl pi p opt from the Ontario College of Ed- to him than 25 feet." ucation and McGill University, -- . u The report was received by As Milligan turned his head/the office here of the Royal to pick up a glass of water, Ro-|Nepal Airlines, owners of the | jury 18 months ago while work-|driquez leaped at him and|Dakota that disappeared on a grabbed the pistol. Moore/scheduled flight from Kat- joined his fellow officer to over-|mandu, capital of Nepal, to power the husky pipefitter. 4 the Glen C d Enters Algiers i:iicc om ste Gotoro River | Th ld shot f th eel id the pl u ft ere was one wi shot from e repo: Sal fe plane was Under Truce |Milligan's gun, but Moore said: CRIME HEARING | _{in northern Arizona. He drew located at Tanakpur in moun- "J don't think he felt like kill.|{@inous territory about 36 miles ALGIERS (Reuters) --- Mem-} ing anybody." dis- two days. Ryai eas whereabouts in San Francisco to deny her charges. She claimed he was the father of her fourth daughter while on a brief visit to their Glen Head, N.Y., home in 1956, but a San Francisco Superior Court re- jected her assertion in a June hearing, She said in her suit against the church that Ryan was ab- ducted, gven liquor and shifted around to various monasteries. in different states. This was de- nied by both Ryan and church officials. Ryan said in the divorce suit that he left his wife in 1955 be- cause his wife '"'inflicted a course of extreme cruelty which necessitated his departure from the family dwelling place." Ryan claims in the suit that Mrs. Ryan's fourth daughter was a result of adultery with an unnamed and unknown man. commission The gunpoint hearing was in- terrupted in its early stages by Milligan's 28 -year - old son, potters Moments earlier, Milligan had voluntarily released five of his prisoners. Charles, who was promptly The drama began aboutithrown out by his angered 8 a.m. in a four-storey state) father. capital annex housing offices of} By telephone, Milligan told the Arizona Industrial Commis-|petective Sgt. Seymour Neal- sion. list: There for a hearing on his| «] damn near killed them all. disability claim, Milliganiye had to get past you to get whipped out a .22-calibre Pistol in, You get him the hell out of \this building." S wnt sf CHEQUES WERE STOPPED Dissident Chie | Milligan suffered a back in- LONDON (Reuters) --~ The British war office will conduct an inquiry into the death of a scientist working at a top-secret germ warfare research labora- tory in southern England, it was announced Thursday night. The announcement said scien- tist G. A. Bacon died in hospital Wednesday night in "circum- stances which make it possible that death was due to acciden- tal infection resulting from his work" at the laboratory. The laboratory is concerned with research into defensive measures against the possible use of biological agents in war. The laboratory director said Bacon became ill several days ago and he emphasized that "there is no positive reason to suppose that he died of any di- seas which he contracted through his work with us." inside the Nepalese border. His mother, expecting another child, says it will take many years to pay off the medical expenses for Todd's operations. with this jug, take it away from|bers of Ahmed Ben Bella's warned Chief|sident to "and bring it to the po-|geria's capital here today after them quickly," Kitney, lice station." is faction headed Al- {nationalist leaders temporarily AGAIN AUG. 20 TORONTO (CP) -- On- tario's royal commission on Three Men Killed crime will resume hearings Aug. 20 after a summer holiday -adjournment from late June. The provincial commis- sion under Mr. Justice W. D. Roach of the Ontario Court of Appeal has held 43 sittings since opening hear- ings March 21, Among early witnesses at the resumed hearings are expected to be Joseph McDermott and Vin- cent Feeley, reputed On- tario gambling bosses, and Attorney - General Roberts. q|Shelved their differences under 'the shadow of a looming civil war. Former premier Ferhat Ab-| bas, one of Ben Bella's chief) supporters, and more than 100 Battling Blazes MARIPOSA, Calif. (AP) Flames trapped a six + man) pumper crew battling a forest fire Thursday. Three of the men died and the other three were critically burned. Planes dropped borate in a desperate and futile attempt to beat back the flames which suddenly swept up a canyon to- ward the men as they tried to| @ set a backfire to save two build-| ¢ jings, the U.S. forest service re-| j@ | ported. Departures Outdo Canada Arrivals (CP)--Canada ap-\the 12 months slowed to 'about more people|335,000,"" with a small decrease than» it\in the number of births and a | |medi Said and Hadj Ben Alla-- will arrive by air. Reliable sources said Abbas- purposely went by road in or-| der not to arrive with political) _| bureau members. " | His aloofness from the Bureau} would allow him more room for| manoeuvring if his mediation| was needed here, the sources) said. } Under the 'truce' reached) Thursday, Ben Bella's seven-| man political bureau will run} the country as a sort of cabinet! and set up elections for a con-) i. assembly Aug. 27. But a week later, the compo-| OTTAWA sition of the bureau, on which|parently lost Ben Bella has a 5-to-2 majority,|through emigration will be discussed by the exist-| gained by immigration during|slight increase in deaths. ing nationalist Parliament. |the 12 months up to last June 1.| But the estimated 'over - all The provisional:government of| 'This was indicated today in a|population gain was 332,000, or premier Ben Youssef Ben)bureau of statistics report esti-/3,000 less than the natural in- pac go oi joer Brecge vn - mating Canada's June 1 | Popalla.| crease. t internationally |tion at 18,570,000 compa with! tad ; until the assembly appoints | 18,238,000 a year attire. H a on -- -- oe ee | 'The 382,000 increase was noe -- | my ; June 1 was about 70,000, while ----|smallest annual rise since the] Asses 1950s gain of 265,000. |total emigration neared 72,000 Th tellin extimate. isl' | Cee *| He said latest estimates are jbased on figures of the natural/tnat- some 45,000 Canadians |population increase -- births|moved to the U.S., another 12,- minus deaths -- combined with|000 went to Britain by boat and 115,000 left for other countries. The estimates do not include those who went to Britain by air |for which figures are not avail- | Overloaded Boat Brings Jail Term KIRKLAND LAKE (CP) -- A y ; man arrested for driving a/|immigration reports and esti- boat with too many people in|ma of emigration. Canada it has been sentenced to 10 days|keeps no official tabs on popula- tion outflows, and the emigra-|ahie. in jail. Gerald Gendron, 28, wWas'tion estimate is based mainly| stopped by an RCMP motor-|on United States and British! }boat patrol after it noticed i0|immigration statistics. passengers in his boat -- three women and seven children. The |BIRTHS DOWN boat carried only three life-sav-| Today's report said the na and partly to Canadian restric- jiny cushions. ltural population increase during| tions. Claude Jodoin, president of said in Ottawa that current activity to discover how to pro- vide care for drug - deformed babies underlines the urgent need for a nationwide medical| care n. ; aga | The London office of El Allline's office in London will be organizations and privately- operated insurance BP si ped Home Secretary Henry Brooke's|Israel, and a report from Je- Gnetrates thelr complete inabi.|°Tde? directing it to carry Sob-|rusalem indicated the govern- ity to meet this kind of situa.| 2 te New York, where he|ment - owned airline might be tion," he said. faces a life sentence for spy-|told not to accept Soblen for The federal government ing for the Soviet Union. transport to New York. mapped plans aimed at prevent-| Waiting to escort Soblen were ing future release to the public : Shane and Deputy Marshal Jo- Missin Acid explained: dangerous side-effects. Similar|seph Wasielewsky. | g story, and he did it, even thoagh moves were underway in the|Put aboard the aircraft by Brit- he repeated himself. é United States. ish police. The Canadian government pro. posed to check techniques used RESPONSIBLE FOR SOBLEN) ......... byte fond and drug resort nity fr sobien when oe | In Bowmanville government, which barred thal-|Put aboard the aircraft by Brit-) idomide's release to the public, ish police. BOWMANVILLE (Staff) --A said nevertheless that tighter| -"The responsibility for get-| missing gallon jug of muriatic controls were needed. ting Dr. Soblen on the aircraft|acid is posing a threat to the! Congressman Harris B. Mc-\is with the British and El Al,"|safety of local children. Dowell of Delaware introduced/a U.S. embassy spokesman! police Chief Bernard Kitney was hidden in the grass behind the Balmoral Hotel by Roy An- ger, a local masonry contrac- tor, who is repairing brickwork e there. F or M 1ra cle B a by The dull yellowish-colored jug repairing process. This acid RUSHMORE, Minn. (AP) --({about six, doctors will operate|is so strong that it is diluted by They call him the '"miracle|to place the tube inside the!95 parts of water to one part of baby" and after seven opera-|chest. d a ts t . tions in his 18 months it's n0| Then, say the surgeons, the ay 0 vio cc eee NRG wonder. blonde youngster will be able to rubber gloves while applying it with a stiff bristled brush. March 3, 1961, without a con-| Groenewold children. nection between his esophagus and his stomach. The channel through which food must flow came to a dead end. | That meant trouble at once|But, she adds: The chief said he would drea couple, Mr. and Mrs. Donald|We're just so glad to have/a child if he spilled some of the Groenewold. Dr. R. R. Sawtell| him." lacid on him or drank it, of Worthington, Minn., gave the|---- ~ - | baby oxygen and put him in an| #7 ' | incubator. e Todd couldn't keep any food © showed the serious trouble. He was taken to hospital in Min-| ~~ neapolis for surgery. In a five-. ~ hour operation, surgeons con-| nected the esophagus to the stomach. and frail Todd was hurried| # back for another five hours on| | the operating table. He was fed milk through a tube inserted di- rectly into his stomach. In another week a lung col- nia. GAINS WEIGHT April 17, 1961, a three-hour operation was required to cor- rect the position of the feeding tube. By mid - May Todd had pounds, two ounces, and went home to. his parents' farm four miles from this southwestern Minnesota community. Doctors said he had survived 100 to 1 odds to live. hospital for three operations. Now, Todd is home and thriv- ing much like a normal child. But one more operation--hope- fully the last--remains, doctors say. His esophagus runs outside the Canadian Labor Congress, ee ee confirmed that it had received/governed by. instructions from Chief Marshal James J. P. Mc- of new drugs that might have "He just wanted to tell his Poses Danger in testing new drugs. The U.S \sibility for Soblen when he is} ' said the jug of dangerous liquid Seven Operations of acid was being used in the! Todd Groenewold was born|romp happily with the four other "If you see children playing for the infant son of a farm) "We don't worry about that.|to think what would happen to or water down and examination) A week later this broke down lapsed and Todd got pneumo- gained weight -- up to nine Last April he returned to the of Todd's breastbone. When he's in ne YOUNG HOBOES Park is one of 24 supervised' playgrounds operated by the Oshawa Recreation Commit- tee. ies eS a CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 Vandersanden, 4 are seen as they pretend to be hoboes at the train yard. Actually, the park is located just next to a ONTARIO'S BEST LAC James Hennock, 26, of | Ottawa won the tough Ontario match at the Ontario Rifle | Association's annual meet at Connaught Ranges near Ot- tawa. Hannock, a member The flow of immigrants to} Oshawa children attending Canada has been sharply cur-| Connaught Park supervised |tailed, partly due to improved| playground 'were. entertained economic conditions in Europe| to a "Hobo Day," featuring fancy tramp costumes. Jac- queline Lebel, 11, and Cathy of the Canadian Bisley team for the last two years, posted a score of 142 points of a pos- sible 150 (CP Wirephoio from National Defence) CNR railway line, bounded by a wire fence. Connaught Oshawa Times Photo