THOUGHT FOR TODAY In many cases what passes for tolerance is a well-balanced mixe ture of contempt and pity. ¢ Oshawa Stmes WEATHER REPORT Variable, cloudiness Friday, snowflurries ending near noon, not much ure. change in tempera THIRTY-FOUR PAGES Vol. 88--No. 269 OSHAWA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1959 Authorized Post Office a os Second Class Mail Department, awa Get Wa rning From Smith Steel Men Offer New ' e ' Pact UAW officials charged today | that laid-off GM workers are tak-| ing jobs in the house construction| trade at, a lower than regular] Fate of pay and displacing regu- lar construction workers. | Some men are still collecting unemployment insurance despite] the fact that they have a job. | them will shortly, and we will be able to track this thing down. "This is a practice that we heartily disapprove of. Any men engaged in this practice could get themselves into a lot of trouble." "We have tried to impress| Thomas Edwards, an executive| upon the members of the Oshawa board member of Local 494Jand District Labor Council that always act contrary to their nor- mal principles. "This is not new. This is some- thing that we in the trade union movement have to fight against all year long. this sort of thing has got to Stop Maleolm Smith, president of| United Rubber Workers, Whitby, Local 222, UAW, issued a stern|and a vice-president of the Osh- warning to the men saying they|awa and Distriet Labor Council, bad thing for all concerned." "Moonlighting such as this is a eguld, if found out, lose their un- d to employment insurance, supple-| mental unemployment benefits, | gnd be liable to prosecution by PIC officials. | He said they could be fined dollar for dollar for any over-| payment. WORST KIND | ""This is the worst kind of trade| | said he was firmly the 'practice of anyone taking al job at lower than union scale. "As an individual T am opposed to this sort of thing," he said. "This is something we have al- ways fought against." faced with an emergency they wwii ene" "| Restored {anyone else for that matter, are Sir Winston | Don Gillis geis a kiss from umionism I have ever heard of," | said Mr. Smith. "Union men tak- ing jobs away from other union men at a lower rate of pay." James Lownie, second vice-| president of the union, who is on| duty at the UIC. office, assisting Jaid off men in making the| claims, said he had several re- ports of the situation from con- struction workers. "In the last couple of days we have had 2 number of com- plaints," he sald. "If we can nail anv of these complaints down we| shall certainly do something| about it." Mr. Lownie said that the con-| Btruction workers were all col-| leeting unemployment insurance] due to their layoffs "None of them have yet agreed| 'WOODEN NICKELS |. BRING PROFIT NEWBURGH, N.Y. (AP)-- Who says you can't get any- body to take wooden nickels nowadays? People not only will take them, but will pay good money to get them. The city manufactured and sold thousands last summer as a stunt to publicize and help pay for a 250th anni- versary celebration. Wednes- day came the final account- ing: a profit of $7,589. Other expenses, however, took 'ToHealth | his wife after he led all of his LONDON (CP) -- Sir 'Winston! 17-man, anti-communist slate hurchill was described today as| to victory in the elections Tues- | "restored to health" after an in-| day of Local 598 of the Inter- | disposition. national Union of Mine, Mill His secretary, Anthony Mont-| and Smelter Workers at Sud- nist WINNER IN SUDBURY ELECTION bury, Ont. In elections as bit- ter, as any in Canadian labor history Gillis trounced former union boss Nels Thibeault who stepped down from the Canad- ian presidency of the Commu- dominated international PITTSBURGH (AP)--The basic steel industry said today it has submitted to the United Steel- workers union a 30 - cént - hourly package offer covering a three- year period. Wag an average hourly wage of $3.11 an hour. ment said the industry proposal was made Nov. down the same day. - 50 cents an hour ever a fhree year period. The industry valued the Oct. 17 offer at 20.4 cents an hour over the three-year period. On the basis of the industry's The' union in a formal state- 15 and turned union to try to knock out the freshman leader. Gillis won control last March following a 10-month strike against the International Nickel Company. A record 13,255 of 16,000 eligi- ble miners voted. | agu-Browne, told a reporter: "He's better now. He's all| right. I'm afraid I can't give you any more details than that." Obviously, age is beginning to tell on the old warrior. He will| {be 85 on his next birthday, Nov. 30. He is almost completely deaf and he gets about with some dif- ficulty But the powerful will that has often triumphed over frailties of the body keeps driving him, and he makes occasional appearances in the House of Commons. | 14 Cabinet Aides Appointed By PM The others named: Egan There was no immediate com- ment from the union. R. Conrad Cooper, chief indus- try negotiator, said the new pro- posal also softens management's demands for work-rule changes, improves insurance benefit offers and the cost-of-living clause, The new proposal, Cooper said, would have the companies pay the entire cost of iife insurance and sickness-accident insurance heretofor paid for jointly by the companies and employees. The offer was presented to the union during a series of secret bargaining sessions started The new proposal, the union said, represents virtually no two estimates the new is an improvement of" six- change from the proposition the company made last Oct, 17. That offer was rejected by the full wage policy committee, offer as being worth about 24 cents an hour over the three-year period. It estimated the previous offer at 23.8 cents an hour. Conrad Cooper, chief industry ne- gotiator, estimated the new pro- posal would cost the companies than one-third of one cent." Cooper said in statement: "The proposal do what can be done and still keep within non - inflationary bounds in the cost of steel pro- The union estimated the latest this latest company offer and the earlier offers is a small pension improvement which the union ac- tually estimates is worth less In disclosing the latest offer, R. shortly after the mills reopened under a federal injunction Nov. 7 after a 116-day strike. The companies want contract changes to give management more say over working conditions in the mills. The industry pre- viously offered to submit the question to arbitration. Some 500,000 steelworkers re- turned to their jobs Nov. 7 under an 80-day injunction after a 116- day strike. The injunction expires Jan. 26. The injunction specifies that fl cold .and snow overnight, work be resumed under terms o' out the south of the province. nearly all the profit. Conservative mem b er s take OTTAWA (CP) -- A wholesale and comm er ce; now justice; to make a formal complaint," he| said, "but we hope that one of! (turns in sitting beside him to let|round of appointments to jobs as "him know who is speaking. parliamentary secrelaries to cab- DUCK BLIND ACCIDENT | x-President Kills Hunting Pal WALPOLE ISLAND, Ont. (CP) «Harry W. Anderson, a rugged six - footer who directed many tough labor negotiations before retiring as a General Motors vice-president, was killed by a hy blast Wedngsd in a inet ministers was announced Wednesday by Prime Minister Diefenbaker, Fourteen Conservative MPs were hated to the posts. eh pay $4,000 annually i the member's peg Only one such posiiion remains to be filled. Parliament at its last session made provision for 18 secretaryships. One appointment was made some time ago. The statutory limit formerly was 14, though the prime minis- fer appointed none following the March 31, 1958, general election. The bill passed at the last ses- sion also changed the title from| parliamentary assistant to .par- iamentary secretary. Marcel Lambert, Edmonton West, formerly of defence, now national revenue; and John Charlton, Brant-Haldimand, for- merly of agriculture, now citizen- ship and immigration. ppointed parliamentary 1). former parliamentary Chambers, Monirenr St. 'Law the old contract. It provided for| Heavy Snow In Province Ontario got little relief from|low as Tuesday night but dropped | several degrees below freezing, It Snow continued to fall over the was 17 above at North Bay, and Georgian Bay region while snow- 26 above in Toronto, London, and urries were scattered through-| Windsor. | "Snowflurries were to continue Temperatures were not quite as today and temperature was not expected to rise much above 32 Prime Minister Dieter former er ner was Paul Martineau, MP for Pontiac - Temiscam ingne rence-St. George, io be parlia- mentary assistant to the defence minister; John Pallett, Peel (Ont., government whip in the trade and cor H "Morris, postmaster - general; Yvon R. assistants who still are C members were not included in loney, Toronto Parkdale, John B, G. E. Halpenny, London, Informed sources said they were unable to accept reappoint ter's stipulation that all position: SIX WITH EXPERIENCE | Six of those named Wednesday | were old hands at the job. They corporation must quished by appointees. the list. They are Arthur Ma- Hamilton, York West (Ont.) and|® ment because of the prime minis- | and directorates with business be relin- { Tasse, Québec East, public works. : (gency health and welfare serv- © | supplies already has been deliv- ered. \ ARNPRIOR (CP)--About $10,-/Ambulance, veterinarians and 000,000 worth of medical supplies other groups. for emergency use will be dis- WANT PROVIN CONTROL tributed next year. Dr. K. C. Charron, chairman of a national conference on. emer: eral health department's health services, said study groups among the 106 delegates ex- pressed strong support for pro- vincial control over emergency health and welfare seyvices. The federal government had proposed that the provinces ex: ercise such control and make plans that could be co-ordinated ices which concluded at the Civil De'ence College here Wednesday. said about $6,000,000 in medical They will start to go out fo de- pots next year and later will be The edical Supply |. Dr. Charron, head of the fed-|SF degrees in the south. our caused severe drifting, Road crews worked around the clock to keep main roads open. hunting accident. are Richard A. Bell, It was fired by long-time friend § and retired GM president Harlow § H. Curtice as the two were in a duck blind on this Ontario Indian reservation at the mouth of the 8t. Clair River' Appearing shocked and ex- bausted, Mr. Curtice was later driven to Ann Arbor, Mich, to express his sorrow to Mrs. An- derson. "I am deeply grieved," he told friends. "Harry Anderson was my very dear friend for many RETIRED IN 1956 Mr. Anderson, 67, retired as ¥ GM's vice - president for per- sonnel at the end of 1956. He was in charge of the com- pany's labor relations through a 119day strike in 1945-46 and later negotiated contracts giving the United Auto Workers cost-of-liv- ing increases and annual wage boosts based on a formula of in- creased productivity. Scene of the shooting was St. Anne Island where the river, which separates Ontario from Michigan, flows into Lake St. Clair, It is one of the province's| HARLOW H. CURTICE |Carleton, who returns ly finstes) Jury Acquits where he served in 1957 Walter Dinsdale, MP for Bran-| don-Souris (Man.), who returns | to veterans affairs; C. W. Hodg-| ison, MP for Victoria, Ont., for-| merly of public works, now |transport; Thomas Bell, Saint 'John « Albert, formerly of trade lin 8 b, 2 District Men WHITBY (Staff)--Two Picker- ng, township men were found not uilty of robbing a Whitby man, y an Ontario County sessions jury this morning. Daniel Stone, 23, and Charles Last Of Whyte | 20, had been charged with Children Placed PORT HOPE (CP)--Placement of the last of 97 children rein the verdict. This was a third| y |trial before a jury. moved from Mrs. Bertha (Mom) Whyte's shelter for homless chil-| dren was decided here Wednes-| | day. | It was the seventh custody | hearing since provincial health; and welfare authorities took the| children from Whytehaven near| {robbing Clifford Raymond, 911| {Brock St. S., Whitby, on Dec. 27, | 1957. The jury was out less than ne half an hour before bringing Judge W. S. Lane told the two ccused the jury had taken the {lenient view. But he added he id not disagree with their ver- ict. "You boys are not very bright, stockpiled in local areas. nationally. HUNTERS AFFECTED HARRY W. ANDERSON Bowmanville after outbreaks offor you wouldn't find yourselves ¢ infectious diseases. A court later|in this position," he said. ruled they had been neglected un-|*You've been put through quite "der the Child Welfare Act. |a lot, but you déserve that much About 75 children have been trouble." returned to their parents, The] A further account of evidence rest have been made permanent |given in the trial is on page |or temporary wards of the Chir five in today's issue of The dren's Aid Society Times. emergency planners will use the same depots used by the armed forces for stockpiling military supplies. | The stockpiling program along with other features of emergency Summit Talk Rapped As Surrender' WASHINGTON (CP) --Dean | health and welfare planning were discussed during a three-day con- ference attended by representa- tives of the provinces, national professional association such as the Canadian Medical Associa- tion, the Red Cross, St. John Drug Addicts Need Treatment TORONTO (CP) -- A Metro- Acheson, secrelary of state dur- ing the Truman administration, denounced plans for a su meeting as a surrender to Soviet pressure. He said the Russians' object is to undermine the western de-| fence system in Europe. The western alliance is in danger of disintegrating because it does not seem (o have the will to keep pace with the Soviet Union's ex-| politan Toronto committee report jt'on drug addiction says that the treatment period for jailed ad-| Discussion also was held on public health measures that might be required in the event of large' - scale evacuations. Dr, Charron said delegates agreed that public health mfeasures are equally as important as medical services for casualties. The army is to assume the task of giving first aid and sort- ing casualties, Dr. Charron said. Plans for handling casualties and transferring them to civilian hospitals were discussed. Neil MacNaughtan, senior con- servation officer for the Parry Sound district, sald hundreds of hunters will be forced out of the bush by the blizzard. He sald lands and forest air craft have been making aerial surveys of thesarea "and will in- crease patrols when the blizzard lifts." About 40 ships, mostly ore care riers, battled gales, near-zero eater and ice in Lake Super or. rE dicts is far too short. The 140-page report, released] f Wednesday, also notes that Can- ada needs a national treatment centre for drug addicts. Once it is established, the report says muni- cipaljties should embark on vig- oroué rehabilitation programs. The report followed visits of top duck-hunting spots and has| many private clubs and lodges. STOOD UP SUDDENLY Police said both men prepared to fire as a flock of ducks fléw towards their blind. Mr. Ander- son stood up suddenly as Mr Curtice pulled the trigger. The 12-gange shotgun blast hit| him on the right side of the head. The shooting happened about 11 am. but police first learned of it when the body was brought to the mainland in mid - afternoon. | It was carried by boat, then by| truck and again by boat across CITY EMERGENCY | the Ontario mainla the marshy island and the nar- Aug. 31, 1958 but is still a direc- panding power. wh /the committee members to pri- was invited to speak|yate and public treatment cen- row channel separating it from tor. nd about 30 My. Anderson, born in Cadillac miles north of Windsor. |Mich., joined the legal depart- Provincial police constable ment of a GM subsidiary in 1919. LATE NEWS FLASHES to the annval copference of tres in the United States and members of Parliament of the|Canada. It urges that Metro North Atlantic Treaty Organiza-|should make every effort to con- tion member nations here. |vince the federal government a Bud Collins of Sombra investi-| i ! gated the fatality and took AT Jas Sate 2.GM vieepresi. brief statement before Mr. Cur-| § tice returned to Michigan. The| Bs leaves: his Wile, Veda, an body was taken to a Wallaceburg z four-year-old daughter, Jane funeral home and later released ">a" | It was because of the remote. for return to Ann Arbor. A ness of the hunting site that pro-| G. W. KENNEDY HOST vincial police were not informed The two men, frequent hunting|of the accident until midafter- and fishing companions, were noon. staying at St. Amne's Hunting] The ordeal of breaking the trag-| Club, operated by George w. edy to Mrs. Anderson fell to Dr. Kennedy, chairman of the Kel-|A. C. Kerlikowske, director of| sey-Hayes Wheel Corporation of University of Michigan Medical SANTA , Actor And Wife Have Squabble MONICA, Calif, (AP)--Actor Marlon Brando says his ex-wife threatened him with a butcher knife and threw a tricycle at him. She says he beat her, threw her to the floor and terrorized her. Both say the hair-pulling and spanking bouts were the other's fault. Israeli Fighters Intercept Airliner TEL AVIV, Israel (Reuters) -- Israeli fighter aircraft today intercepted a small Lebanese airliner and forced it to land at Haifa after it penetrated Israeli air-space, a mili- h d the view national treatment centre is ur- that a summit conference is of|gently needed. value in itself, a point often| made by Prime Minis Mac. millan. | "The essential thing," he said, Ford Co. Rbandons "is what you confer about--not whether you should confer but| Edsel Motorcar what you confer about. This is| wh essential. | DETROIT (AP)--Ford Motor "There has, however, become|Co. today abandoned the Edsel a sort of a belief that negotiation passenger car 'which it first in- is an abstract virtue." troduced only two years ago. There is no objection to a con-| Hailed*by the company as the |U Ic ference if it may produce "mutu-|answer to a public~demand for ally beneficial results" but it is|more cars in the medium price easy to confuse the word '"'nego-|range, the Edsel never caught tiation" as a cover for surrender./on and only slightly more than ; "If to negotiate means to put|100,000 were sold. Soviet Deputy Premier Mik- | stop over enroute to Mexico. the facade of consent upon a de-| In a formal statement today| oyan skirts past a saluting | The Soviet official is flanked feat, then I think it is not some-|Ford attributed the . demise to| RCMP officer at the Shearwa- | on the right by Premier Rob. tary spokesman announced here. Hawaii Volcano Goes Full Blast HONOLULU (AP)--Majestic Kilauea volcano continued to blow tons of molten lava and white-hot rock up to 1,100 Detroit. Cesire, and E. L. Cushing, presi-| |dent and owner of Wolverine Ma- a nely sald he wa about miacturing Company. Both are a blind the time wh |family friends and neighbors who| Indian pace Degli oli "and| Vere called at the suggestion of told him. "A man is dead," Frederick C. Matthaei, Ann Arbor) PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 MIKOYAN WELCOME HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 Mr. Curtice, who lives at Flint,| Mich., retired as GM president|daughter later. dustrialist and also a friend. Mrs. Anderson told heér little| by the glow of bright Orange feet into the air today. For the sixth straight day, the driz- zling skies over the big island of Hawaii were illuminated and Crimson lava. thing which should recommend itself to us." cars. the advent of the new compact | ter, N.8. airport, near Halifax, as he arrived for a 14-hour ert L. Stanfield of Nova Scotia. CP Wirephoto COMMUNITY $30,000 $50,000 $70,000 L $90,000 $110,000 $130,000 $150,000 $175,000 CHEST ll $165,470.78 SCOREBOARD BCI a IAA SI PO 2 eS IP I GEER