THE TIMES TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising RA 38-3492 All other calls . RA 3-3474 dhe Oshawa Times a. WEATHER REPORT Sunny with cloudy intervals, scattered thundershowers. Risk of hail, warm, humid. 5 Authorized As Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES: : Price Not Over OSHAWA-WHITBY, WEDNESDAY, MAY 20, 1959 10 Cents Per Copy VOL. 88--No. 117 RASA we ne HEAVY OVERNIGHT rains caused the grist mill dam at Tyrone to burst early Wednes- day morning. Photo shows a ------ ok new stream bed cut by the wa- ters in front of the mill. At right can | een portion of | the dam TROUT SCATTERED Gales, Rain In Ar ead fe Si TE Burst Darlington Dam (Staff) Heavy the night were sewer excavations were filled, i Wen timbers in | FRENCH JET AIRCRAFT CONSIDERED FOR RCA 'MOST HELPFUL' PM Gets Facts On Small Cars OTTAWA (CP) -- Prime Min. lining his desire that small-car ister Diefenbaker, advocate of production should take place in building smaiicit cars in Canada, Canada when it occurs in the talked Tuesday with a man who United States. is building them. WELCOMES COMPETITORS He conferred with President! Mr. Grundy said he would wel- Gordon Grundy of Studebaker- come manufacture of smaller Packard of Canada Limited for cars by the big three. That would an hour and said Mr. help "popularize" them in Can- Grundy was 'most helpful" ada. : : through his experience in the Mr. Diefenbaker, he said, had smaller-car field shown a 'very friendly attitude. Mr. Grundy said they covered "I think he realizes that the literally the whole automobile compact car is the auto of the production field. He said he future," Mr, Grundy said. : agrees with Mr, Diefenbaker *'al-) Chrysler has said it is consider- most all across the board" on the ing building a small model in view that the smaller car should Canada and Ford has indicated be built in Canada. nearly aA foreground are part of wreckage of the dam the Photo, . {Lark which Mr. Grundy said is ment. : at 400 to 500 pounds lighter Studebaker-Packard's Hamilton than the bigger-car models and plan has been strike-bound since costs about $300 or $400 less than| Wednesday. adi ip Ta ip Rg | Mr, Diefenbaker conferred sep- Negligence turing's big sire aon, Creve ler and Genera ors -- out-| e. "=~ Charge In Foster Dulles | Barrie Death Times Staff TORONTO (CP) -- Hail shat- ~- Joan Nes- it. is studying the question. Gen-| ¢ Studebaker-Packard is turning eral Motors has studied it in the % out a "compact" car called the past but has made no commit-| HA Nine-year-old Roger Streets is shown on way to hospital in steel - shanked dart which pierced his skull while he play- ed with a group of boys. Dart RRR a. DART STICKS IN HEA Warren, Ohio, for removal of a | ' Three American | Types In Race | OTTAWA (CP) -- The French|would be made under licence fn Mirage, Mark III jet plane has/Canada by A.V. Roe (Canada) joined the ranks of aircraft being Limited. considered by the RCAF for] A possible exception to this adoption into its air division in/might be the British Blackburn Europe, it was learned reliably NA-39. The government might today. want to order it direct from tue The RCAF has had teams in British plant. However, this pl France--the Dassault Company of is not likely to be available until Paris manufactures the plane--to|1965 and the RCAF is believed inspect the plane and is reported ito regard i ss too heavy and [pleased Wilh its perigrmance: Besides the Mirage and Black- | The Mirage, now in servicel, .. "omer planes said to be fn with the French Air Force, has| : - y the running for the air division a speed of more than twice the role are three American types: |speed of sound and ean be used the Grumman Super Tiger, the |as a high-level interceptor or low- republic F-105 and the Northrop level attack plane. 156 : The government has not yet price of the F105 would run made any decision about re- anout $1,800,000 each and of the equipping the 12-squadron RCAF |g,per Tiger about $1,700,000. The air division in Europe. | Northrop plane would be consid- 1t is considered likely that any erably cheaper but the RCAF new plane for the air division'does not regard it highly. ~~ Future Of Berlin Behind Scenes was removed at St. Elizabeth's Hospital in Youngstown, where Roger was reported in fair con- dition today. He is the son of Landell Streets of Warren. ~--AP Wirephoto. GENEVA (AP) -- Russia and|crisis in order to reach an agree- the Western powers today werg ment here for the chiefs of gove {reported moving cautiously be- ernment to meet this summer. hind the scenes of the Big Four| Western diblomats think conference toward secret talks But about the future of Berlin and the no no yet on what ministers are continuing debate / | C {convening of a summit meeting, settlement ; be only minor involicenience result (©P) Hoff 1d Cc 11 y Ha od Sovit forelar Te for Berlin that would be rone grist mill ed. i ", 2, Xe Oshawa will be a ou a The Western and Sov x acceptable to both the Soviet Une y est. fon and the W " i Tue and debris a fhe ulton road west in. the viein-|night. . ad over a wide area in, the|ity of bridge. ard, Harvey, Robert a {| PUC officials in Oshawa report.(John = Burbidge estimated the ; k, mill operator oy damaged switches and fuses damage at $15,000, including loss for the past two years, battled o, power lines in the Brooklin|0f tomato crops on their adjoin- unsuccessfully the night through area, where a power failure oc-|/ID€ property. an attempt to contol thel.,.eq at 2 am. Crews are out| Fierce storms also swept flow of water over De dam. The repairing the damage. {through farmlands near Cobourg, the" min ah Jovy Phe , Lightning alsp struck a trans.p, ot, 200 Bo by lightning flood ormer at the Oshawa sewage and destroyed by fire. Damage Eoinihas § Clings To Life | WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pain. charged with criminal negligence relieving drugs are keeping in the death Tuesday of an RCAF| G { al ng dobn nt following a two-car col Ries Dulles senerafly, © Mslon at the Intersection of Hien ener |" The former secretary of state/Ways 7 and 35 near here, Crown -- sleeps much of the time in his|Attorney Lorne Jordan said to- (Walter Reet Army Hospital dag. Rudolph Handel m. To The state department said/Toute from Camp Borden WASHINGTON (AP) -- The 37, en chairman of the Senate rackets to committee urged today that Con- miles east of Oshawa. Two Tuesday Dulles, ravaged by can- Rockeliffe RCAF base near Ot-/gress meet head-or James R. jected by , continues to grow weaker. |tawa, died in Sunnybrook Hospi- Hoffa's threat to call a general (* The ean old Pilles is not in tal in Toronto from severe head strike in the Unite®States if la- injuriés suffered in the collision bor unions are subjected to anti. Water raced across the proper- ty in front of the mill, cutting a new stream alongside the road Huge mounds of carth were moved with the force of the fast flowing waters. No one was injured, but trout and suckers were scattered over a wide area. Before the dam burst Mr. Thornbeck had allowed anglers to fish the pond for a fee. AID STRANDED FiSH Following the break sportsmen from the area aided stranded fish into deeper waters by push ing them back with broken boards which littered the banks of the new formed stream. Other streams normally fed from the millpond were muddied for p downstream by the earth shifted from the vicinity of the pond OSHAWA DAMAGE LIGHT Oshawa public vorke official reported that while roads were damaged to some extent, and Canadian Jobless Drop Off ployment in Apri faster-than-usua! pace ile the Jobless dropped off by 80.000 in g the month. The government reported today that at April 18 there were 445.000 unemployed compared w 525 000 a month lier and 35,664,000 with jobs a» 5.552.000 in March " was the third successive month of rising employment, fo Canada since unemployment hit the winter high of 538.000 in Jan uary The post-war peak of 1 1 ployment was 597,000 in March last year. The April . ment figure for this ve. 000 below that of April 19 Those with jobs "In Apri bered 127.000 more than earlier. Besides thes: bureau of statis tics estimates, the government released figures showing that at April 16 thers were 733.729 per ainst um a year 0 registered fo ) empioym { g ures contain an unknown propor tion of persons changing from job to job. The bureau estimates are on a monthly sampling of based 30,000 households. CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS OLICE RA 5-1133 SPT. RA 5-6574 Ontario with IRE DE id |and for April, 1958, in brackets: 1200,166 (230,734--226,899). JSPITAL RA 3.2211 disposal plant, but did not cause an yinterruption in services. In Port Hope, the Ganaraska was reported running high, and there was some minor flooding. In Cobourg, the storm flooded | basements and roads, while light-| ning struck the local radio trans. mitter, causing the station to go off the air an hour before sign-| off time, Bowmanville public works de-! partment received calls for drains which con'd aot contain the big ruth of water. M + much damage w reportec a d Whitby public works officials was estimated at $22,000. |a coma, however. TORNADO-LIKE WINDS | | Heavy rains lashed much of : { Southern Ontario Tuesday. Tor- Dunnies Study bound car which failed to stop at will introduce soon a bill to apply nado-like winds whirled through areas near Guelph, 45 miles west] of Toronto, and Alliston, 30 miles| northwest of Toronto. A barn was destroyed and a house and three other barns damaged. European Tour Wren Blair, manager of Whitby | | considering an offer by the Cana- |dian Amateur Hockey Association {to tour Europe next November. Dunlops, said today the club is|serious condition. [trust laws. a ; | Democratic Senator bitt was the driver of a north-/MeClellan of Arkansas said Monday. Provincial police said Miss Nes-| John L. he the intersection, colliding the anti-trust laws lo trans . A hand? 8 sporta 35i, Handel's ea Sthound uh Nis tion unions, He gave no further cia % and Sgt elvitne Dav- details. Anti-trust laws have been idson, 44, of Rockeliffe are- still @imed in the past al monopolies in hospital here, but none is in In business and industry, ONE EXPIRY DATE | | Hoffa, president of the team- | sters union, said Tuesday that or- Inquiry In state that they were surprised at receiving no calls. Municipal officials in Pickering| al ef township said that they intended to inspect low-lying areas. They found ras which normally did flood after heavy rains had come] through alright { Streams in the vicinity were swollen to some extent, but not enough to cause any alarm 80,000 The gove ucnt described the in employment between i! Apri "significantly than normal im provement for this time of year, jobs in reported as the Besides those without April. the government 22,000 on temporary layoff com- pared with 29000 a month earlier and 32.000 at the same time last vear The largest part of rise in employment btween March and r > in non-agricultural ent up by 70,000- the usual seasonal rease---from 4.933.000 to 5.003. The figure for April of last vas 4.846.000 rm jobs maved up from 619, 661,000, smaller the double past year with a corresponding early rise in farm employment. Those at work on farms in April were 30.000 fewer than in April, 1959 reliecting a vear-sto-vear down ernment unemplovment than the nre ear cally all local areas he Ap nployed repre ented 7.3 per cent of a national abor force of 6,109,000. The month before, it was 8.6 per cent of 6,077,000. In April of 1958, it was 8.6 per cent of 6,059,000. Unemployment in Ontario to-! talled 11,000 in April ! employmen Ontario had 139.000. up 32.000 from March 098 from April. 195 Here are employ April those for last March| the nati-nal for _ 'urban | Tuesday with a blast from Judge erations would have to be studied |Joseph A. Sweet of Hamilton who before any definite decision on | Berlin crisis date fay flaveup at 'Astounding' TORONTO (CP) -- A judicial inquiry into sales of lands by sub- York Township opened labelled some of the initial evi- Yence "astounding." Testimony indicated that more than $1,500.000 worth of land owned by the township had beer sold since 1954 without any ap I sal of the properties and no separate records of the transac- tions were kept The investigation, ordered Municipal Affairs Minister War render, will also delve into the township's financial matters as related to the subdivision of land and zoning bylaws. Judge Sweet criticized the an- swers given hy Howard Hall. York's clerk-solicitor Questioned by T. Kelso Creigh- ton of Oshawa. conducting the case for the municipal affairs de. partment, Mr. Hall said if the sale price of a piece of property was 'okay' the appraised value was inserted in the records as the same The CAHA convention in De- TEMPERATURES [egitation shouldbe 10 have al troit Tuesday chose the Allan | AT SOUTH POLE its collective-bargaining contracts Cup champions to make the tour |expire on the same date, and aor a Bob LeBel an- WASHINGTON (AP) -- If [then strike. nounced that an invitation was| it's any solace to those who "We can call a primary strike received by the association. | suffer from summer's heat, Mitho . the weather bureau is going I Whitby decides lo make ihe to make public, daily reports trip it will have to pay the cost k of the tour except $1000 voted by © high and low temperatures A WA « at the South Pole "just to the convention to provide the satisty curiosity." team) wi Rew Witorme Bow Last week the warmest MT, alr Sized, 'W-| temperature at the South Pole ever, that other financial consid-| was 65 degrees below zero. The coldest was 89 below. |straighten out the employers once and for all," Hoffa said. Hoffa has been working to or- ganize a conference of various transportation unions --- including] his teamsters--and longshoremen| and rail unions. He spoke Tues-| day at a district convention of the International Longshcremen"s As-| sociation but indicated he was} Queen, Eisenhower To Open Seaway June 26 CP) The Queen symbolic opening of the water-|destroyer Forrest Sherman, the Eisenhower willl way which has been in use for Royal Navy Frigate Ulster, and Lawrence the last month the Canadian destroyer escort Details of the day's ceremon- Gatineau. START AT 9:15 AM. The day's activities will start at 9:15 a.m. when the Queen and Prince Philip leave the "royal oy sficial E are eX- yacht, berthed at Montreal's| ceremonial gate spanning the ap- ar pon | the approaches L2urier pier, to drive to RCAF roach to St. Lambert lock op- oS istation St. Hubert to meet the Pp! : to the St. Lambert Lock, gateway | | posite Montreal, marking the president and Mrs. Eisenhower to the seaway on the south shore The president's aircraft Colum. of the St. Lwrence River oppo- bine IIT is scheduled to arrive at the trip could be made. OTTAWA and = President formally open the St Seaway at a half-hour ceremony on the morniig of Friday, June ies, one of the high points of the ) Royal Tour, were announced here The royal yacht Britannia car- today. = rving the Queen and president ; More than 50,000 people, includ- : i & then vill pass through a special ing 5,000 official guests, ¢ than in vears because spring work in agriculture began' earlv this| site Montreal. {10:05 a.m. COMMEMORATIVE BOOK | After a 2l-gun salute and in-| | Roberts, president of Can-(SPection by the president of a| |ada's St. Lawrence Seaway Au-(8uard of honor, the entire party| Negro Gunned Down In Burning Home LAFAYETTE, La. (AP) n a house after shooting a v a police officer and wounded t ned down in his burping Wome Suspension Gf Licences On Hit-And-Run TORONT? (CP)--Attorney-General has assurances from federal Justice Minister said todsy he Fultn that the Criminal Code sugrension of licences of drivers convicted in hit-and-run cases Khrushchev Will Visit Albania LONDON 1 visit his tiniest (Reuters --Sovie satellite, sin news agency Tass disclosed tcday a premier to the Adriatic republic falls during the original indicating he of May 27 that time. y (thority, will present the Queen (Will drive to the seaway site by| |with a commemorative book con-(Way of Highway 9 through La- taining names of organizations fayette in Montreal South. and individuals who took part in| For the Britannia's passage building the seaway through the lock afterwards, the Lewis G. Casfle, administrator Queen and the president will re- of the American St. Lawrence main on deck uoti' the royal Seaway Development Corpora. vacht leaves the loc! tion, will present a similar book In Lake St. Louis the Britannia to President Eisenhower and re-|Will pass by units of the United| {quest that the seawav be de-|States and Canadian navies lining [clared . open. its Toute, Two escorts, me run . each of the two navies, will ac- ao agvorh aud lhe Besidont company the royal yacht from ; ._ _, .,|Cote Ste. Catherine lock to lower | The formalities, starting at 11/Beauharnois. (am.m. EDT. are expected to, At that lock the president and take about 30 minutes Mrs. Eisenhower, accompanied The Queen and president. ac- by the prime minister and Mrs companied bv Prime Vinicter Diefenbakor, will disembark and Dinfe er. then will oceed bv car to St. Hnhert a Britannia for a five 15 nm through the seaway to the lower does not expect |Beauharnois lock. The scyal off for yacht wil be escorted by the 8. lpm. A Negro barricaded himself vhite woman today and killed hree others before he was gun- Roberts of Ontario will be amended soon to allow t ver Nikita Khrushchev the Khrushchev's beard the cruise about 5 The president's plane will take Washington about 6:30) visit isit ou! ~ lall across the nation that will THOUGHT POR TODAY ° on rival plans for Germany but Western diplomats say this talk Tl e has reached a dead end of dis- agreement and the obvious ob- jective of both sides in continuing suggesting a strike by all labor is to make more propaganda, unions. | Everything that hzppens inside | The suggestion was quickly re-/the conference room is reported | AFL-CIO President immediately by press officers for | George Meany, who served notice the delegations. | Hoffa could not count on support| More than 100 members of dele- | from the federation's 12,750,000 gations and advisers sit in on| members, The AFL-CIO has ex-/these meetings. Only about a pelled the teamsters on charges dozen men--probably three from of corruption. |each of the Big Four countries-- Democratic Senator Pat McNa- wil! attend the secret talks shap i «mobile. Workers of mara of Michigan, a former De. ing up. Little information about night he would be willing to enter troit union official, said a general them is expected to emerge from the negotiations to end the strike strike "would be suicidal, just|day to day. at the Studebaker-Packard Lime crazy," and added that "I think 7 ited plant here if Gor: {Hoffa has more sense than to do EXCLUDE GERMANS eh of 4 Gordan Grundy, that." He noted that Hoffa had| British Foreign Secretary Sel: jaxer.Packard, took part. said a strike could be called, not Wyn Lloyd, U.S. State Secretary, Negotiations between the com. that it would be. Christian Herter and French For-| any and Local 525 of the union But McClellan said he saw real eign Minister Maurice Couve de over a mew contract broke down danger in Hoffa's words, which Murville are agreed that both; week ago after four months 'of he called a threat against Con. German delegations must be ex-hargaining. Last Wednesday 400 gress and the American people. cluded from the secret sessions. production employees went~en | West Germany, which opposes strike. action that accords more| : prestige to East Germany, My Su, said 1a has authority agreeable. The East German [gattle the strike on behalf of the spokesman sdid his Jovernment union. would not insist on taking part . since it is interested primarily in yey. au Wijoy are i the success of the Geneva nego- rates in a new contract, The come meet the demands of the fu- ![tiations. pany has offered an increase of ture, will cost many billions The Western ministers want to! six cents a year on existing rates of dollars. Some people are [find out whether Soviet Premier | running from a minimum of $1.75 beginning to wonder if the |Nikita Khrushchev -- obviously |to a top of $2.21 an hour, plus future won't be too expensive [anxious for summit talks -- will eight cents for 30 skilled trades- for us to afford. linitiate a relaxation in the Berlin'men. thea Ep ama UAW Director | May Join Talks At Studebaker HAMILTON (CP) Burt, - Canadian - director of the ,any Construction, expansion and improvement of highways, streets, schools and so on, to 22 | ELECTIONS ballots. in | the West GM plant The votes however, there Qsh- > cast in the UAW union | booths being set ur in buses hal ere the majority of the | at the plant gate Voting will are seen being cast by Tem | hailoting is expected to take | continue until Saturday afters Peters (left) of the North GM | place. For those workers who | noon to ensure as heavy a vote and Russ Hamilton of | can't make it to theounion ball, | as possi : VOTING STARTS IN LOCAL Two of the first opening minutes of ava's largest 'labor elections are polling Er ------ E --Ls