WEATHER REPORT Mainly sunny and warmer on Sunday, with light winds. THOUGHT FOR TODAY Most people know the difference between right and wrong, but some just hate to make deci. sions. hye Oshawa Trme Authorized es Second Cross Moll Office Department, TWENTY PAGES Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy SCUGOG ISLAND ALMOST ISOLATED OSHAWA, SATURDAY, MAY 14, 1960 WARNING FOR CANADA AGAINST SPY FLIGHTS Hospital Drive 'Must Decide' Soviet Asserts Success Closer LONDON (AP)--The Russians|pends in no small measure on the H. Walker today cautioned Canada against|lessons which the Canadian gov« paign chairman 7 permitting United States spy ernment and the governments of General Hospital planes to fly from Canadian|the other countries where U.S, announced today bases bases are located draw from the of the recent A Moscow radio broadcast to|incident of the spy plane." by 3 North America said Canada| RN group 74 | "willingly and unquestionably"| This was the first direct men ions, the had put its territory at the dis-|tion of Canada in Russian blasts the campaign posal of the U.S. Air Force and|in the last week about the Ameri. shortly \ the gentlemen of the U.S. de-can spy plane, External Affairs Thad nid a ora: fence department and the intelli- Minister Green has reiterated sers to be heard from, it is like fl gence agency were making several times in the House of ly that final will not be ; themselves at home there. {Commons that while U-2 high-fly- available for few days, "What happens next Is a|ing jets of the type shot down do he sald. matter for the Canadian govern-|occasionally operate from the Terry ¢ |ment's conscience to decide," United States over Canada, they vidson, said the English-language broad-|do not fly from Canadian air Whitby campaign @ [cast space to other countries. The only campaign in the "As everybody knows, Canada U-2s flying over Canada are en. ing encouraging progress. They {has not yet dared to disobey its|gaged in legitimate weather and pointed out, however, that it had| {partner ' |rddioactivity research, Green has not started until this week and its| "The fate said success could only be determined | by the strength of the response during the coming week Mr Walker made his an- wouncement at a meeting of the| | campaign management commit . | tee on Friday. He stressed that} Against | | success in meeting the objec. ay | tive still depended on the final ef-| | fort, and there should be no| HAVANA (AP)---Fidel Castro slackening of that effort in the|says a Cuban coast guard boat closing stage fired on a United States sub- The community objective marine 65 miles northeast of Ha-| $850,000. Up to Friday -evening,|vana eight days ago. He accused| ference | the total of donations and pledges American warships of operating --_-- _---- received was somewhat in excess without lights near the coast in R ° T ] 89--NO. 112 not doubt, however, that the pledges will be fulfilled. That was proved in the campaign six years ago, when only a tiny frac-| tion of what was pledged was not | finally received by the hospital. The people of this community | have a superb record in this re-| They keep their promises." | ¥ started the campaign § later in Whitby Mr. Moore said, "but we have been picking up momentum rapidly. The peo-|* ple of Whitby realize that we are affected as much as anyone by lack of bed space in our disirict hospital, and these comings days hould give evidence of this rea- lization." New Charge By Castro E 5 general cam for the Oshawa Building Fund that as a result gener donations and employee and organiza objective for should be reache us employer ndividual Oshawa We totals another Moore Da joint and William chairman of the| said the own was mak of world peace de Showdown In Paris PARIS (AP) -- Nikita Khrush-|slap at the United States when he {chev flew into Paris today for a|told the airport crowd over a {summit showdown with President|microphone that "certain mili. Jisenhower on the spy plane cri-|tary interests' are trying to con: in American-Soviet relations. tinue the cold war. His Ilyushin - 18 airliner set| "We hope they will not be sue. down at Orly Field four hours|cessful." and 45 minutes after he took off] Speaking of the summit confer from Moscow. The weather here|ence, he listed as primary objec |was sunny and brisk, but the atti [tives disarmament and "liquida tude of the Western summit del. {tion of the remnants of the last egations was gloomy. war." He wanted to see a treaty Khrushchev, however, of peace with both Germanys FLOWERS FOR MR. K. Soviet Premier Nikita Khrush- | Khrushchev is French Deputy shev receives flowers from |' Premier Roger Frey The chil Russian children on arriving | dren are from the Russian at Orly Wield in Paris today | embassy in Paris for the Big Four summit con. | (AP Wirephoto via radio from Standing beside Paris). FIRST FERRY SERVICE .IN 40 YEARS Sis . Ferry Service Helps of $600,000 violation of international agree "That total and it will apply | ments, lalso to the final total -- will re-| was Jo ater-logged Scugog The little township of Scugog,| Port Perry's Reeve James J, sentative of the Port Perry with nearly 250 families, is all Gibson started the island's first|Chamber of Commerce reported, but isolated because of - rising ferry service in 40 years, He was that they had received word that on the job at 5 p.m. on Friday something would be done about waters of Lake Scugog, which night to ani over to/the situation by this autumn, surrounds their community. For (iheir homes and sald he will be| Mew ite, the village oi Port three days now, only trucks have available unit! the water sub-|Perry is feeling the economic been able to negotiate the cause-|gides to perform this service, [pinch of the isolation of Scugog.| way on Highway 7A between Port] Reeve Gibson's ferry service is| Businessmen estimate they have| } {main valid as long as all pledges | are honored," campaign manager Harry Smith pointed out. "I do Agreement In a midnight television speech astro disclosed that the coast |guard vessel opened up on the |sub with machine-guns about * 10 p.m, May 6 off Matanzas, | A Cuban navy ship joined in. Ih¢ said, and pursued the {marine for about 30™"Wiles but the {latter "sped north swiftly with | her Mghts out." | The Cuban premier cited nine VANCOUVER (CP) ~~ Irene BUD |p obrin ds' back in Room 13, con { | fined at least until Tuesday in immigration department deten- tion quarters here, Back In Custody smiling as he stepped down from the plane, to be greeted by Dep- uty Premier Roger Frey. A 100- piece band and a company of . troops paid the Soviet premier Miss Rebrin, free on $200 bond formal military honors, {for 38 duys previous to this des} Khrushchev got here almost 24 |cision on Friday the 18th, went|hours ahead of Eisenhower and back te the same Room 13 where| Prime Minister Macmillan, West Germany's Chancellor Adenauer Perry and the island and exit or|free, incidentally. entrance: to the island from the| For the past three days, the Cartwright Twp. side, on the high sehool students on the east, is impossible except bY island have enjoyed an enforced boat holiday because the school bus The waters of the Scugog have which brings them from the flooded the causeway, just east|island to the district high school of Port Perry for the past five in Port Perry could not ford the weeks, but heavy rainfalls over causeway the past weekend raised the level] There has been no rural mail of the lake by Wednesday that delivery on Scugog Island for one all traffic across the causeway week now, but mail by car came to a halt. Water 21 over to the island for inches deep flooded over the methods of delivery, roadway and ears attempting to which can pick their negotiate the road were stalled the watery strip when water seeped up over hte Port Perry and transmissions. have petitioned But the island com- cial government pletely isolated Friday sions to have the causeway night, by at least two feet. One Dief Impressed By Proceedings LONDON (CP)--Canada's Joh: Diefenbaker headed for home to day, more convinced than ever of the mysterious strength of the Commonwealth Obviously impre ceedings in the cabinet 10 Downing Street, tI minister flew back to Ottawa London missibn completed In a statement at the airport before boarding an RCAF Comet jet, he said he hopes future Com monwealth be held more frequently He added that he would occasional conferences be held away from London, but most other Commonwealth members are against a change Diefenbaker said the conference showed a remarkable degree of unity on the toughest South Africa's race policies RESTRAINT SHOWN He added: 'The fact that were able to come to such a.de gree of unanimity is a tribute the restraint and statesmanship searching in good of those countries who by reason weather a Beaver Aircraft of their population have not only missing with four persons aboa an international - interest but ain the Hudson Bay peculiarly national in the Thursday problems we discussed RCAF Asked if he thought the dentified DeLeew CITY EMERGENCY oun: PHONE NUMBERS lines base Smith POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 still gets own trucks across their via Scugog the coun cils provi was as not of on many occa. raised repre- ence would lead to South" Africa That a more liberal policy I can't field of prophecy But Mr South xternal affairs minis room at| gj h prime hi say Louw sed by pro i e to convey to wernment 1¢ the very strong ( necessity ommonwealth countr of 'uph undamental Commonwealth all and color The 11-day Commo ference ended Friday commupique 18 Uns dilemma of South Africa policies in a predominantly white Commonwealth Press Hunt For Plane TRENTON planes e and one of principles of the equalit conferences car ea gh 1d Ke le acia non question we to (CP At leas Ve are tor area since one Friday g Fred Tom Air M conter- Ww Wheeler manager dent A has no and a ed only Lead h aboard The plane tour beliey dentified ast heard f when the pilot radioed the cr desting 1 more lafter it had tak fligh nan been wa than six hour n off on a normal «-hour - ing 1 of lost $40,000 in business in the past four weeks, They say that resi dents of Cartwright Twp., to the east of the island, are now doing their shopping in either Lindsay or Bowmanville, rather than Port Perry. They are just as anxious to see a higher causeway as the residents who are stranded All idents in the area looking into skies now ing that warm. sunshine lower the leve he which has only one outlet which travel the causeway with fan bells taken off vent the radiator fan from I are hop- will lake, Trucks do so to pre plash- water back on the motor and them in the centre of the res the the of stranding whal looks lake at present like t of Niagara Awaits | Big Annual Jam ST. CATHARINES Niagara Peninsula expects it | traffic jam t veekend cially designated Blos om Week The many CP)--The an of A rua u f here back on cherry ome We blo particularly Bu peach (ree our tree dist 1 10 t room and he rin 1€ furing the week- nm Sunday end and sunny Flood Threat Shifts To Little By The THE CANADIAN PRESS lood threat in northeas rn Ontario shifted from the sodden Timmins area Friday and centred on the little railway town of Foleyet, 65 miles to the south west s 650 re rated he Lake Ivanhoe 40-year-old dam batt men Foleye dents are sep flooding walers by In Wednesday department from a creaking in unceasin 20 of le sinc e las the piled more an than 150 the Just inst have old their own ton indbags yoden of ucture. They managed lake 0 he even feet above A 0 re Mat drop Reached At Dowty AJAX (Staff) -- The week-long| Charge York Man strike at Dowty Equipment of Di d Th ft In lamon e tice T. G. Norris handed down his Canada Ltd, will end Monday| morning Agreement between management and union was, TORONTO (CP) -- Donald|secision Friday morning, but an reached on Friday. Foster, 26, of suburban York i The issue was deadlocked all|Township has been charged with week with no sign of reopening|armed robbery in connection with of negotiations until union mem-| Friday's theft of $5,000 worth of decided to call in a third|diamonds from a downtown jew. eller Police seized a key and traced to a railway station locker| where they recovered the dia-| The - 33-year-old Russian lan. guage teacher was returned to immigration department custody Friday when her application to Lave the B.C. Supreme Court quash a deportation order against her was dismissed. | Her counsel filed notice of ap-| {peal several hours after Mr, Jus. linstances of U.S. Navy vessels being sighted near Cuba's coast between May 6 and 11. on bail pending disposition of the| appeal was delayed by time and |eircumstance and won't be heard bers until Tuesday. party Mayor we | William Parish was | asked by the union to arrange ai meeting and this accom plished Thursday evening monds company announcement| Jeweller J. M. Levy told police] 'With exception of the|two men, one with a 5-calibre| Wild Scene . inc in. wages of five revolver, ordered him into a back| t earin hour introduced by|room of his store where they| on May 9, 1960 ang taped pie Foul and bound his - | certain new 10D arms -anc (4 | In City Hall | SAFETY MONTH | SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- The the terms of the biggest riot in San Francisco SCORE BOARD since vaDay raged ! bargaining agree- remains the same as those contract which expired in asl since VJ-Day raged at city hall Friday when 200 shouting per Ma Isons tried to squeeze into an al >» . lready « i: pari \ 3 Thursday Total ready i immed hearing of the 9 House of Representatives' sub. 0 0 was the | said general ease cents per the company provision for classifications new collec ment in th Augus 'The a per 1. the pany hour A modified contract will run for xl of 18 months from April on which the com made the five cents an increase effective,' spokesman i We wr demands from 10 hour and capital the check-off issue." new date Nn . . 9 |committee on up*!American activ. 1 ities It took more than 400 police |men, using clubs and fire hoses |to handle what developed into a {wild melee inside city hall | Twelve persons, including six po- licemen, were slightly injured. Sixty-six rioters were arrested. It was difficult to determine | whether the riot was instigated, |or by whom, Organizations which {had filed protests in advance of the hearing disclaimed responsi OILY. The hearing had been called to| be a big job investigate Communist activity| he y emier I declared|\® northern California < ; drownings came Timmins a disaster area and has Representative Edwin E Wil | day night. Three men are be- | promised the province will match chairman of the un-American ed Viljo Jokinen, 50, dis relief funds dollar for act ities, subcommittee, said appeared in the swirling Vermil Murde Martin, CCF MP these young Peile hve bean lion River, 25 miles southwest of [for Timmins, said Acting Prime | Misguided, ut didn't of ol any) Sudbury Friday night. Paper mill | Minister Green had told him the sugdestions. as to Who did the) vorker Looymans and federal government would take |Misguiding. Charles ers are believed to immediate action to aid the area have drowned in the Abitibi River |when it receives a formal request {0 miles north of Cochrane. They from the Ontario government were on flood patrol in a smal NO TYPHOID FOUND . . os No I¥PiOID FOUN Car Crash V The roughly 1,500 residents eva Reports that members of a ar ras ictim cuated from the Timmins suburh|marooned family five miles north 'MABERLY (CP)--The woman of Mountjoy Township are still{of Timmins were suffering from|victim of a car-truck crash last unable to return to their flooded |typhoid fgver-have been denied Tuesday was identified Friday homes. Some 30 isolated families| Pr. D. W, Templeton who exam might by POtiCe izabeth Lie are receiving food by RCAF heli-|ined them said they had stomach| flesh, 40. Police aid she is be} | lieved to be from Edmonton | The woman died Tuesday in a the head-on crash that also claimed run: the life of Frank F, Welch, 53, of their| Oshawa, driver of the car per An inquest will be held at Perth] Monday night Accidents Injuries Fatalities Charges laid for traffic offences mion si to 9 cents ated on an 4 219 Rail Town steadily normal from trol ill peak In the wake reports its nine-teet-above- centre, says the cleanup w ol the floods 1'0s has of Is liey t lost disaster n lar de Rene Daun Police Identify copter but officials are puzzled flu 300] In the week-long off who has been|banks Timmins flood con bout + how o feed some res rains sent and left sons homeless of the province and spring rivers over hundreds of inded cattle Damage is estimated at $2,000 000. Dave Lalonde running the € has avoplication to have her released| cc. she had been held for nearly two weeks following her arrest by im- migration authorities last April 13 AUTOMATIC STAY On her arrest in April the de- partment intended to deport her to Brazil, from where she came to Canada in 1958 as a visitor, but court proceedings brought a stay. |The notice of appeal has the same t. Miss Rebrin's application for permanent residence in Canada was rejected in January, 1959, and her appeal against the order te Immigration Minister Fair. clough dismissed a year| later | A political refugee from Red China, where she was born of White Russian parents, she is was arrived an hour before Khrush- chev. Adenauer will join U.S, British and French leaders in| one-day Western summit consul-| tations Sunday. President Eisenhower, who leaves Washington by air tonight, cancelled, without explanation, a farewell statement he had planned to make before setting out, KEY FIGURE Khrushchev holds the initiative and, to a great degree, the key to the success of the conference French and American diplomats agree that if he confronts Eisen- hower in a bitter and hostile manner, hurling verbal invective, the first summit conference in five years could be wrecked in | considered stateless and thus not qualified to become an immigrant to Canada. | | five minutes. and improvement of relations be tween Tast and West, AVID LISTENERS Western diplomats hung on his airport words with avid interest, hoping for some strong indication on how the summit leaders will fare in their talks. Khrushehev's. brief arrival com. ments did hot conclusively define his position. They left him poiat ing the finger of accusation af the U.S. and claiming for himsel! an earnest effort to end tensions and make East-West peace. Allied diplomats speculated that Khrushchev and Eisenhowes might have a private talk prior to the Monday morning opening of the Big Four summit sessions, President de Gaulle was re ported planning an attempt to get Khrushchev to soft-pedal the spy plane row. Prime Minister Macmillan, due from London Sunday morning also is expected to devote his initial efforts to trying to save the conference from disruption. The Soviet Communist party newspaper Pravda charges mean while that the flight of the United States U-2 jet was an attempt to Minutes after his arrival here. "poison the atmosphere" on the |Khrushchev made an obviousleve of the summit, OSHAWA GIRL AWARD WINNER Among 18th those honored at graduat the | on ceremonies | Ontario College of Art | left to right, back Kowalski, Oshawa; | the 13 are Irene Tay row, Sheila Macdonald Sally Wildman Roman Bartkiw ground. Forty together receited Lorne Park; of Erindale. in fore | students, al scholarships | is Oshawa General Hospital Building Fund $100,000 at the walski Agnes Central ceremonies was a pupil Miocich at Collegiate (CP Miss Ko- of Miss Oshawa's Wirephoto) $200,000 $300,000 $400,000 $500,000 | $600,000 $700,000 $800,000 $850,000