Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 29 Oct 1959, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY A person who is trying to put up a good front may be doing it' to hide the wall his back's te. he Oshawa Times WEATHER REPORT Increasing cloudiness Friday with rain starting during the evening, Little change in tem« perature tonight, 4 VOL. 88--No. 252 10 Conte Por Cov OSHAWA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1959 Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa THIRTY PAGES ROSE KRAVITZ pauses on the steps of the Supreme Court in Washington upon her arrival to deliver = Attorney General William Rogers' petition in the steel strike injunction case. Rogers asked the court to let Government Plea On Steel tell the union fo get going on the appeal by. noon today. Without comment, the court denied the justice department request. That leaves the union - until Monday to appeal the ruling of a Philadelphia appeals court that upheld the injunction, laid under | the Taft-Hartley labor law. But union lawyer Arthur J. Goldberg said he expects to file the formal appeal notice with the high tribunal Friday, and present a complete brief for the union] case by Monday. This means the court probably| won't be ready to rule until the middle of next week. H RESUME TALKS The strike will go on at least] unti then unless something| § WASHINGTON (AP) -- The United States has a new entry in the space derby--a balloon as big as a 10-storey building in- fl flated 250 miles above the earth. # | The first space balloon launch- éling Wednesday at Wallops -Is- #lland, Va., was a smashing suc- cess. Not only did the balloon perform as planned, it startled {millions of people all over the| jeastern seaboartl. Toronto Soprano Wows Met NEW YORK (CP) -- A young Toronto soprano who made her debut Wednesday night at the Metropolitan Opera was well re- ceived by one of New York's best-known music eritics. Teresa Stratas, who turned 21 last May, played the role of Pousette, a secondary character in Jules Massenet's opera Manon. Howard Taubman, music Sritic for the New York Times, "says that even though Miss Sirtaas had a tiny part "it was enough to indicate that she had a bright soprano and a flare for he stage." an injunction against continu- ance of the strike go into ef- fect unless the United Steel- workers Union files its appeal by noon today. Rogers did not personally go to the court's headquarters. nant as she played the part of a coquette with a good deal vivaciousness. The petite singer began. enter- taining patrons of her parent's Greek restaurant in Toronto when she was eight, and was re- warded by nickels and dimes thrown at her feet. AS 10 she be- gan to give serious attention to woice study. When she was 16 she won' $500|503 and a trip to' New York to sing on Ed Sullivan's television fics to become a winfier Denied ( (ai re-stril be re pre-sirike : an] po » i sig SR w v L anlitan and over working conditions li economies; sb PE ab both the Royal Suaervitony of Nose and 'the Social Register 'Boo-Boos' Gone TORONTO (CP)--A couple of "boo-boos"" in last year's edition which appears today, David B. Crombie said today. He said omission of the mame of Maj.-Gen. George Vanier, Can- ada's new Governor-General, was one "'boo-boo" in the 1958 edition. Another was leaving out Defence Minister Pearkes. Both names are included in the current edition of what Mr. Crom- | bie has described as a blue book MARIA CA of Canada's social notables. {hopes to put some-of these giant He voice was true and reso-|Pop Seaboard Startled By Balloon The balloon, 100 feet in dia-| meter, was the biggest object anyone has ever sent up into the fringes of space. But it only weighed 130 pounds. It was not meant to go into or- bit, and soon fell back into the sea. Later the National Aeronau- tics and Space Administration PIERRE SEVIGNY French-Canada Treated Equal OTTAWA (CP)--Associate De- fence Minister Sevigny said to- day he believes the French- speaking Canadian is getting fair treatment in Canada's armed forces. He said he wished to deny sug- gestions that promotions in the forces are not always based on either seniority or in most cases on merit, Mr. Sevigny was commenting to reporters on a brief presented to him Wednesday by the Fed- !space travellers into orbit around |the earth, REFLECTED SUN The balloon, fired at 5:40 p.m. EST, caught the rays of the sun at the top of its flight. As it un- folded, its aluminized surface caught the light at different angles and sent forth myriad flashes of reflected sunlight. The project was not announced in advance and nobody knew what the object was. Prof. Robert Brown, director of the moonwatch station at New Haven, Conn.. said it looked like "the craziest thing in the world.' Civil defence officials checked in with their headquarters within minutes. Newspaper, police and radio station switchboards were glutted with calls from the curi- ous or the apprehensive. TIGHTLY FOLDED The balloon was sent up in a two-stage rocket with a thrust of 130,000 pounds. The whole bag was folded into a container 26% eties of Quebec. OAKEN COFFIN USED FOR SLEEP STANSTEAD ABBOTTS England (AP) -- Ninety-four- year-old Arthie Miller will be buried Friday in the some oak coffic he p CTP . eration of St. Jean Baptiste Soei-|,, Summit T or Paris Set Atlas Test With New Nose Cone CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla, (AP)--An Atlas missile crowned with a new tactical - type nose cone thundered over the Atlantic early today on an intercontinental range flight, 5,500 miles to an ocean target. This was the second test for the new cone, which stood nearly 12 feet tall atop the 80-foot mis- sile. The first test earlier this month was successful, In Washington, a spokesman for the air force called today's test a success. He said all its objec- tives had been reached. The air force calls this its second 'generation' nose cone and plans eventually to use it in place of smaller cones which now top the Atlas, Thor and Titan mis- siles. The cone is designed for faster re-entry, heavier payloads and greater accuracy. There was no plan to recover the cone, which carried instru- ments to radio information on its Ananth Lond: inches in diameter. The payload, container and all,' weighed 190| himself, often napped in and once had himself photo graphed in. He bought the coffin 34 years ago and kept it in a garden shed, Every day he would give it a shine. The brass nameplate and handles were kept wrapped in' tissue paper. Mrs. Kathleen. Tew, who kept house for him, reported:. "Mr, . Miller was fond of that coffin, He often took a nap in it in the afternoons' and once 'had. his photograph to see how unds. The sphere was made of plas] tic and coated with silvery alu- minum outside. After the balloon was released 250 miles up, air trapped inside it began to expand. Then four pounds of water in two plastic bags were released inside the balloon, At that altitude the water: expanded into vapor 'and completed the blowing up of the balloon: At full size it contained 523,598, cubic feet. The U.S. hopes to send: these y taken | in it hen BI Sid i 3 of the the in- termediate-range Thor, was fired a few hours earlier on a 1,500- mile flight, also declared success- ful. General Motors Make Payments General Motors of Canada Lim- . ited. asjupnced today that it will R ba dowmeil dd niny nts!break in India's Sie out oo INDIA'S NEHRU Nehru Firm To Halt Chinese NEW DELHI (Reuters)--Prime Minister Nehru said Wednesday his government will take firm steps to halt Chinese Somuumict "|in Paris "about Dee, ' |day that he and the heads of the British, French and West Ger- ' |meeting. PARIS (Reuters)--The Western summit conference will be held |1960, 15," For- eign Minister Maurice Couve de Murville announced today. President Eisenhower an- nounced in Washington Wednes- man governments were set for a meeting in mid-December, but that the place was not settled. The meeting of the Western Big Four is designed to prepare for a subsequent East-West summit Couve de Murville dlse told the National Assembly foreign af- fairs commission' that Premier Khrushchev will come to Paris Diefenbaker said the ment was expected and constite uted "an appropriate step." Probable Date 'About Dec. 15 during: the: fist thre months of He would #several day spend in Paris and "several days" in the French provinces, - Premier Michel Debre has said that the East-West summit cone ference will take place after this visit, "doubtless during the course of next spring." Couve : Je Murville, who spoke to the commission today for three hours, insisted on the need for agreement among the Western powers before the t. At Ottawa, Prime, Minister unces MEXICO CITY (AP) -- The| frontier ener sources reported, The premier addressed a closed-door meeting of the 13 state governors now holding a convention in New Delhi, He talked amid widespread In- dian anger over alleged frontier "trespassing" by Chinese Com- munist troops and a week - old border clash in which nine Ind- ian border police were slain and 10 were captured by the Chinese. Nehru told the governors his government is determined to de- fend India's borders. The neutralist leader also said a firmer poliev toward Commu- inist China count of known dead neared 100 today in Mexico's flood + stricken west coast states of Colima and Jalisco. Many more still were Hurricane Hits Mexico, 100 Dead |driven from their homes by rain swollen rivers that jumped their banks and poured through dozens of small villages. The rivers knocked out come missing in one of the country's worst modern disasters. Large sections of the two small states bordering the Pacific still were isolated by floods in the wake of weekend torrential rains and a hurricane Monday, Air rescue operations con- tinued around the clock in an ef- fort to reach hundreds of families tions and flooded roads, hindering the movement of milf. tary convoys carrying food, medicine and clothing. President Adolfo Lopez Mateos took personal charge of relief operations. The pacific port of Manzanillo, which took the full force of the hurricane, reported 80 known fa. talities. At least 100 residents ting on Nehw's o speech, political. eircles Repayment will be made by payroll 'deduction after laid-off tions with the Peking ment. Military experts forecast the stationing of regular Indian Army units. at all outposts along the 2,500-mile border with China govern- were reported missing and 500 injured. Full. reports of ¢ SS wi 3 haw, that the "et Manis orl gone down at sea, The report said 12 men, were rescued but 17 still were missing. Mom Whyte Home Please see story on Page : for tributes to the late Mrs. Colpus. and Communist-ruled Tibet. employees return to work. NO PARALLEL IN HISTORY HAYWARD, Calif. (AP) --A| team of doctors has succeeded) Cut-off Human Leg: Grafted Onto Body All that remains now are skin grafts and an operation within a Children Settled PORT HOPE of only one of 9¢ children moved from Mrs. Bertha Whyte's mis. Sob last July remains to be set- Harry Deyman, Cobourg crown attorney, said the remaining case will be settled Nov. 18. Placement of 14 children war decided Wed- nesday at a closed hearing in the . town hall. The children were taken from the Whytshaven mission at Bowe manville, 10 miles east of Osh. awa, by provincial authorities alafter an outhreak of an infectious than he can myug |disease in the home. store," the doctors said. Pr er thal Breakthrough for the first time in grafting|few months to link fhe main hip|hip nerve operation, surgeons| Mr. Deyman said three-quar- t In Rheumatism VANCOUVER (CP)--Dr. J, H. Kellgren, professor of rheumatol- ogy at the University of Manches-| ter, England. says a major break- throu; tism and arthritis research. gh is' imminent in rheuma- Addressing a meeting of the Canadian Arthritis and Rheuma- ism Society Wednesday, Dr. Kellgren said a permanent cure for the affli~tions can be expected within the next 20 or 30 years. THIS PHOTO shows A. V, Roe's 'Flying Saucer'. It was taken from a plane flying over the A. V. Roe aircraft plant near Toronto and shows the mystery vehicle in the plant yard. What appears to be a generator truck used for start. ing aircraft engines is nearby. Sir Roy Dobson, Avro beard chairman, said earlier the machine has undergone a sue- cessful tethered flight! It is being -d=veloped by Avro for the United States army. Jack Judges, free-lance cameraman, snapped the picture with a 16-millimetre movie camera, LATE NEWS FLASHES All-New Rircraft here. f | don't they will say, tions scheduled to resume today The Federal Mediation Service| 'Bomb Hoax served notice on both sides that| a joint bargaining conference. 250,000 more in related American] KANSAS CITY (AP)--A bomb is handling negotiations for the Wednesday night but the tempes- Former president were among {Theatre when Missouri's Gover- NEW YORK (AP) -- The New number and a the garden, who together won a total which indicates danger for this mitted to District Attorney Frank jour." their appearances om the .pro- (+ gh the downtown theatre. mation to "an authoritative returned, Van Doren, an English 'profes theatre hox office and - police in Washington before a congres- "There's a bomb planted in the| Van Doren won $129.000 duringlg. 30. "» garden won $98,500. Callas a few minutes before 9 {Bo off?" she asked. Told that it anc let the people know I am POLICE RA 5-1133 'Well, that Maria Callas.' I'll take Canada Steel Situation 'Good' OTTAWA (CP)--Canada's reasonably good shape" except for the auto industry, Trade Minister Churehill said today. apart. from the auto industry supplies of specialized pri ciable effects" in Canada from the 107-day U.S. steel 'strike. Five Paintings Tum Out Old Masters LONDON (AP)--Five grime-covered paintings found in a ramshackle shed in Ireland were declared today to be old masters worth more ® Than $1,000,000. The paintings, said vid Carritt, are by Lotidon aft sxpelt Da artist Francesco Guardi, A. V. Roe Plans No Legal Action TORONTO (CP)--An official of A. V. Roe Canada Lid., says the company plans no legal action against the CBC for ielecasting film sad to. be of 'the Aveo,car, a revol top-secret aircraft being built Russian Pig Iron Por Detroit MONTREAL (CP)--A Norwegian freighter has delivered about 2400 tobe of Faroe si iron to Detroit, it was learned today. pment also went by rail- way to Buffalo, N.Y. and Toronto, y Canadian Sports Council Planned steel supply situation is "in ByA.V.Roe TORONTO (CP) -- The CBC broadcast pictures Wednesday of A. V. Roe's revolutionary flying |saucer being: developed for the United States Army, The pictures, taken from a banking aircraft, showed a bright-colored, disc - shaped ve- hicle with what appeared to be a driver's seat -in the centre, - It|ti was attached to a long cable or rope. The pictures were taken by Jack Judges, flying free - lance photographer io snapped them as the hine lay on the ground| inside Avro fie ay.0 at suburban Malton. Sir Roy Dobson, chairman of the board of Roe, and other high company officials, said they had no 'comment on the filming. TESTS GOING WELL The pictures were taken shortly after Sir Rov reported that the machine--called the Avrocar and described as a wingless aircraft, He sald in an interview that , dependent on United States there have been 'no appre- the 18th-century for the United States Army. back the severed leg of a hu- man, Surgeons said they could find no parallel in medical history. for the operation performed in Eden Hospital here, The operation, announced to- day, was kept secret for three months until doctors decided it was successful. The operating surgeons, whose names will remain secret until their work can be reported .in dical journals described the operation anonymously in the Hayward Review. The right leg of Billy L. Smith, 25, was crushed a few inches above the knee by a crane while he was rebricking a furnace in the nearby Decoto plant of the United States Pipe and Foundry Company. Only a 'two-inch strip of skin connected the leg to the stump. TRY A "MIRACLE" corrects deformities, telephoned. a vascular surgeon, who special- izes in 'mending torn vessels, and asked: "Do you want to try for a miracle?" the vascular surgeon a 5 After blood vessels in the lower feg were flushed with anti-clot- ting fluids. the vascular surgeon spid he 'hooked up the severed main artery and started the blood howiig ate foot immedi- ately turned pink." But shortly after he stitched to- gether the main ain Joins, so that arterial blood could ie gas present there is no sensation. shorter than before hut *"'better An orthopedic surgeon, who heart the foot turned white and there was no pulse in The artery was reopened, a clot removed, and the blood vessels were flushed again. They have functioned perfectly since. BRIDGES GAP The orthopedist cut away man- gled tissue, leaving a two - inch |the risk." She sang one aria, then the at Pittsburgh between the union | said it was glad to hear that "i ) C if nothing happens by Monday it| t oncert Some 500,000 steel workers are industries are out of work. The hoax interrupted a Maria Callas {tidus soprano brushed it off as . TV Quiz Stars {Harry S. Truman {nor James T. Blair stepped on York Times says today Charles, "Ladies and pry of $227,500 on the NBC television 4, dience, so we are asking you 8. Hogan, that they received both! The audience calmly walked gram. fe concert was finished with- source in the criminal courts) The orchestra was playing an sor at Columbia University, isiheadquarters. He told the police gional committee investigating orchestra pit at the Midland] his appearances on Twenty-one, i'oncert producer Larry Kelly |o'clock. CITY EMERGENCY was 9:30, she replied: FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 [state AR ad his an- comes of new full-scale negotia-| and the big steel companies. gotiations would resume. But it will call them to Washington tor B C 11 on strike against 96 companies; Y 4 as "big steel" group of 11 companies'opera concert for 40 minutes "ridiculous." and Mrs. {the 3,573 persons in Midland A Got nswers stage after Mme Callas' first Van Doren and Hank Bloom- nan 00ment has received a call quiz show Twenty-one, have ad- 1, eave this building for a half- quesions and answers prior to ,u while police swarmed The Times aliributes its infor-out incident after the audience building." overture when 2 man called the scheduled to testify next Monday dispatcher: charges of TV quiz rigging. Theatre that's set to go off at now dropped by NBC. Bloom- hyrried backstage and told Mme. | "What time is it supposed to PHONE NUMBERS : | "Then 1 will go out and sing HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 PETERBOROUGH 7 sd jdea of a Canada council will a ribet member of Parftamest for sports during the next session Progressive Conservative sald today, | ered flight, "The orabt Ban had undergone a successful teth- is in an advanced testing," Sir Roy sald. gap between the flesh parts. of the leg sections, and then bridged, the gap with two inches from the upper leg' bone. nerve to the lower leg, wheré at Smith's leg is .two inches "expect that he will get some muscle return and some ters of the children were returned to their parents. Others were return, but neither will be en- tirely normal." made temporary wards of chile dren's aid societies. COMMUNITY CHEST CANVAS Following a final briéfing in the Hotel Genosha, Red Feath- er canvassers for the down- town area started work this * morning. In the picture, Carl Olsen, centre, chairman of the downtown canvass, hands can vass kits to' Winse Bradley, f left, and Don Browm, two of the Oshawa merchants taking part in the drive. --Oshawa Times Phoie

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