The Oshawa Times, 4 May 1960, p. 1

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WEATHER REPORT Mostly sunny and warm today and Thursday, fine spring weather, southerly winds. THOUGHT FOR TODAY Psychologists say that a lot of fatique comes from dodging and postponing work. A lot of fati- gue also comes from trying to keep abreast of work. The Oshawa Same Authorized as Second Coss Mall Post Office Department, Ottowe Price Not Over TWENTY-FOUR PAGES 10 Cents Per Copy Kennedy Beaten By Nixon ow WASHINGTON (AP) -- After a|racial moderate won the right to day crammed with primary elec-|enter the Democratic run-off for tions, Vice-President Rich ard|state governor, with the winner YOL. 89--NO. 103 OSHAWA, WEDNESDAY, MAY 4, 1960 i | 'GM Vacation Set Aug. 1-15 1400 Hours Of Work Nixon sported the most decisive, i triumph today--victory over Sen-| ator John F. Kennedy in Indiana. | But, as votes seeped in from Tuesday's balloting in the Dis- rict of Columbia and Ohio, other| aspiring presidential candidates counted victories too. | Senator Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota won his first Demo-| cratic primary in the light-voting District of Columbia. And, as ex- pected, Kennedy won all Ohio's| delegates to the Democratic na-| tional convéntion. Nixon appar-| ently took all the Republican del-| |egates in that state. | | In two non-presidential primary | ies the results focused on Jasves) more than personalities. States-| |rights candidates led in Ala-| bama's primary for Democratic presidential electors. In Florida, | both a states-rights man and a er _ Days Permits LOSES ALERT BATTLE *Unrealistic' civil defence alert yesterday. | . Police said most arrested were | BROUGHAM (Special) objectors to nuclear tests and Reeve J. Sherman Scott, of Pick- warn --AP Wirephoto |i 0 Township, speaking on the | {building reports for April, which| {amounted to an estimated value| lof $1,270,500 for 31 permits, de-| rided the figure as 'unrealistic "| He said that permits to date in 1960 'amounted to $2,175,700 For | the comparable period in 1959 they amounted to $735,732. He | said that this year's permits in-| |leluded four shopping centres |"More than ever will be built," he added. He said that the per-| honeymoon yacht mits were taken out "to keep | steamed majestically up the|over pages to reports of the wed- Bhead of he iv I) evn Thames early today and an- ding preparations. iki ® Be ort] chored in a city bright with flow-| The last of the princess' eight | wil 'make a welcome addition to New York police carry off unidentified woman who was arrested in city hall park for refusing to take shelter in the 3 NEW SWIMSUITS Yacht Awaits Margaret, Tony Lo | n today was in a fever of e nent. Newspapers gave LONDON (AP) Princess Margaret's virtually assured of election in November. OUTSTRIPPED KENNEDY | In Indiana, Nixon piled up a huge Republican popular vote, outpolling Kennedy's Democratic vote by a good margin. With returns from 3,665 of the state's 4,261 polls, Nixon had 3: 503 votes and Kennedy had 28 9986 votes. Thruston B. Morton, Republican national chairman, called Nixon's vote a 'tremendous upset viec-|? tory." Kennedy supporters, how-|§ i ever, said their man had shown 3 he could win the state in the No- vember election. In the District of Columbia, Humphrey had a decisive edge over Senator Wayne Morse of Or- egon in the Democratic presiden- tial preference vote. This 70-foot totem pole will be | But a Democrat unlisted on the| gent to Ottawa from Victoria, ballot, Adlai Stevenson, also showed he had support in the cap- ital. A slate of convention dele- gates pledged to him held second place behind the Humphrey slate, The Republicans had no presiden- tial preference ballot. HOSPITAL DRIVE RESULTS GOOD With the Oshawa General Hospital building fund cam- paign in its third day, cam- paign officials said that results so far are good. 'Campaign officials point ou? that there is no door-to-door canvass in con- nection with the building cam coroner's jury Tuesday criticized paign. All donations to the |, t' orzaniized supervision" campaign are being made | lack of organ a dis through payroll deduction, by |at the Ontario Hospital here in a mail, and business canvass. [ruling on the death of a five-year- There has not been, and will lold retarded boy. not be, a door-to-door collec- . i Harvey Collin tion of funds for the hospital, | The jury found 'Harvey {e {Lyons died of injuries received TOTEM POLE = | B.C. for installation outside the | new Canadian Scout headquar- | ters. The big totem will 'be | moved on two flat cars. --CP Wirephoto 'Supervision Lack In Boy's Death ORILLIA (CP) -- A five-man ers and bustling with prepara, young bridesmaids went Nesday | township funds. | April 13 or earlier. Fri- . ; HE ine Tae The royal yacht Britaonig. twas Catherine 'de Vesci, Arm-| gleaming a a refurbishing,|strong-Jones' niece. She has been| waited in the shadow of the grim|iil and looked pale and shy, but| old Tower of London to take Mar-lher mother, Viscountess de garet and Antony Armstrong -|Vesci, said she will be welll Jones aboard for a Caribbean|enough for the wedding. cruise after their wedding. Although the marriage is only Into the royal suitcases went|tliree days away, there still has| three new swimsuits for the prin-|been no announcement o | cess, all one-piece creations, one whether the Queen will give Mar- of them royal blue with detach-|garet's, husband a title. Court able straps circles point out that unless he is Some of the honeymoon lug- made an earl, marquess or the|patch that hinted strongly at gage already is aboard the Bri-|like, any child of the marriage prearrangement, the Common- tannia would be a commoner--plain Mr. 3 ' + or Miss Armstrong-Jones. | wealth prime ministers have hit ROYAL BALL TONIGHT msi i toe sa ------ jon a typical Commonwealth solu- British society and visitors here tion of the controversial apar- for the wedding prepared mag-| Police Hold Youth |theid issue. nificent gowns for the glittering | After a brief and amicable de- ball the Queen will give tonight In Stabbing Death {bate, they decided Tuesday to at Buckingham Palace for her |keep the question of South Af- On Apar By ED SIMON Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON (CP)--With a dis- |In informal discussions with Ex- ternal Affairs Minister Eric Ww. early belie T S, e no power to call one of their number to account for its domestic policies. PMs Compromise | conference agenda and take it up "Evidence showed that no hos- staf members were-present during a fight between the boy and six-year-old Daniel Campbell * in the playroom. h d It was the second time in as i el many days the Campbell boy had injured the Lyons boy, officials At the same time, Tuesday's|said. Efforts to keep them apart brief debate broke new ground were hampered by overcrowded {by bringing the conduct of ajconditions." Commonwealth member before] Evidence showed the fight be- the conference, The point was|tween the boys took place during |quietly emphasized when thela change of the five-person shift prime ministers issued an un-|and staff members were all oc- leupied in other pl 5 | Mrs. Katl supervisor, arrived on 1t told of the raising of the is-|her shift nd found "Danny sue by Tunku Abdul Rahman.|Campbell holding the Lyons boy prime "minister of Malaya, which|whose face was all covered with ttained Commonwealth m e m-|blood." Bessiup in 1938. [BRAIN INJURED Rahman expressed the hope( pr Anthony Barkauskas, pro- | ; |precedented opening-day commu- inique largely devoted to the South African debate. elich, night a NATO Powers Warn Russia ISTANBUL (AP)--The Atlantic| powers today warned Russia tothe ministerial meeting of the 1alt attacks on individual mem |Central Treaty Organization, bers of their alliance. Otherwise,| American State Secretary Chris- hey said, there can be no peace-|tian Herter and Britain's Foreign ful coexistence, Secretary Selwyn Lloyd were The final communique of the|given a similar report by leaders NATO council of foreign minis-{0f Iran, located on Russia's crs said the Soviet Union's|southern flank. propaganda efforts to "discredit"| The NATO communique said of West Germany and other allied|all this: states threaten the alliance as a| "While desiring a true interna- vhole and are inconsistent with|tional detente (relaxation), the a real improvement of interna-|Atlantic alliance cannot be satis- tional relations. |fied with a formula of 'peaceful | This was the central theme of coexistence' under cover of which s continue to be made on members of the al- Only 'last week in Tehran, a: |the statement issued at the|att windup of the three-day meeting |indiv of statesmen of the 15 - power|liarce. North Atlantic Treaty Organiza-| '"Detente, like the peace, is in- tion. |divisible In their closed sessions the| The effect of this warning was ministers heard first-hand ac-|{to put the Russians on notice, 12 counts from the delegates of West |days before the Big Four summit Germany and Greece of the|talk Paris, that they cannot psychological and political pres-|pick and choose countries and re- sures Moscow has been building|gions of the world with which al s in Annual vacation period for most production workers at Gen- eral Motors of Canada's Oshawa plants will be the two-week per- icd beginning August 1st, it was announce. today. In departments which cannot be completely closed for the two-week period, satisfactory ar- rangements will be made by supervision for employees to take their vacations, the an- nouncement said. Qualification for vacation pay is 1400 hours of work in the va- cation year, which ends on June 30. Company-paid vacation per- jods are 40 hours pay for em- ployees with one but less than three years seniority; 60 hours pay for employees with three but less than five years seniority; 80 hours pay for five but less than 10 years seniority; 100 hours seniority. up against their governments. |they mean to play fair. pay for 10 but less than 15 years seniority; "and 120 hours pay for| employees with 15 or more years Vacation pay is calculated on the basis of the employee's aver- Qualification For Pay pay period in which he worked and which erded prior te June 30, The maority of about 13,000 employees will take their vaca tion at this time. Of these 2500 are office employees. All the of. fice employees will not be able to go at once, as offices continue to function during this period. Even though most of the plant will be closed down, a certain number of plant employees will probably also be required to work and take their vacation at ap. other time. Feeder plants in the Oshawa area have been waiting for the GM announcement before. decid- ing on their vacation times. ¥ probable that most will follow the GM example. : A spokesman for Fittings Lid. said the plant will close down for the first two weeks in August; the same as in other years. Duplate Ltd., Houdaille Indus- tries, Coulter Mfg., etc., all said they had heen waiting for the GM announcement. They will ans nounce their vacation periods age straight time rate for the last later this week. i morning. A runaway car smash- ed his Tuesday evening sending glass W. Ruttle of Oshawa is shown examining his shattered win- dow at 72 Westmount St, this living room window flying through the room. Luck- ily no one was in the room at the time. Mr. Ruttle was forced to take his family to a motel "A CLOSE CALL FOR HOME-OWNER for the night. The car had been parked on the street and ap- parently slipped out of gear. --Oshawa Times Photo, that an opportunity would - be|yineial pathologist, said the Ly- found for the prime ministers to|,ng bov died SGV ral hours after talk about South Africa's racial|ihe fight of a brain injury. He discrimination - while they were|gaid a depression on the back of in London. But, significantly, he the boy's y wd could have been made no demand for inclusion of | suffered three or four days be- the item on the agenda. | fore death, That left the way open for | Ai 9 [ The jury ruled that "there is |Louw to invite his colleagues to|apparently a lack of organized {take the matter up with him in-| supervision which should be cor- Commonwealth formally. Then the conference rected as soon as the provincial price increases, |quickly turned its attention to a|minister of health carries out {less-controversial discussion of plans to dlleviate overcrowded international affairs. |conditions now existing." em rome EE rms ncgpes j : | © he saw A on rs The ball will launch a three.|for Questioning in the stabbing d from Montreal. |new problems without departing BOWMANVILLE (Staff) told them someone had been in conrt d himself lodged Police Ch 3 rd R. Kitney| gue Chief Kitney said wh him dow but said he came to court x would he able to go to work," day whirl of parties and official| death of Alexander Bakalis in an functions marking the royal wed. | Uptown Toronto apartment Tues- ; said Bakalis died of mul-|from the basic ground rules un- tiple stab wounds apparently after|der Which it operates. An Oshawa man, Allan Grant Gil-|killed more. 42, 221 Ritson road south in the rs cells He wa ight into court told the court escorting Magistrate R. B 'nto the the accused staggering ar the st: he thought h Chief Ki was in session, the 'see how my partner (charged in family court with assault) was Gilmore said ~~ CITY - EMERGF™"Y younger sister and the ex-photo- : {day night. The decision was an example ding of the decade. « g i, Police identified the man, in his®f how the flexible Common- a knife duel. Exclusion of apartheid from Police found Bakalis' body after [the agenda reaffirmed the basic (fon of East Beach, Bow-|, ma vho staggered into and fined $50 nd costs, or one month, on ond charge of court room he turr 1 noticed the accused staggering on the fal! dawn them. He sent OPP Con- stab's Ja Ricard to see Gil yelling and swear ng and could be heard all over tow going to make out. "We're supposed to paint the La PHONE NUNMRERS POLICE RA 5-1133 Se eS te ox-photo- TORONTO (CP) -- Police. said rica's racial policies off their | wealth structure adapts itself to Oshawa Man a man picked up in suburban|principle that cou Tuesday morning to public intoxica'ion since Febru- steps leading to the downstairs more. '~ his' (PC 'Ricard hall, where court is held Olympia Restaurant tomorrow FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 minster Abbey |tcday they' are holding a youth as Joseph Normandin,| Fined $50 ine [North York with a badly cut hand /members hav "see partner made out ary 16. public washrooms. fon) Gi!» Gimore admitted he was drunk night and I was wondering if we| HOSPITAL RA 38-2211 §D - UAW, LOCAL 22 the. Oshawa tal 'building cam- ) esented a swelled by $500 | cheque for $500 to 7. D. Thom- y night. At a brief cere- | on, MPP, a member of the of * hall, the la- ol 222 Wo- mony in. the 1 dies of the UA men's Auxiliary ( 11 : were Tuesda 2 VJOMEN'S AUXILIARY GIVES TO .. id ( , and Mrs. Alice Reardon, president of the WA. Mr. thomas, right, accepts the cheque --Oshawa Times Photo, | hospital board. In the picture | taken during the presentation | are, left to right: Mrs, Stanley, financial secrc Mrs. Mary Tugger, vice-presi- | v 'HYDRO LAND INQUIRY Living Costs | 'Half Per Cent OTTAWA (CP) -- Widespread especially in food, pushed Canadian living {costs up by one-half of one per cent in March, the bureau of sta- tistics reported today. The consumer price index 0. counci climbed to 127.5 on April 1 from Canada and will appear Thursday [126.9 a month earlier, reversing|moraing as a witness before the la four-month downward trend |roye comniission 'investigating TORONTO (CP)--Warren Gar- diner jcompared with the four-month de: |aommission counsel Joseph Sedg: cline .of 1.4 points from the rec- ick said today. ord high of 128.3 last Nov. 1, Mr, Sedgwick said the commis- The April 1 index level, based sion had adjourned Tuesday night on 1949 prices equalling 100, com- for two days but now would meet | The bureau reported higher cause Mr. Gardiner has returned | prices in all sectors.of the con-|o Canada and will appear as : umes budet, led by a 1.3-per-cent witness." increase in food prices. | Mr. Justice G. A. McGillivray, The food index, largest €om-/the commissioner, ruled Tuesday | pondent of the consumer price 1 I commission hearings dex, rose to 120.9 from 119.4 dur-|ywould resume without testimony ig March with I EXDengve ire m Gardiner if he could not [oo a, ee ol ear P os, be subpoaened. Mr. Gardiner was |potat 3 Si i lower, 2 Dusiess trip to the United as were most imported fresh veg-" doid The commission seeks to ques- etables. ; x : | gl (tion Mi ardiner about his par! The shelter index reached al" oF 80 record level of 143.3 on April 1|id the purchase of Indian reser- . vation land from Sarnia Indians {from 142.9 a year earlier, as i 4 ee [home-ownership costs increased (by the Toronto firm of Dimen- {while rents remained unchanged. |Sional Investments Ltd. and the The March rise in living costssubsequent sale of part of that was preceded by an increase in|land by Dimensional to Ontario {industrial wages. The index of av- Hydro-Electric pow er commis. erage industrial wages and salar- (sion. The royal commission is in- {les at March 1 -- latest figure vestigating that land deal, |available -- was 175.5 compared wrlier testimony was that Mr [170.2 a' year earlier. The index js| Gardiner had been paid a com- A : . |mission of $14,000 for work done hesed on 1949 prices equalling, "yopoif of the company. hic . The royal commission origin- This wage index, computed| " Piri from a survey of firms employing| 31 adjourned for the two days more than 15 persons and cover-|" "low various lawyers time to ing a wide range of industries, [Prepare their final arguments. M | TORONTO |Sarnia was made Tuesday. | (CP)--A mpve to Toronto realtor and son of broaden the scope of a royal|inquiry without the testimony of |the chairman of the Metropolitan | commission inquiry into the pur-/W. W. Gardiner, a Toronto real | has returned to[chase of land from Indians in|estate dealer and son of Fred- Increased | Son Of Gardiner As Probe Witness A decision to proceed with the |erick G. Gardiner, chairman of Kenneth Bryden, CCF member |the Metropolitan Toronto council. of the legislature, ing, and said he would apply for a stated case. The royal commissioner said he pares with 125.4 a year earlier. cain T ur-day at 10 a.m. '"be.|Would not reconsider his rulings. |, | : Mr. Bryden said he would con- |, ult with hs lawyer about the xt step. A further legal move ~ould mean a direct application! |to Court of Appeal. TAKE BREATHER Meanwhile, the heating dian reserve adjourned until Friday. Mr. Bryden objected to: bank account of A. J. B. Gray, commissioner, time: ments of Dimensional Invest. Hydro, beyond the time when Hydro acquired title to the land: ; E: objected to |The rise of one-fifth of a point|the Sarnia Indian land purchase, |four rulings by Mr. Justice G.A. McGillivray of the Ontario Court of Appeal, presiding at the hear- into purchase by the Ontario Hydro- Electric Power Commission of by the commission to have Mr, land that formed part of an In- Gardiner appear as a witness. in Sarnia stands Commission A refusal to have produced the|orable to Mr. Gardiner, Metropolitan Toronto assessment| ppp who did land con-| dt sultant work for Dimensional i ed Mh vestments Limited in his spare | $60,000 FOR GARDINER | Mr. Gray said at Tuesday's hearing he believed Warren Gar. diner was to receive about $60, {000 commission for his part in |the Sarnia land deal, A cancelled cheque produced orday showed that the younger 'Mr. Gardiner had been paid $14,000 by Dimensional on Aug. 28, 1958. Saul Sigler, a former major shareholder in Dimen- sional, said the $14,000 was a jdows payment against commis- sion. | A subpoena was issued earlier counsel Joseph [Sedgwick seid, "We may draw some conclusions, perhaps unfav- about the fact he has pot appeared." Gardiner later was re- in Chicago and | scheduled to fly back to Toronto tonight. He is completing a busi- ness trip. A refusal to have produced the| minute book and bank state- |HIRED AS AGENT | Mr. Gray said he knew Mr, ments, which sold the land to/Gardiner had been retained as agent for Mr. Sigler and Sam |Ray, Mr. Sigler's partner in Di- ional Investments at the SAFETY MONTH SCORE BOARD represents an average of total|Béfore it adjourned the commis- wages paid. ion was told that Samuel Ray, In other sectors of the con-|President of Dimensional Invest- sumer budget, there were. scat-ments, was the only other wit tered increases in the prices of ness to be heard. Mr. Sedgwick some items of men's and wom- told the commission a medical en's clothing to push the clothing/statement that Mr, Ray is "unfit Total Tuesday Fox May Accidents 2 Injuries Fatalities Charges laid for Traffic 0 0 1 index up by .4 per cent, to 110.8/to give evidence" because of a from 110.4. strc¥e and paralytic condition, ¥ Offences >] L | |time of the purchase of 3,100 acres of the Sarnia Indian re- serve. The company paid $6,521,» 946 or about $2,200 an acre for the land. Ontario Hydro subse- quently bought 176 acres of the land from Dimensional Invest ments for $1,250,000 or about $7,000 an acre. Mr. Gray repeatedly denied Tuesday that he was to be paid $275,000 under a written agree ment for his services to D; sional. ¥

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