Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 22 Nov 1958, p. 1

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

THE TIMES TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Adve tising .RA 3-3492 All other calls RA 3-3474 The Oshavon Some WEATHER REPORT Cloudy tonight, sunny intervals with a few light snowflurries Sunday. Winds light. VOL. 87--NO. 275 Price Not Over OSHAWA-WHITBY, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1958 7 Cents Per Copy Authorized As Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa TWENTY PAGES . GERMANS ASK GET-TOUGH POLICY by By enn ' SANTA AR It is easy to see a sample | Shaw, left and Doug of the excitement and joy Santa | son, right. Santa delighted the Claus brought to thousands of | many who turned out to wel- Oshawa's children, on his ar- | come him as he was the high- rival in Oshawa this morning, | light of a big parade sponsored mirrored in the faces of John | | | | German Horsemen Take Fair Honors By RIC HARD ANCO |C. Brady and Sons and Thomas TORONTO (CP) -- A German O'Brien of Glanworth and St.| {| f by the Oshawa Shopping Centre | RIVES TO CHEER OSHAWA YOUNGSTERS Dickin- | Merchant's Association. Thou- | will reign over the shopping sands lined the parade route | centre 'Winter Wonderland" which led from Alexandra | throughout ile Christmas sea- Park along Simcoe street, Bond | son and will divide his time street and Park road before | between visits throughou | proceeding west on King street | centre and his throne which is to the shopping centre. Santa located in Eaton,s basement. 2500 Men Sent department walked out at 10 p.m. at 2 p.m. in Toronto. | Production stopped at the Gen- sent home at General Motors of eral Motors plant here Friday Panada Ltd., Oshawa. {night after 240 night shift work- \ rs of 551s Clifford Pilkey, president of ory of the chassis department : Oflwalked out. Gocal 222, United Automobile, A company spokesman said it Workers, sald the men walked was a "work disruption" and did out because they wanted to know not appear to be a strike. The en- what could be done about super-|tire shift of 2,500 men was af- visors, foremen and office per-|fected. sonnel working on car produc-| Clifford Pilkey, president of don. {Local 222, United . Automobile Following this charge by the|Workers of America CLC, said tiation with the company which|reached in company - union is scheduled to resume Monday tract negotiations. Home rated 8,495 ve- hicles compaicd with 7,793 last wi says the Canadian Automo- or bile Chamber of Commerce. He also said some workers| This is made up of 7,164 cars claimed supervisors, foremen and compared with 6,649, and 1,331 office workers were working on|trucks compared with 1,144. car production. He gave no de-| Production to date this year is tails concerning this but said it|estimated at 306,987 vehicles would be raised when bargaining|compared with 374,837 in the cor- resumes Monday. responding period last year-- The UAW has called a mem.made up of 255702 cars com- bership. meeting for Sunday to Pared with 309,154, and 51,285 discuss strike action. After Fri.|trucks compared with 65,683. day Bight's walkout 3 large group of workers went to the union hall Mr. Pilkey. | HOW TAX ----------| DOLLAR SPENT where they were addressed by| How is your tax dollar 1s estima fiw J sensational performance of Fritz team of jumping horse riders,|Thomas, for a Smith hereford, 2 | performing to near -perfection| Friday night, easily won the Royal Winter Fair's international | team challenge Prix des Nations] Trophy to complete its North] American sweep of four cham-| pionships. The victory was paced by the| Thiedemann, who combined with | his 11-year-old horse Finale to| clear a total of 22 obstacles over| a 487-yard indoor course in two | rounds. A Canadian team upset a pow-| |erful United States squad to take| second place in team standings. | Mexico was fourth. Cuba trailed far behind. The German triumph here gave | [them a clean sweep of major North American international jumping contests this year. MEXICAN BIDS HIGHEST Carlos Urquiza, 71, of Quere- taro, Mexico, paid the top price| at a beef {8M, a hereford-bred heifer, for Olds, Alta, Second highest here-| [ford bid was $700, paid by James! Car Production | TAKE-IT-OR-LEAVE-IT Blue Jay Domino Supreme. for aberdeen angus. | The grand champion duel-pur- pose shorthorn cow award went to Cheapside Betty 7th, owned by Jack Atkinson, Nanticoke, Ont, He also-was named premier | exhibitor. | Brothers-in - law Leonard W.| Coulson, of Milton and A. Roy Coulter, of Campbellville swept the major honors in red polls beef judging. Their joint entry, Pinpur Echo Advancer, a three-| year-old won the grand champion bull Rosette for the second suc- cessive year. The champion's yearling son, Pinpur Echo 23M, owned by Mr. Coulson, took reserve. Mr. Coulson also won the grand champion cow title with Rose Ruth 6th, and the reserve with a| full sister. Horse show winners included: cattle auction. He| James Widgery Memorial Tro-| |bought Blue Jay Rose Supreme|phy--Portage, entered by Victor | Sifton, Winnipeg; roadster stake t the [$1,025 from Warren Smith of|--Fashion Lady, owned by Fraser Hurdman, Hurdman's Bridge, Ont, | | | UN Dea UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CP) at outer space negotiations with the Russians and today pushed a) |take-it-or-leave-it proposal. | The 20 associated nations--in- cluding Canada--decided to act on their own after talks broke down between the U.S. and Rus- |sia over makeup of a committee {to make recommendation for |UN supervision of peaceful ex-| {ploration of outer space. The group, which already had {put a space resolution before the| UN General Assembly's political |committee, decided to submit a |new draft without further talks with the Soviets. The revised dlocke d talks, calls for an 18-nation study group that would lay the ground- work for, a permanent UN space committee, Canada would be a member of | | E | U.S. owners took top awards © | ¥ ¥ CARIL RETURNS Caril Fugate, 15, convicted of first-degree murder and sent- enced to life imprisonment, waits to be taken back to Lin- coln State Hospital where she has been confined. She was sentenced by a jury in a trial following a killing spree involv- ing Caril and her companion Charles Starkweather earlier this year. --AP Wirephoto PM Urges fi Exchange Grants By ALAN DONNELLY, NEW DELHI (CP)-Pei it: elhl 00 {a university | wealth." ' nvoce today Teo hopes a new Commonwealth pro- The Western plan, which diplo-|gram of exchange * scholarships The United States and its sup-/mats hoped would win Soviet ap-|will be in full operation within porters have abandoned attempts proval despite the breakdown. in|two years, He said the program launched |at the Montreal Commonwealth {conference will provide "in effect in the Common- this group, The formula includes| most of the 11 nations contained| The plan of exchanging 1,000 in the disputed Soviet draft, but|students and teachers "will pro- adds several 'candidates favored vide mew vistas of opportunity, wisdom and tolerance among the by the West. | : { {various peoples of the Common This Ist is composed of the wealth." United States, Britain, France| and the Soviet Union as major| powers; Belgium, Italy and Swe- den from Western Europe; Czech-| oslovakia and Poland from the| Canada has undertaken to pro- vide for one-quarter of the stu- dents and supply one-quarter of the teachers needed for the pro- By REINHOLD G. ENSZ BERLIN (AP) -- West German officials today advocated a tough Allied policy on Berlin, including the use of tanks and fighter planes if necessary, to maintain Western links with the city, Henrich von Brentano, West German foreign minister, flew into Berlin for talks with Lord Mayor Willy Brandt on the. situa- tion created by Soviet pressure, There was no indication when the Soviet Union might carry out its announced plans to turn over to the Communist East German government control of Allied communications to Berlin in an effort to force the Western powers to abandon their positions in the former German capital. Several ambassadors were re- ported summoned to the Soviet foreign ministry in Moscow to- day "to receive an important document," presumably on So- viet intentions for Berlin. ONLY ROUTINE However, only the Dutch, Bel gian and Austrian ambassadors were summoned to the ministry and they discussed routine busi- ness not involving Berlin. Russian Premier Nikita Khrushchev launched a drive 12 days ago to end the occupation and get the Allies out of Berlin. Officials in Bonn, the West German capital, feared that a So- viet withdrawal from the occupa- tion agreement would lead to Al- p with mans for liberation. UNILATERAL. ACTION Moscow has said it will give the East Germans control over Allied military traffic to West Berlin even if the other occupy- ing powers do not agree. The West thus would have the choice of dealing with East German con- trols of trying to ignore them on the 110-mile trip between West Germany and Berlin, Some officials in Bonn favor ig- noring satellite controls. They want the West to use tanks and fighter planes if necessary to force their way through East eventually Te West Berlin and in the killing of the hopes of 17,000,000 East Ger- Tanks, Fighters In Berlin Crisis MUNICH, Germany (AP) -- Chancellor Konrad Adenauer said Friday night any commun- ist attempt to enslave 2,200,000 West Berliners would rock Eu- rope. Soviet Premier Khrushchev's announced intention to cancel yr four-power occupation status of Berlin is "seriously straining in- ternational relations," Adenauer said. The chancellor told a m here of Catholic and Protostan clergymen the Big Three Wests ern powers will on their declarations to remain firm is Berlin. | | Oshawa Boy Falls In Deep Well Michael McCarthy, 4, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leo McCarthy, Gibbon street, was watching car toons on television this morning. The adventures of "Popeye" were enough excitment for him today. At the same time yester- day, he was hanging in eight fee} of water down a 30-foot. well, Mrs. McCarthy said that her son was playing in a field behind their new home, and dislodged the hoards covering a well. The youngster tumbled down the well, The boy in twice his depth of water, but with presence of mind, he vig which he grabbed, but his hand slipped, and he. fell back, grabb ing the pipe again. ~ Fire Chief Rae Hobbs, with » detachment of men in the emer. gency truck, sped to the scene. Fireman Ron: Templar was low- ered into the well of a rope, grabbed the boy, and the two were pulled to safetly by hand. The fire chief estimated that Michael was in the well about. 20 minutes, "That little gaffer has a lot of nerve' he commented. After some hot soup, and a warm bed, administered by his frantic mother, Michael is abso- lutely none the worse for his ex- perience. He has a small scratch on his eye, but, in the words of Dow Workers FORGED PERMITS spent? This will be high on |draft was handed in here Friday|Communist bloc; India, Iran, |8ram in other countries. Germany. his mother '"'a boy could do that Endorse Strike Action SARNIA (CP) -- Local 16-672, Oil, Chemical and Atomic Work- ers, representing about 450 em- ployees of Dow Chemical of Can-| MONTREAL (CP) -- An ada Limited, have endorsed the month investigation by the RCMP action of the policy committee in|and the justice department into invoking strike procedure. what is believed to be an illegal G. Palmer, international |immigraticn scheme may soon representative of the OCAW, said result in prosecutions. more than 300 members who| Sources indicated that as many turned up for the local's regu-|as 20 Israeli residents may have lar monthly meeting unanimously been helped to gain forged cre- confirmed the policy commit- dentials permitting them to enter tee's action in rejecting the last and remain in Canada. One or "package settlement" proposal of more travel agents were in- the company. volved. a 8- RCMP Probes Immigration Plan istudents or teachers. Japan and the United Arab Re-| public from the Asian - African| bloc; Argentina, Brazil and Mex-| ico from the Latin American group; Australia and Canada rep-| | list of voter's questions when |night. |resenting nations with special in- |terest in outer space. There have been no indications THOUGHT FOR TODAY the Allies are considering dealing with the East Germans on con- friends it it's Even sin's best sometimes wonder worth the cost. trols without granting recognition and by insisting the East Ger- mans are only the agents of the Russians. anywhere". Michael's only comment on his experience was "It was cold in there'. Michael has a brother and twe sisters; Frank, 6, Beth, 2, and Jane, one year. Jean Miquelon, 48 - year - old they elect a new city coun~il mmm EER RTA for the next two years on N S Mi Dec. 1. | An offcial breakdown of hs ners municiual service during the course. of a year appears on | JEKYLL ISLAND, Ga. (CP)-- Some vacationing Nova Scotia J] a Montreal lawyer named two C d ] Pl lost their jobs have indicated months ago by the federal justice ar na d willingness to remain here and - - gation, said Friday "the investi-| 0 h V t It all started when Governor gation will be completed shortly | 5 awa 181 | Marvin Griffin of Georgia invited cutions." McGuigan will be in Oshawa to-|mine accident to holiday here for The investigation is reported to morrow to attend a tea at St.|two weeks with their families-- documents and entry of persons|north in honor of the 100th] The miners accepted and by to Canada under t he guise of anniversary of the arrival in/plane and bus were transported! -- order. | ground. . | Mayor Liman Gifford and Mrs.| A seafood processing firm, Sea-| iS) | Bint, as well as numerous other [Simons Island, offered jobs Fri-| civic and district dignitaries are{day to the miners and their Large Ontario Citie Get Mayor By Acclaim TATE NEWS FLASHES By THE CANADIAN PRESS Two Ontario cities and two of parations come in two stages. the province's largest towns re-{irst Shere Bre Toit nations, : 4 ves ve until the fol- elected their mayors by acclam-|jowing day to qualify for the ation Friday. ballot, Each 'municipality picks J. W. C. Langmuir at Brock-|its own dates for nominations, ville, R. G. Newkirk at Chatham, dualifications and elections with- oh .g iin a year-end time period fixed A. W. A. White at Galt and Leo by Ontario law. Some elect an- Dal Villano at Amps all won|nually, some every two years. 'w terms without opposition when Fey were only candidates cies ayaa Foy as out propo: at nominations for com-! ificati s 5 A a & {qualification deadline passed. te slactions. The Tymmiins elec-Sarnia has a two-man race in its Poe OF eh i 18 Dec. 1 vote for the mayor's chair + dy ec. 1. vacated by retirement of Dr. M. Some centres had a surfeit of M. Gowland with Frank Gower candidates. Eight were nomin- and Iven Walker in the field. ated for mayor at Cornwall and Kitchener, which also votes seven at Stratford. Fort William's Dec. 1, has a four-man battle live prospective candidates in- with Mayor Kieth Hymmen op-/didates--M Sid and Meinzin- hoth city council members who clude two women, first to con-posed by Fred Breithaupt test the office there since the city McLennan and Joseph i became an organized municipal-'ger ty in 1907. CITY EMERGENCY COMMUNITY CHEST SCOREBOARD POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 Ontario municipal election pre-| elected by acclamation, and at Jackson is opposed in a bid for a Oshawa, which has its vote for ates a dairy farm within the city limits, night for centres which held nom- inations field. At Peterborough, which votes w how much is spent on each In Geor ia g page 15. miners who survived disaster but department to guide the investi-| |pack fish instead of digging coal. and it may result in some prose-| His Eminence Cardinal James|the survivors of .the Springhill have uncovered details of forged Joseph's Conveni on Simcoe street|all expenses paid. Oshawa of the first Sisters of the|to this former millionaires' play- Gifford and Alderman R. Cecil{pak Corporation of nearby Saint | expected to attend. wives. | | Nov. 29, Ross Dobbin, Rupert| Knox and Donald Loucks seek to succeed J. A. Dewart, who is re- tiring A Other qualification deadlines passed Friday at Oshawa, where farmer Lyman Gifford was re- nine years. Hamilton, where Mayor Lloyd D. 10th straight term by William G. Harris in.the Dec. 3 election. At| States became engaged. couneil Dec, 1, Mr. Gifford oper. | STURGEON FALLS, Ont. Qualifying deadline comes to. Poard here has announced tha Friday and may cut the Fort William's two women can- Catherine Seppala Dorothy Pickup--are Thieves Rob Store Of § TORONTO (CP) the Consumers' Distributing Co: Mr ve been avowed contenders for eks. company, said today. Thieves smashed a hole in the wall of goods valued at $50,000 to $75,000, Jack Stupp, owner of the Rustralia Re-Elects Government CANBERRA, Australia (Reuters) -- Country party coalition government today was returned to power for another three years. It has been in power for Australia's Liberal- Ties Canada To U.S. In Conflict NEW YORK (CP)--Liberal Leader said today it would be virtually impossible for Canada to re- main aloof from any "major" Lester B. Pearson conflict in which the United Classes Re-Open For 480 (CP)--The separate school t classes will re-open Monday for the 480 students left without classroom facilities follow- ing a blaze at the old public school Thursday night. The fire is believed to have been started deliberately. 50,000 | mpan; Friday night and stole OUTSTANDING OCVI BOY AND GIRL WITH PRINCIPAL Chosen the outstanding «girl | and boy at the Oshawa Colleg- | iate and Vocational Institute for | | 1958-59, Nancy Minett and David Halliday are shown with their awards at the Oshawa Colleg- | iate and Vocational commence- ment Friday night, They are flanked on the right by OCVI Principal G. L. Roberts. Miss Minett reseived the Miss Ed- mondson award and Mr. Halli- day the Murray Johnston Cane. Mr. Roberts termed the decis- jon of picking the outstanding boy and girl a difficult one for the school staff and commend. ed the winners on their achieve ment. . (SEE STORY AND PICTURES ON PAGE 3). : --Oshawa Times Photo $30,000 $50,000 $70,000 $90, 000 $110,000 $130,000 $150,000 $175,000 a $109,496.86 SUPPORT YOUR COMM UNITY CHEST

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy