Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 13 Jun 1960, p. 1

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

THOUGHT FOR TODAY Many a goose becomes a dead duck because of the fear of being called chicken. ¢ Oshawa Times WEATHER REPORT Sunny with cloudy intervals Tuesday, little change in tem- peratures, winds" light. Not Over "OSHAWA, MONDAY, JUNE 13, 1960 ee Docc, Mail Ottaws / TWENTY PAGES { VOL 89--NO. 136 wero Uniform Car Insurance Rate Queried)' Ike's Planet On Flight o Manila OTTAWA (CP) -- A federal 37.8 per cent in 1957, their actions | erally set as a result of conscious combines report gave strongly- had had '"'a substantial effect on price leadership by the board or- worded advice today to one sec-|the degree of competition in the ganizations. . ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP)-- or disrupt the Eisenhower visi 3 On arrival here Sunday for his tor of Canada's automobile in-|automobile insurance business." The commission's report made surance business to abandon its] It indicated that one reason for no recommendations for new leg- e" | President Eisenhower, hailed to first Visit to Masks i 1 Jeary warmly in Alaska, was to fly to|take off at 6:50 am, Anchorage Eisenhower was islation to deal with the situation. | 1t said this field is entirely within the constitutional jurisdiction of | provincial governments. F Ontario had a law -- never # brought into force -- authorizing the provincial superintendent of insurance to order changes in premium rates that were too| high, too low or discriminatory. | £%% © The Philippines today on the next|time (12:50 p.m. EDT) aboard|cheered at the eg of a potentially perilous Far Eastern tour. ; There was no advance indica- # tion of anything but a rousing re- ¢ ception for the United States : leader in Manila, where he will : be the guest of the government or three days. system of compulsory uniformity the influence of rates set by the in insurance premium rates. |poards was the existence of "con- The report by the Restrictive|ferences'" of other insurance Trade Practices Commission said companies operating in. Ontario this practice may breach the and Quebec, in the Prairie prov-| combines law. |inces and in B.C. Justice Minister Fulton, in| The report said that while making the report public, gave these conferences recommended no indication of any immediate --but did not enforce--premium legal action. But he said the re-|rates for their members, there lationship of "certain practices" Were varying degrees of collabor- to the anti-combines law will be|ation across Canada between the reviewed again after the insur- Dodie and conference organiza ance companies have had time) !l0DS. ; to consider their position. Each organization knew of rate The commissions report was a changes to be made by the other, { *% - clear call for greater price com-| 20d conference rates "were gen: petition in a business that took| in more than $300,000,000 in pre- miums in 1958 The commission also advised the rate-setting associations to] | & Ajax, Whitby Men? a his jet airliner. The schedule crowd of about 4,000. Do. calls for a refuelling stop at mated 30,000 others turned out Wake Island and arrival near thelon a tour through the eity of hilippine capital, at 3:45 p.m.|about 47,000 population. Manila time (3:45 am. EDT| Tuesday). | The president arrived in sunny| Juthorage, Digest city in the| Court Grants The report also suggested that|? The risk of danger is expected giale, Sunday morning after Who Rov sigan sen Boo) ; next Sunday on his scheduled|a 3.700-mile non-stop flight from rules requiring members to dof ; : on arrival in Tokyo. There Japanese | Washington. nnu ment re-insurance business only with|? © left-wing mobs egged on--per-|npamps 10 CONTINUE { other member companies, and haps now controlled--by Commu-| =n" leaving Washington, Eisen-| limiting the location and number nists still are trying to prevent|, Ct HOKE tected ad. | T of branch offices. vice that he abandon or postpone 0 i gman his visit to Tokyo because of Khrushe ev riotous demonstrations therel ROME (AP)--An Italian court against the visit, the U.S.-Japan has granted Ingrid Bergman and security pact and the government Roberto Rossellini an annulment | LP. {of Premier Nobusuke Kishi. of their Mexican proxy marriage. | 0 1C1es | He is going ahead, Eisenhower| yo = = Ee filed {said, because the visit "repre- e courts 'opinion, by Judge Orlando Falco, was made consider ending the practice of setting fixed rates of commission | for insurance agents of member companies The bulky commission report,| STRATFORD (CP)--City police In Stratford Jail dial off a safe in the CNR station| being presented to two Stella, 7, left and Helen Mos- quite of Anchorage. Stella and Helen, who is eight years old, PRESIDENT EISENHOW- er grins toward the crowd after | small | hower, the President's daugh- | ter-in-law. The president left | Anchorage af noon today for the Defended sents an important phase of a program whose paramount ob- jective was, and is, to improve the climte of international un- public today by one of the law- yers involved in the case. The ruling paves the way for signed by chairman C. Rhodes grrested four men Sunday in Soy aR ric men vin rein tO Stratford branch of the a jie Justice department's com-| Bank of Canada. a y § Dranch The break-in was the in a The inquiry, Wile) rudea vo| series. four of them involving Jers 40. wa; came oul de an, hich lagu res pic | eekend. which provides for general inves-| WEE Lhe .v Eskimo children in Anchorage, | hold a bouquet of red roses they | at Tavistock, 19 miles Sontheash Alaska, today. The girls are | presented to Barbara Eisen- | Philippines. (AP Wirephoto) the Italian film director to marry A (AP) -- The Soviet derstanding." bie tos Ei Sonali Das Gupta, the wife of an public today avidly di d a hower was met here by of here, but police said they prob-| ably got nothing. | . A safe in the St. Mary's High » - School, 12 miles southwest of here VEST POCKET RIOT was tampered with after thieves entered the building. Police there have not said whether the safe Free Vote Indian movie man who left her husband for Rossellini, bore the Italian a daughter and now is in Italy with him. Miss Bergman did not eontest Rossellini's suit for the annul ment. Now 42, she is married to strong defence in Pravda of Pre- his press secretary, James C. mier Khrushchev's policies and|Hagerty, who last week was be- its denunciation of his "leftist" |sieged by a screaming Tokyo eritics. mob -- which he narrowly ; in |€SCaped. The article by N. Matkovsky in| "" "00 of conference Hagerty dicted only slight changes in | Stratford police said a econ- tigations of trade practices that|iaple rushed to the bank here|Was opened. raise some question of the public| gpter the alarm went off in the interest. | police station at 4:30 a.m. today. 3 police sta y The inquiry, which made a de.| Constable Ken Uniac found tailed study of the auto insur-|three men emerging from the ance business in the 1950-52 pe-|pank cellar, Two men were ar- riod, dealt mainly with the ac-\;ested on the scene. The other) tivities of so - called "boards"! iw, were arrested later at their | which fixed minimum premium|pomes, rates for their member compan- Charged with breaking and jes in various areas of Canada.|entering with intent to commit Named in the report were:|an indictable offence are George Canadian Underwriters' Associ-|Crack, 28, of Stratford: Robert Mon, which established ratse for ber companies in Ontari juebee and the Atlantic 'Prov-| ona Noel Em et the three Prairie p ; and the British Columbia Under writers' Association. The commission report said that, although the share of mem-|ber plant i ber companies in the country's|miles east of here, was smashed insurance business had dropped|in an attempt to open it. | from 48 per dent in 1950-52 to' Saturday thieves knocked the Massive Security For Ike In Tokyo TOKYO (AP)--Some Japanese protect Eisenhower should mob leftist groups appeared today to|action develop when he arrives| § be backing away from massive on June 19. airport demonstrations on the] . . day President Eisenhower ar-/CONCERN OVER INDIVIDUALS rives in Tokyo, but the Commu-| A high Tokyo police official ex- mist party leadership was re-|Pressed confidence that the force ported still threatening to mark would be able to cope with any | § the day with violence mob action, but added: '"No| § The headquarters of the leftist) amount of security can guarantee Sohyo Labor Federation said|there will be no incident from most members felt they should an individual terrorist." not demonstrate at the airport it-| The car that will carry Eisen-| self Sunday. |hower and Emperor Hirohito on| Even the Communist wing of the 11-mile trip from the airport the Zengakuren Student Federa-|to the palace will be accompa- tion said it would refrain from nied by 13 trucks loaded with 600 about the other break-ins » KEEP WALKING Two British soldiers against Eisenhower's press sec-| plug six sidecar motorcycles, four| from San Francisco to retary, Jamse Hagerty, Friday [radio cars and patrol cars. York. The two soldiers Security officials continued| po : x i | Bonin : police will be spread. all plans to mobilize 25,000 police 0 along the route to the imperial | palace, with orders to take strong | » {action against any attempt at in-| Adlai Rocky terference. Mobile units also will) ' patrol along the route, and] Not Candidates NEW YORK (CP)--Adlai Stev-| security measures was held Sun. | enson and Governor Nelson gay police sources said the Com- still hardy after | and Sgf As a dress rehearsal of the| Mervyn Bvens: 53 Stratford police said the four arrested here will be questioned § rebels to surrender by dawn or ? {under still such acts of violence as staged policemen, 52 motorcycle police| keep walking on their marathon New are pictured near Harrisburg, Pa., conquering some rugged Pennsylvania countryside, the sergeants voic- ed confidence they'll break the 1926 record of 79 days for a cross-country walk. They are Sgt. Patrick Maloney, 34, front, --AP Wirephoto Revolt Flops In Argentina time in jail during Peron's regime, proclaimed himself pro- visional president of the rebel BUENOS AIRES (AP)--Presi- dent Artufo Frondizi's govern- ment announced today that overnment. vest - pocket revolt in Western |® . Argentina had collapsed a scant The rebels accused the From- hours or so after i saris Sovernment of a y cmt ; A, SEA rH & bulk 3 'Ss eR had| In a broadcast frm San Luis, to his side within a few|in the foothills of the Andes 400 hours after the small-scale re- miles northwest of Buenos Aires, the rebels declared: bellion in San Luis. "i a th The jdent confidently an-| "We want a free nation with- Hh i > out Peronists and Communists." nounced he would leave as planned this afternoon on a In addition to seizing the San month-long tour of Europe. |Luis radio station, the rebels Before dawn a spokesman for| managed to get control of the pro- the interior ministry said loyal|vincial government head troops had captured Gen. Mau-| quarters and put Alberto Domeni- ricio Gomez, commander of the cone, the provincial governor, 2nd Argentina Army, who was re. under arrest, ported to have joined the rebels.| Frondizi told reporters he The other rebels fled from the|Would not call off his trip to Eu- strategic sites they captured a|rope, which he is making to seek few hours earlier in San Luis, in-/support from both governments |cluding the local radio station, |and private industry for Argen- |the spokesman said. |tina's economic recovery pro- Sunday's issue was Saned "the In Local ideological nism." It said that some persons mis- takenly consider such things as meetings b et we en Communist and non - Communist chiefs of | state--Khrushchev's much - dis- cussed policy of summit diplo- P Of Teamsters WINDSOR (CP)--Members of {Local 880 of the International {Brotherhood of Teamsters o 4 |showed little interest Sunday in(Macy -- 2 departure from Marx an election of officers which|™0 : : could end the local's 14 - year| (Comrade Kupushehav. Jas lke a ck Marxism-and sky wrote. Independent - officials conduct. ing the vote said about 936 of more than 5,000 members cast ibaliets in widely separated cen- tres. The results were expected to be announced today. ballots were sent as far afield as|note that in the world Commu- nist movement there has FiThe election, firs: tree vote in|some difference of opinion on po- |the local since 1946, was the |licy. |climax of a power play to re- COURSE "OBJECTIVE" |move control from international| The article said: "The eourse |President James R. Hoffa, of socialist development is objec- | Local 880, one of the largest|tive. Assertions of temporary left- |teamster units in Canada, has|ists in the international Commu- |been under the trusteeship of| nist movement: that, having taken |I. M. (Casey) Dodds, head of the power in their hands they can Publication of the article and Mailed |the discussion of it took public been the newest state, Hawaii. Hormones Could pr the original plans for the presi- dent's Tokyo visit. He said he knew of no intention to eliminate a 15-mile motorcade from the airport to Emperor Hirohito's downtown residence on arrival Sunday. INCREASE GUARD Reports from Tokyo said secur- ne! senhower-will' oa the cruiser St. Paul from Manila Bay to Formosa for a visit there before going on to Tokyo by way of Okinawa, His 23,000-mile tour Swedish impresario Lars Schmidt and they live outside Paris. Still before the Rome courts is a case to settle final custody of Miss Bergman's three children by Rossellini. The actress has tem. porary custody of ~ all for deployment of T0000 more than | court The Rome civil tribunal, i= also will take him to Korea and Judge Falco's opinion, agreed with the original decision. Control Cancer |40,000-member Canadian Teams-| proceed i tely to |ters. nism, sidestepping definite histor- | All other members of the ex-|ical stages of development, are ecutive ran for election. Most sup- | mistaken and incorrect. Such as- |ported Mr. Dodds and Mr. Hoffa, sertions contradict Leninism."" HONEY HARBOUR (CP)--Ex- periments in the use of artifi- cially-produced hormones as a cancer-control agent were out. lined today by Dr. Gregory Pin- gram. | WARNED TO SURRENDER Lanois . | ar, U.S. Limits inki Drinking would be tried in military courts, . and the civilians brought to trial | In The Air the "Conintes" plan] adopted last March. This gives| y (AP)-- | military courts the right to try| NEWARE, NJ. (AP)..A new civilians and impose the death/rule of limit drinking on air- | penalty for such actions as sabo-|liners flying in the United States {tage and bombings. jis keeping passengers from get- Most of the leading rebels were|ting too high in the sky. members of what Argentines| woe travellers are accepti hers .o rgent nes pting have mega the, £0 ne curs on booting whe Cru | » 4 ling, a survey at major air - ent anti . Peronists who de- als 'shor nounced Fr ondizi for wooing CML SOE [UV SEARING {votes from supporters of former) re Ts | idiciator Juan D. Peron in the full playing bartender and fight-| 1958 elections |ing off air-borne wolves. Fortunato Giovannoni, a re- ne Federal Aviation Agency tired general who served some Nas begun its first action under the new law against five New| Jersey men and two New York-| [to face an assault by loyal troops from the surrounding area. He {said the rebel force numbered lonly 300 to 400 men of an anti-| |aircraft group. Larcher said the military rebels guards will be increased at the | {United States Embassy. Rockefeller, who have figured munist party had seized control prominently in speculation about|of the campaign against the the presidential nomination by| Eisenhower visit and the US. the Democrats and Republicans| Japan security treaty. LATE NEWS FLASHES ers. They are due to go on trial Tuesday in Montreal under other charges there for their actions on a flight to that Canadian city. respectively, once again have de-| This was reported to have up-| clared that they won't be candi-| set the leadership of the Socialist dates |party, which was already con-| Stevenson, who ran against/cerned over mounting public dis- President Eisenhower in 1952 and favor with the anti-Eisenhower 1956, said flatly in Chicago Sun-|agitation " not candidate" day '1 am nol a candidate' |, nF WAN'T VIOLENCE after Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt| i asked him to clarify his position.| The Socialists, leaders of the And the Republican New York Parliamentary opposition to the Governor, although once again SeCUrity treaty 'and Premier No- casting doubls on Vice-President busuke Kishi, were reported now Rivhird Nixon who has been undecided on what course to fol- picked bv: Eiserower "as his| 10% during Eisenhower's visit. It ' i was considered possible they successor for the Republican|might want to wash their hands Nine Forest Fires In Ontario TORONTO (CP) -- Lands and forests department reports nine fires burning today in the following Ontario districts: Sudbury and Pembroke, two each; Sioux Lookout, Geraldton, Cochrane, Swastika and Tweed, one each. During the past 24 hours, eight new fires were reported and four were extin- guished. Fire danger ranges from high to medium Good Hay And Fall Grain Harvest TORONTO (CP) -- Dry, favorable growing weather since June 1 may result in an average or better than average hay and fall grain harvest, according to the monthly crop report of the Ontario department of agriculture, The FAA, announcing its ac- tion last week, said the travel lers put on an inflight pillow flight. {BROUGHT OWN LIQUOR The United States government |agency charged the men with |ignoring safety instructions. Al- {though no liquor was served on {tht Eastern Air Lines flight from |New York, the FAA said the men had their own supply aboard However, wet The federal rule, which went Be pes aemt . L BUFFALO HOLDS CARS AT BAY Wilson and Recording Secretary | Howard S. Faulkner. | They were opposed by Leo La- |bombard for president, Andrew a |Poland for vice-president, Arthur aa ARIA i (AP) Coldwell for secretary-treasurer| "i a ers ey a0 nas e land Lloyd Kellog for recording| , .» javen a Pp | drink," a man telephoned the state highway patrol Sunday. "I don't expect you to believe this, but there's a buffalo on secretary. the highway near Nipomo and he won't let traffic by." Patrolmen hurried 10 miles north of Nipomo. The Buffalo standing in the middle of the southbound lane was real enough, and he was angry and determined that no car would get by him. Nobody knows just why. Anyway, patrolmen were re- lieved when he jumped a fence, President Nasser Visits Yugoslavia ULA, Yugoslavia (Reuters)-- { President Nasser of the United | Arab Republic arrived here today |for a week of talks with Presi- |dent Tito -- the seventh and 'probably the most important" | conference the two leaders have had since 1954. Nasser, accompanied by senior J government officials and his wife| pursued by his owner, Jay and four children, docked here in| Doty, who maintains a small kis yacht after a state visit to| herd of bison. | Greece. | cus of the Worcester Foundation for Experimental Biology. The New England scientist ad- dressed more than 200 doctors at- tending the fourth Canadian can- cer research conference. The opening day of the four -day forum was devoted to a review of bio-chemistry in cancer =e search. s Dr. Pincus suggested that per- haps one of the solutions to can- cer control lies in the use of hormones as a preventive. Hor- mones are a kind of internal | secretion that pass info the blood and stimulate certain organs to action. . He said an experiment had been carried out with a group of| young women during the last five years. The subjects were ad- ministered a balanced ration of two hormones, estrogen and pro- gestin, adequate to maintain a normal menstrual eycle. "Although it is foo early to denominate our findings as sig- seen a single case of breast can- cer and the one instance of can- cer of the cervix probably ante- dated treatment and in any event represents 1-25th of the expected incidence " Dr. Pincus. He said hormones profoundly affect the course of tumor growth and development. The levels of such hormones in humans varies in time--"in certain youthful in- dividuals one finds or dinarily observed in elderly per sons and in some older individ. uals, youthful patterns may su pervene." ) Hormones, therefore, may pre pare the cells for cancer either by constant stimulation of tissue during long periods or by quanti tative diminution in advancing age, reducing the activity of pro- tective mechanisms which they sustain in youth. i. Among world-renowned cancer experts at the conference is Dr. Charles Huggins, the Maritimes doctor who first tied up sex hor mones to prostate cancer years ago and developed an operdtion which is still performed for this form of the disease. Dr. Huggins now is head of the Ben May nificant, we have thus far not Laboratory in Chicago. nomination, said he would not be; a candidate himself and would might mark his stay. support Nixon if the vice-presi- n advance of any violence that The Socialists, the Sohyo Labor spring weather is expected to retard the growth of spring grain, production falling below last year's level by as much {into effect March 10, requires a {stewardess to refuse drink to dent is nominated at the party's| Federation, and the Zengakuren national convention _ |Student Federation -- with the But he said that unless Nixon |obvious support of the Commu: discloses new positions on de-|nists--are behind the massive fence and foreign policy, *I think anti-Eisenhower demonstrations. it's going to make it very much| The Socialists, however, say their more difficult for him to beltarget is Kishi and the security elected." |treaty, not Eisenhower person- |ally. CITY EMERGENCY | A spokesman for the Commu- PHONE NUMBERS |nist wing of the student group POLICE RA 5-1133 | said: "We may slow down the presi- FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 32311 |dent's car but we will not stop it. {Students will line the streets {around the airport and perhaps |even go up to the terminal, but we won't lie down on the run- ay or in front of Mis automo; as 40 per cent in southern counties. CCF Leader Blasts Premium Raise TORONTO (CP) -- Ontario CCF Leader MacDonald said today that Progressive Conservative governments across Can- ada are boosting hospital premiums to try to convince the public it cannot afford full health insurance coverage | Field Aviation Gets Contract OTTAWA (Special) -- A half-million-dollar contract has been awarded to Field Aviation of Oshawa by the defence production department, it was announced today. The contract, valued at $470,000, is for a variety of services concerned with the storage of major items of aircraft equipment and acces- sories during the current financial year. Also announced was a $21,827 contract to Pye Canada Ltd. of Ajax, for the manu- facture" of waatwal iF television cameras. These contracts were some 140 awarded by defence uction durin We last helt 'sf May : |anyone who appears intoxicated. | Passengers who bring their own bottle must check it for service {by the stewardess The rule provides fines up to $1,000 for violations. The rule has stirred some con- |troversy in the aviation industry. Airline companies and their crews differ among themselves on whether it goes too far or not far enough. | Talks with passengers and {flight crews at two airports serv- ing the New York metropolitan area--Newark and Idlewild--re. veal that the only one who isn't putting up a squawk is the air customer. NAVAL VETERANS' REUNION IN COBOURG Hundreds of naval veterans | Reunion during the weekend. from Eastern Canada arrived Above, Mrs. Roberta MacNeil, in Cobourg for the two-day | Port Hope (left) pins a lapel Sixth Annual Naval Veterans' I=2 en Les Fion, of Bowman- [§] ville, while Mrs. Edna Cock- burn, Cobourg (right), who is a former Wren, pins 4 lapel tag on Peter Tufjock of Osh- awa. The 'veterans' activities Grand Naval Bad rd ral av; Saturday, and a church parade and eeno taph servies Sunday. go

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy