Johnson, duri North Carol ndon B. the Sen. 1 mee of Tues- dy afd briefly Kenn They met just day, Sen John F ON PARLIAMENT HILL ina Democr Angeles, the Ins Election Costs Worry Mem By DON HANRIG HT proposal several Canadian Press Staff Writer i tur OTTAWA (CP)-T yroblems of federal elect pondered in ti day. One conclr costs too r vista 'some & possibi! ist swear to , someth {ur RGES INQU IRY REPEALS ACT In effect , the 1 ion before e debate| 8 ates and their Some expenses should be met i fro-- public funds, Mr. Pickers- gill said. He descri bed th t ; necessarily a Liberal party .t/but 'as one "I hold perso | very strongly." Reduction of penses was '"'one that si mpl) y must Hospital me! mber 5 0 K MP Rejected by t tee was a instead i ff campaign of the g be done If named by h the most votes in the preceding election and the clerk by the party with the second most votes. TURN IT DOWN Turned down in committee, the ay night at tempt ul By LEO LeBLANC Canadian Press Staff Writer Defeat was not imexpected | QUEBEC (CP) Provincial When the former Liberal govern- health authorities meeting ment faced 2 lar Conserva- -| throughout this with fed- Armed Forces Manpower Cut OTTAWA (CP) -- The gov ment may try to reduce d spending further by manpo cuts in the armed forces civilian staff of the defence de-| Mr. Pearkes Is said fo be op- partment. | posed to any manpower reduc- Reliable sources said Tuesday ticis in the armed forces though the government, possibly over he has been able to cut his the objections of Defence Minis- | civilian staff by about 5,000 in ter Pearkes, has ordered the de-/the last three years, ineluding fence department to survey the 1500 this year. effects of manpower reductions He said in reply to a quest ranging from five to 20 per cent. |by Harold Winch, CCF MP for There now are about 188,500 Vanceuver East, in the Commons employees of the defence depart-| | defence committee last week: men* -- 119,000 servicemen and] "My own firm conviction is 49.500 civilians--who are paid athat to cut down the Canadian| total of some $660,000,000 aonu -| Army as vou suggest would not ally. provide the degree of security A five-per-cent manpower cut|that this country should ext in the department would loplin the event of nuclear attac ahout 8,500 from the payroll. Any|The army has about 48,000 p ent likely would fall more heavil y| sonnel, the RCAF 51,000 and the on administrative staffs than on navy 20,000 combat forces. [cur BUDGET LIKE A BOMB | . The government cut the The government. order to con-| fence budget this year to $1,596 duct the survey fell like a bomb|000,000 fram $1,695.000,000 in 1959- among defence planners They|60, a drop of $99,000,000. have held that the armed forces| The slash need more instead of fewer men| funds for new to carry out the services' as- ment. Defence authorities said 'it signed obs. {is hard to see how. these funds| "or instance, officers have sald/ can be cut any further. Reduc- the army has only about one-|tions, if they were to be made,| quarter of the soldiers it needs would have to be achieved|; to carry out its eivil delence role| through manpower cuts. properly | One reason for the manpower| The RCAF soon will have to survey is id to be the desire| find about 1,500 more per ment to grant the to man seven new heavy .radar|armed a pay Increase stations. | without The navy has already had tolbudget ficial opposition. are veel mothballs te for the -iput warships into rovide the mar Tr vessels eoming and| yards. force ars ago, are that the elec- «| "VICIOUS" +| Daily newspapers chars Some ir ion bors niain- in thi resentat Ss cou ive gov |case. st 1 over campaign money. have been rumors go- the Liberals are ible collecting elec y. I'm glad to hear that y be a little more dir- s indicate.' the CCF party d to being able next federal election | more money than it has had the past said much of the rising ¢ gn expense is created by Cit tizens were get h spot radio} advertisements, 'big s" in newspapers and use| The result was the competi! tion 'cancels itself out." th RATES of "his main objections: ge electim candidates a national advertising % times a local ad rate. rticularly vicious" hing should be done to rate adju 1stmenit. action also to bring abou 1t shorter elec- » Mr. One ake n cam- Mr .Pickersgill said he hopes day will come when cam. broadcasting will be a matter and it will S| since their should be| Fisher said: {INTERPRETING THE NEWS Brutal By Sov By DAVID OANCIA Canadian Press Staff Writer Nikita Khrushchev's latest ver- bal attack on the United States and Britain appears to mark menacing new phase in Com- munist tactics. It seems to be a reflection of Kremlin thinking that the Iron Curtain bloc at last is more powerful than the 'decadent Signs iets capitalist societies' and that the| time is ripe for brutal jabbing| operations that could shatter the free world's will to remain afunited. Observers in London are gen- erally agreed that the Soviet leader clearly means to exploit the case of the RB-47 reconnais- sance aircraft to whip up anti- American feeling, to discredit Daughter Of Writer J Strangled LOS ANGELES (AP)--The 19-| ar-old co-ed daughter of the | screenwriter who wrote Act of| {Murder was strangled with her {own slacks Tuesday on the cam- {pus of City College. | 8¢ President Eisenhower and to di vide the Western alliance. EFFECT LOST The effect of the stiff Ameri- can protest to the Russians may be lost in the hullabaloo over the fact that this plane was shot down uncomfortably near Soviet 'erritorial waters, | The conclusion drawn is that] the West may have suffered yet| another severe setback as a re- sult of the loss of this American aircraft two months after the) capture of the U-2 spy plane well inside Soviet borders. The attitude in the British capi- tal is that this is a time for] Western nations to keep cool and | Police answering a '"'woman | screaming" call found the body {of Nina Thoeren. Within 15 ih utes, police arrested a 35-hear- \old Negro who, they said, ad- f senato s came with (mi itted the brutal slaying. Booked | a : for the state's 87 voles, {on suspicion of murder is ex- --AP Wir photo | |convict Raymond Celmmons, a nl 'Trial Of 3 | lun | . Both {mor told them he offered the [pretty brunette a ride and she he did not rape her, only tried [to kiss her. When she fled, he grabbed her, ripped off her cloth- {ing and strangled her with the| i slacks. Police arrested Clemmons as rear the scene. | BOUNCING BALL CASE They are questioning him about the unsolved "bouncing Ball" slayings of seven Los Angeles women, mostly elderly. The so-called "bouncing ball" killer got his name from the fact | that a witness at the scene of one slaying saw the killer, a Ne- CHATHAM (CP)--The trial of} arrested in Montreal| with abdu a 15- Dresden rl was ad-| Tuesday il Thursday crown concluded its e men id charged ear-old | journed when the held in custody here arrest, are Michele| Rampino, 21, Leonard Luvara 23 and Carman Scibetta, 19. Lorrie Sc hr am disappeared June 8 while she and two other girls were on a shopping errand in nearby Dresden. She was {found three days later in Hamil-| ton. The men are charged under Section 235 of the Criminal Code which makes it an offence to take, or cause to be taken from| the possession or against the will| of her parents, any female under| the age of 1 In court a say the girl sald) she was pulled into the front seat | of a car owned by Rampino and driven off. She spent the nights in the car on country roads and |in a shack near Wallaceburg, be- |fore arriving in Hamilton, she said. In Hamilton, she said, Luvera| talked to her about going to Montreal with him. Then she left the trio and telephoned her par- | ents. U The men, left. not regard Clemmons as a likely suspect in the "ball" murders. Miss Thoeren's father, Robert for The Prowler. He died Vienna a few years ago, police sald. DEMONSTRATION OF TIRE THEFT TORONTO - (CP) Sub- urban North York school board officials are still trying to think of something to tell a bus dealer who left a 54- pa-eenger school bus in the b « parking lot during the weekend as a demonstrafion model. y When members of the board came for a second look at the bus Monday they found it neatly raised on blocks, in the middle of the lot. All six tires had been removed. nder cross - examination by defence counsel S. L. Clunis, the 1 said she did pot scream for when the men stopped at service stations and a restaurant. | no er be possi ble for anyone to] ase time." The present sys arging election cand "an advantage to him a the longest purse." Scheme "In Quebec Jan. 1 eral health representatives in ef- rts to estat a hospital in. surance plap in Quebec by Jan.| 1, 1861, Premier Lesage an- nounced Tuesday He told a pre 59 conference his | government wants hospital insu ar-| ance and not study committees. | He announced that the commit- | te > set up by the Union Nationale administration a few months ago| > study hospital insurance has| been disbanded " T committee, he said, was] not doing any ¢ di ful to estab. ance plan 1¢ com mi tee mem! r staff alone 0 $ 250,000 a year, ** Quebec is the only nationale hospital insurance plan. Mr. Lesage lone rights of the prov-| and particular characteris- | Quebec's hospital setup in establishing a plan. Premier Lesage announced a | treasury hoard has been set up to control the government's spending, similar to the ome in Ottawa. It would guard against what he called the abuses of the Union Nationale government spending methods, The treasury er, Mines Minister Paul Trade Minister Andre.Rous- and Lands Minister Bona 1 Arsenanlt. Control on spending will be kept before and after payments are made. Mr Lesage said two! an civil servants have been| ged with the task of setting up a system of controls, They |will be assisted by technical ad- visers. Said Mr. Lesage: *'One may imagine the spending orgy of the | Union Nationale government in connection with the election cam pai gn when one notes a sum of $15,777 , 575 spent during the 1959- 60 fiscal' year remained unpaid nereasing the defence until the current fiscal year went/cause her mother was dead, and into effect." said, his govern- ment will take into account the hoard members| are Premier Lesage, also finance) amounted | province which does not participate in the| MRS. LYLE 'PAMPERED' Orphan Vixen Made House Pet FORT WILLIAM (CP) Dic- mans, it was decided to allow tionaries consider Rusty a vixen,|the Buchanans to keep her until but to her godparents, she's just|she is big enough to stay at an orphan fox. |Chippewa Park zoo. Acquired by Lyle Buchanan| "I guess Rusty didn't hove about the middle of May just a|sense enough to run," Mr. Bu- | tew days after birth, Rusty now|chanan said. |leads the pampered life of allows were going to shoot her be- household favorite |cause they didn't know what to She ies television, romvnsido with her. So I brought her on the , and grows fat home." on dog and vanilla ice| For the first few days of her cream domestic existence she was shy Rusty was found by workersiand nervous. when they noticed a dead fox by| 'Now she gets into everything, the side of a road. One cublincluding my hair," Mr. Bu- scampered into the woods when the men approachef but Rusty stayed with her dead mother. Ordinarily such animals are returned to the woods, hut be- BUCHANAN fur food he had ejected Rusty from the Inside of the television set. "She likes crawling in there, as well as hiding behind the chesterfield, then racing out she had been handled by hu-|around the room." Lieut, C. W. Crumly said Clem- | | finally accepted. He insisted that) {hey saw him getting into his car| gro, bouncing a rubber ball as he Officers said, however, they do| |'T. Thoeren, also wrote the script in| "Anyway the fel-|* chanan said a few minutes after |i to keep their powder dry. Western observers can {conclude that Khrushchev | deadly sincere when he says that| "our supreme aim is to make |socialism, as practised by the |Soviet Union, the economic sys- tem of the whole world." The threats, the outbursts, offers of aid, the withdrawal of | | aid, the wooing of new and un- committed nations are the new | weapons in the new conflict. Against the dedicated, indoc- trinated and disciplined on- slaught, the West's best hope y be to remain united and to | eh policies and a philos-| |ophy that will appeal to the un-| committed in Asia and Africa as| more desirable than monolithic | | communism. only | the | D RUG & CARPET SALES Broadloom wall to wall, Rugs, Carpets, Stair Runes. ~ Installation by our own mechanic 174 Mary Street RA 8-4681 VF Vv VN GEORGE CUNNINGHAM Bus: RA 5-6564 Res: RA 5-9464 69 KING EAST o FAMILY SECURITY e MORTGAGE INSURANCE eo EDUCATIONAL PLANS eo PENSION AND GROUP PLANS THE MUTUAL IEE OF CANADA ESTABLISHED 1869 LL FOR MORE VACATION GO POWER - of Canada Ltd. Your Vacation Cash is Ready! $50 to $1500 TODAY ! RA 86283 2914 Simcoe St. 8. 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