Mayor Thomas Plans To Seek Second Term- Page 9 WEATHER REPORT Sunny and warm today. Sunny THOUGHT FOR TODAY For the man who has every- thing: A calendar to remind him when payments are due, She Oshawa Zimes and continuing warm Wednes- day. Winds light. Price Not Over VOL. 91--NO. 183 10 Cents Per Copy T OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, AUGUST 7, 1962 Authorized as Second Class Mail Ottawa and for payment Post Office Department, of Postage in Cash. SIXTEEN PAGES Algerian Power Handed Over To New Bureau Under the agreement last ALGIERS (AP)--The Alger-|gerian rebellion--scheduled for ian provisional government of|early September. | Thursday, which ended tempor-| Premier Ben Youssef Ben| The Ben Khedda regime thus|arily the quarrel between Alge-| Khedda surrendered its powerjassumes formally the almost |ria's leadership until the elec-| today to the political bureau|entirely figurehead roje it has/tion of a constituent assembly,| headed by Vice-Premier Ahmed/had since Algeria became inde-| scheduled for Sept. 2. Ben Bella. |pendent. Its assumption of ac-| The agreement stipulated the A communique issued by Ben|tual control over the adminis-| Ben Khedda government would Khedda's office said "the pow-|tration of the country was sty-)remain in office, retain -ontrol ers held hitherto by the Provi-|mied by the bitter struggle for}of foreign affairs and would || sional Government of the Alger-| Power beween Ben Bella andjhand its formal resignation to) ian Republic (GPRA) are his opponents. |the CNRA meeting immediately} henceforth exercised by the p0-' FUNCTIONS DETERIORATE (fer the elections, litical bureau." | Government functions have The communique said thejdeteriorated to a' minimum, GPRA continues in existence/and. those that have been per-} A-Ban Treaty as the "'institution of the revo-|formed have been handled by! ' ; Urgency lution." Until a meeting of the|local military authorities in the| s Cited by Dean National Council of the Alger-| various sectors of Algeria and ian Revolution (CNRA) -- the/the provisional executive set up GENEVA (Reuters) Ar- thur Dean told the disarmament self-appointed Nationalist Par-|by the Evian peace agreement| liament which directed the Al-|with the French. | ° |conference Monday that Rus- O OI I l Kel ed er | sia's nuclear bomb' test Sunday} emphasizes the 'urgency' of Placed In Offi ace 1ce |with Russian delegate Valerian Zorin in an effort to reach ac- road to democracy and €co-} nomic stability with the inaugu-|chaos. Despite challenges from ; | dissidents of both parties, Valen-|ference adjourned and an | American spokesman described takes over as president from) dential balloting last May. n Liberal Alberto Lleras Cam-| ence's nuclear subcommittee should meet Thursday, the | concluding a test ban treaty. BOGOTA (AP) --. Colombiajjas Pinilla in 1957, then kept it cord on a test ban. ration of Dr. Guillermo Leon jcia_won 1,746,030 of the total): > argo after four years of a| DIVIDE SEATS EDWARD R. MURROW Telstar Expenses Too High: Murrow WASHINGTON (AP) -- Ed- Dean said the Soviet Union's)ward R. Murrow, U.S. propa- 30- to 40 - megaton atmospheric} ganda director, says his agency test "'underlines the urgency of|may not be able to use the pro- our achieving a comprehensive|posed new communications sa- test ban treaty, banning all/tellite system unless it receives tests in all environments." special rates. At the disarmament confer-| 'We may not be able to af- ence, Zorin said of the Soviet|ford it," he told the Senate for- test resumption: "The United/eigt relations committee Mon- States knew what was implied) day. |by their series of tests in outer) Murrow, who heads the U.S. space." linformation agency, _ testified that the national interest de- jmands that the agency use the | The chief U.S. delegate said | | completes the first lap on its|buried to lead the country away Dean _met with Zorin. for 2% 72 Valencia as president today. it as "a tieeted anes on, he will continue private talks} lf ict : : : tom dictatorship and inane irs after the 17-country con.| Valencia, 54, a Conservative,| 2,644,384 votes cast in the presi- They agreed that the confer- unique political system alternat-| The parties divide seats in spokesman said. ing the presidency between the|Congress and on district and| once warring Liberal and Con-|local councils evenly, and the| servative parties, |national government is a coali-} The system. was evolved injtion. sp 1958 as a solution to political} Valencia has been in politics fighting which 200,- pce. igh an Be ate Hage been lombians in the preceding} Closely iden with any po- Scoade and led to the dictator|litical faction. He admits to a ship of Gustavo Rojas Pinilla. |lack of administrative experi- Conservatives and Liberals|ence. Like Lleras, Valencia is buried the hatchet to oust Ro-|strongly anti - Communist and anti-Castro. He is committed to carrying on Lleras' pro-Western policies co - operation on an unprece- dented communications scale." On the basis of present com- mercial cable rates, Murrow figured it would cost his agency more than $919,000,000 a ycar, or eight times its annual bud- get, to beam a 90-minute daily TV program around the worid. He said he based this estim- ate on using seven television cir- cuits, one each to Latin Amer- ica, the Middle East, the Far East, Southeast Asia, South Asia, West Europe and Africa. Mother Legal Abortion STOCKHOLM (Reuters) Mrs. Sherri Finkbine and her husband Robert today settled down to a relatively leisurely visit to Stockholm while her ap- plication for a legal abortion takes its course through normal channels. When the Finkbines arrived here Sunday from Phoenix, Ariz., to apply for an abor- tion to prevent the birth of the baby she fears will be deformed because she took the drug tha- lidomide at an early stage of her pregnancy, they thought they had "'only a few days" oe- fore it would be too late to siop the pregnancy. "Since then we have been in- formed by friends--not doctors --that if necessary up to seven weeks can pass before there is any urgency about the opera- tion," Robert Finkbine said. His 30-year-old wife is about 12 weeks' pregnant. After Mrs. Finkbine, already the mother of four children, is examined by a doctor--expecied to take about four days--her ap- plication for an abortion would be submitted to the Royal Swed- ish Medical Board. HAVE TO WAIT It now is too late for the ap- plication, to go before the board's weekly meeting next Friday, but it could reach the board for the Aug. 17 meet- ing. Monday, the Finkbines were abroad and social and economic reform at home. He is counting heavily on United States aid to help him tackle the many eco- nomic ills still besetting this na- tion of 14,000,000 people in the) ' | sem because of its im- Man's Severed "", 3322, 22%%3,20 ™ But if his agency is to use space communications he said) Hand Restored lit must seek one of three things: | | | Special reduced rates, (2)) coe. en -- ys wh ge hl revered More Taoeee from Congress, or| i pbb es a Chicago bindery| (3) a separate system to 'han- Chief among them are a serl'worker was reattached to his| Sr) aueruaeat business. m ous balance of payments defi-| om Monday in. a dramatic| cit, due largely to falling Cof-| emergency operation. He acknowledged that the Kingion Mahead. deahk add fee prices, and a need to at-| : ee , third choice, a separate govern-| tii the aasty hours of the tract $1,700,000,000 in foreign in-| Hospital authorities said the { satellit ati would ne until the early S of vestments to underwrite an am-|9peration on Arthur Holmes, 41,/™ment satellt . aperennn morning today as Jamaica bitious $8,500,000,000, 10 - year|was the first such surgery in be "'very sea seivan hie staged the biggest ite f economic development program.|the midwest. Threé similar) The committee is holding) island history, to celebrate inde- reat aan ~----~ {operations have been attempted|hearings on a Kennedy admin-|pendence . after 307 years of in Canada and the United States/istration bill that would au-!British rule. lin the last four months. thorize the formation of a priv- At society's top level, Prin- However, the three staff sur-|2!ely owned, government-con-| cess Margaret and her husband } ; |trolled corporation to launch; orq Snowdon -- representing geons who carried out the rare and operate the projected new Queen Elizabeth -- met Ja- = | : | Brockville Crash ' Die fan ee | Dave teases ee maica's business and _profes- Fatal for Pilot [operate the projected new 5 ' . oe ../System of speeding words an BROCKVILLE (CP) -- Willie Luke's Hospital said the success} >?" gs "i n th ' 3 ; Nielin, ir ll fly-|or failure of the, operation would pictures around. the globe. sional leaders in Bg ele ing instructor, died today when|not be known for at least 48) FAVORS BILL state ~ = ee e island's Murrow said he favors the "Newest resor 1B, In jiocal dancehalls, streets a light plane crashed and burst/hours. : into flames at the municipal air-/ The surgical team said the) bill, even though it contains no |major arteries, veins and bones|guarantee of special rates. for and marketplaces, the rest of the city whooped it up with less port here. Nielin had taken off in the|of the amputated member were! government users, y He said the projected new formality, : forty-five-| space relay system dramatized) Today Princess Margaret plane, owned by the Brockvilie|reunited with the arm in Flying Club, in driving rain onja four-hour - and - M |@ chartered flight to Muskcka.|minute operation. Pulse in the|by the satellite telstar will usher, who attended the official pro- | He was alone in the plane. hand also was re-established. in "a new era of international clamation of independence at KINGSTON (Reuters) -- All DR. VALENCIA -- SUICIDE OR ACCIDENT? Blonde Movie Queen Dead "She often mentioned Joe Di- maggio." The housekeeper said Mari- HOLLYWOOD (AP)--A mys-jsometimes bright and gay,,in the tiny chapel of Westwood childhood in foster homes. There; | Village Mortuary were former|was mental instability in her terious phone call in the night/sometimes depressed star. ; ; : shortly before Marilyn Monroe} Arrangements were being|baseball great Joe Dimaggio,/family--her mother and mater- J Aari nal grandparents -spent many|lyn explained that she didn't was found dead added still fur-|completed, meanwhile, for quiet/second of Miss Monroe's three ther conjecture today to the| funeral services and burial Wed. husbands; drama teachers Lee|years in mental institutions. sleep well and that's why she tragedy that befell the blonde|/nesday. Friends were hoping|and Paula Strasberg; Miss Mon-| Those facts might indicate took pills and went to a psy- movie queen. |the simple rites would not at-jroe's half-sister, Mrs. Burnice suicide, in the absence of a sui-|chiatrist. There also remained the ques-/ tract throngs of the curious. {Miracle; the star's publicity|cide note? But could she have SLEPT LATE tion of whether she died inten-| Details were not set, but mor-jagent, Miss Patricia Newcomb,'made a mistake? The telephone But if Marilyn had trouble go- tionally or accidentally. tuary spokesmen said only 15\and a few others. /receiver found in her hand--was} in, to sleep at night, it was her "I don't remember what time| Persons were invited to the} Neither they. nor police knew she trying to make the Most difficulty in getting up the next the call came in," said the ac-/service for the 36-year-old Miss|the answer: Did Marilyn meanjimportant phone call of her | day that brought much of hee tress' housekeeper, Mrs, Eunice! Monroe. |to take her life with the sleep-| life? lmisfortune -- like the Some- Murray. "And -d don't know who; "There will be just personsjing pills that killed her? MAY TAKE TIME thing's Got to Give firing. it was from. jclose 'to Marilyn, no movie stars} Dr. Curphey said a toxicolog-| It may be weeks. perhaps! Her housekeeper said Mari- "But knowing Marilyn as I do, 0r anything like that," said ajist found in Miss Monroe's blood) months, before an official find-\lyn suffered from headaches I think that if this call wakened| Spokesman. twice the amount of barbitur-|ing is reached. and sinus trouble during that her up, she might have taken| The actress will be laid tolates considered a 'lethal dose The housekeeper, Mrs. . Mur-| picture. | some more sleeping pills." rest in a mausoleum crypt near/No alcohol was found in the ray, bristled at any suggestion| 'She would say: 'Remeniber.| Coroner Theodore J. Curphey|the grave of a woman believed| blood. "|Miss Monroe might have been|call me tomorrow morning at said the death Saturday of ythe|to have befriended her early in! 4 '<uicide team' of experts|drinking to excess, 5,' Mrs. Murray recalled. actress was caused by a mas- life. from the Los Angeles suicide| "As to drinking, that is sim-|"And I'd get everything ready sive overdose of barbiturates. | The headstone identifies | prevention centre is seeking in-|ply not true," she said. "Shelin the morning but she just Mrs. Murray added that the/Grace Goddard, who died in|formation on the last weeks of|loved a glass of champagne be-|couldn't: make it." unidentified call might account|1953 and whose burial arrange-|the star's life. They will report|fore dinner. It made her relax.| Hollywood speculated Her dis- for the phone's being found/ments were made by Marilyn'their findings to the coroner to|She had plenty of liquor in the|missal and the shelving of the clutched in the hand of the|herself. help him decide whether the house but it was for her friends. picture might have stunned Ma- took Marilyn in as a child when| They had these facts: Therejher last weeks, "but she was| negotiating to resume the film. | | Even though her last two pic- Miss McKee, a film librarian,,|she was found nude. She was/laugh and her detailed interest|Make Love--were not box of- later put Marilyn in fosterjunder psychiatric treatment.|in people. fice successes, Marilyn had io} day Her three marriages ended in|She was so young, so vital and|star, the future looked bright-- t Invited to the funeral at 1 p.m. | di lat least to others. | The woman is believed to be death was intentional or acci-| The housekeeper said Marilyn|rilyn into depression, but 20th) CITY EMERGENCY jthe former Grace McKee, who dental. had moments of depression in|Century-Fox said it had been |Miss Monroe's mother went to was an empty bottle of neuen) Atos often characterized by her} PHONE NUMBERS ja mental institution. tal pills beside the bed where|beautiful smile, her musical|tures -- The Misfits and Let's POLICE 725-1133 homes because she could noi|She was having career difficul-| "Marilyn never mentioned|real money worries. FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 care for the child during the ties. death and I never saw.her cry.| For the childless, husbandless HOSPITAL 723-2211 vorce. She spent an unhappy!so beautiful. - a Jamaicans Fete For Independence midnight Sunday, arranged to jopen the Jamaican Parliament and will be a guest at a state |banquet as the independence |festivities continue through the | week. | The celebrations so far have |been remarkably free from in- jcidents and visiting Common- |wealth diplomats have ex. |Pressed surprise that the pop- jular reaction to independence jhas been so law-abiding. Labor |Minister Starr is Canada's rep- | resentative. | There were no restriction on the sale of liquor Monday and premier Sir Alexander Bustam- ante was reliably reported to |have said he was "apprehen- |Sive" lest there be isolated out- breaks of violence which would mar the celebrations. Strict police precautions were in force, but they appeared to have been unnecessary for the most part. The island's first governor- general, Sir Kenneth Black- burne, took the oath of allegi- ance and told Bustamante he was completely confident of the island's future. Nun Dead, 3 Hurt In Car Accident STURGEON FALLS,. Ont. (CP)--One nun is dead and three others are in hospital as the result of a one car accident on Highway 17 Monday after- noon. Dead is Sister Mary Celine of the Order of St. Joseph. Her name before she joined the Roman Catholic Order was Vio- let Biola Arsenault of Port El-, gin, New Brunswick. The driver of the car, Sister St. Julia Greco, is in satisfactory condi- tion. In critical. condition with in- ternal injuries is Sister Anita, sister of the dead nun. Sister Louise Joseph is in satisfactory condition suffering from back injuries. The car was travelling east] following traffic and police said} that the driver lost control. The vehicle rolled over once and! came to rest on its wheels 100 feet off the highway. The three sisters who were passengers were thrown out of| the car. j Damage is estimated at §$2,- 0. Seeks | {trying to arrange for an ex- amination immediately and a spokesman for the board said that in certain urgent cases "the matter can be taken up if the application is submitted a couple of days later." By Monday night, however, Mrs. Finkbine said no doctor had been approached and no appointment made. The Finkbines flew to Stock- holm after an Arizona court turned down her application for an abortion in the state. RENEWED BLAST RISK FOR MAPLE 26 Families Evacuated From Immediate Area MAPLE, Ont. (CP)--A danger area around an explosion- wrecked $200,000 propane gas plant remained partially evac- uated overnight more than 48 hours after a séries of Saturday night blasts that killed one man. Stilllazing vapor of com- pressed' gas escaping from a 30,000-gallon tank caused au- thorities Monday to evacuate a dozen families from an area which was restricted to official personnel. Risk of a new explosion rose today when two of four flames burning on the huge tank went out, apparently doused by heavy rains. Police said that i 'Heath Holds eetings -- On Euromart LONDON (CP) Edward Heath, Britain's chief negotiator with the Common Market, held separate meetings today with Commonwealth high commis. all four flames were to go out jbefore enough of the gas was burned up, a new blast would be almost inevitable. By dawn today a total of 26 families had been evacuated. The families were given shel- ter in private homes in this village of 1,100 persons, still tense as firemen watched the remaining gas burn off through an escape valve. ENTRANCE RESTRICTED sioners and amb dors of th. rival seven-country Europ- ean Free Trade Association. Heath, lord privy seal, gave them a first - hand account of the developments at the four-lay ministerial talks that adjourned Roadblocks Pn Sunday morning in Brussels on Britain's possible entry into pe six-country Common Mar- et. The negotiations have been adjourned until mid-September when the ministers' deputies will meet again in Brussels. The ministers themselves are due to restart their talks in | early October, following the |Commonwealth prime ministers conference opening in London Sept. 10. Although the Brussels talks failed to reach completion on the crucial question of farm ex- ports from the Commonwealth, Heath said "'a great deal of use- ful progress" was made. Heath said he and the minis. ters of the Six worked their way through a paper dealing with the produce of Canada, Australia and New ealand. A high British government source, in denying reports from Common Market quarters in Brussels that negotiations had broken down, said that a large measure of agreement was achieved. became of their dwellings. tened, in addition to devastation pany plant and damage to other buildings including new town- ship offices, whose front was thrown out of kilter. Only fatality was Herbert Joslin, 51, a company employee, who died Sunday night of burns suffered in the first blast as he approached a tank truck around midnight Saturday to investi- gate an apparent leakage of gas. He was the only worker at the time on company property, where during working hours some 40 employees are engaged in transferring compressed bulk gas to containers for local de- livery. HEARD 20 MILES AWAY The thundering explosions-- three major ones and several smaller ones--could be heard 20 miles away and were felt in metropolitan Toronto. Scores of persons were knocked down and some thrown as much as 20 feet, but no others were seriously. Some 50 homes were ordered evacuated overnight Saturday, but most of these were occupied later. Eleven men were arrested in the vicinity of the evacuated homes during the weekend on charges of trespassing by night. They were remanded for court appearances until today. Meanwhile, the cause of the holocaust remained obscure. In- vestigators from Ontario's energy resources board and fire marshal's office were poking wreckage of the storage yards in search of clues. Township authorities also were surveying the condition of buildings that might have to be condemned. injured India-Chinese Border Dispute Talks Foreseen north and south of the community just north of metropolitan Toronto, and the only entrance was. to officials and villagers, some of them rushing home from out-of- NEW DELHI (Reuters)-- Prime Minister Nehru said Mi Co pe oer to that the two es should hold further talks on their long- town vacations to find out what at the Superior Ptopane Com- standing border dispute. But Nehru said the Chinese Five homes had been flat-|TePly to an Indian note was "disappointing" and he accused the Chinese of using "abusive language" in their notes to In- ia. The prime minister spoke to Parliament as he filed a gov- ernment white paper containing 90 Indian notes and 75 Chinese notes exchanged from Novem- ber last year to July this year. Nehru said a note from China received Sunday expressed will- ingness to hold further talks on the basis of a 1960 report by Chinese and Indian officials covering factural data support- ing the rival border claims. The report was drawn up after a meeting between Nehru and Chinese Premier Chou En-Lai. The Chinese note replied to a July 26 Indian note accusing China of "aggressive patroll- ing" and suggesting new talks "as soon as current tensions have eased and an appropriate climate is created." SULLIVAN WEDS EGYPTIAN had. called their wedding off. It was the first marriage for Actor Barry Sullivan and Egyptian actress Desiree Sumara pose after they were married Sunday night in Las Vegas, 24, hours after they Miss Sumara, 23, and the third for Sullivan, 49. They plan to honeymoon in Spain in the fall when he finishes @ movie he's working on, (* Wirepiicio) t