TIMES-GAZETTE TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising RA 3-3492 All Other Calls ....... RR 3-3474 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle Weather Report Sunny today and Saturday. A little warmer Saturday. " VOL. 86--NO. 122 Office Department, Ofttawe As Second Class Meil OSHAWA-WHITBY, FRIDAY, MAY 24, 1957 Piles Not Over 5 Cents Per Copy TWENTY PAGES "% # WILLIAM C. WECKER, left, who recently retired as presi- dent and general manager of General Motors of Canada, re- Dealers Give Tributes Bomb West To Former GM Head In a ceremony that was prob- bly unique in the annals of Ca- dian industry, automobile deal- rs from coast. to coast gathered br a testimonial subscription din- r in Toronto last night to honor . A, Wecker, recently retired president of General Motors of anada. Mr. and Mrs. Wecker are due sail next Monday from Mont. al on the Empress of Britain an extended holiday in Eng- d. More than 300 GM dealers and r close business associates ard George Hogan, represent- dealers of Ontario, pay tri te to Mr. Wecker for 'the nesty, understanding and fair- ss that have characterized Bill| ker's relationship with the Ca- dian GM Dealer organiza- n. mile Dubois of Hamilton, irman of the testimonial din- , presentrd Mr. Wecker with engraved watch as a token of esteem of the Ontario dealer | up, organizers of the gather- an McLean, of Vancouver, re- sented West coast dealers atioperation four months ago. He friends, the dinner. On_ behalf of all dealers in n presented PAID Sangster of Regina deal- 2 uh from the deal |e many old friends gathered to-| : Wecker," he said, "will be gether from such great distances. knowing a man such as 'Bill' mbered by all present not! "I am overwhelmed by your Wecker." Canada Mr. Mc-/and at his Mr. Wecker with ing that time. de a Replying to the evening's many ox of | ceives an engraved watch from George W. Hogan, Sr., at a testimonial dinner in Mr. Weck- ers' honor in Toronto Thursday | Heller. only as an example of the highest type of industrial leader but as a respected man and a favorite friend." Further tribute to the guest of honor was paid by Dick Logue of Sydney, on behalf of East coast dealers and friends of Mr. Wecker. Ted Cabeldu, GM dealer in Of- tawa, welcomed Mr. Wecker's successor, E. H. Walker, as 'head of the widespread Gener»! Mo- tor: *» ly," remar! at. as in ine case of his predecessor, Mr. Walker was regarded by the dealers as "our president". E. J. Umphrey, vice-president and director of sales for Gm and long-time friend of Mr. Wecker, echoed the sentiments of the other speakers for their guest. He spoke of Mr. Wecker's unfail- ing efforts to build a manufactur- ing industry capable of supplying the needs of the "greatest dealer or ization ever bled." Jeff Umphrey's attendance at the Wecker testimonial dinner |was his first public appearance OBE as President of General Mo. have hit the pillars of capitalism since he underwent a serious back in hospital | has been convalesc home wa dur-| and re-| # Wecker said that he | of seein; ANTI-U. I | | : 5. MOBS Khruschev Says Won't night. The watch was presented to Mr. Wecker by automobile dealers from coast to coast. Mr, Hogan is a Toronto GM LONDON (Reuters) Nikita Khrushchev said in a speech pub- |lished here today Russia does not |intend to blow up the capitalist world with bombs. ' But he said the Soviet Union kindness and the pleasure of your will outstrip the United States in company," he said. "For many the next few years in per capita | years I have respected you for production of some agricultural your loyalty, your® abilities and products and "this victory will § for that quality so much in evi- have a greater effect than the H- dence here tonight -- your gen- bomb." erous fellowship, The Russian Communist boss 9 Americans | Are Injured TAIPEI, Formosa (AP)--Chinese|were set up around the American mobs went on an anti-American! Embassy--military Jolice in a rampage today, ravaging the U.S, hand-to-hand chain the outer Embassy and Information Service ring, civilian police in a middle Office, besieging a military head-| cordon and troops in an inside quarters and chasing Americans line, Guards were rushed to other on the street, !American installations and te Nine Americans were injured. American homes. The U.S. flag was hauled down' Two of the Americans injured * from the embassy flagpole and ip the attack on the embassy were torn to shreds. admitted to hospital, They are the Thousands of Chinese, worked press attache, Alexander Boase, up to a frenzy by a U.S. coi 0 martial's acquittal of an Ameri- ally beaten, and security can army sergeant who killed aiCarl Ackerman, hit on the FORMOSA COMMITTEE IN CHARGE The committee in charge of ar- rangements was: Emile L. Du- bois, 'Hamilton, chairman; Harry J. Addison, Toronto; Murray Bil- lings, Brockville: E. H. Cabeldu, Ottawa; J. W. Clarke, Orillia; L A. Crews, St. Catharines; C. H Davidson, Campbellford; N. M. Davis, Toronto: Geo. W. Hogan, Sr., Toronto; Bruce V. MacDoug- all, Port Credit; A. E. McVittie, Sudbury; James A. Orr, Kitchen- | accused the Western powers of in-| § venting the theory that as Russia, the United States and Britain all had the hydrogen bomb, neither side would use it but would wage a cold war and frighten each other with the bomb on the principle of neither war nor peace. The Soviet news agency Tass to- day reported the speech delivered Wednesday in Leningrad to a con- Chinese peeping tom, stormed th embassy, and spent most of the afternoon tossing broken furniture The disorders spread and th mobs tried to invade the U.S. mil-| itary communications centre in # the Sugar Building. About Americans storm gate and were besieged in- slammed down the ference of agricultural workers. 4 4 ; side. "We stand for peace," he said. |ing inscription: "On t oo ven fo x ees Police Tightens er; Jack W. Pink, Toronto; T. E. "for the banning of atomic and Roberts, London; Jack Robertson, hydrogen weapons and we appeal Toronto; James St. Remy, King-|to the United States and Britain ston; A. E. Stedelbaurer, Wind-|to join us in this. sor. The illuminated plaque pre-| "We are not going to blow up sented to Mr. Wecker by Cana- the capitalist world with bombs. io 4 dian GM dealers bore the follow- (If we overtake the United States & i ipti he retire-|in the per capita production of i | ment of William A. (Bill) Wecker, meat, butter and milk we shall Canada, Limited, his with the most powerful torpedo General Motors yet seen." Dealers of Ontario, give this testi- monial, + tors of i wien S85. Watch At Gaspe o he Our lives have been enric MURDOCHVILLE, Que. (CP)-- |The 110-man provincial police de-| BENNY IS ON THE BEAM AGAIN to this strike-| Just a few hours short of | keeps a watchful eye over his | Giants, gifts of visiting ball | housands Hear raham Preach W YORK (AP)--Mixed mo-|ested. I have my own private sort | of religion, and I'm wondering are bringing thousands of Yorkers to hear the gospel| hed--many of whom haven't| inside a church in years. | man behind the pulpit Is | gelist Billy Graham, but he| elf says his only message is Bible, and every minister has| So what is it that brings Hose; usually aren't interested in| bject? | u get all kinds of answers the assorted peogle flocking dison Square Gardlen--18,000 em Thursday night--but the frequently heard reasons ese: The possibility of resolving inner problem; 2. Curiosity; ited by a friend; 4. Desire emonstrate support for the de. 'W REPLIES en in on aefew replies to estion: nn Cyre, a Manhattan strip dancer: "I'm in show busi- and I just wanted to find thy s0 many people come to about a story that's 2,000 old. Is it showmanship or he says?" Roskolenko, New York st: 'I'm spiritually inter- what this man's appeal is. Is it a personality thing, or are the peo- ple starved inwardly and trying to find out what's what?" Mrs. Edythe Hammel, a church. going Br o.o k1yn housewife: "I| came because I think it's going to do me some good. I think this man is going to bring religion back to the country, and that's what It needs." | WANTS TO SEE Lila Cherney, a good - looking young woman from suburban] Queens: "I want to see what he, says or does to make people say 'I receive Jesus.' I'm not a very religious person myself." W. F. Fisher of Peterborough, Ont.: "Graham is admired very muchgin Canada, and 1 was in Bugland last year, and found he had made a lasting impression there, too. I was just on my way back to Canada from the south, and stopped over to hear him."| So it goes. As for the varying motives, Graham tells the crowds: "It makes no difference why you came. If it was curiosity, that's all right. Many people came to Christ originally out of eurios- ity." isarmament Plan as Wide Scope SHINGTON (CP) --- The States now is aiming for a| tep disarmament treaty would become world-wide in| and include limited reduc- in manpower, military ex- res and all weapons capa: firing or delivering atomic new American plan has hammered out in talks here eek between administration s and Harold E. Stassen, ent Eisenhower's disarma- ide, and will be offered to ssians when the five-power sarmament negotiations re- London next Monday. Il be presented at the Lon- fons with the blessings of cretary John Foster Dulles pe president, who fold a onference here earlier this at the United States must -minded and meet the Rus. alf-way on th question of ament. | ED INSPECTION f American plan calls for lim- bn-skies aerial photographic on of territory and small ps 10 or 15 per cent--re- of such major armaments raft, warships, submarines, and tanks all weapons {They are the United States, Rus- pay strikers' shares on group life of env ne hy drogen or other atomic explosives. It can be said authoritatively that the Americans feel that a lim- ited first-step disarmament plan is worthwhile because once the first step is taken it is easier "to take the second step and perhaps eventually agree on the ultimate goal of atomic disarmament. The proposal also envisages the setting up of an international de- pot, probably under UN auspices, into which nations party to the treaty would be required to de- posit the armaments they shed as a result of the agreement In its early stages, the five na- tions involved in the current talks the U.S., the Soviet Union, Brit- ain, France and Canada--probably would sign the treaty but it would be open to signature by other na tions. In fact, the U.S. govern ment feels that, to be successful it should be signed by all nations of military significance. A KEY POINT The United States, as a key point, 'is trying to negotiate a treaty which would ban atomic weapons for all except the three powers that already have them sin and Britain | ts watch One week after he fell into the | first steps' while his sister, | players. Benny ecarri lors town hal lghte med is ni well, Benny Hooper, Jr., strides | Wendy, adds a gleeful smile to pay z es big elt ing members of the United Steel- away from his hospital bed in | the event. Both youngsters ,-° workers of America (CLC) andl Mastic, N.Y. His mother, Betty, | wear caps of the New York | sling. non-union workers at Gaspe Cop- per Mines Ltd. id ' ener meee cone Norman Was Pushed Cat Lover tained for using what police, called "abusive and intimidating lan- = . guage" against a group of non- |strikers, P at Walsh Claims There was no violence -- only shouted 4, os Jo Sharges TORONTO (CP) phi Walsh. that the Canadian team investi- 3} LL] | were laid by : secretary-treasurer e Pan- gatin, Norman death in Cair 11 ithe strikers after a warning. Canadian Anti-Communist League, Jat g the Nowy that he ib © are or 1 1011S Tension rose Tuesday when a says he has learned that E. Her-| © utc acs 'company letter was distributed bert Norman, Canadian ambassa.| : warning the strikers that the dis- dor to Egypt, did not commit pute would not be settled with a suicide. signed contract. He told # federal election cam- PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- Miss le de ha the porment whee Ci. + Ex Tani 3 who sometimes has kept as many it would be an election boomer- as 75 felines in her West Phila- | paign meeting Thursday night the = a delphia apartment, is suing two) Canadian diplomat who died in a We know Norman was either animal care agencies and nine in- [fall from a seventh-storey window Pushed from the window or hyp- dividuals for $3,000,000. lin Cairo "was either pushed from notized into jumping. Both meth-| Miss Chazin contended Thursday the window or was hypnotized 0ds are used by the Russian sec- that 52 of her pets were destroyed | into jumping." {ret police. . and she was forcibly ejected from | The Canadian Embassy, in re.. Mr. Walsh said the Liberal gov- the headquarters of the Pennsyl- {porting Mr. Norman's death, said rament, yIgnorant, nmocent or vanis Society for la: Miss Chaz premier - designate, is photo- | . he apparently committed suicide, otherwise," has suppoi "com- of Cruelty to Animals. Miss Chazin I el Lg vy 2. Jog file Snember Rs s fall from the window followed |munism in high government jobs. |said that while she was away last nale Palace in Rome after he ured in testimony before the Sen-|2 Period of depression said to have| He declared External Affairs April 3. a number of her pet cats| {oimally accepted the task of (ate rackets investigating commit. Tested Li Hy renewal ol Minier P Sarason was Suity of a ne os] forming. a new Italian govern- ic/charges by a U.S. congressional supporting ""r. Norman * oug! 2 Hy (tee, was found shot to death in his) J} oom mittee that he had at one he knew he was a Commie sym- | posted. ! Lr lo ies new premier Shot To Death Adine Zoli, above, Italy's new | SEATTLE (AP) -- Terry Mc- the Pennsylvania SPCA headquar- ters she was told 52 of her cats Power, housing, taxes, along | pearance there tonight, told re- scientific committee to give an PARIS (AP) -- Premier Guy ment. President Giovanni i Gronchj gave Zoli the job after automobile Thursdaysin a wooded time been 8 Communist. The|pathizer or had been one." the fall of Premier Antonio Seg- | Coroner John P. Brill said Mc-| (hares were branded as false by yg gAPPED REDS ni nt. Nulty had committed suicide, Mr. Walsh Lg a meeting | [. Sheriffs' deputies had been seek- |; support of John Boland, Inde. in anti - Communist statements manded to see the bodies she was| {ing McNulty to serve him with a pendent Progressive Conservative |since 1953 when he resigned from ejected by two employees. oman aces subpoena issued by a grand jury.|candidate in Toronto Parkdale. (a number of Communist-front or-| "gp =. t 'to: the olfice of It convened Monday to look into |ganizations and feclared he ns, aler, "SPCA She pitice of} " activities of Teamsters Union lead- HEARS REPORT {planned to expose Communist ac-| = AA s or oats R Sax nd) rtion harg ers in this area. He said he had "received word tivities. i Fil permission to An Oshawa woman has been Sou He Sumas, remanded on $3,000 bail, on a axes arb C F |charge of procuring an abortion, | [] u y g city police said today. 0 et 0 Ive Mrs. Edna Fitzgerald, 209 King F . > nd wae meer Feature klection Potpourr i Mmtraep "5. apes, peore 1 1 |Temporarily May 27, the Crown stated. Shel | will face a procuring charge, and! a possible alternative charge. th I ixt fr tinstit [th Ct ese were in ursday's mixture | ii e government institutes price the tests and urge meanwhile th y i in the campaign for the June 10 controls which should apply to further tests UR hat Coty hab asked iw 19. Toman in federal election. steel and other basic industrial re- The Russian attitude "of calling ie rer ye be found | e And they stood in a Vancouver Guirements." for elimination while increasing = ine fore street Thursday night to hear John! The. Liberals could not blame the number of their tests is purely gh oom Mollet told re | Diefenbaker promise "a new birth| inflation on rising food prices for hypocritical." Or ugh. pe. ond! of unity and freedom in Canada" |With few exceptions, such as eggs! While relaxing at a barbecue POr'ers ge { 0 en under a Progressive Conservative and pork, prices of farm products south of Vancouver, Mr. Diefen- decision to resign." | government. i Canada had Seclined Father bakes met Mrs, Della Wilson of gn. an risen. "One of the rea akaw, in his home province of , : » cresh from a8 afiernoon barhe- causes" of inflation could be found Saskatchewan. She recalled how, {in Parliament Monday and quit Vi d gave him his first dancing lesson, In expenditures by corporations when a young man, he used to ™yiromned sources said Coty Mr. Diefenbaker spoke also of ot of Jeshrves. drop atound their home for meals. 0114" ask former Premier Rene ARVIDA. Que. (CP)--President POWer development to the largest iin Fredii Leader Solon Low An, 5 e gdded, 1 gave him his pjoven "this afternoon to take Gerard Picard of the Canadian|Ct0Wd of the campaign to date-- iq Albe Fagin . of Ta ams on Fhe his girl Soundings in the National Assem- and Catholic Federation of Labor 000 in the Georgia Auditorium poi Bre, fooeria constituency of frre WOLKE Teac i. _ bly to see whether he could form was expected to open talks foday 2nd that many more listening to "yp ™ ar. i also. discussed is el he voices 2 So rose from the , "cabinet. with union officials representing loudspeakers in a blocked street artes ohiati to her 1 > "0 Ha CCP 1 der Mac Id or = a law _rentesenting otside. p 's 0 jection to fur ther tes s n ario .eader MacDonald Some bi} sir workers Prime Minister * §- Laun of hydrogen bombs. There was di- fold a Toronto meeting that if the Alumina mnany of Canada neonug . ikiger 8 «Aaurent. vision of opinion among scientists Liberals are right about builder: oun ung I her nlime. had to pass up Saint ac 10 the effects of such blasts. having built more houses than It was not known whether he John. N.B., when fog prevented Byt 'so long as a large number of they can sell, it is because the . iad some plan for settlement of his plane from landing there. eminent atomic scientists are con- houses cost more than most Cana- I ] C 11 the dispute, . But he also discussed power vinced of the dangers, the nations dians can afford. n al e The union--the National Metal Thursday night at Fredericton have no right to risk world health "We may well have built foo 3 Trades Federation (CCCL)--wants| with a suggestion that New Bruns- and the welfare of future genera- many homer of $15,000 and up, far' MATTAWA (CP)--An unident- a master contract to cover Al-|wick and Nova Scotia give seri-|tions in conducting tests." beyond the financial means of two- ified youth was found dead in the| can's nine Quebec operations and ous consideration to the Liberal] He was not criticizing Britain | thirds of our people. But this sim- police cells here Thursday hang.| an immediate 30-cents-an-hour! federal government's offer to help|for its recent tests. "Obviously if ply highlights th. basic failure of ing by his belt from the cell| wage increase build coal-burning steam power the United States and Russia en- the present housing policy. By re- door. Police said the youth had There . was no comment from plants and integrate electricity gage in them, other nations will fusing to lay greater emphasis on been arrested two hours before on union offic als on Alean's an- transmission systems in the two feel obligated to arm themselves an extensive low-rental housing an impaired driving charge. He nouncement Thursday that it will provinces with the same instruments." program we have failed to meet was about 19 CCF Leader M. J. Coldwell ut Canade should call for an|the needs of the people who need] Mattawa is 40 miles east of Moving inte FAm ning for =n Invmediste menting of the (IN the hamee monet North Bav | merIran-a Information Service Office |ransacked it in the same pattern |as at the embassy. Furniture, pa- pers, typewriters and equipment! were wrecked and tossed out of 'the windows. Another mob assaulted the U.B. About downtown Taipei. Informed sources said Chinese authorities were claim a state of ene curfew as a of the worst anti- American disorders since General 0 Chiang Kai-shek esca) here with the remnants of his 'tionalist forces in 1949, rant on Taipei's ma €'but not severely injured. Most Americans encoun in street. The riots started after Ma Sgt. Robert R. Reynolds -- man whose acquittal stirred trouble--had left with his wife and seven-year-old daughter by char- d tered plane for Manila, A US. court martial the sergeant Thursday of of voluntary manslaughter of a . t 1 through a Chin bathroom y w hile his wife 1000 demon strators §7 armed olice sven escorted "] & !formed before a police station in'and his family to the airport. with a lds' ac fo Chinese entered the er i "woman's banner said: "Killer Reynolds innocent? U.S. a- court-martial decision unfair, uf, just, j U.S. authorities advised alll A crowd of Chinese gathered at | American personnel to stay in- the embassy gate to watch her doors. The British consul issued march. Then a stone was thrown. similar advice to Britons. GUARD U.S, BUILDINGS The crowd began hurling missiles until practically every window in ithe embassy building. was WOODSTOCK CP) -- The elec- arm, injured in the fall, in a |_TOMight three lines of defence'smashed. ~ Liberal, PC suesSPCA Heads To Meet saying the newspaper wishes to tion campaign tours of Prime Min-| give people in Oxford constituency ister St. Laurent and John Dief- enbaker bring them to Woodstoc! on the same day, Thursday, June 6. The Woodstock Sentinel-Review announced today it has invited the two party leaders to speak from the same platform at a political rally the newspaper is ready to sponsor. Alf Burman, the paper's man- aging editor, has sent telegrams to Liberal and Progressive Con- the 'best in political informa- k tion." The paper said it would do all possible to set the time of the rally to fit in with schedules of both leaders. Under present arrangements Mr, Diefenbaker is scheduled to address an outdoor meeting in Vie. toria Park and to leave at 5 p.m. for Brantford. Mr. St. Laurent's train is scheduled to arrive at § p.m. and his speech is slated fog |servative headquarters at Ottawalthe park shortly afterwards. She said that when she went to| J} _ Mr. Walsh has been outspoken had been destroyed. When she de- || with a barbecue and some fog-- | porters "inflation will continue un-' authoritative opinion on effects of Mollet said today President Rene | serve temporarily "I maintain my| § Mollet lost a vote of confidence § SHE GETS A FAMOUS AUTOGRAPH Pretty Doris. Martin of the | Vernon, B.C., Girls' Pipe Band gels a famous autograph right on the drum head. Conmserva- | tive T.eader John Diefenbaker obliges with his signature for the attractive member of the famed girls' band which met him upon his* arrival in Ver js J