RS ARNT UYoee ce gen wescguzaon THOUGHT FOR TODAY Before hitching your wagon te a star, make sure that the star is on the ascendancy. dhe Oshavon Tomes WEATHER REPORT Cloudy and milder today and Wednesday, rain tonight, with some rain and fog Wednesday. Authorized as Second Class Price Not Over Post Office Department, 89--No. 9 0 OSHAWA, TUESDAY, JANUARY 12, 1960 Ottawa Mail SIXTEEN PAGES CRITICIZED IN No New Leads In Tate Case MONTREAL (CP) right over She called to appear. trace her took the train for Eve, Police saidito say he would be Monday they have turned up no with a gift for her new leads in the case of a Bow-|police after he failed manville grocer reported missing an attempt to in Montreal Christmas Day husband, Mrs. Tate Det.-Sgt. Nathan Smith of the Montreal-bound missing . persons bureau New Year's 4 % 3 disappearance of Wililam Tate, She later told police she had Cs 4 51, is still under investigation, located a conductor who told her HYSTERICAL MOTHER SAVES DAUGHTER nd "were hoping for the best" 06% * COREE io, BO IE | Tate's description was releas- three mex on the train cal, Mrs. Mar- ed to Montreal newspapers and / . radio stations and the detective in Bos was arran ging to have the miss i with her ing man's photograph flashed by ame said the powmanville, fire that swept tenement build- ing. No lives were lost and no injuries sustained, although the cold that gripped the eity Mon- | pyilding was a total loss Thirty persons fled to --AP Wirephoto rm ---------------- -- | past follows as fire | ety from the the five store Natalie Yee, 15, fighters struggle to get hose the bitter Nearly garet ton's C daughter Cv two, in her sister | day nysie Chin flees a fire Det. Smith said he has been nable to trace the three men.| § He said he was also trying to track down Tate's whereabouts the city's two television stations. between ihic time. Tate arrived "We've had good results in the > 4 ® Qo 4 aya 5 |and went to the home of the re- using television to locate lativ 3 ; ; | {missing persons. I'm hopeful it!'? J ¢ Ea } {will work again this time," he The detective said Tate's train pulled into the station here at 7 LJ » 3 | said : t nN er 1 11 { 1A t i | But Tate's wife Lillian said she/a.m. but he did not appear at| {fears he has met with foul play./the relative's home until three |She said her husband may have|hours later F U 11 P 1 i been carrying a considerable] The grocer was also believed |amount of money with him. to have been carrying a suitcase) Tate was last seen after he/when he left Bowmanville, But| arrived here by train from Bow-|the relative said he was empty-| manville to join his wife visiting handed when he showed up. TORONTO (CP ¢ relatives for the holidays The relative said Tate left the| should produce enriched He went to the home of one house saying: "I'm going for al nium, Dr. John Davis of -{the couver urged today tinued ference on uranium and : lic reactor less uranium energy, 1g nder the| pr Davis said few overseas types?" auspices of A "| countries v to buy all their. Dr. G. C. Laurence, director d relative and telephoned his wife! walk" ment ched uranium from the U.S. reactor research and aii Dr. Davis--who director of At » Energy Commission and ment, Atomic Energy of Canada research and planning, Brifish an alternative source would have Ltd., used American - prepared Columbia Electric Company --!a major appeal. figures of costs as a basis said an enriched uranium project "I can," he said, "suggest sev- Support heavy-water reactors ol would help develop the north and eral sites in northern and eep- the most economical for produc-| mai Bich, obmis ong a oc. lpi gor The enriching process wo River is an obvious candid.ie. 1 use one of the North's Iz is Grand Falls on the natown lines into action in anada' Other speakers saw seeable fufure as natural ura Canada's tario is dedicated to the heavy- yach especially r has to be importe water reactors use than many other 11 p use of the heavy-water and heavy « Toughest Union : Vs. Rail Chief x hy water] "ORAWA (CPI Noith Keri, THe aloe sre foaled against His or Canada "and is ca's most hard-boiled labor union Teamsters, who have some 40, ferred for most coun- has collided head:on with Can-000 members in Canada Apart dro Dower resour and he en- River in Labrador iid d. ada's most pi ful labor leader. from the weight he swings as visaged ": r Kit ' Dr. Davis commented that 1 Ce the large heavy-' The chips be down late chief spokesman for 135,000 rail! the traditional garb, display He saw a difference in inte rest uti in Southern Ontario Water moderated plants will this month when Frank H. Hall,|workers, Hall is one of four gen. their skill in acrobatics atop ACROBATIC FIRE FIGHTERS Tokyo firemen, dressed in d Hamilton Japanese city. The exhibition was given before a huge crowd at the Meiji Shrine Outer Gar- ater ourselves to this simply because On-| poss two weeks. bringin threat of disrupted com- Ple doze and ha y L The weather a warning of fre today. However, it said the would not be as severe as which struck the prov 28 and left miles of b: lines and many areas electricity The forecaster sa ville Mus which al and ¢ ation service for day sleet storm » hardest hit this 3 Cottages in the' Muskoka resort ) laining of } government au which would end Er Among his were A Town , made leading 'Cananoque Fire east lh 2 Pn This is how owned by New York Central who lived (rain at Wellington. passenger sources, and the rest of the cour 3ut,' ed, "in many them if desired." Canadian Labor Congress vice-president "PRICE ON MY HEAD' cipally a product of United r Uranium enrichment in advance of delivery. {their horns in west coast raids|case. es {Canadian Brotherhood of Rail- ay against the Teamsters -- raiding Plante, vice-buster temporarily ing vice. The articles, publi he MELBOURNE (Reuters)--Au the Teamsters' suspension at a| OTTAWA (CP)--Resumed ne-| Without fuss or fanfare, he'addresses and pictures. to the t of snow and crum- name was N ute hig - Caron, who ed eastward. It movie. It pictures the last days «= F Th D h i ing the year 51. Fines s Or ree eat S source said statements filed in an applicatio mn he year 1 51. Fines as » above fre 5 A doi ur conelling the out pay pending the appeal. tralia with his family in 1950, shivered in the grip of winter : E nm liceman, disappeared from public, - . ee after snow blanketed streets in year, depending on how they time he had been fired from the he Wet, Round the Bend, | Mediterrimean as a 75-mile gale ers, is for a pay increase of about health" and mentioned being in dealing wit th . a Canadian airman. 'thousands of miles of road were basic pay is about $1.77 cents an cause 'I has ought vice jrector in charge of the morality dination." Plante charged that oi . : 5 : . houses were hitting he GENEVA (AP) The United two days earlier that his govern- show that a technical control] days in churning seas off the wind-battered Newfoundland [the-scenes rulers of Montreal. tests, spurred by new u y advance notice tests WARSAW (Reuters) - A Polish astronautical The talks have been going on afeguarded 'I pede the tiations | | ) / earth -- about 35,000,000 miles away. Destroys House . to prod the Russians into ynsupportable" Soviet assertion on nuclear tests ended Dec. 3 In their 14 months of (Reuters) -- A condemnation of two-storey brick house in the| The talks were suspended Dec, Soviet delegations have drafted| Palatinate state German Reich party, stormed out of the debate over «70. A passing motorist PHONE NUMBERS complete failure to agree on new of the practical control procedure freeze and break a European trade war and counter Russia's economic of Ohio between Southern Ontario, with si the cheapest and Probably be designed to use na-rail union chief, tries to getleral vice-presidents of the con-| bamboo ladders at annual "De- | dens in the capital. its almost immediate need for most efficient power stations/tural uranium, but slightly en-|Jimmy Hoffa's teamsters thrown gress. Brotherhood president W.| zomeshiki" ceremonies in the --AP Wirephoto | electrical energy from nuel they can f riched uranium 'could be used inlout of the 1,100,000 member J, Smith is an Ontario regional!" ~~ RR ED To try, which has no such foresee- otf ada we are. Dr. Davis' and Dr. Laurence's| At the moment, observers are, Both are members of the 21- able need ng to find a market for comments were contained in betting on Hall, unless the team- member CLC executive council Enriched uranium now prin I yur 'more conventional! texts made available to the press|sters should decide to pull in|that will consider the Teamster States, while Canada uses lon Hall's Railway Clerks Union tural uranium with heavy-w and raids there and elsewhere in al te etur: 1S reactors. 'Best Selle [Canada on the CLC . affiliated R il U = - I dll, union Transport and General ' ° - RT ut Oo an ar torm arnin 8 uthor Dies Hall and president W. J. Smith e lof the brotherhood are filing raid- age a ling charges with the congress MONTREAL (CP) Pacifique real police were openly condon But Threat Less [Of Stroke Eiiic are Not Hopeful ova arti of vu ms aE ot stitution--_and all said fa 3 an in-| Montreal Monday as unobtru- book form, co ontained 12,000 Aor erview Monday he will call for sively as he left 18 months ago.|cimic charges with names, dates, TORONTO (CP iy heavily laden with th te -| d TAlET al hor ule died in the hos- congress executive council meet- gotiations between the railways returned to testify at the $100,000 1s . 4 rain' moved into Ontari mid-winter snov after a, stroke oi y 4) py It led to the vice probe under| OBE . 4 ing here starting Jan 2. and non-operating ions on huge dar s b.3 f ay Sor the second ime 11 ga vear ain could add greatly y ¢ p 3 his real! -- E: il perating unions on huge dam: suits he and former . opi Court - J r nd tag 1 , ; -- |wage increases are likely to flop 1 mayor Jean Drapeau| Superior Court Justice Francois would have been 61 on Jan within two days of today's start, have filed against Police Director, n a 100,000-word re- His latest best-selling novel, I. Cold Wave Blamed an informed source said Monday. Albert Langlois and 34 ot} : dt the Beach, was made i 0 The next move will be federal policemen. Plante and Drapeay yaer Jolice officers. ~ including : wa nu government conciliation, thelcl they were 'defamed in Langlois--of tolerating vice dur- through Windsor of the human race after a nuclea : h as $7,000 ar x rie ¢ ¢ The disputants are miles apart/for a writ prohibiting vie 8h as /,000 and susper Marie, Ont. at|w LONDON (Reuters)--At least j, terms of money, and od : } pro 2 © were levied. Langlois appealed Windsor's -| Shute, born in Ealing, a sub-|three deaths were blamed on seems no Way f immediately ve. prove te y and took leaves of absen I urb of London, emigrated to Aus- freezing weather today as Europe! .aneil yo e ante, suilior, lawyer, and po- : The railways estimate the non-|view in June, 1958, after being! gi comp a xat 8 A mj Beayy jon} A woman was kitiad and 18 per-|ops' demands would run to be- relieved of his job as assistant strictions In sons injured in traffic accidents|tween $65,000,000 and $97, 000,000 a police director. It was the second Like "AL 4 hich West Beeh 4 were applied. police force ! nie M ee v esl Italy was hard hit by the cold. Main demand of the 15 unions Plante, now 52, told the court into a successful film,| Shipping was delayed in the representing some 135,000 work- he has been travelling "for my Requiem for a Wren, No High- whipped up rough seas. " f -- : 50; and 30 and|way, The Far County. aad hel Sere A B Bes 4 25 cents an hour, starting from New York and Mexico abet ba UR th up seven inches deep|Jan, 1, 1960 and continuing to the He said he had been secret Sudbury and Rainbow and the Rose, the last. covered sections of England, and|end of 1961. Present average about his comings. and goings be- |icebound hour. ars and 1 am not unaw | ere is a price on r N 1 T 1 S | Pldmte was associate police di- uclear Talk Spurred TaTE NE EEE World War. In 1948 Director Langlois fired him for "'insubor- By US. Test Threat jv maven to repo fre a + . a nis well-publicized raids on ST. JOHN'S Nfld. (CP) -- Two big Icelandic trawlers with horse parlors, barotte dens and about 60 men abord have been unreported for nearly two pocketbooks of powerful behind- States, Russia and Britain re- ment felt free to resume nuclear|plan the scientists had agreed on| north coast sumed negotiations here today weapon testing at any time, but! previously no longer would be is | He wrote a series of articles for a ban on nuclear weapon would not do so without giving adequate to detect underground . |for the * daily - newspaper : ne ; Russ May Bim At Mars {Devoir and charged that Mont-| Jollowing an American thre Eisenhower said the U.S. would, The Soviet scientists ridiculed! by es D € sion a r lations here inthe American data and said it iali P 3 i time was deliberately distorted to im- specialist, Dr. Jan. Gadomski, was quoted here today as ' saying the Russians may fire their first interplanetary intermittently since Oct. 31, 1958 West Europe officials| Eisenhower's tatement said] rocket at Mars, April 16 when the planet is closest to Except for a Soviet test series iniconsidered the Americans: were! this "intemperate and fr Sa early November of 1958, none of iryi 18 intemperate and technically the three powers has set off any ,, eement, a tactic which So GANANOQUE (CP) : nl ag 1, a tacli Cll 50- had clouded the S jo. AeA Four test blast since the talks opened propaganda organs said! the talks qd the atmosphere of Neo-Nazism Stirs Up Row persons were left homeless early The voluntary U.S. oLatorum would prove futile | % neEoia MAINZ, West Germany today when fire swept through al President Eisenhower announced LITTLE PROGRESS tions the American, British and| neo-Nazism stirred up a noisy row today in the Rhineland- |west end of this town 20 miles| et ; parliament. During the uproar, 48-year of Kingston 18 for a three-weeks Christmas/ODly the administrative frame-| old Hans Schikora, state chairman of the extréme right-win T £1 ident | CITY EMERGENCY recess after an East-West group work for a world-wide organiza- : Y gi Tires of the Sidents. Were of scientists reported almost tion to police a test ban. Most| roused two of them. Fir |roused t ) firemen : i . r h S 5 methods to police a ban on tests{rémains in dispute Bid To Avert Trade War J A id friday held nde: n 1 N i ie i POLICE RA 5-1133 yo u ie rground Liat ie Sollapse of the entific! PARIS (CP) -- The Western powers were expected today D=1 154 ne American scientists |diSCussion Ng ' ov 5 " i yp "» og i » building s 4 lod "by Dr. James 3. Fist, (whether a reasonably foolproof | to set up two committees of "wise men", in a bid to avert Poin ding Jas FIRE DEPT. RA Mrs. Margaret Seott, who mger fensive, The move was likely to be proposed by the United on the lowe floo Mr, and M E. ed n the air. The smoke is | Staten. George Amo and their son Jack foming from the wrecker he. 5-6574 xecutive vice ent of Bell{control system even possible] HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 i lived in the upper apartment, fey the tracks. Four per- Telephone ries. sub-|at the present stage of sc ific seen {mitted detailed scientific dats to] knowledge. | "temptations" partments. |*'every consideration port convicted 20 active and for-| OVERNMENT SPRAWL REPORT Probe Suggests Fewer Agencies TORONTO (CP)--A on the organization of govern-|sume ment in Ontario today recom-| If adds: mended streamlining and] "Our cities, towns and villages strengthening machinery for han-lare expanding at a more rapid dling municipal matters and said|rate than the population as a the government "might function{whole. Reducing working hours, more smoothly and easilv" with more leisure time and, above all, fewer departments. the widespread, if not universal In an 84-page, 25,000-word re-|use of automobiles, have brought port issued by Premier Frost the with them a revolution in the three - man committee whichineeds and wants of what has made a 15 - month survey also|¢ome to be in Ontario a predom- suggests the government resist|inantly urbanized society. to create new de-| "All this has meant demands There now are 20. upon the municipal authorities While new governmental func-|for facilities, amenities, social tions might demand formation of|services and education that were a new department on occasions|not thought of as being possible should belof attainment a few years ago. given to the possibilities of merg-| "It seems clear that these ing two or more of the thenineeds and problems of our urban existing departments and thus municipalities will not be met or committee sponsible ministers should as avoiding an increase in the total solved without the active and full number." co-operation of the provincial The report stresses the group-|government. ing of related functions to help THREE-MAN COMMITTEE "restrain the proliferation of gov- The Comuities established ernment agencies, cut down ony... 10 1958 was headed by duplication of effort and help ein- Walter 1 "Gordon, Toronto - ae- sure uniformity of policies in al,oyntant "and members were Dr. given area |.W A. Mackintosh, principal and URGES STRENGTHENING {vice-chancellor of Queen's Uni- It suggests the municipal af-|Ve€rsity, and C. R. Magone, fairs department be made prim. former deputy attorney-general. arily responsible for all impor-| Premier F Frost commended tant community questions and them * 'for the meticulous consid. that it be reorganized a nd eration they have given this very strengthened to meet expanded important problem." responsibilities. | "The functions now performed {by the community planning {branch of the department Bil and nicipalities should be handled by| p |the municipal affairs department| OTTAWA (CP)--Thé Canadian {instead of the Ontario Municipal Association of Consumers called {Board. Municipal financing now today for federal government ace {under the board also should betion to effectively outlaw trading |transferred to the department. |stamps. It called them an "eco. The report does not suggestinomic parasite." {that the board be eliminate It! A brief prepared for submission savs the board has 'performed to Prime Minister Diefenbaker |its vital and difficult role with said there has been a marked in- |great distinction crease in recent months in the use CAN'T DO EVERYTHING of the trading stamps although, "However is neither desir-|/the association said, the Criminal able nor possible to continue to|Code clearly intends that they be [throw all the emerging munici-| Prohibited. pal problems on the board. These!- The traling stamps are passed are responsibilities which the|out by retail merchants with pur- government self or one of the chases and can be swapped for - merchandise in trading stamp company catalogues when col- lected in required numbers "We ask that, in the coming ge ion of parliament, the present Urges Strong Indian Defence ci. te ettective praninition 'f J iis stamps throughput Can- BANGALORE, India (Reuters) ada, so that this economic para The working committee of India's site shall be removed from our ruling Congress party today is economy," the brief from the sued draft resolutions for the 25,000 - member, all - woman con- party's annual session here call-|sumer group said. ing for the speedy strengthening the work of ar hr on sre Bg a A now being one hw Teomneetin with planning should {all be transferred to the depart- ment of municipal affairs." It recommends that approval] of zoning bylaws passed by mu-| The brief was released to the of India's defences in the face of|press in advance of its presenta- Chin aggression. tion to the prime minister. RERIAL VIEW OF TRAIN WRECK the wreck of a sons were killed and many in- | : in the crash that occur- d on the r travellers home from weekend visits. | day Cause of the eget was stil | being investigated by state and New York Central officials. The photo above was taken Mon AP Wirephoto