Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 16 Nov 1955, p. 1

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RA Tg Tope Wa i Weather Forecast Showers today, and colder, Moder~ ate winds. Low tonight 382, high tos morrow 35, TIMES-GAZETTE TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising. RA 3-3492 All Other Calls . RA 3-3474 DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle OSHAWA-WHITBY, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1955 Not Per Sovy * kx TWENTY PAGES DISMAL END AT GENEV Plan OCAA Meet Both Sides Are Adamant On All Major Problems Arena Creditors To Study By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER The round of closing sj hes New Data On Project - VOL. 84--NO, 267 futhorited as Second-Closs Moll s Cone « GENEVA (AP)--The Big Four was expected to sum up the posi foreign ministers' conference, tion of each side, and lay the which began three weeks ago with! groundwork for the propaganda high hopes, breaks up today with|battle made certain by failure of the prospects of an East-West|the conference. settlement in Europe more remote, WOULD BLAME RUSSIA than ever. The Western Big Three were The creditors of hold a special meeting in Oshawa |'Y tomorrow night to discuss newly |, revealed facts of city council's |g; | 1 the Oshawa|council had a dark corner on this, Community Arena Association will|and that has been revealed strong : he added. intend to hand over to our le- al advisors all the facts of the "At the meeting tomorrow night| : The major result of the confer- ence appears to he the demonstra- tion that Russia is rigidly deter- mined not to. accept a reunified Germany allied with the West, and that the Western powers are equally determined not to accept reported completing a declaration {that would blame Russia for the failure to bring a German settle- ment nearer. They agreed among themselwds that they would not commit tifem- selves to holding new negotidtions art in the ice rink project. Ti -G i p proj |Times-Gazette stories. any other kind of Germany. with Molotov next spring on the Legal advisors of the creditors] ¢ [will be present at the meeting. | These important moves follow a Daily Times-Gazette series of stor-| ies detailing the history of the, community rink project, which has "I don't know what the out- come will be, but we will flush out] the city." REFLECTION UNFAIR 'Ald. John Dyer today firmly stated that he believed city council Any progress toward a solution of the vitally important disarma- ment problem, or toward eliminat- ing East-West barriers to trade, travel and uncensored information also has been trapped between the German question, The Russian foreign minister wound up the Tuesday session with an wanted agreement on some kind of statement about European secur indication that He urgently rigid positions of the two great | power blocks. LAST SCHEDULE As Foreign Minister Molotov, State Secretary Dulles, Foreign Secretary Macmillan and Foreign Minister Pinay began the last day's heavy schedule of work they were even uncertain that they would resolve two normally routine questions. They did not know whether they | could agree on a final communique admitting their differences and ¢, spotlighting the few minor issues on which they approached some mutual understanding. Also they did not know just what they would say about holding an- other foreign ministers' confer ence. ity. Tuesday night Molotov, in what could be his final bid for some show of unanimity on security, fell back on a suggestion that the four powers agree on a statement sef- ting forth those provisions of a European security treaty which both sides already had described as desirable. These included renunciation of force, joint action against aggres- sion, denial of assistance to an aggressor, creation of an East-West buffer zone of limited military power, consultation and recognition of the right of self-deferte, "But the Western Big Three said the list did not express the westv ern viewpoint that security de« pends on German unification, GM, Union Resume On Negotiations Negotiations on economic issues|Canada will result from present aimed at ending the two-month » strike of 17,000 employees of Gen-| "Fiembers of the top halon bare SACS ERTL a BREE ended up derelict and $35,000 nl debt. | The should not accept responsibility for the situation which has deve- Times-Gazette stories re-/loped at North Oshawa park. vealed that the city council never] Commenting on the Times-Gazette issued a permit for the construc- article, he said: "I dont think tion, which is on city land; did|the reflection on city council is not give permission to the OCAA| fair. to put the building and rink on| "There was no intention of the city land; city treasurer's office|city to go into private business, handled the »ayroll: city coun-land that rink is private business. cil has been responsible for main-| 'Just because council authoris- {tenance of the plant sinceles a loan, it does not commit | march, but has neglected it; three council tbwards responsibility for| departments of city council were|the building," said Mr. Dyer. | to supervise the project, but no| Ald. Dyer said he could not un- supervision was exercised. derstand how the OCAA had been| WILL GET FACTS |able to obtain so much credit to {launch the project. H. H. Taylor, spokesman for| He claimed that the wrong in- more than 50 creditors of OCAA,! terpretation had been put on the said today that the articles in the|council motion to "supervise" con- Times-Gazette were '"'very illu-|gtruction of the rink. minating. i ARENA CREDITORS "I have always felt that the city' (Continued on Pag §) Committee Is Appointed On Vote Result Broadcast The Times-Gazette on the broadcast, N. C. MILLMAN « . « Council Too Hasty City Planning | Said Too Hasty Planning Board at times wished!lined the plans made by Oshawa the Oshawa City Council would to handle the sewage of the city, five fore shought fo planning| when it has a population pf 90.000. board's recommendations, before wr, Millman Ww making 'certain. decisions; N.C. Doe mao i? ~ ehair-| sroup the indu 5 I AT Mr, Mil said this when ad- {5 dressing the Lions' "Club on feat and oper Joad aid vai transport ures of town planning in Oshawa. "Nothing is worse for a city expressed by both sides City council makes the final|than to get a mixture of all types early setlement could be reached. decisions on town planning. We|of land uses. in the one area, If LOCAL PLANT PROBLEMS advise only, and they, have to take|you live in a residential area and Strike talks so far have been the responsibility for the decisions| someone puts a welding plant near- concerned with local plant prob-| they make," said Mr. Millman. |py, then it does not do your prop- lems Jen ig PEARSON HOME son waves as he alights from the RCAF C5 aircraft that carried him around the world on his good- is will tour. He arrived at Rock- cliffe airport today to be greet- ed by a large group of well- wishers. --*Fednews"" x The City Council has- ap CKLB and a. commie to. make 81 r 5 ry To Rule On Boys iE ew In Priest-Slaying Case Canada's Minister of External : Affairs the Hon. Lester B. Pear- son accompanied by Mrs. Pear- n, p i ronto. Douglas Si chair. the tte, advising] city hall and the chief refurning officer, it was pointed out. City Clerk, L. R. Barrand, told council that the old system was best, in his opinion, and would result in the returns being broad- cast much earlier than under any United Auto Workers closed five commit w rison, manager of CKLB, was read GN platits Septeniber 19, hope was Catharine's to council requesting permission to from Scarboro broadcast the election results in conjunction with the Oshawa Jun- ior Chamber of Commerce. Mr. Garrison said that the sti- sor, make up the 'union committee. Vancouver before starting to hitch- Defence counsel Harry Walsh asked the jury to bring in a ver- dict of not guilty because of in- sanity in the case of Guy Ferragne, BRANDON, Man. (CP) -- The| frial of three Quebec youths ac- cused of killing a Roman Catholic priest during a highway robbery goes to the jury today. The defence is seeking a verdict that would free two of them from {who signed a statement saying he Iwas the one who Filled the trigger. the joint murder charge and send For Gerard de Tonnancourt, 18, i i {and Claude Paquin, Seip' companion % 2 Hospital for Bren he asked acquittal. The crown is asking conviction] of all three for murder in the death) Jan. 9 of Rev. Alfred Quirion of} St. Edouard, Alta. Counsel completed their dresses to the jury Tuesday. HAD BEEN SHOT | The body of the 44-year-old priest|three guns, was found in his car on the high- knives. way five miles east of Brandon. He had been shot. said the facts were that the three youths planned a robbery which turned into a murder and all three Ishould be convicted. ad-| Mr. Meighen emptied two large suitcases full of heavy clothing and a small kit bag which contained ammunition, and ithe suttcases from Winnipeg tol 18, of Riviere des Prairies, Que.,| 18, both of Crown counsel F. O. Meighen! He said the youths had shipped! tion would co-gperate with the Jaycees to broadcast the results from the fifth floor of city hall, During the council discussion of the letter, many aldermen praised the old system of broadcasting re- hike westward, and pointed to the warm clothing they contained. "JUST FOR FUN" He asked the jury if they could believe they would start walking across country, clothed only in light jackets and carrying a hand- bag full of guns, knives and am- sults from The Daily Times - Gazette office. other system. He said that there would be some inconvenience and delay in broadcasting from city hall. The committee will discuss the election night broadcast with rep- by 2 | |b p resentatives of the radio station,|fort to obtain better planning. STILL A CRUSADE Times-Gazette and Jaycees. | munition, "just for fun." "That is the reason they gave police when asked why they were carrying the guns, a starting pis- tol, two knives, a pair of socks filled with bullets, and a quantity of ammunition--just for fun." Mr. Meighen said the two Mani-| toba psychiatrists who said Fer- ragne was not insane had a long edge In experience over the other two doctors, who claimed he was legally insane. WOODSTOCK (CP). -- The first guaranteed wage plan of any con- sequence to be negotiated by a Canadian labor union has been ac- 'Not Do-Gooders' Complains CWL Head Of NODL Purge TORONTO (CP) -- The Catholic| The league has no interest what- Women's League says it wants only ever in adult reading, she aid. It to keep indecent literature away!is concerned over the infldence of from the kids. Adults can read obscene, immoral and sadistic what they like. |literature has on the minds of League officials Tuesday night grade and high school children. offered a clarification of their] «Thijs js not a program of censor- newly-launched campaign to clean ship The plan prepared by the up Ontario newsstands. : |women is to approach the deal- "We're not a lot of Carrie Na-iers in a courteous and Kindly tions with hatchers, not a bunch of pirit with requests, not with de- do - gooders' said Mrs. Ward mands or threats, realizing that Markle, president of the Toronto|through a' local dealer, the cus- Archdiocesan Council. "Were only tomer is the master of the situa- intérested in the welfare of ouritjon children. "This is an educational pro- gram." day, reactions have run A rss Yo criticism to outright Criticism has come from authors, port. book store proprietors and news About 1,000 observers are exam- dealers. : ining newsstands and bookstores in The executive of the Association Ontario cities and towns, The for Civil Liberties expressed deep league is a Roman Catholic lay concern over what it called "the organization book purge." In a statement it Mrs. Markle said the campaign said: is neither a crusade nor a purge.. 'Any greup of people may select "It is an attempt to bring home its own reading material by what-| to dealers and parents the damage ever standards it adopts. But when which can be done by distribution'they . also claim the privilege of of indecent literature." selecting books for others . , . the ~ LATE NEWS FLASHES Intruder Holds Up Toronto Bank ° : TORONTO (CP)--A solitary intruder, believed armed, today held up a Bank of Nova Scot"a branch at downtown Queen and Bay streets, escaping with an estimated $4,000. 1,000 Cypriots Riot In Nicosia NICOSIA, Cyprus (Reuters) -- More than 1,000 slogan-shouting Greek-Cypriot high school students Taarched through the streets of Paphos today, pelting British soldiers and government buildings with stones in the third successive day of anti-British riot- ing. cepted by a vote of 94.6 per cent of some 6,000 employees of Massey- Harris-Ferguson Ltd. The result was a combined tally of votes held in Toronto Sunday, at Brantford on Monday and here | Tuesday. The combined vote was - |counted at the local UAW-CIO Hall results are sure to prejudice demo-|here Tuesday night. cratic principles and undermine] Under the new agreement On- {that faith in human beings. , . ."|tario employees of the company, Mrs. Markle said she is sure the members of the United Automobile Massey-Harris Men Accept GAW Scheme wi w The agreement guarantees a worker a minimum of 65 per cent of his wages for four weeks and 60 per cent for a further 22 weeks. The company, which manufactures farm implements, will begin next September to set aside five cents off employees will be eligible for benefits beginning in September of 1957. . The rules by which the company insurance is paid are similar to the government regulations and em- ployees must be eligible for govern- ment benefits in order to receive the company insurance. m pl tr fore they jump." groups, you want, then you get individual | action by the legislators," said Mr.! Millman. | knowledge that can be decided in a minute. Planning is still a crusade in Can- ada, but in the United States it is an accepted fact. Ni8| experience," Mr. Millman stress-| an hour for each employee. Laid- pi valley green belt development. BOARD IN ACTION "Sometimes we on planning|erty any good," he said. oard wish the aldermen woul "CITY PLANNING ive the matter more thought be- {Continued on. Page 2) Mr, Millman appealed to public odies, such as the Lions, to exert] ressure on city council in an ef- Clear Beavers "Council receives knowledge o Of D Ch hat to do partly from public am arge FORT WILLIAM (CP) The if you let council know| | hat you want. beavers aren't trying to dam up the Kam river after all. "If you don't tell them what] fer Of He SepsHment of lands - " : and forests, said Tuesday the bus; Town planning' requires great|jitfle animals were pl y It is not something|peaver house and feeding bed. It was believed earlier the | beavers were attempting to erect {a dam across the deep channel "It is a science which requires/outside the city aid Dr. Cummins said investigation showed that the brush and small Mr. Millman illustrated his ad-|/frees in the river constituted the dress with several planning board|beavers' feeding bed for the aps. which showed the master|winter. n i ans for road development, indus-| The tree limbs are pushed into ial sites and the Oshawa Creek|breaks in the wall of the beaver house when the beaver remains be- low the surface of the ice. They He stressed the importance of{feed on poplar bark collected be- Wiring Made Red Red-Faced LONDON (AP) -- Jiri Hajek, Czechoslovakia"s ambassador to Oshawa local discussions, snarl: ed over the seniority issue, were completed during the weekend, clearing the way for major negoti- ations today. |up to concentrate on more com- Hugh Cummins, conservation of-| A special meeting was held yes- terday, attempted to define the margin of difference between com- pany and union on items still in dispute, and to lay out an agenda for future bargaining. | Separate committees were set| Britain, possessed one of the red- {dest faces of all Communist ens voys to the Cour. of St. James' today. The ambassador, who maintains an embassy building and a private house in London, found that some one had hidden 'a microphone in his office. He lodged a protest with the British- foreign office, saying he expected British officials to make a thorough inquiry and Jub plicated issues, such as wage in- equities and skilled trades prob- lems. Louis G. Seaton, of Detroit, heads the GM negotiating group, faced| on the union side by George| Burt, UAW national director. Members of Oshawa Local 222 UAW-CIO will enter master-con- tract negotiations for the first time since the strike began. OSHAWA UNION The Oshawa union group refused in 1953 to enter a master contract arrangement with the other four plants in the GM chain, and were covered by a separate agreement. It is believed that a master- contract for all five GM plants in ish the culprits. The foreign office investigated. A government official sald Tues« day this is what was reported to Hajek: The ambassador's office had been wired for sound. Mierophones, or listening devivces, planted there. The devices were traced to & shop on London's Old Brompton road. A man bought them there several weeks ago. His identity: had been A member of the ambassador's own embassy. Pooch's Smooch |: association misinterpreted the aims Warkers (CIO-CCL), will be eligible tof the campaign. In the statement for company-paid yment is a partial list of the 300 hooks to benefits they receive under the lon the league's objectionable list. federal government's unemploy- The company agreed to start paymnt into an unemployment reached an agreed limit employees OF ROYAL HOTEL * who are laid off can draw from it ! (Special to The Times-Gazette) |gervice. | the Ontario Liquor Licence H Board, issued this forenoon, the unters alt | Hotel at Whitby has been sus- | pended for a period of two Ai R v 14. Reason given for suspen- 1I escue | si ity was th sion of the authority was the | MT. CLEMENS, Mich. (AP)-- an intoxicated condition. The |The air se | order stated also that the gen- Selfridge air force base Tuesday beverage room was unsatis- [the heavily-wooded Lake Huron vores coast on the advice of the Mich- Tuesday marked the opening of | the Michigan deer hunting season. it feared hunters with itchy trigger fingers might accidentally shoot LJ - Ontario Girl | crashed through the trees. NEW YORK (CP)--The Metro-! old Windsor,» Ont., girl, Emilia | Cundari, to its roster of singers. | appearance in February in '"The| NJAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP)--A| Magic Flute pooch's smooch got 64-year-old Itroit and studied art and music!with the law today. at Marygrove College there. She| Tomlin's affectionate dachshund under Edith Piper and later joined|caused $1,100 damage to two auto- |{the New York City Opera Com- | mobiles and slight injury to three| clarifying the campaign's purpose insurance. It will be in addition iment insurance plan. SUSPEND LICENCE fund Sept. 15. When the fund has |in proportion to their length of TORONTO -- By an order of | beer authority of the Royal | weeks, commencing November serving of b t s. in | : BI a oo porsons I, | sea rescue service at eral supervigion of the hotel's called off a practice exercise along igan conservation commission. | M Si The conservation commission said et. digns the parachute jumpers as they | politan Opera has signed a 23-year: . {She is expected to make her first Saves Driver Miss Cundari was born in De-|Frederick Tomlin out of trouble] came to New York in 1953 to study| was blamed for a car accident that |pany., She has sung with the Tor-| persons. A careless driving charge| onto, Windsor and Detroit sym-|against Tomlin was dismissed af- phony orchestras and won a schol-| ter he told the court he lost control | arship and prize at' the Ontario. of his car when the dog rubbed Music Festival, jits nose on his cheek. Solemn services of institution and induction were held Tuesday night in St. George's Anglican | Church for Rev. Clinton D. Cross, ' new rector of the church. Shown ' R following the service are, left to right, Ward, of Toronto; able F. sewage disposal in the city and out-lfore freeze-up. The Rt. Rev. G. H. Wells of | Professor R. . | Toronto: Rev. Cross; The Vener- J. Sawers, of Toronto; ev. J. R. Fralick, of Elmvale; Rev. to; Rev. R. deCorneille of Toron- F. H. Wilkinson, bishop of Toron- | - | colorful to; and Rev. H. D. Cleverdon of | service Oshawa; E. N. Weldon and S. T. Close to 700 people attended the | service. - Following the reception was held in { a ST. GEORGE'S RECTOR INDUCTED AT COLORFUL SERVICE ° the parish hall. Receiving with Rt. Rev. | Hopkins, wardens of St. George's |. the wardens were the rector, the Bishop and Mrs. | and Dr. and Mrs. Ward. Wilkinson, ~Times-Gazette Photo

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