Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 14 Jun 1957, p. 1

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TIMES-GRZETTE TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising All Other Calls . ...... RA 3-3492 RA 3-3474 THE Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE Weather Report Varisble cloudiness today and Satur day. Seattered showers and thunders VOL. 86--NO. 140 Fat Olties Deparment, Ottewe OSHAWA-WHITBY, FRIDAY JUNE 14, 1957 8 Come Por Copy TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES TRADE MINISTER BOWS OUT Trade Minister C. his political career this week, greets Hon. Lionel Chevrier, D. Howe, left, who announced the end of Privy Council president, who was elected in Montreal Laur- fer in Monday's general elec- Big Powers Near [Low Wants Disarmament LONDON (AP)--Harold Stassen statement in Helsinki wers [that Western proposals for dis- sarm-| armament control were a "screen sald today that the big are nearer to a first-step ament agreement than they have/to mask plans to continue been since the Second World War Stassen, United States delegate| to the five-power United Nations| secretary also ridiculed the Amer- says John Diefenbaker, Progres- vestigatin re- ican proposal for a trial aerial in- sive disarmament subcommittee, Thursday the [arms race." | tion. Mr. Howe was defeated { in Port Arthur, They are seen before departing for a cabinet meeting. Diefenbaker Get Chance LIBERAL CABINET HOLDS LAST MEETING--HELLYER | | | | TwoMen - |; Arrested InBrooklin | BROOKLIN (Staff) -- Two To- {ronto men, Edward Thomas, 26, {and James Dunn, 19, both of 1134 Queen street west, were yester- {day charged with attempted theft! in Brooklin. The two were arresti- § ed at Mitchell Bros. Building and |Supply. | Bruce Mitchell, one of the part- ners of the firm, told police he was having his lunch at his home, directly across the road from the office when he saw two men enter the office, The door of the office, he sai had not been locked but was pulled closed when he and his! brother left for lunch, Bruce Mit- chell went back to the office to § investigate and said he found? one man near the safe and the \other standing in the office. 15 | He sald that the two tried to get out of the office when he went| in and a struggle ensued, His brother, Donald, who lives just| |west of the office, came on the |scene and gave assistance. | | Mrs, Mitchell called Constable Eric Trowell, from his home, in the same block, and the two ted. " were, |arrested. | EDMONTON (CP)--Solon Low, Police believed a third man, Conservative party chief, The Soviet Communist party national Social Credit party leader was also involved. They are in-| the posiibity that he e \was parked outside office | ! [lands ai | St.Laurent Awaits Diefenbaker's Cal OTTAWA (CP) -- A gener- al six-per-cent increase in sal- aries for the Sivi service, A increase will cost the treasury about $110,000,000 a year. Finance Minister Harris, de. that |feated in Grey-Bruce, should try for election in Wellington South, However, it was learned that Mr, Harris will not contest the riding. Eric Winkler, Progressive Con- servative, defeated Mr, Harris about 8,100 votes, He polled 10, votes to Mr, Harris' 7,489, Results of the armed forces vote, not ine cluded in these figures, are ex- oF: pected to be announced this week. t was awaiting a telephone call from John Diefenbaker, Progres- sive Conservative leader, who at|ister: that time was in his parliament- ary office, e call, Mr. St. Laurent said, hadn't come through before the start of the cabinet meeting, | But Prime Minister St, t said nothi clear Following Thursday's five-hour he|cabinet meeting the. picture re- mained uncertain, The atmosphere as cabinet min- both the fallen and those retained by the voters, gathered seemed that of a government tidy. ing up matters before turning over: the office to new management, Laurs The ] a five-hour meeting Thursday when they cleaned up a lot of "routine business." Mr, Diefenbaker arrived at Up- at 7:30 am, to pre- is meeting with Mr, St. urent. Asked whether there would be a change of government and how soon, Mr, Diefenbaker told report- ers everyth awaited his talk with Mr, St. urent. MARGIN OF EIGHT re for en 8 the federal government situation &f- ter the afternoon Meetings of the Liberals' top ech- elon, He did, however, ate that the Liberal administration [ad decided to iia civil ser- ce salaries, there! |new area to Pets hing . Had the Liberals, after 33 ry ona ikl ae ry old on a | ? seemed scarcely possible, © lp i report | i " |should be given an opportunity to/and made an escape when hel In Monday's voting, the Con- small minority of die-hards turned from Washington for re-/spection zone in the Arctic, re- Pi y to pe servatives obtained 111 seats to Mr. St, Laurent"s cabinet ATons for the Liberals. F ters wanted to stay stubbornly ia ternoon after conferences with new American plan. Talking to re-| co-operate in every way possible." the two men in the office. . EE sumption of the arms talks this/ported to be a key point in the form a government and "I would saw the Mitchells struggling with | » 4 : i % z ' i i te Secrefary Dulles and other porters in Washington before his American officials. he Peace River constituency where ""We are nearer io an agreement considered Khrushchev's remarks he was re-elected in Monday's fed-| Youth Faces | departure, Stassen implied that Mr, Low, who arrived here from for the first step than we have were made for propaganda pur- eral general election, said in an been at any time in the last 31|poses. Disaymamtent policies, he interview Thilsday that Mr. Dief-| " said, are "changed in negotiation' u ven an oppor-| S Ch [not in such public D BegoaL tity in view of the election re- erious ar e [NEW WILLINGNESS | fous. Stassen told reporters at n a rt, "Some difficult problems re- main," he continued. 'Part of the blems have been over- # few major ones re- Russia reaction to new U.S. plan for a limited start on arms . Before he flew to Wash-|was returning to the London talks | last week Stassen had dis- oussed the American plan rte Jately gud informally with Valer- fan n, the Soviet disarmament delegate. Stassen and the Washington of- cials made their comments in face of Nikita Khrushchev's|the negotiations. Fisher Plans Things | One specific point of encourage: | | ment Washin, was an Tndiention of Soviet Eness too S. No "road blocks" will be thrown in the way of Mr. Diefenbaker's forma of a government, the Social Credit leader "The people ha ve indistitd wha Sa # shoul h cod orm overnment and given a chance been his colleagues to show what they can do to meet this country's lems. "If he is called on to form a the p tion ph Us. Xi of full agreement among the Allies. | |Stassen did say, however, that he {with new "procedural" instruc- | tions, It was learned meanwhile that Dulles is sending Julius Holmes, a veteran U.S. garded as continuing guidance in For Home Constituency PORT ARTHUR (CP)---Douglas M. Fisher, the 38-year-old school. teacher who defeated Trade Min- ster Howe for the CCF in the fed- eral election, already has ideas about what he wants for his eon- stituents in Port Arthur, Mr, Fisher, who was back $eaching his collegiate class the day after his upset victory over the veteran cabinet minister, said ene thing he wants is research by govern - sponsored agencies booster television stations, The main reason for such sta- seaway," he said. He tended to agrees with the Manitoba govern- ment, which has been critical of port facilities at the Lakehead. The victorious candidate, who said he believes votes went his way because the federal govern- ment increased old age pensions by only $6, said he wants to see a after the Liberal veteran had rep- resented Port Arthur for 22 years sald he had always been fascin- ated by politics, However, he was associated with the CCF party for | only mine months before he en-| {tered the campaign. | Mr. Fisher said he won by foll-| owing the advice of one of the| "greatest experts in the world of | Liberalism," Frank H, Underhill, | curator of Laurier House in Ot- tawa, He quoted Mr. Underhill as saying, 'concentrate as strongly as you ean on presenting the is-| sue of parliamentary freedom." | "I tried to keep that in mind," | he said. | Mr, Fisher said he knew a week before the election he would win. | "I was positive that I'd take the | city of Port Arthur, and I thought | | I'd take the bush camps," he said. | |"I knew Howe would take the |small towns." SLIPPED A DISC without difficulty, A week before the election he suffered a slipped disc while lifting one of his three children. He was carried to a cam- paign meeting at Geraldton on a his speech, Rover I would co-operate in every way possible." BOWMANVILLE -- Robert Jo- [Soph Ryan, 21, of Celina street, |Oshawa, Jas been eh with rape as result an attack on a 21 i married womar ik HER oH of or Regiment % MAJESTY RECEIVES BOOK A ig- | by one of the unit's w | a a pad vor FIven To 106 Queen To EE a tournament. Mayors Discuss meen v5 deme, cv Py wration Problems MURRAY BAY, Que. (CP)-- Canada's mayors today got down '|to the more serious business of their taxation and financial prob- lems, Mayor William Hawrelak of Ed- monton, president of the Canadian Federation of Mayors and Muni- clpalities, officially opened the five-day convention Thursday night and was the butt of a few jokes about his unsuccessful bid for election as Liberal member of Parliament last Monday. Paul Dozois, Quebec minister of municipal affairs, welcomed the delegates and discussed some of the problems caused by Canada's two-race culture, English Canadians and Ameri- cans exercise a strong influence on French-Canadian institutions, he said, and 'faced by this in- vasion , , , the small French- Canadian people, numbering 5, 000,000, is concerned about its fu- ture and has a reflex of defence." ""The authorities of the province of Quebec, when they steadfastly defend provincial autonomy , . . do not do so with object of creat- ing difficulties for the central government but solely with the aim of protecting our own institu. tions. "We all desire Canada to be prosperous and unified in its di- versity. This necessarily implies the mutual respect of the two eth- |nic groups which constitute it." The delegates broke up into i i today to di financial probl One i will be devoted to finding new sources of revenue and another to the problems of borrowing. | Police Hunt Clue In Girl's Death DETROIT (AP) -- A routine {check of countless tips and an Were relented, He campaigned hard, and not area-wide dragnet for known sex, . na. ie Dibble, 45, an Itinerant deviates appeared today to be the only hopes of police for a clue to the savage rape-slaying of six- year-old Mary de Caussin. Of four men picked up for ques- stretcher, With the help of nurses. tioning after the child's body was!they first beli he was able to stand and make |discovered Thursday in a' Wwoods| stains yo pelieved et later about 2% miles from her home in showed the stains were not blood, aster rose to e - - | . Detective-Inspector Thomas Colo hen yo. Nina 24 od 8 Gone In Nicosia Commonwealth Meeting To Open On Schedule By R. J. ANDERSON Canadian Press Staff Writer SASKATOON (CP)--John Dief- snbaker says the Commonwealth ime ministers conference in ndon must open as scheduled June 26 despite the present uncer- tainty as to who will represent Canada. The Progressive Conservative leader, taking note of press spec- ulation in Britain that the confer- ence perhaps should be postponed until a new government in Ottawa Bas Deen formed, said Thursday ght: "There can be no postponement | until a later date, A postponement would mean obvious inconvenience for other prime ministers of the Josmmawealth who form a ma- Mr, Diefenbaker, breaking a three-day silence on political mat- ters since his party won Monday's federal election without an over- all parliamentary majority, gave pis views on the London confer- tuce as he flew from his home | constituency of Prince Albert to {Saskatoon en route to Ottawa where today he will confer with| Prime Minister St, Laurent. Mr, Diefenbaker avoided dis- cussion of what may come out of his meeting with the prime min. ister. Throughout the week at his Prince Albert home he has had nothing to say on domestic poli- tics other than to announce Tues. day that the prime minister had invited him fo a meeting in the capital, The Conservative leader said there had been "too little time for preparation, both by the prime minister and myself," for the Commonwealth meeting This was due to domestic politi- cal considerations, he said. Both he and Mr, St. Laurent had been campaigning actively for weeks Nevertheless, the conference must roceed as scheduled. The date ad been chosen months ago and could not be changed now | The 35-minute flight from Prince 'Albert in a scheduled Canadian Pacific Airlines plane was slightly bumpy. APPEARS RELAXED Mr. Diefenbaker appeared re- laxed and refreshed after the |Jews took away War On Israel Groups By RAY MUNRO Special to The Times Gazette ISRAEL -- That most of the in- habitants of this country would be of Jewish faith is a foregone con- clusion; but that most of this country's Jews are Orthodox -- that is to say they eat, sleep and drink religion -- is a fallacy, Only a small number of Isreal's Jews, about ten per cent of 1,600, 000 can be called the "old re- ligious Jew', The remainder follow their re- ligion in an easy-going if not hap- age non-churchgoing Christian of any Canadian community. ch for the overwhelming number of non-religious Jews in to the great strains and pres- sures that have been brought to bear upon the present generation of Jews and their families in war-torn and religion-ravaged Asia and Europe. Governments unfriendly to their religious rights before the start of the Sec- ond World War, and smothered their faith so entirely that in many families it will be lost for generations to come. Yet without pressure from the "old Jews", and without com- |suburban Ecorse Township, two continued commercial photographer seen i {the neighborhood of the girl's home Wednesday. And they held, |Jacques Pares, 23, who was ar. uestion- plaint from the "new Jews', Jew- ish dietary laws are observed in all Jewish units of the Israeli De- fence Forces. the country is attributed directly (100. Puts Strain Since 1953, marriages and divorces among Jews fall within the jurisdiction of the Rabbinical Courts. DENIED ACCESS Contrary to provisions of the |Israel . Jordan Armistice Agree- |ment, Jews are denied access to {most of their venerated holy {places such as the Walling Wall and Rachel's Tomb, now in Jor- daniag hands. Also allied to the Jewish faith are the Karaites, a sect which recognizes only the Jewish writ- hazard fashion, much as the aver-|ten law and not the oral law of, the Talmud; and the Sarnaritans who recognize only the Torah and the Book of Joshua, The Karaites number 1500 and the Samaritans Majority of the Arab population of Israel is of Moslem faith and they number 138,000. Regular services take place in some 100 mosques and are conducted by 130 members of the Moslem clergy who are paid by the state. Christians number 45,000 and are mainly Arabs. There are 160 churches and chapels, and the clergy number 1000 including 150 {monks and 550 nuns belonging to 30 monastic orders. The Druze are counted as being 19,000 and follow the teachings of Jethro, Moses' father-in-law, while the Bahais, founded by Mirza Ali Mohammed, number but a handful. Canadian Dies In London Crash Ask Probe rested when officers found what| 1ONDON (Reuters)--The death| toll in Thursday's London bus dis-| Brutality blood- FAMILIAR WITH AREA chill, one of the 70 policemen from | 15 departments working on the] case, said it appeared from tire tracks that the vicious killer was familiar with the secluded spot | where Mary's body was found. The girl, daughter of a Ford Motor Co. technical writer, dis-| appeared Wednesday evening. pital with multiple injuries. Murray, was among killed outright when a double |decker bus mounted the erowded sidewalk of a London shopping district. LATE NEWS FLASHES strenuous election campaign as he headed east for his conference with the prime minister, Since Monday he has spent much time, conferring with local party lead- ers and has had lengthy telephone talks with party stalwarts across the country, He has maintained silence on what, if anything, came out of these conversations. If he is con- cerned with Canada's No. 1 politi cal question of the moment--whe- ther the Liberals will remain office and try to function with a minority government or turn over power to the Progressive Conser- vatives--he has given no sign. However, in an interview earlier he foresaw Canada undergoing an expansion "beyvond imagination" and playing an ever increasing part foreign affairs. PC Party Gains Yukon Vote OTTAWA (CP)--The Progressive Conservative party today claimed its 111th 'seat in the new Parliament when complete returns from Monday's vote showed Erik §. Nielsen defeating Liberal opponent James A, Simmons by 49 votes in the Yukon, Arab Shot In Gaza Strip GAZA (AP)--United Nation s Emergency Force headquar- | ters announced that an Arab crossing from the Israeli to the Egyptian side of the Gaza Strip demarcation line was shot dead today by a patrol of the Danish-Norwegian battalion. (41 On Trial In Red China TAIPEI, Formosa (Reuters fer 0. K. Yui announced today rested during anti-American ri | dicted and turned ever to mil ) -- Nationalist China's Prem- that 41 out of 111 persons ar- is here May 24 have been in- ary authorities. ight early today | NICOSIA, Cyprus (Reuters) -- | Her husband, 58-year-old George The Times of Cyprus says an in- the seven dependent and impartial inquiry {should be held into allegations of | brutality by British security forces on this Mediterranean island if !their "good name' is to be cleared |and the truth established. | The English-language newspaper {says in an editorial that a Cypriot government report issued Jus. 11 denying allegations of brutality and torture by British forces of {Greek Cypriots seemed designed | "to convince people in Britain and {elsewhere abroad--not the people) of Cyprus." The Times of Cyprus says the! report claimed that a large num- |ber of British police officers were accused of 'monstrous conduct." | This, it declares, was calculated to arouse British anger that such | charges should be levelled against British policemen. "No single complaint of this {kind has ever been made to our | knowledge against British uni. formed police officers or against any member of the CID (criminal investigation' department),'" the paper says, adding that all the complaints were directed against "certain army and intelligence in- terrogators and a very small num- 'ber of 'special branch' men." UN To Probe Algerian Massacre | i | UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CP)| The Asian-African group at the ! United Nations voted Thursday to back an international investigation of an Algerian massacre in which 303 Moslems died. The Moroccan chairman of the voting bloc, El-Mehdi Ben-Aboud, sald the 27-country group had de- cided "to take appropriate steps' as soon as possible to bring about an "impartial" inquiry into the massacre at Melouza, The French have blamed Algerian nationalists slaying of their fellow Moslems. Russian Leaders Cordial At Party, MOSCOW (Reuters)--In a burst of cordiality not seen since before the Hungarian revolution last Oc- tober, five Societ leaders Thurs- day night sipped whisky and chat- ted with Western diplomats at a Queen's birthday reception in the | British Embassy. | | Viee-Premiers Anastas Mikoyan, |Georgi Malenkov, Mikhail Per- vukhin and Vyacheslav Molotov, and former foreign minister Dmi- trl Shepllov, attended a party The won 26 and Social Credit 19, The Commons has 265 seats, Mr, St, Laurent tld a reporter that the nature of the voting was "unprecedented." By unprec- edented he meant that the Con- office. until defeated in Parliament on a want-of-confidence motion, | Yet the Conservatives had wi 110 of the 265 Commons seats |the election while the took only 103. or the ons and that two other J also were opposed Voting in one riding--Wel ey atone as def 'PC Head 2 In Capital OTTAWA (CP) -- John Diefen-| "I told you baker, Progressive Conservative leader, said today he will confer| laughed. with Prime Minister St. Laurent office. Mr. Diefenbaker, questioned by reporters as he arrived liamentary office, declined to make any definite statement on whether he expects to take over government from the Liberals. "I won't be very communica' on those questions at all," he safd. "I haven't the information." DROPS HINTS However, he made some eom- ments whieh could be taken as 4 . 4 at 3 p.m, in the latter's East Block, rives then," . baker replied, ra Se The Conservative leader, whote party won 111 Commons seats 108 for the Liberals, arrived air from his Prince Albert, - e, oi him at the front door of arliamen ulldings wi George Tustin, a friend from thelr boyhood Jars in a suburban ronto school taught Mr, enbaker's father, William, Mr, Tustin, party whip in the {last Parliament, lost the Conserv. |ative nomination in Prince Ed- ward-Lennox in Ontario. He told in his par- hom wer, He remarked that a number of press reports have suggested prospective Conservative cabinet slates and added: "Any one of you who has a list like that, it would be very helpful." He declined to elaborate on this statement, At another point, one reporter remarked that Mr, Diefenbaker had said during the campaign he expected to go to London to rep- resent Canada at the Common- ven by British Ambassador Sir wealth prime ministers' confer- ence opening June 26. a reporter he has mo immediate political plans. PARRIES QUESTIONS He parried most questions from reporters with a smile. Asked whether he would be " statement following his mee with the prime minister, he sald: "That depends on whether there is any statement to make. That represents everything I ean tell you," Would the afternoon meeting be long? he was asked, "There is an answer to that but I'm not going to give Td atrick Reilly, HONOR gegen - Msgr. Maurice bishop of Quebec, A # + lt, eeremony in Caen, France, commemorating the 400th suni- AAS FRENCH CANADA'S FOUNDER Re versary of the death of Jacques Cartier, founder of French Cs a. 3 v Vv

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