Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 16 Nov 1959, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY It's remarkable how fast the tide runs out in the case of a person who is always borrowing money to tide him over. Zhe Oshavon Times WEATHER REPORT Cloudy tonight and Tuesday, rain turning into snowflurries Tuesday night, seasonal temper- atures turning colder. Vol. 88--No, 266 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1959 Authorized os Second Class Mail post Office Department, Ottawa . SIXTEEN PAGES Wave crashes over harbor wall at Dover, England, part of an overall storm that swept STORM POUNDS Britain with gales, rains and blizzards. Winds reaching 104 miles an hour were recorded in BRITAIN the Dover area on the south | who in 1910 made the first round coast. Rigging of a small ves: | trip crossing of the English sel is visible behind wave. | Channel by air. : Statue at left is Charles Rolls, | --AP Wirephoto RITTLE RELIEF SEEN Arctic Air Mass | Tumbles Mercury By THE CANADIAN PRESS The freeze deepened across Western Canada today as the mercury tumbled to new lows in one of the worst November cold spells on record. From Vancouver Island to northwestern Ontario tempera- tures were 30 to 40 degrees be- low normal. The weather office said little moderation coyld be ex- Wednesday. ES tl We were Bear or be- » A low freezing in the rest of On- tario and southern Quebec Sun- saw the mercury as high as 60 at some points. Snow accompanied the cold in southwestern British Columbia and Manitoba. Record daytime {lows were recorded Sunday at {many centres on the prairies. In Edmonton and Calgary the tem- perature remained below zero. F IN B.C. The Arctic air mass gave Van- couver jts first serious below-| freezing temperatures of the year, Roads were icy and two day but the forecast today was for slightly milder weather. In the Maritimes, balmy weather deaths near Yale, B.C., were di- |rectly attributed to slippery |roads. Blizzard Rocky M DENVER (AP)--The weather-| Buries ountains last week, reported a 20 - inch rand TH 'by evening. Rain] battered Rocky Mountain and northern great plains states coped with a new blizzard today. Sub - zerb temperatures were| {snow depth with about six inches lof new snow. The new storm dropped two to : six inches of new snow over charted and wind gusts up to 60|ne ions "hut all main highways miles an hour were clocked in remained open, Air travel was parts of the Dakotas, Montana, iioq "pe train nd b and Kansas, Blowing snow re. e zed i" da 5: a ch Noss duced visibility to near zero in| ag esp Dear: schedu'e, { In western Montana, authori- some localities. | included 32|ties were looking for two missing Low temperatures inclu Frat fren Oshawa Man Injured In NO MOTIVE Weekend Murder Of Farm Family GARDEN CITY, Kan. (AP) --|Nancy apparently were not mo- In a farm home far off the beaten|lested sexually. He placed the, path of this vast wheat area four|time, of death between 11 p.m. members of a prominent grain|Saturday and 2 a.m. Sunday. farmer's family were murdered| during .the weekend. |GIRLS FIND BODIES Herbert Clutter, 48, his wife, The Clutters gave a ride each Bonnie, 45, their 16 - year - old|Sunday to two of Nancy's school- daughter, Nancy Mae, and 15-|mates. The girls, Mary Ewalt year-old son Kenyon, were bound | and Susan Kidwell, stumbled on Car Crash BOWMANVILLE (Staff) ,~ An |Oshawa man, Gilbert Zwicker, . [32, of 421 Stevenson road north, Heavy sleet is belleved to have ,;q ty, Hamilton girls, Mary caused the crash of a light air-|nfepoygal, 16, and Pauline Fen- craft near Nanaimo. Two Dersons|i 19° were admitted to Bow- were killed. manville Memorial Hospital Sat- A high-level air mass now over urday as a result of a two-car the Pacific may move inland collision on Highway 35, north within 48 hours, causing some of Orono. moderation in temperatures, al-| james Varty, 49, of Windsor though: it still will be cold, the street Ajax, was taken to hos- weather office said. pital suffering head lacerations, The Manitoba storm was mov-|but was allowed to return to his ing eastward and was expected home after treatment. The Me: to hit Wi , by Doon. Tuesday, and head injuries, the Fenton was moving ahead of the storm girl suffered a broken right ankle Dougal girl suffered lacerations and snow behind it. and Zwicker suffered back and chest injuries. WILL CONTINUE EAST Cartwrigh The public weather forecaster "OPP Constable Jack ay in Toronto said the storm will vestigated. keep Hoving sas through Odawa ani ontreal, reaching these| Man Loses Eye In A] areas in another day or so. A flow of warm air moving zhead of the storm was expected | to bring milder temperatures of| about 40 degrees in Southern On- tario today and near 30 farther north. Southern Ontario temperatures | were no higher than 35 degrees yesterday and between 18 and 25| degrees in the north. Three Soldiers His conition was satisfactory Stabbing | A 33¥ear-old Oshawa man, |Michael Breda, had his eye re- {moved in the Oshawa General | Hospital Saturday night after he {had been stabbed in the eye and back in front of his home on Al- |bert street. t Butte and -29 at/hunters, did in "southwestern|Kent, of Hamilton, Mont., who Montana; -23 Lewiston, Mont. [became lost Sunday while hunting] and -14 at Sheridan in northern|With three other men. Snow in| Wyoming. {the area is 14 to 16 inches deep. At Scott Bluff, Neb., the tem-| The snow. generally had ended| perature dropped from an after-/in Montana today as the storm | noon high of 64 to zero by mid-|crept eastward and southward) night. The temperature fell 29 de-/into the Dakotas, Wyoming, | grees in one hour kere Sunday western Kansas and western Ne- Hurt In Crash this morning, according to the A car carrying three soldiers|Oshawa General Hospital. went out of control Sunday night| Police believe that an ice pick on Highway 401, just east of Was used by the man who attack- Whitby cloverleaf. or ign reported to ave Mr. a is re The westbound car entered the told: his wife that he was going to centre boulevard, rolled over and T Ianded on its 'roof, | Toronto. He returned about an hour later and, according te the All three occupants wer e report, was talking on the tele- | NEW ORLEANS (AP)--A US, Coast Guard helicopter reported today sighting bedies floating in "% the Gulf of Mexico amid scattered s wreckage at the scene of a Na- 4 | tional Airlines plane crash. Forty- 'two persons were aboard. Cmdr. Jim Durfee, did not indi- cate whether there were any sur- vivors from the crash on the Miami-to-New Orleans run. The (plane carried 36 passengers and a crew of six. » National's chief pilot Capt. | Charles H. Ruby, flew from Mi-| ami and found the wreckage. Ruby said U.S. Coast Guard vewsels wizre en route to the scene of the wreckage and should reach there in an hour. The plane disappeared on a flight from Miami, Fla., to New Orleans. The DC-7B was carrying 36 pas- sengers and a six-man crew, An airlines spokesman said last radio contact came when the plane was in the vicinity of Chandeleur Island, 45 miles due south of Biloxi, Miss. Those aboard included Jack At: kinson, federal aviation adminis ANASTAS MIKOYAN Red Deputy Stops At Halifax By DAL WARRINGTON Canadian Press Staff Writer | The pilot of the helicopter, Lt.- jn HELICOPTER FINDS MISSING AIRLINER Bodies Floating In Mexico Gulf tine check run. He was listed as a member of the crew, The airliner lost contact with radio points shortly after mid- night. The crash was the second in- volving a National Airlines plane fix years. Another plane crashed in the gulf in 1953, taking 46 lives. At 10:20 a.m. CST (11(20 a.m. EST), the coast guard issued an advisory locating the wreckage 100 miles southeast of New Or- Jeans, near Pass a Loutre at the mouth of the Mississippi River. The coast guard's earlier re- port said its planes had spofted an oil slick and life raft, but no survivors. The plane, National Flight 967, vanished in a fog that enveloped the area so quickly that Moisant Interpational Airport at New Or- leans had to amend its midnight forecast. The plane already was overdue at fog-shrouded Moisant when the amended forecast came out. The plane was about half an hour out of Moisant when it dropped off the radar screen that had been tracking it. The aircraft was flying at 14,000 feet over the HALIFAX (CP) -- The forth- coming overnight visit to Halifax ration dnspector gs Tour 450-mile overwater route/ from Miami. of Soviet Deputy Premier Anas- tas Mikoyan is seen in some quarters here as a possible fore- runner to more extended visits by other Russian leaders. - The basis of this speculation is Mr. Mikoyan's choice of Halifax for a stopover Tuesday en his 7,100-mile flight from Moscow to Mexico. It is said he could just| as readily have stopped at Gan- der, Nfld, or Bermuda, 8 warm- Gander was the original plan but the Russian leader switched to Halifax. A Soviet Embassy secretary said he doesn't know why. Mr. Mikoyan will epen a So- viet exhibition in Mexico City. The deputy premier will travel in a Soviet plane, a four-engine turbo-prop Iyushin-18. He is due at about 3 p.m. and is expected to leave early Wednesday morn- ing. Orono Youth night. SNOWFALL SIX INCHES Helena, Montana capital that took the brunt of a record storm |braska. J The weather bureau said the cold front would extend from Lake Superior through the cen tral Mississippi Valley by this Four-Car Crash Injures 3 People Three peonle were injured in a four-car collision on King street west, near MacMillan drive, Sun- day at 4.45 p.m. Passengers Hugh Madden, of 609 Stewart street, Whitby, and Robert Connen, of 218 Fred- erick street, Whithv, both suffer ed minor injuries. One driver, Frances M. Lee, 1202 Simcoe street north, was also slightly injured. To'al esti- mated damage to the four cars was $500. The drivers of the other three cars were David G. Rivers Jr., of 511 Stewart street, Whitby; H. G. Gascoigne, 91 Bruce street, Oshawa; and Maleolm Knocker, 124 Elgin street east, Oshawa. CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 |evening. | Two Break-Ins In Oshawa Two break-enter and. thefts were reported by the Oshawa Po- lice Department during the week- end. Cash totalling $122 was re- ed taken from the cash regi- er at Preston Decorating Sup- plies, 19 Bond street west. Early Saturday morning, Police Constable Michael Michalowsky found the rear door, to the {building open. He reported en- [tering the building to find the {cash register had been tampered pC | David T. Preston, proprietor, [said there was $122 in the cash {register when he left on Friday. 1 was empty when police investi. gated. Early this morning, Police Con- stable E. H. Kerr found the ser- |vice station at 245 Wentworth |street, had been broken into.| [Seven dollars and a car radio [were missing from the premises. Entry was gained through the |south-west window of the station ! thrown out, later taken to Osh- awa General Hospital. Two were reported discharged from the hospital. this morning; the other has been"taken to Sunnybrook Hospital in Toronto. Taken to Svnnybrook Hospital| was Maurice Brissard. Released' were Earl Dominie and Gerry| Coughlan. phone in his ground floor apart- ment when he saw a man stand-| ing on the sidwalk outside. The report said that Mr. Breda went outside to see the man, but ran back within minutes /and grabbed a towel to cover his eye, Mr. Breda was taken to hos- pital in a car under police escort. , LATE NEW S FLASHES Man Goes Wild Over W bricks through every window i Police said guests staying in the second floor were afraid breaking and car theft. Police in Mrs. Mountford's home 4000 Chickens Roasted BRACEBRIDGE (CP) -- chickens and 3,000 turkeys. HAMILTON (CP) -- The C Tim Buck said here Saturday.. which is owned by Henry V! g TORONTO (CP) -- A man stripped the clothes off a woman, smashed her furniture, set fire to her bed, threw in her car early today while several people watched in terror. Mountford's home in suburban Scarborough and tenants on Brown, 22, later was arrested in Orillia on charges of house- poultry farm here and first reports indicate a loss of 4,000 6000 Communists In Canada a membership of 260 in the Hamilton area, national leader that the party's total Canadian membership is 6,000. About 45 per cent of this is in Ontario, he said. oman n her home and then escaped the basement of Mrs. Leola to come to her aid. Wallace sald he was a former tenant InFire , Fire today swept through a ommunist party of Canada has During an interview he said mutual troop withdrawals along the dispujed Tibetan-Indian bor- der and for an Immediate meet- ing with Premier Chou En-lai. He told anxious members of In- dia's Parliament that Chou's Nov. 7 proposal for troop withdrawals seemed impractical. Nehru said India has made |counter-proposals, and that he is willing to talk over the border dispute with C ist Chinese officials. But he said careful preparations are necessary, thus ruling out an early Himalayan summit meeting. Nehru said the rejection and ter-proposals were handed the Chinese ambassador in New Delhi this morning. He declined to give details until Chou got the note. MUST ACCEPT Nehru's offer in the past has been to negotiate smaller pockets of territory in dispute along the long border--but only if China accepted, at least in broad prin- ciple, the McMahon Line which the Indians claim divides north- 2ast India from Tibet. His brief remarks today gave no indication whether there was any change in this position.) Nehru said reports received during the weekend indicated that the Communist Chinese inter- rogated ' Indian border policemen Boy On Bicycle Injured In Crash Fifteen-year-old Klaus Mayer, of 86 Grenfell street, was taken to Oshawa General Hospital with Killed By Car An Orono youth, Nyle Arthur Switzer, 18, was pronounced dead on arrival at Toronto St. Mi- chael's Hospital, Saturday, after being hit by a car on Bayview avenue extension and thrown 80 feet against a guardrail. It is believed the victim had been driving behind his brother Edward, on the Bayview avenue extension, when his brother's car broke down near the Prince Ed- ward viaduct. He parked his car on the shoulder behind his broth- hand and foot and gagged. All{the killings when they were were shot in the head and Clut-|driven io the Clutter home. ter's throat was slashed. | Clutter, a founder of the Kan- Police don't know who killed|sas Association of Wheat Grow- the Clutters, They haven't deter-|{€'s, was a past president of the mined the motive. {National Wheat Growers Associa- Nothing in the house was in dis-|lion, president of the Garden City array. No valuables appeared to|Equity Exchange and a director be missing. Money which had|0f the Consumers' Co-operative. been placed in an envelope for|President Eisenh pointed church lay on a bedroom dresser|him in 1954 for a two-year term alongside a diamond ring. of the federal farm credit board. The coroner, Dr. Robert Fen-| Nancy and Kenyon attended ton, said Mrs. Clutter, 45, and|high school in Holcomb, a village about a mile from their home. Both were honor students and ONE-MAN GROUP Nancy last week won the school's good citizenship award. FOR PRESIDENT keaoy to rere TAIPEI, Formosa (AP)-- The family apparently had been Yen Tse-Chiang, 33, is in jail |feady to retire when they were for trying to capitalize on |attacked. All except Kenyon were sentiment in favor of a third (in pajamas. The bodies of Mrs. term for President Chiang (Clutter and Nancy were in sep- Kai-shek. |arate bedrooms. Clutter and Ken- Yen styled himself chair- (yon were found in the basement. man of "the committee of one The home is nearly a mile away million in support of Pres- [from any through road. The only ident Chiang Kai - shek" and [persons living close by are the collected membership fees [family of Alfred Stoecklein, who amounting to $1.25 a person. |has worked 11 years as a farm He had collected 33 subscrip- [hand for the Clutters. tions when police found out Stoecklein said he saw the Clut- the of one million |ters early Saturday evening, be- was only one millionth tht |fore he and his wife and three umber... Yeu himself {children went out, He 'said they accu en of fraud. returned about 9:30 p.m. They retired and heard no disturbance. Nehru Reject NEW DELHI (AP) -- Prime| who were captured during a clash Minister Nehru today rejected in 'the Ladakh district of Kash- Communist China's proposals fori, oof 95 He called 'the re: ported interrogation '"'deplorable procedure" and said the govern- ment awaited further details. Ten policemen captured in the clash and bodies of nine others were returned to India Saturday. PROPOSE ACTION Parliament reassembled after a two-month recess with a number of strongly worded questions about border developments. The leader of the Praja (Peo- ples) Socialist party, J. B. Krip- alani, proposed a motion for strong action against Chinese who are occupying several th d square miles of Ladakh which In. dia considers hers. Another opposition leader, Frank Athony, proposed that the Communist party of India be banned because its "openly treas- onable policies and utterances are approval of Chinese actions and in encouragement of further ag- er's vehicle, then walked for. ward and spoke to him through the window on the driver's side. As he turned to go back to his own car, he was struck by a car driven by Frederick George Thomas, 32, of Redwater drive, Etobicoke. Thomas has charged with criminal negligence gression." as a result of the accident. King Saud Asks UN To Quit Gulf RIYADH, Saudi Arabia (AP)-- King Saud wants the United Na- tions Emergency Force with. drawn from the Aqaba Gulf area and the restoration of the Arab bea on Israeli shipping in the gulf. 5 The king's political counsellor, head injuries he received in a col- made this statement on behalf of the Saudi lision involving three cars and his bicycle, on Grenfell street at King street, Sunday afternoon. Mayer was X-rayed for a pos- sible skull fractuge, The hospital reports his Arabian monarch to three Amer- ican correspondents in the royal palace. The reporters had sent the king a set of questions. After dis- on as satisfac. "them "with -Husseini, he |Grenfell street, was driving one tory. Estimated damage to the three cars was $525. Joseph J. Childerhose, of 98 car, James E. Fegan, 32 West- mount avenue, was the owner of Perry. |and support of Israel is the only a second car. The third car was tween the Arab . Moslem world owned hy Charles Teno, of Port ad the United States," Husseini authorized his counsellor to reply in his name. "The question of the existence source of misunderstanding be- But he added, President Eisen- hower bad promised Saud in 1957 that no aggressor in the 1956 Suez War would be allowed to annex any territory. and "we are still waiting and urging that this promise be fulfilled." "Until now United Nations forces are still in Sharm el Sheikh to ensure the free passage of Israeli shipping in the Gulf of Aqaba," he continued. The king felt that the UN force should withdraw from Sharm el Sheikh and had written Eisenhower sev- eral times officially and privately to this effect, although not lately. The Gulf of Aqaba is Israel's only exit to the Red Sea. Be- cause the United Arab Republic bars Israeli shipping from the Suez Canal, it is also Israel's only direct water route to her markets in East Africa and the been|Pope John today, and the pontif crs are Agostino Bea, German Jesult who was confessor of the POPE VATICAN CITY (CP) -- Eight new cardinals were named hy tod announced they would be el JOHN Pope Names 8 Cardinals raona, Spanish secretary of the Vatican's Congregation of the Re- ligious; Archbishop Gustava li io to Switzer. to the red hat--symbol of their new office--at ceremonies next month. The eight cardinals-designate will be created at a secret con: sistory on Dec. 14. A public con- sistory at St. Peter's Basilica, when they receive the red hat, will follow on Dec. 17. Pope John today also an- nounced he had nominated Am- leto Cardinal . Cicognani, for 25 years apostolic delegate in the United States, to succeed Eugene Cardinal Tisserant as secretary of the Vatican congregation in charge of the Eastern Catholic Church. The new cardinals are. three Italians, a Spaniard, a German, a Briton and two Americans. One of these is the archbishop of Chi- cago, Most Rev. Albert Gregory Meyer, and the other Most Rev. Alois Joseph Muench, Bishop of Fargo, N.D., and papal nuncio to Germany. BRITISH CARDINAL The new British cardinal is Msgr. William Theodore Heard of Edinburgh, British dean of the Holy Roman Rota Tyibunal. Oth- Far East. late Pope Pius XII; Arcadio Lar- land; Archbishop Paolo Martella, 64, 'apostolic nuncio to France, and Francesco Morano, 87, secre- tary of the Ecclesiastical Tri- bunal. The Pope's action increases the College of Cardinals to 79 mem- bers, "its largest size in the his- tory of the church. Before today's announcement the strength of the college had fallen to 71--28 Italians and 43 non-Italians. Pope John held his first con- sistory for new cardinals last De- cember when, in a historic deei- sion, he raised the number from 70--a .maximum set nearly 400 years ago--to 75. © CANADA HAS TWO With its new additions, the College of Cardinals will include 31 Italians and 48 prelates of other countries. Of the non-Italian contingents, the Uvrited States representation of six is exceeded only by France's seven. Canada has two. The consistory on Dec. 14 will be secret. It will be followed by a colorful public consistory in St. Peter's Bastlica on Dec. 17 at which the new cardinals will receive the broad-b! med red hats, or gal- eros, 'symbolic of their rank. COMMUNITY CHEST SCOREBOARD $30,000 $50,000 $70,000 $90,000 $110,000 $130,000 $1 50,000 i $175,000 »---- | : a OC -- .., | | $151,475.96

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