5 WEATHER REPORT Thunderstorms clearing this afternoon, Saturday sunny and less humid, cooler, winds south, shifting, THOUGHT FOR TODAY It's odd how many men who * shirk exercise for fifty weeks a year think they're supermen for the two weeks 'f their holidays. The Oshawa Times OSHAWA, FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 1960 EE Dor aan. . = EIGHTEEN PAGES ALL-OUT CONTINENTAL AIR TESTS CONSIDERED Taxation Remains" | les ES Discussion With Municipal Trouble (@ ' sg = NORAD Officials ' OTTAWA (CP) -- Canada and fence is "quite irdivisible'" and CORNWALL (CP) -- The an-|/next month's federal - provincial | United States authorities are con- [it would be "quite unrealistic' swers to problems of education|financial conference at Ottawa i 4 . sidering an all-out North Ameri- |for Canada to pursue its own de. land taxation still eluded the On- where he proposed to discuss 4 {ean test of North American Air {fence singlehanded. tario Association of Mayors and| provincial and municipal tax § ; s Defence forces which would in-| "A policy of neutralism is not Reeves today as it moves into the! problems. f h volve restrictions to civil avia-|the policy of the Canadian gov- lust day of its three-day conven-| In the resolutions session Paris , tion, Defence Minister Pearkes| ernment at the present time," he tion, tinued efforts to push throug! indicated today. | said later, in reply to George C. vation passe .'a $10 poll tax on single wom He told the Commons defence | Fairfield (PC -- Portage - Neep- ae ssa pRssOR LY Je. over 21, Many favored the re | committee that he believes North awa). Price Not Over VOL. 89--NO. 146 Mody Fi IR America's whole defence system | Paul Hellyer, Liberal defence GM SHIPS CARS TO KUWAIT A shipmeni of 30 brand-new Pontiacs from the Oshawa plant the Oshawa harbor Thursday. Above, Captain O, K. Abraham- sen, skipper of the "Mafalda', da started loading the cars Thursday morning. The ship is the second ocean-going cargo | the perennial problems. At the ution but felt its unpopularity same time delegates from about| Would rule it out. > 450 municipalities heard Premier gopool, TAXATION Frost say there was no suchi™ pu nin "executive director thing as easy money in any ad-| or" tno" Ontario School Trustees' ministration. Council, warned tax rates were | | The mayors and reeves have approaching the danger point. | should be exercised "as soon as|critic from Toronto Trinity, { | possible." | wanted to know whether NORAD Asked by Art Smith (PC--Cal-| will ever become an integral part gary South) whether any plans|of NATO. i exist for such a large-scale test,| Mr. Pearkes said NORAD is Mr. Pearkes replied: | part of the NATO concept in that "This is under djscussion with it provides defence for North of General Motors of. Canada a + = checks loading papers with Roy | vessel to call at Oshawa har- bas " ir resolutions : / ig ards b Su based most of their resolutions Delegates suggested an appeal to! Lid, to Kuwait and Persian | Day, export manager of Gen- | bor within recent weeks. for relief in the education field the Supreme Court of Canada Gulf ports was dispatched from ! eral Motors (right), The Mafal- --General Motors Photo on increased aid from both Pro- to decide whether municipalities viicial and federal governments. must be responsible for education organize the municipal affairs de- partment to "cut the red tape of SEVEN CHICKENS \ . By THE CANADIAN PRESS At London the weather office e- To Railwa S ment would encourage greater ef-| toothless cab driver downed | Violent rains lashed Kitchener-! Ported only .16 inches of rain. Y ficiency in municipal govern-| seven friend chigkens in one of | Waterloo and Galt Thursday, In Woodstock, about 25 miles ments, but the reorganization] 0 «ay vou can eat" deals Ab : bo : lans to pay a further subsid latter city during a storm that city hall demanding action after P A pay 3 sidy an = brought rain to.most of Southern their basements were flooded ©f $13,000,000 to the railways un- VIGILANCE ADVISED - . The premier dwelt only briefly costs. 1 10N on the two subjects, His speech concentrated chiefly on his gov- . ' Batter Ontario PENSACOLA, Fla. (AP)--A | night, causing a power failure of from London and Kitchener, 60 OTTAWA (CP) -- The govern- would not usurp municipal pow- at a Pensacola drugstore. Ontario. with sewage for the second time der its program of holding the/ He said the best guarantees of | INORAD authorities." | America while NATO is a defen- | |sive system for Europe. There | DEFENCE "UNREALISTIC" |was constant explanation of Pressed by several committee NORAD defence developments at members for comment on sug- NATO meetings. gestions for Canadian withdrawal] NATO countries, he added, from NATO and NORAD, Mr. have not shown a desire to take Pearkes said North American de-/part in NORAD. New Quebec Boss Fighter Politician QUEBEC (CP)--Premier-elect| roots campaign. During the day Jean Lesage can be called a he would meet hundreds of per- fighting politician, {sons in factories, on farms, in Jim Ferguson wandered into the store Thursday, spotted an "all the chicken you can eat S b id ernment's plan to completely re- CABBIE DOWNS Y | Wider services from the depart- more than three hours in the angry ratepayers stormed into Ment gave notice today that it ers. Ii ' li frei r i icient municipal administra-| Lightning struck the Galt Pub-|in a week. ne on freight rates pending the! efficien Pp report of the royal commission |tion are a vigilant electorate and lic Utilities ' Building, knocking| Kitchener engineer W, L. Brad: | on transportation, hoped. for by| responsible councils--not a bu- out the power at about 7:30 p.m.|ley said the rainfall there was pext. spring. |reaucracy sitting at Queen's Power was restored to residential the heaviest in 15 years--even/ The $15,000,000 would be paid | Park. | | consumers around 10:30 p.m., but heavier than when hurricane under a nine-month 'extension of diduaisial high-tensich lines were Hazel swept the area in 1954. the Freight Rates Reduction Act in operation by 2:30 a.m. l0-| Some streets were under sev-|expiring July 31. ' day, police said. eral inches of water but no seri. The legislation, involving pay- The storm also washed out gus damage was reported. {ment of a subsidy of $20,000,000 roads, Sranded cars, (Joppie {for the Jou ending July 31, was trees a ooded cellars. Water . passed by Parliament at the 1959 rose to two feet, six inches on Birth Control Pills session. Highway 24 just south of the city In bringing it forward, the gov- and elsewhere many manhole covers were washed up by swirl-| In Drug Stores ing gutters. freeze on freight rate increases ernment said it would put al | In many ways the premier's, |'address told the municipalities to leut themselves lonse from-pro- | vincial apron strings, to stand on | their own, feet. and look to the] province for advice, but not as| [te ultimate answer to all prob- lems, Mr. Frost defended his mcen- icipal board. There had been until it received the report of ther: mblings of discontent with the Thundershowers and lightning] TORONTO (CP) -- Canadian royal commission, which is study- board's power to approve zoning over the Toronto area this morn- drug stores have been selling ing freight rates among other | by-laws. ing caused momentary electrical birth control pills for the last | things. | He said he would consider a | off the bones." for 99 cents' sign and told the fountain manager to "start frying and don't step." Mayor Jimmerson scoffed. "If you eat Tive chickens it won't cost you a cent," he said, Two hours. Inter seven. hicks: p- ens had been eaten, na "I haven't got a tooth in my head," Ferguson said. "It's kind of hard to get the meat Parks superintendent Jim | Gardiner examines the desecra- | tion of a « y at Sudb GRAVE VANDALS and mentally dor were Teen-agers or older men are believed responsible for topp-. similar, incident at the same |mendous task. cemetery. | After one look at the situation, "PEOPLE'S FUNERAL' he said then: 'I want to fight." However he did not go into the uphill struggle to overthrow the New, Better ruling Union Nationale party blinded by his own desire to win. - He loves a scrap. He is physi-| offices, garages, restaurants, and cally strong to withstand the even on street corners. rigors of election campaigning, 3 y alert, to. match his opponents' arguments. on the{hov. long, then would w spur of the moment. Sd oe ond st The When he left the federal politi- J cal scene just two years ago to ling miore* than 20 headstones [become leader of the provincial in the graveyard. Last year 36 |Liberal party, the 48-year-old tombst: in a | Quebec City lawyer faced a. tre- M night he would deliver a speech, Shown an to step down from the speaker's stand to shake hands with who- ever wanted to come up to him. | speeches reflected his legal' |training and his years as a |erown prosecutor in Quebec City during the Second World War, [They were clear and usually built up to a carefully-timed clie max, sometimes leaving his aud. fence highly excited. e years ol ™ i H lapses affecting wire communica- three y n presentation of The $20,000,000 subsidy had the reasonable alternative that would i i i a doctor's prescription | tions and radio reception $ X He planned every move. He a travelled around the province an 1 a fg urging party organizers to ex- pand their organization as widely general effect of reducing to an safeguard and protect the rights o . A spokesman for the largest| average 10 per cent a freight of "property owners, or Ies an ar SHOWERS TODAY manufacturer of the pills said rate increase" of 17 per cent Representatives of the associa-| 1 1 / as possible down to the lowest L I t For Nurses level--the polling subdivision. ace n 0 He pushed the idea of setting The weather office's 5 a.m. his product is "in fairly common granted the railways by the|,, wh ; him at forecast called for.sh"wers and use" in Toronto and across Can-|board of transport commission tio would , accompany i R J : acks Japan os pected late today or tonight. Pre- S P k Y HALIFAX (CP) -- The Cana- Up women's organizations as a » dictions were that only the west- cenic rargkwa BS dian Nurses Association, con-|source of voting strength. Fre. 1Sen ower ern Lake Erie, Timmins and ex- » TOKYO (AP) -- Japanese left- He said he could not step aside cerned about nurses training, is quently during the six weeks | province today with clearing ex- thundershowers for most of the ada, ers in December, 1958. treme northern areas of the prov- ince would miss the rain. No violent rainstorms were re- . N . sorted Thursday night outside the Mine President Denies Fake Telegrams Kitchener area. In Kitchener, two, I'ORONTO (CP) -- Robert Winters, president of Rio Tinto inches of rain fell in 40 minutes.| Mining Company, today denied his company was sending telegrams to members of Parliament seeking their support in a Rio Tinto proposal to purchase some uranium contracts Saturday, Sunday in the Elliot Lake mining community Expected Sunny $5000 Barn Destroyed By Fire TORONTO (CP)--The weather NIAGARA FALLS (CP) -- While struggling to put out a bureau today gave this weekend| fire in his bedroom caused by an overturned lamp early today, outlook® for Southern Ontario | farmer Kenneth Skogland received word by telephone that A storm centered over Georg his barn was 'blazing. The fire, believed to have started when ian Bay is moving rapidly north a boit of lightning shortcircuited the $5000 barn in nearby eastward while a high pressure] Willoughby Township. area centered over Nebraska is n Lake Ontario ne: began a new series of(for a caretakers cabinet, as the expected today te approve a campaign that carried his party WASHINGTON (AP) -- The demonstrations today in an ef-| Socialists demand, because this/Te€port | CORNWALL (CP) -- A scenic{ | parkway will be established along the Lake Ontario and St. Law- |rence River shoreline from the Bay of Quinte to the Quebec Thursday night. ; "It will certainly be something for thie people to see," he told Association of Mayors and 'Mr. Frost did not say plans for the parkway would be finished and no construction date was given. Highways Minister Cass said fort to whip up enough public sentiment to force nullification of| the new U.S.-Japan security pact. vacium Communist party mean- The first demonstration was a/while was warring with the rest people's funeral" for Michiko of the left wing over the dead € B .:/ Kamba, the 22 - year - old Tokyo| cg. y rag porder, Premier Frost said University co-ed killed in the co-ed, who was a member of the "Trotskyist" wing of the Zenga- student assault on the Diet (Par- kuren Student Federation. 'The liament) building June 15. It was Trotskyists are more extreme the third leftist memorial service |p ) i 4 ark {than the Communists and accuse the convention of the Ontario|pelq over the girl's ashes. fd Reiss . [the party of being too soft. Sponsors of today's funeral had| The bulk of the left wing at- Rallies in factories and shops| report said her internal injuries {are scheduled Saturday, with a|indicated she was crushed or night demonstration around the|tramped during the student-police Diet for which 60,000 are prom-|clash, and a Communist party| To help finance continuation of recent years, all brought up to would creates an administrative|changes in nursing schools, recommending many|to power Wednesday the hand- |some leader openly played up to A study designed to. give the/the women in the audiences, 57,000-member CNA a basis on/complimenting them for taking which to set up new training an interest in public affairs. | standards will be put to a vote, Mr. Lesage visited every riding at the windup session of the in the province in the last two | association's biennial meeting. |years. Meanwhile, he kept a | (The Canadian Press earlier watchful eye on happenings in | erroneously reported there were the legislative assembly. He had 15,700 members in the associa-|no seat in the legislature and tion.) |co. ferred constantly outside the The report recommends an house with Opposition Leader Reeves. when Predicted 20,000 would turn out, tributed Miss Kamba's death to|immediate re - examination of George Lapalme, or with-acting but only about 3,000 showed up.| police brutality. A police autopsy schools which it described as|leader Rene Hamel. | "inadequate" and "incapable" of, The Liberal election platform meeting the profession's future is a consolidation of resolutions | responsibilities. |passed at Liberal conventions in Democratic candidates for Presi- dent in the November general election are lacing into President Eisenhower's handling of foreign affairs, making it clear that they consider foreign policy a major issue in the political campaign. There's Senator Lyndon John- son of Texas, majority leader of the Senate Democrats. Until re | cently he was playing the role of the great pacifier and spreader of oil on troubled waters. He tried to quiet Senate criticism of for. eign policy after the U-2 plane incident. But Senator John F. Kennedy of M husetts, the D ats' front-runner for the nomination, moving southeastward 25 m.p.h.| 2 Irish Pros Star In Canada Cup the parkway would probaly be ; ) 5 1 ne , Sunny today except in eastern ™ I : 4 : J Sn J "io St.|ised. On July 2 the Socialists and organ accused the Trotskyist stu- the study, fees for active CNA date and simplified to meet cur- wouldn't" listen an merrily PORTMARNOCK, Ireland (CP) -- Ireland's host pro- [developed under the Ontario St. heir allies will try to muster dents of being partly responsible members are expected to be in-| rent needs. blasted Eisenhower's handling of districts where rain and thunder-| fessionals Norman Drew and Christ Te) | S " unc er s I sty O'Connor led off the |Lawrence Seaway Development|, : : | / age 7 o storms will be followed by clear-| parade of 30 nations in the second round of the Canada Cup |Commission and link a series of 300,000 around the Diet for more, for her death. Icreased to $4 from $2 annually. Mr. Lesage waged a grass-|foreign affairs. ing skies this evening. Saturday| golf championship today and finished with par--breaking | parks Shouted Yemends tate Rew par and Sunday will be sunny in alll rounds that were bound to put them well up in the tourna- Sections of Highways 33 and 2 SAME ES, N0d: al once an regions ment before the day ended. tig a voice adoption of a declaration Eh y would be utilized, he said. | refusing to recognize the secur- |ity treaty which went into force HOUSE STRUCK BY LIGHTNING |e eats concede that in an election Premier Nobusuke| {Kishi's conservative Liberal- | Democratic party would again| J {win a majority, But they claim| the majority would be reduced | substantially, and that this would] represent sufficient popular ob-| For about 40 minulc this house at 230 Oshawa blvd. north,| morning, weather conditions in Oshawa may have resembled the raluy season in India Between 6.30 and 7.30 a.m. slanting sheets of rain made it difficult to see more than a few feet as a series of heavy thun dershowers rolled across south- ern Ontario. Promptly at 7 a.m. complaints of flooded basements started to pour in to Board of Works chair man Walter Branch's home. Half an hour later Mr. Branch was standing in the driveway of t+ North Oshawa home, water subbling up over his shoes, in- ipecting conditions first-hand with 1 city engineer, Then he squished off to work Lightning struck W. J. Clark's CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 fusing some electrical wires. "The kitchen light went out with a click," said Mr. Clark. 'Then I noticed smoke coming from under the sink, coming from the basement. I guess the lightning followed the cables in." STREETS FLOODED Works = superintendent Joseph Wood reported many streets flooded, particularly Ritson road south at the CNR underpass. Jar- vis, Colborne and Cubert streets were affected by debris collecting over catch-basins. Eulalie - Central Park South and Adelaide - Kaiser Crescent storm sewers were overloaded. Mr. Wood received about 20 calls at the city yard from peo- ple complaining of flooded -base- ments "The Stacey-Court street areas seems to have been hard hit," he said. Rain caused some unfinished |sewer connections to sink. Mr. Wood said this would set the sewer program back. Catch-basins on Harmony road and North Oshawa were report- ed plugged. In the Keewatin area, | walter rushed down streets and into back yards. "Some portions of north-west Oshawa went without power for a half hour, starting at 6.37 a.m.," he said. These portions are supplied by the hydro substation on Thornton road south. A breaker at the sub- station came out due to some un- {determined storm trouble. Ap- parently the trouble had cleared up within the half hour, because they were able to successfully put the breaker back in at 7.09] a.m. The Oshawa General Hospital was among those buildings sup- plied by this substation. How- ever, Mr. Shreve said there are always alternate power feeds available for the hospital. Mr. Shreve said three or four men were called out to patrol the lines, looking for the trouble that caused the breaker to come out. WET LINES A Bell Telephone official re- ported nothing but wet lines, as yet, He said "we are a bit busier than yesterday, But there is no- thing serious in the way of storm damage." In Whitby, lightning blew two line fuses early today, and dropp- ed a feeder line at the Blair ustreel sub-station. {jection {o the treaty to justify its Power was off in the eastern nuification. {section of the town from 5.30 to] Moments after the treaty took | 7 a.m. | effect Thursday, Kishi Sones] i : ou ns intention to resign but set no The power was interrupted atte Today he was reported tol the low-level pumping station, also have told a cabinet meeting it! on Blair street. PUC employees would take some time for his got the pumps going with auxil- party to decide on a successor. | iary motors until power was re- TT SA BP iss on Dundas east, al Cuba To Seize the CPR crossing, began filling with water at 6.30 a.m. Whitby | |police directed traffic around the U S I t ts subway for one hour, . . n eres But two vehicles, already stall.. HAVANA (AP)--Premier Fiy ed in the water, had to be towed|del Castro intimated Thursday out. Water reached a maximum/|his government eventually might height of 24 inches in the sub-/take over all American business way, interests in Cuba in the face of The storm sewer which drain. what he called economic aggres- ed the subway was cleared and S'O0 by the United States. the water began to recede at 7.45 In a nation-wide radio address, a.m Castro referred to a number of American businesses which he Works department foreman . said the revolution has permitt Robert Coutts, who estimated to continue aap ited that one-half inch of rain fell, | "In the same way . that they said no flooded basements had are there How it may be in the been reported. future that they will not be Bowmanville had few com-there," Castro said. "We will not plaints, with some calls about remain impassive. We will know water on the roads, caused by how to handle economic aggres (flooded culverty Ision." Seventeen entrants Joan Boardman,CEngland;/ grun Moeckell, Germany; Lizzie York's Idlewild Airport on ar- heck, Holland; Marie-Jose Ven- E J : ] i IN SEARCH OF TITLE AT MIAMI BEACH Aass, Norway; Birgitta Ofling, | Lebanon; Marie Louise Garrle Sweden Standing: Eliane | gues, Tunisia; A" a Gross, Ise Maurath, Switzerland; Huberte | rael; Svanhildur Jacobsdottre, Box, Belgium; Marilyn Esco- | Iceland; and Magda Pass Alog- bar, Morocco; len Gaintop- | lou, Greece. oulos, Jordan; adys Tabet, AP Wirbphoto