Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 5 Dec 1955, p. 1

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TIMES-GRZETTE TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising. . RA 3-3492 All Other Calls ....... RA 3-3474 "THE D H AILY TIMES- Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle AZETTE 1 aowflurries. Weather Forecast Cloudy with few clear intervals and Moderate to medium winds. High today 35, low tonight 23, Authorized Post Office Not Over Mail OSHAWA-WHITBY, MONDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1955 Re a as Second-Class s Department, Oftawe * * SIXTEEN PAGES VOL. 84--NO. 283 den D ueln US. To Visit Canada In February LONDON (CP)--Prime Minister Eden and Foreign Secretary Mac- millan will travel to the United Stal and Canada at the end of J for talks with government leaders in Washington and Ottawa, it was announced today. A White House announcement said the British leaders will arrive in Washington Jan. 30 at the in- vitation of President Eisenhower. They will spend "a few days' there. Eden told the Commons today he and Macmillan then will go to Ot-| tawa for discussion with Canadian leaders. "I should like also to inform the) House that at the invitation of the prime minister of Canada, the for- eign secretary and I will visit Ot- tawa at the end of our visit to Washington," Eden said. VISIT WELCOMED Clement Attlee, leader, said: | "I am sure the House will wel- come this announcement. I am sure I express the view of all of us when I say that we are so glad the president of the United States is so improved that he is able to receive distinguished visitors from overseas." : President Eisenhower now is at his farm at Gettysburg, Pa., con- Firm Explains Job On Plane An official of Field Aviation Co. story in The Times-Gazette which Ltd. explained today how the com-[said the aircraft was hangered pany obtained a contract for|in secrecy on the firm's premises. painting the Czech - made plane] Mr. Suarez said he objected to which is now at the Oshawa air-| the story because no official eom- port. pany statement was made. All y statements must be ap- Mr, . Suarez AS Labor party plane, is currently the sub-/compan io a controversy since it is[proved by himself, ased to CITIZENS GO TO POLLS | EARLY VOTING HEAVIER HERE Famous U.S. Air Pioneer Dies, Aged 69 BALTIMORE (AP) -- Glenn L. Martin, one of aviation's greatest pioneers, died here Sunday night of a cerebral hemorrhage at the age of 69. Behind him str crammed with dohad tabul aviation career "firsts." On Aug. 1, 1909, he made his first successful test flight. Nearly | half a century later his gigantic company was picked by the United States government for the awe- | some job of making and launching | a satellite of this planet. In between, he was credited with | being the first to develop a suc- cessful parachute which could be opened by the jumper at will, com- plete the first airmail flight, and make the first extended flight over ocean water. His company claimed the econ struction of the first multi-passen-| ger airplane, twin-engined bomber, torpedo and dive bombers, super- cargo ship, ground-to-air guided missile and many other innovations of the industry with which he grew; > i Foiim voip Wri gil Aer id Winner of the 1933 Collier Trophy! and 1944 Guggenheim Medal for his contributions to aeronautical sci! ence, 'Martin resigned as president' of his company in 1949. He stepped own as "board chairman later, rem a 10 PREGING ; } RRA oll he spark a. frans-Can- iL . "We are concerned solely with manner by competitive quotation. | i iin the aircraft as ne: would "This is a very routine opera:\for any other customer, and we tion as far as we are concerned." have no part whatsoever in the be added. importation or promotion of 'the Mr. Suarez took exception to a'aircraft in this country. 'Weather May Aid | H refighters Seek Wage Increases © The Oshawa Firefighters Asso- ciation will seek a Wage hike when negotiations are opened with|! | the city council for the 1956 agree- |: ments between the city and fire- i men. Ice-Locked Ships MONTREAL (CP)--Shipping of-ymen shouldn't have too much ficials here are hoping for an as-|trouble easing the boats through," | sist from the weather today in{Mr. Juillet said. "But if the tem- their attempt to clear some 40 ves- perature goes down to 15 like it | | | | | were among the first voters at The current contract expires on {December 31. and the OFA has rrepared a log of claims for pres-| entation to city coungil. | A preliminary letter seeking an opening of negotiations has been sent to the city council and will be |dealt with tomorrow night. J | i y S t eturni officer, Mrs. G. ) EARLY CIVIC election voters | uty returning e a TE enor the 5. A. Lovell school polling | Goalacouch. In the. bottom pic- | V Be were Mr. alg Mrs. | ture, voter Peter Dryburg reads { OFA. said today that details of the ; E. Weir (pictured at top). They | a polling booth notice warning [108 of claims could not be releas-| Nick Sumka, looking vainly against bribery and corrupt |©d till after city council had been| around for someone .to present | practices in connection with a {advised. the East . West trophy to as game ended in 6-6 tie between All Stars from the West and the 'booth, which opened at 10 East. Nick walked up and down WHO GETS THE TROPHY ? | the ground after the game but didn't succeed in handing the prize over. City Hall Confident Of Rise A roundur of polling booths & | the city indicates that there be an increased number of votes registered at the Oshawa eivie elections today. 4 Light snow was falling when the 89 polling booths in the city open- ed at 10 am, and some returning officers report a steady flow of voters right from the start, FLOW HEAVIER Although it is too early yet fo determine whether the registered number of votes will show a big increase over last year's some deputy ' returning claim that the flow of early vot~ ers is definitely heavier than last year. One polling booth officer reporis that in the first hour of the number of people who had vot- ed was about double that for the same period of the previous year. There are more than 25,700 vot- ers in Oshawa, but last year fewer progress report of voting : trends and returns for mayoralty race 12 aldermanic , seats, rd Education and Publie Utilities Commission, Deputy Returning Officers will telephone the results of their bal- lot papers to The Daily-Times office and an experienced news paper staff will collate the figures for broadcast. Public and election candidates will be able to watch the. pro- gress of returns at the newsroom of the newspaper. It is expected that the broadcast: will begin at 17.45 p.m. a.m. and are handing their completed ballot papers to dep- |e ee Himes Gazette "Strike In 78th Da Big Talks To Res As the strike at General Mo-|boro, St. Catharines, ff ion and W. Germany Fears Blockade By Reds RR BERLIN (AP)--Communist Eas Neues Deutschland, organ of the Germany insisted today that the|East German Communist party. | bath sides revi h wens 5 viewed positions, 3 preparing to resume national bar-| Negotiators for the . four GM question of barge traffic to isolated| The future of barge traffic--a Y, ume work as a trainee before becom- ing eligible for re-classification. .|ANOTHER ITEM Negotiation of production stand- els through the ice-clogged La-|did a few nights last week, the chine and Soulanges canals. situation could become serious." Temperatures which dipped well ; below freezing vers days Ty started the jam an reatened to lock some 50 vessels in the ice until Shots Fatal Spring. i The weather Jorcas Joday Lx mises a low and high of 28 and 32) in the Montreal area. This, com- or al, bined with the predicted 20-mile-| | an-hour wind, should be a big help MELBOURNE, Ont. (CP)--Po- to crews tryin to clear the ships,| lice reported bachelor farmer Dan shipping official said. { Multins, 60, was found dead with Jean Barcelo, superintendent of 8unshot wounds today in his pig the St. Lawrence river canal sys-|5'Y: : tem, said he thinks all the traffic/ His mother, Mrs. Minnie Mull will be able to get through "if|/ins, 84, was taken to hospital at weather conditions do not get|London, 20 miles east of here, with worse." a gunshot wound behird her ear.| The rain, which has fallen inter-|Her condition was described as) mittently during the past 24 hours,| critical. _ is a help Mr. Barcelo said. J. Henri Juillet, superintendent of the canal, said that prevailing _vinds helped alleviate the situaton ¥"in the Soulanges canal, about miles west of Montreal He said the ice was pushed away from the entrance of lock gates and boats Jere able to enter with little dif- y. "If the weather will only remain a few degrees below freezing our 30| Stolen. Police said Mullins had been shot and his body was disfigured by pigs. They said Mullins au- tomobile apparently has been A neighbor, Mrs. Cunn, told police: "Mrs. Mullins came banging at my door about 9 a. m. She said, 'Something terrible has happened at my place. You better go over and see.'" Gwendolyn West Berlin must be handled on a|yital link in the lifeline of this ministerial level by the West Ger-|Communist-surrounded city -- was man government. {raised during the weekend by the The Communists thus acknowl-|disclosure that the Russians have edged that they hope to force rec-|given the East Germans power to ognition of their regime through renew or deny applications for the the new clamp-down on the water operation of Western-owned barges route. So far, West Germany has|The Russians to date have turned dealt with the Communists only on back 52 permit applications, saying the level of "technical experts," |theSe must be submitted to East something which does not imply German officials for processing. recognition. | BLOCKADE FEARED | | Khrushchev Rants On About UK. 'Colonialis By HAROLD K. MILKS MANDALAY, Burma (AP)--Ni- kita S. Khrushchev has continued! his blistering public attacks on Burma's pre-war British rulers during his visit to Burma with Rus- sia's Premier Bulganin. Khrushchev, first secretary of the Soviet Communist party, and Bulganin came here today from Taunggyi. There the party chief also lashed out at "colonizers," charging that the British author- ities had been "sitting on the it was God who you." "They made profits while yeu starved. As representatives of a| European nation, we are ashamed about what those other Europeans sent them to rule did before. But not all Europeans made the statement. Moscow de- | { hink as did the colonizer." Khrushchev then reversed his field, termed Russia territorially| more Asian than European, and| linked racialism to European col- onization. | I | sibility the Communists might try to set up a partial blockade by cufting off Western barge traffic through the denial of permits. | About 24 per cent of West Berlin's & heavy supplies, such as coal, are m | brought in by waterway from West | | | Germany, 110 miles distant from the city. to Khrushchev that Britain re-! . 10 another development, an East| garded the Burmese people s| German government delegation| "savages and barbarians." headed by Prime Minister Otto| Notes of Western correspondents| Grotewohl left by air today for showed that--as translated by a ,iTi¢ndship visits" to Red China, Russian interpreter -- Khrushchev | North Korea and Mongolia. | ADN: the East German. news agency, said the delegation . in-| cludes Foreign Minister Lothar, Bolz and Maj.-Gen. Heinrich Doll: Recent developments have led| wetzel of the' staff of East Ger. some British newspapers to ques- many's militarized tion whether any useful purpose! police. will be served by the scheduled The Red demand is voiced in| The Soviet action raised the pos- nied that he did, and Russian re- porters said they couldn't remem- ber anyone using those words. gaining on major economic is- sues later 'this week. When the strike of 17,000 CIO United Auto Workers began Sept. 19, more than 100 new contract items remained in dispute. Company officials now indi- cate the number has been whitt- led down to 21 as a result of more than 150 meetings with the union, Most of these meetings have been concerned with local issues, including wage inequities, skilled trades and production standards. The company has offered $485 per 'hour to adjust wage inequities, with $340 per hour for use in Osh- awa plants, and the remainder dis- tributed through factories at Scar- Woman Hurt As Tots Burn BATHURST, N.B. (CP) -- Mrs. Emilien Arseneau, 26, was severely burned Sunday in a futile attempt to save her four children when flames destroyed their two-storey barracks frame dwelling on the outskirts. of| Bathurst, Dead are Michele, one, Gerard, plants outside Oshawa have not commented on their share of the inequity pool, but the union wants the $340 per hour figure for Osh- awa upped to $500. According to GM sources, the union is demanding 8 cents per hour increase for the skilled trades group in addition to the wage in- equity fund. LJ The company has indicated one of the basic skilled trades issues was solved when the union agreed to accept'a trainee program. Employees classified as trainees would receive training on skilled trades jobs and eventually could qualify for re « classification as journeymen. Trainees could also be used on skilled trades, jobs when a short- age of 'journeymen existed. No agreement has yet been reached on the length of time an employee would be required to { lards is another item still in dis- pute, with no change of position on either side, The union wants GM to agree to negotiate production standards, but the company continues to insist |that the establishment of produc- tion standards must remain a m t responsibility, Inclusion of indentured appren- tices at Oshawa into the UAW- CIO bargaining. unit as requested by the union could be accomplish- ed, GM indicates, if other skilled trades problems are resolved. Under the old contract, inden- {tured apprentices were not repre- | sented by the union, until comple- tion of their four-year training | period. UNION SHOP The company has stated its wil- lingness to discuss the full union TALKS TO RESUME (Continued on Page 2) LATE NEWS FLASHES MONTREAL (CP)--Three Rus- sian church leaders embarked on the Ontario leg of their Canadian tour today after side-stepping a protest demonstration on their ar- rival in Montreal. More than 50 persons were wait- ing for the visitors when they ar- rived at Dorval airport. They car- ried banners and distributed pam. phlets calling Archbishop Boris, the delegation leader, "a priestly- Tobed puppet and a subservient ool." But the Russian Orthodox churchmen were whisked away im- mediately upon arrival by officials of the United Church of Canada, sponsors of the tour. They arrived in Toropto Sunday night and were again taken di- rectly to their hotel rooms without incident. A city detective was as. signed to an adjoining room to pre- vent any disturbance. REPRESENTS PATRIARCH Along with Archbishop Boris, who represents the Moscow patri- Russian Church Leaders Side-Step Demonstration Moscow Theological Seminary and Anatole Guibatchov, a seminary layman whose position corr nds to that of 'a university registrar. At a press conference held shortly after their arrival, the 50- year-old blackbearded archbishop said through an interpreter that there is no ban on worship in Russia. Any Russian could believe in God | and practise his beliefs and "many persons so believe and practise." He said there are "about 20,000 churches in Russia, about 35,000 priests, 69 monasteries and 5,000 monks and nuns." He said "'very few--less than 10" Canadian O x churches are still under the jurisdiction of the Russian patriarch. Those which had broken away were considered to be in "schism," and reconcilia. Son attempts have proved unfeas« e. arch in North and South America, the delegation includes archpriest| Constantine Ruzitsky, rector of] 'Buffalo Police Hold Couple : BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) -- Police in Ann Arbor. Mich., are holding a Buffalo couple wanted here in 120 Indians Die In Big Cyclone MADRAS, India (Reuters) -- At least 120 persons died in a tropical cyclone which struck the southeast To Test Act In Ont. Court STRATFORD - (CP)--K. M. Betz. ner, director of the Toronto Milk Producers' Association, Local 1, says the validity of the Ontario Farm Products Marketing Act will be tested by the Supreme Court of Canada beginning Jan. 14. His announcement Friday night necks" of the Burmese people. | 'Let us live together, let us fight| visit of Soviet leaders to Britain His all-out campaign on the col-| together, let us help each other in|pext April. onial theme continued despite Mos-| What we need," Khrushchev added.| hile Khrushchev and Bulganin cow denials of an anti-British state-| Let us fight together to prevent pushed on with their Asian tour, ment attributed to him last week a new war which is threatening some observers in London's diplo- at Rangoon. matic colony predicted a new connection with the alleged kidnapping of a three- week-old girl. [two, Margaret Rose, three, and| Nicolle: four. Two other children were in town when the fire broke out ' 6 Die In Auto [now m' | mother next oot wien hr mer Three Injured In Snow-Skid struggle for power within the GRAVENHURST (CP) -- Two passengers and As Train Hits Khrushchev renewed his attacki A Moscow radio broadcast, | S rain l |noticed smoke rising around the on Britain in a speech Sunday. |meanwhile, accused th British for-| Kremlin, and said the party boss| GREENVILLE, S.C. (AP) -- The|chimney of her home. Mrs. Ar- : . is the driver of a Grey Coach Lines bus were injured today when the vehicle skidded on a snow-covered to an association meeting at nearby Milverton was the first indication of the court test date. The test had been tentatively slated for Feb- ruary. At the last Dominion-provincial coast of India last week, officials said here today. Tidal waves hit some areas after winds up.to 60 miles an hour lashed the coastline in a two-day storm Thursday and Friday. Floods de- ¥ conference Prime Minister St. stroyed crops, disrupted commiuni-| cations and caused damage of aurent said he does not think it 3 prudent to amend Dominion farm property estimated at 3,000,000 1-|marketing legislation fo permit pro- pees (about $600,000). vincial collection of indirect tax "The colonizers who have been|eign office of a "fresh offence" in might possibly be ready to bid for Southern Railway's passenger train seneau made a frantic attempt to here interfered with the develop-|its commnts _ on Khrushchev's| all-out one-man control. {the Crescent, rammed an automo-|enter the house but was beaten ment of your economy and the de-|speech last Friday at Rangoon. | Kremlin leadership has func- bile at a grade crossing near here| back by intense heat and smoke. velopment of your culture," Khrushchev said, "and they tried to rule you and convince you that! "ludicrous" a statement attributed! death of Stalin. Sir George Young, chief s man for the foriegn office, termed] pokes-| tioned more or less as a collec-lat dusk Sunday, killing six per-| or committee -- since the sons. None of the passengers on ; 'the train was injured. tive ) P Her husband left Bathurst a month ago for a construction job in Labrador. hill on Highway 11 north of here and went part way down a 20-foot embankment, coast, The storm struck the Ta, Ramnad districts on the Madras! jore and/on farm products "until the prove ince's own mark had been tested. eting legislation

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