' THOUGHT FOR TODAY In these days of scientific pre dictions and achievements, if you don't believe the incredible you're behind the times. WEATHER REPORT Variable cloudiness Friday with chance of showers or isblated thunderstorms, particularly late in the day. \ OSHAWA, THURSDAY, MAY 35, Authorized as Post Office Department, 1960 Cross Mall Ottawa THIRTY-TWO PAGES VOL. 89--NO. 104 TOWNSHIP LAND SALES CONDEMNED BY JUDGE 'Shortcomings And Deficiencies' TORONTO (CP)--There have, gations that were made of male been *'serious shortcomings and|feasance" on the part of some deficiencies in the local govern-members of council. The report ment" of suburban York Town-|names Deputy Reeve William B. ship, Judge Joseph A. Sweet of Graham, Frederick Wilfred Hall, Hamilton says in his report of a|Harold B. Linden and Fred Howw 'War Prevention Goal Of Summit MOSCOW (CP) -- Premier, Khrushchev expressed regret Khrushchev soid today that the|that Eisenhower' could devote [first problem facing the May 16|only seven days to the summit {summit conference is disarma-|talks.- The duration of the meet- |ment--"the most radical means|ing, he said, should be defer- ot ensuring peace and banning | mined by the necessity of achiev- war." ing results, and there should be FIVE SOUTH African girls sit behind barriers in vicinity of London's Clarence House today to wait for Princess Margar- et's bridal procession pass by | tomorrow en route to Westmin- ster Abbey. From left are Su- san Jaques, Durban; Lan- nette Morgan, Durban, partly | TITLE FOR TONY? London In Fever The second task is a German|no other aim than the prevention peace treaty and the West Berlin of war. problem, he told a joint session| CRITICIZES NIXON o the wo houses of the Russian| He then went on to say that he upreme Soviet. ha He said the chances of Success|i; yas difficult for him not to at the diigo talks has 'the| have the impression that Nixon jmmed ors0) thin! United States, Britain and France iy on be iad 50 of ie --the countries whose heads he|ipo" arms race. will be meeting in Paris in tWo| paiier Khrushchev painted a weeks' time, a Ws d {glowing domestic picture, an- Kirushcher repeated. We 4 fnouncng a program fo abolish in mands fo $ axe of occupation of West Berlin. He said og 7 ae in the Sovie ion nobody could lose by concluding a peace treaty with Germany, as the Soviet Union wished to do. OUTLOOK GLOOMY As applause echoed from the Kremlin rafters, Khrushchev said the outlook for the summit con- ference is gloomy because of what he called aggressive actions and speeches by American lead- ers. Khrushchev said that for Presi dent Eisenhower to send Vice- President Nixon to sit in for him at the summit conference would be "like sending a goat to take hidden in rear; Linda Jackson, Port Elizabeth; Denise Powell, Durban, and Lyn Cox, Zulu- land. --Ap Wirephoto be asked to approve a program for abolition of income taxes by stages. Probe Into Death Of Millionaire d met Nixon several times, and| He told the deputies they would judicial inquiry released today. Handing of land sales "seri- ously and adversely affected the financial affairs" of the township, he said He proposed strengthened legis-| lation regarding land sales and zoning bylaws and recommended that sume of the evidence taken during the 47-day hearings last summer be reviewed by "'proper and competent authorities" to de- cide whether action is necessary. Judge Sweet was appointed commissioner for the inquiry after criticism of some municipal ard, BUILDING PERMITS The report says these allegae {tions were 'connected 'with the issuing of building permits." "If improper payments were accepted or sought by members of the council of the Township of York in connection with the issus ing of building permits," Judge Sweet said, "there is the impels ling inference that the motivation for the making of such payments was either (a) to procure a per mit which should not be issued dealings in the township, which lies northwest of the city in Met- ropolitan Toronto. under the township's bylaws or {(b) to assure the issue of a pere [mit which should be issued but LAX IN THEIR DUTIES {the issuing of which would be His detailed conclusions were: |Prevesied or at least Spposcd if Some York Township councils Payment were not made to some in recent years hmm far| Person or persons in a position to short of their duties;" prevent or oppose its issue," Yonik Judge Sweet recommended that In the sale of township lands, x e "the interests of the township|the evidence be considered by have not always been served by|aPPropriate Crown authorities "to some councils" and as a result| determine whether or not any ac. Per?! tay. tion or proceedings should be the township Tas sufiged griey taken or any charge or charges For Wedding Day LONDON (CP)--The flags arc|along the flower-decked route orl LONDON (AP) -- A new life e crowds already are mill- the wedding. starts Friday for Prihcess Marg- ing around Westminster Abbey| The Queen and Prince Philip aret. An *'unhealthy attitude" was sometimes adopted by some coun- cils toward the law of Ontario and bylaws of York Township which care of the cabbage." Eisenhower had said that if his presenca were required back in Washington on domestic matters SPOKANE, Wash. (AP)--A mil- lionaire rancher, whose trussed body was dragged from the Spo- kane River, apparently did a lot 'PUPPY LOVE' and London is keyed up for the staged a glittering ball Wednes- while the conference was contin- of travelling that his friends and biggest royal festivity since the/day night with top figures in in- : WEY ig TO waiting sight- broke throu, her fia 0 + ole i othe 1 es in pd \ Avissteong + Jones reached the last 24 hours be- fore they walk down the abbey's long aisle Friday. through the palace gates. The couple went to a diamond- gl omted police shepherded the studded pre - wedding ball at|Ri maroon Rolls Royce through Buckingham Palace Wednesday the erowd. Margaret and her fi- night to the cheers of 50,000 ance waved and smiled as shouts sightseers along the route. of "Good luck!" went up from As time grew short, Britons the mass of struggling men and speculated about the chances of| Women. Armstrong-Jones getting a title. If he goes to the altar in West- minster Abbey without a title, Power Pla Margaret will be the first Eng, Y lish princess in 450 years to marry a plain "mister." I K li TITLE? NONSENSE! | n rem 1n "Title for Tony? What non- sense!" exclaimed a banner T headline on the front page of the 0 an S tabloid Daily Mirror. An editorial declared: "Does young Tony want a title? | MOSCOW (AP)--Frol R. Koz- No. Does he deserve a title? No. lov was shifted from the Soviet Maybe he will deserve a title council of ministers to top later on.Maybe we all will. But|Co munist party job Wednesday on what grounds does he rate alnight as part of a major shakeup title sow} tell in | it in the government and party or- "Mr. Jones fell in love with a ganization princess and a princess fell inl" The peshuffle--first of such pro- love with him. All good luck to|nortions since Georgi Malénkov, H.R.H. Princess Margaret and V. M. Molotov and Lazar Kagan. happiness to the young couple. |,vich were purged in June, 1957-- yo Lord i AA |left Nikita Khrushchev clearly y still command. Earl Jones? The shakeup carried ifica- ." we 19 > p carried ramifica a le sti came/tions that Western observers re- from L. G. Pine, editor of Burke's 8arded as significant in long- Peerage. Soviet planning, The emphasi "The splendid preparations be- seemed to be on speeding up ing made for the marriage would|Khrushchev's seven - year eco seem to point to an honor of nomic plan and whipping up| some magnitude," he said. _ eqthu iasm in the party| would be a fitting climax to a machinery by promoting younger | most romantic match if some ro- elements, | mance could be given to any title] Kozlov, 51, who toured the bestowed." United States last year to lay the | ; roundwork for the premier's| WHITE KNIGHT? visit, had been one of two first w.Pine suggested iio hd 8! deputy premiers in the top rank heautliupspunding 2 s of the gover ent machinery. He A 8, AT was made a secretary of the So n to the dignity of the m a a a, | Mas without necessarily creating Communist party's central a peerage." His nominee ommittee, | cluded "the Knight of Glin, he other first deputy premier, Knight of Kerry" or simply "(he ' I. Mikoyan, was not affected White Knight," all titles from by the shakeup, British history. _ (Harrison E. Salisbury, a New Friends of the groom still be-| York Times expert on Soviet af- lieve he will be made an earl. fairs, sa d the switch means an The Queen's husband, plain important promotion for Kozlov. navy Lieut. Philip Mountbatten He pointed out that chief Soviet on his engagement because he power is vested in the party had relinquished his of | hierarchy, not in the government prince of Greece, was sated apparatus.) . Duke of Ediapurgh by the late} Three new deputy premiers King George VI just before the were named. royal wedding in 1947. Alexei Kosygin, 56, chairman Title or no, thousands of sight- of the important state planning | seers and tourists have packed | committee, moves up to the first London hotels and slapped up alll deputy premiership Kozlov va- available seats on stands erected. Kosvgin 'also becomes 5 member of the ruling central CITY EMERGENCY [rly proesidium. | Nikolai Ionatov, 59, a secretary | PHONE NUMBERS |of the central party committee |was shifted from that post to| " |a deputy premiership. Vladimir | POLICE RA 5-1133 i rn aD. ata: N Pp = pm {head of the s anning com- FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 (mittee, taking a deputy premier- HOSPITAL RA 3.2211 ship as well. He held similar jobs in the Russian republic. 5 SR Guat nce and Mother Elizabeth drove slowly al home, And a fascinating young mar- ried life 2 certainly should be--a cee ood an the gay Bohemianism in sein Despite her occasional taste for relatives did not know about, n ; less tien a year, Sheriff lias J. Reilly said Wednesddy, But the wealthy bachelor had the reputa- tion of staying close to, his home near Thornton, Wash.,, except uing, he would send Nixon as his representative. HOSPITAL DRIVE 'ENCOURAGING' "Be kind to | Clarke has his ki man A. R. ke, of 120 | Toray and Maun Ave, Ottawa, thought it | puppy, Tommy chose from a very good occasion to get | many at the Ottawa Humane | his son, Tommy, a dog. LAC | Society Shelter, full » % a fling, Margaret always has loved the pomp and position of royalty. Someone once asked she did not find the royal round wearisome, Back snapped the answer: "I can think of nothing more wonderful than being what I am." WON'T WITHDRAW a Close friends, dor this reason, iscount suggestions that the i princess is tired of life in the pledged by jhe Houdaille work. headlines, that she wants to with-| SS was 8 : tly more n draw to a quiet country love| 9 per employee, nest. 'MAY AFFECT SUMMIT Soviets Gun Down U.S. Research Jet MOSCOW (Reuters)--An Ame--|off from a field near ican plane was shot down when |Turkey. it violated Soviet air space Sun-| (That plane is.assumed to have] Khrushchev, addressing Rus- day, Soviet Premier Khrushchev|come down near Lake Van, not|sia's parliament, said it was the announced in Moscow today. |far from the Soviet Armenia bor-{second incident of its kind within He did not disclose the type of|der. a month, plane, the number aboard, or| (The area is close to the point| On April 9, he said, an Ameri- their fate. |where a U.S. C-130 transport wan-|can plane violated Soviet air (In Washington, James C. Hag-|dered over the border and was space "from the side of Afghanis- erty, President Eisenhower's|downed by the Soviets Sept. 2./tan" and then apparently flew on press secretary, said he had | 1958. The Russians have ac-|to Turkey. heard nothing previously about/ counted for only six of the He described the two incidents the plane infident. There was no men lost in that incident, as "aggressive activity and no immediate White House reaction| (The U-2 is a National Aero-| preparation for a summit confer- on any phases of the Khrushchev |nautics and Space Administration|_ =" speech. craft, essentially a flying labora-| (Officials -at defence headquar-|tory. Its assignment is high-alti-/y, ters said Khrushchev apparently tude weather observations and referred to a U-2 research plane(such tasks as air sampling to missing since May 1 after a take-icheck on the radioactive contam- when on buying trips, Investigation showed that Witte made many visits to Spokane ahd apparently spent most of his time in the city on the skid road. He moved through the streets wear- ing big overalls and carrying from $200 to $300 in his pockets, but is believed to have gone to a barber school for a haircut, Reilly Officials of Oshawa General Hospital building campaign re- port véry encouraging results from the payroll deduction plan of contributing to the fund. At Houdaille Industries Ltd., in the first day of the. payroll de- duction campaign, 75 percent of the hourly rated workers of the UAW had signed up in the Plan, The 'average voniribution The heavy-set Witte had a large wardrobe at his farm home, but was always seen in Spokane wearing the overalls and a denim jacket. Adana, ination resulting from nuclear tests. It is a single-engined jet.) nion did not take any action "Apparently the Americans "On the first of May at 5:36 | order was given to shoot down the Malaya Rips Lid Off Apartheid Talks "It appeared that the plane was segregation, Tunku prince Abdul Rahman, the Malayan prime CASE UNDER STUDY in its third day. established that the plane came man who died in a police cell Saturday have charged that city Such incidents as the air space police should have knowa that their brother William was Khrushchev rhetorically asked plane flew over New York or Chi- IRONTON, Ohio (AP) -- Rescue Khrushchev said that the Soviet {about the April 9 incident. Then he went on: [liked the fact that they made this - Lg and were not punished. LATE NEWS FLASHES (a.m. an American plane crossed |the border into our territory. The invader, This order was fulfilled and the plane was shot down. LONDON (Reuters) -- Malaya today broke off its private : talks with South Africa here on the apartheid policy of racial |American, although the markings were painted out. . minister, issued a statement ripping the lid off efforts to keep peace at the Commonwealth prime ministers conference, now pr, 3 A commission of experts is studying the data and it has been " . . Man's Relatives Accuse Police from either Turkey, ran or Pak. KINGSTON (CP) -- Relatives of a 68-year-old Kingston |istan." police were negligent in not providing medical attention. Leo |violations, he declared, could lead Serviss of Toronto and Arnold Serviss of Detroit said today [to a world war. hurt. An autopsy showed a fractured skull, the delegates what the American N B , d In reaction would be if a Soviet egr 0 Ia g 0 Y ppe Well cago. U.S. officials have said, he ! \ went on, that they have A- and nearby Burlington, Ohio, crews have poured into in an effort to free an 18-year-old H-bombers on duty and ready to boy from his entrapment at the bottom of a 35-foot retaliate. If a Soviet plane was near American territory, that Thieves Visit Schools, Church AJAX (Staff)--Two schools and had occurred at Clovelane public | | | ing the night 'and offices 'ran- Ajax. sacked by thieves who were ar-| Total loss of money, accordin parently looking for money. [to police, is about Panne Entry to Parkside junior school [and inconvenience adds up to a was made through a window, Thz|lot more, door of the principal's office was| A few weeks ago two schools forced, and contents of the desk|in Pickering Village were broken and files scattered around. Alinto and considerable damage small amount of cash had been|was'dore to doors although little banked the day before, so the| of value was stolen, thieves gained little for the a ---- | a church were broken into dur-school on the Baseline, east of "is & cause for serious concern." |f the ship land through an agent, ILLEGAL UNDER ACT a municipal council to buy from or sell to the municipality. Judge Sweet said "Tonks and his wife made the purchase in the name of another" and the judge found that "there appears te have been an attempt to avoid the law." He recommended that "'proper and competent authorities" re- view the Tonks' purchase. If they find Reeve Tonks "not eligible to sit and vote in council" er that "the sale or what purports ta be such sale is void," they should consider appropriate proceedings and action. The judge also wrote of "alle- cerned allegation whi sparked the inquiry, that 'Reeve Chris Tonks had purchased town-|thinks there should be su The Ontario Municipal Act makes it illegal for a member of pal affairs ch dis. cussions. He suggested that an independ ent body be established with membership consisting of a judge, an engineer, an expert in town planning, an accountant and |an expert' in real estate and given power to recommend the municipal affairs department set up temporary controls over any municipality. He said the independent body should have power to determine whether financial affairs of a mus nic'pality "are adversely affected or in danger of being adversely affected by reason of negligence, inefficiency, incompetency, lack of diligence, lack of due and proper attention, disinterest, lack of information, corruption oF other mism t, fi ance or malfeasance," ir | -- work, | The vestry at the Church of The Holy Trinity was entered, files were ransacked but appar- enily nothing was taken. St. Andrew's senior school was| © also broken into, and files and| § desks were rifled. The contents were strewn about the floor, Pickering township police re ported that a similar break-in SAFETY MONTH SCORE BOARD Wednesday Total 0 2 0 0 Accidents Injuries Fatalities Charges laid for traffic oifences URW To Seek 30-Hour Week WINDSOR (CP) -- The United Automobile Workers announced | Wednesday its intention to find| its own cure for "creeping" un- employment. In its next round of contract demands, due early in| 1961, it will seek to reduce "pro- gressively" the present 40 - hour work week. Resolutions to this effect were endorsed by Local 200 of the union at Ford of Canada. Her-| bert Kelly, Local 200 president | said the entire union's interna-| tional wage policy will be geared| tc the new demand. The Windsor resolution de- clares that unemployment is * union's most impor i un- resolved problem. It points to steadily in er e a sing automated processes, accelerated production] Here's the highest tempera- Sehedules and Shanges of loca:| tyre in Oshawa General Hospi- ons by firms, as major causes. The target is a 30-hour wt tal, and Instead of trying to without reduction in take - home| bring it down, the staff is en- 34 81 Neg dryAvell. Hundreds of would-be helpers and onlookers ringed th ene today. would be the beginning of war, pay, to be sought in stages. | couraging it to greater heights. Accounts manager Fred Pearse, left, and Mrs. M, Morgan, exe- cutive housekeeper, show how the hospital staff drive to raise funds for the new hospital wing has burst the thermome- HOSPITAL STAFF BURSTS 'THERMOMETER' ter. The staff, in less than & week, has beaten its objective of $18,600 toward the new wing, and donations to the staff drive are still rolling in. --Oshawa Times Photo, OGH Building Fund Objective: $850,000