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RA 3-3492 RA 38-3474 Mshawa Sx ' 2 v WEATHER REPORT Light snow late tonight change ing to drizzle and occasional rain, milder. he 7 ee Not Over OSHAWA-WHITBY, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1959 Mo Sb Bot TWENTY-SIX PAGES * 2 /OL. 88 -- NO. 36 Te The Quebec government's pew marine training ship Tor- lundy arrives in Halifax coated Need Urgent OTTAWA (CP) -- The federal foreseeable improvement in "# |government was told today that |prices for wheat, oats and bar- 47 |deficiency payments for western |ley. grain grovers are urgent and| A major factor in this profit "altogether necessary. |decline was United States sur- The advice came from the Ca-|plys. disposal operations, which nadian Federation of Agriculture the CFA said will continue at in a brief strongly worded but|jeast another five years, along making no direct reference to the yith continued U.S.- subsidization --CP Wirephoto |forthcoming mass delegation to|of all dommercial sales. AFTER ROUGH ATLANTIC CROSSING with ice after a rough oeeas | forced several ships into Hali- | may become top-heavy and roll i | r. Srosting Som scotland rad | fax. As ice builds up a vessel | Queen A At Seaway Ceremonies OTTAWA (CP) -- Montreal has been granted the honor over Cornwall as the site of the of- ficial opening June 26 of the St. Lawrence Seaway. Ottawa of about 50 prairie far-| mers seeking such payments. Western farmers' econoriie po- iti i d drastic- Shion he CFA aid Moreover, markets. Production adjustment there was no improvement -in|Was unnecessary, and in any sight; the situation was event is "certain to be ineffective "far | ¢ AS in Lo hd from being a temporary setback |in bringing price improvement. Delegation leaders have esti- Meanwhile, the Canadian far- mer was not 'seriously producing" in relation to his own nd Eisenhower |TeacherSupply dequate Soon OCE Dean Says Facd with a world surplus of mated the deficiency payments i i igati i i i ian farmer was would cost the treasury $300,000, opening ceremony at the Cana-jin navigation facilities for the, TORONTO (CP) -- Trends in (grain, the Canadian f u pen St On lock PB United States built|teacher supply are changing rap-| beset by steadily-rising produc: 000 annually. They ll propose a The official ' [some facilities at a cost of $150,- idly in Ontario and there will be|tion costs while there was no'limit of $1,500 per farm. e Farm Payment over-| # BALTIMORE (AP) -- A Penn-| PASSENGER TRAI DERAILED, 32 HUR None Seriously Hurt In Mishap a ~ lh T HESS & x yards. The last three cars broke i sylvania Railroad | | train, speeding long about 80 {miles an hour en route from Washington to New York, was de- railed about 10 miles east of Baltimore today. Thirty-two persons were taken to hospitals. Two of those were released after checkups and hos. pital spokesmen said none of the 30 remaining suffered more than minor injuries. The electric engine and all 10 cars stayed upright despite the twisted rails and chewed ties.| A railway spokesman said the| cause of the derailment has not been established. A policeman at the scene said the rails appar- ently spread. But a Pennsylvania official said he doubted that this was the cause. The engine and the first seven cars rolled up the track between the rails for several hundred Oshawa MPP Urges Bureau a opening of the 100.000 a surplus available for secondary be WHEN'IT MELTS! h Cornwall--located at what is|President and Mrs. known as the international sec-|will return home the e.ening of tion of the seaway since the|June 26 while the royal party con- American - side Eisenhower andtinues in the yacht along the St. Grass River locks are in that/Lawrence River to Cornwall and area--had bid strongly for thejon into the Great Lakes and opening ceremony on the ground|across Canada for 1 six-week that the seaway is a joint project|tour. and the ceremony should be in-| Mr Diefenbaker also an- ternational. [nounced that at the Queen's sug- But Prime Minister Diefen- gestion the. names of all work- er d in the men who built the seaway and Wednesday that President Eisen-|all persons who contributed to its bower has agreed to travel to|construction will be recorded in Montreal to join Queen Elizabeth|a sr ial book as a mark of rec- and Prince Philip aboard thejognition. royal yacht Britannia for an Canada has spent $335,000,000 Detroit. as, situs: my Pa ne Lib Sefiools In owl {WOU fou Yea: Ontario's Snow Threatens Flood the. a metit {nesday by Dean B. C. Diltz of "The Queen and Prince Philip/the Ontario College of Education By THE CANADIAN PRESS Snow finally quit falling in arrive at St. John's, Nfld., June before a special committee of the 16. The opening is the main pur-|l¢gislature's education commit. pose of their visit. But until their|tee. He based it on a report on |departure Aug. 1 from Halifax |secondary school teacher supply Eastern Canada Wednesday, giv- ing folks a chance to sit back and think about the flood threat posed by the deepesi freeze in Summer cottages in the Lake Simcoe and Muskoka districts are in danger of collapsing under the weight of snow. Thousands of rural school children are still on holidays because buses can't get through drifts that in some places . a n I a _---. 'g , Rejected By Burt WINDSOR (CP) -- A charge that United Auto Workers Union (CLC) negotiators were "black- jacked" into accepting a "pat- tern settlement" imported from the United States in recent con- fract talks with General Motors Canada was described Wednes- y as "nonsense" by George also charged the Ford and Chrys- ler union negotiators were told by the international office "that once the company came up to pattern we would have to settle or be without support financi- ally." The Chrysler local struck against the company Jan. 20, and [they will visit Canadian commun-|soon to be released by OCE. ities from coast to coast, spend-| 'Under present. conditions, ing most of their time seeing within two years we may expect smaller centres rather than the|that there will be more teachers cities. than are needed to replace with- years. Fifteen feet of snow has fale in 4 a, Georgian " ern Ontario, most of It in the last], three weeks | They will spend a day in Corn-|drawals and to supply additional {wall June 27. The itinerary calls|classes resulting from increased for one U.S. stop--Chicago July 6|enrolment. i | {--but there is a possibility they| 'The impending surplus will be| will also spend an hour or so in| postponed for a year or two if the |extra qualified teachers are used to replace those teaching with Donald and 1 by Lib- . onald. & a proposal i eral Leader John Wintermeyer vais Dario passing ad do. at ther 3 "id Tuten by So riverbank communities in south-|town, The Lake Ontario commu- [that paid by industry if they at.|Western Ontario to watch forinity has a flood history going [tend OCE for a year. signs of a thaw. Officials say the pack to 1850. I Hine ground is frozen Jatties down' fue inches of snow. tell op than usual, rivers in some cases gingoion Wednesday. Wolfe Is- are solid ice to the bottom and ay residents won stranded in 0! jfve them were destroyed In a.' dents who took a pass course|snowfall has been heavy. oh [their homes when the township blaze Wednesday which nearly at university and about 100 type| The Toronto weather €€ plow broke down. levelled a frame business block|A certificates to honor university| Wednesday said this nas beet (he) At Hanover, the roof of William in this village 31 miles north of graduates." | worst winter for snow since 9: |strang's home caved in and it J Tre the ice - jammed Ganaraska River which runs through the middle of Destroyed In | Bradford Fire : BRADFORD (CP)--Five Main| Dean Diltz outlined teacher training. OCE each year grants Street stores and the apartment . e apartments) vont 350 type B certificates to Burt, the union's Canadian direc- tor. The charge was made by Charles Brooks, president of Chrysler Local 444, in the local's fiewspaper. Mr. Brooks said the UAW's international office had gefused to authorize a strike st GM or to permit Mr. rt as head union negotiator to set a strike deadline. The Chrysler local president Hundreds Flee Flood Waters Along Wabash PERU, Ind. residents along the banks of the a settlement was reached a week Five firemen overcome by {to dig his way out. Jager. Brock id in. th tic) smoke while attempting to halt ti Skies Seared oyge 1 an Mr. Brooks said in the article imes and Newfoundla nes- that he had taken 'sharp issue" | the spread of flames through the day. The temperature dropped, It with Mr. Burt for "importing the apartments were carried out by was 11 below zero at Gander, , Canadian Cottons ar off and stopped. None of the cars overturned. DEBRIS BLOCKED TRACKS __ Ties and rock ballast wi tossed high in the air:and scal tered down the right - of - way, blocking three of the four tracks. One passenger, Henry G. Gare diner of Philadelphia, said he was in the car next to the dining car. He said an attendant, the only other person in the car, yelled: "Hold your seat, something's going to happen." vo "The car started rocking and swaying and bumping," Gardiner said, "Then stuff began flying out of the pantry of the dining car ahead, going all over the place." He was tossed to the floor of the car but said he suffered only a minor leg bruise. County police estimated that 300 passengers were on the traim. For Consumers | TORONTO (CP) -- Restlutions| calling for a sickness and acci dent benefit plan and a govern-| ment consumers' hureau rs] ® put on the Ontario legislature's e 1ne order paper today by CCF mem-| T TS bers. | : The resolutions, submitted by| BERLIN (AP) -- The Soviet Reg. Gisborn (CCF--Wentworth| Embassy declared today that | East) and T. D. Thomas (CCF--|West Berlin's 2,200,000 civilians | Oshawa), will be considered by|have no reason to fear any Com- the House at the government's|munist blockade. convenience. An embassy spokesman said Mr. Gisborn asked House ap- civilian traffic in and out of West proval for a benefit plan "to give wage and salary earners security against loss 0" income when they after expiration of Moscow's May 27 deadline for ending the four- power status of the city. Mr, Thomas called on the gov. ernment to establish 4 consti: ers' bureau to co-opérate with ex- isting consumer organizations to: "Provide field and information services to assist in the develop- ment of consumer organizations; publish independent expert infor- mation on the quality of products placed on the market of Ontario; have authority to call attention to, and where necessary prohibit, misleading and fraudulent adver- tising: .exert constant pressure for the enforcement of federal laws governing food and drugs: |and conduct continuing research into price spreads and recom- |mend appropriate action to re |duce unreasonable spreads." The spokesman however, the question of what will happen fo 'the supply lines of the British, American and French garrisons in West Berlin after May 27. After that date the Russians say they intend to transfer their controls over Allied sunnly lines to the East Germans. The Allies Dymond's Opinion On Fluoridation TORONTO (CP) -- Dr. M. B. Dymond, Ontario minister of Berlin would go on uninterrupted | ate a d| West No Red Blockade Told say they will refuse to bow 36 East German controls. "What will happen then," the Soviet spokesman in reply. questions, "does not depend om us but on the way the W powers react." The spokesman was comment ing on the decision of Allied lead. ers to risk war Ithet tian toler- oc! tro iid | ! the Russians have been obligated under four - power accords to guarantee and regulate Allied military traffic on the rail and a highway link to this city, 110 miles deep in East Germany. Toronto Officers Appeal Sentences TORONTO (CP)--Two of five former Metropolitan Toronto po- lice officers, convicted of theft im recent trials, are appealing their three-month sentences. William M..Doherty, whose ap- peal has been filed, is free om $3,000 bail. A similar appeal is U.S% pattern and applying Canadian scene." DENIES CHAP ~~ Mr. Burt issued statement denying the allegations. | | of the contract tals jt/other firefighters and without -modificaion to suit the|1here were no other injuries. Four of the five apartments above were occupied and tenants lost almost all their personal be- "There was defintiely no | bludg oning fron. the U.S. in any In fact, there was no interference whatso- revived | longings. The 90-minute fire through a bakery, meat market men's clothing store, store. ever from the international office | of the union,' rector said. | | the Canadian di- A firewall prevented the flames {from spreading to an adjoining "The contract terms were ac. Pranch of the Canadian Bank of cepted by a 95 per cent vote at| Commerce and other buildings. | Chrysler and by 85 per cent at re fg (AP) -- Anxious Ford and General Motors," he munities aided in the fight. One "ded. "In all three cases the|fireman was injured in a two-car Fire brizades from four com- Wabash worked and hoped today [votes were free, and were by collision on his way to Bradford as they waited to see what the rampaging river would do next. Hundreds of families already have fled from the swirling flood Waters and hundreds more are threatened. Governor Harold W. Handley declared a state of emergency in 13 northern and central Indiana counties Wednesday night and telegraphed President E ise n- hower to ask that they be desig- nated disaster areas. Hardest hit was Peru, a north- ern Indiana city of 15,000. Nearly 500 families were moved from their homes here when the Wa- bash burst through sandbags and poured over two floodwalls at the north and south ends of town. Soon after the floodwalls gave way, the river level began to drop slowly from its neak of 23.65 feet, 11% feet over the floodwalls. But city officials weren't sure whether the drop occurred be- cause the crest had passed or be- Cause water was spreading out through the town. "We can only wait and hope," said one volunteer worker. No casualties were reported and the evacuation proc ss went off smoothly. i. A mile-long ice jam about four miles downstream from Peru was cited as one of the major causes of the flood. Demolition experts studied the possibility of trying to dynamite the jam, but an engineer, R. D. Walker, said he'd never seen ex- plosives take ou' a jam that size. CITY EMERGENCY secret ballot. ' | Most shops had just closed be- | "The settlement was in each cause of half-day shopping here refrigera- tion services depot and a variety | OTTAWA (CP) Increased tariff protection is likely for Can- swept |ada's cottons industry. Informants say the government is almost certain to accept rec- ommendations of the tariff board for a sweeping overhaul of the cottons tariff structure, including a 15-per-cent boost on fabrics coming from the U.S. But some tough haggling may develop as Canada opens new negotiations with the U.S. to re- vise existing tariff rates. Canadian imports of foreign coon run to about $150,000,000 a year, with the U.S' sending in | | | [ | case recommended by the presi-| Wednesday when the flames be- about $100,000,000 worth. dent of the local concerned, and|gan licking up from the basement this means by Mr. Brooks him- self in the case of the Chrysler|p.m. Cause of the fire was |settlement," Mr. Burt said. |of the meat market about known. It is unlikely that the U.S. 1:30 would agree to reduce its pros-|. not pects in the Canadian market without getting heavy tariff com- t TORONTO (CP) -- tario's 17 mental hospitals. Health Minister Dymond an- nounced a radical new mental health program in the Ontario legislature Wednesday and said it is designed to keep patients "in as close contact with their normal home apd community en- {vironment as possible." Ontario's 24,000 mental patients would get a system of regional mental hospitals, cottage-type in- stitutions and diagnostic treat- ment centres offering out-patient treatment. "The mental hospital will not be considered as an institution for custodial care," declared Dr. Dymond. He indicated last year's $35.- 287,600 allocation for mental health will be boosted substanti- PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3.2211 ally "Here, as in other fields, who can measure the cost of a life?" he asked. "The modern concept is that NEW PROGRAM FOR ONTARIO Throwing Away Keys To Mental Hospitals [LATE NEWS FLASHES They're| services should start at the com-|special methods for the treat- throwing away the keys to On-/munity level. Now it is not pos- /ment, management and reactiva- over sible for us to start all again. We must work with what we have at the present time and community." The diagnostic treatment {centres would be established in large cities to provide treatment informally, without committal There would be accommodation and staff to provide both out- day care and night care. "If a family physician feels that one of his patients should be seen at the mental health centre, he will refer the patient to that centre just as he would to some other specialized centre or to some other specialist." The regional mental hospitals would be broken down into sepa- rate units of 300 patients. They would provide comprehensive nsy chiatric services for the whole commuriity, give active treatment to patients referred from other organization of mental health centres In a region and "employ work backwards to try to bring the mental hospitals closer to the patient and in-patient treatment, I | [tion of patients with chronic men- tal disorders." About 12,000 chronic or hope- |less cases would be transferred to cottage-type institutions -- three were already in the planning Protection Urged No one was injured. The cause of the 50-year-old [tariff concessions in the U.S. Power Canal |report, indicated the government The board now is studying tariffs|foot section of a two-lane auto- try to work out a 'package' deal | cottons as well as synthetic. The |get--in which tariff changes soz. SRbSAKIEN as he attempted to | April. | items to 20 from 50 and decreas- bridge's collapse was not deter. day public hearing last year.|ihe canal, part of the St. Law, Nfld., and one below at normally- {moderate St. John's. |pensations or reducing Canadian Finance Minister Fleming, in| tabling the board's two-volume Bridge Falls {will take action, though there 5 {would be no speedy conclusions.| MASSENA, "N.Y. (AP)--A 100- lon synthetic textiles. mobile bridge across a power | Informants said Canada might canal collapsed early today, dis- with the U.S. and other countries | involved. The deal would include | eR) |35, suffered leg injuries when his negotiations would not be com- 3 | pleted in time for the next bud-|2utomobile went down a 50-foot {mally are made--in March or Sus ne Shel ridge to M sssens | ; - | Many homes were left without The board's proposals, ing the number of cottons tariff | perature. |ing some rates while increasing] others, followed a marathon 48- mined immediately. It crossed Dress and other manufacturers/ pene ower project, between opposed the cotton industry's bid! ep projec', A 0 Massena and the new Alcoa alu- for increased protection. minum plant. The board found the industry generally healthy financially and|on the frozen canal and was able to stand up to competition.!smashed. Pembroke Couple Remanded PEMBROKE (CP)--Garbage collector Donald Barnhart and his wife today were remanded in custody for two weeks in Renfrew County jail on a charge connected with the Jan. 27 death of their baby daughter, Shirley Ann. The Barn- harts were charged Tuesday with "failing to provide the necessities of life for a child under 16, without lawful ex- |stage and be "cared for in pleasant and comfortable sur-| {roundings."" | | Shifting these patients would free psychiatric#s for work on| more prohising cases but Dr.| Jymond emphasized: | "These patients are not going| to be ignored or lost sight of com- pletely, because it would appear that much of the research that has been going on for a long time might possibly yield some hope that effective treatment may yet be available for certain numbers |of them." | The health minister said his new program will include in- creased research, more therapy through music, workshops and recreation and rehabilitation through community agencies. " cuse." Wounded Dog Captared INGERSOLL, Ont. (CP)--An Airedale dog wounded by gunfire Wednesday after it attacked an 11-year-old girl on a sfreet in this Oxford County town, was captured today. It is being kept under observation to determine if it is rabid: India Wants $700 Million NEW DELHI (Reuters)--India plans 'to seek $700,000,000 In aid from her five chief 'creditor countries and the World Bank to fill a foreign exchange gap in her five-year develop- ment plan during the next two years. authoritative sources said today. rupting power to a large rural However, Francis Flynn, about health, said today he is against the fluoridation of water supplies. Dr. Dymond was commenting on the decision by Metropolitan Toronto council Tuesday night to ask the Ontario government to being filed by Jean-Paul Burke, it was learned. Two of 12 officers of the sub urban North York division, charged with theft last Novem- ber, have been acquitted and change its legislation to allow|five, includ ing'Doherty and fluoridation of water in Toronto|Burke, have been convicted. Five and the 12 Metro municipalities.'others are to stand trial. THOUGHT FOR TODAY A person brings nothing into this world and takes nothing away. And, the world being what it is, he's lucky thus 'to break even. reduc- heat in 23-degree-below-zero tem. The section of the bridge fell | Princess To Visit Nigeria LONDON (Reuters) -- Princess Margaret will visit Ni- geria"as the Queen's special representative when the fed- eration becomes--indépendent in October next year, Buck- ingham Palace announced today. FIRST NEGRO MESSENGER Donald Fairfax, the first | sponsible government, hands a Negro legislature messenger in | document to E. C. Dauphinee, Nova Scotia's 200 years of re- | chief messenger of the Nova % Scotia House for many years. --CP Wirephotq .