Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 19 Aug 1959, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY One way to hurry up the season is to borrow a substantial am- ount of money on a 60-day note. fie Oshawa Times WEATHER REPORT Sunny and hot. Thursday; ine creasing humidity and chance of afternoon thundershowers. Authorized As Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottowc VOL. 88--No. 193 \ rice Not Over OSHAWA, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 19, 1959 TWENTY-TWO PAGES Cents Per Copy Jobs Set New High For July OTTAWA (CP)--Canadian em-|/unemployment was nowhere near ployment jumped by 153,000 to.a/the job increase in employment. | record 6,206,000 jobs in July, the] Ontario jobs rose by 5.000--! federal government reported to- more than the usual seasonal day. = gain--to 2,294,000, a jump of 73, At the same time, unemploy- 000 over the vear. ment fell off slightly to 228,000( At Jyly 16 100,023 persons were from 234,000 a month earlier. The registered with os Er number of jobless in July, 1958, nent service offices in Outario.! was 291,000. In June there w ; The figure of those with jobs at oy July 1958 135.208. ore am PM Decl | OTTAWA (CP) -- Prime Min- no hint of whom they will be. ister Diefenbaker said today two |the cabinet Thursday. "4 | Speaking to reporters on his whom this would be. way into a cabinet meeting, he| inew members will be named to one "departure" from the present |cabinet. Again he gave no hint of It was considered likely, how- said it would be safe to speculate ever, that the departing member that one will be from Quebec and [would be J. M. Macdonnell, min- the other from Ontario. He gave lister without portfolio, from the 2 New Men For Cabinet ares |constituency of Toronto - Green- He also said that there will be wood. He is 74. The one cabinet vacancy at the moment is public works, which has been filled on an acting basis by Howard Green since his ap- pointment to the external affairs | portfolio two months ago. Main reason for speculation Soviet Sub Claim Just Propaganda ee Tren Supplies In Steel the result of seasonal expansion Till 1960 in agriculture, Farm employment accounted for about two-thirds of the increase over June. In addition to those without Jobs as estimated by the bureau| of statistics, there were 12,000! persons on temporary layoff, down slightly during the month| 3 TION and comparing with 19.000 a year WASHINGTON (AP)--A Mos-| earlier. Rh ' . FEWER REGISTERED NEW YORK (AP)--How is the {GISTERE ol crnike td : With the bureau 'estimates, the floc Nalke 3 f jee i ing United government also released figures| an Fa es - from the national employment Will the iia in pry Ye service showing 291,513 persons ports hold over to plague the Raistered or 0k St uy 16. domestic mills after the strike?! ford or ban Ne hw oss mM What do the users of steel think] 2.362 July, 1958. bx > x) i ! Nonfarm employment 'tose to about the industry's stand in the tres from Hudson Bay appeared north. propagandists than of undersea warfare 'experts. | U.S. submarine specialists con-|This leads in {ceded it is mot impossible sub-|and the Atlanti 'marines could enter Hudson Bay| C. GOLD CUP TOURNEY OPENS IN OSHAWA 5,371,000 from 5.322.000 in June Sooty ane zhout the Shiante of E. H. Walker, president of | Oshawa this morning. He is | Bowling Club. Sixty-four en- Gaw, representing Kodak of from under Arctic ice and then and 5,172,000 in July last year. mic operate kin Wien 'nt General Mole of Sanat, | Janked pie left bY Seon tries from many sections of | Canada, Ltd., presented pic- iausieh nee missiles oot sien the Gulf of Boothia. That tortuous The govern ap tl Ar ente : d., (centre) deliver the I. Read, chairman of the Gol ahd pe robe. walk i times . & mediate range as | t 35 fath- a li Yorumen: Fevofied fA sociated Pres 8 reporters.' first howl at the opening of | Cup Committee, and on the Canada and the U 8, were wel- tures of the Queen and Prince |day by the naval newspaper So. chai] Has Jy shout B ba other workers entered the labor nants. of | ete Slestions In alll the General Motors Gold Cup | right by Byron S. Edmondson, | comed to Oshawa by Ald. | Philip to the Oshawa Club. [viet Fleet. Ty _,Ibottom. It is a risky route for market between June and Julv| oo... Of the country, find that| pawn' Bowling Tournament in | president of the Oshawa Lawn ' Christine 'Thomas. Jack Me --Oshawa Times Photo | But American specialists said| 30 o0na Yipresent supplies will 1a8t HOIAErE] ----r----emrrerrert------------------ RAR ian SE his meee. | Water's and geography of the area The Soviet publication's refer-| cow claim that missile-shooting ence to entering the bay from ro re Soviet submarines could bombard [under Arctic ice seemed to mean Prises Transport Jsine; Heth North American industrial cen-|the approach would be from the 49, Toronto Broadview, Finance today to be more the idea of| Hudson Bay has two entrances. |One is the comparatively wide, deep entry through Hudson Strait. \ypymigration Minister Fairclough, from Davis Strait|5; Hamilton West, and Health The other, the northern one, is| that the departing member will be Mr. Macdonnell is his age and the fact that Ontario's unofficial quota of cabinet ministers is filled at present. In order to appoint a new min. ister from Ontario it would seem necessary for one of its present representatives to leave the cab- inet, The list of cabinet ministers {from Ontario at present com- | Minister Fleming, 54, Toronto Eg- Ilinton, Mr. Macdonnell, Labor Minister Starr, 48, from the Osh- awa area constituency of Ontario, {Minister Monteith, 56, Perth, Governor - General Massey to- {an often ice-choked route from|day leaves Royal Victoria Hos- |pital in Montreal, where he has !been receiving treatment for a | kidney infection, and will be on @ hand for the swearing-in cere- mony. than for several years. of defence contracts years. ) $s anywhere| Many of the additional jobs|from this October to mid-1960, | were filled by the new entrants,| They find several users of steel with the result that the drop in|buying foreign metal, even if it| | make it one of the more unlikely |spots for submarine operation. DEPTH A FACTOR With few exceptions, Hudson | FIRES STILL BURK Bay is less than 100 fathoms (600 feet) deep. For reasons of con- cealment as well as safe navi- gating, submariners prefer at least 100 fathoms of water for submerged operations. KILLER EARTHQUAKE $2000 Rewards : | la domestic price rige follows the ES ah T h f R 1 For Two Murders [indus stand/are ssi vee | un er ou er S ( |flation has got to be stopped! Burn Ei hi V i ti Tuesday an-/to the industry itself, the more nounced rewérds of $2,000 each/vocal they prove to be. Most, for information about two un- however, decline to be quoted on TORONTO JCP) -- Attorney- some place." The closer they are! General rts | South Fire, Explosion Riots Rack Africa Solved ders, [he issues. cases ved are: reign steel plays an increas- Damag aber toad at Oghavwa, cur ing Patt in the planning of many! wis VELLAWSTONE, Mont eiferson and 'Gallatin. rivers sq obiis ual ois. abumnt. gb Biting was asleep In her frafler| NORFOLK e pg ee en Ae companies. Thomas C. Fogarty! py _ Killer slides *shrugged|Tiee, Forks, Mont, fo. form. the|87-foot-high dam was | eh fi son A let, aes headed 10 : gh 2 | den, 'ahout 50: tntles mortmcer oHlLEvE We Continenta ng loose from. the Monta iies| Missouri River. [but that it still held, if 'yelled, thinking if Wa '& 'g oncet Point on Rhode Island Tuesday ight thi ov Peterborough, on April 5. 1950. steel from Wales.since April, andl carthaakes lefl eight known Four of the known dead pop The shocks tilted land behind bear' she said, dlfeq|1002Y With one: of het hangar) "ic Eg bys "een than essier, 38, a St, TH Swe' ~ Ide: ay. under ks, from one family. They were F. R. . icing the ol Y hei the trailer was efig D i ssier, a St. Thomas| we've also arranged fo meet our the dam, raising the south shore wh Re ayer na. Hames compartments seared by explo- killed by police, were ingpired by ervice station operator, found Cuban steel requirements with earth and trees may hide an even Bennett, 45, of Coeur d'Alene, to 15 feet from six and dropping by dead of shotgun wounds that al-|shipments from overseas, Most /ligher toll. Idaho; his two daughters. Carole, ihe noith shore by the same,Sdid she "was swept under water most blew off his head March 31,|of this steel costs us more than Approximately 80 persons were 17, and Susan, 5, and a son, Tom, | an cunt. P 'for a long way" until she reached 1959. {we usually pay." injured as the series of shocks|ll. Bennett's wife and another mye Rock Creek campground,|Safety. She was injured, as were "Police mwestigation has come! A western manufacturing com-|hit the Canadian and American SOn were injured. | '|Steele and his wife, sion and fire that killed two crew members and injured about 20 others. A US. Navy at At- the African National Congress. lantic fleet headquarters here to a complete halt," Mr. Roberts is buyi New li ere | | of leaders," were|Friday separated parts said, ws iis of oi fd Livi Hin Frew fot Tuesday ight but caused no] TOLL COULD RISE | BURGLAR FOUND B.C. FAMILY SAFE Sent th Drie] Jetas Tuesday J oa colors or (of Noval, in protest over higher : damage. Sasgivors Yojorted geeits 4 vis. Joseph B. Armstrong of |e" 250 miles east of here in|wore congress armbands. The|taxes and restricted entry into # * 2 couple and a crippled boy swept! | Victoria, B.C., camping with her + ngress i owns cities. y Most of the victims were camp-iaway in their car by an ava-| ASLEEP ON 10B {husband and two children, de- the Atlantic, 0 is the main Affican pod wis sad say the laws are ers enjoying vacations in _thellanche. At another location, NORTH BERGERN. N.J |Scribed how "I was knocked off aimed at forcing them to work as ITO o] Tro er Yee of Soviiipesteny Montana, parts of an automobile registered| pn" Wavrie "Smith was |My feet and rolled and rolled" for white farmers at lower wages nd nn lies weg: ol Yellow-io Taoimas Stowe, 31, of Sandy, caught sleeping on the job. {by the tumbling earth. than they could earn in the cities. § . |Utah, were found. Stowe and his John Riechert said he came Then she heard her husband omen have been in the fore. The tremors struck near mid- | wife were reported missing home {0 lis second: < floor | calling her name, She said the | night Monday at Hebgen dam] Of the approximately 60 | and farther downstream ho Treated As Guest in the|sons injured, only 27 remained in| {Madison River valley, Montana hospitals in four Montana towns. | {trout-fishing country. Six were reported in critical con- There were an estimated 22,000 dition cape and entered the apart of the Cuban armed forces, as a __|to 25,000 vacationers in Yellow-| At one time Tuesday night the . : : b private visitor The conference resolution did {stone Park when the shocks hit|death toll was given by officials ment itending Jo Tou Xt Bt Premier Fidel Castros' younger | ot say, but the foreign ministers but no one was reported hurt|as 19, then was revised down-| = Ei on ie 0 Tes Wit iag got no official welcome |c0Uld call a hemispheric confer-| there, Earth slides closed some|ward by Montana's civil defence A is og ie charged on arriving Tuesday after the end i eaking tering TE ooy alter the ond with breaking and entering. ministers meeting. Some 300 per- |children , Patricia, 18, and Don- | {ald, 11, were all right but "looked | L. . . | like drowned rats." Six Forest Fires In Ontario | In Yellowstone Park, Old Faith- TORONTO (CP)---Six forest fires were reported burning {ful spouted on its regular sched-| ju ontario today, all under control. They are located by dis- {ule today, unharmed by the tricts as follows: Swastika, four; Parry Sound and North earthquakes. Park rangers said| Bay, one each. Three fires were extinguished and two new {the terrific shocks easily could| fires were reported in the last 24 hours with burning econdi- have shut off the centuries-old tions ranging from low to medium, geyser HELENA, Mont, (AP) -- me Haitian Troops Besiege Invaders PORT AU PRINCE, Haiti (AP)--Haitian troops today were reported besieging 30 bearded invaders on a mountain on the southwest coast. An authoritative source predicted a shortage of food and water would force the rebels to sur- render or try to fight their way out. Miners On Strike At Anaconda \._ BUTTE, Mont. (AP)--Miners and smeltermen today weil, on strike at the Anaconda Company, one of the world's apartment Tuesday and found Smith sleeping on his bed. Police said Smith told them | he had climbed up a fire es- SANTIAGO, Chile (AP)--Chile, What will havpen if the country today treated Raul Castro, chief refuses? ence to spotlight the refusal. The |roads in. the western side of the director, Hugh Potter peace committee also could make | . But sheriff's fficer sai its inv estigation from the outside a ot Sheri yo 4; Hh TE sly | sons were at the airport, but boos 20d then publicize its report. |FELT. OVER WIDE AREA {to death beneath. slides. |about seven miles downstream on|7,600-foot peak had no name. It| were mixed with cheers. | This would put the case before| Although southwestern Montana| Jeeps, boats and helicopters the Madison from Hebgen dam, | does now. i Castro originally had described |the people on the Americas and, got the most devastating blows, |were used to rescue an undeter. was the area hit hardest. | "Call it Earthquake Mountain, | bis trip as a goodwill visit, and the ministers hope, bring public tremors were reported in British mind number of persons re.| Officials said as many as 30 to|2 Man said. "Just look at it." | there had becn rumors he would Opinion down on the trouble- Columbia, Washington, 1d ah o,|ported marooned by the slides in|35 automobiles and trailers park| Ihe top was gone, jerked from | appear before the foreign minis-|maker. {Utah and Wyoming as well as|the Madison River valley. lat the camp ground nightly. {where it had stood for ages. It ters to make charges against the, The conference agreed that at{both Dakotas and Alberta and " y {crashed down in the darkness on Dominican Republic. Later he|least part of the unrest in some Saskatchewan. 150 MAKE WAY OUT |SURVIVORS' ACCOUNTS [sleeping vacationers along the said he was on a private visit to/countries could' be blamed on| The victims were camped| At one time 150 were reported| Warren Steele, 37, of Billings,/ Madison River in southwestern| pick up the Cuban delegation to poor economic conditions. This along the Madison River. It flows|trapped below Hebgen dam, but/Mont., told how he and his wife| Montana. | the conference SOLDIERS HELD Castro and his wife went through customs without incident. But Chilean police detained three Cuban soldiers board the plane for carrying guns. Earlier. the Chileans had expelled Castros advance plaineload of journalists| and armed soldiers because they! lacked proper entry papers. The majority of the 21 ministers made plain before they ended their Caribbean peace conference that they don't like what is going on in tense Caribbean. The Santiago conference did? not single out any culprits or slap any specific wrists, even though)' the fight continued at the confer- ence table between representa- tives of the two major Caribbean] antagonists -- Fidel Castro and, ' Generalissimo Rafael L. Trujillo, % dictator of the Dominican Re-| public WATCH ORDERED : The most immediate step taken] was to direct the inter-American| &, peace committee of the Organiza- tion of American States to keep| 4 watch over the trouble spots and study ways to prevent attempts from abroad to overthrow legal governments. The committee can make inves-| tigations at the call of a victim-| ized country or on its own initi-|' ative. But for an on - the - spot] check, the committee will have| to get the consent of the country! it wants fo investigate | CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS came her was one of the points the Cubans from Yellowstone Park west-|many to get on the record. ward, then northward to join the| Tuesday night. safety by were asleep in their tent when *1| When the rumbling was over, largest copper producers. A walkout by 5600 members of } Was awakened: and. Tealized the| nature had left almost two moun: tains. t had reached the International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers Ind. began at Butte, Anaconda, Great Falls and East Helena | EE Fi) RUN FOR LIFE The dam took a severe pound- ground was shaking. I rushed ou ing from the mighty shocks. For|and found rocks and dust flying] The new mountain -- perhaps in Montana and Tooele in Utah. White farmers and residents, meeting Tuesday in country areas, pledged their support police in preserving law and ore der. Douglas 'Mitchell, leader of the opposition United party in Natal, said police were "numerically in- adequate to cope with the de mands made on them," The government would be held responsible if civilians were forced to use guns to defend their property, he said, {Little Earthquake from now on-- | a time officials feared it might/off the. mountain." is 25 : i | 20 out, unleashing a flood down! A wall of water battered Steele 2 . 00 Loe, Nigh smd af [the canyon. It forms a lake hold-|and his wife. Their night clothing yon wall to canyon wall. "jing 337.000 acre-feet of waler. |was ripped off by jagged rocks. It lies across the Madison Montana Power Company offi Miss Verona Holmes, 35, of| River. Behind it is th frightened Te -- i -- --------------------a "town of Ennis, Seven miles in| front of it is the scattered pocked-marked Hebgen dam. In| {the middle were people, trapped! {between a power dam that took| years to build and an awesome {mountain created in seconds. Those who lived through the inightmare told stories they coul Election Time D awns In Nfld. hardly believe themselves. Th | ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP)--Nev- House, refused to support his eerie awakening to a horrible| {foundland's record number of resolution which said the grants noise, an unearthly shaking of the | lelection candidates continued should be perpetual. entire earth itself, then quiet. | {house-to-house campaigning today, The United Newfoundland! Grover Mault is 71, on vacation) for Thursday's provincial eler-|party born when James Higgins [rom Temple City, Calif. He and |§ tion. and A. M. Duffy split with the | his wife had picked a quiet spot | Radio and television Programs pC. party over the issue, said it/along the Madison for their eve-| {returned to normal at midnight|does not agree with Liberal poli-{ing camp, They were in their| after being crammed for the last| cies in general but its nine candi. |trai r, a mile below the dam. b Shree weuiss By polities] Specches.|dates are backing Mr. Small-| Thay heard the rockslide a a casting AWS profit Sotit} wood's Term 29 stand ahead, then saw the quiet river|g $72 voting begins. ny Hore! so are the 19 Newfoundland gurge ir They, Simped 200, * ¥_ The hectic task of campaigning | Democratic party candidates, | Lt" irsiler, "Walch wart of "@ ¢ Ms [ix over as far as Liberal Premier who entered the battle little more |f10at. 4 wd ; than two weeks ago in an at-| Mault grabbed a branch of a % Smallwood is concerned. : "Pm through dine fiery tempt to repea! what they term tree: It snapped. The trailer fighter, who freely forecasts alll 20t-labor" laws passed unani.|floated om. Then another branch|§ 32 Liberal: candidates will be | mously bv the legislature last/Ca@me into view. Mault made a elected. "The election is over." March desperate try. The branch held. Ce Frm = Mault and his wife climbed off |§ PC STILL WORKING 1955 VOTERS' LIST the trailer and into the tree. They But his opponent in St. John's In all, 95 candidates will be stayed there all night. Rescuers (West, Coiiservative Leader Mal-|S¢€king the support of an un-fin "boats found them Tuesday |colm" Hollet, continued his per- known number of eligible voters.|morning and took them to hospi- Fie] door-to-door visits, He leads| 11 last voters lists were drawn|tal. » la slate of 32 Conservative candi-| in 155 When 190,000 people! 'Eimer Tretsch of : Scarsdale, a "Misr, dates who support the federal|Vere listed. |N.Y., recovering from the first |government's decision to discon-| Speculation here is that as/shock, organieza a group of per-! Fingers clutching rope to 1 Bh minute entr. ent. ; thie Newfoundland's spe ca 1|many as 10.000 people are eligible haps a dozen survivors. keep his chin and nose out of | and sii gt POLICE RA 3-1133 Fi and others flee for | pany storage area in Kansa Jerr F granis after five years, eg Unregisiers 0 "Through most of the night. we suffocating wet sand, Ralph ' down on him when he went 15 2 pm ir tiv . "its Al a ansas in 1%... here were Jl Liberals, two heard people - crying for help,| Longo, 50, laborer at a sand | feet down into the hopper t FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 helt lives Bons huge mass | City About 100 firemen were The' nremier called the election PCs and two United Newlound- [screaming » Tretsch. said. "The a in Long Istaia City. dislodge Ne bia oi that HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 J gis ig 4 0m. 38 ex- | injured in fighting the flames. jwhen Mr. Hollett and Rex Re- land party members at disgolu- (front end of that mudslide just| N.Y., awaits rescue by shovel | had toppled into it. Life and | com- ~AP Wirephoto inouf, the only PCs in the 36-seat/tion. Orne seat was vacant. . |didn't give people a chance." | and bucket brigade during $0- death struggle during which | i 4 f HANGING ON ROPES FOR LIFE he was completely buried at times was won by rescuers. Despite his plea to return to work immcliately he was sent home after treatment at a hos. pital. --AP Wirephote . * 1

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