THOUGHT FOR TODAY The only way some people thank God is in advance for they're asking for. something The Oshawa Ti me WEATHER REPORT Sunny today and Thursday with little change in temperature and light winds. VOL. 89--NO. 132 Pricé Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 1960 Authorized as Second Cioss Mall Post Office Department, Ottawa TWENTY PAGES Nova Scotians Give Support To Stanfield HALIFAX (CP) -- A strength- ened Progressive Conservative * government was returned to power in Nova Scotia Tuesday in a provincial election that brought personal defeat to Liberal leader Henry Hicks. It was an easy victory for 46- § year-old Premier Robert L. Stan- field. He had called for a man- %- date to carry Nova Scotia's case to the federal-provincial confer- ence at Ottawa next month, All } his cabinet ministers were re- elected. The result compared with the last election 1960 1956 27 24 18 1 43 Progressiv e Cons ' 87 PER CENT VOTE Preliminary figures indicated almost 87 per cent of about 400,- 000 eligible voters used their franchise. Perfect weather prob ably helped swell the record turn out, The Nova Scotia vote was the first of four provincial elections this month. Saskatchewan votes today, Quebec June 22 and New Brunswick June 27 In contrast to Mr. Stanfield who had the biggest margin of any candidate, former premier Hicks lost his Annapolis East seat to Progressive Conserva- tive Hanson T. Dowell, a lawyer and former Canadian Amateur Hockey Association president, by 14 votes. Mr. Hicks, who won the Lib eral party leadership after the death of Premier Angus L. Mac donald in 1954, said he will con- sider his political future after a weekend rest. It is believed he may resign as leader. Mr. Hicks said Tuesday night the result of a recount 'will de- cide my immediate political ca- reer." "If I don't win in the recount, 3 WARHEADS" STORAGE STANFIELD'S VICTORY SMILE Premier Stanfield, who fought the campaign chiefly on the 3'%- year record of his government and the relationship between Progressive Conservative { Strong showings and early vie- tories in industrial Cape Breton and wins in two previously-Lib eral Halifax strongholds pointed gov-| the way to a re-elected Conserv-imobilize 600,000 IN CANADA UNSETTLED Think Tke | 'Will Make Japan Trip WASHINGTON (AP)--Senator J. William Fulbright, chairman |of the United States Senate for- leign relations committee, voiced his full support today for Senate |ratification of the new U.S.-| | Japanese security treaty in ad- |vance of President Eisenhower's !visit to Japan | The Arkansas Democrat and | other members of the committee |said they are convinced Eisen- +thower will .go to Tokyo June 19 unless the Japanese government asks a delay The White House said Tuesday) "no change is contemplated" in| plans for the three-day visit. | In Tokyo, Japanese conserva- tives launched a campaign to welcomers for | ernments in Halifax and Ottawa, ative government with a bigger the president's arrival, to offset party is "gratefully thankful for the new mandate given us." He said the govern ment will "strive our hardest for the advancement of the Nova Scotia people." CCF Leader Michael MacDon ald, the only one elected out of a record 34 CCF candidates, said he is surprised his party didn't do better. The Canadian Press reported one hour and 19 minutes after polls closed that re-election of said his margin. It is only the second time since Confederation that Nova Scotia Conservatives have won two elec- tions in a row. The last time was in 1928. The CCF increased its share of the popular vote to nine per cent from its three per cent in the 1956 election, all at the expense of the Liberals, The Conserva- tives got 49 per cent of the nearly 350,000 voles cast, the same proportion as four years and I doubt if T will, then I'll be the Progressive C on se rvative ago. The Liberals share was 42 out of my legislature seat." government was indicated Prince Arrives landed at Malton air- | ..For Study Talks TORONTO (CP)--Prince Philip|dajs, He stood rigidly at atten-| suburban tion as an RCAF band played port today from Ottawa for two The Queen. days of business meetings. His Comet IV BOAC. jet air- guard and I i eraft was on schedule at 11:30 members of the diplomatic corps Association of Bri am. EDT. Greeting Prince Philip at the foot of the landing ramp were Premier Frost of Ontario, Rt.| Hon. Vincent Massey, former gov. ernor-general of Canada, and W.| M. V. Ash, president of Shell Oil Company of Canada Limited. The prince chatted briefiy with the reception party then climbed into an open car to drive into Tor onto. He is here to confer with indus trial and labor leaders on the, problem of the individual in a changing industrial environment His visit in Toronto will be with out any fanfare or formality. OTTAWA (CP) Following a relaxing overnight stay at Gov- ernment House, free of formal engagements, Prince Philip flies to Toronto today to take up the business of his brief Canadian Visit. He was to fly from Toronto to New York Thursday and will open. a British exhibition there Friday. : Philip's visit~here was strictly a courtesy one. He was. greeted at Uplands Airport by Governor- area of 240.000 square feet, he- policies and, above all, General Vanier and Prime Min- He inspected an RCAF honor| shook hands with Commonwealth mostly from countries QUIP FOR PHOTOGRAPHERS The prince, in exceptionally good humor, poked fun at photog- raphers filming his signing of the RCAF guest book. When he had finished writing, he quipped: "Another one to go in the waste basket." This apparently was a refe ence to the picture the. photog- raphers had taken. Gen. and Mme. Vanier enter tained Tuesday night at an in- formal dinner for Philip, Mr and Mrs. Diefenbaker, and a few members of the Government House staff GM Opens Massive Parts Warehouse MONTREAL (CP) -- General Motors of Canada Ltd. today opened a $3,500,000 automotive parts warehouse in the west-end subiifh of Pointe Claire. The new building, with a floor field, to, re-appraise its pricing find a comes General Motors' Quebec per cent, down from 48. y Low-Wage After Riot Defended TORONTO (CP)--K. D. Mor- ley, president of the Canadian tish Manufac- furers and Agencies, said today -lit is "'quite wrong" to attribute the difficulties of certain Cana- dian industries to imports from Britain, Europe and |called low-wage areas." "In 1959," Mr. Morley stated | "British exports to Canada (and this for a record year) totalled $596,600,000. Germany - exported $126,600,000 and Japan $102,900, sland sireraft today any anti - American demonstra-| tions. | Premier Nobusuke Kishi's Lib- eral-Democratic party and Japa-| nese business leaders joined in a "national welcome Ike commit- tee" to ensure a warm and friendly reception, Native Area Patrolled | JOHANNESBURG - (Reuters) | Police backed by armored cars| patrdil a remote native reserve in South Africa's Cape Province after clashes with tribesmen in which 30 Negroes were reported killed. Authorities covered activity in {the Pondoland reserve with a {news blackout, but one .newspa- |per. reported neavy casualties in |a "serious disturbance" follow- ing local land disputes The Durbar newspaper Vatal Mercury quoted unconfirmed re-| 'other s0-|norts as saying 25 tribesmen and mental illness, five Negro pclice officers were killed in clashes. Eight persons were reported wounded. A doctor at a hospital reserve told reporters by phone that 13 Negroes the tele were in | TWO determined. « no information on the cause of the|for STAGES OF BOMARC FIRING 'Nightmare Trend In Modern Life TORONTO (CP)-Eechnological progress may turn modern so- ciety into a nightmare of divorce addiction and the Canadian was alcoholism, drug Manufacturers' Association told Tuesday. Dr. Oswald Hall, University of Toronto sociologist, told closing sessions of the two-day annual meeting the industrialists could Accusations Come Fast sce ~~ In Quebec {television image of the consumer | QUEBEC (CP) -- Accusations father sipping his favorite beer|. ¥ esvaed % Vand mother enchanged by a new, | fle as thickly as promises Tues revolutionary detergent. day in the Quebec election cam- He said industrialists had paign. set up a new religion in| yiberal Leader Jean Lesage which cathedrals "are depart-| Hed: Premier. Antonio. Barrett ment stores and supermarkets, |®a!€ Temier Antompo, harre.e and the litany is the commercial|an 'irresponsible man" and "an | sumer what he is, and you ean 000. The grand total is $826,100,- brought in Monday with bullet change the mold in which they jingle; both offer a path of sal-|ignoramus." 00, which is barely 22 per cent of what Canada took in that year from the United States, where wages are high. "Is anybody going fo suggest seriously that -it is that 22 per cent which is doing the damage, land the more so when: one con- siders that many of the products now imported specifically from Britain are of a type not manu- | factured domestically?" Mr. Morley, general sales man- ager of Dowty Equipment Cane ada Ltd., addressed the associa- tion's annual meeting. He added: "The goal for Canada , . . is quite definitely to move in a de- termined way into the export to keep its wages on a realistic level, ister Diefenbaker, who escorted headquarters for parts, service commensurate with the pogsibili- him along a red carpet to a Trunk Murder Victim Death Cause Mystery iiss ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP) RCMP officials said today a Har bor Grace, Nfld.. woman believes the body of a young woman found in a trunk in an Argentia, Nfld., railway express office Tuesday may be her daughter Police did not reveal the name of the woman but said a son wil come here to view the body and give positive identification Meanwhile, RCMP inspector D. O. Bartram announced today that an autopsy performed on the body of the peroxide blonde woman had failed to disclose the cause of death. DETAILED EXAMINATION Inspector Bartram said vital organs will be sent immediately to the RCMP laboralory at Sack ville, N.B., for "'a detailed exam ination." He said only external and x-ray examination had been made here. Harbor Grace is about 63 miles CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3.2211 and sales. west of Argentia, a United States naval base The woman. a peroxide blonde in her 20s. was described by RCMP as five feet 1%2 inches tall and weighing about 115 pounds. She wore blue denim jeans and a blue denim shirt She wore no stockings ard no' shoes The body was discovered by Argzentia rai'way agent Thomas Donovan, a 15-year veteran rail- roader 'who said a pile of blan- kets and c'othing covered the body CONSIGNEE UNKNOWN Mr.. Donoven said he opened the trunk, marked 'Fragile hanale with care' when he de- tected an. unpleasant odor. He there was no such person in ntia as ' Mrs. Williams," to vhom the trunk was addressed Shipped from Toronto by rail May 4 the ttunk arrived at Ar- gentia, a naval base about 90 miles from here May 14, by CNR coastal poat from North Sydney, N.S. It was shipped collect with a price tag of $17.68 and weighed ou' at 170 pounds TORONTO , (CP) --1s 'there a European involved in the bizarre case of the body in the trunk? Police here worked full-time today on ascertaining this fact land other angles of the case un-|of British murders," he sald. ties of this country and no other.' covered in Argentia, Nfld., where a railway freight agent Tuesday found the body of a woman in a trunk. The trunk apparently was shipped from "Toronto. "There is no doubt we are deal- ing with murder," said Metropol- itan Toronto homicide Inspector C. H. Cooke. The description does not fit that of any woman reported missing from Toronto. Toronto police say they believe the body was prob- ably brought to Toronto from some other Ontario centre, and shipped from Toronto to Argen- tia The investigation « is compli- cated because the trunk was shipped collect and did not re- quire the sender to. sign any documents RCMP Inspector D. O. Bartram said in St. John's there is a pos- sibility t he dead woman was originally from Newfoundland and, for some bizarre reason, was returned there after her death. Toronto homicide detectives agree the case is "one of the most bizarre that has ever oc curred in the city, if it did occur here." Inspector Cook felt it showed a European influence, "Corpses and trunks were a familiar, if not frequent, feature wounds. lie declined to confirm reports of ary deaths BILL NEEDS SHOES had cast the consumer | "You have made the con- one." ' No Blacksmith So Trip Halted COALDALE, Alta. (CP)--An English nurse's cross - Canada horse and wagon trip has been interrupted because she can't "good. old blacksmith" in the heart of Canada's farming and ranching country. Such tke plight of is Miss -- Audrey Goodchild, more particu- larly her horse, Bill, and her German shepherd, Jade--a trio {which set out from Galt, Ont., in| August, 1956, in a converted milk wagon, intent on reaching Van- couver. Miss Goodchild arrived in Ta- Alta., last September and a hospital in.the southern Alberta town + Last Friday <he started the last lap o her jaunt. Just 20 milés from Taber, in Coaldale, Bill developed shoe trouble--and the trio was temporarily stymied be cau-e a too-mechanized Canadian West couldn't supply a black- smith. "It was very difficult to find anyone that would tackle the job," said Miss Goodchild. Two men finally offered help but were able to change the knobs on only three of thc shoes and gave up after struggling vainly with the fourth Miss Goodchild said Bill was fresily shod in Taber, and spe- cial knobs were screwed into the shoes to protect his feet from the hard pavement. After the 20 miles to Coaldale. the knobs needed replacing. HARD ON SHOES Bill would be a tough baby for any parent to keep .in boots. Be- fore . reaching Taber last fall, Miss Goodchild provided him with a parr--iwo pairs, rather -- of rubber shoe:. 'She said they last approximately {wo weeks on paved highway LATE NEWS FLASHES Fleming Tables Spending Estimates OTTAWA (CP) -- Furthe timates, including another $25,000,000 . a servémis, were tabled in the Commons today by finance Minister (ville, as part of their honeymoon r supplementary spending es in salaries for civil Fleming. The money for salaries was the biggest item in the supplementary estimates, which totalled $36,025,485. Tent Mystery For Provi FOREST (CP) ncial Police -- The discovery of a pitched tent, sleep- ing 'bag, air mattress and a woman's black slip on the banks of the Ausable River near here has provincial police mystified. | Since tlie tent apparently-has been empty two weeks and no one has been reported missin g, the theory that the tent's oc¢cupants were drowned has been discounted. Abducted German Lawyer Dead BONN (Reuters) Dr. Wal kidnapped by the East Germar summer of 1952, died in the Soviet ter Linse, a West Berlin lawyer 1 state security service in the Union Dec. 15, 19533, the West German Red Cross said today. Linse, then 49, was work- ing for the West Berlin anti-Communist free jurists organiza- | tion when he was struck down by two East German agents. vation, but the road is a phoney| yo iced the terms after refer- |ring to press reports quoting Mr. EDUCATION PROBLEMS . |Barretve as describing an alleged agreement. i. the. meeiinga. Dr, Peak-n at the Quebec legislature Claude T. Bissell, president of|ofiices of Libeal House Leader {the University of Toronto, Geerges Lapalme as a hoax. claimed undergraduate business np; Lesage said he believed courses were substituting tech-| : ; niques and procedures for meth-|{S0meoue entered the office last ods and idaes. Friday night seeking documents H. George De Young, president he made public in Montreal Tues- of Atlas Steels at Welland, replied (day. that business, berated a 'few| The documents dealt with a years ago for not giving enough|swory statenent by Honore Pel- university support, now was be-|letier of Si. Pacome, Que., who rated for having too much in: said he was given $3,800 to 'Fe- fluence. {sign from the Liberal party. Mr. SRT | Pelletier said in the statement [that a $3,200 cheque from Auto- mative Preducts Limited had | been given him by Colonization {Minister J. D. Begin. Newly Wed ' Bomar¢ Mishap Sparks Queries OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis-| Prime Minister Djefenbaker ter Diefenbaker indicated today has maintained that Chnada will that Canada and the United have sole control over use of the States are still negotiating an|warneads but it has not yet been agreement on storage in this | explained hew this could be done country of nuclear warheads for|in accordance with present U.S. the Bomarc anti-aircraft missile. {jaw which says American nu- Opposition Leader Pearson clear weapons must remain un- asked in the Commons whether der American control. it is the goversment's policy to| The government appeared to store nuclear warheads for the he just out of the woods on the Bomarc in Canada. |Bomare issue in the light of re- Mr. Diefenbaker said he had|norts from Washington that the nothing to add to what he 3d U.S. Senate will restore funds for said on previous occasions. The ipo w n io f before the pret storage had not teen, he Weapon iopred ot Re of : | Representatives Paul Hellyer, Liberal defence] si a critic, asked Defence Minister|" Then the New Jersey incident Pearkes for a report on the fire|occurred. Mr. Hellyer said it was in a launching shelter of a nu-|Just one more in a series of "'mis- clear-armed Bomarc on a New adveutures" which have plagued Jersey base Tuesday. The fire re-|the weapon Joased a small amount of radia-| joe TARGET DATE : The Bomarc has been under de- Mr. Pearkes said merely that : fr 5 Y 3 velopment since 1952. Canada is some damage was caused by the heduled to get 60 missiles: and 45-minute fire and that no Cana- dian personnel were involved. 35 Jounchers free from the U.S. NO INFORMATION There appeared to be a pos- - To another question by Mr. sibility that the U.S. Senate might Hellyer, the minister said he had|appropriate funds sufficient only \ the two Canadian Bomare fire, : . : | bases. This would make even , Mr. Hellyer said Tuesday night/more difficult the government's in an interview that the incident|gask in defending the 1958 de- at McGuire Air Force Base points) cision to acguire the Bomarc and up the need for a complete inves- (it is unlikely it would accept any tigation into Canadian-American|guch arrangement. plans to store nuclear warheads| : for the Bomarc in Canada. The Liberals have objected to + " ninls {the weapon on the military Government officials took some 3 ; .~1ground that ft is vulnerable te comfort in fhe fact that the fire| ; i 2 did not set off the nuclear war.|aitack on its fixed sites and on head. - {the economic ground that it is a pArd they said the Bomate waste: of money. : ases to be installed near Ni ------ EA or, Ll ohh 27 tii, Jae e., "wi aw, 4 g. centres of population. | TC (didn't feel eitigens were" | But officials - were obviously by the New Jersey hews. |disturbed over possible reper-| But Reeve John Bolton of ad- {cussions of the New Jersey in-jjoining Widdifield Township, {cident on residents of North Bay where the base is to be located, and Mont Laurier. said: "The Bomarc jeopardizes Under present plans, Canada the people ii is supposed to pro- |and the U.S. will have joint cus-|tect. Why jeopsrdize human lives |tody of the nuclear warheads with a useless piece of equip- stored in this country. ment?" Radiation Scare Started By Blaze McGUIRE AIR FORCE BASE, |news in New York newspapers, N.J. (CP)--A needle-nosed Bo-|some 80 miles to the north, and |marc-A, battle - ready with an{was of special interest in Can- |atomic. warhead in its concrete ada, where the controversial B launching pen, caught fire Tues-|version of the Bomarc is still day, touching off a radiation{earmarked as a defence weapon |scare. at two bases. The anti-aircraft missile was, The two models of the Bomare badly damaged and some radia- are similar in appearance and tion seeped out of its nuclear tip.|carrying capacity of their ware First reports were that there | heads. But the A version is pro- |was a threat of heavy radiation|pelled by liquid fuel and the |in the remote pinelands around Canadian-earmarked B by solid {the base just to the east of here,|fuel. The range of the latter is |but the United States Air Force|much longer, provided it reaches later said the radioactivity, and|the operational stage. |a slight amount at that, was con-| The A version is in operation fined to the badly damaged|at a Long Island base and Mec- launching pen, |Guire, where Tuesday's incident Investigators of the U.S. Atomic occurred. | Energy Commission, the defence| The air force said the Bomare {department and the New Jersey caught fire as it nestled unm- department of health said they attended in its concrete launch would all investigate. |ing shelter, one of 54 at this mis- The incident was top - playedisile base, Husband Drowned PICKERING (Staff) -- Word was received here today of the death by drowning of Robert Grey, 33, late Tuesday afternoon | in High Lake, 15 miles from| Huntsville, | The deceased, the son of Mr.| and Mrs. Blair Grey, of RR No. 4, Komoka, Ont., a police village near Lotion, was married last Saturday 'in the Pickering United Church by the Rev. Melville But- tars to the former Miss Mary Riley, 37, a lifelong resident of Pickering Village and an em- ployee of the Ajax Hydro Com- mission. The Greys were staying at the Lodge, near Hunts- | Limberlost trip before returning to London, where they had planned to re-| side. Full details of the tragedy were unavailable, but it was reported that the husband died after a canoe, in which he was riding with his wife, capsized tossing them into the water. Mr. Grey| |quickly disappeared from sight, | |but his wife managed to 'clifig to the canoe and then make her way to shore. Mrs. Grey wandered around lost for more than three hours after reaching shore. Arthur LeGault, 71, rests in Mrs, Grey was under sedatives a hospital at Newberry, Mich., today as Ontario Provincial Po- after surgery to repair multi- |lice. continued dragging for the ple wounds inflicted by an 'body of her husband. | angry mother bear. The elderly | SURVIVES BATTLE WITH BEAR woodsman fought off the ani- | the bear as'she was tending mal with a pocket knife. He | her two cubs. He walked a mile was bitten 2nd clawed on his | out of the woods to get to a face and lost a tooth. LeGault | hospital. Dorothy Bennet is the said he apparently surprised | nurse, --AP Wireptiote ¢ # F