THOUGHT FOR TODAY Among many things needed by the man with his nose to the grindstone pair of kick- proof pants. is a The Osharon Times WEATHER 'REPORT Sunny with a few cloudy in- tervals Sunday, a little cooler with light winds. VOL. 89--NO. 170 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, SATURDAY, JULY 23, 1960 Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa EIGHTEEN PAGES FIRM WITH NO OVERHEAD the roof from over their heads. Damage was widespread throughout the city, with trees | uprooted, power lines downed These employees of a London business concern look remark- ably composed in the wake of a storm late Friday which took Soviet Hammers Spy Plane Theme UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CP) only an interim reply, pending a The Soviet Union Friday asked|full-dressed speech Monday when the UN Security Council to "'in-|the debate will be resumed sist" that the United States stop| Lodge repeated the American what the Russians charged were|position that the RB - 47, shot "new aggressive actions" by the down by a Soviet plane July 1, U.S. Air Force against Russia/was not over Soviet territory as 'Pensions Provincial | sd | Siege Laid Bes awa ? it : OTTAWA (CP)--The provincial| Liberal premiers Jean Lesage premiers invade Ottawa this of Quebec and Louis J. Robichaud weekend, prepared to lay siege of New Brunswick both won up- to the federal treasury. |set provincial election victories A three-day conference starting|last month. Conservative pre- Monday between Prime Minister|miers Duff Roblin if Manitoba Diefenbaker's federal forces and and Walter Shaw of Prince Ed-| the 10 provincial premiers, | ward Island toppled former Lib- backed by 28 provincial hinet|eral governments in 1958 and *% | ministers, will be the opening! 1959. round in joint efforts to work out| | . " we ; a new tax-sharing arrangement, TORONTO (CP)--Ontario will |send a large delegation to the ca VICIOUS WINDS ROCK ONTARIO Farming Areas among the 11 governments. ge 4 " All "provinces have served no- federal-provincial fiscal confer- tice they will be seeking a larger | ence 1 i | slice of the direct taxation fields| members will leave here by plane no © dominated by Ottawa. The|Sunday night. | federal government has given no| Included in the delegation are hint of how far it may go to meet |eight cabinet ministers, four dep- their demands uty ministers, seven other govern- One and perhaps two additional | ment officials and eight municipal f ' conferences will be held or bhe- representatives. { fore a new federal-provincial tax-| Premier Frost, heading the del-| sharing pact is hammered out. |egation, expected to disclose BIG EXPENSE the province's' submission Mon-| It's a vital problem. Tax-shar-'day morning. The 20-page docu-| ing payments by Ottawa provinces count for nearly one-'money for Ontario. tenth of federal expenditures and la considerably higher proportion of provincial revenues "he new tax-sharing 'arrange ment, to take effect April 1, 1962, will strongly affect the finances of both levels of government for probably five years. That has been the duration of the last three post-war agreements "ost of the provincial delega- tions, backed by 51 official ad-| visers and including another 21 municipal "observers,"' are ex- pected to arrive Sunday ! € Among them will be four pre-|viet third secretary in the Rus- miers who weren't at the last|sian Embassy here to leave the such heads of government meet- United States for spying. : in November, 1957. The expulsion of Petr Y. Ezhov, ---------- | 39, was the 12th ouster of a Soviet diplomat from the U.S. in the last {10 years U.S. authorities said the expul- sion was ordered after evidence was collected against Ezhov, rather than being deliberately is | and windows of homes and businesses shattered. The storm did work in a brief half- | hour (CP Wirephoto) Diplomat For Spying (AP) its WASHINGTON Lowered By Time OTTAWA (CP) Canada's veterans will mn Road Collision about $600,000 this vear as time Takes 5 Lives takes its toll of First World War| DRUMMOND VILLE, Que. timed as a counterpunch to Mos- Pensions to irop by n Ottawa July 25-27. Most| © to the| rent contains demands for more) § U.S. Expels The| United States has ordered the So-| ' | Suffer Damage By THE CANADIAN PRESS |boro, 16 miles southwest of Peter A solid line of thunderstorms, | borough. Winds ripped a roof accompanied in places by vicious |from a barn and felled nine tele- winds, swept across Southern On-| graph poles. tario Friday, causing heavy dam-| Some farmers experienced 100- age to crops and barns. | per-cent loss at Tillsonburg, 25 The downpours came on the|Lilles east of St. Thomas. Stanley heels of the province's hottest day Smith, chairman of the Ontario of summer, with temperatures in| Flue Cured Tobacco Growers' the 90s. Marketing Board, said, however, No injuries were reported. In-|the losses will not make great surance assessors estimated dam-| inroads into this year's 25,000,000 |age at $5,000,000 on 9,000 acres of| Pound crop, due to be harvested [tobacco in the Tillsonburg area|in a week. |of Western Ontario. | London, Strathroy and Tilbury | The weather was expected to be| Were hit hard. Windows were | generally sunny and cooler today | blown out of stores and fallen |and Sunday |power lines put more than '1,000 The weather office said a con-| telephones out of order in London, tinuous line of thunderstorms,|Trees fell across roofs of homes, stretching from the northeast to|factories and at least one car, | th2 southwest, built up along the| Most of the 150 -tents pitched |length of Lake Ontario and Lake] near London airport for a militia [Bris ald moved Joa Sev-| survival course were flattened. feral centres registered gusts UP| The south end of Sarnia wa {to 90 miles an hour. . | without power for two hours after Toronto got 1% inches of rain.| a 4000.volt transformer was Lit | tse areas received about an py lightning. Several power fail- | The southwestern portion of tel 2 Vere reported in Lambton | province was hit Ly a brief but| - | strong storm which left a trail of| uprooted trees, toppled power Xv owe, Solapsed barns and Sa Hog Market | A storm in the community. of Argument | Puce, 10 miles east of Windsor. | knocked over trees and damaged houses and boats, Power was cut| off for several hours, | and prevent their recurrence. Vasily V. Kuznetsov, a first deputy foreign minister, flew here from Moscow to present the Soviet case before the coun- cil on the U.S. RB-47 plane inci- dent Kuznetsov, in language even than that used by Soviet ¥o eign Minister Andrei Gro- th- u-2 downing of the American lution that would also condemn "t hese continuing provocative actions" by the U.S. Air Force and regard them as "aggressive acts." Gromyko's resolution was re- jected 7 to with Russia and Poland the only countries voting in favor PROVOCATIVE ACTIONS Kuznetsov said that the 2 u S. |the Russians claimed. Lodge said that the downing of |the reconnaissance bomber by a Soviet fighter plane was "criminal and piratical action and that in view of Soviet activ- |ities Fuznetsov's speech was "'a | pretty revolting piece of hypo- crisy." n : He again. appealed to the| myko in the council last May on|g,yiet Union to. release two cap-| tured airmen the Russians spy plane, introduced a reso-| claimed were the only survivors of the crew. One was killed and {for others are missing. | But Kuznetsov insisted that the surviving airmen, Lieut. Free man B. Olmstead of Elmira, N.Y., and Lieut. John R. Me- Kone of Tonganoxie, Kan., would be tried "with the full severity of Soviet law,' ers of the Pentagon fence headquarters) (U.S and de- although the lead- the pro-| United States government" were servicemen, Veterans Minister| (CP)--Five persons were killed cow's attacks on the us. over Brooks said Friday. | early today in a highway accident the Soa American ) - an Veterans pensions are ex-| involving an ambulance, an auto- i Sd Hee TS pected to total $148,940,000 this{mobile, and a truck. _-- De og year compared with $149,550,000f The accident occurred 10 miles Siang Ie é a Al hI 3 ol |1ast year, he said as the Com-|north of here during a heavy rain an 4 Terican Se i 2H el mons gave speedy approval to|storm. Quebec Provincial Ld Foe as expelled. So a He his d e p a rtment's $200,678,000 |said preliminary reports indicated | llmbassy pers y FIRST Lloyd Hildebrand, 5, and his brother. Ralph, 3, sons of Dr. and Mrs. Henry Hildebrand of Steinbach, Man., savor their rod as the pm charges in the past decade. upeshieh Ya CAFS: A from Lal Ezhov, like another Soviet dip- The over - all reduction of $1.1, Que., to Quebec City, at-|lomat: since expelled, was under- 901,000 is due largely to econom-| oF 5? Dace the car and |taking his undercover activities in ies in administration, he said. | truck. | part during the time when Pre- To suggestions that pensions| pgjice identified the dead as: mier Khrushchev visited the should be boosted to keep pace|cjaude Nicol, 26, accompanying|United Sattes last September. {with increases in the cost of 1iv-|pis wife, a patient in the ambu-| The state department said Ez- ing. Col. Brooks said a full Te-||ace; Berthe Lapointe, 25; Roger hov was engaged for months in | view of pensions is planned. {De Grandmont, 37, all of La ~e'ting aerial photographs of But he noted that there was no Sarre, in northwestern Quebec;| American cities and defence in-| increase in pensions between|and Gilles Landry, 35, and Ros-|stallations. | 1920 and 1947. The next increase| aire Landry, 40, of Ste. Rosalie, BEL Er UN Troops phen? : first ice cream cones in some CONES | from their home in the strife- torn Congo. The Hildebrands were among the Canadian mis- sioparies evacuated from the Congo. (CP Wirephoto) time after arriving in Montreal | . Strong winds accompanied by N Cl {heavy rain badly damaged an) ear Imax area near the village of Bailie-/ | | TORONTO (CP) -- The differ ences over marketing policy be- {tween the Ontario hog producer | | 6 Hurt, One Dead In Forest Fires By THE CANADIAN PRESS | A rash of small fires started | Fires continued to rage through acres of timber and bush in New-| foundland, Northern Ontario and Western Canada Friday. by lightning had been put out. | A 3,600-acre blaze was being {fought by combined ground and air forces in northeastern Al- | "systematically undertakes vocative actions against another state and is thereby. constantly placing the whole world before what is in fact tantamount to a crucible." "Instead of acting in conform- ity with the United Nations charter to promote the consolida- tion of peace and security, this great power--the United States o. America--is playing with the destinies of the world and time and again is undertaking actions that can involve the peoples of all countries, and primarily the people of the United States itself, in the disaster of a new world war with all the ensuring cata- strophic consequences." The wives of the six crew members of the RB-47 listened from the gallery as Kuznetsov made his bitter attack on the U.S.. and the women appeared tired and bewildered by the de- bate. The Russian wound up with denunciation of American bases everywhere Penry Cabot Lodge, the chief U.S. delegate, was the only other speaker Friday and he made i primarily responsible. 'FLEA SURVEY FROM SCRATCH LONDON (AP)--The thought of a flea makes Robert George itch--itch te get his hands on it | Of all the strange hobbies in the British Isles, George's is among the strangest He is working on a flea map of the United Kingdom. When finished it will show what kind of a flea a British subject is likely to find by scratching. around in his old home town. So far George has catalogued a nd bottled nearly 60.000 of the winglessjumpers. A teacher, he's compiling his flea map mn his spare time. Up to now he's discovered that Britain has 61 varieties of fleas. He's recorded specimens from countries 37 Opposition See To Arms UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) The United States' ran into op- position today. in its bid for a meeting of the 82-nation United Nations disarmament commis sion early 'in August U.S. delegate Henry Cabot Lodge Friday asked the chair- man of the commission, Luis Padilla Nervo of Mexico, to call the early session. Some diplo- | meeting Aug. 5 Lodge said the | should discuss the hreakdown of n Parley o consult we want gations needed time their governments and to sit down and think." Taking Over 'Riot Areas LEOPOLDVILLE (Reuters) -- partment spokesman said Fri-| the British Columbia - Alberta Belgian troops today pulled out of day that the fire situation was border and hiking trails were|positions for which I have been | Other areas reported few fires. berta Friday. In the southwest- Near Gander, Nfld, a fire which broke out Tuesday was still out of control after consum- |{ing 100 square miles of cut tim- {berland. A British Columbia forestry de-|il the Crowsnest Pass area on|tional defence." Another leading diplomat noted this capital city to the derisive|still deteriorating in the 11,000- the recent series of day-and- night meetings of the Security Council and said '"'we want a rest." MAJORITY NEEDED Padilla Nervo began consulting UN members on a date fs |this required the agreement of a The 10 - ; memt a the hold 1 mats said the U.S. wanted. a|meeting, The U.S. view was that 2 commission | Majority of the membership--42.| cheers of Congolese onlookers. At the same time, United Na-|clear skies forecast, $100,000 is| tions soldiers, who are replacing the Belgians, fanned out through the hinterland toward such trou- ble spots as Luluabourg. Latest reports said Belgian paratroopers suluabourg airport and Con. olese forces the rest of the town. Belgian army commanders stood tight-lipped as their troops nation disarmament moved out by the truckload from the 10-nation East-West disarma-|committee--set up last Septem-|Leopoldville. The deadline for the ment talks in Geneva June 27 ber after the Geneva foreign | withdrawal was 6 p.m. local time when the Communist side walked | Ministers conference consists of | tonight out One key delegate told porter he had talked colleagues and found that none was in favor of meeting before the end of August. He said dele- a re- Not Much Excitement As Republicans Meet CHICAGO (CP) Compared with the razzle -dazzle of the Democratic circus at Los Angeles the Republican convention open- ing here Monday could turn out to be as tame as a meeting The reason is that few of the 1,331 delegates assembling ;eem to doubt that Vice-President Ri- chard Nixon has enough votes al ready in his pocket to take the presidential nomination But comparisons are apt, and the accent seems to be on youth. In many minds Senator John F Kennedy, 43, was making token gestures when he said in advance of the Democratic ores. idential convention in Los Ang- eles two weeks ago that it wasn't a shoo-in. He won anyway bankers'! only | But in that case there strong opponents--including Lyn. don B. Johnson, who turned out to be a running mate with Ken- nedy for the vice . presidential position--while Nixon: he seems to be just like money in the bank. In a nutshell, this is the over- all picture of the Democratic na- tional convention which was held in Los Angeles two weeks ago and the Republican convention which now begins here. The Am- erican public is a ga-ga as the politicians can make them about the presidential elections in Nov- ember. | The 'boy from Whittier, Calif', | Nixon, who at 47 has become the strong man among Republicans, were Nixon forces as the party's vice- presidential nominee. Rockefeller: 52, keeps saying he wants no part of the vice-pres- lidency, a job Nixon has held ever since he climbed aboard the .bandwagon of Republican Pres. ident Eisenhower in 1952. SHREWD POLITICS But Nixon is shrewdly aware that with some of the Eisenhower magic wearing off, he can use a little more popularity and mus- cle to counter the Kennedy-John- son coalition It is possible that Rockefeller would ignore the demand of dele gates that he accept the No. 2 spot? He might, but then he would risk party enmity should he con- tinue his drive for the presidency five Communist countries -- the Soviet Western and five Union, Bulgaria, Czecho-|drawing vith 20 slovakia, Poland and Romania-- bases. Premier Patrice Lumumba = the United has The Belgian forces were with- to their main Congo called for their complete States, Britain, Canada, France evacuation of his country. and Italy. United Nations authorities here In his letter to Padilla Nerou, appealed today for at least 200 |Lodge deplored "the cavalier | additional doctors. A spokesman manner" in which the Commu-| said the medical situation is "ex- nist delegates at Geneva walked tremely grave." ou* under Soviet leadership just | plan. | SALOME OUTDONE The doctors are needed to re- anti- white rioting. - Wine Inspires Italian Bears TRENT, Italy (AP)--Woods- men near this Alpine town are still talking about the wildest bear dance since Salome shed | the seventh veil. It had every right to be a wing-ding--the two performing bears lapped up the better part of 250 quarts of . wine between them Professor Peter Krott, custo- dian of the animals has been here for some time keeping their fill 'of sausage and other stored supplies Then they found, upturned and open, five 50-quart demi- johns of north Italian wine and a jag-sized snootful./ The two bears reared up on their hin legs and tried every- thing from the Charleston to rock 'n' roll The amazed woodsmen told townsfolk afterward "there never was anything like it." got square-mile Kamloops area. With being spent daily in the battle {against the flames. . SIX INJURED Six men were sent fo hospital as 60-mile-an-hour winds fanned the 13,000-acre Spius Creek blaze. Victor Jackson of Edmonton was killed when his plane crashed as he fought a fire at Kelowna. During the week 588 new fires were reported in British Colum- bia, 263 of them in the Kam- loops district, In Northern Ontario more than 200 men were battling a forest fire that has engulfed 500 acres of timber near Red Lake, 300 miles northwest of the Lakehead. |as the United States was about | place Belgian physicians who fled | F D [Four Drown to submit a new disarmament | from the country during As Fishing Boat Flips VANCOUVER (CP) -- Three trapped men and a girl pounded frantically from within an over- |turned fishing boat for three hours today, but drowned as the crews of 10 vessels fought to come to their aid in heavy seas 10 miles northwest of here in Georgia Strait, A fifth person was rescued. names were released. The 57-foot Unimak struck the tow cable between the fishpacker Cape Flattery and its barge, No verted in the water off Cape Curtis, the southern tip of Bower Island flipped in the air and landed in-| ern part of the province 65 men {were combatting a 600-acre blaze reported out of control in the Hay Lake region. The fire hazard was extreme [closed in Banff and Jasper na- |tional parks. One major fire was burning near Prince Albert, Sask., but rain and thundershowers have {held fires under control in North- ern Manitoba. | In Quebec, firefighters con- {trolled a fire spread by a 30- mile-an-hour wind on the north |shore of the St, Lawrence River [165 miles northeast of Quebec |City. |terms, will to make the tracks for a united Republican . Republican | organizations and the Farm Prod- og ~+yucts "Marketing Board "are ex. Pl ois { pected i ite to a head follow- ing a joint meeting July 27. | at orm Agricultural observers feel the producers, rather than come to A reement |Ontario government give way, |foreing 8 showdown recently a 3 , (promised by Everett M. Biggs, dent Richard M. 'Nixon today xsiiant deputy, minister of agi ia ar! . appeared to have cleared the mpic oonld ne government effort in the November general Stripping hi Compulsory Pow. election with a compromise the O ve : 4 ee Eroups agreement with Governor Nelson ti nano oF users As. A. Rockefeller on basic platform |Soc anon, Ontario Hog Producers Soni, Marketing Board and Ontario In an eight-hour New York Hog Producers' Co-operative, The prod uc er organizations would lose the power to direct all hogs from Southern Ontario through their assembly yards and to collect a 30-cent service charge on each hog sold.' The organiza- tions usually get about 95 per cent of the hogs in the province. At a July 15 meeting the fac- tions failed to settle their differ- ences, largely amalgamation of the three boards and electoral system changes. The number of complaints from farmers since the direct sales system was introduced in 1956 is seen as indicating the three or- ganizations would not receive enough support to make possible continued operation on a volun- tary basis if the government removed the boards' compulsory powers. | meeting which he took the initi- | ative in arranging, Nixon and the | liberal Republican New York gov- |ernor agreed on what the latter |called "specific and basic posi- |tions on foreign policy and na-| | "These constitute the basic] fighting," Rockefeller said in a statement. "If they are embodied in the Republican platform as adopted by the convention, they will constitute a platform that I can support with pride and vigor." There wasn' the shadow of a doubt in the minds of Republicans working on the platform that when it is presented to next week's convention here it will represent the composite views of Nixon and Rockefeller. i» | I' | | |18 almost certain to emerge as | Republican presidential standard | bearer PHONE NUMBERS | Though New York's Governor Nelson Rockefeller keeps sniffing -- . at the wind in search of a draft, POLIC E RA 5-1133 | he'll be lucky if he finds a mere . . tor ne breeze. FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 More likely the multi million- HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 aire may find himself drafted t CITY EMERGENCY land delivered hog - tied to the » Krott's same two bears stag- gered back to the same Alpine camp the following night, weak but still willing. They sniffed and snooped but couldn'! find a hair of the dog that bit them | Woodsmen had hung all re. | maining supplies and demi-| johns--in the higher branches of nearby trees in future years Undoubtedly the thought in Rockefeller's mind--as it was in the mind of Adlai Stevenson--is that lightning can strike and there may be just the remotest chance Nixon may be rejected Democrat Stevenson apparently thought the same thing but though the crowds loved him, the delegates didn't, But the two bears sneaked out on the professor a couple of nights age and woodsmen of Lares in the valley of Genoa, near Trent, tell the rest of the tale: The night prowlers raided a temporarily aban- (doned Alpine camp and ate tabs on their habits, all for the | sake of science | | two answer the Cape Flattery's call for assistance. The rescued man was thrown| clear and picked up by the tug. | The body of the girl was re-| covered. | The collision occurred shortly | after midnight in heavy seas. on Ten vessels in the area, includ- ing the CPR ferry Princess of Vancouver, raced to the scene to wy TARTS HIJINKS in front of the hotel which is | quarters (Sheraton Towers), as Girls carrying Nixon . for- | President signs paraded today | Gov. Nelson Rockefeller's head- | part of Chicago's pre-conven- tion hijinks. (AP Wirephoto) '