THOUGHT FOR TODAY _A family man is snapshots in his wallet instead of greenbacks. one who carries + ¢ Oshawa Time WEATHER REPORT Cloudy and cooler with snow- flurries tonight and Friday. Winds light becoming northwest 15 to 25 Friday, VOL, 91 -- NO. 285 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1962 Authorized as Second Ottawa and for payment aoe es Pa eee of Postage in TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES Indians May Fly Russi _ Against Chinese TEZPUR, India (Reuters) -- Prime Minister Nehru said to- day his government made no} an MIGs from various places but let us watch how far they go." In New Delhi, the Times of nese arrived at 'a nearby Him- alayan foothills camp. They were handed over to the greement with Russia not tolIndian Red Cross by the Chi- use Russian-made MiG jet fight-inese Red Cross at ithe former ers against the Communist Chi-|indian headquarters of Bomdila, nese in the border dispute. {captured by the Chinese last Nehru said the Russians| month. would supply four of the prom-| Prisoners were driven over ised MiGs this month and four! mountain roads in a 37-vehicle or five early next year which|conyoy which reached the Indian could be used as models for @/position shortly after midnight. India reported that the first con- signment of Russian MiG jet fighters was expected in India next month, flown by Indian pi- lots trained in the Soviet Un- ion. The newspaper said Russia had agreed to sell India 12 MiG-21s at an estimated price projected MiG manufacturing plant in India. | "Four MiGs do not'make too) much difference to anybody,"') he told a press conference held) during his visit to Indian troops) on the northeast frontier. Nehru also said he did not see | any possibility of . American) troops being stationed in India, although military advisers might come. "Advisers in various shape and form may come," he said. "That is a different matter. But we do not expect any ground troops from any other country. Nehru said talks might be| held with Pakistani officials! later this month on differences} between the two countries but no date had been decided on. Earlier Nehru said India| would refuse to bend to the] Chinese Communists and if they) should invade again they would! "meet stiffer resistance." Nehru, who spent the night at this tiny Assam community, also held talks with his army commanders. on the status of Indian defences in the event of a resumption of hostilities in the| border war with Communist China. During the night, the first group of wounded Indian sol- | | of about $730,000 each. Moscow also had promised to provide by April, 1964, the nec- essary plans for a factory to manufacture MiG in India,| with Soviet technical assistance,| the paper said. TALKS TO WOUNDED The wounded were immedi- ately taken to a military hospi- tal, Nehru visited the hospital later and talked to them. Nehru said on his arrival here he had "no news" about Chi- nese troop withdrawals sched- uled to have begun Dec. 1. He told a mass meeting at nearby Guahati Wednesday the border conflict was going to be "a turning point in the history of the world." "What has happened on our! borders is a historic thing," he} said. "That is why the eyes of the world are turned on us." He said he did not think the Chinese would return to the po sition they held before the im position of their unilateral Driving Rain, Snow Sweep Across Ontario By THE CANADIAN: PRESS Snow, driving rain and plung- "jing temperatures swept through *|Southern Ontario during the night from the eastern Umted| An Atlas F series missile roars off its launching pad Wednesday on the last - test flight for the United States' first intercontinental range missile. The rocket flew un- New Tactic In Hoffa's F TEST erringly to a target 5,000 miles away. The flight closed out the Atlas test program which be- gan here in 1957, --AP Wirephoto cease-fire. "But if they dare they will be! met stoutly." | east across Lake Ontario. He said Indian military prep- Windsor received the most arations will continue "even if|concentrated corner of the the war stops. We have been de-|Storm centred between Windsor ceived once and we are not go-|and London. ing to be taken in again." To the east, the storm dumped i - now over Michigan and began Nehru said India had no ob-|§ 4 jection to the Chinese decision to} moving toward Toronto and east , jto Quebec. ceasefire announced Nov. 21, | "We would like th tp with. A heavy downpour preceeded : | sno Wi ' i drew fren. cuir tereiiory," he snow at Windsor. Rain became said. "They have withdrawn States and continued today to| fan out west to Lake Huron and | diers taken prisoner by the Chi- throughout the area. Linemen today were restor- ing telecommunication circuits Boston Strangler Sought B y Police Hearing NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -- Air pistol pellets fired at James R. Hoffa in court by a former mental patient have injected a new and unexpected element into the labor leader's conspir- acy trial. His lawyers claimed the at- tack -- which saw the pellets bounce harmlessly off his body --proved the Teamsters union president couldn't get a fair trial. The shots were fired at Hoffa Wednesday from a distance of| two feet by a man identified as) Warren Swanson, 28, of Wash-| ington, D.C. Hoffa ducked, then} lunged at the man, knocking him to the floor with a hard right to +he face. Swanson required 14 stitches HOFFA Veteran Risks Neck To Halt JAMES to repair the head wounds in-| Bank Robbery flicted in the mauling that fol-| lowed. A deputy U.S. marshal; ELIZABETH, N.J. (AP)--Ro- struck him on the back of the|bert Dischler was not about to head with a pistol and a Hoffa/let two bank robbers get away bodyguard got in a few kicks be-| with his $1,600. fore the bleeding man was led) The 24-year-old U.S. Air Force from the court in handcuffs. veteran had just deposited the U.S. District Judge William|money Wednesday when two BOSTON (AP)--An intensive\tainly similar to some of the'; wilier said Swanson was in|armed robbers entered the Bay- police hunt for a man _ with|others." contempt and ordered him held.|way branch of the National honey-colored hair was under| Police began a search for a'r ater Miller had the man com.|State Bank of Elizabeth. a woman in the greater Boston area since mid-June. The body of Miss | Sophie} Cuban Bombers' which collapsed in some areas,Clark, 21, a student and med-| from the storm's first shockjical technician, was found late Removal 'AP)--Russia iis jet bombers @ pace that could bave all the planes off the is- joving tom Cuba at land withinw days, planes. wave, _ | Chased by sioee winds, snow oF Geen Sound and snow miles south of Owen Sound. es In a letter to UN Ambassador Rural areas in Kent County] Adlai Stevenson made public also suffered heavily. Hundreds of residents were left without Wednesday, Kennedy com- electricity in the wake of the Wednesday, a silk stocking and oat knotted around her The body was unclothed fora when if fourth - floor aparth ent, less} than a block from where thejing: first victim died ago. six months! Dr. Richard Ford, Suffolk informed sources report. It appeared likely that the U.S.-Soviet diplomatie wrangles mented 'We Cuba." have eliminated the nuclear menace from season's first snowstorm. The Ontario Hydro office said at least 200 services were still out over Cuba will fade with the removal of the last of the Rus- sian "offensive weapons." Informants said the Russians have taken a hard stand in New York negotiations against forc- ing Cuban Premier Castro to accept international inspection | which President Kennedy seeks} to make certain Cuba stays free} of atomic 'weapons. With no inspection agreement} in prospect, the U.S. appeared|and all that h jarmed services committee, But Senator Richard B. Rus- County medical examiner, said: "Obviously she was sexually at- tacked . . . this death is cer- of order at 10 a.m. Ice and snow, combined with high winds |felled hydro poles serving the jarea. Snow fell overnight at Lon- on and left a covering of two. nches before a heavy deluge of rain today turned snow to slush. sell, chairman of the Senate said: "It was a mistake for! President Kennedy to lift. the! quarantine until we had the.q right of on-site inspection); Four inches of snow fell on throughout Cuba." In a television interview, the} eorgia Democrat added: |the Stratford district. The storm "We will eventually have to| affected all centres in the wide rid this hemisphere of Castro|southern Ontario region but in| e stands for . . -|most districts early snowfalls G Youth Admits Rape, Slaying Police Claim NEW YORK (AP) -- Police " prepared to continue aerial sur-|The opportune moment for a: n|were washed away by rain. veillance as a safeguard and let|/invasion has passed, now that| the diplomatic contest melt into the United States has accepted the background--perhaps with|Russia's word on the removal| Ip The change in weather dis- ersed isolated patches of fog which hovered around most jareas. a statemen by each side ex-\of missiles from Cuba." plaining its position to the UN| Security Council. | oe This would set the stage for) ~ gy a new and uncertain phase in East-West relations. The United States is expected to talk with) © the Russians on a number of cold war issues. | Sources reported Wednesday -- night that the Russians are shipping their bombers out of Cuba at a rate indicating all) of the aircraft will be out well in advance of the Dec, 20 dead- line promised by Soviet Pre- mier Khrushchev. The IL-28 jet bombers, along with 42 missiles pulled out of Cuba earlier, were the nuclear- capable long-range arms whose removal Kennedy demanded, terming them offensive wea-) ? pons. The defence department an- nounced Monday that three of the IL-28 jets had been spotted by U.S. patrol planes aboard a Soviet freighter leaving Cuba. } Informed sources said more outbound shipments of bombers have been counted virtually daily at such a rate that com-) plete removal should be fin-| ished in a matter of days--| perhaps by the end of this week. The Russians were said to have informed the United States that they are withdrawing more} than 40 bombers. The U.S. sources declined to give the} exact figure the Russians men- tioned, but said the number ex- ceeded previous U.S. estimates) of more than 30. | The Russian statement giving a larger number than U.S. in- telligence estimates was re-| garded in Washington as addi-| tional evidence the Russians | | | page |) said a 15-year-old boy admitted) Wednesday night that he had) raped .and slain nine-year-old) Lourdes Bass on the roof of al Brooklyn housing project. Chief Police Inspector Joseph Coyle identified the youth las James Rooks, a Brooklyn | Negro. Rooks was picked up by school crossing guard on the tip] {of an unidentified person who) jsaid he had seen the youth }"'exposing himself' on a bus in jthe area three weeks earlier, |police said. The youth broke) down after two hours of ques-| |tioning, police added. | Coyle quoted Rooks as saying he had met the: girl on the} street Tuesday, forced her into an elevator and took her to the} roof of a 14-storey apartment} jcolder, turned to ice and then/way today in the wake of the;young man who annoyed a snow which continued piling up|seventh strangulation murder of|neighbor, Mrs. Marcella' Waw- few ours body was rzniak-Lulka, 30, before Miss Clark's found. She described the man as be ing about fivewoot-nine and 160 honey-colored he rang her doorbeli 120 pom: Wh she. an. » Mis. Wawrzniak-Lulka ¢ brushed past her say- 'm Thompson. i'm -here to do the painting." Police said the woman told them that when she said she had not asked for any painting to be done the man "started talking real funny and said how jtall I am and what a good jmodel I'd be." The man, whom Mrs. Waw- rzniak-Lulka described as about 25 years old and wearing tight black trousers and a three- quarter-length car coat, fled when she said she would have jto consult her husband in the jnext room. She said her hus- \band was actually out at the time. said, |mitted to the medical centre for} Six customers and 12 bank \federal prisoners at Springfield,|employees looked on stunned as iMo., for observation. one of the gunmen passed from Miller also ordered six addi-|teller to teller, stuffing $52,000 sional armed marshals forjinto a satchel. souvtroom duty and directed | +a henceforth everyone enter- But Dischler swung into. ac- No Relie LONDON (CP) -- A dense |smog settled down on London 'lagain tonight, with the death toll already 67 and another 738 -;|victims of the sulphurous fumes in city hospitals. As the choking pall thickened with. the early darkness for the fourth consecutive night, a gov- ernment weather bureau spokes- man said: "It's a repeat performance of the previous nights--just as in- tense and thickening at the same time. The rest of the coun- try now is comparatively clear, but there is no relief in sight for London and the lower Thames River areas until tomorrow, at the earliest." Outside London dozens of au- tomobile accidents occurred on icy roads and another transpor- tation freeze-up was predicted for, England and Wales during the night. A spokesman of the British Automobile Association said the number 'of smashed - up cars made some stretches of highway 'ook like battlefields." Air tests in central London showed the midday smoke con- tent to be 2% times the aver- age for a comparative Decem- per day But worse, still, tho concentration of the combustion byproduct -- sulphur dioxide-- was seven times average. This was blamed for the bulk of the deaths. Most of the victims were el- derly or were already suffering from respiratory ailments: when FOG STILL DENSE; DEATH COUNT 6 f Seen As Pall Thickens emergency bed hospital service for hospitals: "There are masses of cases." Police said final figures of sudden deaths due to the smog --when they come in from all over the nation--would run into many hundreds. : The killer smog of 1952 lasted about nine days. The current one has run but one-third that long. Early today two empty elec- tric commuter trains crashed on a spur track at Gillingham, south of London, ia heavy fog. A member of one of the train crews was killed and the both. engineers were taken to hospi- tal with injuries. MAY BE LIFTING There were signs the smog was lifting. As Britain crawled to work for the third successive day, weathermen said the 500 - foot- fog was thinning in many places. In Loadon, however, they warned it will probably clamp down again after dusk -- and dusk these days is around p.m. The dawn also brought an im- provement in the fog across the country. Traffic still was idle along the east coast and in the northern county of Yorksrire, but many other areas had cleared. London Airport for the third day. More than 60 sudden deaths in was closed tion. He jumped the bandit with the loot and wrested the from him. At close ired a} ty the court be searched. | } Hoffa, 49, is accused of con- be violate the Taft-Hart- dencover payments from a tratysport firm in return for la- bor peace. The trial, now in its | stomach. |RETURNS FIRE the . pall descended. Some of|Tuesday and Wednesday wey them' dropped dead on Londonjattrituled to smog. The don commuter train sched. ules were in chaos. Thousands who normally travel by bus heart or chest complaints whose condition was aggravated by the sulphurous pall, With smoke and sulphur diox- jseventh week, may last until | Christmas. | The second gunman advanced, spraying bullets. Dischler re- flocked to the subway stations as the smog immobilized or ide in the air amounting to 10 and 14 times the normal con- turned the fire until both rob- bers fled. When the smoke of battle cleared and acclaim for the hero began pouring into the Dis- chler home,. Dischler's father | ea | Youth Queried In Boy's Death |: som OR, Ont. (CP)--An 18-| "My son is a lucky guy. He jerron yaa was -in ogee Ye have had his head blown for questioning about the} ee : ne death Wednesday of al 'Td do it all again if I had paper boy, struck by a vehicle to," Dischler said. which police said did not stop. I was worried about a $1,600 Dead is Raymond Power, §, deposit I had just made. son of Mr. and Mrs, James; The deposit represented re- | | slowed to a halt the double-| deckers. "This looks like another 1952 disaster," said Cmdr, John Langworthy, chief. of London's' jtent, the weather bureau said Wednesday that things were ag bad as in 1952, when a killer smog caused at least 4,000 deaths. Hamilton Victory Copped By Copps Power of Sandwich West town-|Ceipts from the gas station Dis- chler operates here. HAMILTON (CP) -- Victor where Mayor Nathan Phillips, ship. YOU'LL FIND INSIDE... Mother Given Custody Of Child .. Page 17 8) Traffic Court Fines Total $930 Ajax Youths Fined $600 For Assaults Two Dogs Perish In Blaze ...;. ceases Parcel Of Land Sold At Tax Sale ~» Page 17 .. Page 3 3 Complete Oshawa Election Figures ... 3 house. | 17 | | Police said the boy was rid-| An unarmed vault custodian, ing his bicycle on a township] William Petuskey, 65, got in the road to make the last delivery|line of fire during the exchange on his Windsor Star route when|and was shot in the left temple. VICTORIA (CP)--A band of! |sons of Freedom Doukhobors| jhave accepted a govern-|agreed {ment pledge of help, called off could. The government officials |their vigil of protest and headed| offered the delegation free |transportation back home. The 49.- member delegation broke up a bizarre campsite on the steps of the legis!ative build-| ings after a promise by the province that it would do every- thing it could to solve the rad- ical sect's problems. _ They had arrived 29 hours| |Hope, B.C., where 1,250 of their migrating brethren ment saying the Freedomites have been assured they will not go huagry "'regardless of where \they are." He said the' Salva- earlier to demand action on the! providing food and clothing to problem .posed at the village Of|the Freedomites. are|/Scherle's advice, conferred for Douks Accept Pledge For Help, Head Home |fic fatalities this year with 21,|, He said th no firm _ commitments to do everything it to Hope, 100 miles east of Vancouver. WON'T GO HUNGRY Mr. Dickinson issued a state- | tion Anmy will be subsidized for The delegation listened to Mr. |He was in fair condition today truck continued on its way after] the impact. Police recovered a) broken headlight and other parts! of the truck, The. boy was found! {woman reported seeing a vehi- I S f Bed with its headlights burning n a ety ee half sunk in the Detroit River. | While Swanson underwent} By THE CANADIAN PRESS emergency treatment in hospi-/ New Brunswick is the only tal, he told reporters he came| province free of fatalities after |passed last year's seven-day to- |tal of road deaths. A Canadian Press survey |shows 52 persons have died on he was struck from behind by| J a grey panel truck. |at hospital. Only N.B. Free 140 feet away from his bicycle.| Police started an intensive) jhere to kill Hoffa--a man he'd|the first five days of Canada's never met--because of a vision Safe Driving Week. The rest of jthe country's highways since the week began Dec. 1, compared Witnesses told police tne| }search and after thrée hours aj he had last month. jthe country has already sur- with 49 deaths in the Dec. 1-7 at the five-day point. Ontario has had the most traf- |compared with a seven-day to- e government made| He said he offered to pay for|tal of 14 last year. Quebec is but)a delegation of Freedomites tojnext at 15, compared with the go to Ottata to tell their story|week's total of 13 last year. to a Senate committee, if such} Newfoundland, Prince Edward a committee was established: |Island, Nova Scotia and Mani- "They said what they really|toba have reported one death wanted was first to get their|/this year, Saskatchewan and Al- men out of prison, but more im-|berta two each and British Co- portantly, to restore their Ohris-|lumbia eight. tian community," Mr. Bennett} Purpose of the week, spon- said. eee gin! conadien Highway |Safety Council, is to promote WANT LEADER safety consciousness tunee the "They said that it could notjusually hazardous driving month be restored until Sorokin' (Ste-| of December. fan Sorokin, spirutual leader of} Followi the sect who lives in U tri iigtiay) ge is. the day-to-day evey?! record this was brought back." ahs pid seven-day totals: "TI told them that as premier: y Kennedy Copps climaxed ajlat 70, veteran of a record eight week last year, and 35 deaths ear. with last year's|" meteoric rise in civic politics Wednesday with a landslide vic- tory at the polls that ended the unprecedented 13-year reign of Lloyd Jackson as mayor of Hamilton. The 43-year-old radio adver- tising salesman surged to the forefront early in the counting and Mr. Jackson, 74, conceded defeat three hours and 20 min- utes after the polls closed. Mr. Copps received 37,789 votes to Mr. Jackson's 23,067. Mr. Copps will be the city's first Roman Catholic mayor. His career in municipal politics started only two years ago when he stood for board of con- trol for the first time and topped the polls with a record 43,000 votes. For Mr. Jackson, the defeat ended a record tenure, five years longer than any previous mayor in Hamilton's 115-year history. The voters' decision follows a years in. office, was ousted by plata Donald. Summerville, PRAISES RECORD In an expansive mood as he watched the results pouring in his favor, Mr. Copps praised Mr. Jackson's "wonderful" rec- ord, but added: "It's unfortunate he didn't re- tire undefeated with colors fly- ing as he was advised." Mr. Jackson congratulated Mr. Copps on his victory and had little to say except that he was relieved it was all over. An estimated 54 per cent of the eligible 147,552 voters turned out in clearing weather and re- jected fluoridation of the city's water supply by 43,872 votes to 23,435, They approved Sunday movies 45,128 votes to 27,778 and ex. tension. of the franchise to: all British subjects of the age of 21 who have been residents for similar one Monday in Toronto, oy year by 45,055 votes to 22,« 32. intend to carry out Khrush. CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 SCOUTMASTER AT 80 William N. Weikel, now 80 years old, polishes off a piece of cake in Philadelphia where he still has post of Scout- master, an appointment -he took.on a "temporary" basis back 'in 1945. He still has the job and is believed one of the oldest persons in that capacity in the Scouting movement. He goes camping "'with the kids' in the summertime but not in the winter "because it's too cold'. ~AP. Wirephoto squeezed into ill-heated cabins'some. time and decided to gZ0. and tents. |Their bus arrived at dusk and Paul Scherle, village chair-| they stood by it for an hour man who brought the group|singing hymns before they left. here, advised their return after|Six members stayed behind to I had nothing to do with immi-| December gration of getting people out of Nfld. federal prisons, so 1 couldn't/p.E.1, help them." |Nova Scotia The Freedomites ieft their|N.B. ja meeting Wednesday with the/drive back panel trucks that had ldeputy attorney - general, Dr./brought their camping equip- Gilbert Kennedy, and Deputy| ment here. Welfare Minister Ray Rickin-| Premier Bennett made a+ un- son. The meeting produced a)scheduled visit to the steps of| "momentary truce,' Mr./the legislative building Wednes-| Scherle said. Iday. homes in the Kootenay area of! Quebec oe SSS et et eastern B.C. in early Septem-! Ontario ber, saying they would march to Manitoba Agassiz mountain prison.. The Sask. prison is near Hope and con-| Alberta tains. 60 Freedomites coavicted| B.C. of-acts of terrorism. |Total a PH PnrSrHCSo @erno™"F*woosoonr @avwor-"NMuseosso erHo®=Peyusoor™ eco FSF rooro* Ce Bor