2 THE OSHAWA 1IMES, Mondey, May 9, 1960 re i RUSSIANS SAY top picture | is wreckage of U.S. plane shot | down during 'an espionage flight. Spectators crowd around | the wreckage. Soviet Premier Krushchev said that the pilot, -. Francis Powers, parachuted to safety and admitted that he was on a spying mission for the | US. Central Intelligence Agency. In. centre picture Pre- mier Krushchev holds up what he says is a map made by Powers, Krushchev displayed map during his speech before | Barrette, ow TRY 'PROOF OF SPYING BY 7 bo Us.' i #% | tario, four of them Guelph men coming from the lake. Provincial [Muskrat River 4 and WEEKEND ACCIDENTS Gen. Vanier | 40 Canadians Die Captures By THE CANADIAN PRESS Traffic and boating accidents were responsible for the majority of the 40 accidenfal deaths re- ported across Canada during the ; |weeke.d A Canadian Press survey from 6 p.m. local times Friday to mid night persons dead in traffic mishaps 13 drownings Quebec had nine traffic fatal ities, Ontario six, and New Bruns- wick, British Columbia and Al- berta two each. Four of Quebec's traffic deaths occurred in one accident Satur- near Cap Chat, Que. The victims were Armand sister Lucette, aud, 24, 30 10 ONTARIO DROWNINGS Ten drownings were in 18, Octave Mich- On Bay. British Columbia three drownings. Other deaths included a hunt. reported ing fatality and two falls in Que- | bec, a child hit by a train in Nova Scotia and another fall in British Columbia. A three-year- old gir] died in Delhi when a head as she was looking out. The survey includes deaths con- nected with weekend holiday ac- | tivities | The Ontario dead | Bruce Cooper, 21, Gary Free- man, 21, Richard Forszen, 27 and Don Campbell, 23, all of Katrine Station, about 50 miles believed to have arrived at the for an island in a canvas boat powered by an outhoard motor A cottager said he heard crie In Traffic, Boating | Thomas Lucas, 70, when struck by a car near Stratford Friday night. Stephen Hudson, 51, drowned | Friday night when he fell into | Lake Ontario near Toronto's Fx- hibition Park. Ronald: Fitzgerald, 32, drowned EDT Sunday showed 21|window crashed down upon Her Sunday while on a fishing trip at Trout Lake near St. Charles, 27 miles southeast of Sudbury Joyce Somers, 18, in a head-on crash between two cars Sunday near Midland. Leslie Hampton, 32, Sunday | When his car went out of control and crashed into a hydro pole in day when a car plunged off a| Guelph, presumed drowned Sat-la Toronto suburb highway into the Cap Chat River urday in Three Mile Lake at|CHILD HIT BY CAR Kenton Shroder, 3, of injuries Ouellet, 20, his|south of North Bay. The four are suffered Saturday when struck by a car in downtown London and Leandre Fournier, |ake early Saturday and set out| Gerard St. Cyr, 19, of Chapeau, |drowned Saturday night when a car in which he was a passenger lammed through a bridge on the five miles south- ao | whose boat overturned on a fish- police from Burk's Falls found | east of Pembroke | Ask Pay By KENNEDY WELLS Canadian Press Staff Writer MONTREAL (CP) -- Frank H. {ing trip 50 miles south of North an upturned boat near the island. | Railway Workers Hikes The hearings are tentati scheduled to run May 9-13, } 16-18 and May 24-31, but post- |Hall, canny veteran of scores of ponements are expected to pre- | contract disputes with Canada's vent them from winding up be- |railways, | arguing creases for almost today was to 120,000 non- begin fore the middle of June, with the] the case for pay in- | board's decision--not binding on| either party--not expected for at |operating railway employees be- least another month [fore a three - man conciliation SEEK 25 CENTS 4 ing the wage: |of the 15 unions for whom he i 4 |take up the first two days of the 25 cents an hour during the life| board. Mr. Hall's arguments for rais- S The unions are asking that the $1.77 average hourly wage of s of the members their members--all those railway | employees not actually engaged chief spokesman are expected to in running trains--be raised by hearings. Then it will be the railways' ? |turn--either to begin presenting 4 [thier own briefs or to attempt {immediate rebuttal of Mr. Hall's. GRANDMOTHER, 51, LOCKED IN STADIUM MEN'S TOILET | in a | from Tuesday WEST BROMWICH, England (AP)--Mrs. Ethel Cross is as cross as can be. She was locked lavatory. She was there to Wednesday knew she was and' nobody | there the Supreme Soviet in Moscow. In lower picture Powers, civilian pilot of the U-2 American jet plane is shown. The photo was It was a men's lavatory. And she never did get to see the second half of the soccer match So she's writing to the di- rectors of the local soccer sta- dium and sending a bill for £8 16s damages. This is not to re- compense her for the 16 hours she was locked in the toilet when the coinslot device jammed the door "It's really for my husband, | three sons and a daughter-in- law who each lost a day's wages through taking time off to search for me," explained | the 51-year-old grandmother. It happened when she went to her first soccer match Tues- day to watch her 25-year-old son Leslie play in a local match. At the interval she went to the washroom and by mis- take walked into one reserved for men. She closed the door behind her and it jammed. She heard men talking outside the door and was too embarrassed to shout for help 3 When her husband got home [clusion that the hearings before] at 10 p.m. and found she wasn't there, he reported her missing. Police searched the stadium, Even the women's powder rooms were checked--but not the gents. Mrs. Cross had lost her voice crying out for help in the empty stadium Next day, her husband led a family search party. Her 26- year-old son Ray heard a faint cry for help as he looked through the stadium. When the door to the cubicle was smashed open, Mrs. Cross was safe but tired, cold and Cross. "l never want to go to an other soccer match as long as I live," she said Rape And Vice In US. Films TORONTO States (CP) United crease . films are becoming in- viewed during the year ending war the RCN had fewer than 3, of 82 from the number contract retro- the of a two - year active to last Jan. 1 last agreement expired Included in their demands are changes in vacation rules to give three-weeks holidays to employ- ees with 10 years service rather than 15 years and four - week vacations after 20 years instead of 35 as well as other changes in working conditions But when compared with the wage demand these other issues are relatively unimportant for during the six weeks of fruitless negotiations which broke down Jan. 22 the six railways, headed by the CNR and CPR, flatly re- fused to consider any increases. The apparently 'untridgeable gulf between the two parties has produced the widespread con- when the board--set up by the depart- ment of labor after talks broke down--are little more than a necessary preliminary to govern. ment intervention, Navy Pays | Tribute To Mariners By THE CANADIAN PRESS Celebrating its © 50th A car owned by Cooper was found near the lake. Larry Douglas Doolittle, 8 drowned Friday night while swimming in a quarry pond near Hagersville, 26 miles southwest of I'amilton Allan George LeBreton, 16, when his bicycle was struck by a car Sunday near his Ottawa-area home Bonnie Libby, 1, drowned Sun- day in a creek behind her home near Golden Lake, 35 miles south of Pembroke vo» 'TRANK EXCHANGES' By KEN KELLY Canadian Press Staff Writer gressive Conservative MP for Vancouver, raised the question of |admit the Chinese Communists to | BOSTON (CP)--Cuts by Con-|the action of the House of Repre-|the UN "'under present circum-| Edmonton | By CHARLES GEREIN Canadian Press Staff Writer | EDMONTON (CP)--Governor- General Georges P. Vanier and Mme. Vanier during the weekend took a peek into the era the pioneer West dusty cowboys, white faced cattle, hucking brones and even dancing girls. It's the vice-regal couple's first official trip west, and so far the |score is tied: The Vanier captured the hearts of western- ers; the Wes! has captured the hearts of the Vaniers. I From Winnipeg to Edmonton, Gen, Vanier has let it be known | that he and his wife are finding | their tour a refreshing experi- | ence ha avi IN MODERN SETTIN While pioneer days usually | ORGANIST NIGHTLY -- 9.12 NORMAN HOWARD | HOTEL LANCASTER NS TRAVEL OSHAWA ONT FOUR SEAS [wind 4 RA. 8-6201 "i y FRIGIDAIRE AIR CONDITIONING SALES & SERVICE Fred's Refrigeration RA 5-6335 found cowboys out on the range and chorus girls in saloons and | cow palaces, these particular | ones performed for the Vaniers in a more modern setting. The cowboys were professional | performers participating in the Rodeo of Champions here, the chorus girls part of the Army Show presented in the modernis- | tic Jubilee Auditorium Saturday | night by the 19th Alberta Drag- oons F. R. BLACK, 0.D. 136 SIMCOE N. at COLBORNE THE EXAMINATION OF EYES FITTING OF CONTACT LENSES AND GLASSES CHILDREN'S VISUAL TRAINING For Appointment please call RA 3-4191 (Evenings by Appointment) U.S.Decisions Can | Influence Canada unwise to recognize Red China or gress in spending on the Bomarc |Sentatives in cutting funds for stances." missile illustrate the need for the Production of Bomarc-B, the auth the impact of its decisions in Canada, Canadian government is building United States to remember the a conference on Canadian-Ameri- can relations agreed Sunday. aircraft missile for which two bases. During off-the-record sessions, The communique sajd the {Americans "expressed the hope that the Canadian government GET THE BEST For Less At MODERN UPHOLSTERING 926'2 SIMCOE ST. N. RA 8-6451 or RA 3-4131 OSHAWA would not Canadian legislate to require shareholding in sub- The three - day conference of (the Canadians argued that this|sidiaries" of US. companies Canadian and American legisla-|5tep was taken without due re- operating in Canada. tors, businessmen and men in- gard for Canada's part in that terested in foreign relations area of continental defence called in a final communique for more opportunities for frank ex- changes on opinion on common problems. One of the chief topics dis- cussed was continental defence and the Canadian delegation, headed by Douglas Jung, Pro- Missing Boy Found Alive After 4 Day L'ASSOMPTION, Que. (CP)--- Three-year-old Jean Beauchamp, weary and wet, was found alive and comparatively well Sunday in the woods near his home, four days after he wandered out of sight of his father on the family woodlot He by the four was spotted MORE WARNING NEEDED CANADIAN REQUEST The Canadians urged that sub- sidiaries of American companies The communique said the Cana- act in every way as "good citiz- dians "suggested that more warn- {ens of Canada with Canadian in- ing of a prospective cut in Bo-| terest uppermost." mare should have been given the "It was emphasized by Ameri- Canagian government and peo- can participants that in actions e "American participants agreed that earlier notification subsidiaries be affecting Canadian American companies must would free to act in accordance with have been helpful but expressed sound business practice," the the hope that the U.S. administra-| communique said. | tion, which still supports the Bo- marc program, would seek a res- toration of funds in the Senate." Conservative MPs Maurice Allard | Besides continental defence, the| (Sherbrooke), Gordon Chown| | meetings covered American in- | vestment Arms Pa in Canada and Far {Eastern policy. There was gen- S eral agreement that it would be/George Hogan and John Gray. The Canadians at the confer- ence were Jung; Progressive | (Winnipeg), Art Smith (Cal, | South) and Eric Winkler (dey. Bruce); Toronto businessmen ct Seen Of Top Urgency OTTAWA (CP)--External Af-| anniver- Gervais brothers, all experienced fairs Minister Green, returning tion that the summit should di- Canada advanced the sugges- sary this week, the Royal Cana-|woodsmen, making a final sweep| Sunday night from a trip to Eu- (rect the 10-power East-West dis- dian Navy paid tribute Sunday t0 of their search area before giv-| rope, said Russia's shooting down armament f the merchant mariners and 1,700 sailars who died in the Battle of the Atlantic In church parades and open-air services across the nation, regu lar servicemen, veterans and cadets remembered the navy's surge into maturity in the strug- gle to keep the convoy lanes to Britain clear. Six days after Canada went to creasingly loaded with rape, [March 31, 1959. A decline in the |000 officers and men and 13 ships, premarital vice, adultery, homosexuality, horror and even abortion among |tion activity in the adolescents, the theatres branch there was of the department of travel and crease U.S. no. appreciable de- in the number of films relations, number of feature subjects may two of them training vessels violence, | be attributed to curtailed produc since third become the navy with officers and During the By 1945, it had largest allied more than 95,000 men and 400 ships taken some years ago when he |, plicity said Sunday in' its an-|submitted from British, European six-year battle, Canadian ships, was a U.S. Air Force pilot. Pow- ers resigned his Air Force Re serve Commission in 1956. The state department admitted that a high altitude U.S. jet plane made an intelligence flight over the Soviet Union, but said it was not authorized by authorities in Washington AP Wirephotos Lesage Look At Farmers MONTREAL (CP) Antonio Barrette and Liberal Leader Jean Lesage have of- fered a look at Quebec's farm picture from two different win. dows in launching their cam- paigns for the June 22 provincial elections The premier, speaking Sunday in his hometown of Joliette, 45 miles northeast of Montreal, said it is a credit to his Union Na tionale party that Quebec's agri- culture has remained a family enterprise Ninety-seven per cent of the province's farmers owned the soil they tilled. The government had spent $180,000,000 on farm credit and $35,000,000 on rural electric ity The government had helped reclaim more than 1,000,000 acres by spending $80,000,000 on drain- age works, and had created an agricultural marketing office Everything possible, said Mr Barrette, has been done to help the farming class "which this year has received more than it ever obtained up to now." LIBERAL DISAGREES Mr. Lesage, speaking at Louise- ville, 70 miles northeast of Mont- real and on a province-wide ra- dio hookup, had a different view of the agricultural situation. Premier He said the government had no agricultural program nor a single new thought for farmers since farm loans were established some years ago. In the last 15 years the num- ber of farms in the province had dropped to 118,000 from 146,000 and average farm income had slipped to $1,500 in 1958 from $1,- 830 in 1949. MODERNIZATION PLAN Mr, Lesage said the Quebec agricultural industry also needs to be modernized while retaining a family farm framework If th Liberals gain power, he said, storage, grading and mar- keting facilities for farm products would be established Mr. Barrette in his 50-minute address emphasized that his gov- ernment has no ties with Ottawa "We are independent,' he said. "We are a provincial party." HISTORIC REMINDER DERBY, England (CP) A scarlet tunic was hoisted on the flagpole of an army barracks here to commemorate the battle of Badajos in Spain in 1810. Dur ing that battle of the Peninsular Wars a British soldier hoisted a tunic after the French captured the regimental flag nual report. Director O. J the censorship of U.S. film im- ports amounted to an all - high during the last because of the trend time issued. 12 months will be reduced by about 20 dur- towards ing the year due to a combina- or Asiatic sources, Mr. Silver- Silverthorne said |thorne said. od: ; There were 477 theatre licences enemy surface ships, Canada lost |answered the fath Indications are that this|24 ships and seven torpedo boats.|searchers. Police "dramatic treatment of the more tion of factors, among which are sordid aspects of contemporary the shortage of a good product life." Unless some self done in the industry, he said, it is possible that U.S, state and |eivic bodies will institute similar I controls to those in effect in On- tario to protect the public. CAN BE HARMFUL Mr, Silverthorne said the theatres branch accepts the view |- ! younger people can suffer day for changes in the law "attacks on and threats that "positive harm' when they en- policing is vision. and the increased scope of tele- Liberty Of Press 'Under Threats' DEAUVILLE, France (Reuters) remove Newspaper owners called Sun- to alone or in company, sank 27 en- emy submarines and destroyed 42 PEARKES LAYS WREATH In Ottawa Defence Minister Pearkes placed a wreath at the National War Memorial and later took the salute at a parade ol _|naval units past the national de- fence" headquarters Mikhail Tal Chess Champ MOSCOW (Reuters) - Mikhail counter in film entertainment sit-|against the liberty of the press" Tal, a 23-year-old journalist from uations only understandable the mature mind A total of 485 films were sub- tional Federation of the French grad a de-| Press said press liberty is threat- mitted during the year, Suspended 15 Days ISTANBUL, Turkey (Reuters) |tences for some types of com- newspaper ment on court cases Milliyet has been suspended from! The federation said press free- The national daily to in France A statement issued by the Na-| over Mikhail Botvinnik of Lenin-|Chief Sylvin St. Jean of I'Assomp-| Mr. Green said Riga, Soviet Latvia, triumphed hecome the champion to chess Saturday youngest world ened by changes made in the |, he 20th century penal code last year forbidding | Turkish Newspaper magistrates, lawyers, from giving information abou judicial inquiries and preliminary yo hearings. The changes also pro- the 21st game of a two month | vide heavy fines and prison sen- duel that had been avidly fol-| and police | po t {held the title since 1948, lost the Botvinnik, who is 48 and had |24-game series when Tal drew lowed by thousands of Soviet spectators. Tal forced a draw al the 17th publishing for 15 days by the dom is threatened by 'the spread move, bringing his score for the martial law commander for pub- of seizures (of newspapers) prac-|series to 12% points to Botvin- 1 students the government Korea Milliyet, which has the second largest circulation in Turkey, is the fourth newspaper to be sus pended in the last five days. Four daily newspapers and four weeklies were closed last week. The ruling Democrat organ Zafer also was suspended today for one week for printing pictures of student demonstrations in An. kara demonstrating in Seoul against South OLD PARISH Longueuil on the south shore of he St. Lawrence near Montreal (was first settled in 1657. ishing pictures of high school tised in the most arbitrary way." nik's 8%. by the Board of Education in Tenders for Coal & Fuel Oil Sealed Tenders Marked "Tenders for Fuel" will be received Schools their for fuel for the next season. Q ities and sp: of the Board of Ed Board of Education, Oshawa, Ontario, ih. Tenders will close Wednesday, May 25th, 1960. q may be obtained at the office ucation, 179 Simcoe St, South W. GORDON BUNKER, Business Administrator. ing up the hunt. an American aircraft 'is a é committee to stop dealing in generalities and get They bundled him into blankets good illustration that there has down to 'specific issues. and rushed him back to the fam- ily farmhouse. His mother, Mrs. Aurele Beauchamp, 30, greeted him tearfully. The family has six other children "1 gave up hope four days ago." said the father, Aurele Beauchamp, 31. "I was sure he was dead." father Wednes away picking Beauchamp woodlot with his day. He strayed flowers . while Mi felled trees. 1,000 JOINED SEARCH More than 1,000 volunteers, as- sisted by police and soldiers, er's plea for said the hunt would have been abandoned if no clues had been found by Sunday night The boy was located by Adrien, Freddy, Laurent and Henri Ger- vais "lI didn't know the Gervais family until today, but we're go- got to be a disarmament agree- ment--and quickly." He said, however, in an inter- view at Uplands Airport that in- spection must go hand-in-hand with disarmament. Asked whether the destruction by rocket of the American plane high over the Urals of Russia Jean had gone to the family might prejudice the outcome of po. {the coming East-West summit | conference, Mr. Green replied: |"It certainly does not help the summit. Any increase in tension is a danger to the summit." ATTENDED WEDDING Mr. Green had been away from Canada since April 28. He at- |tended the NATO foreign minis- ters conference in Istanbul last week and Thursday flew to Lon- don where he attended the wed- ding of Princess Margaret. While in London he also con- ferred with Prime Minister Diefenbaker is attending the The suggestion was reflected in the conference communique, which said: "They (the foreign ministers) regret the unwilling- | ness which the Soviet side has so |far shown to discuss specific | practical measures of disarma- Green agreed with a re-| rter's suggestion that this was| a call to "stop beating around the bush." Two Boys Saved In Cruiser Fire | ORILLIA (CP)--Roy Leggo of |the Toronto suburb of Long Branch threw his son and an- other boy into chilly Lake Simcoe Saturday when fire destroyed a 30-foot cabin cruiser he had bought an hour before. Lory Leggo, 4, and Ross Wes- |Diefenbaker and Canadian High tenfelt, 6, were thrown to Ben. | Commissioner George Drew. Mr, Jamin j Jarvis of Orillia who jumped from the boat when a ing to be the best of friends from roo oh wealth prime ministers spark from a booster battery ig- now on," Mr. Beauchamp said They said the child was wet, conference. Saturday, Mr. Diefenbaker and |nited fumes around the fuel tank | fe NATURAL GAS IS YOUR BEST BUY HOUSE HEATING NOTHING DOWN No Payment Until September.!! Easy payments over 5 vears on monthly gas bills | $14.60 Installs complete gas forced air furnace, In- cluding labour and ma- terials to connect with nearest existing base- ment duets. monthly installs a conversion burner. most furnaces. CHANGE-OVER CAN BE DONE IN A FEW HOURS Units for all types of home heating FREE BURNER SERVICE Your Gas company does not employ door-te- door salesmen nor telephone canvassers. For Information about dealers licensed by the Ontario Fuel Board to sell and install natural = equipment call or write the Sales partment of 5938 Consumers Vas RA 3-3468 as Mr. Leggo tried to start the hungary and suffering from ex-|ny. Green attended the Football| motor. posure. Doctors said he would be Association Cup final between Mr. Leggo suffered slight burns 1 kept under observation for sev-|wolyerhampton and Blackburn. before he jumped into the 38-de- eral days and treated for ex - posure to his arms and legs "He must have walked between six and eight miles," said Police {tion, a town 15 miles north of Montreal The external affairs minister flew from London to Ottawa in an RCAF C-5 transport From the Canadian standpoint, the most im- | portant aspect of the NATO talks concerned disarmament. | LIMI Oshawa Wood Produds | READ ALL ABOUT IT... Wednesday's Paper . « . the big Open House Celebration TED gree water. The cruiser SUPPORT THE | 4 { was | HOSPITAL DRIVE! burned eut. LEAN TENDER SLICED LEAN SKINLESS WIENERS 54 SIMCOE NORTH Tuesday and Wednesday Only! Sensational Meat Features CLUB STEAKS Breakfast BACON MINCED BEEF Ib. 39. Ib. 29. Js. 51 n 29: