OUR TELEPHONES lorExannnerWantMalelo monomers numbertocaiifortnaflosmase EditorialbepLUPAW 97th Yoshis Andrew wickstead ll of Gowan Street sits behind wheel of car which won him third place in the Joe Koslte trophy race on Saturday at the soap box derby and the Card Ferguson trophy for the bestbuilt car Glen Wlddes standing helped Andrew build the prizewinning racer Innisï¬l Reiects Estimate on ReVi$eilï¬dit6ï¬um The next round in the battle to build an mooseat auditorium for Barrie District Central Collegiate appears to he immin ent pension project involving con struction of additional class rooms and shops This addi tion would be financed jointly by the province and the federal government it is expected that the final cost of this portion of the proposed expansion pro gram would be in the neighbph aturday night lnnisfii Town ship council considered revis ed figures on the cost of such In addition and mlflEd fdown thaiutlmdto by reaffirming lts standoirparticipate in an ex penditurenot over $250000 The revised figure of $345050 was oomidered by the lnnlsfil council This was decrease from $385000 first proposed Architects were able to shave $40000 off their original esti themselves must bear the cost of the auditorium fact that is running out The money for the class room and shop expansion must unlcipalitics put them is not known Mrflrifflnsald the if some mate by making changes in the overall plan To date Barrie and Sunnidale he spent before March 1953 in order to qualify for the 100 per cent grant from the province and Ottawa If decision re garding the auditorium is not reached soon board members feel that there is some danger that these grants may be in jeopardy Charles and Essa townships have agreed to the estimate iorthe auditor ium councils opposed repre sent Vespra lnnisfil and Oro Barrie had proposed earlier that the auditorium he built to ccommodate 1500 pupils but oftfigurerather thanhave lengthy delay in start of construction The auditorium would be built at the same time as huge ex am NUTSHELL Killed Vireo Struck By Pipe WELLAND OP Arthur SekelairmseldlledhercSun dal night in the PageHersey Tubes factory when he was struck by moving 16inch pipe chairman of log comrni tee today we cannot go ahead wrth one project without the other It doesnt just make sense to cell tender by SAULI STE MARIE Ont 0P Floodwater washed away 30foot section of the TransCanada Highway north of here anda car plunged into the lzfootdeep gap before dawn today injuring two persons Thieves Take $197 From Restaurant BRANTFOHD GP Thieves broke into Livingstong High way Rataurant east of Tillsonbur ear with $19 cash gv ly Sunday and escaped contract turn of events will be under halves doubt if you could find builder who would even bidon such basis Grliiin pointed out that the trict collogiates here had experienced demand for stu dent accommodation for nearly loo more students than expect ed this year The anticipated increase next year will bein 200 to 250 additional studeata he said and just where we will thing isnt resolved soon lt might be that theiboard will have to consider portable class rooms No one likes to even consider such thing he said but we have to find home for them somewhere Vespra Township clerk Earl Richardson told The Examiner today that his council had not considered the new figure as yet because was have no ng official He said he believed Jheirsohoolboa tiveshadmentioned it off the record to council members but he had not been officially formed of the new proposition SPECIAL MEETING Our next meeting is not scheduled until early October but special meeting could be called if required Burton board secretary 5de they were not aware Vespra waswaiting for anything more than th is rcpresentaï¬ve narrie council members re main adamant intheir view no ess than 1100 seats Mayor Willard Kinzle absent from the city on business trip was not available for com ment but it appears likely the subject and the most recent discussion at tonights regular council meeting Barrie city council recently voted in favor of proposal to investigate the feasibility of breaking with the district col turn of BotheMrrwGriffln and r1nhtrarrgledï¬ilï¬m sir boardwolderawley couldnt that the new auditoriumshould quay Flood Causes HighWaerashoHW MacDonald who wanted to into hammer Barrio entire cancu Mendy who II 196 nusnaoasoxnirn 63 Bodies Redovéred rom fï¬ashed Plane By ARTHUR QUINLAN SHANNON Routers High tldol waters on the River Shan non today halted attempts to cover 19 bodies still in the wreckage of United States bound airliner which crashed here Sunday killing all 733 aboard The high water drove recov eryiworkersr fromth JohnsonandE where the fuselage of the Pre dent Airllnee DCoB Theodore Roosevelt was embedded in thick fog within two miles of Shannon Airport alter taking oif after chluelling stop The piano was piloted by Capt Ed Tonnesen of Lon Angeles and crew of three other Americans Co pilot Robert Budnlk Navigator Tom TAllr Kruge Deadman FuseMay Push Govt To Accept 113 ucleorWeapons By DAVE MCINTOSH OTTAWA CF gadget known to the military as the dead man jfuse may convince the Canadian government to ac cept defensive nuclear weapons from the Unitedstatm Air lence Kuter commahderin chief of North American Air Defence Command in speech at Toronto Sept discussed the need for nuclear warheads to counteract th deaijl man fuse Gen Kuter said it is only reasonable to infect that nu clear bombs rrléd by Soviet planes would designed with dead man fuseseo that they would detonate impact with egmundeven Thoughiii Tilrl craft arrying them were shot down in flames or disintegrated in the air He said conventional weapon will destroy the bomber but will not assure destruction Admits Slaying Aunt Cousin of the bomb Only nuclear weapon could destroy both Geo Kuter gave this exam ple Suppose Soviet bomber were bent on attacking Toronto with five megaton nuclear bomb the equivalent of 5000 000 tons of TNT Suppose an interceptor knocked down the bomber with conventional weapon 50 miles upwind fromToronto if the bomb detonated when it hit the ground Toronto would escApe materlal destniction But the radioactive fallout might kill unprotected personrthroughout the entire city Toronto could suffer as many casualties if the bomb had hit its target the fnteiceiitor had used nucleus tovaii missile the bombeitself would have been destroyed in the air There would still be some fall In Suicide Note Leif For Wife SARNIA CPlA death note probably interrupted by the 11 for double slaying and surclde here this weekend if it hadbeen finished Thomas Crawley 23 was found dead of shotgun blast inhlsapartment Saturday with an unfinished note to his wife beside him The note acioiowl edged that Crowley had beaten ï¬earoldwousinwfewhours ear er Writtenin pencil the note nd any reason for the slayings but postscript said am sorry that wont get to talk to you but there not much canrrémemi her anything last Police suggested that Craw leys explanation was halted by the arrival of Detective Donald Stifllï¬héï¬man about the slay ings MacDonald heard ashot as he hammered on Crowleys door and discovered the body when he broke in Killed earlier were MrsLe smitesystem Year ld moth of five chlldre womanlshusba and her son Danny The sister of the dead leys mother The bodies of Mrs Moore and her son were found about am by Crawleys wife and neighbor woman in weed filled lot home Mrs Moore warmindlng her ovï¬chi dren and two daughters of neighborFriday night when according to one of the children drunken manrap peered and orderedher out with himShe never returned and lt was believed Danny tried to helphis mother HERES ONE The insane asylum attendant shed var to the head physic octori man outside adjoining the Moore wants to know we have lost any male inm es Why man Someone ran away with his wife Khrush des NuclearWar askedthe medical lee Storms Fu Sunday night of the 03 bodies were brought ashore The 77 passengers were 65 Germans eight Austrians two Swiss and two Dutch INCLUDES FARMERS in Ducsscldofi an official of the agricultural lm iinn lifannesmannihegnar isaid lhepaisenge farmers and agricultural students in vlted to tour the US or three waukee an agricultural ma chine manufacturer The two stewardeases were Erika Urban of Llnz Austria and his Jackson of Helsinki Finland The disaster produced the highest death toll in plane crash in the British isles The worst previous crash was March 1050 when 80 died in Walesult also was the worst disaster ever to hotel US commercialplane overseas Only one person was seen coming from the plane woman of about 25 was pulled from the water intoa launch cal centre three hours later Relatives were arriving here today to identifythe bodies eswere burned and mutilated but through the planes windows others could be seen slump safety fbelts Police sai dencethatthe thing before the crash at WASHINGTON APiRussia has triggered her fifth and sixth nuclear blasts and one of them padred plmoh far greater than earlier shots in the cur rent tests The Atomic Energy Comrnlslt slon said the first of Sundays explosions7mgtheatmosphere wason the order of several megatonsan explosive force equivalent to several million tons of TNT Although it was by far the largest fired since Russia relt sumed testingll days ago the blast was long way from the Joomégatonileveb which Soviet muchimoraradioactlve debris Prerniet hu than the previous explosions reach The second nuclear device tired later in die day on the but died in an emergency media on forward held by WEJEUWMV LOCAL WEATHER Cloudy with few showers toluen rol Cooler Wind lllbt law tonight 65 High Tuesday 70 For full lummary see page two Not More Then per CopyI4 Poul ï¬eesl Worst HurricanéOiCentury Lashes Texas Louisiana Coast GALVESTON AP Hurri cane Cerla the most intense storm alrned at the Texas coast this century lashed Louisiana and Texas with l73mlleanhour winds and batteflnngioot tides today while sun miles at sea More than 100000 persons fled the coast in Texas and Louisiana in one of historys malorflights the Red Cross said At l0 am EDT Carla roared through the Gulf of Mexico 05 miles due east of Corpus Christi its Manilawide eye was ex pected to strike land this after noon larm losses will be close to 8100300000 said John White Texan agriculture commis sinner Galveston island city of 75000 from which 15000 fled was completely isolated from travel Al for inland as Bay City no miles from the coast Carlas slashing winds ripped out power service and telephone communi cations At Port Lavaca on Mata gorda Bay 9200 of the citys 10000 persons left for high ground Tidessulged to 107 feet above normal at Port Aransoa The weatherbureau office in Chicago labelling Carla the most intense hurricane to strike the Texas coast this century said it may be the worst in of Texas history rlcane ripped through southern Ian fourweeksold girl was ldlled 50 persons were Injured and l50 homes damagchor da Itroyed The hurricane itself however struck at deserted coastth and at ghost towns and cities in one of the largest mass evacuations ever in the United States between 300000 and 00 000 residenta along the Texas and Louisiana coast fled north ward to escape the approaching storm Highways were jammed by solid lines of automobiles Coastal residents loaded their cars with clothing food and family pets and drove inland Torrential rains are expected to bring up to l5 inches more water The weather bureau said Winds hit 140 mph in gusts at Matagoarda Bay early today and the weather bureau snid hurricane winds 74 mph or morecould be expected as far as 120 miles inland WAVES FEARED But was the great tidal waves accompanying the storm that were expected to deal be greatest damage The weather bureau said tides in to Effect above normal could be expected from Galveston to the point wheregthe ntre of theetorm strikes the oast Galveston island where Chief Po ceW Burns estimated 5000 of tho 3069resl mm Iv and wind dents remained was completely cut off from the al Laride flï¬gfdï¬iggflï¬ilï¬ï¬ï¬‚gemï¬ coastal foads orl ironinland power and communication gawk by water fromthe any smaller townswera do Four toriiadoes spawned by sorted Only police officers rc all lines ahead of the hur malned to prevent looting ry RUSSIA TRIGGEBS 5TH 6TH BLASTS CITests In Atmosphere same Arctic island as the first was reportedto be in thaiow to intermediate klloton range 11181001 davlces tested bo fore Sundays doubleheader danger mm mm 5an ranged from about the 2mm from the four earlier tests but too equivalent of thebon1thL nunmd heme5 runneamwvo dlncreesrthemossibillty of ahima to something in the 150 deadly 125mm to 200 00040 class The AEC said both of Sun days blasts took place in the All Soviet nuclear blasts in Am in the View of thisseries have been fired in Navaca egeml nn Island theatmosphere which has been used in the past Because it was so much more deto it not lar Soviet powerful the first of Sundays or nuclear devices blasts presumably produced This isthe thlrd location used by the Russians The first three shots in the present se ries were in the Semipaiatlnsk area of central Asia The fourth note the eartii anddamage both presentand future life if ltbo comes heavy enough us experts say there is no This residue from nuclear tests in the atmosphere pro duces fallout that can contaml test was east of Stalingrad Louisiana Simday rilght At Koplt near Terrenceville Nfld Sunday night slightly injuring is pilot and trotcrew members The three were flownJLhospitaLtoe PRESTON GROVE exam no mo 3clashlosinssflsmwwlaresï¬ï¬ Impénalists and complete disarmament un Berlin Not Worth one LiteMb NEW Merriam or ArnoldPeters can no for rm lskarning said on his departure Sunday night for Europe that Berline is not worth the loss of one Canadian life Reveal Plans For Bilingual School renown roe Plans Ericssons an bilingual high ischool were revealed Sunday at garden party on the 15 acre site for the proposedschool in suburban Don Mills Says Wishes IIe couidsackuack NEW DELHI Reuters Prime Minister Nehru said today emler Khrushchev would like to8bandon Viet nuclear tests Speaking to reporters here or his returr frommMoscgw talks Nehru said Khrushchevs genera argumen was at resum tonnesme Aton Japan Reports Increased Radiation TOKYO AP The Japan meleorol gicaiageiicy reported today its stations throughout Japan ad detected slight STALLNGRAlDJAP order lfliï¬shc ev chose lius Isias bloodiest baitiegroua AtheSecondwo his people he sees encourag ing rays of hope of settling the Ber erman crisis peace fully He Vpredic therewill be negotiation The Soviet leaders dec tion Sunday broughtwlld cheers from crowd of 35000 thatlncluded hundreds of yet areas of the Battle at Stalin grad The premier said nuclear war would create great struction in the but asserted that Asdflirushdravspokekacom munihue he signed jointly with Prime Minister Nehru of India was released in Moscow and New Delhi calling for peace ful solution of the German prob increase in the level of raodloactivity rain believed to be allI961 of recent Soviet nuclear 613110511711 lem through negotiations be gtween all conobrhed der strict and effective inter national control was the most important questio frontingths world ing placed onpeaéetbe Soviet government announced lt will JLLmaepowecqu1ndimo proved multi ratakeT rockets into Pacific target to be ginning Wednesday tlnulngto Oct 15 The usslanshave at these rockets ooul superlouclepr born point accurac to Nilth musacmv an5 Jim Bunsen officialvisltto vietz Unio