Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 5 Nov 1958, p. 1

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THE TIMES TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising .RA 3-3492 All other calls RA 3-3474 Price Not Over 7 Cents Per Copy VOL. 87--NO. 260 The Oshawa Sime WEATHER REPORT Cloudy with occasional rain to- night and Thursday, cloudy and cool tomorrow. Authorized As Second Cl Post Office Department, ass Mail Ottawa TWENTY-TWO P. OSHAWA-WHITBY, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1958 iy, PRESIDENT EISENHOWER John, drop the ballot into the | John : : box after voting in the election voted points to the ballot with his at the nearby Barlow Fire | his glasses as he watches his son, AP Big Three Asked Thor Rocket Goes "Boom" At Blast-Off CAPE CANAVERAL The UN General Assembly Tues-| halting them under a control sys- A Thor intermediate-range rockel jowed in the voting for the gov- 3 th a bril-leporships of 32 states, but in the nt flash shortly after launching V To Suspend Tests UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CP) plosions while Geneva talks on le the sn day night overrode Soviet oppo-/tem go on. aa Xe oo sition and called on the three nu-! Valerian Zorin, Soviet deputy lia elear powers to suspend test ex-| foreign minister, at once accused ly to Brilain and the United States of It Ww > fifth bringing pressure on other dele. "a! 2 gations to vote for the resolution tered sections which, he said, "flagrantly con- plunged into the tradicts the interests of peace." [the cape The U.S. Air Jury Ponders Charges In Sommers Case VANCOUVER (CP)--The final decision in Canada's longest crim- inal trial is in the hands of the| He did not® however, say spe Jury and a one-time provincial! cabinet minister and others ac- cused of bribery may know their would ignore the 81-member as- fate today. The Court jury of nine/y.s. men. three "women is "the| orb Lodge of th game one which Saturday con. Henry ge of e ted 47 - year - old Robert E. United States rebutted the charge | i | He described the document, tions, as a "paper resolution," the missile was des lution by.' 05 ifically that the Soviet Union apart ti ncn : Flaming debris rained into the [) TS, one-lime minister of of pressure. He said the majority water. A huge black cloud hung Search N " Mine LJ - - Fire Sweeps lp afd forests. of Souspiracy.}i py expressed their judgment in e from whom he is said tolthe light of the "Soviet threat to taken bribes while in office.| world peace." Mr. Justice J. 0. Wilson com-| 71,4 Zorin's accapt 4 ge said Zorin's assertion Jlcted his charges Tuesday in the g owed that a Soviet represent years ago, has taken over con- ovel trol of both Houses of the United of New York who also (strength since the Roosevelt era. preceded | son John with his ballot Wirephoto) |e AP) NEW YORK TO GOP mis- time 1 veay d ploded in recent months ntic just off Force a malfunction oc red adopted by 49 to 0 with 22 absten- seconds after launching £00 that more to their column until the SEES MISGIVINGS crats got a working majority| royed by the announce adding: "Life will pass this reso- range safety officer. . » 65-foot rocket blasted aloft It began to : ' of left party in Tuesday's mid - term flecting public misgiving about margin in the previous Senate. immediately y : " 4 trail of Wendl hower' h : i Le a thin trail of flame. |o;ca since he won personal vic-ling and "corruption, or at least two more will be decided Nov. 25 lenly jerked to the oo" in "1956 for his second term that some ethical standards were when the new state Tange | put failed then to earry his party not fulfilled." |safety officer pressed a destruc! 8 y party sembly's appeal. left. At that point, [tion button and the missile burst!" against the Florida sky THREE-YEAR CONTRAC FOR STELCO WORKERS Democrats Control Both U.S. Houses - But as Eisenhower's star was|references in the campaign and WASHINGTON (CP) The setting, republicans got a clim-lits aftermath to the resignation Democratic party, riding a wave mer of hope from the emergence of Eisenhower's aide, Sherman of popular support that rivalled on the national scene of million- Adams. Adams' name was linked Dwight D. Eisenhower's Repub-|aire Nelson Fockefeller, who with that of Boston industrialist | lican presidential victory six ousted Democrat Averell Harri- Bernard Goldfine in investiga- : ¥ man as governor of the key state! tions of government favors sought by the latter | Generally, the campaign offi- y cially was fought on local and 4 | Rockefeller's down = to = earth, o5tic issues, as is usually thel 3 | jcampaiSning 2 Ney 2k Cit vase in these off-year elections ¥ seats decide is 'nina, |UPset the traditional Democraticl yon one-third of the 956 Senate the J ay join patter: of dian Tg ding seats and all 435 seats in the| representation in the upper house Javrgest Jne ropoli y . i House come up for re-election. : emocrats out of control of the re Eaae ; sin since Franklin D Roosevelt won| ost popalus state and brought PRESIDENT RETIRES EARLY . his third term in 1940 immediate speculation that the Eisenhower had no election n . In.the lower House of Iepre-| po sublicans may seize upon him night comment. He spent the Diefenbaker sentatives they tacked almost 100 as a popular figure to lead them'evening in _the White House seats to their majority of 35 inf; ype next battle for the pres- watching feturns on television . the outgoing House, all of whose jqaney in 1960 and retired early. But long before a S 1 135 seals were up for renewal in picenhower cannot by law run midnight the pattern had been the mid-term election. for a third term. And in view of set in most of the country as Tuesday's vote, hailed by the more and' more Democratic vic- re al e Democrats as a vote of non-con-|tories were chalked up as the poll! fol- Pl lok | : AN NELLY "fidence in his admifistration. (closings moved westward with Chia DO LLY er Vice - President Richard Nixon|the time zones. 58 . ro '|may find it difficult to get the| gn io 4 ¢ter midnight the PARIS (CP Prime Minister contest for that office in Republican nomination for the >> & 1 seats Diefenbaker arrived in Paris to- York the Republicans got . . Democrats had won more seats ad 8 I 4 n> top office two years from now. ¥ he 235 tl had held in the day for a one-day visit and within biggest encouragement in a gen- rs feated than the 235 they had held in the © ' is x erally gloomy picture Adlai Stevenson, twice del ated previous House of Representa-| 80 minutes of landing at Orly air- t-| "The pro-Democratic trend set by Jisenhwer a ihe Democrats ves and no Republican was pont pean his Jig meeting with aly. 2 , mid-eveni residentia' candidate, C. '® leading in the more than 100 seats| Premier de Ga in early, and by mid-evening the 00)", mandate for the opposi-| pili io T ie | hours of tall d Arrow ; - res 8 still in doubt, The Republicans, In three hours of talks an narrow two-seat majority the; ty "'t roduce thought- 4 ! Democrats: had' dldnz: to in hel 00 Party Lo: produce had 200 seats in the last House. |luncheon at Hotel Matignon, de Jemocra ad clung ful, creative leadership in a dan-| 3 in |Gaulle's official residence, the Senate since 1956 had been well gerous time.' The picture was, the same in Canadian leader wa expected to ne: ater returns added ® : the upper house, where the Demo-|! anadia acer wag expec widened. Later returns added e upy diaouss the French Premier's rec By LLOYD McDONALD States Congress in its greatest| pRESIDENTIAL POSSIBILITY With all but one of Tuesday's contests for one-third of the Sen- JOHN DIEFENBAKER The pattern was generally N 3 : 3) \ a Py ge) it- total approached the 65 who won| He attributed the Democratic early in the evening and well be-|ent proposals for stronger polit election with Roosevelt in 1940. victory in the congressional and | tore midnight held more The defeat of the president's|state governorship contests as re-|49 seats of their narrow 49-to-47 lies, especially France, Britain and the United States. elections put on record Eisen-| Republican leadership at home Thirty-three of the 96 Senate steady decline in influ- and abroad, the high cost of liv- seats were at stake this year, anc holds its first congressional elec- al This last was one of the few ition. orpanic change within NATO. 0 power in Congress. | Quemoy Resumes | st, .and the possibilities of an TAIPEI Formosa (AP)--Artil-| Ajgarjan cease-fire and negotia- lery fire resumed today in the tions with rebel leaders. It is un- offshore war after a lull of 27|jikaly however, that Diefenbaker hours. Red Chinese guns opened jl] 'present anv proposals of his up on the Quemoys before dawn.! wn in this field Last Nine Bodies than the! ical consultation among NATO al-|pocohuk an unemployed bush: | The Canadian view, it is ed y stood, is that there should be al jitch' near her home. strengthening of the means of | Feschuk who lived with his and noticed blood stains, Then he of Alaska consultation so long as rights of * ' 1 NATO allies are maintained. Canada feels there should he no . . "| The Canadian leader also|" Police [early today. | Artillery Fire sought first-hand information oo piled sofa. ina, garage, de Gaulle's views on the situation aids hbo : | head. 1 North Africa and the Middle Still unconsclous early today, Colonel Arrested Reveal Details Of Steel Offers TORONTO (CP)--Details of a Increments for job classifica- proposed three-year contract of- tions during the term of the fering a package dea: of more agreement total about four cents than 27 cents an hour to workers an hour. at the Steel Company of Canada when the previous contract ter- plant in Hamilton were released minated on March 31, the mini- today. mum rate was $1.73'% cents an Negotiators reached agreementipoyr and a first-class machinist on Monday after 8,077 members|earned $1.56. There is an incre- of the United Steelworkers of mont between cach of 26 job America (CLC) had been oni jasses. strike since Aug. 12. Union mem- . [bers were meeting in Hamilton $24 SETTLEMENT today to ratify or reject the set Employes on the payroll from tlement, July 1 to the start of the strike The agreement is to run to|are to be paid a $24 settlement in July 31, 1961. It provides for allieu of retroactivity in the new 26-cent hourly wage increase|contract. spread over three years, four! posinning next year, those with weeks' vacation after 25 years ps5 voare service will get four and improved group insurance. weeks' vacation with pay, to cost FIVE CENTS NOW the company about six-tenths A five-cent increase is included cents an hour. : [from date of signing, an -addi- Improvements in the group ine Itional seven cents on Aug. 1,/surance program, effective Jan, |1959, and a further 10 cents en|1, are estimated to cost about |Aug. 1, 1960. 1 2-10 cents an hour. Sister Found Dead Then Brother Hurt By GERRY McNEIL The children, seven - year'- old EDMONTON (CP) -- A brutal twin boys, and girls aged eight slaying took a bizarre twist Tues-|and 12, said they saw a scream- |day night when police found John|ing woman knocked to the Pod ground, kicked and beaten with worker, in critical condition 12!a club. : hours after his sister - in - law's| Their father said that when he bludgeoned body was found in a found his wife missing in the morning, he went to the yard brother's family in their small|called police from a neighbor's {Frame home in' residential north-\ home, They found the body, east Edmonton, was discovered|They had not found the weapon, unconscious behind a debris believed to have been a club, |szid he was injured about the today, hospital officials said he| : pi was' 'holding his own." Earlier Tuesday, the body of| By Syria Police Mrs. Rose Feschuk, 30-year-oldi pAMASCUS, Syria (AP) -- mother of four, was found in a Baghdad radio announced Tues- Nationalist batteries returned the ater today Diefenbaker wz gutter 200 yards from her home. gay night that Col. Abdu SPRINGHILL, N. S. (CP)--|mittee was formed Sunday to fire ter 10a Dlclenbalies Jods bo Fully clothed, her body was cov.| sav" Sot, that Col. Abd | Salem Search for nine bodies in the gyuqy the possibility of keeping| Nationalist headquarters ro- NATO secretary - general, andi ered with welts, bruises and|iraq's revolutionary Premier Ab- crushed No. 2 coal mine contin- ported the Communists had fired General Lanris Norstad, NATO blood. |del Kassem, recently appointed ued slowly and painfully today. : Sis nearly 2,000 shells on the islands|supreme commander. Police said it appeared she ambassador to West Germany night and Belly ing work crews) In Ottawa, Revenue Minister y "ya10 afternoon. They said the!" Fis one.day stav here, at the had been hit by a car. . had been arrested in Baghdad. Y clawing through rock and debris Nowlan, Nova Scotia's federal higgest concentration came be- start of a week-long European Her husband William, John S| The radio broadcasting an offi- : : : Fa : ! 4 1 government representative, was tween 11 and 11:40 a.m., when tour was to close with a private |Younger brother, was charged ..., communique by the coms Most officials expect a decision completed is long-dra Rout di ed in t Jl tower. The fire miners working since 2 to report to the cabinet today on 948 were counted. That was al- dinner for some 24 persons at the| With criminal negligence soon af-1 ander in chief of the Iraqi ay. a ; armament debate Tuesday v 1 underground upheaval 3 {he Springhill disaster. most 24 a minute. home of Canadian Ambassador] ter reporting to police that his armed. forces, said: Aref 'care Mr. Justice Wilson asked the 1. A dralt, sponsoredbz trapped 174 men i = Pierre Dupuy wife was missing. to Baghdad without permission." Jurors to decide on the guilt OF tria. Japan and Sweden, cx 'opter One hundred men have been William, employed by Northern| It said that in the public inter- nocence of seven accused fac; hope the Geneva conference over the flames by Sabena saved. The death toll of 74 is the Alberta Railways, told police he est and "because of the retired x il » ibery phase of the 78-day trial tive could only think in terms of New Airport nd asked the jury for a total of acters and slaves because th 7 verdicts in the cases INVOIVING | uu" the wav Soviet: society w ZAVENTEM, Belgium (CP eight accused, including Som- dh ay.» he BS Fire destroyed the heait of Bel: mers. : 's new $14.000.000 nation: The jury deliberated almost two. The assembly endorsed three , rt late Tuesday hours then asked to be taken to other resolutions submitted t their hotel. by the political committee in cramped tunnels a the town's only industry alive, ing multiple counts as the alleged ime givers of bribes and on seven WI be successful counts against Sommers as the, 2. An Indian-Yugoslav 1 alleged receiver of the bribes. tion throwing the assembly's The Crown charges $16,000 port behind the Geneva « changed hands ence on measures for preve The others involved are timber surprise attack executive H. Wilson Grav, who faces 10 counts; Gray's firm of 3 A resolution to ex; Pacific Coast Services and tim. Present 25-member dis ber engineer Charles D. Schultz| commission into a body and his company of the same Of all 81 UN member name, who face nine counts each; structions to produce B.C. Forest Products, six; John tive proposals and recon Gray--a Pacific official and tions" for the Security Evergreen Lumber Sales, a Pac- and assembly, at a ffic subsidiary, three. sion if necessary "Mom" Whyte's Outlook Unchanged By Conviction Conviction for failing to com: ities to compel her to regist ply with the Ontario Children's her home, something which Boarding Homes Act has not has been advised not to do changed the outlook of famous Mr. Bazos. foster - mother, Mrs. Bertha However, action regarding x 2 "Mom" Whyte, or curtailed- a gistering the home n } Yrors on i roposed expansion-program at held in abeyance pendin ed e Whytehaven Mission for Chil- of an appeal, notice of w . ren. served upen Magistrate ) e strain of Following her conviction, a Baxter and own A ls wh group of Toronto businessmen Harry R. Peyman, followi paren proved launched an immediate campaign| conviction pen to raise $50,000 for use in erecting | The case will now come under a new building to house an esti- the jurisdiction of a county cou mated 80 more children and in-|judge in Cobourg. It is not know clude school, recreation and staff 5¢ this time when the appeal will Tatities. of the fami be heard ief patrons e fund are te xis ik Toronto es ely Dr. Nelles) ROUTINE UNCHANGED Silverthorn and C. L, Burton, hon-| The peaceful scene at Whyt orary board chairman of Robert|Haven following the Tuesday Simpson Co. Ltd. morning conviction was in sharj Anthony C. Bazos, Toronto, contrast with the earlier scenc Mrs. Whyte's attorney is actingon the steps of the fowh hall as legal counsel for the commit-| where Mrs. Bertha '""Mom" Whyte tee appeal. and her husband, Bert, faced a | Mrs. Whyte's conviction made barrage of flash bulbs and que it possible for provincial author- tions. The routine life at the haven te. Have CITY EMERGENCY "MOM" RESTS except ernoon Baz ind may er pilot, | worst in Canadian mining history Probes VO per-'since the 1920s when 88 men died "LATE NEWS FLASHES in a Stellarton, N:S., pit GE i A bird in the hand will get you nowhere socially. ) ! The nearly 900 jobless miners | bul Were |oft are concerned about the fu- | lise -Zone Plan Sir Roy Dobson, chairman of parently (A, Vv, Roe of Canada Limited ter of Communist Poland, was in Norway last week to sound out Western support for a new ver- sion of his plan which would bar nuclear weapons from a zone in- cluding Poland, Czechoslovakia and East and West Germany. Canada and Norway are allies |in the North Atlantic alliance and their thinking on world problems oftens runs along parallel lines FIRST PLAN IN FEB. Rapacki put his original plan | before the Canadian and other| | Order Gas Cut Off . |Western gomernments in a formal TORONTO (CP)---Chairman A. R. Crozier of the Ontario note Feb. 14, 1958, which sug- Fuel Board today officially ordered the Ottawa Gas Com- gested prohibition of nuclear pany to cut off the supply of natural gas in all inactive weapons in Central Europe and a| lines. The order confirmed a directive issued to the company control system to police this ban. last F gay $id Mr i: poser said he has heen assured "the Because Canada for more than wo woul Pp Le a a sibie a Q < > in ,. rk ould be completed as soon as possible a decade has been keenly inter- | ested in achievement of some dis- armament agreement, it wel- comed Poiand's initiative. However, Western countries, in- cluding Canada, rejected the plan |on the grounds it would disrupt |Western defences MODERATE VIEW i | But Canada took a much more| moderate view in its rejection Britain and the United By DAVE McINTOSH OTTAWA (CP)--The Canadian : parent company of government is ready and willing ' Dominion Steel and Coal Corpor- to give serious consideration to ation which controls the Spring-new Polish plan for a denucle: hill operation ized zone in Central Europe A Springhill trade board com- Adam Rapacki, foreign minis iid last week he didn't think the Springhill mine would re-open Avro is th the Former Jockey Charged TORONTO (CP)--Former jockey Bobby Keane, 32, has been charged with fraudulent concealment in connection with an alleged $500 swindle. Police say Howard Cook, a Sarnia restaurant owner, said he gave $500 to a man who de- scribed himself as a jockey and said he had a "sure thing." Cook said he was told he would win $8,000 and later was told he would have to raise another $1,000 if he wanted to collect. He called police. | THOUGHT FOR TODAY and his children were awakened |colonel's repeated attempts to by screams from the back yard|disturb general security, he was early Tuesday. He said he looked arrested and will be tried on a out the window but did not want|charge of plotting against the to get involved. country's interests." PLAN TRUST FUND Wife And Daughter Stranded Ba TORONTO (CP)--"he wife and infant "daughter of nela Da Silva, 25-vear-old Portuguese immigrant who was killed on Tu~sday on a construction job here are reported stranded in the Azores. A letter to Da Silva, never arrived at his boarding house after he left for work on Fuesday. In it his wife said she could not enter Canada un- til he filed proof he was employed Hundreds Late For Work . |States and invited Poland to try Espi- again Though no new Polish note has yet been received here, it is upderstood Rapacki is proposing now, besides a ban on nuclear| |weapons, a reduction of conven- tional forces in Central Europe. | The Canadian government is) === 3 ks prepared to give careful study to read, TORONTO (CP)--Hundreds of street car passengers wel te for work today when a mobile crane tore down 500 feet of overhead wires of the Toronte Transit Commis- would favor any scheme which Fireman, at left, suddenly sion at downtown Queen and Yonge streets. Traffic was would make eventual reunifica-| confronted with puff of flame disrupted for about 75 minutes. Police cordoned off the area tion of West and Last Germany| from doorway, turns to beat | because some of the wires carried high voltages even more difficult hasty retreat today. { any new plan, though it is anx- ious not to give the impression it Action | Clark on upper floors. Even CHICAGO HOTEL SWEPT BY BLAZE ladder caught fire from intense heat. Fire started in basement of tap room. came during fire in eight- storey business area building that houses Hotel Jackson- --AP Wirephoto PHONE NUMBERS COMMUNITY $30,000 $50,000 | $70,000 $90,000 $110,000 $130,000 $150,000 $175,000 POLICE RA 5.1133 CHEST DE ---- $58,028 | SUPPORT YOUR COMMUNITY CHEST | ora, et SCOREBOARD

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