The Oshawa Times, 10 Sep 1959, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY There is a certain type of wo- man a man can get along with only by keeping his mind open and his mouth shut. le Oshawa Times WEATHER REPORT Mainly clear tonight and Fri- day, much cooler. Winds north west, light tonight and Friday. Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1959 Authorized Post Office 3 As Second Class Mail TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES VOL. 88--No. 211 DISTRICT PILOTS AT CNE | OTTAWA (CP) -- Two depar- tures from tradition, each further underlining Canada's independ- ence within the historic frame- work of Commonwealth ties, will be part of Maj.-Gen. George P. Vanier's installation next Tues- day as Canada's 19th governor- general. A detailed program, issued to- day, shows that for the first time O Canada For New Gov.-Gen. that all will attend the hour-long ceremony. The new governor - general's first proclamation will be signed in front of the assembly. Gen. Vanier's new personal seal may not be ready for the ceremony, in which case he will use a tem- porary seal of two concentric cir- cles and his initials. Governor-General Massey, first Flying Officer J. W. Ferga- son (top), son of Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Ferguson, R® 1, Hamp- ton, is one of the pilots flying seven CF-100 jets from 433 All Weather Squadron, North Bay, at the forthcoming Internation- al Air Show at Toronto's CNE on Sept. 11 and 12. More than 200 RCAF airmen will take part & | proclamation as the Queen's Ca- fl been invited to the installation] Vanier will arrive in Ottawa Mon- in the display. Flying Officer D. Rea (bottom) of RCAF sta- tion Portage La Prairie will pilot a T33 Silver Star jet train- er during the air show. Born in Oshawa, Flying Officer Rea was educated in his home town of Whitby. He is now serving as a pilot instructor with the RCAF. Justice's Report Makes Mayor Quit EDMONTON (CP) -- Accused |land deals and charges of bribery in a land| of "gross misconduct" deal, popular Mayor William Hawrelak resigned Wednesday, five weeks before completing his fourth term as chief magistrate. | His resignation followed tabling in council of the report of Mr. Justice M. M. Porter of Calgary, appointed by the Alberta attor- ney - general fo investigate ¢harges of civic maladministra- tion. The report said that, in four land transactions, the mayor served "two masters" at the same time anc misled fellow commissioners and the council for his personal profit. In a deal involving land for a supermar-| ket, the report added, the mayor committed 'gross misconduct." DENIES WRONGDOING Mayor Hawrelak, wiping tears from his eyes, denied the charges. involving city officials be turned tover to the 2ttorney - general for possible action POPULAR FIGURE Mayor Havrelak, 45, was first | elected in 1951. by the largest vote ever given a mayoralty ca didate here. He is a past presi- dent of the Canadian Federation of Mavors and Municipalities. He was unsuccessful in the 1957 federal election, when he ran as a Liberal in Edmonton East. In Calgary last month, the re- port of a similar investigation found Mayor Don Mackay and two senior city officials had taken unfair advantage of their offices. Mayor Mackay later sur- lvived a motion' in city council that he resign' and run again hext month. the national hymn O Canada will|Canadian to hold the office, re- be played at the end of the color- tires the moment Gen. Vanier is| {ful ceremony to be held in the|installed and issues his proclama- |Senate chamber. Officials said|tion. There is no other handing- they find no record that it has|over ceremony. |been played at previous installa GOES TO PORT HOPE Itions. | h : | . ier's first! By that time Mr. Massey will| 3 first y % | . In addition, Gen. Vanjer"s firs bars Jers te apital By. tren or) his family residence at Batter | |nadian representative will make |"! no mention of "instructions" re-\W i y him from the sove i " | eT Bow Shee 29 as in the|lhe installation of the new gover-| |past will call attention to the fact/ior-Several ro. of bis -deoarmarel he has taken office and will com.| On the eve of his departure, | mand rnment to continue Mr. Massey will be guest of honor| n id the ave lat a government dinner for 100| | guests. | 1,000 INVITED i More than 1,000 persons have yer-soldier-diplomat, and Mme. | Gen. Vanier, 71-year-old law-| scheduled to start at 11 a.m. EDT|day from their Montreal home. land to be televised nationally.|They will be accompanied by | However, because Parliament is|State Secretary Courtemanche { An invitation for the Toronto] Mr. Lamport explained that {Transit Commission. to operate a/the Oshawa Toronto Gray Coach| {bus service in Oshawa was re- operations were "most profitable| jected by the commission Wed-|and if the Gray Coach took over! nesday. {the service there would be less Mayor Lyman Gifford said this|likelihood of outside inter-city ood House, near Port Hope. He ¥ r.|is to leave Ottawa an hour before ' |morning he was informed by the + |City Solicitor, E. G. McNeely of % (the TTC's decision. His Worship| {would make no further comment! 'until he had personally heard| {|from the commission. On the recommendation of J.| % | : |G. Inglis, TTC general manager : {of operations, the commission i | | concluded it should not involve ¥ itself in the Oshawa operation. :| A paragraph of Mr. Inglis's ; |brief to the commission said: "There would undoubtedly be much criticism im Metropolitan This Atlas ballistic missile [Toronto of the commission de- blasts away from its launching ¥ ¥ voting any of its time or atten.| Commissioner competition. Commissioner William Russell| led the opposition to the Lam. bort proposal. Mr. Inglis said| Gray Coach Lines had neither| the equipment nor the organi- zation for a civic operation; Oshawa required an immediate answer. The CNR were giving up Oshawa system operation at the end of the year, "I can visualize the city-to be of Oakville and the city-to be of Brampton asking the same thing in a few years," observed Clive Sinclair. .'under the chin by a shot fired by| {not in session, it is not expected 1 - pe smna-- NEWFOUNDLAND § and Mrs. Courtemanche. TRICKEN pad at Cape Canaveral with the first experiment of the rocket- boosted Mercury-type capsule riding in its nose A malfunc. tion later caused the capsule to fall considerably short of the programmed impact point, The [tion to any such venture outside| "If We can't satisfy the citizens {Metro until or unless it had first {provided adequate and satisfac- tory service throughout the en- tire Metro area." In rebuttal of the report, Allan Lamport, TTC commissioner, More Polio said the TTC could not operate a domestic bus service in O-hawa. He asked for further discussions capsule was recovered --AP Wirephoto | | { | its Canada | More new polio cases were re-| Prince Edward Island reported ported in Eastern Canada Wed-|its second case, a young man nesday but Montreal health offi-'who had not been vaccinated. [cials said the paralyzing epi-| In Toronto, Health Minister| demic appears to be levelling off. | Dymond said Wednesday that! Dr. Adelard Groulx, Montreal's|supplies of salk vaccine are |city health director, said '"'the|/"ample" in Ontario. {number of cases this week should] He gaid Connaught Labora: ndicate whether or not the €Pl-lteries, manufacturers of the anti- li {demic will run to late Septem-ipolip serum, have rushed sup- {ber." Montreal has been hardest plies and "there is no longer any hit of any centre, with 38 deaths. rationing to branch laboratories Seven new cases Jere reported and doctors." in Newfoundland Wednesday, gince Jan. 1, 55 cases of polio puiting the province's sicknessiyaye been reported in Ontario. toll at 81, with six deaths. Aniof thee, 45 were paralytic; Four RCAF plane was due lungs from Al- 'The aircraft hi |of our own areca, we certainly wouldn't be justified in going outside it." Mr. Inglis indicated there was no apparent legal obstacle to TTC operation of the Oshawa system and it would be permis- sible under Bill 80. J. H. Kearns, TTC treasurer, warned that Gray on the possibility of the Oshawa service being operated by the Gray Coach Lines, a TTC sub- sidiary. BATH TUB DERBY HELD IN BATH Coach Lines would not have the necessary funds to buy new {equipment needed by the Oshawa MONTREAL (CP)--Police re- ported a 21-year-old youth was killed in a night club early today in one of five separate shooting incidents in the city One man was severely wounded and an- other was believed wounded. Norman Primore, 21, a waiter, was the fatality. He was struck one of three men in a downtown Windsor Street ciub. Witnesses told police the three men joined Primore at a table, a gunshot sounded and the trio bounded for the door. Club em- ployees tried unsuccessfully to| stop them. | There was no indication whe- ther any of the shootings were related. HIT ON STREET | At 4 am. Maurice Bouchard, |31, was struck in the legs and| {abdomen by three shots on east-| end 'St. Dominique Street. | He was taken to hospital in| critical condition. Det.-Lt. Roland Perron said Bouchard told im: "I don't know who shot me or how many there were. But I'll take care of them] {myself when I get out." A few hours earlier in front of a night club a few blocks away there was another affray. Sev- isystem. eral persons revorted a volley of Five Shootings Hit Montreal TTC Rejects Bus Proposal Club Waiter Killed By Shot Under Chin shots were fired and someone was hit. But a night club doorman on St. Catherine Street said the vie. tim "disappeared during the ex- citement." Shortly after midnight police arrested a mean after a shot was fired on the street in front of an- other St. Catherine Street club. No one was bit and police said they have not learned what had happened. The suspect's name was not disclosed. The fifth shooting occurred not far from a night spot on north- end Park Avenue. There were no details immediately available. Heat Wave Ended For Ontario To the delirious delight of thou sands, Southern Ontario's stifling heat wave ended today. It seemed too good to be true. For those who baked in fur. like temperatures for weeks, BATH, Oat. (CP)--To cele- brate its 100th anniversarv as a village, Bath has decided to hold a Bath tub-derby. The race will take place Sept, 26 and real tubs -- old iron ones--are being fixed with three wheels each. Two participants will be Mayor Harry Veiner of Medi- cine Hat, Alta., and Mayor Nathan Phillips of Toronto. Bath is about 15 miles west of Kingston. The race will be run on one of the long hills with abounds at 4 distance to be decided later. NEW DELHI (AP)---India and Red China were disclosed today to have exchanged a new series of bristling notes, each accusing the other of aggression and each demanding that the other draw its forces "Both renewed claim to Longju, the isolated frontier post I ad taken other respirators to Montreal. @ to- the dis- du + pwr pekiiing ave died from They had been stored in Alberta warehouses since 1953 when Al-| |berta was swept by a polio epi demic. 12TH CORNWALL CASE A Cornwall man was admitted to hospital in Ottawa with polio| | Wednesday bringing to 23 the| {number of persons struck by the| |disease in the Ottawa area. He {was the 12th Cornwall vietim. ! The Lakehead reported its first| polio case of the year when al Port Arthur baby was admitted | to hospital. | Three persons suspected of | {having poliomyelitis were ad-| mitted to hospital in London,| |Ont., Wednesday, bringing the {otal of known or suspected cases in that area to 15. | the Red Chinese seized nearly two weeks ago in a gun battle Bristling Exchanges Between China, India of the place unless they withdrew voluntarily. "As far as Longju is concerned, the government of India would be with-|Prepared not to send their sonnel back to the area provh ded also withdraw the Chinese would their forces," said an Indian note tabled in Parliament today. "This would mean neither side would have personnel at Longju." day's debate on the border dis- pute were four other notes from Peking. One, received a week ogo, claimed Lonju was on the earn side of the border and at India committed | "deliberate aggression' by main- troops there. the weatherman had these soothe ing words: "That should be all the hot, humid weather for this year" Refreshing cool winds swept down from the northwest during the night and were expected to cover all of Ontario by noon. Cit- ies which had sizzled in 90-degree weather for days were expected to be blessed with temperatures in th low 70s today. The hot records. in Toronto Wednesday, a record for Sept. 9. Hamilton had 94 and 1 "BRAZEN" ACTION The note further charged that Windsor 90. The hottest spot in the country was in the Eastern |Ontario village of Stirling 14 Indian troops "brazenly" occu. miles northwest of Belleville. It Two Arrested On Bombing Charges LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP)--A|stroying property with explosives segregationist leader and a truck|--a felony which could mean as driver were charged today withimuch as five years imprison- hree Labor Day bombingsiment and a $1500 fine for each. linked with Liitle Rock's school| A second truck driver, Jessie integration battle. R. Perry, was also arrested. No The segregationist was E. A.!charges were filed against him Lauderdale, a 48-year-old lumber but police continued to question dealer. His arrest followed that | him throughout the night. of driver. {tive in the segregationist Capital Each was held in. jail under Citizens Council $50,000 bond on charges of de-| Mayor Werner C. Knoop's of- LATE NEW {bombed Monday night. The oth- ers were the school board's ad- ministrative building and Fire Chief Gann Mezlley's official car. | The car was blown up in Malley's 3 FLASHES Loi os | 'Passenger Train Rams Loaded School Bus PARK, Baltimore passenger train rammed into a loaded school bus in western Maryland today, killing seven of the 25 children MOUNTAIN LAKE | and severely injuring 15 others Viet Nam Red Troops Invade Laos VIENTIANE, Laos (AP)--North Viet Nam Communist troops have crossed into Laos and attacked three army posts | in Phong Saly province, the army said foday. Government | troops suffered losses but the number was not announced. |manded to see him and Sims. (youths. | - Negro Family Must Vacate Home ST. CATHARINES (CP)--A ordered to vacate their apartment in a low-income area of intends bi St. Catharines because of "complaints from the neighbor- hood." |drive-way as he and his family were asleep. Sims' arrest came Tuesday aft- ernoon, but it was not disclosed |until his lawyer sought his re- lease late Wednesday through habeas corpus proceedings. | Lauderdale's arrest was dis- = |closed hy police after lawyer |Amos Guthricge and two other segregationiste went to the poli station Wednesday night and de- Md. (AP)--A St. Louis-to- f J. D. Sims, 35-year-old truck| Lauderdale long has been ac-| with Indian border guards. The Chinese warned India against trving to retake the point. A new aspect of the h however, was an Indian offer to make Longju 2 temporary no man's land while the ownership |of the area is discussed. Previous {Indian stat ots had indicated |the Chinese would be pushed out Youth Killed In Death Drop NEW YORK (AP)-A The note was handed to the Communist Chinese ambassador here Wednesday--the same day that Premier Chou En-lai was making public in Peking a letter accusing the Indians of aggres- sion and demanding that they withdraw. with assurances that Red China would abandon territorial claims against Sikkim and Bhutan, two small Himalayan states under In- dian protection, and offered to negotiate on other border dis putes. In the batch of papers opened Chou, however, tempered this!J pied Chinese territory at several {other points along the Tibetan border since June 28, thereby cre- ating an "extremely dangerous" situation. Another note charged Indian aircraft with six violations of the| Soumist Chinese borders since The exchange was made pub- lic just after Soviet Russia Wed- nesday called on India and Red China to smooth over their dis-| pute because it was creating complications for Premier Khrushchev's visit to the United! States. | was 95 there, Other parts of Canada were lucky, Vancouver had a 63, Ed- monton 65, Saskatoon 67, Winni- {peg 36, Fredericton 80, Halifax 80 and St. John's, Nfld., 70. Mont- real, however, was hit with an 86. Moosonee, in Northern Ontarle, was in for an amazing drop Mm temperature, It was 90 there Wednesday A 55 wag forecast for today, with a frosty 30 tonight. Some folks, the brewers and the ice. cream manufacturers, were, happy. unleashed a big watchdog on two teen-agers flyirg kites on the roof of a Bronx apartment Wednes- day, police said. As the youths fled in panic, one of them {plunged six storeys to his death. | Afterward the woman, Mrs. |Anna Maronet, 67, returned tol} {her apartment, where police |found her and took her in for | questioning. Mrs. Maronet apparently be- {came annoyed by the rooftop ac- tivities of 16-year-old Jesus Del- |gado and a 14 - year - old com- panion, Antonio Hernandez. The |latter lived in the building. | Police said Mrs. Maronet led i {her powerful Belgian shepherd | log to the roof, unsnapped his eash and ordered him after the AT KINCARDINE Nero family of four has been "The principle which has ap-| parently been applied . is that| 2 person, upon accepting public office, must relinquish and avoid all private business ties." He said any privale (ransactions he| had were not with the city and did not involve any city funds or| land. | Veteran Alderman Fred Mitch-| ell was elected to fill the mayor' post until the Oct. 14 municipal elections. Mayor Hawrelak did not make, known his plans. Council also agreed to hold a | TORONTO (CP) -- Canada's |first large nuclear power reactor| {will Be built on the shore of Lake| "Huron, nine miles north of Kin-| |cardine in Bruce County. James) S. Duncan, chairman of the On-| tario Hydro-Electric Power Com-| #8 mission, made the announcement| i Wednesday. | | Possible sites had been studied] Atomic Plant Site Chosen tion now is under construction by AECL, Ontario Hydro and Cana-| dian General Electric Company Limited. The Kincardine site was chosen, Mr. Duncan said, be- cause "water for cooling purposes is available in large quantities, the bedrock founda- tion is suitable and, highway and | § | lin the Blind River, Manitoulin rail transportation is nearby." {8 Island, Owen Sound and Parry]. The plant will use 300,000 gal- und areas. |lons of water a minute for cool- | The 2,300-acre site chosen jg/ing purposes. The water will not |: (mostly bushland and the |come in contact with radioactive sur-| rounding area special mecting Monday to con sider possible action of Mr. Jus tice Porter's recommendations, Mr. Justice Porter's report suggested the city consider look ing into the possibility of recover ing Mayor Hawrelak's financ gains in some of the land deals. | Jt also suggested evidence on two) lightly populated | Materials and will be returned to so that the danger index is much (the lake in pure condition. lower than other sites inspected| Design work for the station is) | : by engineers, Mr. Duncan said.|Utder way but actual construc-| i i 5 {tion is not likely to begin before Wig Peapir 'will i $60,000,-1 1961, Mr. Duncan said. The plant M) to build and wil produce s scheduled to begin operation! 1268,000 horsepower of electricity. |i, late 1964 or early 1965. | 8 | All that is required is final ap-| It was expected the project jproval by fe Atomic Euergy wil employ a peak work force a Tr cis pr . " ontrol Board. Atomic Energy of|of 1,200 men in the building stage. |Canada Limited will build and|A maintenance hi a BEGINNERS IN INTEGRATION pay for the reactor, after the site|force of about 70 will be trained Dennis K. Bordley, 6, (right) | School at Camden-Wyoming, | gesturing with pencil, also a suc. has bez cleared by Ontario Hy-|by Ontario Hydro to take over one of the first two Negro stu- | Del., strides along with hand | first-grader, is unidentified. a |dro the plant when it is ready for| dents at previously all-white | in pocket on way to first grade ~--CP Wirephoto ' A small prototype nuclear sta-loperation. Caesar Rodney = Elementary | classroom. Youngster on left; CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 INCOMING GOVERNOR-GENERAL AND WIFE Maj. Gen. George Vanier | senger liner Carinthia docked | ernor-general Sept. 15, welcomed his wife, Pauline, | in Montreal. Gen. Vanier is to | ceeding Vincent Massey. | back to Canada when the pas- | be installed as Canada's gov- AP Wirephoto 3 \

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