The Oshawa Times, 7 Jun 1960, p. 1

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om pt THOUGHT FOR TODAY Many a person is too busy to- morrow that he's too tired to work today. ¢ Oshavoe Gone WEATHER REPORT Sunny with little change ia temperature, light winds today and Wednesday. VOL. 89--NO. 131 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, TUESDAY, JUNE 7, 1960 10m Mail ig BiB gy Ri EIGHTEEN PAGES ONE FOR HIS SIDE Premier Robert I. Stanfield | fax South riding where Attor- smiles as he hands his ballot A ney-General Donahoe is seeking to the returning officer in Hali- | re-election in today's Nova Bribe To Switch Liberal Charge QUEBEC (CP)--"We promisesaid he did noi know and had to de our part so that the present not dealt with the company. electoral campaign may be . . Mr. Pelletier said that later two exempt of violations, frauds, |individuals gave him six $100 malicious insinuations, and alcoholic beverages." Mr. Lesage produced a photo each signed. | Premier Barrette and Liberal static copy of the cheque. = Leader Jean he had advised Mr. Pelletier, oy e. and keep the living in -apartments stores in the main street vere evacuated as a precaution- arv measure violence bills, | OLL BRIDGE INQUIRY FADES IN FINAL SPAT Parley Resumed On Disarmament GENEVA delegate Frederick Eaton today | promised 'lengthy and serious consideration" for the new Soviet disarmament plan presented at the 10-power disarmament con- - ference. ww Zorin rose to present his coun- try's new three-stage plan in what restrained manner." that goals or invective." FIVE-WEEK RECESS The delegates assembled under 4 the chairmanship of Li.-Gen "8 4 E. L. M. Burns of Canada after a recess of more than five weeks. a The talks broke up in deadlock hy Woe » | April 29 amid hopes for directives that never came from the abor- tive summit meeting in Paris. | Conference sources said Zorin | Scotia provincial election. | made only a passing reference to 3 y the summit breakdown during his (CP Wirephoto) 35-minute presentation. ait Afterward Eaton took the floor again briefly to say recrimina- tions over the summit were use- less and the disarmament negoti- ations have taken on even more importance following the Paris failure. Zorin said the new Russian plan | took into consideration the French | views regarding the liquidation of vehicles for nuclear attack by moving this aspect from the third On Water phase of the original plan into By FRANCISCO QUINTANA VALDIVIA, Chile (Reutets)--A pk 0BOSES JOINT STUDY / small, tired army of engineers 'Tye Soviet Union now proposes and soldiers waged a frantic hat "joint studies should be ul bagtle against time and water|dertaken of the measures for the here 'today er tdiseontimi amc, Or (hed ak Their enemy was more than ture of nuclear, chemical and 600,000,000 gallons of water pre-{bacteriological weapons" for im- cariously dammed up in. five plementation in the second stage, nearby lakes as a result of the he said. south Chile earthquakes which ~ oa locked their normal outlets last - Fly-Bitten Convicts Surrender bulldozers and other tolls to dig canals and open up other outlets SAULT STE. MARIE, Mich. (AP)--Three mosquito-bitten con- through which the water can be drained off before it smashes victs, free for only a day after escaping from a prison camp, Tired Army In Battle -- through its banks and roars down the valley to destroy this already. quake-ripped city Valdivia's inhabitants have been camping out on the high ground of surrounding hills. Bad weather Monday delayed plans to evacuate hundreds of women and children by sea. » | today. Housing Ideas | The three, armed and described |" . as dangerous, were confronted Given Toronto Monday by three officers. They surrendered after a tense mo- TCRONTO (CP)--A civic hous.| ment and a warning shot by ing expert tcday called on Tor- police. onto to tear down the few hun- dred rundown dwellings remain- ing .n downiown Toronto's indus- triai area to stop the flight of in- dustry to the suburbs. David B. Mansur, stepping down as chairman of Metropoli- tan Toronto's housing authority, | suggested mere family dwelling units be built and public housing developments be spotted through. out the suburbs. The former president of Cen- tral Mortgage and Housing Cor- poration said that the residential heartland of Toronto is not as crowded as the city has been led to believe, quamenon prison near Paradise, Mich. Police said they bound two guards, slugging and threatening the life of one, then dashed away in a stolen car. They broke in into cottages themselves with a rifle, shotgun and four hunting knives, police said. Officers combed the area and two state policemen, Carl Berg and Fred Grecco, and game warden Wagoner Weinert discov- 'ered the three Monday > (CP)--United States, Disarmamept of conventional forces and arms had been trans- ferred to the second stage of the, Soviet plan, as it was clear that these forces could not play a decisive role by themselves. All conventional weapons re- Eaton gave the assurance even |leased should be destroyed during| « before Soviet delegate Valerian this stage and controls would be | introduced, Zorin said. Zorin said that in the past the| * : rces d was "a West always had argued at great| gy 4 ES Hoyas id vas E wa 4 + |lines which had scheduled | length about the necessity of con-| [trols in any disarmament pro-| gram. In the new Russian plan the readiness of the Soviet Union to have controls with disarma- ment has been clearly shown, he said. 100 Treated For Smoke | In Subway | NEW YORK (AP)--At least 100 persons were believed overcome by smoke after fire broke out to- {day in the east side IRT subway |line just south of Grand Central | Terminal. The fire stalled a number of |ecommuter-packed subway trains [in the tunnel. Acrid smoke filled {the subway and billowed up {through gratings into the streets| to evacu:| {An emergency bal "was "sot up on 42nd Street,Yopposite Grand {Central Terminal} All of the first 'passengers re-| moved appeared tb have suffered | from smoke inhalation. | | Many men and women received oxygen as they lay on sidewalks. | { Five ambulances and fire and | police emergency equipment went into action as did the Bellevue) Hospital Disaster Unit. | Doubt Anything To Be Achieved By ARCH MacKENZIE ets, Montreal Maisonneuve-Rose- Canadian Press Staff Writer |mount, protested that they had expected to be able to question OTTAWA (CP)--The Commons a bridge official today as well as investigation of Montreal toll Associate Defence Minister ws (bridge operations was adjourned pierre Seivigny. . |indefinitely today, probably for| - | keeps. | RECOMMENDED JOBS | The investigatitn died as it had| Mr, Sevigny is one of the Con- {lived--in a prolonged wrangle. |servatije MPs who had recom- | Conducting the investigation | mended men for. the position of |was the standing committee ono] collectors on Jacques Cartier railways, canals and telegraph prigge, its | i | i {| Mr. Denis suggested that per- nd meeting logay, But Gerda haps politics--apparently refer- « SEIN (J SA0E Ive ring to Quebec's June 22 provin- {moved the motion that the com- cial election--might have some- {mittee adjourn its investigation. thing to do with the decision to It might well have done so a,c off the Commons committee PM Seeks Ideas On Educ KINGSTON (CP)--Prime Min- = ----"|faced a handful of new charges ister Diefenbaker called on the sary "a greater consultation be-|to Royal Society of Canada Monday night for suggestions in extend-| university training to men women in underdeveloped coutries | "There is nothing in my opin-| lion that will do more good than| The convicts escaped Sunday money expended for purposes of tary requirements, how military| Kishi also ordered the govern- from a trusty camp at the Tah-|providing for exchange scholar- requirements could be co-ordin-| assistance. will pay ships and technical There is nothing that greater dividends." He said he had suggested a Commonwealth' scholarships scheme in 1958. And this fall the| Tahquamenon State Park about first students, 200 of 250 of them, explained to the uncommited na-|Eisenhower. | 25 miles west of here, arming would begin studies in "Camada-itians which today view our activ- The need to help underde- veloped countries was created |partly by the expanding world| population -- it would double within 40 years--and as a means of maintaining ramparts against the advance of communism. | Recent developments in FEast- sh law ig REGINA (CP) -- Saskatche- wan's CCF government, in office for 16 years, stakes its future in Wednesday's general election on a proposal to establish a com pulsory, prepaid plan for medical i care. ago Premier Douglas heralded the an during a six-week cam gn as the main issue on which socialist party will stand or log Opposition to any type of state I ste medicine 'was voiced by the Saskatchewan College of Physi cians and Surgeons, a profe organization represet 5 the province's 900 doctors opposition while medical what onal conference to campaign for elec-| The Libera: chief said Mr. Be.| become increasingly heated |statement saying that "because| The pledge was part of alof the differences --®%, opinion eration of Sacred Heart Leagues, concerning my Liberal political a Catholic lay organization. It activities 1 nave decided to stop Cardinal Leger, Archbishop of til there is more discipline in the Montreal. party " headed for a press conference fore a packed hall, Premier Bar- where he demanded the resigna-|rette brushed off as a "hoax" a D. Begin from the cabinet and jary was committed at the office from the post ot chief organizer of Opposition House Leader CLAIMS $3,800 PAID Ture In Quebec City : Mr. Lesage distributed to re I arreite denied that there sworn statement by Honore Pel- Be Produced a declaration Which letier of St. Pacome, Que., stat- Said was Sworg to by Emile ing he received $3,800 to quit the Liberal party orice a in Kamouraska riding in 1956, 25 Forced To Flee said in the statement that on| me the amount I would accept to change parties and become a RIDGETOWN, Ont (CP)-- Twenty-five persons were evac- The statement said that : other meeting, Mr. Begin gave eariy today when a fire broke out from Automotive Products Com- 20 miles east of Chatham pany of Montreal. Mr. Pelletier' The) blaze, which burned part and an adjoining vacant building, vas orought under control by fire- Cause of the fire and estimate of S . damage have not been deter- urvivor People above party officials are certain V toria busingssman Cecil Re: in dense bush 65 miles northwest of here but fear he may have| suffered in the accident They said Monday killed his business partner, Cec Rhodes, 44, on the Nitimat Lake The men disappeared on a fish ing 'trip nine days "On Sunday we found Ra ngs camera almost half a mile from pl from a branch on a windf log his with the strap wrapped around a fall was a place in the leave somebody had made a bed mud and moss for more thar miles from the w k before tried to find a river which wo lead him to salt tion June 22 in a duel which has/gin had Mi. Pelletier sign a declaration sponsored by the Fed- which exist in my constituency was supported by Paul - Emile working for the Liberal party un- After signing, Mr. Lesage Meanwhile, in Sorel, Que. be- tion of Colonization Minister J.|Liberal statement that a burg- of the Union Nationale party Georges Lapalme at the legisla- porters photostatic. copies of had been a theft or a burglary. Be aupre, clerk in Mr. Lapalme's Mr. Pelletier, Liberal candidate May 16, 1960, Mr. Begin "asked| Ridgetown Blaze member of the Union Mationale.' an- uated from their apartments Mr. Pelletier a cheque for $3,200 on the main sireet of this town, m---- of a three-storey hardware store Fear Crash men fiom eight departments. mined VICTORIA (CP) ings, 45, survived a plane died from exposure or injuries| walked away from the cra mountainside Searcher Ken Cessford the crash scene. It was hanging branch to hold it. Under the Searchers followed footprints : n petered out. Raw gs apparently ged west coast Id three politica water on the the Vancouver criticizing plan, was of couldn on the major Gee said j hat nay fo Ro member the al Leader CCF Thatcher of Parlia main issue Sask althoug p li le be sen CITY EMERGENCY stchcven i PHONE NUMBERS _ jcovirived ts voice and by its close association with Ea {'anada labo me id vhether agricultural chewar to be ¢ 0 be dominated ch he voice said ha zed its lead POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 PLEDGE pay e P re e Conserv: P Acreage ( Martin Pederson empi ed agriculture, They criticized cy» PROVINCIAL ELECTIONS Douglas Versus Doctors the policie agricultural |it formed Canada's first socialist acreage government in 1944 up to| A total of 221 candidates, a full slate by each of the four main ins a parties plus three independent government's and promised payments to farmers of $100 From leader Social Credit and Martin Kelln, came promise to develop natural re-|and two Communists, will contest ources by private enterprise 54 seats. A late spring breakup and establish a debt-free govern-|forced deferment until June 29 of ment voting in the northern riding of The - general election will be Athabaska the CCS party's fourth test since| About 515,000 persons, an in First To Vote By DON HOYT Canadian Press Staff HALIFAX (CP today in the elections of Liberal government were brought to an end by the Con servatives. The Conservatives won 24 of the 43 legislature seats vith 49. per cent the 327,000 votes cast. The Liberals received could 48 the popular vote I'he The CCF, with one and three the 43. candidates Writer Nova Scotians first four scheduled oted of provincial month 400.000 eli 121 Con each had e field, the CCF 34 and there Indepent of The ible voters per cent of and 18 seats won from candidate: ( e choose ervative seat per cent of voles STANDS ON RECORD Premieq voters va one Four women were trying to be the first Stanfield to sit in the offered Nova Scotia legisla his government's record on provincial and in the field im of matter tederal-provin coupled good 1o public h a planned pro Vork based pon good | the "prov services, | per the « ate voted in rent 1956 ector years mprove ince's when 23 {mould the CCF party in the de- the it |crease of 5000 from the 1956 election, are eligible to vote. Saskatchewan has a population of 900,000. The CCF won 36 of 53 seats in the 1956 election. The Liberals took 14 and Social Credit three Redistribution added two seats, giving the new legislature 55 seats MEDICAL CARE PLAN Premier Douglas, 56-year-old |Baptist minister who helped pression days of the 1930s, said {month ago," said Mr. Baldwin. investigation |He said he doubted anything|™ 5 "=" | more can be done, at this time at walls ius denied by Mb, Baide least. ARs , : + | The vote to adjourn was 16 | ON] leave tie conmilice 3 Jae 5, with the two Liberals present, THe committee lias other Work {one CCF and two Conservatives before it | forming the opposition. > i | FACES CHARGES . or i |P 1--1st add--Doubt Anything " no - The committee was bearing | Federation THEY SAY THEY'LL MARRY down on operations of Jacques | Cartier Bridge and also studying Nero entertainer Sam my | five-foot-seven acresss, said | Victoria Bridge, operated by the| T st Vote Davis Jr., 34, and Swedish | they would wed after her di- [CNR. More than 20 former toll | e movie actress, Mai Britt, 24, | vorce from Eddie Gregson be- | collectors on Jacques Cartier| pose :n London Hotel after an- | comes final Sept. 28. {Eridge ase re are ord I | . nouncing they plan to marry. | (AP Wirephoto via radio from |' R's tes. am a ivr a |into toll collecting irregularities. | The five-foot-six-inch Davis and | London). | This investigation sprung pon n alc | the fact that revenues jump q i : last September when toll collect-| (Cp) ~The West Indies - fodorn unwda 1 OW i l ing machines replaced humans. ition, a group of Caribbean islands In bucking the move to shut|pelq together mainly by a come wy down the committee for now,| mon desire to become free of 4 : Liberals Azellus Denis, Montreal! 4 ' S : 4 3 biggest and wealthiest member, TOKYO (AP) -- Radical stu-|way sitdown might be employed is to remain within thé fold. dents today threatened a sitdown|' 'depending on the circum- Drop Gas Bombs Hon. Norman Manley, prime strike on the runways of Tokyo's|stance . minister of Jamaica, has an- International Airport June 19 in| Premier Nobusuke Kishi dis- On African Area nounced that a referendum will an effort to block the arrival offcussed the students' threat at a| : |be held in 1961 to decide whether President Eisenhower for a four-\meeing with public safety and] JOHANNESBURG (AP)--South|the island is to remain within the day state visit. |army leaders and the labor min- African police were reported to- federation, officially brought into A spokesman for a pro-Com-|isters. A spokesman said "strong day to be using aircraft and heli-| being in 1958. munist factior of the Zengakuren action' would be taken if neces. | copters to drop tear gas bombs| wr Manley did not immedi Student Federation said the: run- sary, including barring all traffic[on a rioting mob of 300 Negroes atley set a date for the referen- ---- from the airport before the|in Lusukisiki area, near the bor-\qum. His announcement was American president's arrival. [gers of Natal and the Cape Prov-| made 17 hours after Sir Alexane Beth Kishi and Foreign Minis- | . !der Bustamante, hard-hitting vets ter Aiichiro Fujiyama again re-| The - Johannesburg Afrikaans of many a To {jected demands from the Social- ahernonn newspaper Die Vader-| po ° ist' and Communist parties, the and said reports: of serious | cal scrap, disclosed he was i A d leftist students and leftist labor|riots" in the area are reaching resigning as opposition leader to a 1011 1 uniens that Eisenhower's visit be| Durban but that no official con-|lead a fight for Jamaica's seces- cancelled or postponed as an ex-|firmation is available. |sion from federation. West relations had made neces-|pression of Japanese opposition the new United States-Japan tween nations joined together in|military security treaty. the North Atlantic Treaty Organ-| Fujiyama told a press confer- ization. We must reconsider ence that any Japanese proposal NATO's future." to suspend Eisenhower's trip It. had become necessary to|"would be a stain on our na-| § study how the responsibility of |tiona! honor . . . and would dam-| § NATO would develop, what age Japanese prestige all over changes could be made in mili-|the world." A ment and police forces to take ated with political objectives and [steps to stop leftist demonstra- what could be done to make sure|tjons Lefore the American Em- progress in military co ordination (hassy. He appealed to news- was not discounted by economic|p ner publishers to support the or political rivalries. |government in its efforts to en-| "How can NATO's purpose be/sure a friendly welcome for | to cross Machinists' lis government will put into ef fect the compulsory prepaid plan for medical care if his party gets a1 per cent of the popular vote The CCF received 45.2 per cent | of the vote in 1956 when. only the Liberal and Social Credit parties had enough candidates to form a government, The Conservatives ran only nine candidates pared with 54 this time The government nounced details of plan but the said must be compulsory, prepaid, | universal in admin stered hy a body answerable to com- nol an medical has is care premier coverage, the wernment and acceptable to doctors and the public Once operating. he the plan aid, patients bor, anytime, anywhere, can go to any do where today ities with suspicion?" the prime public sentiment to force dissolu-| sary because by 1980 nuclear|the Diet gave their resignations to destroy the world. 8 the past, our northern areas to the US.S.R." LONDON (CP)--Prince Philip) tude from apparent friendliness|United States. He will arrive in , . " y wid 4 Jovian psychological theories to 2nd the English-Speaking i PICKETS AT VANDENBERG BASE L] [J 3 cording to this theory, the way spend a day in Toronto and go to break down a dog is to apply on from there fo open the British I'l e Tipp es : [) . feed it, forget it, ring bells, flash| He is due back in London Sat- hin 1t lights, so ultimately the dog will urday for the annual trooping the Union pickel today at bases le. The Atlas could still Cape Canaveral, Fla, berg Air Fore se, Calif., i . a WASHINGTON (AP) -- State Secretary Christian Herter berg Air Force Base, Calif, the Warren AI'B, Wyo., and Offutt But the strike, by a compar- i . relations committee that despite demonstrations in Japan i i) ombar-| "gi loman AFB. N.M., General Dynamics = Corporation, work Macmillan In Oslo For Trade Talks us sites. A tieup 'of a majority of the Macmillan and Norwegian Premier Einar Gerhardsen will seek ation Machinists. How- ists' walkout In an effort to whip up enough minister asked. ltion, the 125-member Socialist| ' He said disarmament is neces-|/minority in the lower house of| bombs will have been developed Monday to party chairman Ine- to the point that will enable them |jiro Asanuma. The time had come for Canada Vi * T C d to "again offer, as we have in 1sit 0 ana a | - La | inspection provided that similar By Prince Philip | i and reciprocal action is taken by | Mr, Diefenbaker suggested that|left by plane today for 8 cruel : recent Russian changes in atti- four-day visit to Canada a to hostility suggested the So-|Ottawa tonight and aliend 8 Joi - i viets were trying to apply Pav- dinner of the Pilgrims Society| international relations. there. ¥ 3 Mr. Diefenbaker said: "Ac-| After a day in Ottawa he will affirmative and negative stimuli|Exhibition in New York on Fri- in turn--be nice and kind or cold, day go all to pieces trying to make color ceremony at Buckingham head or tail of what is going on." Palace SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP) --irefused } lines virtually picket lines: {halted activiiy Vandenberg AFB, whose war that test and launch the Atlas, ready pads and gantries are the United Slates' only "opera-|ocafed on a beach 160 miles tional long-range U.S. missil north of Los Angeles. . | be fired the At- Herter Would Not Postpone Visit in an emergercy from Vanden-/jantic missile range. 4 only base with combat-ready|, said today President Eisenhower should go ahead with his |A¢1"¢ facilities "AFB Neb, where Atlas launch plans to visit Japan June 19. Herter told the Senate foreign | y 1 pad: are near completion tn 4 Auk g : ! ans atively few key te ch nicians|, ay 3c involved against the visit 'under existing circumstances, the president's gainst the Convair division of ocai issues are involved: plans ought to remain unchanged The strike, first major has stopped or crippled the con- stoppage in the aircraft-missile struction of new Atlas launching industry, has serious overtones. (AP) ite Pri inister Mac an arris 4 n Od) of wr _= wh visit Mitister Mamiian are The strike was called at mid-|industry's plants could result if ! ; Dupes 0 ANDOTIAMN irade nhs t Sunday by the International other strikes follow the Machin- to avoid an all-out trade war between Western Europe's al economic nigh ways ¥ a two r Question 200 On Office Entry (C1 me ever, another 25,000 workers at| The union asks a 14-cent hourly plants here which make the big we boost aud fringe benefits. sile voted to go on working! The Machinists rejected as inad- large-scale "strikes are equate Convair's offer 11- cent hourly raise and a three-cent FIVE B AFFECTED cost-of-living increase. The wage 5 These five bases were tied up scale now ranges from $1.79 to |when many other union workers,$3.40. blocs m because QUEBE( too cost I question Provincial police today announced they 200 persons {in the week lature offices of Opposition Leader Georg connection with end entry of the leg Lapalme.

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