THE TIMES TELEPHONE NUMBERS : Classified Advertising RA 8-3492 All other calls '.....,. RA 83-3474 he Oshawa Tne WEATHER REPORT Mainly clear and colder tonight and Sunday. VOL. 88 -- NO. 68 OSHAWA-WHITBY, SATURDAY, MARCH 21, 1959 Authorized As Second Class Mall Post Office Department, Ottawe SIXTEEN PAGES 7 el LADY LUCK PROVES FICKLE orite, "Slippery Seaport" Their horse, however, was not in the first three runners to complete | the gruelling Grand National | Steeplechase course. Mr, Lay- | coe used "444" as a nom-de- Lady Luck smiled though not as broadly as she might have, on Frank Laycoe, and his wife Lee, of Ajax, They held a ticket in the Irish Hospital Sweepstakes on the second fav. plume on his ticket, explaining that four is his lucky number. The Laycoe's telephone number ? Ajax 444, Photo by Mills Road To Summit Pro-African U.K. Meeting FIVE TOP PRIZE Battle Raging In Tibet City | NEW DELHI (AP) -- Fighting is raging in Lhasa, capital of Communist-held Tibet, the Indian|ists or fled from his great Potala foreign ministry reported today. (palace under protection of A terse midnight radio report friends. from the Indian representative in| jew Delhi authorities are re- "the roof of the weorid" sald: ported to have asked the Chinese "Fighting in immediate vicinity| Embassy here to take any steps of consulate, Situation tense and necessary to protect the Indian rising.": consulate -in Lhasa, ave bilef message Jussested The Chinese here declined com- only free world link with Tibet-- {ne on the reports of the fight may have been cut off, | The Indian consulate is just out- REPORT SIGNIFICANT side Lhasa between the Dalai] The Indian foreign ministry's Lama's summer and winter pal- confirmation of open tighting in aces, which are only two miles Lhasa is significant, Careful not apart, to antagonize Red China, Prime The uprising was sparked, ac- Minister Nehru has tended to dis- young captive ruler may have been kidnapped by the Commun- prize winners in the Irish Hos- pitals Sweepstakes based on the Grant National steeplechase at Aintree, Engalnd today, seven people in this area will receive $1150 apiece. This amount goes to each ticket holder on horses unplaced or not running, Ticket holders in this district were Frank Laycoe, 42 Tudor Ajax, who drew "Slippery Ser- pent"; Warner Brown, 59 Mead. ow Rd., Oshawa, who held a tic. ket on the 100 to 9 shot, "Done Up"; Stanley C. Weyrich, 122 Allan St, Whitby, who drew a horse, "The Crofter"; Mrs, Ver- na Ireland, 115 Elgin St. W. Osh. nal"; Same Smith, 3 Veterans Rd., Bowmanville, who drew awa, who drew the horse, "Eter. B. ANADIANS WIN : SWEEP No Major Prize In Oshawa Area Although no one from Oshawa|the following noms de plume: land district was among the top Charley, Outremont, Que.; Albert onde, Montreal; Anatanis Tevelis, Hamilton; Donmik, Tor« onto; and Chris, Elmwood, Ont. Three Canadians held tickets on Wynburgh, finishing second, and two more on Mr, What, the favor. ite, who finished third, Second place ticket holders will pocket $56,000 each and thirds are worth For Wyndburgh the Canadian tickets were listed for: BXS 37379, Willie, Calgary; BXD 42411, Jo Jo, Regina; BZD 44726, Lena Rudy, Windsor, Listed for Mr. What were: BXK 74511, Last Post, Montreal; a AMH 48733, Ginger, Kelowna, St. $28,000 each, In a Quebec Army, Navy and Air Force Veterans Assoclation sweepstake based on the race, "Key Royal" and Mrs. Margaret first prize of $28,000 was won by Meet Dis GETTYSBURG, Pa. (AP)-- Prime Minister Macmillan and President Eisenhower today were reported seeking a compromise route toward a summit meeting with Soviet Premier Khrushchev next summer. Moving into the setond day of their Camp David conference, they also were expecied to dis- cuss military arrangements in suppart of their determination to maintain the Western position in Berlin despite Soviet pressures. Deputy Defence Secretary Don- ald A, Quarles was summoned from Washington to participate in cussed {ban. The ideas have not been offi-| cially disclosed, but Eisenhower told a recent press conference he was not convinced they were practical. rerge lew aba ; emergencies ot ¥ i v pbout of. Firecrackers explodcdd, whistles summit conference were reported sounded and banners were dis. to have emerged during Friday's Played saying "Keep Britain discussions. white. The differences must be ironed A Negro speaker, referring to out before new Western notes reports of a plot in Nyasaland to can be sent to Moscow about kill Europeans, said: "It is not {plans for a Big Four foreign min-| Africans who are killing Euro- isters meeting at Geneva May 11 peans. It is the Europeans who are killing Africans." ~possibly to be foliowed by a In Edinburgh meanwhile, Lord Ends In Brawl LONDON (CP) -- A meeting supporting African nationalism broke up in a fist-swinging brawl Friday night near the houses of Parliament cording to the Indian press, by count reports of unrest and revolt | an order to the 25-ycar-old god-|in Tibet, | king from the Red Chinese com- These reports of trouble in the mand in the capital telling him mysterious land in the Himalayas to report at once without body- have been - growing since last| guards. summer when Khampa tribes- DALAI LAMA VANISHES men of eastern Tibet slipped out The whereabouts of the Dalai ©f Lhasa to launch a guerrilla Lama, who is worshipped by the|campaign against the Chinese 1,300,000 Tibetans as their relig Communists from mountal n lous and political leader, was not Strongholds southeast of the capi. known, tal. There was speculation that the PEARKES VISITS REGIMENT Hon, G. C. R. Pearkes, VC, | Oshawa Friday night. He is (right), rainister of national de- | seen here conversing with Lt. fence, was accorded a warm Col. M. C. Finley. officer com- | welcome by the officers of the . i ; LE | 11th Armored (Ontario) Regi- | manding ie regiment. See pe Deliaes lajm the Rua ment at a mess dinner Fri- | story on Page Three. 3 lave leading a popular uprising| day in the officers mess In (Oshawa Times Photo) King, Ajax, who held a ticket on the horse "Saxon King"; and the E. Cryer of 228 North Syndicate holder of a ticket under the pseu-|St., Fort William, donym of Rona. | Second prize of $16,800 was on By THE CANADIAN PRESS bY, Thelma H, Clark of Winnipeg. Five Canadians today won| Third prize of $12,000 was won $140,000 each as Oxo, a 10 to one by G. Smith, North Gower, Ont. shot, won the Grand National Two pools of $16,800 each were #teeplechase at Aintree, England.|to be split among persons whose | Three of the winners, holding|tickets were pulled on hofses [Trish hospital sweepstake tickets Which were scratched or falled {for the contest, were from On./to place. A third pool of $16,800 |tario, Two were from the Mont- was to be divided into consolation real area, | prizes, Tickets were registered with| A total of 327 Canadians had chances on the race which saw 34 against the Chinese, Others say | the tribesmen, who claim to be fighting in the name of the Dalai| Lama, speak only for themselves. Two-Car Crash horses start, Only four finished. Persons with tickets on horses that failed to start or to place in the running will receive $1150 the talks {July or August. Ailing State Secretary Dulles is SUMMARY OF VIEWS represented at the conference by| According to authoritative dip- Acting Secretary Christian A. |lomatie informants, the differ. . Macmillan's chief adviser ences boll down to this: Justify it; this (heads of government session in Home, secretary of state for Commonwealth relations, was telling a meeting that details of ithe plot will be disclosed soon to Parliament. Jes the Afri girls and _-- means jlaunch a campaign of minder | ware killed early today! in a two. wants from the foreign and argon. hn AL i" Poekea negotiations Wath Russla|crisls, Macmillan is reported to on a nuclear test ban . This is | believe that a summit meeting among the issues on whith the must be held regardless of what two do not see eye-to-eye. {the foreign ministers do. Macmillan discussed with| Diplomats said they were con- Khrushchev a month ago in Mos- fident that the differences would cow some new ideas on a test/be reconciled in some manner. a ministers meeting some progress| In London, Joshuea Nkomo, the this town 25 miles west of Tor- anning to discuss the dead-|towatd resolution of the Berlin president of the Southern Rho. Onto. {desia African National Congress, described reports of the plot as "a very cunning frame-up." | The disturbance in London {came at a meeting ordanized by {the British Movement for Colo- Inial Freedom, Defence Share TE AVRO AFTERMATH To Be Subject At Ottawa Talk OTTAWA (CP) -- Leaders of the Canadian aircraft industry wjll come here Monday to dis- cuss with government officials defence production - sharing ar-| rangements between Canada and| the United States. The meeting of the Air In. Despite come of the 14,000 aircraft work- Little Hardship Jobless TORONTO (CP)--What has be-|was expected to attract the great south of here when deflected by| [bulk of the Avro staff. ers who lost their joon a month| The axe came for the 14,000 -- {ago when the federal government! Feb. 20 when Prime Minister | {scrapped the Avro Arrow jet in-| Diefenbaker told the Commons that the government had _ (dinell, 19, Huttonville; Raymond 'Fatal To Four The Dalai Lama 1s portrayed | here as torn by pleas of the) lous txil |Khampas for rotection and de-| ® ° priori ise With Cheap Crude Oi car collision on Highway 10 near are getting set with thousands of TALKING BIRD SOLVES CRIME [7 of, hoes, fo, flood the SYDNEY (CP) -- A white priced crude oil from Soviet | and yellow budgerigar is fields, probably the only bird in Aus- They said today the oil will tralia to have solved a crime [flow from areas as far away single-handed. as Baku on the Caspian Sea. Police told the Redfern | A Finnish trade delegation, Sout Sat me stolen Died, headed by Trade Minister Arti Fla Me weetie Pie, identified itse Karjalainen, returned to Helsinki [pls Blaine NePme, b/ when it sald: "Lend us a [from Moscow this week. It con- lington: Norman Moore. 19. Bur.| Quid, lend us a quid." firmed that the Russians have lington. Ghai | Thomas Weekes, 37, la- [completed a huge transcontinen- Another youth, John Rhodes of] DOrer, was charged with hav- tal network to link the Caspian Churchville. was thrown th hl ing stolen the bird and sold it [and Black seas with the Baltic. | the windshield po' np to a shop. The Finns were offered Soviet and escaped serious injury, police| A friend of Tweetie's owner |oil "at a very favorable price," said ' | Identified the bird after hear- 'a spokesman said. The exact ing its request, |price was not disclosed. | Three other persons were taken to hospital in Cooksville, about 10 miles south of here. | | Police identified the four dead as: Lucy Benner, 16, Burlington; Ruth Taylor, 17, Ontario training |centre at Brampton; John Car- Dickson, 22, Brampton, | Russ May Flood West STOCKHOLM (AP) -- Scandin.) Soviet technicians are putting) The Russians are, however, | avian sources say the Russiansithe finishing touches on a mod-(phuilding a refinery at Ventspils| |morthern Europe. each, There are also 1,680 prizes of $280 each and 3,600 consola- tion prizes of $50, Extra Spending Bills Okayed | OTTAWA (CP)--With a smile |at the opposition across the Com- mons aisle, Works Minister ern port for tankers at Klaipeda) (pre-war Memel), in Lithuania, |2nd are eapectes to tun out gas | Another oil port is planned at/Cline y ultable: for the Western Ventspils (Windau), on the Lat. Markets vian coast of the Baltic. {PEVELOP PIPELINE Green mopped his brow. Soviet oil sold to acrth Euro-| Swedish informants also have| The government leader in the peans in the past has had to reported the rapid development/Commons was signitying Friday come from the Black Sea by of a large pipeline system for na-'night, after two days of persis. tankers on month-long trips via tural gas in the Soviet Union and tent opposition questioning, his the Mediterranean, its satellites, relief that the Commons had Swedish experts take the So-| Finland now Is buying its total completed work on $282,799,710 of viet bid as a first sign of an all-|supply of oll from the Soviet Un-|supplementary spending es- out sales drive for Russian oil in'ion, |timates required to pay governs A trade agreement signed early ment bills up to the end of this They say the Caucasian crude this year between Sweden and the fiscal year which ends March 31, Russia offers to sell from ports Soviet Union provides for Russian| The Commons sat for a brief a one-day voyage from Stockholm deliveries of 1,600,000 tons ofPeriod beyond the normal ad- and Copenhagen is only fit for crude oil during 1959, an increase|Journment hour to wind up dis heating. of 700,000 tons over last year, cussion of the supplomentaries. They believe one of the cars| Tweetie Pie can also say: ---- crashed head-on into a steel abut.| ,., red " {ment on a bridge about a mile) I'm a good boy" and "eat . your dinner. B 1 T Ok ill To Okay Pay Increase the other auto, NEWFOUNDLAND RUCKUS win, deputy governor . general, gave royal assent to them and to $616,654,878 in inte rim money supply to cover the bills that will come in during the first two months of the 1959.60 fiscal year. The opposition engaged in scat- Ontario Backing tered scrapping with Finance dustries and Transport Associa.| tereeptor? Minister Fleming who was pilot- tion, chief spokesman for the air-| About 2,300 are back working craft industry, was called at the for Avro Aircraft Limited and request of thé .defence produc. Orenda Engines Limited, the two scrapped the Arrow program. The call-back began within a few days, however. For Aldermen Iroquois Chiefs TORONTO (CP) -- Salary in-| TORONTO (CP) -- Attorney.) Earlier this month, the chiefs ntary esti S creases of $1,000 a year would be General Roberts was to visit the deposed the elected council on/through the Commous, touching Premier Lashes In the intervening month there has been less hardship than ex- ected. | A Toronto report on the status of production-shar.| tS Iroquois engine. |survey of the oi Than Bl ing arrangements and how best| Another 300 or so professional has been, in fact, some indica. to tender for U.S. defence de- engineers are also in the Avro tion that the people from the two partment contract. The meeting fold, with the federal government plants are far from desperate will be held in camera, |contributing toward their salaries Some have politely declined when The big three of the Canadian for six months, [they were offered work at $60 or aircraft industry -- A.V. Roe| A few have launched new busi- more a week." (Canada) Limited, Canadair Lim- nesses. A group at Port Hope, 23| The 10,000 employees not re- ited and de Havilland Aircraft {miles south of Peterborough, said|hired live méstly in Toronto-area of Canada Limited--will be rep- Friday night they plan a new communities from Oakville resented. {company to employ about 100 in/through Brampton to Oshawa. Roe was left high and dry a/sheet metal and electronic work. |The Weston national employment month ago when the government | Of the rest, most are still un-|office has registered 3,000 for cancelled the Arrow jet inter- employed. Few have gone to the work or unemployment insur- eeptor program. |United States where higher paylance. tion department, {subsidies of A. V. Roe (Canada)| Officials of the department will Limited who designed and built brief the industry representatives tN® Prototypes of the Arrow and permitted municipal aldermen|Six Nations Indian reserve near and controllers under legislation| Brantford today for a conference approved Friday by the legisla. With the Lereditary chiefs who re: ture's municipal law committee, cently lost their bid to take over The pay increases would be-|Bovernment of the reserve. come effective by a vote of a city) This was announced in the leg- {council but at least one mayor is|islature Friday during a discus- opposed to the move--Toronto's|sion in which government and op- Nathan Phillips. position members spoke in sup- He sald he is against any bid/port of the Iroquois chiefs. At Diefenbaker ST. JOHN'S, Nfd. CP)--Pre-|Canada says I aggravated the {mier Smallwood told the legisla-|situation . . . This is said by the {ture Friday that Prime Minister Prime minister who doesn't think {Diefenbaker 'has been good His uy uted of 8 Yori wo enough to tell Canada from the|g, Sure he Jnows Sets. He for a "salary grab" by Toronto] The House also considered House of Commons that the pre-| There's no need to find out the Bldermen or controllers, declar- what work it has yet to do this mier of Newfoundland had ag- ng session and heard welfare de the reserve -- they called it ajon practically every government "puppet government" -- and de-|department, jmanded a return of the tradi-| Considered were a host of gov- tional government of the Six Na- ernment spending items ranging [tions confederacy of Nort h| trom premium payments for high |America which was replaced by|grade hog carcasses to an addi |an elected council under terms of [tional $2,300,000 for aerial photog. |the federal Indian Act 35 years/raphy of the Arctic reaches. ago. During discussion of labor de- The chiefs were in turn de-|partment spending, Paul Martin posed by the RCMP last week|(L--Essex East) failed to prod after they set up their own courts| Mr. Fleming into divulging the and the elected council returned government's plans for the un- Ito power. employment insurance fund. facts and assess the responsibil: "1 have heard no suggestion partment estimater. gravated the violence in the New-[!tY: +. « that city council would take ad- foundland woods dispute. RAPS PC MINISTER vantage of it but I am giving Mr. Diefenbaker's statement! Ww. J. B. Browne, federal min. fir Warning that I will fight it in last Monday was aovmtthing like ister without portfolio who repre. | council." . « saying that the British pre-|sents St. John" mier had aggravated Hitler's ie come iy H West, haa Tailed MAX MUMS hr Dovy d lence. o p ¥ | on: ah o Newfoundland's good name is atito the Municipal Act, sets out | $1 Billion Proposal 'Because after all if the British premier hadn't opposed Hitler, there wouldn't have been nearly slandered." stake. and this House is being Mr. Smallwood said he was {this schedule of maximum sal aries: To Double B.C. Power vast power dams on the Canadian portion of] Such an agreement will be dis- OTTAWA (CP)-A development sc me or the Col-/the Columbia which rises in BC, cussed in Washington Wednes- ur Som 2 ai electric power /B.C., in British Columbia and northwestern U.S. to the Pacific. of 1JC. the United States Pacific north-| Three alternate schemes were Canada' west in 1985 has been proposed suggested by the board: Out pee anh Jusition, in Lolunbia | h ! s been tha to te Wiirasonal Joint Com fui no diversion: one with di U.S. must make payments to mai Project. ada in power for damming International Columbia River En- near «Where ; 3 Slambin oh rg water gineering Board, would cost the Kootenay comes within a x rg age ry 0 joa in BS nearly $1.000000000 in Canada mile of Columbia Lake, head- prants js generate ejectrinity. alone and would double current water of the Columbia River;| FOF Years the US. refused to electric output on the Columbia and one with diversion of the 28Tee to return power to Canad to 16,000,000 kilowatts. Kootenay into the Columbia at '" exchange for the use of Cana-| The board proposes the con- Dorr, about 10 miles north of the dian water. However, the U.S struction of at least eight mighty international boundary. | The engineering report said jt| Canada should receive a share of CITY EMERGENCY y at Trail, /day, April 8, at a meeting of the lit. « . . Take the Civil War in the qq not know enough of the facts and flows through the Canadian and American sections \ now has agreed in principle that| Mr. Smallwood said "the heat | Controllers in cities over 300,000 of the stand population, $8,500; over 200,000, Leader Lester $6000; over 150,000 $4500; over| £ have "liked it(100,000, $3500; less than 100,000, § Mr. Pearson said he|$2500. + wok h Aldermen could in| § [United States, ihe Louis Riel re- ang that was why he was dis-|cities over 300,000; Bgl] |bellion in Canada. appointed the prime minister had/over 200,000, $2,000 over 120,000, | Mr. Smallwood said there were not seen fit to set up a royall10,000, $750 over 500 and $350 be- 48 days of lawlessness and Vvio-| commission. {low 500. { |lence™ before he intervened in| g {the strike of International Wood: (CLO) {workers of America * * wi mete eis 1 TAIN Derailed No One Injured The Liberal premier's first in- tervention was a blast at the IWA in a radio and television ad- dress. He told the loggers to send the TWA packing and he would help them form a new union. CAPREOL, Ont. (CP) -- The taken to Hornepayne, about 175 WAS ASKED TO ACT CNR's Super Continental passen- miles northwest of the derail ger train was derailed just be- ment, where they were put fore dawn today 35 miles west of aboard the westbound Contin. Gogama and about 115 miles|ental. {northwest of this Northern On-| The CNR's Northern Ontario tario railway centre, |district headquarters at North as much of it. You can think of «not too proud" so many instances in which vio-ltaken by Liberal lence would not have been so|pearson. He would great if someone had not opposed pater nad was on me for 12 days before I intervened" at the request of "politiciandabor leader" Cla AA ee Jodoin, president of the Canadian| All 13 passenger cars on the/Bay said the transcontinental {is "physically and economically POWer generated at U.S, plants. feasible" to go ahead immedi-| The biggest of the proposed PHONE NUMBERS [ately with one of the three dams on the Columbia would be POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 35-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3.2211 schemes. However, - the board said that a Canada - US. sharing of costs and benefits will, be required before full co-opera: {tive 'development can go abead.! at Mica Creek, 9 miles stream from Revelstoke, up- B.C. agreement on The dam would cost a maximum resentative, $327,000000 and have a maxi mum generating capacity of 1, 624,000 kilowatts. Labor Congress, Frank Chafe, westbound train left the tracks/line would be blocked for about eastern Newfoundland CLC rep-,ut remained upright. Reports/24 hours, Traffic is being re- labor officials and from the scene said no one was routed on CPR and Algoma Cen scores of telegrams "written bY injured. tral 'Rallway lines through Sault the TWA. | About 100 passengers weme|Ste. Marie and Sudbury, 2 "And yet the prime minister of transferred to a apecial trala and'miles south of here. l HIGH LEVEL DISCUSSION President Eisenhower and | at Walter Reed army hospital | three-way discussion of he site Prime Minister. Maemillan |. «_ .. ; : i in Washington Friday. They | uation in Berlin. visited U.S. Secretary of State Joba Foster Dulles in his suite | took the opportunity for a (AP Wirephoto) a Ee