WEATHER REPORT Sunny with little change in temperature today and Tuesday, winds light Tuesday. THOUGHT POR TODAY + A psychologist says that women ; give ties to men as an expression of love. That's the love that passeth understanding, 8 or Second Cioms Mal 4 OSHAWA, MONDAY, JUNE 6, 1940 Pa Sic EIGHTEEN PAGES How, (OTTAWA SEEKS NATO SESSION No Panic Canada To Back WINDSOR (CP)--Weary fire- mothers and their newborn 'Open Sky' Plan men from five Windsor stations babies to their homes. Two bound to have differences but be intermittent VOL. 89--NO. 130 smn Sunday night battled fire in an|women in labor were moved to administrative wing of Grace Hotel Dieu Hospital. Hospital while nurses, doctors| Fire Chief Ovila Bezaire said and volunteers rushed to move ng estimate of d could im- patients in adjoining medical | mediately be made. Damage was | wings confined mostly to the attic, used Firemen said the blaze, of un-|to store linen, cots and mat known origin, started in the cel-|tresses. : | | lar of the 40-year-old central | . wing and spread through a laun-|CITY WAS WARNED dry chute to the attic. The fire struck the overcrowded | Thick black smoke billowed Sosphdl Just Sher Je, cis u from the roof while angry flames|S'@ 180 warn crackled at the eves. The hos-|@ disaster could occur unless the pital"s 275 patients remained | ¢Y motes. Mnediely on an| calm and there were no in-|€XPansion pian { juries Dr. Henry Crassweller charged | souneil t funds on less urgent | Explosions were feared from |Counci spent he ? oxygen, piped into the wards for Projects Wile Despite yee medical purposes. Firemen and|Waiing oF tinal] a - y hospital staff quickly 'shut off would be critically 05 valves. |pital beds in the event of a disaster. | FIRE DOORS CLOSED ---- ---------- The night staff discovered the fire about 9:30 p.m. and imme- diately closed steel doors, sealing = Welfare Ideas off the busing section. i . . patients wer: vac- | a Poth > Med Salvation | Being Queried Army Hospital. Many--particul- OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis- ter Diefenbaker said today he has proposed that any new NATO heads-of-government - conference | be held in Canada. { He made the st. t in the| Commons in reporting on his visit ~ | |lo Washington Friday and Satur- day. Mr. Diefenbaker also said that : |if and when an "open skies" pro- posal is advanced in the United Nations as a means to remove the threat of surprise attack, Can- ada would join in sponsoring such a resolution. The prime minister said there is "increased urgency" for a re- examination of the capacity of] IN AGREEMENT The prime minister said he and President Eisenhower were i» agreement on the circumstances which led to the summit failure and on the current Western posi- tion with Ruesia. There should be an equilibrium between defence and a readiness to talk with the Soviet Union. ot wk MATERNITY CASES MOVED DURING FIRE : Lakeshore Slide Europeans posal first made by the U.S. pres Traps Sunbather Make Way From Congo WEST ROUGE (Staff the jacks, Trapped for nearly an hour in a rock slide Saturday evening, a To- ronto man is in Scarboro General Hospitai in serious condition with erushed pelvis and other in- juries. His right leg was mangled and amputated. Walter Stitt, 24, Jane street, Toronto, was sunbathing on the rocks south of the CNR tracks at the foot of West Rouge drive ai the lakeshore. Two compan fons, David Creelman, 2 and James McBrinn, 25. of the same| address were on top of bluffs lymg in the grass Creelman heard grinding noise and heard Stitt scream in terror. He looked down the bluff in time to see the rocks moving and his friend disappear under- cross the tracks to get to the a huge block of granite lakeshore. trapped under the | Leonard Ferguson, whe operates at the waist and hips- (a boat livery and snack bar at rescue and provided without which the huge rocks could not be moved. The rocks are a part of a loose wall along he bluffs, placed there by the CNR to prevent further erosion. The tracks pass close the brink of the bluffs. Pickering township police were called and the police boat came from Frenchman's Bay to render assistance Blood transfusions were also ordered, but were not used at the scene RESCUERS IN DANGER Constable Charles Daniels the rescue was fraught with dan- ger for the rescuers. There was the constant menace of further rock movement. The property be- longed to the CNR, but people to independence June 30. A Belgian official said there of 239 left in the colony compared with more than 100,000 a year ago. Another official said there may be even fewer now as "many left in too much of a hurry to inform the residency authori- said ties." a booked solid until the middle of August, an airline official said. being besieged with cables ask- | ing for reservations. Reports said |a stream of cars loaded to capac- {ity was leaving for Uganda and Rhodesia. LEOPOLDVILLE, Belg ia n|ridors. | Congo (Reuters)--A mass exodus of Europeans is under way as the! Congo enters the final lap toward Ww k St |are fewer than 80,000 Europeans Belgians packed their bags and Scheduled airliners and a Hundred charter flights are European-bound ships also are] {arly maternity cases were, HALIFAX (CP) -- Social wel- {moved from adjoining wards 88(¢ove leaders are beginning to smoke pushed through, the €or Luestion the effectiveness of spe- ance crews took some 15]cialized welfare agencies in deal- ----------------------"|ing with today's social problems. | social worker Eric Smit of Ottawa Amb | said today. Y | He made the statement in his| | annual report to the Canadian| {Welfare Council's family and| child welfare division. Mr. Smit is the division's executive secre-| Suggested To Industry acai en TORONTO (CP) -- Unemploy-| These newer services were ment may wel! be Canada's main needed "to meet the needs of {domestic problem in the yearsirelatively affluent people, often iminediately ahead, Walter | Gordon said today in an address to the annual meeting of the Canadian Manufacturers' Associ-| " 'More Time Asked He said there is a trend away from specialized agencies, such as child welfare services, to difficult problems as do the very| poor." Mr. Gordon--Toronto chartered accountant who headed the royal leg was horribly: mangled. Gerfuson's Beach half a mile sorncthing like tis to béwpen. The , bo FEAR NEW REGIME commission on Canada's €co- 'ment challenge to The cnusg of the dopaciures i {In Foley Hearing EISENHOWER ANSWERS ATTACKS Attacks On Ike Draw U.S. Reply WASHINGTON (AP) the increased salvos of criticism coming from Russia and Cuba. 1. Said #¥ was disgusted with Premier Khrushchev's bitter at- tacks on President Eisenhower.| Earlier, Eisenhower had said in|co - operate and not cause harm It accused Khrushchev of tfying|a talk at West Point, N.Y., that{were "most apparent." bhehev's "ill . and {United States has fired back at|of Moscow In a commencement address| the North Atlantic alliance to |deal with coming problems, After such a study at the offi- cial level, the NATO govern- ments should give early and ser- ious attention to a meeting of the heads of government such as that held in 1957 in Paris. NEEDS CONSULTATION ident at Geneva in 1955. The two leaders had discussed bilateral matters such as North American defence and trade, in- cluding the U.S. wheat surplus disposal program which could hurt Canada, especially in Latin America and Africa. The|him which has been flowing out paths of progress could not be {Sunday at the University of Notre Within a peniod of a few hours | Dame, he deplored as "ememies on a fee basis, who may have as|gaturday, the state department:|of human dignity" leaders who) "brandish angry epithets, slogans and satellites." to degrade international relations /Khx and confuse the issue of the Paris|pressions" had made the West- ence eollag era al onger than ever. 2. Protester! to Havana that the| That time he did mention the So- ed ex- There should be thorough pre- | liminary consultation in NATO so | that new lines of endeavor for the| |alliance in the year ahead could |be sketched and established. Without such consultation, new Display Of Force By U.S. Aircraft MANILA (AP)-U.S. jet fight. ers fanned out over southeast Asia today in an exercise osten- sibly planned to test the mobility of combat air units. The 120-plare operation alse was widely viewed as a show of force and a warning to the Chi. nese Communists. Air Force offie ciols said, however, that the ex- ercise was planned months ago, and was not a result of the abor- tive summit conference. opened up. Mr. Diefenbaker said his visit |to President Eisenhower is the |"kind of call one makes on a | close neighbor." The unusual warmth of the wel- come extended him and expres- sions of a desire by the US. to Canada the U.S. were Trade Invasion | | ale presents : 3 (eing undermined by the waves(the new native regime and loss |manuficiuring industries. TORONTO (CP)--Gerald Fox,|Casivo reginie was waging an in-| Viet leader by name. | of jobs | "It has been announced." he|24, of Bracebridge, has beem.re-|tense official campaign of slander| The weekend statement corumented, "that the Senate/manded to July 6 on a charge of against the United States. It said|by Secretary of State Christian proposed to set up a ittee| criminal 1 in tion | the Cuban government was trying | Herter through his department to study the problem. This is an with the March 17 traffic death/t, sow distrust and animosity|was aimed directly at Khrush- {excellent idea, but I should like|of Ottawa sports while claiming to seek fri hip chev and his "personal attempts {to see other organizations as well| Tom Foley. and understanding at vilification." It said: {address themselves to the ques-| pox's car collided with an' air- : | "All America, I am sure, | tion | port limousine ir which Foley, 38, IKE HITS BACK with ut Shares the disgust I feel at the tho | ill-te- led B 4 Pri sen ' | "Would not this be a construc-|y ac senger. Fox's attorney: President Eisenhower, a : Carrie rice |tive and useful thing for the as a passeng 5 3 mpered attacks emanating ked for more time to {naming Khrushchev, also hit . . {Canadian Manufacturers' Associ-| pare "his case. oho at the 'criticism "| from Mr. Khrushchev. . . . His TORONTO (CP) -- Most eon-|tii Canadians generally better |ation to do? If you were prepared | marks reflect credit neither on man was sumers would "blow their stack' understand the real weight of thelto undertake such a study or) CANADA'S OLDEST Hs nor on his government. | gps Killed was pinned by his chest, leg and|if they knew how much of their|!2X Durden they are carrying. series of studies jointly with the A : - By Freight By Canada Urged TORONTO (CP)--It's time for| Sales will go to the countries Suasda to San Fu Stier and the corporations whose sales- countries' foreign markets, Transport Minister Hees said to-|™€% do the most effective job in the markets of the world. To back up our salesmen, our prices and our quality must be right. Mr. Hees said he has just re- turned from Fred Birrell, who lives nearby, said Stitt showed great courage. He was conscious most of the time until a doctor arrived and| ini Stitt | | Critizing those who view Cana- |dian trade prospects with a de- featist attitude, Mr. Hees said there is a need for confidence and "a determination to go out and win for ourselves markets which others have long consid- ered to be their spy right." "Other countries don't have any reticence about invading our markets. Let's do a little invad- ing of theirs, for a change." Addressing the convention of the Canadian Manufacturers As- | sociation, the minister named de- |featism and smugness as two of |the "unwarranted and undesir- |able" lines of economic thinking in Canada. He continued: "We now have entered the pe- riod of the hard sell, and it is up to us as a people to realize this, and to utilize to the best of our ability our high qualifications in this regard. look in regard to Canada's fu- iure, 'as compared with some of the crepe hangers we have among our own people." OTTAWA (CP)--Finance Min ister Fleming was asked today to negotiate with the Japanese government for voluntary quotas on the sale of Japanese footwear in Canada. The request came from the Association of Shoe Manufactur- ers of Canada, describing itself as one of "the broadening range" of Canadian manufacturers whose domestic sales are being restricted in competition with low-wage, high-volume producers in Hong Kong and Japan. of Not realizes a a : | f > > unions w Pk Su Woe Mendnh ox ome 3 vo soy In sme 083 Sen Ne REE wrens % weld 2e evel h. t to A . € 8 Donald Pons ie Rash the hi H. 2 Evans pres dent of the played by those indirect, or hid-|------------ S------ [ ' Rt int anadian Manufacturers' Asso-iden taxes ostensibly paid by . nt On Wa To WwW k [ciation, said today in an address| some vague and faceless corpora-| | earing 5 ) 4 or Strike Halts log associations annual meet-leon but in realty paid by vem] JNG@AT 1110 KINGSTON (CP)--John Gow 5 |selves." | . Taethe - al "Far too many Canadians,"| Mr. Evans comments were| . | od Is ii Westbrook, father of 16 a il k Mr Evans stated, "'are under the|contained in a text made avail-| At 0 | 1t I] 00 ge digren was cilled early today sel alt} bra lable tn i} p ill | u in when his car was struck by a 1SS1 e or delusion that the various formsjable to the press in advance of | wes bound CNR freight drawn by of corporation taxes f 7|delivery nis M aa x CHICAGO (AP)--A wage dis-|thoce Opn oie Tales Tid eve ans president of Honey- v CALABOGIE (CP) -- Relatives 11 born to himsell and his wife three diesels. : > pute has ended after tying 'up|excise taxes. taxes on materials, (well Controls Ltd.,, Toronto, said say Bpencer Church likely won't|who died in 1927. The accident occurred at the millions of doliars in cargo along(and all' the rest t--are ajthat if employment is to be yc 1S enjoy his 110th birthday celebra-| Mr. Church, born at nearby CNR crossing about three miles Great Lakes wharves for 20 days. |jegitimate i m position which| maintained labor should join tion next Sunday as much as pre- (Grassy Bay, comes from a fam-|west of Kingston The strike of lor d be borne by any concern|with management in supporting] BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) -- Three|vious parties because his hearing|ily of 16 children. The only other| The westbound train carried the four cities officially siness to make a profi : the 'buy adian" campaign, persons suffered minor injuries| n't as good as L used to be. lone still alive his sister, Mrs. |car about a half mile from the day, when ste -Joring employees one person in a thousand|and government should give and nine others were arrested in| Church, who lives with his|Ross Burton of North Bay, crossing before it stopped. The and the International Longshore that a corporation, be-|Canadian industr adequate pro-| what police described as a near-|daughter-in-law Mrs, Randolph fuses to tell her age but is b river's body was thrown from men's Association got together nal, cannot bear|tection and encourage reased|riot at an outing of 500 motor-|Church, near this village 40 miles|lieved to be about 20 years|the vehicle. ; on a benefit package which both|;,.. should spare no ef-|population through immigration.|cyclists -- including a number|west of Ottawa is believed to be|younger than Spencer. Mir. Gow was on his way to the employers and the union re-|fent to set it across to the gen- from the Toronto area--Sunday.|Canada's oldest resident. | Still active, Mr. Church goes Work at Kingston elevator when garded as a victory eral public that these taxes, alllTHE CASE FOk TARIFFS Deputy Sheriff Harry J. Run-| His birthday is Friday and will to bed anytime between 9 p.m, [his car was struck. _ The settlement sent strikersiof them. me become a part g that Canada has|fola said the outing was on the|be celebrated quietly at home.|and 11 and gets up around noon. | i SE back to their jobs Sunday in Chi-|of the company's operating ex-|changed from an agricultural to|*"verge of riot" when he arrived |However, on Sunday a reception|He also naps a bit during the| ! iY cago, Cleveland, Buffalo and Mil-\nances and, as such, are in. an industriai economy, Mr 21 other police officers, in-|will be held at the Calabogie|day and spends some time sitting| waukee. The new contract pro- cluding five state troopers ommunity Hall when his numer-|in "his chair outside the house. | - 4 evitably reflected in the price|Evans added vides wage increases for long-\na:d by consumers "The -only non - believer left, "About 15 of them were fight-lous relatives and hundreds of | He zais well reads the local shoremen in those cities and Du- seeiné to be Ottawa which, in its ing, swinging fists and beer bot-|friends will call to congratulate paper and watches some tele-| luth, where dock workers had/INDIVIDUAL FAYS offshore bartering, seems as pre-(tles, and the rest of the crowd him {vision. His eyesight is good and| continued work under an exten We can never, I think, hopeloccupied as ever with the im-|{was looking on, milling and| Mrs. Church says he has SOME he has never worn glasses sion of the contract that expired any significant and lasting portance of every industry but|cheering," he said reservations about meeting alll Te says he doesn't smoke but May 16. moderation in taxation levels un-|the biggest The fight erupted after hose people ai the community muct have chewed "about a ton" ------ -- ---- mmm etre A pute in the outcome of a 100-yard hail lof tobacco. | £8 |drag race of the cyclists. "They ask him questions and| ; | Among those arrested on he's afraid he won't answer them|TRIED LIQUOR--ONCE ues ay ar S O 2) {charges of disorderly conduct righi because he doesn't catch| He drank liquor only once--and| : | were seven from Ontario: Adam |what they say." |got very drunk | |Rilling, 19, Leonard G. Gugins, | A ' | "I was sick for a whole day PS |22. William Goydas, 21, John R.|164 DESCENDANTS |after that and said to myself, |Graham, 18, Brian Hutton, 19, and] Family members alone Wwill|'Drink no more * and I never did ests In 4 Provinces [=== iiri:ins wor whan gin {onto" and Barry Lockhart, 21,/Church has 164 direct descend-! He says the main reason he By THE CANADIAN PRESS [taxes of home-owners '21, Clarkson, Ont ants, including six children of hte has fived so long is that he has ~ Nova Scotians vote Tuesday in|maximum of $50 to aservatives and Martina Kelln {never said a cross word to any- v ! heads Social Credit [ore the first of four provincial elec-| Thé CCF, led by Michael Mac-| The four main parties have full He also says he has had little tions in a busy election month in| Donald, contended neither old-|slates of candidates. | LA E NEWS FLASHES interest in politics. Canada. line party is offering answers to! Only two main parties, both| | "Maybe that's another reason Saskatchewan goes to the polis Scotia's problems. Mr. |with new leaders, are campaign- 1 have lived sc long." Wednesday, Quebec June 22 and MacDonald was the lone OCF ling in Quebec : : : Ne a oat member. in the last legislature. price Antonio Barrette, 61 COUIt Rejects Hearing On Bridge Premier Robert L Stanfield O/MEDICAL PLAN ISSUE seeks re-election for his Union| OTTAWA (CP) -- Montreal engineer Rothwell Grant lost Nova Scotia seeks to increase the| |, Sask tchewan, the CCF, in|Nationale party which has been| his third aftempt today to have the courts hear his claim that Progressive Conservative party's office 1 wars, stakes its future il power since 1944 the high-level bridge across the' St. Lawrence River at Corn- 24-man representation in the 43-|on one main jssue--a compulsory,| The Liberals, imder former| Wall is unsafe and in danger of collapsing. The Supreme Court seat legislature. He has cam-|prepaid medical care plan, Doc-|federal cabinet minister Jean] ©f Canada upheld a decision of the Ontaric Court of Appeal paigned mainly on his past rec- tore generally oppose it Lesage, are urging that | that the former inspector for the Sf. Lawrence Seaway ord and a program of "good The CCF held 36 se i the|*time. for 2 change" | Authority has no reasonable cause for action. po | he I1 EB . works based on goodwill for theljast Saskatchewan lature, Mr. Barrette was chosen leader ure. ; : compared with 14 for the Liberals'of his party a week after the| Lived) Lender Hewy hree for Social Credit. Prd death of Paul Sauve Jan. 2. Mr. | wid slat r , 10-pe ive Conservatives had none. Sauve, in turn, had filled the last egisia ure, of - a 10-pe tedistribution v add two seats vacancy created by the death of cent "rebate on the municipal ty the legislature, one in| Maurice Duplessis last Septem-| Regina and one in Saskatoon, for ber | otal a of 55 Be aries have named can- CITY EMERGENCY In oe north viding of didatee gle 9% al ny PHONE NUMBERS es ove ar Athabaska voting has been de-lan increase of two seats over the POLICE RA 5-1133 ferred until June 29 last legislature. No third party The three Saskatchewan oppos- has yet nominated candidates FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 SOSPITAL RA 3-2211 . ~ HE a dis-| up Nova Gray May Appeal Bank Book Order TORONTO (CP) -- Metropoli-| fee Toronto Assessment Commis- sioner A. J. B. Gray says he will discuss with his lawyer today a possible appea! of an order to Attorney-General Checks On Name " |produce his bank records before| TORONTO (CP Attorney-General Kelso Roberts said {the Say oh Durcis om today he is making an investigation of a Toronto firm using the e Sarnia lan pure 1a5e Inquiry, name Kelso-Roberts Auto Sales, Mr. Roberts indicated that if W The Ontario Court of Appeal the firm's name is false he will take steps to prevent his name |Fuied .ast weck that Mr. Gray being used in car sales advertisements. An employee of the |Must disclose his personal bank| firm said the company is owned by two persons. one named [accounts and Dimensional Invest | | Kelso and the other Roberts | ments Limited must open its rec-| {js | |ords on tlie Sarnia land deal. | | Low Rental Housing Study Urged | Norman Borins, counsel for| {Dimensional Investments Limited | OTTAWA (CP) -- A new study of subsidized rental housing '(must open its records on the Sar.| One of the first shipment of | cars are bourd for Persian for low-income families was urged today by Ottawa Controller [nia land deal | cars 'ever to leave Oshawa | Gulf ports. Watching loading Paul Tardif. Addressing the opening session of an Ontario Norman Borins, counsel for| directly for an overseas port | operations are the Mayor of housiag Sonereste, ND a said Ottawa and other cities (Dimensional, said Sunday night| is swung aboard the Dutch | Oshawa, Lyman Gifford (cen- are subsidizing slums ra than good housing through welfave |he did not think he would appeal| freighter, Ametelhoek, now | tre), E. J. Walker, president Sssistance to needy families. of the Sp, bo P a. in Osh harbor. The | and general manager of Gen- » 8 Hicks, | and he grec new 5 ic OSHAWA CARS FOR OVERSEAS eral Motors of Canada, E. J. Umphrey, vice-president and director of sales for GM (right) and the captain of the Amstels hoek, J. Vollers (left), --Oshaws Times On parties nave new leaders.!| The Union Nationale held 71| Ross Thatcher, a former CCF seats in the last legislature. Lib-| membe of Parliament, heads erals held 17 and independents | the Liberals. Martin Pederson is|three. Two seats were vacant " lleader of the Progressive Gon-!dissolution, y 7 ta a