Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 20 May 1960, p. 1

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\ THOUGHT FOR TODAY 4 With reference to a hangover, a teaspoonful of prevention is worth more than a quart of tomato juice. WEATHER REPORT Variable cloudiness tonight, and Saturday, a few scattered thundershowers Saturday afters noon and evening, Warmer, humid. VOL. 89--NO, 117 OSHAWA, FRIDAY, MAY 20, 1960 Pont Otte" Deparment, ed @s_ Second Cioss Mail Ottawa TWENTY PAGES Missouri, 'Kansas Hit 'By Tornado | TOPEKA, Kan. (AP)--A for- |nado rumbled across 100 miles of northeastern Kansas and neigh- boring Missouri Thursday night, |littering its path with the rubble lof shattered farms and villages. | However, the twister gave {plenty of warning and thus i ' § (claimed only one life and injured i \ on / only 28 persons. é | | 'HIDDEN STRUGGLE IN U.S.. MR. K. SAYS Screaming Crowd In East Berlin BERLIN (AP) -- Nikita S. Khrushchev promised today to preserve the status quo in Germany until another sum- mit conference in six or eight months has a chance to set- tle the problem. "The president of the United States intentionally sent a recon naissance plane over the borders of our country," he said. "Think of that--on the eve of tne summit conference." 'Everything seemed to indicate at the United States did not th BERLIN (AP)--Nikita Khrush-\\ant a solution of problems and The tornado first dropped out # es , / 7 tev lopmients." "The question is whether rea- of a thunderstorm about 40 miles 4 Hi in 4 A | west of Topeka just before sun-| "2 4 4 sonable coexistence or war will win the upper hand," the Soviet premier said. "Presi- - . |dent Eisenhower has greater dif-| ficulties than I. With us, there exists complete unity of our for- # |down. There was just enough § 4 ? y k. {light to outline the deadly funnel, | 4 %, Py 4 3 and most pepsons in its path Fe 3 A / gained shelter. QUEEN MOTHER SIR ARTHUR PENN EMPLOYEES DONATE $3000 TO HOSPITAL FUND Hg Bolldings Ne eign and domestic policy. "In the United States there are Miss Doris Newell (centre), | ciation, presents a cheque for | of the Oshawa General Hospi- | Oshawa store, watches the pro- fle tise Sas Mding He ground trong and powerful forces which secretary of the Eaton's of | a riion of a $3000 contribu- | tal. Merle Book, right ana- | ceedings a7. when | sma 0: Merl. 5 2nd : i | portio contribu 2, erle Book, right, mana | ceedings den, a village of 400 nine miles |lare not interested in an end to Canada, Itd., employees asso- | tion to T. L. Wilson, president | ger of the T. Eaton Company --QOshawa Times Photo. | north of Topeka. The damage was| {heaviest there. | {the cold war. | | DARING ACCUSATION the cold ~~ [chev told a screaming applaud- sought only a new occasion to © ing audience in East Berlin today worsen situation and heat the at= ithat a 'hidden struggle is going mosphere to the most extreme on in the United States amongipgiut." various forces which makes us Canada Population 27 Million By 1980 TORONTO (CP) -- A. C. forth, president of the Toronfo- Dominion Bank, forecast Thurs day night that Canada's populse tion will increase to 27,000,000 by 1980 from today's 17,750,000. In an address to 40 visiting Australian businessmen, Mr, Ash. forth said the gross national prod His daring accusation reversed uct will triple from the present 'WE MUST BE READY' | Cli be | Then the funnel skipped 30! M R miles to near Leavenworth, Kan., a emdarr a | m 1 ild. V [the usual charge that there was $35,000,000,000 and the national S and splintered more farm build |a hidden Brion. going on in the standard of living will be two. ings. Soviet" Union which obliged the thirds higher than at present. LJ Lo t 0 THRUST IN THE DARK NEW YORK (AP)--The Daily, "Palace circles said they ex- Communist leader to take a hard 1 S n It was dark by the time the News says Queen Mother Eliza-ipecied a final decision when the|attitude toward President Eisen- i tornado dipped again and cut beth would like to remarry, if] Queen Mother returns from ler Bower. ® through the centre of Edgerton, she can get the permission of her ssh ol Hi h Peak Mo., at 20 miles to the |daughter, the Queen. current state visit to Africa." | g northeast. The town's fire station| In a copyrighted story from| LONDON (Reuters)--A report | Rescuers inched up the tortuous! roofed. lish royal circles." Elizabeth contemplates marriage | | The Queen Mother's intended to Sir Arthur Penn, 74, was offi-| |second husband, The News says, cially denied here today. | is Sir Arthur Penn, 74, her groom-| The report was carried by a LONDON (CP)--Prime Minis-/that the situation might take a him last Sunday when Khrush- face of North America's highest ter Macmillan warned today that more favorable turn." chev told him the Soviet govern- mountain today toward a desper- there may be 'grave implica- Macmillan was referring to a ment was not prepared to negoti- ately sick woman and: four in- YOUTH LITTERS a prepared speech in-waiting and treasurer to the New York newspaper, The Daily| The accusations w man to a shouting Khrushchev stood silently by. He in Russian before the enthusias- tically speaking tr The 40 Australians comprise |the largest government-sponsoréd {mission ever to leave Australis. ere made in|1hey are making a six-week tour read in Ger. of Canada and the United Statés audience while to stimulate Australian trade and e North American investment in la 7 : was demolished, a grocery was London, The News attributes the : ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP)-- damaged and several houses un-|report to 'sources close to Bet S9year-old Queen Mother| n,n talk with a few words Australia. They will be in Toronto 10 days before going on to lator took real and Ottawa. over. He coupled this claim of a new| struggle with further denuncia- Btals Missile tiers of Eisenhower, tions" in the failure of the East- meeting he had with Khrushchev ate under threat of further flights jured men. West summit conference, but said in the Soviet Embassy late Mon-|of U.S. aircraft over Soviet terri-| A jet helicopter, flying at more ROAD WITH CAR [Queen Mother's houstheld. |News. e ascribed news. he would continue his efforts ito day night. y ' : [fhsin twice its normal ceiling, pene ! mei about an understanding wi The prime minister painted alfailed twice Thursday fo pinck DOVER, England (Reuters) paper as 'au aristocratically But . or RX J & IL | But then early next day, Mac |gloomy picture of prospecis for|the five climbers from the high| A 20-year-old laborer who de- |handsome man of great dignity 'WE CAN BEAR IT the Communist bioe. millan said, Khrushchev reaf Macmillan told Parliament the sirmed all his tonditions. for i an East-West agreement in Gen- reaches of 20,320-foot Mount Me-| cided to dispose of his car by .|and charm and a life-long friend more stern" and to meet 'new REFERS TO IKE'S PLEDGE |this agreement," he said, "but I! Concern mounted, as the rescue] for "depositing litter on the [was widowed eight years ago by West must be ready for the inter-|{end i eva on ending nuclear tests. Kinley. The army said it would| Dover was fined £2 Thursday [of the Queen Mother." national situation "to become ng the summit talks. ""We shall press on to try to get|iry again today. Dover was fined 12 Thursday The Queen Mother, nearing 60, W i B Ii threats and new dangers." Of Eisenhower's pledge to halt (should not conceal that this pro-| party's climb could take three| highway." the death of King George VI. But it was too early to judge U-2 reconnaissance flights in the cess may be somewhat less rapid days. Temperature on the mount- Brain Marsh said in court | The News says protocol decrees yet whether Soviet Premier area of the Soviet Union and his|than I hoped." ain Thursday night was 15 below| that he jammed the acceler- [that the widow of a monarch Khrushchev's attitude in Paris Promise that they would not be DID a zero. ator and jumped clear just [should not remarry and that the constituted a major change in pol- resumed, Macmillan said with ALL POSSIBLE -s ; Rescuers included 47 members| before the car hurtled down a |Queen Mother's plans 'have a =] a m Labor Leader Hugh Gailskell of the Seattle Mountain Rescue| cliff. |created a tense situation in the icy or was just lated epi- considerable emphasis: en East Wess relations " I shouid is say here that|cXPressed thanks to Macmillan Council, shuttled by helicopter to "I thought my troubles Royal Family." The newspaper " Mr. Khrushchev subs {for his statement on "the tragic a 10,000-foot-high base camp after| would then be over," he had |aqds: . In either case we must be hrushchev subsequently |oyents of these days." acas: BERLIN (Reuters)--The new tween the Soviet Union and Eas flying 1,500 miles. told Dover police. "The sources said that when pao" "west crisis following the Germany would create difficult ready." he said. made some play with the fact "Whatever may be obscure." | i But the car crashed onto a ihe Queen Mother first brought collapse of the summit talks was conditions for West Berliners. The that this assurance was limited|g its INSIDE STORY to the president's own tenure of| Cl kell added, Macmillan was the first of the office. Western statesmen to give much| jt was, however, made clear|all in their power to prevent the men, including a doctor. One of - | i o the inside story beiviad the col that this assurance was the most|breakdown aay " the unig carries a small et. phere 1 2! Buckingham Palace yes, apse of the Smit pal ey categorical and definite which| Gaitskell said Khrushchev's at- transmitting radio with him. | was electric. He described what had hap-any president of the United States titude indicated a deliberate de. Tragedy struck after the climb. | 000 residents despite the breakup Oe great shock and dis could constitutionally give." cision on his part to wreck the ©! 3 had scaled the continent's Macmillan further disclosed, _\t had come as a surprise to!conference. highest peak Tuesday in two sep- { 'ourt Or ers of the Paris summit conference. 1 Nar i cel Eris Ba Ait -- . - arate parties. Five mountaineers i i that he had received a personal from Anchorage reached the sum- The feeling of the man-in-the-| message from the Soviet premier street was not one of disappoint-| mit first 2 starte A on May 9--five days before the Wan ly 0 Sane vow A : 3 Ment but of conviction iat only| Big Four assembled in Paris--de ! ar 2s] | Day, and three Seattl: men made 1C eo S 11 1 a major world war would force later i the West to move its estimated) | claring that Khrushchev 'had certain apprehensions about the : : : : . 3 : 4 I SUDBURY (CP)--Falconbridge; The walkout, which followed aj successful outcome' of the con " i 5 i | "Let's be calm," said one typi- | Nickel Mines Limited Thursday company ruling that men in all § asi Sa yp! Banc were based among othe Before UN SAFETY MONTH obtained an interim injunction|departments must wear safety cal West Berliner. It's not good things on the American aircraft from the Ontario Supreme Court goggles, was declared illegal by(to get excited. What can we do ge on lan said. | UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (A ; SCORE BOARD |azainst picketing of its properties both sides. The miners claim the but bear it as we have done all incident," Macmillan said : DN NS, N.Y. (AP) but were a necessary defence ag ! ; : ! these years." | Russia's Foreign Minister An-|against surprise attack. in Falconbridge and Onaping and goggles are uncomfortable and ye . APPEAL FAILS ; . ; drei Gromyko was flying to New Eisenhower in Paris said the May {at the McKim IRIE: iis 3 jhnecessary excat i certain ON BEST OF TERMS | Playing a conciliator's role, York today in pursuit of a United|U.S. would propose that the UN Thursday Total The order also prohibits coun: classes o: employment, " The American, British and : |selling of breach of contract be-| Operations at company mines French occupation forces have Macmillan said he had told Nations prohibition against|set up a system of international Accidents 0 i Khrushchev in Paris that his American spy flights that will be aerial inspection against surprise [tween the company and its em- and plants have been brought al-|;ore and more won the friend- fears and "conditions' had been binding after President Eisen-| attack, but Lodge said this "open Injuries 0 12. Iployees x ; most to a standstill since the ship of West Berliners in Tecenti largely mel by President Eisen- hower leaves the White House. [skies proposal would not he Fatalities 0 1 Jacob Finkelman, chairman of|\alkout spread to six other Fal years, They no longer are Te.) hower, anc that it was '"'unrea- [pn a telegram to the UN Secur- rushed to the UN as a hurry-up, Charges laid for Ortario Labor Relations Board, | conbridge properties. {garded as occupation troops but| "one thing is MD WITH PARTY disused road half way down j ith her daughter ; |plain--the prime minister and for-| With the: disabled climbers| the cliff and the youth was te Wien a a shel2ccepted sadly but calmly today East German government, which eigh secretary (Selwyn Lloyd) did were four well and uninjured charged under the road litter |e" have by law, the atmos- 1% We! pt Hi -- wg re el | $ ' V. | 0 lave fu on over access by rail and road to West and the free world. There was no sign of nervous- Berlin and also could interfere in ness among West Berlin's 2,500,-|the air corridors between the City | cians for a rocket they fired into Shot 9000 Miles CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP An Atlas missile blasted off today on a hoped-for journey of about 9,000 miles past the tip of South Africa into the southern reaches |of the Indian Ocean. The intercontinental range giant powered into the sky from this missile test centre at 11° a.m. EDT. If all went right, the over. [water flight would last about 52 { minutes. The air force was ex- pected to announce results |shortly afterwards. The exact ine [tended range was not revealed in |advance. The Atlas was geared for the |longest surface-to-surface missile {flight on record, exceeding the 7,760 miles claimed by the Rus. the central Pacific last Jan, 20. t a bit later. itab ite {11,000 troops out of the city. | & sonable" to expect more ty Council Thursday night, Gro- counter to the Soviet charges. traffic offences 14 259 [said the company asked leave to| , . ooting attended by 500 un-las a shield against encircling] "1 appealed to him n tt ) make mvko brushed aside Eisenhower's -- prosecute its striking employees ion members Thursday failed to communism. { apossible the negotiations Het turne, and at vite for taking part in an illegal thi s | impos € € \ atement in Paris that United strive. 2D g [settle anything. West Berliners have made it which all our hopes depend States flights over Soviet terri- | ay : + | 4 : "We both spoke very frankly tory had been halted and would 1%) omes Back The board next Wednesday will Mr, Gills sail he wil) continue siundanly Zest that they will] FY and 1 was not without some hope y consider a company application bargaining "as long as the com- not bow to the East Germans, al- - though their city is 110 miles be-| pon Mt he Yesumed to have the strike by more than Pany leaves the door open." ) 1 | hind the Iron Curtain. a So ko seid Kegemnower could [2,000 employees declared illegal. pony 17 FIRED Ste Ta bun pee School Teacher ing would not be resumed after e or S (0) Officials of Local 508 of the "cnn... officials have denied | of -- Te toes 4 ! ar; . . Internaiional Union of Mine, Mill| old mayor has repeatedly told the he leaves ff J . y S fired. | | we leaves office in January and Stelter Workers (ind). sald en BR Mc. People here that they can place Therefore the president's state- 3 (AP)_P MEE : : I full confidence in their Western ts Res IIS@ ment was only "a tactical step [LISBON (AP)=Presid en tihower, Vice - President Nixon, [230 union members have been yoy said 14 were under notice of aj; d th litical | taken with the object of de-| Lisenhower left for Washington members of the cabinet and of|given notice of the hearing. They jib 50 © Yd be dis. hies and in the political and) SAN ANT b oe +a a today to report to the American : include men at the Hardy. Mine, [dismissal and wou S:military guarantees the West has 3 ANTONIO, Tex. (AP A luding world public opinion. | . the diplomatic corps and con-/'™ fi 'charged when they reported for gi h | school teacher fired after calling [people on the failure of his ef- who started the wildcat walkout given them, | Nikita Khrushchev. "the fil 1 IMEET MONDAY |forts to discuss peace with Nikita Zressmen from both partie s/pondac work. | But a separate peace treaty bel ¢ 3 reales Thee . Rearterh . IK 1 await 118 ¢ pe | 18 Se | man alive" said Thursday he did 'The Security 'Council meets Khrushchev. aval ed Eisenhower at the air GICLIS V0 REPORT so in an attempt to stimulate Monday afternoon to take up the| . The president paid a 24-hour "" . class discussion. "Soviet charge of U.S. aggression, visit to Lisbon on his way back| Thousands of school children| Local President Donald Gillis ar. ang es | eavy a e Winston McDaniel, 32, also told based on the U-2 reconnaissance|from the disastrous summit con.and office workers planned to was to report to Falconbridge) his high school class he thinks plane the Russians brought down|ference in Paris, turn out along the route of his/emplovees today on meetings pilot Francis Powers "should bein Soviet territory on May Day. A crowd of about 2.000 at 15-mile drive to the White House. with company officials California Girl S | | 'wtolen put to death.' Gromyko is due in New York to- Portela Airport cheered Eisen McDaniel was fired Wednesday night from Paris to represent the hower as he warmly shook hands SANTA CRUZ, Calif. (AP) -- A night by the North East independ. Soviet Union in the debate, {with his host, Portuguese Presi | e $ 5 | ent school board after members Asked for comment on Gromy- dent Americo Thomaz. [Bute shark Suackal 2 16 year listened to a tape recording made ko's new charge, a U.S. delega- P : Antorie Salazar wi La a pa 1 It le uns ay | n S awa Monday in one of his classes with tion spokesman referred to an remier Antonio Salazar was |and mangled her le g so se-| MecDanel's permission carlier statement by chief dele. | NOt at the airport - . verely that it had to be ampu- Where vice. stood a 000-boand The tape showed that a vigor- Zate Henry Cabot Lodge that the! The president's goodwill visit to Soviet Space Ship Develops Fault tated helew ithe knee. : safe at Ruddy Electric Dou! pus give-and-take discussion took U.S. will meet all Soviet charges|Portugal included two banquets LONDON (AP) R J ; Ta ah | Suzanna Marie Threiot = was sate, ai Rudy Slee Api place between the teacher and his head-on in the council. three receptions and a 90-minute 4 i ussia's experimental spac Ship swimming 150 feet off shore when St. W., there are now only students. One student who dis.| Lodge, in Washington to confer| talk with Salazar during which developed a fault Thursday during an attempt to bring its {the shark struck. Te attack was agreed with him sharply was or- With Eisenhower and Herter after | Eisenhower gave the Portuguese cabin back to earth, Moscow radio announced today {another in a series along the ( al arn : + fered to leave the cla their return 'today, said he premier a report on the Paris . Jorma Coast Laat authosies Lips Ray TY 2 o dros t Ficen..thought the y q : é yar g tr ohrusad as 4 ° Speaking of President Eisen- thought the U.S. would be able conference 4 Freighters Collide Name on a Warming Hen o Ie (tained a small amount of cash rower McDaniel said, "I don't to prove that the Soviet charge! A White House spokesman said " " waters and the movement of insurance policies, ledgers keys hink he's a great mind, but he's of aggression was "fallacious, [they had also discussed common PORT HURON, Mich. (AP) Four Great Lakes freighters |warm-water fish northward. and some ae (an payable to 20t stupid." and will be able to do do to the North Atlantic Treaty Organiza-| collided in two separate collisions in lower Lake Huron today | Two Californians have been p,q Flectric). ) satisfaction of any impartial ob-|tion problems and reviewed the about two miles north of Port Huron. One of the vessels was {lied py Sharks in the 12st Year| The safe was found to be miss- one off San Francisco, e ot eT ing by Kenneth Bailey, 212 Thick- The safe was in the office, server general world situation reported by the coast guard to hav ryers \ ast gua ave sunk CITY EMERGENCY Instead of debating the| Eisenhower's jet was to arrive |off La Jolla. son Rd. N., when he arrived at | PHONE NUMBERS tharges and counter - charges in Washington at 3 p.m. EDT Atlas Missile Performs Perfectly Suzanna and 38 classmates worl this morning. dealing with symptoms of the dis were on a high school outing. i tor 8 hro ease we would do better to go BIG WELCOME PLANNED CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) -- The air force fired an [15 one of eight children of Fred a Thewstore Yas mae t ge POLICE RA 5-1133 it the disease itself. The disease The United States' three na Atlas missile 9.000 miles today on a record-smashing flight |Theriot, a retired physicist. Oshawa police said. The safe was tye)] ds the danger of sudden |tional TV networks made plans to! past the tip of South Africa into the southern reaches of the Suzanna, Tessie Letunich, 15,|dragged through a hall: to the] FIRE DEPT. RA 5.6574 des h from surprise. Sack " SOVEE s vival i Indian Ocean. x was the longest surface-to-surface missile |Nick Buak, 16, and Larry Cronin. | front porch and loaded on a ve- rn BiG RAL va a $ 'eady for whatever speech flight on record, surpassing the 7.760 miles claimed by the |15, were clustered aroun - | hicleé. Another door had apparent. HOSPITAL RA 3.2211 | reconnai sance missions over the he cared to make, | Russians for a rocket they launched into the central Pacific [ner tube , a Sy pod Logg tried; but was Pra to Soviet Union were not aggressiyel Greetings from Mrs. Eisen-| last Jan. 20, The longest previous Atlas flight was 6,325 miles. Ifin circled them. 5 be too small. | a few scrape marks on the floor. § IE dl $ ; PRETTY BETTY Foxton, switchboard operator at Ruddy | Electric Co., 96 Richmond St. W., had an extra chore this morning. Pictured ahove Betty sweeps up the floor where the company safe spood until it was I stolen early today. The picture shows where the linoleum was torn as thieves dragged the 1000-pound safe to the door, There was very little money in the safe. --Oshawa Times Photos

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