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The Oshawa Times, 17 May 1960, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR Nothing improves TODAY a person's driving as much as a police car following, The Osha Sunes VOL. 89--NO. 114 OSHAWA, TUESDAY, MAY 17, 1960 Authorized os Second Ciess 'Mall Post Office , . Ottawa Lake Burst Dam At Peterbell FOLEYET, Ont. (CP)--A dam holding back Missinabi LaLke broke at dawn today and flood waters were reported rushing on the tiny railway community of] Peterbell A department of lands and for- ests report of the dam break said there was no further word from Drug Addict Treatment Plan Ahead OTTAWA (CP) -- A plan for comprehensive treatment of criminal and other narcotics ad- dicts, inside prison and out, was announced Monday by the fed- eral government The plan approved by the gov- ernment anticipates complement- ary legislation by the provinces, probably as health m res, fulfilment. Federal als will confer shortly he British Columbia government in a start on lining up such co-operation, an informant said This irformant said provinci legislation to treat non-crimin addicts is foreseen as roughly comparable to committal of men- tally-ill persons for treatment WAR ON TRAFFICKERS Harsher prison for narcotics traffickers also are rec- ommended The new line, announced by ister Fulton, is based on recom- mendations of Is of the jus- tice and nealth departments Canada has about 3,000 crim- inal addicts, convicted under fed- eral law of illegal possession of drugs. About one-third of these are always in pr n steady rotation OTHER TYPES riment lists two with t sentences n general! out Justice Min- 'the professionz! man, such as & doctor who has legal access to drugs, and the addict whose plight results from medical treat- ment The new federal plan will re quire co-operation in the main from B.C,, Ontario and Quebec, since the rest of the country has comparatively few addic Mr. Fultons announc t said the federal plan provides for treatment of addict d This was a federal res; Long - term supe community after be another phase, borne federally and provincially. A third phase would be treatment programs for addicts ve not broken any federal would be com- mitted inder pro- vincial ity $ n the release would who F low for treatment law ey Dominion Stores for 11 al |Peterbell, on the CNR main line 5 A 55 miles northwest of here. helicopter was sent to the scene| 3 but had not reported back. Foleyet is on the same CNR line 60 miles southwest of Tim- mins. Monday night a report from Peterbell said its 50 residents were moving to high ground be- cause of the log dam's weak con- dition. It was believed all were| safe LOSES CONNECTION The CNR in Toronto said its | communications with Peterbell were broken shortly after 6:10 am. EDT today. A spokesman said the last report received by the railw:.y was that flood waters were rising rapidly in the com- munity. ° Railway operations in the Peterbell area were suspended Monday night because of the flood danger WEDDING CROWDS | LEFT BIG MESS | LONDON (Reuters)--Henry Brooke, minister of housing and local government, said Monday the crowds attending Princess Margaret's May 6 wedding left a "hidoeus mass of litter." Opening an antilitter cam- paign, he added: "It is all very well to have notices saying Queen Eliza- beth Slept Here or William Pitt Lived Here buf do not leave a staring reminder that John Jones or Betty Smith ate here." | Passengers Of Missing P missing aboard a Wheeler Afr- lines Beaver plane were found Monday night about 35 miles south of Cape Hopes Advance on the northwest tip of Ungava Bay across the Hudson Strait from Baffin Island. Occupants of the plane -- two women and two men -- were safe and sound when they were found by a Murray mining company air- /-\craft piloted by Red Black. The two women were evacuated Monday night by a civilian light aircraft to Fort Chimo. The men will remain with the plane until fuel is flown in Fort Chimo is at the southern| end of Ungava Bay in northern | Quebec The plane, piloted by Fred De- Lew, was found at 7:30 p.m. Tra- velling with De Lew were Mrs, Tom Notting, wife of the Wheeler manager at Mont- Miss Shirley Smith] 29, of teacher with Airlines base rea Lockeport, N.S., a T a Cs ak TRENTON (CP)--Four persons KHRUSHCHEV AT MACMILLAN AND IKE IN GLOOM FIRST SUMMIT SNUB IN DIPLOMATIC HISTORY Russ Ends i today at 5 p.m. after two hours| " ous" intelligence flights over Rus- PRESS CONFERENCE | Anger Grips Free World LONDON (CP)--Dismay, des- pondency and anger at Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev gripped millions in the West to" day as hope for resuming the Paris summit conference all but faded away. Most newspapers put the blame squarely on the Russian premier if the Big Four heads of govern- ment pack up and go home with- out frying to solve the problems facing the divided world. The consensus was that Khrush chev's bitter words to President Eisenhower Monday were die- tated hy internal Russian polities. Just how and why was anybody's guess. British newspapers: from left to if | condemned 'Khru . is and were, gl 'even ¥ EFFECTIVE JOB The Liberal Gua # said ar done his best fo torpedo the sum- mit conference and only a re- versal of his own position can save it now." The Guardian offered two pos- site explanations of his actions: "The first is that he has lost some internal struggle in the Kremlin and has been captured by the neo-Stalinists. The second is that he has calculated that the West is 80 weak and divided that he cau screw more out of .it by bullying than he could get by genuine negotiation." The independent London Times eided "lame - duck" Eisenhower cided "lame - duck" Eisenhower was not worth negotiating with or "reactionary circles" were tem- porarily in control of American policy. "Another possibility is that Mr. Khrushchev is under strong pres- | sure from critics and--still more--in other Com- munist countries, They would ar- 4 [said Russ "has/ inside Ruséia| PARIS (AP) -- A meeting of at the only BigeHou session, eid t West: vers ended| Monday, that the Uni ; he Huse Western Poy never could accept Khrushchev's . [demands of fruitless waiting for Soviet The tough. unrelenting: Kremlin Premier Khrushchev to attend it e 'ough, ng Sremiin ise ri _|leader declared late today in a and discuss revival of the sum mit conference statement to the press that he PARIS (R P Youd on ery beh IS (Reuters)--Soviet re-|\mit meeting ni mier Khrushchev today brought condemned "the treacherous in- the summit conference to a close|cursions of American military with the announcement he would| aircraft," punish those guilty and not participate unless the United give assurances such incursions States condemned the "'treacher- would not be repeated. I [CANCEL CONFERENCE Tentative plans for Khrushchev to Hold # press conference late today have been cancelled, a So- viet spokesman said. He. said earlier the Soviet pre- |mier had considered holding a [conference in the interhational |press centre where some 3,000 {correspondents have been cover- !ing summit talks. Eisenhower promised no fur- ther. spy flights would be made but be could not accept the other |parts of the ultimatum. backed a summit meeting, said! So the first meeting of the Big Khrushchev's attack on Eisen-|Four heads of government col- hower ' "was abominable. His{lapsed, bringing down with it the statement was full of hypocrisy, hopes of the world that some violence and rash folly." |agreement might be reached on In Paris, the conservative{the three major issues--disarma- L'Aurore said jt refused to give|mest, Berlin-Germany and East- up "the last chance and to lese| West relations. ! hops." An even greater crisis may be Soctalist Le Populaire said thiat/in the offing, according fo Soviet it Khrushchev keeps to his pres. [Tots today. ent attitude "he will bear the ed-| pLYING TO BERLIN Khrusheh sia. The long - heralded meeting closed in its second day without ever getting down to negotiations. President Eisenhower declared) ? fi tend an emergency sion Gaulle, was unparalle! hower, Prime Minister Macmillan ing their heels at the Elysee ace. thotight Khrushchev a change of heart | 8 ja 4 ceiving de Gaulle Ci de Gaulle 'personally : ] i] rights in Berlin would be aulll ied. His statement, refusing to. at afternoon ses called "by President g &s omatic. history. He Hed left de Gaulle and i a LJ LC on The western lea fr 28 { because ped 80, miles back to visit in the country 5 But the Kremlin' lear he would be (EE Hap He called reporters into Soviet Embassy to make his statement. The declaration was headed: "Reply by N. S. Khrushchev to questions by newspaper men." said: I to exchange view on whether con- ditions have materialized to start the summit conference. PARIS (AP)--Communist jour nalists spread word today that So- viet Premier Nikita Khrushchev may sign a separate peace treaty with Communist East Germany ia Berlin shortly in the wake of the [tire tesponsibility for the confer-| gp this |ence failure." {morning he is flying to Berlin | The real question, declared in-|Wednesday to hold talks there dependent Paris Jour, "is the|with East German leaders. So fate of Khreshchev himself which|viet officials said he would earry is at stake." : out his oft-repeated threat to sign A commentator in East Berlin a separate peace tredty with East Had made no 1 a st be how Bias 'said that if 'sighs Such treaty, all West 4 . Cold War Freeze In The Prospect | ul he ern ps -f rdian of Man- tank | PARIS (AP) -- Soviet Premier, Soviet leader. It is noticeable, | Nikita Khrushehev"s performance| Western experts say, in the ranks | at the summit meeting that failed | of the officers particularly. About | to get off the ground indicates he|250,000 of them are marked for | is engaged in a struggle to main-| demobilization. Many are slated {tain his claim to lead world com-|to move from the comfortable, | munism. | caste-system life of the Soviet of- | Because of that, a new cold | ficer class to jobs in still dreary {war freeze may be in prospect, farm or industrial areas. {comparable even to the danger-| The fuss Khrushchev raised | ous 1948 Stalin days of the Ber-{@bout the American intelligence {Hn blockade. plane was far out of proportion to its importance unless he. really l © > got an apology fr ! |, Unless he got an apology from, "anyions to blow up the sum- mit 'meeting. | the president of the United States Khrushchev insisted, he could not negotiate with Eisenhower. This, puT ON SPOT? he added in an aside, was a mat-| Khrushchev, in a sense, may, himself have been the object of | an ultimatum: He could carry on ter involving the internal politics his peace campaign in the West of the Soviet Union. |THREE-WAY PULL only if he could come home with The implication is that Khrush- parley br e Soviet delegation spokesmen were not immediately available to comment on the report, It was possible t. the Com. - the 'suggestion as onc of i ra) ing to nfludtioe the Big Three 'Western powers to accept chev's conditions for getting the suman conference on the rails PEKING (Reuters) -- News of the summit crisis in Pais h ts he ked foreign dipl seemed to be"an un and unwelcome surprise to Com- munists -- westerns and Asians alike. They discussed it together gravely in an atmosphere of sub- dued gloom at Peking airport while waiting to welcome Chinese Premier Chou En-lai home from a five-week trip abroad. Some Communists described the Paris developments as "se rious" and "unexpected." Top - ranking Communist Chi- nese leaders gave no outward sign of their feelings. U.S. Election Influenced By Summit WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pros pects heightened today that Democratic and Republican nom. inees for the November United States presidential election will be campaigning this fall during a cold war grown even more frigid. The expected collapse of the summit conference seemed likely to force some extensive revisions in politica! plans by both parties. Although they had expected few : concrete results at Paris, U.S. politicians = generally had looked forward to campaigning in an era of relaxed tensions. The emphasis, as they saw it would be lon each nominees qualifications to lead the world toward a bright: ening peace. ' _ But Soviet Premier Nikifa Khrushehev's wrecking tactics [seem to have 'eliminated that |prospeet. If he pursues this Strike Ballot TORONTO (CP) -- Employees in Domizion Stores here voted Monday night to ke within 10 days unless the company meets demands on wages, length of con- tract and overtime The 1,200 employees bers of the Retail Wi Department Store Uni local. A strike would affe in nine Ontario communiti would probably spread to other parts of the province Union membership across the province thorized strike acti tion hoard was un: company and union' ment Demand increase and maximun year contract were the union Monday to retroactive pay from ber, a $4 increas 1, 1960, and an additiona 1 Stores involved in include those in St and Niagara Falls SAFETY MONTH SCORE BOARD the northern affairs department, and Guy Brown, airline mechanic. An official of the RCAF Rescue {and Co-ordination Centre here said the plane was forced to land] after the pilot became lost and was running low on fuel. The official said the plane landed safely on skis. He said the| " small group suffered no hardship,| Fatalities 0 They had enough food to last 15 Charges laid for days | traffic offences 19 gue that all the junketing 'and|chev is engaged in a three-sided|2D 2Pology from President Eisen- Journeys of coexistence had led|struggle with 1. the Stalinists, 2. Monday May Accidents 1 : | Inj uries 37 1 mem- Total 1 1 are 238 'SPLIT-SECOND TIMING' Missile Warning Link In Canada THULE, Greenland (CP)--Can- ada will play a vital role in oper- ating thousands of miles of com- munication links essentials for «North America's new ballistic missile warning structure Here, 900 miles south of the North Pole, set amid a scene of |glaciers and picturesque arctic mountains, giant radar screens and intricate electronic comput- ers are being tied fogether to scan the top of the world to an- alyze, detect and predict the tar- get of any enemy missiles. But the information received through this complex and expen- sive system to go into operation next fall would be useless unless it can be transmitted with split- second timing to the military forces that could retaliate or at {least get airborne when the at- tack comes To the information from this Greenland coastal site to the North American Air Defence Command at Colorado Springs, Colo., and the U Strategic Air Command Omaha, Neb 6,000 miles of submarine cable, radio repeater stations, telegra- phic lines and other communica- tions links meetings earlier au- A concilia to bring the « n a Agree for a $10-a-we ay ed by for $208 a modif 15k em x May $4 Nov Lae course, the opposing candidates instead may find themselves. de. bating which is more capable of modernizing and strengthening U.S. defences" and which can stand up to Khrushchev best. Politicians disagree on how the hard line currently adopted, by Moscow would affect the outcome of the U.S. president contest. Khrushehey's withdrawal of Lis invitation apparently wiped out the chance that Eisenhower could enhance his position as a man of peace with a triumphal visit to Russia. ' dispt Catharines Oshawa Motorist Drove Too Fast PERTH (CP ward F. Welch, 53 contributed to his own death driving too fast decided Monday Welch and a Elizabeth Laflesh wert killed May between their car and a transport truck driven by Sam 5 of Perth, on Highway 7 Mage berly, 15 miles south of here The jury attached no blame to Bassas CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 Motorist Ed- of Oshawa, bs a coroner's jury night passenger, Mrs 40, of Toronto 10 in a collision ar Basga n CONSTRUCTION MONEY Aside from the alerting value Canadians will be getting some direct benefits from U.S. con- struction exnenditures. The radar and electronic equipment here will cost about $500,000,000. When two other sites at Clear, Alaska, Flood Waters Sop nowhere.' {the military and 3. the Chinese Soi Jetiat intelligence near the LJ a Communists, who have been nag- oviet Union again. : NEW THINKING? ging him for what appear to He may have won a round in 1 IO 11 Western ideas about what RuUS-| fem to be reckless adventures his struggle at home if he can sia wants may have to be re-|in peace-making, demonstrate that he put Eisen- vamped, argued the Conservative| Khrushchev, destroyer of the Bower ip Nis place, at oast to the FOLEYET (CP) -- Floodwaters| In Foleyet, unsafe drinking London Daily Telegraph. "The|, =CPRSEEIers, FER TOVER 0. if|extent that the president sus. [that race through this Northern | water and cramped living condi-|ugly possibility must now be Jane to have bowed on Be [pended plans for future U.S. Ontario railway town when theltions have forced evacuations|faced that those Western leaders gi iii .o {fights over Soviet territory. Ivaphoe Dam burst Saturday con- since the Ivanhoe Dam, 10 miles| who argued for a change ofl ™ myo Sovief boss has been re- Bui Krusheliey has suffered 3 tinued to drop Monday althoughlaway, burst, sending a 13-foot| Western attitudes to the Soviet{ :. 5° iok 'overboard. a [severe reverse on the world ba A ¢ < Bid Ae) quired to Kick overboard all he|giage His peaceful coexistence another 86 persons were evacu-|flood crest surging through the{Union, and a jettisoning of the has built with great care over the|train had oe k ated to the. Timmins area 65/town {Dulles policy of toughness, have|j et three years. Apparently, in ian at us ered in bi oa of {miles to the .northeast | Many evacuees--about one-third |badly miscalculated." | the Stalifist 'and - Red Chinese 0 oma T ouriem os Fog os As the water level droppedioi the 650 residents have left--| The late John Foster Dulles| view. his peace gestures ee Sia i ang Prong ye here, a shaky log storage dam|were flown fo Timmins, already|Was United States state secre-\much too far and threatened | quay tow ourism,; are' lacing near Peterbell, 50 miles to fhe|crowded with most of the 1,500/tary under Eisenhower. 3 communism as a constantly mov-| (northwest, threatened to loose persons evacuated from Mountjoy| The Liberal London News| ing dynamic force. | - {Lake Missinabi on the tiny com-|Township, Timmins suburb, a Chronicle said Khrushchev is| Khrushchev for years has been Russia Formally | munity $3 ferstus. heal week ago. a a asta to fascinated by the idea of a So-| : . | ie dam js in an unhealthy . i ; |damage the Soviei Image hie has|yiet Uni so powerfl nd so| |condition-- it could go out any| TRAINS, POWER, HIT labored to create except for OTs b Dowertdl a it Raps Spy Flights land and sea lines as well as ra-|time," said a spokesman for the| Power has been cut off and the pressing political reasons." could turn the world toward com-| MOSCOW (Renters) -- The So- dio relay stations will be located |Ontario department of lands and (CNR s main line was washed out.| 'We do not know the real rea-!munism without exporting revo-|viet Union Monday formally and on Canadian territory and oper-|forests. {Trane wer. rerouted over CPRsons for Khrushchev's violent and lution or supporting it by overt|strongly called on United ated by Canadians, US. Air| ------f(and Algoma Central lines. destructive attitude," the right-|force States in a note to condemn its Force authorities said. . | Another area of concern in the wing London Daily Mail said,| This has been costly to Com-|"nyoy ocative" spy flights over They estimated that' not only | Whitb Man [Ontané drtifidad; was pelow the a) what we do know ls that) munists in vafious areas. Russia, : will Canada get free mi | Y ake Timagami power dam on) this could be the worst blow to & 'n ha - ing rat wee missle dled dl |the Sturgeon River where water|peaceful coexistence for years."|CUT BACK RED ARMY I he ed ee eres 4 wl rel) {was nearly 10 inches above the ' In quest of his kind of peace-- PATA CHE LU! A : by 000,000 of new business flowing| ets ears | i" DON'T BE SO RUDE hago A ¢ ¥ Presiden isenhower by Pre- : {maximum level set for the dam.| .jone in which the Soviet Union, |". i into Canadian hands through con- [So floodi Wad already hit|, 'he breezy pro-labor tabloid after bringing about a degree of|{™ier Khrushchev at the opening struction contracts and communi-| TORONTO (CP) -- John Percy| pio bel So Wh oO Ready London Daily 'Mirror said over its| nuclear and other disarmament, |Summit session in Paris cations deals. Ward, 25, of Whitby, was sen-| at ge Ec am t potenti-|€ntire front page, "Mr. K.. (if| would still be in a position to dic-| It 'Was the second Soviet note The alerting time that may beltenced Monday to 10. years in airy : AB oy hts 4 "the you' wil pardon an olde English|tate terms to hterest of the Protesting the downed American provided--between 15 and 25 min- penitentiary for abducting and (ih Bay subi Tapio I Ferris| Phrase) don't be so bloody rude." | world -- Khrushchev also pared|spy flight ovr Russia May 1 and utes--may be of little use to the|raping a 16-year-old girl two lon 3 the airy Nipissi wi In small letters in a black box at|the strength of the Soviet Army| called on the U.S 'condemn average Canadian if the omcon-|years ago in Prin gon ot- the 'bottom it added, "PS: Who|and ran into opposition there the provocative activities of its ing nuclear missile is heading in|] M Justice E. G. Moorhouse tawa River Mordcy forced 16/9 you think you are? Stalin?" This has increased the domes-|aviation in relation to the Soviet ihe direction. US. experts here|presiding at Wants second trill aii to flee the Fort Coulonge 1° MITOF, Which has always tie pressure, apparently, on the Union." ggest the best thing a civilian on t Arge, Impos nence.lQue., area 50 miles northwest of can do is ruck to the basement! Ward was sentenced to 12 years Ottawa. On-the Ottawa River at and lie flat on his tomach [by Mr. Justice F, H. Barlow in Mattawa 20 to 25 houses were The warning may be of help tothe first trial, but appealed and Hooded, e i other Canadians outside the im./Won a new trial Thirty-six houses were evacu- mediate missile threat area. It| Alvin Hibbitt, 24, of Whithy, ac- ated below Pembroke on the Que- {can help get populations moving|cused with ward, had a 10-year|hee side of the river and the quickly to p 5s sible protection|sentence and conviction quashed! ater nr p TY 9 areas P by the Appeal Court Sater boii Md Hom Tom Court was told the girl was re-| | Highway 11 at Latchlord by the {turning from a Roman Catholicldam on the Montreal River was youth group meeting when shelynder a foot of water and six or was dragged into a car by four seven houses were flooded youths who drove her to a lonely| Mayor Nathan Phillips of Tor sideroad and raped her. The|onto started a fund to aid stricken Sher Bs a ila nts were never polevet Yesidents, recommending 0 trial, the ci ive $5,000. The : hud r Ward married a 17-year-old By Sp has ae Omaris €ANADA s SHARE : |and Fiingdales, England come|girl between trials. She told theleral flooded areas &s disaster hats ere Canada will play|into operation, the over-all cost|court Monday she is five months her role. Huge sections of the'will rise to about $1,000,000,000. | pregnant, y oy mate = Sow FOLEYET ISOLATED BY FLOODWATERS ) +

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