'Diefenbaker Comments On The Nation's Business All this would seem to indicate <hrushchev decided some time ago to wreck the conference be- couse 'he had found out that the Q THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, Mey 20, 1960 OTTAWA (CP) -- Pressures Adultery Remains ; Divorce Ground Communist China ay be belind By KEN KELLY now presented to establish adul-|ing or simulating adultery that|Nikita Khrushchev's switch from " KHRUSHCHEV ARRIVES Soviet Premier Nikita Khrush- chev, fresh from wrecked sum- mit talks in' Paris, waves from open car following his arrival Be- ier Thursday in East Berlin side him in car are Fz man Communist leader Walter Ulbricht, left, and Premier Otto IN EAST BERLIN The premier spoke soothingly to East Berliners about another summit confer- ence in six to eight. months Grotewohl Sugar Beet Plant INTERPRETING THE NEWS . May Be Operating, LEAMINGTON (CP)--William| Murdoch, Progressive Conserva:| tive member of the Ontario leg-| islature for Essex. South, said Thursday that a meeting in Tor-| onto today may result in the, part-time operation of a Wallace- burg sugar beet plant this year | The Canadian and Dominion Sugar Company announced ear ler this week that its plant would be closed and 50 men laid off In an interview, Mr. Murdoch Summit Fai Set Off Avalanche By JOSEPH MacSWEEN Canadian Press Staff Writer Diplomats are predicting new tremors when the United Nations viet Union have all vetoed in ad vance the rival resolutions ex pected to come before the 11 member council whose emergency said he believes the Wallaceburg Security Council begins debate on meeting is a direct result of the factory is closing because ported sugar is available at low price. a # a a an leaders started at the summit The United States and the So-! CONVERTED FAIRMILE im- the avalanehe that the Big Four summit debacle. Authorities are at least hopeful that the diplomatic disaster in ll ir ws NB Acid, A i FLOATING LABORATORY RADEL II Radio Ship Radel II Top Research Vessel By JAMES NELSON Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP)--Thousands of dollars' annual loss in fishing nets may be prevented by a new device heing developed by radio technicians of the National Re- search Council Science may also soon replace the lighthouse-keeper and make it possible for ship captains to use a telephone dial to call for foghorn signals in dangerous wa- ters. These are among the projects being undertaken this year by the NRC's floating radio laboratory, Radel II, a converted Fairmile entering her 11th season on the Great Lakes, used principally in the development of marine ra- dar. Capt. H.R. Smyth, 54, Mont- real-born master of the Radel and head of the navigational aids work in the research council's radio and electrical engineering branch, said in an interview tests will be fade this year of new lightweight miniature transmit ters. Attached to floats holding fishing nets, they can be traced through fog or high seas by simple detection equipment in fishing boats DRIFTING NETS Thousands of dollars worth of fishing nets are lost every year particularly in the Grand Banks off Newfoundland. They can drift as far as 30 to 40 miles in a fog, carrying their catch with them. Equipment to turn on foghorns automatically, even when fog is some miles away from the main- land, will be tested this year. An electronic flash will be set off periodically on a buoy and, if shrouded in fog, the reflection like the reflection of an automo- bile's headlights in fog on land will trigger equipment sending a signal to the shore and activating the horn A ship approaching a foghorn station and wanting a signal will be able to use its regular ship's radio equipment to turn on the horn. A telephone dial can be worked into the equipment so that all the master has to do is dial the code assigned to the horn. He can turn the horn off by another signal, or it will stop automatically after a predeter mined length of time has elapsed Capt. Smyth, stocky, square jawed electronics engineer equally at home in his radio lab and on the bridge of his ship will also measure water currents in Lake St. Peter, between Sorel and Trois Rivieres, Que., this season. The hydraulics labora tory of NRC wants more infor mation on the collection of silt which has to be steadily dredged out of the ship canal in the lake The Radel II spent the winter in a lock of the Rideau Canal at Ottawa. Early this month it moved down the Ottawa River to a private berth hehind the NRC headquarters. It will take about three weeks to install the test equipment and experimental de vices for this year's program About May 24 she will move through thé canal to Lake On- tario and spend the summer moving between Trois - Rivieres and the upper end of Lake Erie Most of her work is done in Lake Ontario, far from shore interfer ence UNDERWATER TV The chemical balance of Ontario water is constan changing. This year the Rade] 1] will test that and also the trans mission of radio waves over the lake. Experiments will be made with the range of transmission of new radio signal equipment on buoys An underwater era, employed in the tion of retaining walls during construction of the St. Lawrence Seaway, will be coupled this year with a Polaroid Land producing prints quickly to whether good underwater pic tures can be taken by sighting the camera at a TV screen on the ship's deck Lake television cam examina camera see CITY OF CLEAN-UP OSHAWA The week of MAY 30th to designated os Cleanup Week errangements have been made residences, h hold lations of f ON THEIR USUAL GARBAGE DAY, of all discarded JUNE 3rd inclusive, hos been in the City of Oshawa end for the collection from private e, clothing, rubbish resulting repairs, and domestic waste All materials to be collected same place os the garbage for Materials Not Includ Large quantities of waste bui garbage collections) are not in This special collection applies from the cleaning up of grounds or from minor household cartons, packing cases and bottles. sbove-mentioned week only, and ot the same time and in the products (in excess of the normal amount handled in regular not te epar'ments, stores, businesses or industries. Alderman Walter R. Branch, Chairman, Board of Works, material such es paper, rags, should be put out during the the regulor collection. ed In This Collection Iding material and waste food cluded in this collection. only to privote households and Berlin's Stalin Allee lure Canadian Press Staff Writer 0 I'"WA (CP'--Aduitery, real or pretended, is to remain the sole ground for seeking a divorce from Parliament. The Senate decided this con- clusiveiy Thursday when it up- held the majority decision of its divorce committee in refusing to hear the case of a Quebec woman seeking to divorce her husband on the ground of desertion Grave doubts were expressed {about the nature of the evidence ! A OTTAWA (CP) The CBC | postponed indefinitely Thursday a controversial television pro-| gram in which it planned to in- terview a woman said to earn | $100 a night acting as co-respond- ent in divorce cases. A CBC spokesman filmed interview, planned as part of the program Close-Up on the TV network, has been postponed to "an indefinite date," The program instead featured a special discussion on the break- up ot ihis week's summit confer- ence at Paris. A number of protests had been voiced over the original plan to interview the professional co-re- spondent. A CBC announcement last week said the woman, a young secretary, earned $70 week at her job and $100 a night acting as co-respondent in obtain- ing evidence to be used in di- vorce proceedings UNSAVORY SUBJECT In ihe Senate Wednesday Sena- tor Muriel] McQueen Fergusson (L---New Brunswick) suggested that the government consider le- gal charges if the program was carried, She said the program \was most inappropriate for broadcasting into thousands of Paris will not cause despair when homes. It was a sordid and un disarmament negotiations are savory subject concerned the separate confer-| "py "Roy. Ernest Reed, Anglican ences that had been making labor- Bishop of Ottawa, sent a tele ious progress in Geneva gram to the CBC protesting the said the originally hey are riding along East AP Wirephoto Anxiely lest progress on all program. He said the CBC's ad- sides be lost was pointed up by vance announcement of the na- UN Secretary-General Dag Ham- ture of the program "would seem marskjold when, at a press con-|(o he an appeal to the sordid in ference Thursday, he pleaded with |... - East and West to make use of the world body for peace C m Hammarskjold, a dedicated in- er an ternational civil servant and pro ponent of quiet diplomacy, never : rushes into print with crises state- 1ps n ments--especially not when the air is thick with the words of world leaders But he felt it necessary to TOSS Ia é stress that the Paris problems re- iative--"'initiative that should be . Ny wiser for what has gone before, Germany's ' largest shipping not envenomed by the feelings to fompany has started a multi. which recent events may have million dollar service out of Van- given rise." | couver and San Francisco. With the council meeting sched- | The project will be handled by uled for Monday, diplomats said it remote control from. Germany by was still too early to say whether the Hamburg South America line, a compromise move will be at- known in Europe by the abbrevi- Russia might agree The line's ships will cross trade Besides the five veto - holding | between the northwest Pacific permanent members the U.S. [avd Australia and New Zealand Russia, Britain, France and Na- under the name of Columbus tionalist China--the six non - per-| Line. Five ships will make up the manent members of the council |fleet. They will not go to their now are Argentina, Ecuador, Cey- (home port except for refit or re- lon, Italy, Tunisia and Communist | tirement. Poland. It is the first time in German entered the cross trade busi- Observers are certain Russia ness will not be able to win the neces- "BOLD AND UNUSUAL" ary support for any motion con-| "Agents here and in San Fran demning the U.S. for sending U-2| cisco have described the new spy planes over Soviet territory.|service as "hold, dramatic and Soviet Premier Khrushchev has|upusual," already scorned President Eisen-| George C. Kiskaddon, Marine hower's proposal for "open skies" |Chartering Company, San Fran inspection ¢ similar to|/develop when a company cuts it Moscow's action two years ago in! self from its ships in order to asking the Security Council to call make them international traders on the US. to stop sending air while strangers handle overseas craft carrying nuclear bombs in affairs. HSDG is confident the the direction of Russia venture will succeed The U.S. countered then with a| Agents here for the 97-year-old proposal that the council endorse Cerman company are Johnson international air inspection of the Walton Steamships Ltd. It is ex ported by Canada. The Soviet res-|ers will make a once-a-month call olution never reached a vote and|at Vancouver. Russia vetoed the American pro First of the Columbus Line posal ships to call here was the Santa Open to speculation was Rita. She boasts a spotless, white whether the US. or Russia will engine room, an unusual instru-| eek a special meeting of the 82- ment arrangement on the bridge member UN General Assembly in| looking something like the dash-| the face of a defeat or veto in| hoard of a car---and luxurious| UNUSUAL MOVE main and require renewed in-| gy apy) pg spotlight may20p tempted to which the U.S. and ation HSDG. THE IMPASSE shipping history that a company Pe Soviet charge | cisco, explained special problems Arctic areas a proposal sup-|pected the Columbus Line freight the council suites for passengers | Controversial TV | pM Show Postponed the tery. Senator Arthur Roebuck (L- Ontario), who said he strongly supports adding desertion as a, ground for divorce, was the first lo raise the question of the evi-| dence heard by the divorce com- mittee of which he is chairman. | "We sit there, knowing that the one ground that is being pleaded yefore us is not the real trouble (in many cases) between the parties, and it is only by discover-| | order to arouse interest in a seri- ous legal and moral matter." Rev. Arthur D. Waite, chair- man of the committee on evangel. ism and social service of the United Church's Ottawa Presby- tery, also sent a protest tele- gram, "We deplore the program en- tirely," he said The CBC spokesman gave no indication of when the filmed in- terview might be broadcast, but he said there has been no de- cision not to broadcast it. Plea for Leadership In Welfare Services| TORONTO (CP)--A plea for| leadership in the development of | arger units for the administra- tion of welfare services was made Thursday at the annual meeting of the Ontario Welfare Council, Bruce Freure, chairman of a panel session, said: "Under our present system each little municipality has its own administrator. With a little bit of leadership from the com- munities, the province would be ready to support them to the limit." Commenting on the advisability of a co-ordination of services in Ontario, Miss Bessie Touzel, ex- ecutive director the Ontario welfare council, said: of General Praises Bomarc Missile WASHINGTON (AP Air Force Gen. Thomas D. White told senators Thursday 'that the Bomarc anti-aircraft missile will "knock down very high perfor- mance bombers." The top air force officer urged Senate appropriations com- mittee to restore $294,000,000 | production of the missile cut by the House of Represen atiy from the $39,000,000,000 defence bill "Just "three were formed test." recent Base, cessful He said that on May 12 a Bo- mare "intercepted and destroyed at long range, a supersonic Regu- lus II missile.' White said the $294,000,000 will produce nine squadrons of Bo- marc-B missiles "recommended by the air force and concurred in by the department of de- fence." AGAINST DIVERSION White opposed the House pro- posal to use most of the Bomarc production funds for supersonic fighter interceptor aircraft He said the fighters would cost twice as much or more and would not be in operation quick enough White conceded there had been difficulties in early firing tests of the Bomare but said this is true of any new missile and "there yesterday," White said, more Bomarc-A missiles fired each of which per- a completely successful White also noted that all tests at Eglin Air Force Florida, had proved suc- Ihave been a number of spectacu- lar successes in the last month," He said Gen. Lawrence Kuter, head of the North American Con- tinental Defence Command, re- gards Bomarc "as the backbone of our defences" and wants twice as many squadrons AS Are now approved FEARS IRRATIONAL MOVE White also told the senators 'he WILSON & LEE LIMITED ACCORDION SAXOPHONE VIOLIN SPANISH GUITAR POPULAR PIANO TRUMPET home for practice. MUSIC STUDIOS Register Now For Lessons On These Popular Instruments Our 6-week beginner's course on the accordion at $1.50 weekly includes the FREE use of an accordion during that period which is taken CLARINET HAWAIIAN GUITAR TROMBONE VIOLA CELLO MUSIC STORE 87 SIMCOE ST. NORTH WILSON & LEE LTD. RA 5-4706 _|case, there was no good reason tended | to consider a case that failed to|misenhower about |to universities and the other in- | versity, "to attack us | lace destruction from we will grant relief." the hale-fellow handshake to the PLEADS ELOQUENTLY clenched fist, Prime Ministe: The 82-year-old widower made Diefenbaker suggested Thursday an eloquent plea on behalf of night, women left destitute and with children but tied, like the Quebec el not want the ill-fated Paris sum- mit conference to take place even The Soviet leader simply did; nited States, France and Bri- tain would not meet his wishes doing so meant sacrificing the ntire population of West petitioner, "to a bum.' Senator John T. Haig (PC Manitoba), an opponent of wider divorce grounds in this case, also expressed doubt about the type of evidence submitted in many| cases, " He also expressed concern PTTL nd h the Senate "is getting a reputa-| tion all over Canada of being a divorce mill." The Senate *'should insist that some other organiza- tion be set up in our country to deal with these petitions." Most of Parliament's divorce cases are from Quebec and New- foundland, the only provinces without courts empowered to deal with divorce, though he had asked for it for more than two years, Mr, Diefen- baker said in a national television appear that he as been having dif- ficulties with the military authori-| ties at home and was also being) opposed by the Communist Chi} nese in his expressed wish to fol-| {low a more peaceful policy. I "It is worth noting that Pek-| ing's leaders have been uttering seme very frightening statements | recently. Their defence minister | stated that 'hundreds of millions] strong can overwhelm the enemy GET THE BEST For Less At MODERN UPHOLSTERING 926'2 SIMCOE ST. N. RA 8-6451 or RA 3-4131 OSHAWA (The CCF, which has put up a blockade against divorce bills in the. Commons, wants the job War. handed to the Exchequer Court REAL ISSUE MASKED of Canada.) Mr. Diefenbaker said Khrush- NO REASON TO HEAR IT chev, by his own words, had re- Senator W. H, Golding (L--On: moved any suggestion that the tario), who led the fight in the attitude he took at the summit Senate divorce committee against conference was dictated by the 1earing the desertion case, said/U-2 spy plane incident. both the Senate and Commons| The Soviet premier "gave him. were on record as having refused self away' in his Paris press con- to widen the grounds. In that| (erence when he said he had in- to speak to President : : such flights meet Parliament's requirements. | while he was in the United States The 45-minute divorce debate |1ast September. On another oc- followed action by the upper|casion, Khrushchev had said he chamber in giving second read-|gver-ruled the wish of military ing, approval in principle, to two authorities to bring down an in- government bills, one on grants truding plane. ro creasing federal participation in building the Trans-Canada High-| way. Liberal Senator A. K. Huges-| sen, a governor of McGill Uni- said the government's university grants bill, approved ed |by the Commons, raiser graver ~ constitutional doubts than the | FOUR SEASONS TRAVEL KING ST [ OSHAWA ONT PRN RA. 86201 -- Amar current method of paying federal : grants through the Canadian Uni- versities Foundation, It is not, he said, a victory in the protection of provincial rights, but an escape for Quebec's Union Nationale government| from the late Premier Duplessis' uncompromising attitude Do You Really in the flame of an all-out people's! CHILDREN DO HAVE WORMS Ever since Grandmother's doy ents have relied on 'Mot! to re relief from worms. Easy SAFE to give to children fro ickly effective. Graves and m 1 your wp. Qu % Safe... Pleasant Effective Use Mother Graves' WORM EXTERMINATOK SCHOFIELD INSURANCE ASSOCIATES LTD. Want Service? irrational behavior displayed ai the Paris summit conference might make it wise to strengthen American defences. White said that We Have It this year he had been convinced U.S. defences were so strong that "no rational decision could be made earlier We work hard to serv accounts. ® We follow through on nation would American deterrent powers, he said. Then he added: | "What would be a deterrent to a rational point of view might not! be a deterrent to an irrational point of view.' White did not pinpoint his marks further, and when a porter asked him afterward if he was. referring to Khrushchev as| irrational he smiled and said: | "You will have to draw your own conclusions." White said that probably the easiest way to step up U.S. de- fences quickly would be to add] two more squadrons of Atlas in- tercontinental missiles. Any attacking not by number. We represent the best rates. You may budget your months if desired. 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