Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 11 Feb 1959, p. 1

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~~ Dsharon Sime WEATHER REPORT Clearing tonight, colder. Mainly clear and cold Thursday, winds northerly. \ TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising RA 3-3493 All other calls ...... RA 83-3474 . TWENTY-TWO PAGES Price 2 Conts bor. . OSHAWAWHITBY, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1959 v NTN VOL. 88 -- NO. 35 8 ] REPORT RED EFFOR MISLEAD RCAF JETS 88-YEARS OLD Russ Ship Sent Fire Damages Fake Pilot Beam: District Mill = on ore PORT PERRY (Staff) -- Osh-|after firefighters contained the awa and Uxbridge fire-fightersiblaze to the engine room. rushed to the aid of Port Perry] The Port Perry fire depart: ' fire department Tuesday after- ment was handicapped initially noon to help extinguish a blaze by the freezing of the nearest that broke out in the power plant hydrant. Men chopped a hole in of the Master Feeds mill. the threefoot-thick ice of the The fire, which threatened a|lake 100 yards to the east of the large apartment buildi across blazing buildi but found only mud. the street as well as the entire north side of Queen street, Another crew of Port Perry caused damage to the 88-year-|fire-fighters discovered a hydrant about a block away was free, old structure estimated at be a tween $2000 and $5000. and soon had water playing on With Trawlers Several tons of grain in the the fire. : elevator were put out of danger] Another hole, 15 feet further| HALIFAX (CP)--A ship picked out on the ice, was chopped, and UP an overturned dory from the US BUILDING = [Peder rt wii Dav rudiand tigwies 'HOUSENAPPED' progress of the Oshawa and Ux-|the slimmest hope that any of bridge departments racing to/her 16 men survived when she Port Perry. Oshawa Fire Chief|CapPsized south of Newfoundland OKLAHOMA CITY (AP)-- |Hobbs' car siren froze during the| Monday. A building reported 'house- napped"' from the federal avi- ation agency at Will Rogers 164mile journey. Another ship headed toward Port Perry businessmen helped the area northeast of Newfound- Ibe termed neglected under the Child Welfare Act and be taken|- sirport last week has been to divert traffic from the main'land where 31 fishermen are street. The 14 families in the|missing on the Icelandic trawler] away from the parents or guard- City Airport Manager Wil- [2 "Ham O. Coleman said the 30- West One, 'Greenland, Keflavik, Iceland, and Kinloss, Scotland. A flight of four Sabres was following a radio beam into Kin- loss when a new and stronger radio signal was superimposed on the beam. . This signal, if it lowed, would have ferried from Canada to Europe, it is learned reliably. The incident occurred a few " |years ago but came to light only today in the wake of President 's statement that he believes that some United States planes have been lured across the Iron Curtain by false radio sig- nals. The incident involving Cana- dian pilots occurred during the time when the RCAF was flying new Sabre jets to Canada's air division in France and West Ger- many. si The Sabre is a short - range plane and its transatlantic flights RCMP Rapped For Role In Logger Strike GRAND FALLS, Nfid. (CP)-- Mies DISASTER MAP 47 Sailors Feared Lost 'Mom' Whyte Target Of Legislation TORONTO (CP)--Parents and guardians will be the targets of a new crackdown on unregistered children's boarding homes under, a bill introduced Tuesday in the |legislature. Welfare Minister - Cecile said {his amendment to the Children's {Boarding Homes Act would per | mit fines up to $200 to be levied |against persons putting a child in an unregistered home. In addition, such a child could a course and were still able to tinguish a faint trace of the radio signal from Scotland -- to enable them to make base without trouble. KEPT A SECRET apartment block opposite the Juli. There has been no word were alerted for instant evatfia-|Trom. since last Saturday. n. ! | The bill appeared to be di i rected mainly against the Bow- : imanville boarding home of Mrs. .; |Bertha (Mom) Whyte, who has by-80-foot wooden structure was located.on concrete blocks about three miles away at an abandoned air- refused to register her home for © [100-odd children. [ | Registered children's boarding homes are required to meet rigid| | Irequirements for safety and healtt laid down by the Ontario port. He could not account for it's being there. The building was first missed during a routine in- spection last Friday. tion. Harvey W. Mahaffy, manager, who with five other men are em- ployed at the mill, reported the fire broke out at 4.35 p.m, The engine room is at the north end of the building. The alarm was turmed in at |Oshawa at 5.05 p.m. Port Perry Police Chief Archie Menzies complimented the three ShippMig~ Then expressed fear that all 47 men on the two vessels perished. Both ships reported being in danger from heavy ice forming on their superstructure. It is believed they became top- |heavy, rolled over and sank. The United States Coast Guard cutter Campbell found the Blue Wave's dory after it had been spotted from the air by an RCAF The RCMP's role in the strike of 1,200 Newfoundland loggers. com- manded most of the attention to- day as the bitter dispute entered its 42nd day. - Two incidents since Saturday) resulted in charges by union leaders that the RCMP was tak- ing sides. One involved a report The apparent reason for this was that the RCAF did not want to create an incident with Russia when it was impossible to obtain ny absolute proof of what had ppened. As far as can be learned, there has never been any recurrence of the incidence, at least as far as the RCAF fis concerned. that an RCMP Jatrl car side- I t t. | welfare departmen fire departments on their work. Hin |swiped women "Co-operation was marvel search plane. DYING, INJURED OF ST. LOUIS TORNADO that th a lous," he said. et Yorgi A "rounding ng wp u aid Turkey Agrees po | On iM J E od ois pd : : 1 nor Selva Jus Gray Coach Lines | Gets Support Disaster Area To Vote On Seen Likely: Ike agg a La last reported position 180 miles . lieves. its proposed legislation { | | N B 11 | WASHINGTON (AP) -- Presi- ST. LOUIS (AP)--The number|tornado crushed a house at Whit- ew d ot |dent Eisenhower apparently be- TORONTO (CP)--The Ontario northeast of Gander, Nfld. She was expected to reach there y sometime today. The Juli's last covering ships pilots on the Great a : / iq. : Lakes after the opening of the St, of dead caused by the tornado|tier and Delmar, TORONTO (CP) -- The 4,000- lieves that a summit conference \ message said: "Grave danger; department of transport has that hit St. Louis Tuesday has| There also was severe damage member Toronto-based team. late this year is a definite pos- pressures to get the United on a proposed constitution for an|NeaVY icing; severe weather. threatened to close down Gray|Lawrence Seaway will help meet i the American position on this reached 21. Another seven per-|in the section of St. Louis known|gters' Local 938 will vote this sibility. : ik ed [Raise Britain and France out of independent Cyprus and prepared Te. RO 3id an ad sea Coach Lines for failure to pay contentious question sons are missing, and at t 70jas "our G ich Village" ,| . * uch a meeting woul ring West Berlin. sk Britai pprove it. searches urther trace e taxes. ol tals more are in rl Jens Bh oa any pi week on whether to hold a NeW western government heads face-| Eisenhower brought up the sub- Wa High Tove 1. ie The Toronto Transit Commis- to dian lex Slaton, 8 to One of those in hospital was on|shops, apartments and taverns, (ballot on a contract ratified with to-face with Soviet Premier Ni-|ject of a summit meeting briefly| Karamanlis of Greece and Adnan sion, owner of the bus line, isi > Fm mengme! the critical list. | The tornado struck without|the Motor Transport Industriallkita Khrushchev for a discussion|at Tis press Sonference Syesiay Menderes of Turkey, meeting in about $20,000 in arrears for Nov- Relief workers still are meas-|Warning and moved at tremend-| Relations Bureau, it was reported of Sritical onary -- ed effect of State nn Dulles the Fa) Jesdion oy - 4 : S 4 A ce 0 wing dimensions of the misery ee eck uy Minutes today. -| questions of Germany and of dis- illness on prospects for a foreign rs oy yoga Whig Bs inflicted by the twister. The Red J se hi ing Pan | Units of the Toronto local are|armament. ministers' meeting. ters in the five days of bargain. Cross estimated 1,400 homeless 380-foot radio tower and a 575. Scattered from Sault Ste. Marie| Whether a conference is actu-| The president said he thought ing. in St. Louis and the county. ho . ed /a.. Voting} that Dulles' condition would mot| Most of the final The insurance board of St. (toot television tower. jlo Qriawa. Yang in some areds mE | delay a foreign ministers' confer- os ked ut js ghia Louis said 4,000 buildings were|CD INEFFICIENT [begins tonight but results are not ; "lence but noted that there has|iions betueen. for cn a ona- 1 likely to be known until the end : c,.| tions between foreign ministers damaged at a loss of $12,000,000.| The st. Louis Civil Defence of the 'Week been no agreement with the So- Evanghelos Averoff of Greece a ent Bivesiower declared Jsency acksowiedged it did not", | Wm "Ohtiaet teriis were} viets yet on actually holding suth| and Fatin Rustu Zorlu of Turkey. a disaster area, making function smoothly in spite of] | ri a session. ._|They were flying to London this it eligible for federal relief funds.|eight years of preparation for|T¢ached jointly by the Toronto, Soviet spokesmen including atierncon to submit the proposed such a disaster. CD officials | FFamilton and Windsor locals with NE ¢ > Khrushchev and Deputy Premier|constitution fo British Forei GRO AREA LASHED [blamed the weather bureau for|tiC bureau, which negotiates on Anastas 1. Mikoyan have re-|Secretary Selwyn Lloyd. 2 The tornado first touched down not predicting the tornado and Pehalf of 65 transport companies peatedly called for a heads-of- | with minor damage in Brent-| sending out an alert. | with 7,000 employees. : government conference. While he wood, a west St. Louis suburb. The weather bureau replied it| Local 938's Toronto members HOT POTATOES d was in the United States last Then it cut a path across the|yould hae been impossible to do have charged irregularities in montk, Mikoyan argued that it southeast corner of Forest Park. gq the vote which ratified the con- IN CONNECTICUT NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) ally arranged probably will de- pend partly on whether East- E ZURICH, Switzerland (AP) -- West negotigtions ease .Soviet| Greece and Turkey agreed today Blue Wave and her crew are con- tinuing. An air search for the Juli would resume as soon as the Canada Shipping Act, re- weather improves. ember and . The com- ceived the general support of mission, which had been disput- Canadian pilots an® shippers in ing the tax with the government, representations Tuesday to the nate transport committee. Tuesday agreed to pay "under oh protest." CBC Negotiations C. S. Booth, assistant deputy The tax is levied on a seat-per- - transport minister, said the in- In Eighth Day mile basis on buses travelling be- itial reaction fiom the vi J n good, although the U.S. OTTAWA (CP) -- Negotiators|tween municipalities. The TTC coast guard still is +8 convinced for the CBC and its Montreal estimates the 1950 tax will as to the adequacy of the Cana- television producers headed into amount to $205,000. dian proposals. ais NY, of talks his Mr. Booth, who said both Can. mo , bo es apparently determined to continue meetings] THOUGHT FOR TODAY One reason many people aren't broadminded is that ada and the U.S. fully recognize th f e) here until settlement is reached. . Need fon Sumples 7 ary wl In the absence of definite state- they haven't enough brains to spread. otgage legislation Canadian government now is pre- ments, it ppeared the main area of disagreement remaining con- paring a second diplomatic note to the U.S. government on the cerned not the 74 producers who went on strike Dec. 29, but the questions of uniformity. 1,200 other CBC employees who have been respecting their picket Bose ee Distress Signal Up In Atlantic HALIFAX (CP)--A plane flying from Iceland to New- foundland today reported hearing a distress radio signal in an area northeast of Gander, Nfld.,, where the missing Ice- landic trawler Juli was last heard from Saturday. Ohio Cities Imperiled By Floods COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)--Ohio's northern ° cities were : ' would be a conference held with- The worst destruction was The tornado followed almost|iract. They have already voted p Despite U. S. disagreement] pot tatoes? The Dover of Busch Stadium, home of St.| Bodies No. 20 and 21 were dug| cision rests on the result of area 4 or tines. to two mues from downtown St. dav ni Th ; identifi cials say that a summit confer- »yin~ 35 of day night. ey were identified] The agreement included a 21- y pany truck car-yin~ 35.000 the producers' demand that their ' | lof the other employees arose. Ontario Slush- Choked JAMES 'MUIR BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) cause they said they dc not be-| manslaughter charges Tuesday. . on school children in Southern On-|Tuesday made it almost impossi-|cast for all sections of Ontario Canada's of Lacrosse missiles and their (boy died Christmas night after a MW type of weapon this year and| systems. storm of the winter, lin Dufferin county. Al Elmvale around zero tonight and climb to] Bank Man Says im ded illness. {that in limited quantity, officials Only one battery, comprising]: The new weapon is the Ameri hg set up. Half the battery will clear snow - and slush - clogged stayed the night with residents or in the north, 'with Canada, says James Muir, called in a band of "believers" | can Lacrosse surface-to-surface Church, where she and her hus- amount of $473,000 is included in|many and the other half at the in Southern Ontario with accum- Tuesday so buses could get pupils! TW0 days of near-continuous ment is asleep." |carrying an atomic or conven- | | street z i | y Y ri the morning [FARMERS ISOLATED |streets and slowing traffic to a|night Canada could trade with had just finished clearing up the Ported marooned in their homes y hipped the snow into drifts yp Ment there, though "we'll have the government proposes a 24- in drift-blocked laneways and! Orangeville, 40 miles northwest zero. Canada's refusal to trade, he |tions for armed forces weapons telephone services were dis. SdUWPment fought. a iosing battle|* only a confused policy of our {delivery of the same types of de- into Toronto as thousands of mot-|the plugged roads to deliver milk| Drifting was heavier in some a great disadvantage." {Naval appropriations include Toronto police said a glaze of ville near Orangeville was cut off 1s seen more than 10 feet of|than they have ever been, but he imperiled by new floods today for the second time in less 1,500 students have been forced from their homes by the chiefly the carrier-born. Tracker. out insistence on careful diplo- crowded Negro tenements on ap. same path as one in 1927,to hold a second ballot on con- about the amount of advance pre- i Louis Cardinals. This area is one| from the rubble of a house Tues. votes. Srucking, Centre of - Dover, The parties apparently were is. |as Mrs. s, . i | 7 ence is indeed a ibility as , as Mrs. Lee Buggs, 24, and her cent package increase over a 7 Possibility pounds of sp caught fire |, iation be recognized as their . Parents Jailed Canada Gets Only ¥ In Sleet Storm Wake Red Chinese S5iizinis lieve in doctors, were jailed on Mr. and Mrs. Aulton Weems OTTAWA (CP) tario had a holiday today in the ble to keep sand on the roads. [tonight and Thursday. Temper- launchers and armament control Civic employes, however, had|near Barrie, 80 high school stu-|25 Thursday in the south and falll MONTREAL (CP)--The Chi-| When the boy went into convul- (Say. | be stationed with the Canadian streets and highways. !in the hotel. Many Southern On- president of the Royal Bank of band aie members, to pray for the defence department appropri- | artillery school at Camp Shilo, ulations of three to six inches be- home before dark. They re-|Snow dumped more than eight] Mr. Muir, who toured Red | tional high-explosive warhead. The fresh snow came after| crawl. Communist China without offi- snow and slush left Tuesday. Decause plows were not able to to four feet deep. Overnight tem.' recognize them sooner or later |per-cent cut--to $334,000,000 from walked to work. of Toronto, was reeling under 14 Owen told the O!d Boy's Association of| {and equipment. Traffic jams stretched for miles|rupted. More than 100 farmers in G"F"E Tuesday night trying to neighbors to the south. It does (Stroyers and anti - submarine orists continued to brave attro-/to the cheese factory in the town. Sections than it had heen at any! The Chinese, he said, are hap more than $29,000,000 for ships, [by 12 to 15 foot high drifts. The Snow dumped in Owen Sound and|eXPected the formation of village 0 matic work beforehand. path from the park to the vicinity| which killed 78 tract ratification but a final de- ration needed, informed offi- ' 1 De Del, had 'em after a com near agreement late last week on Eight sons died when thel18- : | yea" peri things now stand. ¢ " a ight per: en |18-month-old son, Lee Jr three-yea* period. 8 on the Connectic t Tu pike. bargaining agent, Then the issue For Manslaughter ee ese = O11 New Weapon TORONTO (CP)--Many rurallice under a five inch snowfall clear and cold weather was fore. | Want Trade ; said it was God's will that the armed forces will get only one ) wake of the worst snow and sleet| Sixty schools were closed today atures were expected to drop to |four launchers and 220 men, will to work avertime in atfempts to'dents couldn't get home and below zero and rise to 10 to 20 nese Communists want to trade|sions, Mrs. Weems said, she . from the Jefferson Park Holiness guided missile for the army. An Infantry Brigade in West Ger- Snow fell throughout the night tario rural schools closed early PETERBOROUGH HIT Canada, "but I think our govern- , her son. . lations for purchase of & number Man. The Lacrosse is capable of fore the falls tapered off during mained closed today. (Inches on Peterborough, clogging|China last summer, said Tuesday | SLASH BUDGET ; snowplow crews in many centres| Hundreds of farmers were re-| Winds of 25 miles an hour Cally recognizing the govern- LATE E FLASHE | In its 1950-60 defence budget, | presented to Parliament Feb. 5, Many motorjsts left their cars| 8et onto county roads. {perature was six degrees above|20YWay." $439,000,000 -- in the appropria- TRAFFIC JAMMED inches of snow and hydro and Sound's snow removalithe High School of Montreal, is The navy will continue to take along the main arteries leading the areas couldn't 'get through °Pe® Up streets. |a great deal of harm and it is | planes ordered several years ago. cious driving conditions, The tiny police village of Mars- time previous yhis winter, which pier, cleaner and 'more hopeful |chiefly St. Laurent class destroy- |village was blacked out for a|district. communes, a main feature of in- short :time and residents were The department of highways re. ternal policy, will lead to a re- turn of government by the semi- without heat. ported Owen Sound district high-| ; Flights at Toronto's Malton air- ways were open this morning, [Cae] War ods of She vast, POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 |port, grounded Tuesday, resumed there were narrow sections inland ambitious men" in the co- at midnight many places. One-way traffic operative village units will to} Skies were expected to clear only was possible 4 several loca- tr, dominate the communes within |Bradually over the southern part tions on Highway\No. 6 north of 10 or 15 years, eventually assum of the province today. Mainly Wiarton ing the status of the war lords. | )$ than a month. In one city alone, Fremont, between 1,200 and. 13 and $23,500,000 for planes two floods. Cornwall Chevies Get New Coach CORNWALL (CP)--General Manager Ray Miron of Cornwall Chevies has announced that Murph Chamberldin, | released Sunday as coach of Windsor Bulldogs, has been ac- quired as Cornwall coach for the balance of the OHA East- | ern Senior "A' season. No appropriation has been made for "procurement of two pieces of equipment wanted by the army: The amphibious Bob- cat armored carrier and the Car- ibou transport plane. Develop- Bridget Lowrie, 26, was all alone at the finish line as she won the Olney, England, half of the annual Shrove Tuesday in- ternational pancake race. How- ment work is continuing on both, however, ever, the trophy came back to the U.S. when Mary Colling- HOT OFF THE GRIDDLE wood covered the similar 415. yard course at Liberal, Kansas, in one minute, 8.8 seconds, seven seconds faster than the British competitor --AP Wirephote

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