The Oshawa Times, 17 Jun 1960, p. 1

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WEATHER REPORT Mostly sunny Saturday and eooler, with light winds tonight. THOUGHT FOR TODAY It seems inadvisable to make a covering statement when it is easy to uncover the lie it con- ceals. fe Oshavon Sune : Class Mail . Price Not Over Authorized on Second, Clots, Mall TWENTY-TWO PAGES 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, FRIDAY, JUNE 17, 1960 stabbing | 'WE'RE READY': SEVENTH FLEET Feature | Maintain Vigil On Eisenhower mass nssault on parliament Wed- leader was stabbed today as 20,-nesday has already become a 000 students massed outside Jap-|symbol for the anti-Kishi forces. n's parliament building for new | AR against alliance RESIGNATION LIKELY with the United. States. [Kosaku Shinoda, spokesman for Kishi's ruling Liberal-Democratic {| MANILA (AP)--The giant U.S.| From Korea, the president's 7th Fleet kept an unflagging big jet will take him to Hawaii igil today, ready to meet any for several days and then on to Chinese ' Communist show of Washington, # 1 orce as President Eisenhower| Virtually the entire 7th Fleet, steamed north toward the Na-|125 warships and 500 planes, Premier Nobusuke Kishi's rul-| p10 "51 renorters he believed ing Conservatives again defiantly iyo "0omior would resign after tionalist Chinese island fostress\was on patrol to guard 'Eisen F [of Formosa. hower as he sailed through the announced they would go ahead ratification of the treat id- with ratification of the U.S.-Japan jo oa Us. Wor Mig avi defence treaty. |Japan for at least another 10| Afterward, a govern me Afra, spokesman said, elections will be| up ism inion Kishi will called at which the conservatives|,, io a BY non move," | will seek a mandate from the Shinoda added, | ocratic party and with that a Tot | . Jotaro Kawakami, a leader of of the hate will leave." | / ; 77 / / | the Socialist oppasition to the If Kishi can hold on until then, | [EE JF y Tugs Dag gdh do a e000 Japanese-American treaty, Was| ratification of the treaty will au-| . ; Bl | ard Disc ower. told Te-| mile 'voyage his route lay within stabbed in the shoulder outside a|tomatically take effect one sec: | (Sort "1 Chi ol "might 125 miles of Red China's coast- a might, |1nd alter midnight Saturday. well do something" In an at-[line pou an extreme Tr wi 2 h th si- The wound apparently was not | tempt fo Sut oh nae 4 3e pre : Fighters from the carriers VOL. 89--NO. 140 people for new laws to Rap : | ee violence. | "If Kishi goes there will be a {new leader for the Liberal-Dem- STABBED BY RIGHTIST STABBED JAP DEPUTY ON WAY .TO HOSPITAL Anti-Combine |Light Plane fatal, but Kawakami bled profus- ely. His assailant was captured and turned over to the police. Pleasant Weekend Lots Of Sunshine 1 |blighted by cancellation of his visit to Japan. Yorktown and the Ticonderoga kept a round - the - clock vigil overhead. Griffin conceded there was no There was a possibility the in- cident would become a new rally- ing point for the leftist front back- ing the riotous campaign against Kishi. The death of a girl during the evidence so far of any unusual preparations for Communist mis- |chief-making, But he added: 'W'e are ready." - NOT HAPPY Eisenhower relaxed aboard the heavy cruiser St. Paul, flagship |of the fleet, after his warm re. ception in the Philippines. He |looked weary and grim as he boarded the cruiser in Manila |Bay late Thursday night. It was TORONTO (CP)--The weather bureau today gave this weekend | 8 weather outlook for Southern On-| § tario: | Skies are cloudy and scattered showers are occurring over Southern Ontario today in the FAMILY SLAIN wake of Thursday night's elec-| Morris Tash arrived at his | Police said it was a 'clear trical storm. Clearing is forecast] Toronto home Friday, unaware | case of triple murder and sui- by this evening and abundant] when this picture was taken | cide." Neighbors said Mrs. sunshine is expected over the| t his wife had killed their | Tash had been depressed ever weekend. Afternoon temperatures ree children Mi horses | Since the jana y Sconp its | will be in the pleasant mid-seven-| "What's it all about?" he ask- |-plans to move srael, | |tles both Saturday and Sunday.| ed when he saw the crowd. ---CP Wirephoto. I et aial be was ashapby | But he could look forward to warm receptions in Formosa and South Korea. Dropping of Japan from the itinerary caused revision in the president's tour plans. Press Secretary James C. Hagerty said Eisenhower will arrive in Korea Sunday -- three days earlier than originally planned, He will spend more Would than 24 hours there instead of|the free world on the (j hie Commies Gloating LONDON (Reuters)--The Com. munist bloc today hailed the can- cellation of President Eisenhow= er's Japanese trip as a tremen. dous setback for the United States -- and pro-Western com mentators somberly agreed. The Soviet newspaper Pravda said the "American rulers are now tasting the fruits of their own poliey of aggression and dicta. tion." Brawl Erupts [Feared Lost OTTAWA (CP)--A meeting of a motion IP] Jones (PC--| At V al d'Or the Commons banking committee| Saskatoon) that the committee erupted today in charges of Con-|ask Mr. Gilbert to appear again| TRENTON (CP)--The RCAF servative "railroading" and clos-/as a witness later, at a date to i ; ; ure, and that Committee Chair-|be set by the committee. Mean.|!0day launched an intensive ar man C. A. Cathers (PC--York while, Mr. Gilbert said copies of search for a light plane carrying North) was being guided by the 275 - page document will be three persons reported overdue signals from Justice Minister distributed to all members. and perhaps down near Val d'Or Investment Fulton. The battle began when Frank in western Quebec on a flight of the Retail Merchants Associa- but still objected that all mem- early today from RCAF base at 4 in Parliament and sent to majority. tion Company of Rouyn, Que. vesting is better than a year ago, | tee members objected that Mr.|fact that only the Conservative Mothe, owner of the company, af. "occ oiation's annual meeting. | oF t All these charges by Liberal Howard (CCF--Skeena), who ob- Thursday night from Montreal, Clima e members were denied, along with tained a copy of the document T RCAF Dakot C | others that witness D. A. Gilbert Thursday night from Mr. Gilbert oars Re F Dokotats a Lan Improved tion had seen the government's bers didn't have it, suggested Trenton in an attempt to locate I Ld proposed anti-combines amend- that the issue would be settled; o twin-engine super Beechcraft] MURRAY BAY, Que. (CP)--| ey u ou evive ines before they were intro- by the committee's Conservative owned by the LaMothe Construc-| The climate for saving and in-| the committee, "A br ; » aia : o, The 90-minute fray developed oon Bi Horner (BC = Acadian Roar sald Jassenger ere Na tanger, Prosiacnt I : : when Liberal and CCF commit- Alexis Caron (L--Hull) said the|\ atively \deptified as Dan La- sition of Canadas said today at SO a 10111S11 n 0 > Gilbert, iath al .\members had access to the as-|Mr. McBroom, pilot, and a Mr. Al d 1 Mie: who Prescuted a two-page sociation. Bullies tabiasn|Reid, copilot, Bena ler, who is Senera\| WASHINGTON (CP) -- The| The state department s| Und diet to the committee Thursday, unfair. _The lane and Sons, Winnipeg, added: 8 tre of jadigtionism may raise| frankly unable to provide any| be the ry Eisenh last to turn his back had nearly com- revig he "Chinese Shells Ike's Greeting Li yp Sau dhl |GRIEVOUS PROBLEMS fi in the role of personal dip-|/debacle. - 1 lomacy. The tendency, therefore, may| But he has suffered heavily. burdensome for borrowers;| The American people, through|be to do nothing, to fall back to The friendship of Cuba has been fio Durden on uality common their representatives in Congress, Fortress America, lost to the Reds. The summit col- rather than| shares are available at realistic |Seem surprised, embarrassed and | engage in any new open sparring lapse showed the deep weak- price-earnings ratios." angered by the affront to their with the Communists at the risk /ncsses in U.S. diplomacy. And He said imponderables which | . house of value; interest rates are at attractive levels, to encourage bond buying but not to Val d' , made his airport. east in good ather . T have the floof. ssex Bast) Mr. Jones: "I you'd mind wei scent toward the business for a chan positio; Paul Martin (L--E the ge, you n. was '"'more| - anything pre. Wouldn't be in this 'Auditors Censure and, de- sented to the committee itself, and was available only to Con- servative members, "We are i i i S. I i now the pro-American govern- handicapped in a proper exam- president in being 'turned back of further U.S. losses in world from visiting Japan, | popularity. ment in Japan, a key bastion in ination of Mr. Gilbert," he said. J.W. Pickersgill (L--Bonavista- Twillingate) moved that there be committee basis of the caucus documents until all mem- bers had them. His motion was defeated when Mr. Cathers cast no questioning by members on the Arnprior Council TORONTO (CP) -- Arnprior|costs they thought were being town council has been advised to[paid by the development com- present a new private bill to the|pany. will affect the course of securities the Far East, is threatened by| prices are the ability to win and hold larger export markets and unemployment. WARNS ABOUT TINKERING In coping with these problems he urged avoidance of short-run| solutions, #'such "as artificially- Senate Restores the vote that deadlock. Later, the committee accepted broke a 10-t0-10/ Ontario legislature to sort out a "whole melee of illegality and ir- regularity"' over construction of! {local improvements, A report by two municipal af-| fairs department auditors to De-| puty Minister Lorne Cumming censured councillors for '"'com {plete and utter disregard for the | governing legislation" in its at-| tempts to provide low-cost hous-| ing. The auditors, in the report made public Thursday, said for- | mer councillors C. S. Mulvihill and J. J. Greene acted improp-| erly by voting for an agreement with Arnprior Devleopment Com- pany which they, as solicitors for the company, had prepared. The agreement would have forced 35 homeowners to Blaze In Korea Kills 40 People SEOUL, South Korea (AP)-- The newspaper Tonga Ilbo re- ported today 40 persons are dead or missing, 70 are injured and 40,000 are homeless after a fire that destroyed the entire market area of Taegu. Damage to the important rail centre 55 miles northwest of Pusan was estimated at $8,000, 000. Police said a hot pressing iron ignited chemical material in a pay been The improvements included) water mains, sewers, roads and| sidewalks. low interest rates or inflationary increases in the money supply A which create more problems than SOUGHT PROVINCIAL BILL [they solve. Council last January asked the| Mr. Alexander's comments legislature to pass a bill ratifying| Were contained in a text made the disputed agreement after the|available to the press in advance courts had quashed a bylaw|of delivery. aimed at ratification. Municipal Truck, Car Affairs Minister Warrender vet- oed the bill and ordered the audit. Auditors F. G. Blake and C. W. Yates recommended a new bill to provide for borrowing money for part of the work, issuing de- bentures for other work and cov- ering street gravelling costs in| the 1961 general purposes levy. A bylaw covering part of the Collision | WASHINGTON (CP)--Adding more than a billion dollars to the | figure approved by the House of Representatives, the Senate has |voted $40,514,897,000 to maintain the nation's military strength during the next year, Included was a provision for $294,000,000 to cover the cost of 12 Bomarc-B missile bases, which the House had voted to elimtate. Two of the bases were to be lo- cated in Canada. at North Bay, Ont., and Mont Laurier, Que., and two in the Pacific Northwest, providing some protection for| southern British Columbia. | Kills Three P"TERBOROUGH (CP)-- work was given first and second readings after construction had {changes made by its appropria- |tions committee and added an- Bomarc Spending voted, and nearly $1,250,000,000 above President Eisenhower's| budget requests. are larger because the Senate re- stored numerous multi - million | dollar slashes ordered by the House, accepted other House in-| creases, many additions of its own. centred around Senate approval| truths. the Bomarc of $293,000,000 to build another hig attack aircraft carrier for navy. . | e se h ok defence debate Thursday that) The Senate approved all By use lag locked ot America-is still the world's great. | mob action. Eisenhower's reputation is at stake. He has only a half-year to go before stepping down from "of- fice, It may be only natural for| him to call it a day, to be con-! tent to bask in the light of Amer-| ica: daulation rather than seek| prestige in the larger light of world opinion. State Secretiry Christian A. [Herter warned of a possible re- | emergence of American isolation- ism in an interview two months ago. He observed a growing ten- dency towards national compla- cency; an unwillingness to deal with responsibilities that alli- |ances bring; a tendency to drift items of difference rather than face unpleasant Actually the money differences and then tacked on Major program and | | SENATORIAL HINT the| This could be seen in the way |some senators argued during a place when he is on the Nationale ist Chinese stronghold of For. mosa. The broadcast raised to a fever pitch Communist China's denun- ciation of Eisenhower's Far East ern journey. TOKYO (CP)--Communist Chi- nese guns bombarded Quemoy today and Peking Radio said the action was intended to display "contempt and scorn" for Presi- dent Eisenhower, now on his way ta visit Formosa, 110 miles to the east of the Nationalist-held off- shore island. Big guns in Fukien province on the C inf mh ainiond q "GOD OF PLAGUE" It branded Eisenhower a "god of pl " who has 'crossed up at 8 p.m. local time on Que- moy as well as the smaller na- tionalist islands of Little Quemoy and the Tan Islets, the broadcast said. It was an odd-numbered day of the month, meaning that Peking from the east side of the Pacific to its west side." 'Waves of opposition have risen everywhere it has been an- nounced he will visit," the broad- cast said. "Eisenhower has been Jeqjarod persona non grata by e cour J 1 was sticking to its self-i d schedule of shooting at the off- shore islands only on such days. Today's announcement of the "The reputation of U.S. imper- ialism stinks more and more." A New China News Agency b t heard here declared: qd firing to greet Eisenh an even-numbered day. WARNED TO TAKE COVER Peking Radio said that today shift the money to other military | est power, spiritually and econ-|and again Sunday "a demonstra- tion of arms against the United omit- ted mention of firing on Saturday, "This decision of ours is solely to make a demonstration against United States imperialism . . . for your safety, advance notice is hereby given." The Communists have been shelling Quemoy sporadically on completed, the report| Three' persons died in the shat-| 000,000 i r d-| hardware. {omically, and that it could buy s s | tered Oe of their car he FI3% D000, in Sook Send Some of the increases above world respect simply by a further Statse--- shelling to weloome and day when it skidded on wet pave-| money bill 85 to 0 Thursday night. |the president's requests already|build-up in American military see off' Eisenhower--wil he Sou, ment and crashed into a truck| With more than 100 differences |have approval of both houses. | strength. . ducted atthe Quemoy front. loaded with cattle. to reconcile, a Senate - House| One such item is $105:000,000 to| The time may be.ripe for Can-|Inhabitants were warned to take The dead: driver Robert Joseph conference committee will be|finance the present manpower ada's Prime Minister Diefen. cover. : Heffernan, 26, of nearby Douro|given the task of working out a|strength of the army. national baker to push ahead with his bid The president is scheduled to Township, his cousin, Leo Heffer-|final figure, subject to final ap-|8uard, now 400,000 and army re-|for a North Atlantic summit and arrive off Formosa at 9 a.m. Sat- 1 Ss f n- | serves at 300,000. The administra-|to seek greater diplomatic con-|urday and leave at 10:10 a.m nan, 23, of Peterborough, and prova! by both houses of Con-|S¢ ) | € Christopher Doherty, 19, of| gress. [tion proposed a 10 per cent cut. sultation among the 15 NATO|Sunday Thus the bulk of the an- Storm Again Batters Ontario's Southwest Pe Set napend ui coo "mn "eB rw Boi SEY YiRe of li By THE CANADIAN PRESS .| Provincial Police reported five] The storm, a squall front, rainstorm on Highway 7 on the Southwestern Ontario, an area or six barns flattened between pushed by a cold front crossed | eastern outskirts of the city. The C li 4 $22,000 - in local odd-numbered days of the month for 20 months in accordance with a self-proclaimed partial cease- fire. Presumably the broadcast meant that the barrages would be heavier than the 10 to 60 or 70 shells usually fired by the Red guns a few miles away on the Communist-held mainland. shop manufacturing straw hats. improvement ' stated beginning to feel like the poor Sarnia and Petrolia, 14 miles to Michigan into Ontario, spread |¢ar careered sideways into the stepchild of nature, was battered the southeast. rain and thunder storms as far|front of the truck and was so by a violent storm Thursday| Hydro lines were down in sev- east as Toronto and the Muskoka badly smashed it took police and night for the second time in six eral areas and many communi- area. ambulance workers more than days. lies were temporarily without| Clearing weather was forecast half an hour to extricate the Heavy rains and wind s|power, A Hydro spokesman-~said | for this afternoon with sunny con-| 1es. smashed into the Sarnia and|six high - tension towers were! ditions Saturday. Truck driver Ernest Werry, 53, Windsor-Detroit areas, uprooting knocked over in the Forest area, trees, knocking down hydro wires/'25 miles northwest of Sarnia. In recent days from two to four|of Enniskillen, north of Oshawa, and flooding some areas. Wind and rain damage to crops, barns and hydro installations was estimated in millions of dollars, An official of the department of agriculture estimated damage to Lambton county crops would amount to more than $1,000,000. Lambton county residents re- ported seeing two and possibly three twisters. Sarnia, heaviest hit by the storm, suffered through a similar outburst of nature last weekend Three planes were overturned at Sarnia airport when the storm struck there about 7 p.m. Thurs- day. One was ripped loose from a half-inch steel mooring cable, tossed 120 feet and destroyed. CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3.2211 a | In Windsor the storm caused Windsor district. causing 'flooding, set off burglar alarms, bad flooding and injuring crops, sparked fires and injured at least|especially the onion crops in the one person. In 17 minutes the|Erieau Marsh where growers Windsor fire department ans- said the loss could run to $250,000. wered nine calls. ; Across the river in Detroit some (unhurt. inches of rain had fallen in Hd his load of 11 calves escaped| Both Legs It was the first triple traffic 3 fatality in Peterborough's history| PICKERING (Staff)--A motor- and the first fatal accident of the cyclist, 19, was critically injured year. |when in collision with a truck at : the intersection of Bréck road (and Highway No. 2 at 5 p.m. power failures struck several sub- urbs and Woodward, a main thor- oughfare, was flooded to a depth of 18 inches in places. LATE NEWS FLASHES | | Thursday. In Oshawa General Hospital is Richard LePointe, 3 Spadina oad, Toronto, Doctors said one CANOE EMPTY In Marine City, feared a 16.vear-old boy' om the St. Clair river in a canoe may | have drowned. His canoe was | found empty. About 500 homes in St. Thomas area were blacked out by the {storm and London was deluged with an inch of rain in a single hour. One subway was flooded and one suburb was without power The storm sprawled from Georgian Bay. to Lake Michigan, bringing a potpourri of thunder- storms, rain, hail and high winds. Winds through southwestern Ontario ranged about the 60 mile lan hour mark, Magistrate F Canada's automotive industry. 4 Mich.. firemen Three Assault Charges Dismissed S. Ebbs dismissed charges of assault oc- casioning bodily harm against three members of the College Park Seventh-Day Adventist Church today. He reserved de- cision on the charge against Alpha McPherson, Townline Rd., a deacon of the church, until June 27. The charges against McPherson, Rev. D. L. Michael, Dr. A. E. King, and Stanley Hartwig, all officers of the church, were laid by J. T, Milton Smith, a former member of the church. Auto Industry Leaders In Ottawa OTTAWA (CP) -- The Big Four of Canada's automotive industry today discussed their problems with Prime Minister Diefenbaker. After a 45-minutes session, the delegation went on to see Finance Minister Fleming. They made no comment after the meeting with Mr. Diefenbaker. It was understood they delivered a formal letter outlinin {leg wouid have to be amputated |and probably both legs. The youth suffered other injuries. He was thrown 40 feet after the im- pact. His condition is fair, Driver of the truck was Ray- mond Thomas Clark, RR 3, Brooklin. He has been charged with careless driving. Police said that Clark, who was east- cound had stopped to make a Jefthand turn north on Brock road. LePointe was westbound and he crashed in the front end of the truck. The motorcycle skidded 85 feet on its side after the impact. Sergeant Peter Hollywood of| the Pickering township police investigated, g major problems facing \ \ ed Parkwood Thursday after- ONTARIO PUBLISHERS VISIT PARKWOOD" Members of the Ontario Pro- | noon as guests of Col. R. S. vincial Daily Newspapers As- | McLaughlin, With Col. Me- sociation, in Oshawa for their | Laughlin above are Brian two-day summer meeting, visit- Shellon, publisher of the Sarnia Chpadian Observer, shaking hatids with E. H. Walker, presi- aent of General Motors of Can- ada, and on the right Jack Grainger, publisher of the North Bay Nugget. Thursday night the m8 Were guests of The Oshawa Times at a dinner at which Labor Minister Mich. ael Starr spoke. For the report on Mr. Starr's speech see page od ~Oshawa Times, Photo.

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