\ i | THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle OSHAWA-WHITBY, THURSDAY, MAY 2, 1957 TIMES-GAZETTE TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising RA 3-3492 All Other Calls ...... RA 3-3474 Weather Report Sunny and cool toda: . y and Win orth 20 toons. © Tray. VOL. 86--NO. 104 3st Gor TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES SAY U.S. WILL FULFIL 1957 DEFENSE. PLANS MAP PC CAMPAIGN STRATEGY IN ONTARIO RIDING manager for the riding today. | t Fos Tod = iE od Y | the next few weeks. Mr. Allan Michael Starr, Progressive - Conservative candidate in On- tario riding in the forthcoming federal election, left, greets E. Gerald Allan, of Claremont, | who was named PC campaign conferences in Oshawa today with party organizers as prepa- | rations were made for a series of meetings in the riding in 'Declare | New Texan | Flood Area DALLAS, Tex. (AP) -- Texas disaster area was oy today as the flooding Sabine River surged downstream at record (heights, threatening to inundate {for the second time in four years Hie small community of Dewey- The 1,000 residents of the ti 000 own wore staning by to evacuate if sary. e town i |a flood in 1953. Ry | Heavy cloudbursts soaked | Trinity River watershed a |central Texas, causing flooding in The Dallas area. A new flood warn: ing was issued for the Trinit it began a rapid rise. Bly a ( Ene) 5 ! 1 The rains s| jue Township 2nd Plokering vii [she Casiern. hai of Texas varied & ae 3 SE : |amounts, but except foi . -Times-Gazette Photo bine and Trinity the ror wad recently completed a term as campaign chairman for Picker- Single Missile Could Ruin Navy Task F WASHINGTON (AP)--Air Force mi i i Secretary Donald Quarles a S| mral Asieigh Bunks, Suet oi pi oi og Bel ns pt Be va operations, testified that a bomb Jaunched by a plane could | carrier force would be difficult to nock out 2 naval task force. {locate in the open sea. Even if lo- i force general, Na-|cated, they said, th i Jha Ruining. claims that high- | counter-missile he milo he u 8 a k by a single squadron {force would give it a high dey avy or medium jet bombers of prosection. gree dropping nuclear bombs could pro-| The testimony was given in Jan- same result. tuary and February--some time be- duce Publication today of testimony fore high-level changes headed armed with a fegaton warhead by United States defence leade before a congressional Ri Ww tions sub-committee revealed that|to be tral in such arguments. committee ig uestioning stirred the |Quarle§ is to become deputy sec- ns ree Navy into re- retary of defence, Twining chair- ed argument about the vulner- man of the joint chief Ability task forces. Quarles, in 3 .0f siafi. An ie Jas his Tm Bl oy les and Twining for new | they will be expected | y con- that fighter and Ad- planes would put up an effective OW yi P) -- Ameri. Another consideration in official Saudi Arabia shinking here is the conviction t and that any outright U.S. attack on Nasser tends to strengthen his in- {ternal position in Egypt. Jordan's | with the control of the Suez Canal now completely in his is in position 0 make for the West. WASHINGTON (A ean officials believe and Jordan will join Eg Syria s i of Arab un litical conflict over ot was advanced Nasser trouble Thus far the U ake. This P here today as one reason why the | United States has not directly | inted a finger of blame at| pgypt's President Nasser for his role in the Jordanian Crisis. U.S. policy and propaganda ap- parently are designed to take into account the desires and purposes of King Saud of Saudi Arabia and King Hussein of Jordan. American | officials say they do not believe | that real unity can in fact be re- |respol ator« 1 among the four, but if Saud |in he and Hussein want to play Arabjits independence. politics that way the US. evi-| The Voice of dently will not interfere. commentaries t Furthermore, officials do not | has developed this : want #0 get American policy in a|two others: (1) That it position where the two Arab rulers portant to the us. to would cut the ground from under | the Jvesign of all the it. That would happen if the kings |Eastern states 2a showed ward. friendship for | American grant of $10,000,000 Nasser and Syrian President | Hussein this week was in line wi Shukri al Kuwatly when Washing- standard American policy of hel ton was blaming the Arab presi- dents for much of the trouble. Concer Capit CALGARY (CP)--Prime Minis- continuing his ter St. Laurent says he is "often Credit Alberta amused" by Canadian political spoke to about eoncern over the flow of foreign school auditorium that cou! capital into Canada 2,400. This capital flow, mostly from At several the United States, posed no danger rupted by two hecklers. to Canadian sovereignty, he ar-|with gued Wednesday night. Instead it|gesting they c elped quicken prosperity, and|if they paid helped industrial pro- said bluntly gress, making thems Those who viewed these capil 11 |audience 100. imports with alarm should remem:|plauded. ber that foreign investment! Progressive Conservatives growth had not kept pace with both Calgary ridings. other aspects of Canadian expan- Standing in the last Parliam sion. Liberal "Our foreign indebtedness aetu- vatives ally imposes a relatively smaller 15; Independents 3 burden on the economy than in total 265 pre-war days GOES FURTHER WEST WHEAT POLICY FLEXIBLE Today Mr He referred to the foreign-col- British Columbia trol issue in a 40-minute speech whistle stops sc in which he made clear Canada and Revelstoke, He will be will not engage in any price war couver Friday to elaborat with the U.S. on wheat sales. But federal offer to federal wheat policies could be Columbia River for power. changed vid, if the world ron In bidding for Calgary's tinues seoduce bumper Mr. St. Laurent The 75-year-old Liberal leader,| "You kuow, communism" un of the Soviet Un 5 t "international der the control ion. Its aim in doing this seem to be to say to whe Arabs tha Russia was responsible for an ef {fort to reduce satellite status supporting Hus! nsible, alon while the U.S., b. g with King is nainta Midd selves n Over appeal to points he was in He di ould learn s attention. the hecklers elves tired and The crowd Later increase vacant St by train in Ww Ww erop remarked Also, of ke court. .S. has put the plame for the crisis in Jordan on Jordan to virtual sein, was in part) Saud, | Iping that country Preserve w. ive family c K ' tw Awd Then the two climbed by step- ° : America 18 le {adders over backyard fences and St k B k his line along wit hurried off for a short honey: Tl ers ac im- nd (2) that the US. marine training. Thwar ing free countries to help them- al Amuses PM. to Social admit turn Liberal, we 1.500 in a hig Id seat! of two promine them calmly, at first sug- but argued that if t omething going to win again, it woul were bers are "coralled" in one distait s 168; Progressive Conse 50; CCF 22; Social Cred Laurent heads heduled for Banff he sa e on alalition with the help develop B.C.'s kee even our opponents have him. Te eating along other rivers. n the Upper Sabine, hundred oil wells in the aay water area have been flooded and St Sowa, | Officials today said oug! e peak passed there. Peak crest ma | 16 DROWNINGS orce | Two drownings Wednesday were defence for a carrier task force. blamed on hi 6 , | n high wat But, Be said, "if you project this |total of at pron 16 ater: Sailing 2 o the era when bombers will rains began causing flooding 4 | approach such a force with an air- | Texas two weeks ago o-surface missile that might have,| More than 9,000 pers hy ; say, a 50- to 100-mile range, and been forced t f oS ae {sive that missile either target- waters since oe fasted (See eking Suatitics itself or control [two weeks ago. State ted x ee pl ane 1 do not Jinow headquarters estimate now that § | prevent that missile, if it Meee floaded. Swe Jad ws 3 Officials de i Atos king out a garrier task area of CE eats fore depend nding on how the force 'saster ares after ¥nappin Bt Thomas He clired that in 10 Bl cal evacuaiis of Dey v Second World War Japan lost be-| Thy o | | tween 12,000 and 15,000 planes in FR ched Fg By to 15.5 feet today and] attempts ] eh a ert fe : -------- RENIOR STUD : The Times-Gazette will publish a special fea- ture next Saturday and Monday -- a pictorial lay- out of all students in senior classes at the Oshawa | Collegiate and Vocational Institute, many of whom | will graduate this year. All pictures of the OCVI students are by Ireland Studio. Examination results for Grade 12 students will be published in The Times-Gazette during the sec- ond week in July. Examination results of Grade 18 students -- the examinations conducted . annually by the Ontario Department of Education and known as "departmentals" -- will be announced in The Times-Gazette in August. | 2% WeY=\ A racoon clings to the fop of 2 telephone pole on Bl east in Oshawa, Lion Fog leas of a group iS hildgen who -------- -- re . { Tardiness C (CP) -- Over- for holding | , Mr, Justice id in Supreme, * For LONDON, Ont. sleeping is no excuse up a jury hearing E. G. Thompson sa {Court Wednesday. |" Jurer Gordon D. Gibson was 20| minutes late for court Tuesday, |explaining he slept in. At the end| the civil action, the judge, fined Gibson $15 for contempt of! Heir Marries Family Cook SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- An heir to cattle millions slipped quietly into a Roman Catholic church Wednesday and married a; MA Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP)--The Canadian armed forces have promulgated 2| duress, new order dealing with conduct] of prisoners-of-war. | The order reflects a long study | partment of | warfare--bra was United Nations troops taken pris-| oner by the Communi the Korean War. The order does lally longstanding reg |a prisoner should sup |emy only a 5, | {number and date of birth. But it| pis own side, RA 6 Biss ' ~ RACOON CLINGS TO CITY POLE Sos em TT IRL 10T.00 hb ew POW | oner might face if Co i U.K. Plane Crashes 32 Persons Mother, Tot Are Killed BLACKBUSHE, En : 3 , England ( - 1 gre) -- Thirty-two persons, Pio g a mother and her two children, died in a Viking charter plane when it crashed in flames / in pine forest Wednesday night yh after taking off from Blackbushe Sirport 30 miles southwest of Lon- 2 Only four badly burned 3 were rescued from the burned-out Wreckage. One died later.The oth- 3 were in critical condition to- | The plane was carryin diers from the Be ng 25 ul. ice Corps, two war department ci- | vilians, the mother and her two | children and a crew of five, in-| cluding a stewardess. It was hound for Tripoli, b-. minutes after leavi |airposi the twin-engined Viking Ae [sid that it was in trouble. An engine had failed, and in the |airport control tower and S O § message was received asking per- |mission to land. Then contact was The plane circled the ai perimeter, then a red flash Sport bed the dark sky. Flames envel- oped the aircraft as it crashed into the woods, smashing down 60 trees and setting others afire Airport crash wagons and res cue equipment from a United States Navy repair squadron con- | verged with fire engines and am- bulances from surrounding towns Truck drivers on a neaby high way stopped their vehicles and ran 1 ely. They saw two men run- Bie plane, their clothes merican servicemen s 20 minutes to free on Ry bs to e of the other from the pole were un. A US. Navy pilot, who saw the optimism thou, munists, the Baghdad Pac Britain, Pakistan, Turkey, Mh and Iran) has remained intact and one can see that the Communists the have made no further the Far East, he said. leaders a are in the situation in Assures NATO | Bonn Meetin | BONN, Germany (CP) 3 -- The |t co-existence should United La. ested Xi Avantie ig hoy uy S concessions from out 1567 Seferive plans in hi he Soviet stimion. of Dulles and etary 'Dulles told the |Ll shasta zation he was| The speaker at the opening sos Konrad Adenauer, who pe conveying to them the decision of [sion was West Russia to match West Germany's President Eisenhower. Dulles said the presid i structed him to A ol prod changes | Pledges of 1954 are contemplated in U.S, plans as atomic, bacieriologioal or chem This means the United St ian wi Aid) ; ates will {and 3 not aoliow The recent otis Big of maments, | control of oll uss A is cutting her forces| Over-all mili --the jin Europe and will reduce her Problem of A edhe Ja arvuied rces by 50 per cent in the |fence at the lowest cost--is of at | Ye yous. rita od |e Jhai issues facing the. 15 I open No anti their Iireeday session with a brief be three-day op mers Bb Jie meeting at Bad Godesberg, fol- | * Political opposition at home has lowe y a closed session at the made it difficult for some o fthe st German foreign ministry, |NATO governments -- West Ger- ASSURES PARTNERS mays in particular--to agree to p on ales, steed to tar on fd Eres mil? 2 chan reac Tigh Sel vit |} i9ady in case of Communist at- y es. He said thi | RMS $0 in the case of the United State. ATOMIC & YiaL although his country like Britain |; But Lord Ismay warhed the mine isters Wednesday night that "our is placing increased reliance o i the" deterrent powers of Biome ra souls Bore sokcone pose those of the nn BA Britain's Foreign Secre wyn Lioyd said he believes the Without the use of nuclear weap: West was right to base i on, the wucleas 0 paves defence ay od 3 Dress we yd 52d the Communist bloc |a report 0 3 Miliary ; 3 and clear] this 1s Ro" ime fo |In Agu b il 'recon me a y. [his is no time for ihe 14 0 ened that e other to "talk ourselves Jorces Sccland has none) Bt. out- Ismay emphasized coun! would be forced to accept this vice, but he said it would be "a very dangerous event" if any im- portant NATO power refused the atomic equipment, In West Germany, approaching tember, a general election next opposition Socialists pealing to anti-war prota po} fears of Russia by campaigning against nuclear equipment for the new German army. Chancellor Ade enauer, who hopes to win another disclosed to NATO last D there is no n into 2 decline, e (Soviet) satellites ar a Suifee St anxiety and a liability e ing easily exploi territories," Lloyd said. Piolighle Despite the efforts of the Com- headway in Lloyd reasoned that the 'Soviet -they need e Yoday he ascended t there was no [disaster from his own plane, 1 conviction, be shot or imprison By DAVE MCINTOSH for life or a shorter term. will: "1. Evade ability answering any { whether oral or written, by cts the result © provided (name, rank, ete.); a new condition off Ta divulge i inwashing. The study Whicl €oW ayerimi us based on experiences of [PrP Not a age activities on I or go anything which could not alter basic weaken the cause of Canada and + C-| her allies." ulations that!" One senior official said it might ply the en-'ye inferred from the new order rank, | nat a prisoner, when returned to would not necessar- ily be court-martialed if he had | given information to the enemy as Jong as he had resisted brain- washing *'to the utmost of his sts during with his name, t new hardships a pr captured by th warns against 4 and dark-eyed German girl who once 00k. moon, In little more than a week, 21- in| year-old William Wallace Mein le | 111 must wind up a furlough from ted to) pefore he became 21 last Febru-| th|ary from wedding 24 - year . old! p- | Isolde Constantini, Mein joined fhe aries three f months agh back to verbal sparring today as vith t £ i 3 A 8 d with the blessings of his parentd. | to deadlock which has paralyzed I | this company - owned community { entered its { Verbal Sparring MURDOCHVILLE, Que. (CP)--| hearing the USWA application for Gaspe Copper Mines Limited and | certification. | their 800 striking workers settled | 5c UNIONISTS MEET s met day night | and heard umion leaders counter | the company remarks. | Emile Boudreau, a USWA rep-| resentative, told the workers the| insula sayin company could show good faith |tiate with any certified union. {and a willingness to_negotiate by { In the same statement it said | withdrawing its injunction. He| wages here are approximately the said weekly wages here are ap-| !same as those paid in northwest-! proximately the same as those in| . i _, ern Quebec. | northwestern Quehec but men here | privately : of course that| "The company has maintained | musi work a 48-hour week while | L| Liberals are Song to be|that the strike has been illezal those in Noranda work a 40-hour hlelected June 10. And I can thifk|since it began March 11 because week nt members of One| the United Steelworkers of Amer-| In Toronto, prominent party who have 're-ljea (CLC) has not been recog: compay general fer-| cently blurted this out publicly." nied as a legal bargaining agent.| more workers are t ealt| He did not name the members, Gaspe Copper obtained an in-| plant every day and are putting he Liberals are| junction last June restraining the| the plant in order with a view of id be Quebec labor relations board from! getting back in operation soon, \ MN-| LATE NEWS FLASHES Canadian Jet Crashes In France NANCY, France (Reuters) An RCAF jet airiraft today crashed about 300 miles south of Maryville base in Eastern France, killing the pilot. Ld 2nd day. | The company, a subsidiary of 1 Noranda Mines Limited, broad- cast a statement through the pen- ing it is willing to nego-| Richard V. Porritt, | manager, said | returning to the he "regrettable" if Alberta's the corner of the House of Commots ap- instead of up front with the Lib- erals helping shape Canada's deg- hold tiny NO HOPE FOR SC Most Canadians were nol goinghy it to swallow "incomprehensible the-} ories" of some purely regional { party. Neither the CCF' nor Socially Credit party, he intimated, could | ever hope to form a federal gov-| . for ernment | Bppoint New Ambassador To Ireland with Earlier iY press somlerence; WASHINGTON (AP)--The Senate foreign relations com- id he didn't believe It World mittee today approved by a vote of 9 to 6 the nomination of (Scott McLeod as ambassador to Ireland. be necessary to form a co- Three Men Injured In Train-Car Crash Conservatives 10 Credit from power. h { HAMILTON (CP) Thre~, men are in fair condition 1n hoopital today following a car-train accident at Hagersville, en. r-| Boe Van-| ever p Social However, John - Diefenbaker w. the Liberals, he wou if Conservative leader| anted fo join| vole, id be glad to| 1% | | | screen actress rae, in to them. The order notes that any ser- | ability." viceman Ww while a pri | sleep h such case would ded on its merits. ssible to any rul- had However eac o be deci jals found it impo e regulations hen a prisoner ¢ enough to permi who acts traitorously | soner-of-war may, OB have t Offic: #4 | write into th ling as to W | been maltreated {him to divulge in [enemy Pip Issu By ALAN DONNELLY | canadian Press Staff Writer TRURO, N.S. (CP) | Diefenbaker has indicated prepared to campaign long an hard on the issue of Jast year Commons pipeline battle. | The Progressive Conservativ party leader has spoken re on the topic during his wi J he i sis here Wednesday night if referred to Prime Minist § |Laurent's statement in Wi Monday that suc | "hot air." Mr. Diefenbaker | ment will be destroyed if the -- | tion result June 10 makes I eo pc El '| als feel they dence in their actions. ACTRESS SUES SEES SOUL ENDANGERED Photos such as this have led | There would still be a Parli Arlene Dahl to ment after the election Pictures Corpora- {soul of it and the eter: 000. She said that |of freedom will hav film, the studio |wrenched from it. used "obscene' pictures of her, | Against what had happened which "dropped her dress down | Parliament, the to her bodice". Publication of |the promise of ' the photos, she told a New York |age pension. judge, made her so upset that | *T her nose bled, she could mot |get. . . . and she became so em- "The prime mini barrassed she did not want to hot air. 1 say it's meet people. your sons and daug! said Parli ele sibel WEE sue Columbia tion for $1,000 in publicizing a the future Y } other countrie A jo gw 4 rs i Ll der | LIVERPOOL, and ers)--A young English five plannin, split into two teal nesday night at the gangpla says: "A prisoner-of-war, even under the liner Carinthia. to the utmost of his ae questions, |ciaved behind with except as daughter, b 3 . _|from sailing by a e any information ained by her grandf te a fellow | "coorge Robinson, 43, ing th in propaganda before behalf of the enemyl, -- 304 a co : his 16-year-old daughter Sandra | formation to the | oh | violated Parliament; and | poople say?" campaign, but added new empha- ht when he| ster St. acted uni nnipeg |the pipe h speeches are have a vote of confi- "but the line bill, nal spirit |debate-limiting e been 'that a few ol Liberals had p A a little extra old bill had been hey think Canadians will for- ster says it's! nters, If theseited fo buy specif' co existence with four car. term Bas. had mn of n : [da s Family § Engl: (Reut-) "We are defen family oflorder with eve if ie 1RV in Canada ot. . . . We just can't understand Wed- it. We don't know on what grounds nk of the, order was made." i Robin father and we children] Ho Chon he coul her eldest that grandfather might have i lieved Sandra was being who was re. Canada against her wishes. But | Sandra said: "I want to g0 to Can- |ada with my parents." FRIENDS t she stayed at - g a new life rful groups for Canada. was check-| e family's baggage an hour WOULD MISS sailing time when he Was| ghe added tha urt order restraininglyer grandparents' home durin Easter week and had mention from leaving the country. Sandra's % like the idea of going to grandfather, Walter Payne of Pet- ge didw 1 like tle te i goilig erborough, England, recently aD-ljeaying all her friends. plied for the order in the chancery, "up. | have got over all that," division of the High Court. |she said. "It's all different now." TAKEN BY SURPRISE Robinson, Sranon Tanager fo der--and the two detec-|a furniture irm in England, so tives, Who 'Stood by to see it car-|his home at Aylesbury, Bucking- ried out--took the family by sur hamshire, when the family de- prise. Finally, ent/cided to emigrate last January, aboard the Carinthia with two of | There is a farm job and a house his children, Sonia, 12, and Barry, for the family waiting for jo. His 38-year-old wife, Monica, near London, Ont. decided to stay behind with San-| Robinson emigrated to Canada ldra |as a 14-year-old boy and later did Mrs. Robinson said before leav-ifarm work there, He returned fo | ing for London Wednesday night: England with the Canadian Army in; eline Debate Election e Diefenbaker Says people (the Liberal government) Trans-Canada Pipe Lines shares Lin back they will Japly say in|@ i s ahead: 'You say we. t E the days, A Chat did the ing the risk, and with Parliament |destroyed in the process, 'they i , returned to| Were able to make millions." 4 Liberals were Te um rer: The Conservative leader spoke ition members to|in 2 high school auditorium at stand up to "the ridicule, the con. | Bible Hill, a suburb of this town |temptuous shrieks" which taced | Of some 14,000 persons. More than |{hem in the pipeline debate 800 persons filled the hall, stood i around a door at the rear, or lis- Speaker . Rene Beaudoin had |tened to a loudspeaker in the der instructions in putting! principal's offi . line debate back on ti iad Neipal's: ol1ce, Hane 1 last, after he had al-| TIGHT MONEY RAPPED debate the evening before] Mr. Diefenbaker's speech som : aver | attacked the governfhents tight. iticizing his conduct. The money policy. He said it iS ule had ruled that every-|sound and discriminatory against happened the evening small businesses and certain parts |before 'had mot happened." of Canada--especially the Mari- | MILLIONS MADE times and dhe West ous us. of in Mr. Diefenbaker said the pipe: iad of te heavy government passed by the use of spending, based on over-taxation. closure, meant, Mr, piefenbaker had prepared ointed oO tial text O is speech, issu f the annointed of|p partial t t of h h ed press before delivery, deal- h the United States disposal "With the Canadian people tak- s! If th > power, ther e|son for OPPOS | track {loved a a- jon some letters to a newsp C= CT r- Speaker thing which {the government were able to reap ito the \millions without any risk." That | jpg wit | fact would have been found if the program for farm surpluses, with studied by a Com-/Commonwealth trade and with the T tee, but Trade Min-| possibility of revising yoting pro- lister Howe had mot wanted any|cedure in the United Nations Gen- debate. eral Assembly. Three people and three Amer But he omitted those subjects in ies had been permil-| his hour-long speech, switching his ied numbers of | emphasis to the pipeline. ' to ut {mons commit of|ican compan »