Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 22 Sep 1959, p. 1

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Ee THOUGHT FOR TODAY Many people are so busy at something tomorrow that they're too tired to do anything today. Zhe Oshawa Simes WEATHER REPORT Cloudy with showers and thun- derstorme Wednesday. Turning cooler, light winds, OSHAWA, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1959 Authorized As Second Class Mail Poss Office Department, Ottawa SIXTEEN. PAGES VOL. 88--No. 221 \ PREMIER NIKITA Khrush- a as his special train sped from accompanying the premier on his cross-country tour. NEUTRAL ARBITRATION PLANNED BY U.S. LABO 60-DRY LIMIT CPR, Ds | CNR. Declare | Low-Rate Fares ] MONTREAL (CP) -- Canada's Canadian travel habits and atti-|ductions apply anywhere in Can- two major railways have an- tudes confirmed that tue automo- ada on trips of more than 71% with the theft of more than $16,-\}ionnial AFL-CIO convention to nounced package deals for long bile is the train's top competitor miles. distance travellers and reduced for long-distance trips. fares for passengers who travel in bunches, The new programs ware effec- ooo anadians make about 35,000.- would each save 17 per cent of|{Sued for his arrest. He was last trips a year of 100 miles orithe regular fare. Three adults known to be in Los Angeles. more, the survey showed, and 75 would each get a reduction of 26, The charge, laid by the exe- AFL-CIO Set Up Third Union Deal SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- The|up to the decision of an outside biggest labor union story in years neutral. was developing today--and it had| The paet, worked out by feder« pothing to do with the visiting Ni-|ation leaders, demonstrates =a kita Khrushchev. ' new solidarity among labor It is an historic agreement chiefs in the face ut ws yi a y ; view as a rhounting among the ton leaders of the States busiressmen's battle weaken or exterminate labor ganizations. PLAN CONVENTION So convinced are the AFL-CIO leaders that they have found the Port Hope Ex-Lawyer Charged PORT HOPE (CP) -- Homer W. Aifcheson, a disbarred Port Hope lawyer, has been charged 000 from the William Burley es-\s hit disputes between rival Two adults travelling together|tate and a warrant has been is-\ pions of whatever character to arbitration, putting any conflict Los Angeles to San Francisco. At extreme left is Paul Pett of The Associated Press, who is {per cent are made by car. Only| per cent, and four or more would|cutors of the Burley estate, ac- Railways| 11 per cent are made by train each save 37 per cent. Stop-overscuses Aitcheson of: YSand the rest by bus or airplane. |are allowed, and the normal free Transferring $8,000 from the { S-anadi ign > est | I jsaid it is offering off-season re- "ong sai its rail coach fares| baggage allowed for. |estate's bank account to his own| {duced fares 1 - inclusive] . ; : [duceh Loves Iq AL uclpsivertor groups of two or more on alll The CNR package plan applies trust account; | t Has make rail tr 50° amealin Canadian lines are. being cut tolon transcontinental trains be-| Advising the sale of Dominion| a pp g|"gas-routes" level. The fare re-\tween Montreal, Ottawa, North|of Canada bearer bonds, a solution to burving their conflicts and sobdifying their forces that they plan to hold a special con. vention next year to implement the peace plan A closed meeting of the AFl~ CIO executive council Monday night ratified a plan to solve in. tive Oct. 1. --AP Wirephoto. | canadian chev of Russia points to his nose as he puts over a point to newsmen whom he visited National travel {people will give up long-distance no EF op 4 Rapids, to see how tall 3 Iowa Cornfields Next Stop For Mr. K. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Ni-/him--through the San Francisco the dining room," kita Khrushchev, who became so charmed with San Francisco that he sounded like its chamber of commerce, headed today for the corn fields of Jowa Ahead is an agricultural sched- ule that should keep him---a one- time sheep herder--in the same day, peace-talking mood he was in all day Monday His plane was scheduled fo jeave at 12:30 p.m. EDT. Two hours and" 15 minutes later he was due in Des Moines. There he will tour grows. | moods and joking and didn't lose his| temper once. Over and over again he stressed the words = peace and friendship. LOOKS AHEAD HOPEFULLY He said he and President Eisenhower hac begun frank dis- cussions in Washington, and he hoped the second round of talks, beginning Friday, would bring the two couniries substantially closer together, Khrushchev was at his light- hearted best iv a farewell din ner winding up a sometimes stormy sometimes gay and al- ways hectic three-day stay on the United States west coast. His audience cheered enthusi- astically when he said: "The people of San Francisco have positively charmed us. 1 felt as if 1 were among true friends who are thinking the same thoughts as the people in the Soviet Union." All cities he has visited were good, but San Francisco was "the best of all." Khrushchev once again put in & plug for his total disarmament plan, and again called for peace treaties with Communist ruled- East Germany NO THREATS But there wasn't a threat any where in his words. And once' he said of the Soviet system "We want to build a society under which every man will be a brother of his neighbor, where there will be no enmity, there will be complete equality; the way, was preached Christ." Earlier he went a step further than Communists usually do when they discuss the U.S, The Communist line has been that the American people may want peace but their government doesn't. But here was Khrushchev say- as, by 8: : "We want to have friendship with the American people and the American government, and I draw no line of distinction be- tween the people and the govern- ment of the United States." FORGIVES LOS ANGELES Khrushchev was so carried away with his theme that he even declared peace with Los 'g where on Saturday night threatened to go home He referred to his blowup there, when he became angry at a speech made by Mayor Norris Poulson, as "the inhappy inci- dent," and added: "Let us consider it closed.' Early Monday Xhrushchev slipped his leash and rar --crazily, too, it seemed to porters who tried to keep up with he 1appily re CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1132 FIRE DFPT. RA 5 HOSPITAL RA 3-211 6574 €OTD pryotographers shinnied fshelves" of canned goods. Chil-|nessmen," Khrushchev said, we Khrushchev is a man of many dren screamed with excitement, have no eonflict, We understand area He saw the American gift to culinary culture --the {market. He saw a housing development. He toured San Francisco Bay boat He dropped in unexpectedly on the Longshoremen's Union, He visited a plant where elec- tronic equipment is made. SUPERMARKET BEDLAM The highlight by the twinkling of a Sputnik i As up! | chips. Through it all moved unpertrubedly, hands with Khrushchev | shaking startled clerks and! housewives, looking over the airy department, hefting the meat cuts in their plastic jackets. ! "A fine organization," Khrush- chev said, "a good operation." Norman Gotelli, assistant man- ager of the store, looked un- certainly at the scattered debris after Khrushchev left, Ito our system." | came when he! the city, stob|siopped at the-supermarket, and 5h 4 the appreciat- live Khrushchev told Thomas J Watson Jr., IBM president. "You . so well--giv yen an ani¥ super-| fed me so well--give even an anlfiy 5. yo5q for one or more pas- mal food and even an animal be- comes kinder "I had such a big meal---and all on credit." Watson mentioned the material progress made by the Russians since the war. "Americans con- sider this a happy event," Wat- son said. "and not a challenge LIKES BU Bay or Toronto and Winnipeg, (when sold, depositing the Fone travelling in private cars. ter-union strife that has plagued |fares. Canadian Pacific Railvay said QRTINKS' ODOR MUSTARD GAS lits two economy plans are 'to stimulate off-season rail travel." All of the plans have 60-day limits. ALL-INCLUSIVE i One CPR plan includes in the ticket price rail fare, sleeping accommodation, meals and tips. sengers in all classes of travel between Eastern and Western Canada, and between points in Western Canada The other CPR plan covers groups of two or more coach- travelling passengers. If the group members go and return to- gether any distance longer than |72 miles, they can get reduced CNR said its program is a N The Jes d Je 1 od Communist] gamble that by offering. travel- "Whenever we meet with bush lers ch ape £5 more conveni- trips | woo away It said a yeardong survey of| POCATELLO, Idaho (AP) The J. L. Mauk family used to have one skunk. Now they have got two new ones, and |0 they wish they had none--or at least had the old one back. (P Son John advertised last week that he had lost his pet skunk. Some people found a Regina, Saskatoon, Calgary, Ed-/in his own trust account. monton or Vancouver; the six major western points; be-'Deyman said Monday that no tween all main-line points east of decision has been taken to ex- Montreal and west of W $ and between intermediate points of A.V. Roe (Canada) Ltd., Tor- so long as the trip extends over onto. { 1 | one or more of the major pairs| Aitcheson was disbarred by the expected shortly if the supply off gichute with a rival--over jobe round-trip travel, in all classes. tee. Groups may use it for return trips only. rival organizations for years and No Steel [= | DETROIT (AP) After 1 | weeks, the American steel strike SOUT ces: There was no discuss p i has forced an automobile plant |® aa, [to close. More shutdowns can al, Basically. ie pi Youthst between| Cobourg Crown attorney Harry| ipeg; |tradite Aitcl , once secretary f cities. Law Society of Upper Canada steel remains halted. {rights jurisdiction, raids between Lone travellers can use the last week on recommendation of| First casualty was the Colum- | unions boycotis of rival union ackage plan for one-way or the society's discipline commit- bus, Ohio, plant of General Mo- products, or even organizing ethe {tors' Ternstedt Division which|ics--to let au outside neutral He had been practising in Port makes trim and body hardware|judge as to which one is right. couple and brought them to the Mauk residence. But both of them turned out to be wild ones. John said he was sprayed liberally when he put them in the cage. "That stuff is just like mustard gas," said Mrs. Mauk. "It goes through any- thing. I'd gladly trade both skunks we have for John's old skunk." John's ald was, of | course, deod : BEEN interfere." But, "Often when I meet with trade union officials or political figures things aren't the same be- tween us," At the impromptu meeting of the International Longshoremen's and Warehousemen's Union -- it was kicked out of the CIO be- cause of its left-wing leanings-- Khrushchev said: "My visit to the United States and the conversations I have had "The damage is nothing to!with the American people have speak of, really," Gotelli "mostly just a few cans knocked off the shelves." PLEASED AT IBM Khrushchey preached peace in nearby San Jose, where he vis-| ot enough. 1 want work and a/of a debate resuming today injister Vasily ited the big new plant of the International Business Machines!" Corporation thing got off to a good| While touring the San Fran-|agenda an item on the UN repre- Red China, coast [sentation of China. start when Khrushchev -- never people and the leaders of country want peace just as we in the Soviet Union want peace "What is the main wish I want to convey? Peace! But peace is good wage." LETS OUT NAVY SECRET francisco Bay with the gan, Monday he was jovialOne woman fell into the potato|each other. We do mot try to said. |given me the impression that the| this .|China one to shun a calorie--had a goed| guard, Khrushchev said to Cmdr. : hi lunch in the company cafeteria. B. Palmer Clark, in command of a U.S.-sponsored recommendation|*'lawful" UN rights. "You started by taking me to !the cutter Nina Khrushchev Sees Real People SAN FRANCISCO (AP)--State department officials helped Mrs. Nina Khrushchev dodge reporters and »rowds for a few hours of Im shopping and a chance to look a! an American school. Her day on the town, as a re. sult, was a quiet contrast to that of her hushana, the Soviet pre- mier Slipping motorcade car, Mrs. out of the in a sleek maroon Khrushchev and her official § small entourage eluded their con- spicuous local police escort and were off for more than three hours before reporters located them. But Mrs. Khrushchev was escorted by her guard throughout. $150 AT SEARS-ROEBUCK Mrs. Khrushchev went Sears-Roebuc! tore, spent $150 buying such things as clothes for grandchildren just born nnd expected The outing, lasting from about i1 a.m. to 4 p.m,, took her and] the Khrushchev daughters, Rada] and Julia, over the Golden Gate! bridge, through a Chinese section of the city and into the suburbs. They paused for a late lunch! at Trader Vics Restaurant, where the Khrushchevs selected| hamburger Hawaiian served | with fried banana and pineapple from the two-foot-tall menu of international dishes, including Russian caviar to a own security ¥ where she § { |highway during his July 1 visit] There is widespread concern | don Daily Mirror savs that since that this is a visit which could his arrival in the U.S. the Rus- change the course of history, and sian leader 'has been subjected 4 1 i'to the capital accompanying tour. "LATE NEWS FLASHES UN To Decide On Red China UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CP)| The U.S. predicted another de- Youths wearing trench coats. The United States terms Red|feat for the proposal in the 82-| China an outlaw regime and Na- member assembly. Last year the retreated {tionalist China a "loyal wartime vote was 4 to 28 with nine ab- where Guzman was dropped by ally, a reliable comrade in the stentions. cause of peace." i Russia terms Red China a assistant state |"great peace-loving state," secretary, "that = detestable . that corpse." These were the starting points| | Peking is an outlaw." the United Nations General as-|Premier Khrushchev. sembly, which is whether to include on its current|and declared it "intolerable" that one of the biggest| in the world, had year|parently was a badge of leader- has before it|after year been deprived of its|ship in a street gang, as all the | powers The assembly from its 21-member steering com-| {mittee that it reject India's re-|ing the facts topsv-turvey, and he| 2 eking's claim to the still sought, were described as stronghold of For-/members of a gang known as the lquest for debating of the issue. reiterated P. India asked ncthing more, but Nationalist ™ | pf vhis | ,. Walter Robertson, former U.S.|pital two heurs later, after whis: [first-degree murder indictmen.s months of 1959, About 600,000 cars Russia's Deputy Foreign Min- Kuznetsov echoed who _ ad-| considering | dressed the assembly last Friday, |. ing Into another gang's territory police said that just before he SG Monday and will lay off 2,800 production employees during the ON SCHOOL STEPS next week. Ternstedt officials said finished E H : B inventories were sufficient to Jobless - y The auto industry is the biggest : buyer of steel and GM, biggest epo. P / a builder of ears, apparently is - . : worse off than any ef ils com- AWA | a ae AE TIE 5 SERS PENS ol pd ETRY = pk a Shc ovement | for . - 13 rv glys it can : in NEW YORK ¢AP)---A juvenilefanother o Rican BANE, 0 November, Ford, is hr off the slaying of a 17-year-old/Crowns some time ago. |American Motors and Stude- reported today. boy on his high school steps. The Knights apparently thought Paker-Packard also reported suf-| However, compared with Au- John Guzman, a Puerto Rican Guzman was leader of the rival|ficient steel for another two gust of last year, employment student at Morris High School in Sang. months. rw _ |was higher and unemployment The industry's biggest fear is|lower, match the number of cars GM ber's effrontery in go-|known as the Valiant Crowns, But| which pro- the Bronx, was bushed t-| Behind the fatal meeting, po- ® omk, Wai ampmsher ou that steel shortages will hamper] The July alltime record of Hope less than two years, for GM cars, It halted production can build with steel now avail- able. duces half of its own steel, prob- the number of jobless rose hy to date a girl is said to have set|died he insisted he had left the 20y can hold out that long, too. 11,000 from July, the government side the school Monday by eight lice said, was an argument that A , ide sc y by eig row up after a member of the Production right at the start of 16,206,000 employed persons drop- Royal Knights went into Valiant What the companies predict will ped to 6,186,000 at Aug. 22, the Crown "territory" Sunday night be an excellent sales year. | bureau of statistics estimated, to see a girl, | The industry expectéd a steel mostly due to an earlier-than- A short time after yesterday's|strike and built its inventories as|usual decline in farm jobs. It was shooting a grand jury returned fast as possible in the first six|6,025,000 a year earlier. The bureau estimated those Guzman and two companions to the school steps, a single bullet. He died at a hos- de- peri ice: in. | first alias Monday. that "oy 0 Lona to, Dolice: "A Dine Tall"! against seven other Puerto Rican'and more than 145,000 trucks|without jobs and seeking work leader of Asia, and Nationalist|standard of national and interna-| clique tional conduct the Red regime of| youths and {¥ : youths in the fatal stabbing of have been built so far with steel numbered 239,000 in August, com- Later police Tomuded up Seven we, 16 year-olds Aug. 30 om aon hand when the strike started pared with 228,000 a month earl ' , BE west sil la X | A : Perez, 17, was the killer--and ac- side playground July 15 2 fer and 281,000 in August, 1958, cording to witnesses was the| - | wearer of the blue raincoat. They said Perez confessed the shoot-| ing. | The blue coat, police said. ap-| |other youths arrested had worn] He assused Robertson of turn-|light tan coats. The youths arrested, and one| Russia immediately demanded--|mosa, saying only U.S. '"bayon-|Royal Knights, composed mainly as it has in recent years--that the|ets" enable the Nationalists to|of Puerto Ricans. Peking regime replace the Na- Guzman had been a member of [hold their position there. tionalists in the UN. | Prince Philip In Ottawa In 1962 OTTAWA (CP)--Prince Philip! has told Mayo: George Nelms in| a letter that "if it is possible" | he will be in Oltawa in 1962 for| the United States "needle" $31,000,000 cross-town highway. [lest The letter, the contents Needling Of Mr.K. CausesUK. Worry | LONDON (CP)--British news-|The London News Chronicle says he orening of the Queensway, a napers are expressing anxiety American mayors and union lead- 'lers "are not entitled to sabotage] of | Russia's visiticg Premier Khrush-ja journey in which hundreds of| which were revealed Monday by|chev to the danger point, but sev-/millions outside America are in-| |Mr. Nelms, was in reply to an eral note that the tough talk he volved." jinvitation sent the prince after has peen given may nave done, |he expressed keen interest in the some good. Queen Elizabeth on her Canadian thus should not he endangered The sharp-tongued columnist] |Cassandra in the pro-Labor Lon- Ito a campaign of needling, veiled {and not-so-veiled insults and has carefully beer. made the fall guy of plots to humiliate him by any municipal hali-pint local jack-in- office who wants to take a cau- tious snap at the heels of the ; Kk ~+j Three Bandits Rob Bank Of §15,000 MRS, KHRUSHCHEYV hands and greeted the smaller children as they trooped inside, and then inspected classrooms and asked questions, Assistant principal Barbara Moore said Mrs. Khrushchev commented that the school was "rich," with vlenty of supplies and equipment She aoted a number of Negro children and asked if there was After lunch the private journey any tuition fee. When told there ended. As the party set out for motorcade of newspaper people screeched past red lights and up the steep hills after them. Mrs. Khrushches to the Anza Grammar School just in time to see chil went om was mo charge, she wondered {an hour and # half drive, a 10-car how books and paper were paid for. In a fifth - grade classroom, Mrs. Khrushchey discovered a picture of hersell tacked up iat, prin- O'Halloran re- | e Wi « cipal Gertrude 'dren at recess play. She shook ported. | | ST. ANDRE AVELLIN, Que. (CP)--Three masked men held up a branch of the Provincial Bank of Canada today and escaped with an estimated $15,000. Bank employees said the men entered the branch in this village 35 miles north- east of Ottawa at 10:45 a.m. EDT armed with revolvers and their faces covered with handkerchiefs Train Collision Toll Rises To Four BROCKVILLE (CP)---The death toll from the Sept. 14 train collision here rose to four today with the death of ' Mrs. Alphege Surprenant, 65, of Eastview, Ont. District cor- oner Dr. G. W. Jones said later that an inquest will be held into the fatal accident, in which a CNR freight train rammed the side of a pool train dining car. No date has been set, . . _» 7 Fishermen Missing In Gulf MIAMI, Fla. (AP)---Stormy today for seven fishermen missing in the Gulf of Mexico of"_the coast of *h Flavid Ancthar w vas hear. ing down on the area, promising even more difficult con- tions, seas hampered a search tom Russian bear." | Under the heading "Uncle Sam, be your age," Cassandra says Khrushchev is being "'sedulously exploited as an itinerant buf- foon." Such treatment "may go down well in Hollywood and Los An- geles," where "to my personal knowledge they have the biggest collection of cranks, buffoons, crackpot religionists and exhibi- |tionist mercenaries ever gathered jin one place. .." | "But it does not go down well] lin Moscow, in Peking, in War-| | |saw, in Budapest and in a ecity| | bi called London to which the flight- i time of one of Mr, Khrushchev's I. a nuclear missiles is less than five minutes from the launching pad to the Strand." | | Cassandra calls Khrushchev) "the onl: great dictator in the 20th century wha bas dorad to |!eave lis homeland 'and face the West." OFF TO BOARDING SCHOOL The Prince of Wales, who is today on his way to boarding large for his age he'll be | school. Behind him 'is his gov 11 on Nov. 14 -- wears schaol- | ernes f rine Perhles, | | horts as he walks through | Standard ctice a most Brit- { London's King Cross Station | ish boarding schools is for boys fo wear shorts until they are 13 years old -- no matter how big they get. th ~--AP Wirephoto,

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