gf QUEEN O'Brian (left) Bad Queen Elizabeth and Prince | Leonard Philip chat with New Bruns- wick's lieutenant - governor J and Premier Hugh John Flemming (right) while attending a har- AT RACES ness racing program at Fredericton Raceway during the four-day royal tour of the the | maritimes. | --CP Wwirephoto IRVINE BONUS BUYS HINRL Automatic NO EXTRA WITH THIS t 47 Injured In Wisconsin She Oshawa Times Derailment VOL. 88--No. 177 OSHAWA, FRIDAY, JULY 31, 1959 PAGE NINE DAY LEAD {rain MENOMONIE, Wis (AP)-- {Forty-seven persons suffered in- juries that required hospital treatment and 60 others were hurt less severely Thursday when the last seven cars of a Chicago and North Western Railway pas- senger train whipped from the rails on a northwestern Wiscon- sin hillside. The last seven cars of the 11- 2 Constituencies car train left the rails and rolled 20 feet down a steep bluff over- looking U.S. Highway 12. Onlr a row of trees stopped the plunge of some of the cars. The train, headed for Chicago from Mimeapolis and St. Paul and carrying 209 passengers, was rounding a bend at an estimated 50 miles an hour when the cars left the rails about 50 miles east of St. Paul. Railway officiale said they did not know what caused the wreck but that an investigation is con- tinuing. 'Special Wards 'For Drug Addicts | TORONTO (CP) -- The Metro- | politan Toronto welfare and hous- ling committee Thursday named |a committee of six to visit three | narcotic treatment centres as the | first step in setting up a special | hospital ward here to treat drug addicts, The committee will inspect centres in Vancouver, Lexington, Ky., and Fort Worth, Texas. To- ronto's proposed drug addict |ward will be in Riverdale isola- | tiom hospital. Toronto has 300 known drug Celebration Of Battle Draws Protest Storm French regime and winning Can- ada for the British. Theme of the planned celebra- tion was: "two hundred centur- jes of progressive partnership." EBEC (CP)--Quebec City's agin Baptiste Society has de- cided pot to take part in a Sept-| ember celebration planned for y of the the oT Molains of Abraham Reaction to the announcement Baitle py that decided the fate of (was lively. Some of Quebec's he wo 5 | French-language Rewspapers aud rary 1 ott -esident of periodicals indicated disapproval. Gabriel Pelletier, presifsy its|Many letters were published in the society, SBid tthe deci- which French - speaking Cana- {iocesal Soe a f pro-|dians said it would be wrong to [test whieh arose after plans fot |colebials 2 Seleal. tial war. [the celebration were announced! One of e mos i ual fal per- Is Oe Criticism came from |lodicals--Relations, published by In May, Son some French.|the Jesuit fathers--said in its [public bodies an 5 7 latest issue the celebration would language newspapers. {be a blow to the national dignity | The celebration was planned t0|of French - speaking Canadians. commemorate the 'battle--Sepl. impo writer of the article said the (13, 1758ealy. ich the Frwy of celebration should be cancelled. General Wolfe defeate ce | -- lof General Montcalm, ending the| Relative To Substitute 4 ! | Army New For Graham Rescue CHARLOTTE, N. C. (CP)-- {Rev. Leighton Ford, a native of | Chatham, Ont., will substitute for Role OTTAWA (CP) Voters in vo eastern Ontario constituen- cies will have a chance to show neir current political preferences in byelections Monday Oct. 5. Primie Minister Diefenbaker announced the fall date today for votes to fill vacancies in the con- stituencies of Hastings - Freon- tenac and Russell. The Hastings - Frontenac Com- mons seat wa: vacated by the sudden death last March 17 of former Externai Affairs Minister Smith. Liberal ranks were depleted by the death March 24 of J. Omer Gour, MP for Russell who died in the Parliament building. THIRD TEST The October byelections will be the third such test of voting] inclinations and tastes since the) | Progressive Conservatives won| |the last general election March | 31, 1958. 1 In two byelections last Sept.| 29, the Conservatives retained) |Grenville-Dundas constituency in| {Ontario and took the Quebec seat {for Montmagny - I'Islet from the! Liberals. | In the most recent byelections, Hold Byvelections last Dec. 15, the Liberals wos Toronto Trinity from the Con servatives and the Conservativey held Springficld, in Manitoba. Russell and Hastings - Fron- tenac are the only vacant seats in the 265-seat Commons. Present standing is 207 Conservatives, 48 Liberals and eight CCF. CONTROLLER RUNS The Liberals are banking om veteran Ottawa controller Paul Tardif in the Russell vote, W.T. {(Wib) Nixon, Ottawa real estate agent who contest the constit- uency unsuccessfully in the last two elections, is the Conservaive nominee and Dennis Kalman is running for the CCF. Reeve Roderick Webb of Nore wood is the Conservative candi- date In Hastings-Frontenac and William Shannon, reeve of Mare mora, is running for the Liber- als. Russell voters have sent Lib erals to Parliament without in- terruption since 1887. Hastings-Frontenac was estab- lished by a redistribution of seats in 1952 and has returned a Con- servative representative since. Ulster Boy, 7 'To Be Millionaire | LONDON (AP) A seven- year - old Ulster boy, who gets along now on an allowance of| allowance is no more than am ordinary British youngster's. Gerald's uncle, who has no Canadian Press Staff Writer |which apparently has gone down Billy Graham, on the religious KINGSTON (CP)--The govern-| well with the militia. A military |proadcasts, The Hour of Decision, | ment has designated the army as| organization is required for the in August. lthe rescue agency in event of mobile columns and the milita,| Graham's headquarters said | nuclear attack on Canada but of-|as well as the regular army, fis| Thursday this is the first time in | ficens say the army has less than|the bill. |the mine - year history of the la quarfer of the manpowe| Now militia officers are getting broadcast that another speaker ineeded for this role. a working knowledge of safe and has taken Graham's place for a By DAVE MCINTOSH |g take over its new role, his brother-in - law, evangelist | | two "shillings (28 cents) a week, children, and his father are both looks set for a windfall of around|ahead of him in the family queue £10,000,000 ($28,000,000). |for the title. The present duke is He may get the mouey from his|58 and a bachelor, father to help beat Britain's crip-| If Grosvenor decides to settle pling inheritance taxes. {part of the estate on his son now, Young Gerald Cavendish Gros- young Gerald will become one of venor is third in line for the|Britain's wealthiest citizens. duchy of Westminster, the largest| But right now he is saving up Ha <MZO0 ELECTRIC RANGE | The army plans fo form some | 66 mobile columns, some of them [900-man battalion size, to detect| | nuclear radiation and rescue and |decoptaminate as many - persons las possible from blitzed targets. l1ethal dosages of nuclear radia-|period of several weeks, { tion. | Ford joined Graham's orgamniz- those of the :Royal Family. Its! riches now are being spilled into] private estate in Britain outside|{to buy a toy motorboat. ant fac-|ation in 1955 in Scotland shortly [tors in this acquisition of atomic-|after he graduated from theolog- |age knowledge is the nuclear ical college. He has served as as- fallout tern. sociate evangelist in most major One of the most import auction rooms to pay off taxes incurred at the death of the sec-| ond Duke of Westminster in 1953. Gerald's father, Lt.-Col. Robert| Robert Murphy 269-50 us GENEROUS TRADE-IN | This will involve 70,000 to 80,000, walling winds in Canada Missions conducted by Graham man, cing ear aud mi Toe BN wins 1 Cede hah Sin ln Onde Sok iF ts. associated with the| ont Will be carried to the east of |land and The Britis est Indies, bnew army plans say that neariy(sifuck targets. Ford will return to Canada (400,000 men willbe feeded to | 'Some officers say they believe| yy in 1960 to conduct evangel- carry out the job properly be- the newspapers should publish). "i gone in Alderwood, Pem- | cause there are 13 major target daily the fallout pattern with the| = Te 'Renfrew and other On- lareas in Canada. Ottdra, a city| weather report. Maric communities. lof 230,000 would require six mo-| 35 py ok db bile rescue columns itself, t eo COMPLETE COURSE Gets Promoted WASHINGTON (AP) -- Robert {D. Murphy, 64, was named Thursday to be the No. 3 man in a the state department. George Grosvenor, 49, who in-| herited a part of the estate, said| he might settle a huge sum on (the boy to head off the fax col- lector. Gerald Grosvenor lives on o H 171-acre manor near Enmiskillen.| [President Eisenhower nomin- {He is surrounded by his family's| ed him to be undersecretary of [hereditary wealth but bis own |State for political affairs, dealing | | with the conduct of relations with {other governments, i Frigidaire 30" DeLuxe RDG-38C-59 Big-oven beauty with deluxe back-panel styling and full width fluorescent light. Automatic Cook-Master makes "absentee. cooking a breeze. Light gray porcelain enameled oven is easy to clean. Appliance outlet for automatic percolator convenience. Full-width storage drawer panelled with feminine Lacework Styling. Lift-up, stay-up, hinged surface units. Quick-cleaning drip bowls and chrome trim rings. A lovely way to cook! NOW! $ ENJOY THE FULL FLAVOR WHEN YOU ROAST IT ON AN AUTOMATIC ROTISSERIE _ Barbecue your favorite meats . . . fish or fowl Yes... HOT-DOGS, too! with the Cook Hamer Sapbcuey's cicien ALL APPLIANCES GREATLY REDUCED DURING THIS SALE Produ IP olPdPod doa Pod evifele i MEX IMI NMZ-=<A~ NEW ROTISSERIE NEVER GETS OFF BALANCE Turns just right for automatic "basting". Starts and stops automatically when used Nearly 60 militia officers today will complete at the Canadian | Army Staff College here the first | two-week course on organization and deployment of the mobile columns. | Where will the government find the personnel for national sur- | vival--the army's new term for | Civil Defence? the only feasible solution is in- (corporation of the some 157,000 trained civilian Civil Defence | workers into the mobile column | arrangement. This would mean, however, the summoning of trained workers out of the cities at a time when roads would be | congested by evacuees. A few officers say privately the only solution would appear to be some system of national selec- tives ervice but that they doubt the government would ever adopt such a policy. Until recently, Civil Defence was the responsibility of the fed- |eral health department. But now responsibility has been | split four ways among the health, defence and justice de- partmenis and the prime minis- |ter's office. This has dismayed Civil Defence officials and they say they believe the defence de- partment must ultimately become solely responsible. NEW ROLE | Some officers say they believe, No Action Tn Model's Death From S W ans TORONTO (CP)--W. C. Bow- {man, director of public prosecu- tions for Ontario, said Thursday |no further action is contemplated {concerning the plastic bag death lof Ottawa model Joan de Marcy. OTTAWA .(CP)--The big trum-| A coroner's jury at avs | peter swan, teetering on the edge Wednesday night returned a ver- I extinction 25 years ago, has diet of accidental death by suf- |added assurance today that he|fociation. The inquest was told won't disappear. {the 20ear-old mode! had prob- The national resources depart- | 201Y experimented with the plas- | ment annouriced Thursday 'that|l, Dag. no reason to be dis- [Hive eyouee Gr an satisfied with the jury's verdict," | waterfowl research station from said Mr. Bow il uate Yat |captive parents--the first such{COroner's Co svi Uw IN levidence and come to a conclu- |for at least 50 years in North | gion, ! ; { America. | "The matter iz completely in | The trumpeter, a big swan who|the hands of the local authori- | may weigh up to 25 pounds, now ties." {numbers about 1,600--half in the| | western United States including| Ja Alaska and half in Western Can.| WASHINGTON (AP) -- Inves- | T in breed i tigators of the House of Repre- |ada. he main bree ng grou sentatives announced Thursday (1s Alberta's Peale River region tjey are launching an inquiry to and they winter on the west determine whether television coast. Their mame comes from | diz programs have been rigged. : ...|Chairma ren Harris (Dem. j voices {oversight subcommittee said his The Canadian Wildlife Service, group will go to New York Mon- associated with the project, may|day and seek permission to in- use the captive trumpeters to re- spect findings of a recently con- cluded grand jury investigation. 5 Cygnets In Captivit TV INQUIRY INTERPRETING THE NEWS IRVINE APPLIANCES 50 BOND E. RA 8-5841 NEXT TO UNION HALL Little Succe By ED SIMON Canadian Press Staff Writer Nikita Khrushchev's belated ex- | pression of optimism notwith- standing, there appears to be little chance of East-West agree- ment on an interim settlement of the West Berlin problem before the breakup of the Geneva con- | ference, | If Khrushchev has any last- | minute message for the foreign | ministers that would affect their |deliberations, he hasn't left him- | self much time, The conference lis scheduled to end next Wednes- day and the ministers have | worked out no plans to get to | gether again. | Hopes for a Berlin settlement | have. foundered primarily because |of Russian insistence on a time limit on negotiations leading to | final determination of the city's (status. The Russians indignantly reject the Western assertion that |the time limit constitutes an ul- | timatum. | Yet, Khrushchev continually in- Chance For ss In Geneva |tersperses his olive branch|to a summit meeting, for which 2 BURLINGTON During the Second World War, when Eisenhower was comman- | der-in-chief of Allied forces im speeches with reminders that his government may unilaterally sign a peace treaty with Communist East Germany if the talks drag on, thus ending the existing four- power treaty guaranteeing West- ern rights in the German capital. WAY IS OPEN If he wishes, the Russian leader can renounce his intention to sign a separate treaty any time he likes, thereby disposing of the objection by the Western powers that he is asking them to come to the summit with a gun at their heads. But there is liitle likelihood that Khrushchev intends to give way while the foreign ministers are in session . Long before they met, he predicted that little would come of their talks. The Britain alone hak expressed sym- pathy. If he wants the meeting badly enough; he doesn't need a foreign ministers' conference as a forum for any proposals he has to make. The possibility remains that Khrushchev actually is in no hurry to go to the swmmit, for all his protestations to the cont- rary, and that he is content to let the Berlin situation swelter in uncertainty {LOST PRESTIGE { West Germany's Konrad Aden- auer, the most rigidly uncom- promising of the Western Allies, has lost prestige at home through his manoeuvrings over his coun- try's presidency. And the stub- born octogenarian, for all his determination to stay in power, cannot live forever MONKEYS FLEE HAMILTON (CP) Two monkeys that escaped an amusement park Thursday gave a girder-swinging Tar- zan-style display on the su- perstructure of the $20,000, 000 Burlington Skyway. Officials. chased one of them along a nearby beach and into the water where they grabbed him, wel and shivering. The other was still at large. Jack Knapp, operator of the beach strip zooland, said children opened the cage and the two pigtail monkeys bounded' onto the bridge. 'Boy's Body, 15 Found in Barn DRESDEN (CP) -- An autopsy has been ordered in the death of 15-year-old Clifford Ripley, whose body was found Thursday night hanging in' a barn on the out- skirts of this Kent County town. The boy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Ripley, had completed de- liveries on an afternoon paper route shortly before his body was discovered. Police are investigating a re- port that a number of children were seen playing at the scene just prior to tne discovery of the body. 'Minister 'Returns From Trip LONDON (CP)--Defence Min- ister George Pearkes returns to Ottawa today after spending a week in Britain looking at vari- ous military projects During his visit he was a guest of Duncan Sandys, British de- fence minister. Pearkes saw the new hovercraft which skims over the water, a Civil Defence exer- cise, several missile projects and some of Britain's latest aircraft. Thursday he went to the RCAT supply base at Langar where he was met by Air Tarshal {Larry Wray, air er com- |manding No. 1 Air Division, Europe, Murphy was his adviser (on political affairs. :. Murphy's present assignment |is deputy undersecretary. To suec- |ceed him in this post, Eisen hower nominated another diplo- matic veteran, Livingston T. | Merchant, 55, former U.S. am- |bassador to Canada. 2 Men Held Without Any Sum Of Bail MONTREAL (CP) -- Giuseppe (Pepi) Controni and Rene Robert were ordered held without bail Thursday to await trial at the {fall assizes on charges of traf- |ficking in narcotics and conspir~ acy. Cotroni, 45-year-old restaurant owner, was also committed on a charge of possessing $9,700 worth of bonds stolen from a Brock- ville trust company. Crown prosecutor Jean Paul Ste. Marie said he didn't want the men to go free on bail be cause one of his witnesses against Cotroni in the bonds charge feared for his life. The prosecutor said Luigi Mar- liani, a Swiss-educated engineer employed by Cotroni in 1958, had (unwittingly tried to cash the bonds. He said Mariani refused to | testify as long as the men are at large, "And no wonder," Mr. Ste, [Marie said. "He was beaten up {because it was thought he had talked to police . . . he was al most taken for a ride .in the {country . _ . terrified, he sought Ms was given police protection and I can prove all this iri now as easily as at the ] 1] Ste. Marie indicated he would also delay Cotroni's trial lon the bond charges for a year. Cotroni and Robert, 31, a for- \mer waiter, were committed on narcotics charges filed after seize {ure of heroin valued at $8,000,000 |by the RCMP. Mr. Ste. Marie also oposed |bail for Cotroni on the bonds | charge. New C In Transportation The defence minister, accom-| panied by Miss Pearkes, willl MONTREAL (CP) -- William leave from Langar today in an|P. Moffat has been appointed RCAF aircraft, assistant chief of transportation "In particular they examined for Canadian National Railways, the possibility of co-operation in|S. F. Dingle, vice-president of | prophecy has been richly ful- filled. | On the other hand, it is be-lawait the day when he has a coming increasingly clear that{more accommodating adversary, Khrushchev will have to do some-|to deal with in Bonn before he {thing to get the West to agree'makes his final offer. The wily Russian premier Mavi regard to the development and {production of tracked vehicles, {including armored personnel car- {riers at present under develop- 'ment in both countries." A yperation, announced Thursday. Born in Winnipeg, Mr. Moffat |obtained a degree in civil engin- | eering in 1936 from the Royal {Military College in Kingston /