Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 6 May 1960, p. 1

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| i | a A THOUGHT FOR TODAY Many a female entertainer couldn't put up such a good front if she weren't technically augmented. The Oshawa Sunes WEATHER REPORT Showers, scattered thunder storms tonight; showers ending Saturday, turning cooler and clearing in evening OSHAWA, FRIDAY, MAY 6, 1960 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy VOL. 89--NO. 105 Authorized os Second Cioss Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa TWENTY PAGES Sd Landmark Destroyed By Flames | Fire Thursday night completely | treated for burns and firefighter demolished a storage warehoise Joseph Sobanski suffered a owned by Bathe and McLellan wrenched knee, They were treat- Building Supplies Limited at ed and allowed to go home. Bloor and Albert streets in Osh-/ Residents of the College Hill awa. area reported that sparks flew Officials of the company this into that area. No fires were re. | morning estimated the at| ported. | $50,000. | Someone was seen on the roof| Burned in the spectac ilar blaze|of the E. E. Jones house on was a quantity pti pine lumber| Bloor street east, with a garden loss Tale Wedding Route Ocean Of Noise LONDON (CP)--Radiant as a|with the silence outside during bride should be, Princess Marf-|the ceremony, as the crowds lis aret and Antony Armstrong-Jones|tened on portable radios and loud. and construction machinery |hose, to keep the house from Billowing black smoke shooting flames could more than 15 miles away fic on highway 401 and catching fire. The shed to the be seen|rear of the house caught on fire Traf- several times, but fire was backed managed to keep it from burn-| fighters today sailed off on the royal yacht Britannia for a Caribbean honeymoon. Palace nearly an hour previously. speakers fixed to the palace gates, Television carried the cere. mony to all Britain and to Euro- The couple left Buckingham pean nations as well, The ceremony brought to a up about three miles, as specta- Ing i stopped to see the fire. Thou-| A large transport van parked sands of people jammed the CNR | near the blaze almost caught on station platform and nearby fre severe Mjmes, but fighters " ag se of the! cooled it ol S. Fiveets 10 ge! 2 glimpse Of the A spectacular explosion, about | {one hour after the fire had start-| EXPLOSIONS ed, boomed over the heads of] Fire Chief Ray Hobbs said he many of the spectators, causing] believed something generated some to cower and others to run. Shaugh heat to cause aw explo BUILT EARLY IN CENTURY He said several smaller explo.| The warehouse was erected by sions occurred throughput the Hogg and Lytle Limited during building. Cause of the fire was| the early years of the century, being investigated It was one of 27 such buildings While 90 Oshawa 1 | from coast to coast through which firemer A fought desperately to control tes firm operated an extensive fire, two Simcoe street south houses caught fire as a result of| 1! flying sparks. About half a dozen|Was i i p y| tal fire fighters rushed to the home experimen 3 of Edward LeBlanc and Arthur|gram. The firm had more than a ARCHBISHOP AT ALTAR seed and grain busiest. 2 The elevator, as it then was, TN o the centre of an extensive THEY KNEEL BEFORE pea culture pro- Johnson to with saving a CNR bunk house 5 rar : women worked at the elevator 50 feet from the warehouse Ee ar It wal bt 4 | Margaret was an all-white bride voluminous skirt flowing out into|with three rows of broderie an- ' today in a beautiful dress ofja train at the back. glaise. marriage to Antony Armstrong-|right down the centre front of the forward sweep over the ear i Jones probably was the simplest |podice. on to the cheek, in soft white HAND-IN-HAND FROM ABBEY They were caught in a tremend-| climax 68 days of a steadily build. ous traffic jam in the Old City of ing 20th-century fairy tale. London--Britain's financial cen-| It was on Feb, 26 that Queen tre. Their car finally reached the Mother EliZhbeth announced her pier at 5:17 p.m. (12:17 p.m. |, ger daughter's nt EDT)--47 minutes late. The 3%-Ito a surprised world. mile trip had taken more than | The romance of the princess three-quarters of an hour. joe) the professional photographer: LONDON (CP)--Princess Mar- we: Deat-Liaps royal secret of garet and her husband, Antony | e decade. Armstrong-Jones, walked trium- SHARE JOY phantly out of Westminster ; Abbey into the brilliant sunshine Boy he oS rage ant a on this, their Wedding day, i» ain e people of Brit. cheers that echoed through the A historic streets surrounding the, Some didw Ike thie idea of or ancient Abbey. | A oth- Softly the princess responded: Jo Sorplaived Sn the wedding "1 will." v st ma- Armstrong - Jones placed the jorhiy shared her joy. wedding ring on' Margaret's fin-| Princess Margaret, one of the ger and repeated after the arch. MOSt enchanting news subjects, bishop: "With this ring, I thee has been described as a fun-love wed." | ing glamor girl whose blue eyes "To those whom God hath|Seek adventure. She is just as joined together," said the arch-|0ften described as a person of bishop, "Let no man put/deep religious beliefs with a mind asunder." strictly her own. Iron and granite-hard character ROARING CHEERS |have been demonstrated in the As the newlyweds emerged life of the princess, as well as from the Abbey, the throngs re.|the feminine grace for which she acted with roaring cheers to the|is more famed. In 1956 she re- smiles of the 29-year-old bride|nounced publicly a handsome and her 30-year-old husband. So suitor, an older man, Peter Towne Jammed were the crowds that|send, an air ace from the Second ambulance squads reported 257 World War, because he was a dis casualties, including 171 fainting|vorced person, although the so- cases. called innocent 'party. 3 ' ® extinguish wooden {3000 acres of land in the Osh- . eo. hich had caught fire|awa area for the growing of peas 11 T1INCesS ove shingles which Had eaaga T€ to meet the demands of an ex-| tensive export market. FIREFIGHTERS BURNED | were graded. The building had a| In White 1 own Two firefighters, Philip Elm-|capacity of more than 100,000 | [white silk organza and carrying| The high standup neckline with| The bridesmaids' he a d dress la bouquet of white orchids. a small V-front was piped with an Was in the form of a halo, slightly royal wedding gown ever in| | feathers. hind of embroidery and other IN THREE LAYERS They were made up of flowers, Firefighters are also credited nr and 40 hurst @ad , James Little, were bushels: " LONDON (Reuters)--Princess|slightly pointed in front and a|graduated pin-tucking, bordered The dress she wore for her|organza rouleau which continued higher in the centre and with a trimr....gs. The skirt was made of three fashioned in white feathers, inter- In the glass coach, which the| This tiny woman then took groom entered first after a whis-|a new dimension in the aves. of Its only trimming was rouleau layers of organza cut into 12 pan- spersed with white ribbon ros. ' | pered consultation with the bride, |the Common: in the same white silk|els set in unpressed pleats intejettes and groups of "trembling" © nquiry returned to Buckingham Pal- "Margaret Taser a§ she the base of the bodice and joined crystal drops. orga) row Wich ASHER Wanje by a fine rouleau piping "Which The bridesmaids' This time royal dressmaker gave the effect of a stripe. soft white kid court Norman Hartnell added no pearls, no rhinestones, quins, length sleeves and the fine veil DIAMOND TIARA The dress was classic in style, jalso were piped with organza 1p the midst of royal splendor, with a fitted hip-length bodice|rouleau. only a wide diamond tiara blaz- ] The whole dress was mounted |ing on her head distinguished 2 Pickering shoes were cials are guilty of treason if they tulle. [from that of other springtime| United Auto Workers (CLC) com- With it the tiny princess wore brides. mittee said Thursday. on a foundation of stiffened whitc| Princess Margaret's bridal attire Communist party leaders, a | The royal wedding dress was The statement was contained in shoes with shoes with| PY The entire hem of the dress, |low kid-covered heels and white R t P bl h d no se-the end of the tight-fitting, full-|satin bows. epor u 1S e TORONTO (CP) = Union offi-|were as discuss strategy and policy with cial. the time of the strike were ac-| cused of consulting with Com. "We want ace for a champagne wedding known as a child, bolted Hp breakfast and to prepare for de-|cient prerogatives of royalty and parture on their Caribbean hon- embraced a more modern vogue eymoon aboard the royal yacht/when today she solemnly vowed Britannia. "to obey" a commonder at her For the first time on a great/wedding fo a photographer. She royal occasion, Margaret pre-/then became one of the Jones |ceded the Queen into the palace. girls--and perhaps she herself | Crowds estimated 3 fare than would smile at that. y \ 200,000 mi around the palace ADMITTED MEETING palace! s ACKIE ATTENDS A number of union officials at gates. nion officials a There were a few vacant seats From thousands came the cry, |, Margaret." in the Abbey, in the section re- When the couple came out on a [Served for very special guests. serious as any that could be levelled at a union offi- 'Employees Walk Out BROUGHAM white satin facings and 2'4-inch|no surprise, for it closely resem- report of a committee investi- munists, but Mr. Siren was the heels, {bled advance reports and|8ating charges that local union "0c "who admitted it. He balcony, another volley of cheers Princess Anne and the seven sketches. But Margaret's hair-do|officers discussed policy with\ gq yo"caw nothing wrong with|rose from the square below. other bridesmaids wore dresses was. [Communist leaders during the aiiending the meeting. | which were replicas of the bride's] A high chignon was pinned on UAW's 148 - day strike against He declined comment Thursd WAVES TO CROWD first evening dress--the favorite top of her own short hair, adding|General Motors of Canada in night on the report r8ay| She was carrying her bridal of Margaret's father, the late inches to her five feet two inches, [1999-96. I" Chief witness against Mr Siren|POuduet. She turned to speak to Two King George VI, A veil of white illusion tulle] The unions international execu-|. .< Nelson Wilson, former union her Jushaid, --_-- Sniled an | [ue crepe court (Staff) -- One seat that wasn't vacant, how- ever, was that occupied by ale mond-eyed Jackie Chan, actress, former model and onetime heart- throb of Armstrong-Jones, He had remembered to invite her--as he invited quite a few |friends of his old Bohemian days, CHIMNEY TOPPLES AT HEIGHT OF FIRE Hospital Blaze At Peterb PETERBOROUGH (CP)--Four new-born bahies were the near-casualties Thursday of patients evacuated from Hospital here during alarm fire 200 sc Civic safety by firemen. The four were revived on the hospital where the patients were taken orough | Pickering township employees in the A ; {have walked out. Ernest Baker little-girl bodices, short cuffed shoulders and fell to the floor. land Mrs. Mildred Spang, long sleeves and peter pan collars [time employees, resigned on|tied With a blue ribbon bow. was small Tuesday night without prior Panels of broderie anglaise, |crescent-shaped, of notice slotted with pale blue ribbons, orchids--white with a slight pink and dainty, {| Mr. Baker has been in the tax fell from the narrow waist to the|flush on the petals, lilies of thel collaboration |ground-length skirt. valley and stephanotis, with a few department 11 years and Mrs. Spang seven years. Mr. Baker said they walked out because they felt their knowledge of the rage] " ni > > woe mre vl Rraeeian Rocket they were not satisfied with] "working conditions as they were! ® i lat present'. | About half the patients removed) Robert Turk, office manager, | 1 . . ane only had to be helped or carried, said "the move came as a sur-| ome of them in beds. Station after the fire, touched off by a welder's torch, spread black, ac- rid smoke through the hospital A blood transfusion, started whe the fire broke out, was con- finued, uninterrupted and suc- cessfully on the lawn. Patients were transferred to other hospi tals and some were allowed to go home. Later many were re- At a general meeting of Local 222 UAW Thursday night, the union voted a donation of $10,000 to the Oshawa General Hospital membership prise to him'. He said to fill the MOSCOW (AP)--Marshal An-| The plane was flying at a "very wagons and panel gan he plans to engage two fe-|drei A. Grechko t 5 ! i " C no 8 g . old the Su- great alti 5 a genera trucks joined ambulances at the male clerks and new Steal altitude' S64 8b a speod hospital grounds in response to a chinery will be purchased to take American plane knocked down hour. Thirty babies were carried to Broadcast appeal Beds and care of a lot 6f the work in com. May 1 was destroyed on the first | stretchers were scattered on the, ting and billing. lawn lawn in the near 70-degree tem- perature. BIG DONATION BY LOCAL 222 office ma-|{preme Soviet today that the|of approximately "The engagement was |engaged by the township council|Premier Khrushchev. [to co-ordinate the work of the administrative staff. Tornadoes |population of nearby Grechko, who formerly com. (helped to locate the wreckage manded Soviet troops in Ger-|quickly. many, charged that the Amer lican plane was making an "at- U.S. Holds Protests | tempt to probe our defences and [test our readiness to give deva- |stating repulse to an agressor." | He said rocket forces such as that which shot down the Amer ican plane have "become the Around the hem was a band of off-white odontoglossum orchids. | 540 miles an| d i| "Th wiier| Judgment Delayed shot by a "remarkable rocket" |and it was soon learned that the| Late last year, Mr. Turk was|fired on the personal orders of|intruder was brought down. The| Vinges| IN Damage Action The dresses were of plain white sprang out on each side above the live board has barred Paul Siren, 10s chairman of General Mot- tax collection department silk organza, like the bride's, had|ears. It pulled back from the|/former Toronto area director, ors at Oshawa, the report dis- (from holding office in the union! 4 The committee said Mr. Margaret's wedding bouquet|after he was found guilty of wiison testified he attended three slightly cimbudium iedting with Communist officials meetings at different locations during the strike. including former headquarters of The committee said charges of|the Communist party. with Communists) He said the meetings were led | |by William Kashtan, Communist attending the meetings, but the| committee ruled there was a lack of corroborating evidence against the other members. Mr. Siren| was fired last December as UAW international representative. SCORE BOARD Thursday Total Accidents .. 3 5 Injuries 0 1 Fatalities ... 0 1 Charges laid for traffic offences 34 81 | TORONTO (CP) -- Judgment was reserved Thursday in a $351,800 Ontario Supreme Court damage action arising from a traffic accident which claimed) the life of Dr. R. S. K. Seeley, | bs former provost of Trinity College. | Mr. Justice Leo Landreville| said a decision would be handed SAFETY MONTH | fc identiied 'union members "sed er hand to return the Frantic cheers followed. Hand- hes he gave Midnight id jeeseiets and programs waved. Pall tng it wey th 3 eum. The Queen, the Queen Mother, At he 'w mice i ol t Prince Philip, Princess Anne, Prince Philip ro A Ure an: Prince Charles and other mem- the bride np ton Peder . bers of the Royal Family were Jones replied. He and bs. with the bridal pair on the bal-j;gether sliced one of the many eony. wedding cakes and passed out | Again Margaret | portions, to return the Outside, the crowd which had been singing For She's a Jolly Good Fellow slowly melted away. Armstrong-Jones also waved| At about the same time, the from time to time. guests in the Abbey--who had not They stayed on the balcony for been permitted to move from four minutes. their seats until the Royal Family The din of cheers contrasted! departed--were filing away too. and again, her hand clustered around her. {down shortly. turned to their rooms. | Mrs. Seeley and the adminis-| | | Assistant fire chief George Gimblett said the fire started in a new addition and spread to the hospital . cafeteria where it contained Hospital superintendent Mackay said that within three minutes of the alarm he had checked up to the fifth floor of the hospital. "Every staff member was at {main component of our armed| |forces." | "Separate rocket units have| {been set up with their own com-| | WILBURTON, Okla. (AP) --|mand and separate organiza- {Ugly black tornadoes killed 26 tional structure." building fund This is easily the largest single donation to the fund from any organization since Was, the building fund campaign started May 2. The money will be paid from the Local 222 treasury over a period of three years. Malcolm Smith, president of the local, said that at the meeting the membership 'Tear Path Of Death trator of Dr. Seeley's estate con- tend the accident was caused by For Query faulty brakes on an almost-new | WASHINGTON (AP) -- United vauxhall car. The car swerved! |States officials withheld any into oncoming traffic. |persons and injured about 220 in PHOTOGRAPHS WRECKAGE [strong protests today on Russia's Defendants in ti oti slashing attacks on Oklahoma Red Star today published alshooting down of an American |y lonalis an De prt] Thursday night and today. |photograph of the wreckage of plane while they sought further | paick Litnited od Ray Cosgrove, A twister destroyed 12 houses, the plane. The defence ministry information on the incident. ou employee pi Pink Buick al two churches and the post office newspaper also gave some de-| President Eisenhower, after or-|30 SIP car agency : in the small community of Menif. tails of the incident, but made|dering.an official inquiry, made -------- ---- voted overwhelmingly in (fee this morning. A woman was|no mention of the pilot. no public comment. . favor of the large donation. |Killed and 200 persons were hurt. | Red Star gave this account:| The state department said the Small Business . Gets Protection John the proper fire station and all Many members. he said, | Torrential rains followed the An anti-aircraft defence unit|initial approach would be in the PHONE NUMBERS to ' give generously, and |Were without power and commu-| "When radio operators re-jon the incident reported by Pre- By DON HANRIGHT pointing out the need for this Eastern Oklahoma college which had entered Soviet terri Khrushchev said his govern- designed to protect small busi-| the largest donation I can re- FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 4 ; 2 : : rubble today. The best estimate|passing minute that the plare|violation of its air space, but the| written into proposed new anti. floors were closed," he said spoke in praise of the hospi- [twisters and hampered rescue ef-/was alerted by an alarm signal form of an inquiry to the Soviet nications. ceived the first reports about the |mier Khrushchev * Wednesday in| Canadian Press Staff Writer more space at the hospital, town and officials feared they tory from the south, it became ment "will make a severe Pro-{nessmen against price discrim- call the union ever making to | HOSPITAL RA 3.2211 of injured, taken to hospitals in| was an alien machine and that|communication had not been re-| combines legislation introduced CITY EMERGENCY tal, urging the membership forts. Most of the affected areas|just at dawn on May 1. foreign ministry for more details Eleven victims were counted injcourse of an unknown planela blistering speech. OTTAWA (CP)--New measures POLICE RA 5-1133 Mr. Smith said: "This is {would find more bodies under the|increasingly clear - with ev ery|(test" to the U.S. over the alleged | ination at the wholesale level are any cause." iseveral towns, was about 75. lits intentions were hostile." |ceived up to this morning. in the Commons today. De EE eh

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