" THE TIMES TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising RA 83-3492 All other calls ...,.. RA 83-3474 he sharon Sime WEATHER REPORT ° Thursday sunny with a few cloudy intervals. Turning mild. . er. Winds Southwest. A VOL. 88 -- NO. 47 Price Not Over 7 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA-WHITBY, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1959 Authorized As Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa TWENTY. PAGES~ BUDGET GRANTS Access Roads For Ontario TORONTO (CP) -- Six access } roads' totalling 134.7 miles were eompleted in Northern Ontario in 1958 and agreement has been reached with the federal govern- ment on another six 154 miles, the Ontario budget re- ported today. . An appendix to the budget said that 55 projects totalling nearly 800 miles have been completed since the government inaugurated its access roads program in 1951. Twenty-eight were financed en- tirely by the government and it shared cost of others with private panies which expected to de- rive important benefits. By the } end of the next fiscal year, March 81, 1959, Ontario expenditure would amount to about $6,000,000. & Roads completed in 1958: Polo- wd mar to Foleyet, Hornepayne to Highway 11, Geraldton to Nakina, fd Sani Timagam! mine road, Highway 11 to Caramat and the Sioux TREASURER ALLAN Lookout - Alcona road where a large bridge remains to be built/000 from the $176,900,000 spent in ever the Sturgeon River before the current fiscal year ending it is opened. March 31, Provincial Treasurer In the comihg year, the access|Allan said today. tion that we have brought into very heavy financial burden," Mr. Allan said. School construction was a 'eon- tinuing problem. Since the Sec RECORD 1959 BUDGE ond World War new classroom': accommodation had been pro vided for 650,000 students. Ele- } mentary school classrooms were still being built at the rate of 1,600 a year. In 1958, accommodation was provided for 75,000 elementary Kk : school pupils at a cost of $50,- } 000,000 and for 19,000 secondary school students at a cost of $25, 000,000. Prospects were for an | easing now in the rate of con struction of elementary schools but an increase in the need for secondary schools. In the coming year a new pro gram of assistance was planned {for students seeking higher edu- cation. Estimates included $1,200,000 to make scholarships: and bursaries available to 4,000 roads program would be accel erated by federal-provincial ne- gotiations for a comprehensive The final stage of a three-year students, double the number who {program of adjustment of the Foi ™ | formula for grants to local school [received such awards in 1958. CHANCE FOR ALL roads-to-resources program. Inp,ards accounts for $18,500,000 of had already started on some pro- |i. increase, he said in his | 'Our objective is to assure that jects. Expenditure over the next|p dget speech to the Ontario BO student who has the capacity five years would total $15,000,000, |,00i]ature. The plan provided for although in some cases private grant structure based on a companies might bear part of the ovince - wide equalized assess- eost. {ment for municipal tax purposes. Preliminary agritment had | Also included was a growth-need been reached on the How €| factor to help school boards faced projects and construction was al- with rapid population increase. ready under way: Foleyet to i Chapleau, Savant Lake to High-| This year, the province planned way 17, road north from Port four further improvements effect- Arthur, Nakina to Percy Lake, ive from last Jan, 1: paying Minaki to Pellatt, H. G. Young|grants on approved cost of lands mine road. acquired for school purposes; in- Under the loyment re-|cludi in base for computing Hef program last year, with the grants, the cost of industrial arts federal government bearing half| shops and home economics class- the cost, 375 miles of new forest rooms; increasing to $25,000 from access roads were built and 40 $20,000 the approved or recog- miles improved at a cost of nized cost for each classroom and $1,300,000. |science laboratory in secondary A similar program was planned schools for grant payment; treat- this year. Projects included clear (ing cafeterias on the same basis {will be deprived of the opportun- ity of attending 'university, Mr. Allan said. Awards known as Ontario|; Scholarships would be made to) |students attaining high academic |standing in Grade 13 and wish-| ing to enter umiversily, The ex-| isting program of bursaries to| students in need of financial help| would be enlarged and amount of aid to individuals increased. | Universities, which received $21,000,000 in maintenance and capital grants in the year now closing along with $2,000,000 in 1 ary esti t a year ago, would get $24,400,000 in the coming year. Total grants to each: Univer sity of Toronto, $11,407,000; On- tario College of Education, $725, 4 oh Lawrence W. Smith (above) took up smoking on his second birthday two months ago and now he smokes four or five 4 cigarets a day. His mother, | Mrs. Lawrence Smith, said it all started when Larry picked up a friend's cigaret and start- d last year despite the business PROBLEM SMOKER ON SECOND BIRTHDAY out why he eraves nicotine. Note the ashtray on tricycle (right). (AP Wirephoto) ed smoking it. Now the tot puts up a fuss every day until he gets a 'moke.' Larry is due for a visit to a doctor soon to find 1 bringing down his first budget in 4 1959 are good," he said. *'Per- operation a school grants struc- ' ture which guarantees equality of educational opportunity and re- lieveg the local taxpayers of a No Increase In Tax Rate ° TORONTO (CP)--Ontario's big- secutive surplus since the PA gest-ever spending program was gressive Conservative govern unveiled today with a prediction ment took office in 1943. ov | of economic recovery and gather-| Combined gross outlays on ¢ ing strength for the coming year.|rent and - capital account Provincial Treasurer Allan, |leave Ontario about $10,000,0( short of a billion-dollar budget for the coming year. i Gross ordinary expenditures are forecast at $667,042,000. For the year just ending they amounted 't o $650,157,000 com pared with an estimate a yéAP ago of $619,046,000, the legislature, pointed to record farm income, mining production and housebuilding as bright spots slowdown. "The prospects for the year sonal incomes and savings have been rising. Employment during these winter months is showing smaller than usual declines. . Powerful underlying forces guar- antee us a healthy long-term growth." : The budget, In what probably will be an Ontario election year, announced no new taxes nor in- creases In present tax rates. Suc- cession duties will be reduced in some brackets and there will be a technical amendment to the Corporations Tax Act. Both changes are designed to bring the acts into line with their federal counterparts. ASK MORE REVENUE But the budget speech repeated Ontario's demands for a bigger slice of revenues now going into federal coffers. It suggested Ot- 4TH GENERATION fng 45.3 miles of right-of-way, as class rooms for grants pur 'Macmillan Talks OPP Receive tawa get out of the succession duty field entirely. The tax-sharing agreement con- tinuing for another year gives the province 13 per cent in- Revenue is forecast at $667. 301,000, compared with an ac! 1958-59 income of $650,747,000 'lan estimate of $619,326,000. On the capital side of the ledger, Mr. Allan's budget calls for $322,964,000 in expenditur: the coming year, compared an actual outlay this year 'BF $336,900,000 against an estimated $292,131,000. ard RECEIPTS GROW oe Capital receipts are forecast'it $106,471,000. This year reached ' $142,960,000 after estimated at $94,091,000. In the current fiscal year nil enues outpaced estimates far greater margin than ex itures. The surplus. of $590, was the amount left after) minute distribution of $30,442, not covered by estimates. An extra $25,000,000 went inte the highway construction account, an extra $2,000,000 of ordin revenue into capital account 000; Queen's University, $2,325, ; University of Western On- IN HIS FAMILY JANDIAN. LIS (AP) -- the fourth generation of his family with a birthday on Feb. 24 when he was. born Tuesday, The baby's father, Donald, $12,442,000 was distributed « (supplementary estimates. CBC Strike May End of dividual income tax. It also pro- vides for abatements of per- -Boinis af. garboration In- come and 50 per tent of 5- sion Juties--sielgs in which both Dominion and Ontario govern- ments levy taxes. To meet the growth and devel opment needs of provinces and municipalities "all the evidence building 129.3 miles of new road poses. end improving 93.9 miles of exist-| Strain-Cloaked. Increase In Jono 47 ome Su Sines vv: Salary, Men ister Macmillan and Premier Khrushchev resumed their talks|night at the country villa, and today was reported refreshed by| TORONTO (CP) -- Salary in- creases for provineial police up to suggests" the income tax share , foday in an atmosphere heated was 24 Tuesday. His grand- |up by the: Russian's latest pub-|a good night's sleep. Khrushchev made his attack on the West at a Russian 'political | the rank of stat sergesn; sng a0 should be raised to 15 per cent Any Moment rally in the Kremlin while Mac-|increase in the force of 50 MeN (and corporation income to 15 per- father, George, was 51. And lic avowal that the Soviets will his great - grandfather, Ri- |not make concessions on West chard, was 74. |Berlin or German unification. Khrushchev made the fiery millan was on a visit to the atom were announced today by Attor- centage points. | OTTAWA (CP)--The Montreal |statement to a political meeting research station at Dubna, near ney.General Roberts. "We have also been of the/CBC producers' strike has ent- lin the Kremlin Tuesday while his|the Volga River. The increases, effective April 1/strong conviction--and recent de- ered its 58th day with indications British gues: was away from| The Soviet premier brushed this year, range from $300 to $500/Velopments have strengthened it|that an agreement to end it could Moscow. Khrushchev said Rus- aside as obsolete the Western pro-| annually. The addition of 50 con.|--that the federal government|be announced any time today or sia sees no point in a Big Four|posal for a foreign ministers con-(stables will raise the force to|should vacate the succession duty| Thursday. foreign ministers meeting, will ference on Germany. Instead, 1,874 men. field, ' Traditionally, succession Union representatives of some he plumped again for summit Under. the. sew. .scal duties have belonged to the prov: |400 French authors who work for talks and sprung a surprise byl, ced in conjunction with the| I" the corporation under contract offering Britain a non-aggression| oo 0 Conjunction w he or prof terms reached |provincial budget brought down/ABOVE FORECAST pred versity, ince' i 400,000; Assumption University P38 School grants in the coming|for Essex College, $1,050,000; year would total $147,000,000, an Waterloo College associate facul- increase of $68,000,000 in the last ties, $1,250,000; Lakehead College TORONTO (CP) -- Ontario's|three years and $79,000,000 in the $230,000; Ontario College of Art, education bill in the coming year|last four. | $185,000; special grant for archae- will total $202,400,000, up $25,500,-0 ""We can say without qualifica-' ological research, $10,000. One Tenth Of Men Rehired By Avro TORONTO (CP) -- Approxim- on German reunification and still plans to give the East Germans from commercial work into de- control of allied supply routes to not deal with the Western Allies general basis for settlement in ately one-tenth of the 13,800 Avro Aireraft and Orenda Engines em-|present Progressive Conservative ployecs laid off last Friday are|/government should have made expected back at work by the some arrangements for re-estab- weekend. |lishment of commercial work be- The report of the rehiring came fore withdrawing defence con- Tuesday night as developments|tracts. continued to pile up swiftly in the| Meanwhile, layoffs were re- wake of the federal government's|ported at several sub-contractors scrapping of the Arrow intercep-(and suppliers, of which there itor program: were more than 600 on the Arrow 1. A protest meeting of an ex- project. ted 10,000 aircraft workers fence contracts" and that the |West Berlin. | Khrushchev motored out today | to Uspenskoye to join Macmillan and Foreign Secretary Selwyn|¢ {Lloyd at the villa 25 miles from [Moscow put at the Briton's dis- posal for their visit. The earlier atmosphere of |pact, first days of talking. "It set us back on our heels after days of backslapping," one British offi- cial said. Macmillan was clearly placed joining the force will aken this line with him in their joq, brackets: C great friendliness had been [largely dispelled for the British by Khrushchev's blunt words, |and there was every indication ($3,450); second year $3,900 ( 600); third year $4,050 ($3,750) Union Head | year $4,400 ($4,050). [today in the legislature, a man| ; y be paid n an embarrassing position, as($3480 a year instead of $3,240 for Khrushchev obviously had not|hjs six-month probationary per New rates for regular service officers, with present figures in -- first year $3,750 [fourth year $4,200 ($3,900); fifth | Corporal -- first year $4,600 Mr. Allan announced a surplus of $590,000 on ordinary account, day-to-day expenses of running {the government, for the fiscal year ending March 31. That com- pared with a forecast of $280,000 last year by Premier Frost, who then held the treasury portfolio. Mr. Allan forecast a surplus of $259,000 in the new fiscal year beginning April 1 for the 17th con- | THOUGHT FOR TODAY talks with CBC officials late Tuesday night. A joint statement from both sides said a few points remained to be cleared up in the return. to - work agreement, but these were expected to be resolved 'in another session this morning. The CBC was to meet next with French TV artists, repre- senting some 800 contract work- ers. A basis for return-to-work set- tlement already has been reached Macmillan would press hard tof a determine whether his mission 'to 'Shocked At Moscow has any chance of suc- cess. N . fld. Premier The 65-year-old Macmillan is halfway through his 10-day visit with three other unions repre- senting 1,200 permanent technl- cal employees and news staff. However, none of the to return until all do. ($4,200); second year $4,800 ($4,- 400); third year $5,000 ($4,600). Sergeant -- first year $5,000 ($4,600); second year $5,250 ($4,- Pwas called here for Thursday to {1 [] , $ Bi $100.000.400 West Doubts The author who says mod- ern oman, 8 ihe lon. ex) ve tri Weapons Ban must have 0 find her a home. mer employers be used to somplete eight of the CF-105. The executive of the 10,000- AVRO PRESIDENT GORDON Talks Co In Arrow Issue OTTAWA (CP) -- The search continued here today for ways of easing the impact of Friday's government capcellation of the Arrow jet interceptor program. Prime Minister Diefenbaker was to meet officials of the Inter- national Association of Machin- ists, which represents aircraft workers at the big Malton plants of A. V. Roe (Canada) Limited. A committee of catinet minis- ters was expected to resume talks started Tuesday with Craw- ford Gordon, company president. | The Avro Aircraft and Orenda Engine plants, which employed] some 14,000 workers, were closed Friday within hours of the gov-| ernment's i Junking| Arrow project. | 5 Gordon novel Bi nferences Tuesday wi rime Minister Diefenbaker and a cab- member Local 222 of the United ito Workers at Oshawa said ans-Canada Air Lines aircraft "gould be produced by the Arrow ews. #4 Premier Frost said he has egied in Ontario representatives i the Canadian Manfacturers' ociation for consultations with GENEVA (AP) -- The United States and Britain told Russia to- day that Tuesday's speech by So- viet Premier Khrushchev raised the gravest doubts whether agreement could ever be reached to ban nuclear weapon tests. The Western delegates at three- nation talks on a nuclear test ban $ of finding new work gested the Soviet Union has no othe Avro plant at suburban intention of accepting any kind of on, |effective international control. In the other major union devel-| The Oshawa UAW local executive said test ban treaty. aimed at bringing better under- standing between East and West. SHOCKED BY KHRUSHCHEV Shocked by Khrushchev's ebul- lience at a British Embassy cock- tail party Tuesday night, a few |sudden biting = attack on * West, Macmillan commented: federal government on the|said Khrushchev's speech sug-| "This is an ex tr aordinary|District 2, sai r : has the right to form a union for| Macmillan, suffering from athe province's loggers. | method of diplomacy." heavy head cold and looking| ntinue in a statement that TCA "is im-| ---- that could be made by the skilled Einar fhe Unease inves] "YIELD NOT AN INCH' workers at Avro who built the first jetliner." The statement inet committee. But when discus. charged that Avro was "black- sions adjourned there was no sign|jacked by C. D. Howe, former of progress towards some alter-mastermind of Liberal policy, 'Nyasaland Rist Russian its workers. Mr. Diefenbaker stood by at his home Tuesday night. A spokesman said he was ready to| . join the talks as soon as there Quelled With was something definite to dis-| cuss: Su he was not called in T c G an Defence Minister tle promise for establishment of Pearkes and Mr. Gordon said ear as, uns: just peace. they didn't know whether the! BLANTYRE, Nyasaland (AP)! Eisenhower emphatically told primé minister would enter the RAF planes sprayed rock-throw-'a press conference the United | direct conferences today. ing crowds with tear gas in the States will not give one single Meanwhile, there were these|village of Lilongwe Tuesday as|inch in its determination to pre other developments Tuesday: mounting racial unrest, which|serve the rights and responsibil-| I. Senator David Croll (L--On- (started with native demonstra- ities of the Western Allies with tario) accused the government of tions last Friday, continued in respect to Berlin. "harsh brutality" in killing the|black Nyasaland. The precident expressed his Arrow without providing alterna-| Members of the King's African views in commenting on Soviet | tive werk. |Rifles fired on the rioters in the|Premier Khrushchev's attitude 2. Labor Minister, Starr told the|market place and two casualties toward the proposal by the West |dent Eisenhower said today the| Soviet Union's attitude regarding Berlin is so illogical it offers lit- CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA HOSPITAL RA 38-2211 C t here are indicatins(were reported. It was not known ern powers for a foreign minist- that a "substantial number" of if either was killed, |ers' conference on Germany. the company's employees will] A spokesman for the British co-| The president made these other find other work "almost immedi-|lonial government said the dem-|points at his conference: | ately." onstrators were scattered by late| Non-aggression pact -- he saw 3. Mr. Pearkes, on a CBC tele- afternoon, but sporadic shooting no great objection to any of the! vision program, indicated Can- continued into the night. The Western Allies entering into a 5-6574 (ada might join with the United crowd turned ugly after officials non-aggression pact with Russia. States in development of a coun: ter-missile system. tionalist meeting. prohibited the holding of a na-|An) agreements entered into sep- arately with the Soviet Union! c Union head H. Landon Ladd sald Tuesday night the trade union movement in Canada is shocked at the Int : the International Woodworkers of| hours after the Russian made 81 America (CLC). Tuesday from St. John's. Five were from Canadian Labor ongress Ike Denounces [= {ment Company. GRAND FALLS, Nfld. (CP)--|[800); third year $5,500 ($5,000). Staff Sergeant first ($5,250) ; | 750 (45,500). Premier Smallwood's cam-| to rid Newfoundland of year {$5,500 ($5,000); second year $5, third year $6,000 Arrested Men Arraigned HAWKESBURY, Ont. Mr. Ladd, president of IWA| no government | "They alone have the right," (CP)-- West considers such control|weary, excused himself from the he said in a speech over a pro-|Two men arrested near Montreal opment in the controversy, the|an indispensable element of a|party early while the Soviet pre-|vincial network of radio and tele- mier joked and made offhand|vision stations from St. John's. after an Ontario Provincial Po- |liceman and a motorist were kid- Mr. Smallwood arrived here|napped, are expected to be ar- fied charges, said. The two armed men were ar- rested at Pointe Claire, Que., Tuesday near Montreal and re- turned here for questioning, A third man still is sought. The premier met leaders of 14 provincial police entral Newfoundland unions. affiliates who repre- mill workers at the Newfoundland Develop- ent Attitude WASHINGTON (AP) -- Presi- would have to be effectively| drawn to give them any value. | LATE NEWS FLASHES Summit conference--he felt it woud be a great mistake to £0 § Fish Sanctuaries Opened To Anglers to any summit conference Wit the Russians unless adequate pre- parations were made in advance. Eisenhower called Khrush- chev's attitude obviously and pal- pably instransigent, or unyield- B. The president went on to say the Kremlin leader's position has been well known all along, but that he now seems to be empha- sizing it . As for Khrushchev's blast at the West's proposal for a confer- ence on the Berlin problem, Eis- enhower described it as a devel- opment which certainly cannot be called a hopeful one He went on to say that the So-| viet premier's attitude is so | ical that it doesn't promise much for establishment of a just peace, LINDSAY, Ont. (CP)--Six fish sanctuaries in Peterbor- ough, Victoria and Haliburton counties will be open to public fishing when the season opens this spring. The former sanc- tuaries now open to anglers are Black Duck and Little Mud Lake in Peterborough County; Goose Lake, Mariposa Brook and McLarem Creek in Victoria County, and Little Gull Lake in Haliburton County. Dulles To Decide Own Fate WASHINGTON (AP)--President Eisenhower said today that John Foster Dulles himself will decide--following inten. sive cancer treatment over a period of weeks--whether he is physically able to carry on as state secretary. Avro Workers Get Unlimited Credit TORONTO (CP)--Dairyman Art Armstrong says he is giving unlimited credit for milk to families of 3.500 former workers of Avro Aircraft Limited. Armstrong, who operates a dairy in suburban Woodbridge, said he made up his mind after several wives of workers dismissed Friday 'broke down and cried." |raigned here today on unspeci-|&§ ~ SNOW-WOMAN Mary Gulyas admires this seven - foot - high, beautifully sculptured snow-woman in the | front yard of a house on Athol | street between Albert and | Court streets. The statue was sculptured by Julius Damasdi, a Hungarian refugee who fled to Canada during the Hungar- ian Revolution and settled in Canada. Julius, who lives at 73 Celina street, was a student at the Hungarian Art Univer. sity in Budapest. Oshawa Times Photg, Rl aE