Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 8 Jul 1957, p. 1

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ET ER re TIMES-GAZETTE TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising RE 3-3492 All Other Calls ...... RA 3-3474 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle Weather Report Mainly cloudy with occasional show- ers, clearing by Tuesday morning. Hot and humid today. Authorized As Post Office VOL. 86--NO. 158 Second Class Mell Department, Ottave OSHAWA-WHITBY, MONDAY, JULY 8, 1957 Price N 3 Cents EIGHTEEN PAGES ot Over Per Copy N\A. * Ty. a NEW MISS CANADA Joan May Fitzpatrick (left), | beauty, poise and talent from a 20-year-old brunette from | aeross Canada. Miss Fitzpatrick Pageant in Atlantic City, N.J. Windsor, Ontario, was crowned whose measurements were list- At right is Dorothee Moreau, Mis. contest in Ham- : on, Catads ai ig rosin ed at 36-25-36 will represent | 1956 Miss Canada. {| European Heat Wave Kills Canada at the Miss America | 130 Persons, 15 Aged Die LONDON (AP)--A night of hor-/to have died apart from the 15] About 20 persons died in Aus- yor in a Venice old age home, in elderly persons in Venice. The vic-|tria Sunday while bathing. Count- which 15 patients died, sent Eu- tims in the old peoplé's home less others collapsed in the fierce rope's known heat wave deaths to were said to be under treatment heat. In downtown Vienna a young 130 today. for heart ailments or other infirm: woman, apparently heat-stricken, In most European countries the ities. All but two were women and death lists were still incomplete. the deaths were attributed to the But dozens more were believed to heat. have perished in drowning acci-| At Trento, Italy, Luciano Dalle Sauls oF Other mishaps attributed mule, 29, killed four persons Sun- heat-stroke deaths and severai| . day in a wild fusillade of shots, ni i | Temperatures dropped a bit in tied five others and at drownings in the last few Jays. | tn Europe today but Italy himself to death. Police blamed hot spell in Berlin but smashed | ued fo sizzle in the hottest/the heat for Dall lie's sudd RE A and blew the roofs off| ond, erage, Ihouses hit . |. The hot spell also continued in punctuated 'Austria and Hungary. "Austrian heat wave in Britain, where at her experts predicted it would|least five persons have died in the go on there until hot weather. taken to an ambulance station. Budapest was short of water. West Germany reported seven there ce " around kt he DIE J "At least 23 Italians were ow mid-week. FOR PLANE; 4 AB PRESS NORTH SEARCH 0ARD NEW CHARGES Malenkov Trie Official To Sign Forgery By ROY ESSOYAN | kov MOSCOW (AP) -- Former pre-/ force me to sign a forgery, d To persistently endeavored to! "I was then a secretary of the a! (Leningrad) Yaroslavsky party or- mier Georgia Malenkov was ac- statement I knew was a forgery." | ganization. During a party confer- cused today of trying to force aj When Malenkov's efforts failed ence I received an urgent order Communist party official to sign' Turko said, 'I was threatened and summoning me to the eentral com- a forgery. This charge came atop other ac- cusations flung at Malenkov in the|tee said about him and his char- arty! acter was correct from beginning | ruthless, a man without honor or for-/to end," Turko said. "'Malenkov | conscience, I was persistently co- (was rude and ruthless, It was made by the man in- without honor and conscience." last two days by Communist boss Nikita Khrushchev an mer president Nikolai Shvernik. volved, a party official in Lenin-| grad, scene of the notorious "Len-| foreign. minister V. M. ingrad case' of which Khrushchev|and Lazar | has called Malenkov the chief or- ganizer. case in which several top Com- munists were illegally executed.|riate because Lavrentry P. Beria and Victor same people have been talking Leningrad, Shvernik accused the Abakumov, one of Beria's main ahout a member of the Soviet Union's rul- J |ing party Praesidium, were *"in- The alleged coercion attempt|triguers who used the old sectar- took place in Leningrad in 1949 jan methods of dissent in an ef- and apparently was part of the|fort to split the party." ccused of every mortal sin.' mittee. I was received--if one can "Everything the central commit- use such a word--by Malenkov. "The man I saw was rude and a man erced to sign a forgery, a state- ment I knew was a forgery. I was former.| threatened and accused of every Molotov mortal sin." former| { yNggED TO PURGES Shvernik, in a speech made pub- lic Sunday, accused Malenkov, Molotov and Kaganovich of being linked to Stalin's bloody purges of "This was particularly inapprop-| the '30s. : for years these| Speaking before a mass rally in Turko said Malenkov, Kaganovich, the unity of the party,' ousted trio of "tolerating violations | assistants in the Soviet secret po-| Turko said. 'In February, 1949, of revolutionary law during the !lice, were shot for their part in|I myself got to know through my period of mass repressions." framing the case. THREATENED, ACCUSED | 0! 1. N. Turko charged that Malen-. among members of the party. wn experience the style and| This obviously referred to the methods of Malenkov"s work blood purges of 1937-38, in which { thousands wereliquidatedon Israeli Warships | 5-Day Deadline {lands. The semi - official E agency said Saud issued his warn- ing Friday in a speech to Moslem the holy city of Mecca. Saud was quoted as saying he will call on Arab, Islamic and help repel what he called the Ti raeli threat if peaceful methods fail. | Pro-Negro Test 4Drowned. 3 | Case Opens | A and HUNTSVILLE, Ont. (CP) boatload of screaming women children and a clergyman was (AP)--The twice-defeated candidate for gov-|swept over a 10-foot dam into |rapids Sunday near this central {Ontario town Four were drowned. Three survived, one of them a {little girl plucked from the racing (water by a man who sped down the river bank im a truck to the spot where he knew the victims likely would be washed ashore The dead: Mrs. Margaret Gill- rie, 68, of Hamilton; her three- year-old gramddaughter, Anne Gill- KNOXVILLE, Tenn Mistery malting trial of the is ernor. ton 15" and segregationist John| § Kasper opened today in an atmos. | WANTS REVERSAL phere electric with the whole vast | If you don't want an oak tree controversy over clvil rights. fio row Dinek the Scom ox of {the und," said Judge orge re paud the clty 8 throug. Washington Williams of Baltimore, implications in the case: A former federal district judge P pe : and ardent "'states' righter," Will- 1. It is the first great test of jams argues that the Supreme the federal government's power to Court decision is "not absolute," and can be reversed enforce the Supreme Court's order C Is ot arge or t fhe public schools to i J ith The charge grew out of disturb- rie; and her cousin's two sons, i 5 Seg ances at Clinton, Tenn., last au-!pefer and John Bailey, 14 and 12. regation. tumn and again in November and| Rescued: The parents of the two 2. It may throw some light on December, when Negro students pous Rev. and Mrs. Thomas the question of whether white jur- were brought into the previously arelville Bailey of Hamilton ors will convict persons involved all-white high school the granddaughter's sister, im civil rights cases--an issue now Kasper, born in New Jersey, garet saab being debate in Congress. was accused of fomenting the dis- "1 happened at a control dam turbances in August, when the Ne-|ang adjoining locks on the turbu- Constitutional questions and the boundaries of federal and state gro students were first admitted jant Muskoka River a mile south to the high school authority also will be debated in thi the trial in U.S. District Court victed of criminal contempt for|of Toronto "We are going to fight this out violating a federal judge's injunc- i . to the bitter end," said Ross Bar- tion against interfering with the BOOM WASHED AWAY nett, of Jackson, Miss., a defence integration of the school, sen-| A boom designed to keep boats attorney. Barnett is former pres- tenced to a year in prison and a'away from the dam had been ident of the Mississippi bar and a fine of $1,000 washed away by flood waters a fe = ne -- week earlier, police said. Martin Petrencik, 57 - year - old sport fisherman, witnessed the accident. He was helping lock- keeper George Markell lower logs into place from a platform 10 feet above the dam, and saw the boat miss the entrance to the locks. "It came toward us and I started Mar- eeze, They had a lot of time to go back Maybe fhe motor stopped -- couldn't hear because of the noise of the water. "The boat hit the concrete and then went sideways through the opening. I didn't see them go over. All I heard were the HENLEY . ON - THAMES, Eng. (CPF--Stuart MacKenzie, a 20- year-old Australian giant, beat Russia's best by a scant four feet Saturday in winning the Diamond Sculls rowing championship at the Henley Regatta, It was sweet revenge for the six-foot, four-inch MacKenzie, who was defeated by the same Russian athlete, Vyacheslav Ivanov, in the Melbourne Olympics. Both scullers were near collapse in the brutal struggle against the ' current when MacKenzie crossed the finish line in the time of 8:25. United - States college teams starred in the featured eight-oar events. Cornell's unbeaten crew defeated Yale by half a length in the Grand Challenge Trophy com petition ! Cornell's time of 8:53 was 23 seconds slower than the course record the same oarsmen set Fri- day in defeating a Russian crew KHRUSHCHEV ACCUSED MALENKOV Bare-headed Nikita Krush- | 1949 chev, Soviet Communist party charge that Malenko poss, delivers speech at electric | ed plot the products factory in Leningrad | high ranking y which he accused former | jals -- could open the way Premier Georgi Malen- | criminal prosecution of the of being an instigator of the | mer premier. This help everal offie- for for. Leningrad purge ' Boat Goes Over Dam Australian Win 'Diamond Sculls Saved screams. I looked over and saw no one--no boat, no people. "Then the boat came up and a little boy was hanging onto it. welled for him to hang on but the {boat went under again. It came up again 100 yards downstream, But THE CONSEQUENCES no boy." RACES TO TRUCK Petrencik raced to his truck and drove along the highway beside the river. "lI saw the man and woman come up further down where the water was shallow. The little girl came up three quarters of a mile downstream and I ran dewn. and pulled her up out. "We found the grandmother a and/Mile and a half downstream--she| was dead--but we didn't find the| three others." The parents were pulled from! newspapers today praise Cana-|show almost automatically," The | Threaten Arabs | | CAIRO (AP)--The Middle East News Agency said Saturday King Saud of Saudi Arabia has said Is- lemployees |and bargaining rights. The prov- dignitaries on their pilgrimage to|ince's civil servants say that un- ; met, iment employees--including Pre- less |mier Bennet. and his cabinet-- {they'll strike. the other *'peace-loving countries' to|threat--believed the first seniors g --was issued Sunday night by ple cussions. From the meeting at as sociation headquarters here |C. Bennett specifying association terms for settlement of pute. a. ci 'not considered essential, the as- |sociation says. all B.C, liquor stores as well as s'atements have maintained that | taverns, sn outside commission adjudicat<|chev supporters argued that the| Washington need do nothing ex- U.S. proposals for partial nuclear which are supplied by the govern-ing the dispute would infringe on|problem could only be decided by|cept to accept or reject them, he disarmament and reduction of ment. No marriage, death or birth the legislature's rights. | cocktail Set For Strike disrobed on the street and was raeli warships in the Gulf off] VANCOUVER (CP)--The Brit. certificates would be issued, the {Agaba threaten the Moslem holy jsh Columbia | {been given less than five days in|lecting wickets on bridges would Egyptian which to meet the demands of its be empty, road construction would increases be hampered or stopped, provin- cial pension cheques would not go| government has/courts would be closed, toll-col for salary lout and pay offices for govern their demands are would issue no cheques. If the jthe civil servants voluntarily and The precedent - setting strike in Can- ove! ti the against a y-making executive of s ._ |munications, It. followed eight hours of dis-| Bargaining rights were went scribed as the primary point a telegram to Premier W. [the association, its dis- m. PDT Friday, some 11,000/civil servants almost 90 per cen vil servants will walk off all jobs|in favor of strike action. The government so far has of |fered an average six-per-cent In lcrease when the legislature meets What would mean the elosing of active to July 1. lounges and ET without pay fo serve in hospitals and jails, forest {BC oventment Employees As- fire services and essential com-|% de- 950th anniversar; A. issue between the government and Backing up the association in|gphsent, |its demand for a 13-per-cent pay| If those terms are mot met to/increase and a standard 40-Hour| AS the association's satisfaction by 7, work week is a vote by the 11,000 {probably early next year, retro: Government Bovernment. 23 Aircraft Join Intensive Hunt A mighty RCAF air armada 19 planes and 125 air and ground personnel -- pressed its search today in the desolate James Bay area for a missing Lockheed air- craft overdue since last Thurs- |day night with fou; aboard. 'i 3 tiv.! Two of the missing are John Sharges of anti-government activ- O'Neill, who lives in the Sher- Shvernik, a member of the court| Wood Dark Coon housing sells that condemned Police Chief L. P.| 04" you Haff ih Rots away Beria to death in 1953, charged) op OOH 8 Yesiden o that Malenkov and Molotov--both| gary lanes from Kenting . Avi former premiers--and former dep-|; O'7 B Fo g Avia- uty premier Kagenovich plotted to| don ft ypouners il le Tussing seize power and recruited fellow|3 erat, TEVE JOM : 2 Search ar. S a ,000 square-mile area ec where the plane is believed to LOST CONTACT have landed while enroute to Val The three had "lost all contact d'Or. last Wendesday. It was not with the masses," Shvernik de- Officially reportcd missing until |clared. "The ultimate aim of this| Thursday night. group was to change the Krem-| A full maintenance crew from lin's policies." |the RCAF base at Trenton has Such charges could pave the been flown to Va! d'Or Sunday way for criminal proceedings Morning. against Malenkov, Molotov and | RELIEF CREWS a ane 'nts od t,| Relief crews are on hand for JOHN O'NEILL tite. death: sentence {each plane. There is also a para-| A st|rescue team in the air 24 hours with the south plant of General Shvernik repeate Communisf |daily, and a special medical as-|Motors of Canada here. ERBEes that Maks whe 2 oct Sy" cram oi the grouse. | This is the fourth comseout S s i Force Most of the planes are using|year for John in the far no purge in which several top Com- contingent is being directed by|Aviation and the parent compe munists were executed. i | Air Vice-Marshal J. G. Bryans, |any, Kenting Aviation. However, ci who is commander of the Trenton work in the north only requires " | Bryans visited the search scene nually. | Fallen Chiefs Sunday and returned to Trenton] John is the son of Mr. and Mrs, The missing aircraft was Toronto, and is a member of St, equipped with oxygen, parachutes Gregory's Roman Catholie and rations for "quite a few| Church on Simcoe street north. | telephone conversation with the \ hs public relations department of the, His brother William is rus C ev {dent of the Sherwood Park "If the men aboard the missing| He also has two other brothers ROME (Reuters) -- The Moscow plane survived the landing, there|T. C. O Neill of Kitchener, munist newspaper Unita says four alive," said an RCAF official. real, a teacher in the |ousted Soviet leaders made a dar-| John O'Neill, 23, ight engineer Brothers, a Roma ling bid to get rid of od Park Co There, 27 of Gr D tiement the was born in Do Wonks Sutors. their nectheast "ection of {be' eily| and educated at Si. correspondent says that on 1 with his brother liege in Kitchener. June 17 or 18 Vyacheslav Molotov william, a tool and die maker and 'Georgi Malenkov d ded f the Soviet Praesidium to dis- jcuss speeches to be made at the last Friday and Saturday. | [J The meeting was held, with I D ' nt wo ta IN D1sarmame says. | soon as it began Molotoy,| LONDON (AP)--Western diplo-| The broadcast said the purge of party" leaders launched an attack 2ment talks, continuing today, for|ovich and Georgi Malenkov and on Khrushchev and described his evidence of a possible shift in So-|/the emergence of Communist istic. | shake-up in the Kremlin. But Mos- undisputed Russian s t r o n g man cow Radio warned the West Tot| would have no effect on the nego- secretariat of the party and of the| "If anyone in the U.S.A. thinks ers did mot determine Soviet pol- | that the U.S.S.R. is going to make | icy. organizer of the 1949 Leningrad| ya] d'Or as a base and the RCAF |on aerial-photo work with Field RCAF base. Air Vice-Marshal|from six to eight months ane | . later. C. O'Neill, of Huron street, | Tried To End: it was learned today in al 60.0P PRESIDENT RCAF base at Trenton. Son correspondent for the Italian Com-|1S an excellent chance they are|Rev. Brother Ignatius .of on the plane, is well|ligious order; party chiet Nikita Khrushchev two) known in the Sherw Field Aviation in 195 an urgent extraordinary meeting ™ i waa No Concession three members of the Praesidium kov and two other '"anti- Mats looked to the London disarm-|V. M. Molotov, Lazar M. Kagan« policy as Trotskyist and opportun-| Viet policy in the wake of the|party boss Nikita Khrushchev as They demanded a ehange in the C° expect concessions. tiations because the ousted lead A Soviet answer was awaited to tl t 5 ' The correspondent says Khrush- concessions to the West and that |is mistaken," said the Soviet/ conventional military forces which the central committee, 3 | broadcast, just before the talks American delegate Harold E. Stas Diefenbaker Lauded On Trade Suggestion LONDON (Reuters) -- British|sometimes embittered ministers | the water by Edward Cottrell of dian Prime Ministér John Diefen- Guardian says. luntsville. They were taken to hos-| baker for stirring the Common-| He was con-|of Huntsville and 120 miles north pital with the girl, all suffering wealth nations on trade expansion. | Diefenbaker will rom severe shock Mrs. lodge near the dam. The Baile: faghity was on holiday there. Hanna Arrested Drunk Charge VANCOUVER (CP) -- Christian G Canada made headlines urday and charged with being] drunk in public place. He was released on $10 bail and|excellent impression during is scheduled to appear today in| conference. NOT YET CAUTIOUS police court. Hanna was allowed to stay here "without status' after spending 16 months aboard the Norwegian| | freighter Gudveig. S in the semi-finals for the trophy. Princeton University's 155-pound ers retained the Challenge Cup with a one-length victory over the National Provincial Bank Crew o London in the time of 7:08. The powerful Russians won the | double sculls when their Olympic| * champions, Jurig Tijikalov and Alexandre Berkoutov beat G. Baker and M. A. Spracklin Britain" in 7:41. In the Stewards Cup event, a British team hit the boundary booms, giving victory to] ian four without cox. | te foreign victories -- the won only one event---the classic retained its thor- English atmosphere, con- a Rus Despi British Henley oughly ducted lines Tony Leadley and Christopher | Davidge out of the Leander club] gave the host country its only win beating Austria's Joseph XKloim- stein and Alfred Sageder in the event for paired oarsmen, Gillrie owned a tourist enhaker has "shaken up the set-|Proposals D He Y|tled and defeatist thinking which jected trade increases within the h pansion of Commonwealth trade." | well on his way to bringing about {a Commonwealth economic con- ference that could lead to a po-| licy of expanding Commonwealth [3% trade. eorge Hanna, the "man without| With the proposed European free a country" whose bid to stay in|irade area, "which the Common- But| G2 earlier| Wealth Uti this year, was arrested here Sat-|Prove. ian said Diefenbaker made 'an! hard to see how Britain can sacri- the | fice European co-operation "for But The Guardian predicts that soon become the free trade area i i i jef-|aware that The Financial Times says Dief-| world: Defuddic. Ton as already abandoned hope of ex-|Commonwealth, ' s ) 3 It also predicts Diefenbaker will The Times says Diefenbaker is/run into trouble at home because | "his party made many rash fi- [nancial promises--as one easily {does when not expecting to win" election. | The London Daily Telegraph says that Britain's insistence on the exclusion of agricultural pro- This, it says is not incomfatible alth prime ministers indeed ap- | wealth very much in mind." The Liberal Manchester Guard-| Yet, The Telegraph says, it is the sake of preferences which are | Lord Beaverbrook's empire- "The disappointments and dif- 'minded Daily Express says the ducts from any free trade plan is | proof "that we have the Common- | themselves diminishing in value." | |were to resume after a' weekend sen completed outlining last week. | recess. When the five-nation United Nae { "The U.S.S.R. has gone far tions disarmament subcommittee lenough in meeting the U.S.A. in|recessed Friday, Soviet delegate |the matter of disarmament to|Valerian Zorin declined immedi- {hope for some concessions in re- ate comment but promised to give |t ' 'the broadcast declared. the proposals careful study. | THIEVES STEAL CENTENNIAL CAKE OAKVILLE (CP)--Oakville's nine-layer, five - foot - square birthday cake survived a week of centennial celebrations, but fell prey to thieves early Sun- day. They broke into the Oakville Arena and took the top four layers of the cake. Police said that if the crime was moti- vated by hunger, the thieves won't find the cake particu- larly appetizing, The ingredients comprised sheets of plywood covered with icing. Union First In U.K. Mind Macmillan LONDON. (AP)--Prime Minister Macmillan says 'the Common- wo | | | { | | ficulties of government at home |conference missed a chance to|wealth comes first in our hearts have not yet induced in him the make a clear decision on expan- | caution which older, tired and 'sion of "Empire trade." LATE NEWS FLASHES 22 Sheep Slaughtered i \ WHITBY -- Whitby police said today 22 sheep had been found slaughtered this morning on Pickering Farms west of this town. Full details were unavailable at press time, but the sheep were badly mutilated and were western lambs mostly, "i Group Tries To Ban Pro Troupe MELBOURNE (AP) -- The Lawn Tennis Association of Australia tonight launched a move to ban Lew Hoad and Jack Kramer's professional trouble from playing on any: offi- cial courts in Australia. along rigid traditional. 19 Injured In Brawl DETROIT (AP) Nineteen persons, Including eight policemen, were injured Sunday night in two fights that developed out of police efforts to stop what they called an unauthorized street gathering in the Negro district on the east side, Gi and minds." Macmillan Sunday night dis- lcussed last week's conference of} Commonwealth prime ministers inf |London in a television-radio talk.| | "We in Britain have friendly | : and co-operative relations with many countries" he said. *"We| : {have a special relationship with {the countries of Europe, which we hope to strengthen and extend. | "But if there should at any time be a conflict between the calls {upon us, there is no doubt where |we stand. | Macmillan granted that the con- ference communique might have seemed "'not very exciting. But the Commonwealth meet- lings, he added, are different from "the sort of international confer- [ences and meetings which you and I know so well, where the main | purpose is to make a large num- ber of set speeches and pass 2 {long list of resolutions. "I am never quite sure that pos, "eonirnce" sieve yy NNTE J PTS] FLY AT GARDEN PARTY much. . . ; conversations and . ¥ : Sir Winston Churchill, 82- | Individual {more formal 'sessions of the Com- year-old former British prime minister, tosses ball in an at- monwealth talks are valuable be- cause they allow each member to tempt to knock coconuts from a perch at Conservative Party make decisions "'with a full knowl-| edge of what all its Common- garden fete in his constituency at Woodford, Epgland. Ia a | rents r speech at the fete, Sir Winston cautioned the West against giv- ing up testing nuclear weapons -- including the hydro- gen bomb -- stressing that in Western hands they are deter~ wealth partners are thinking," to war. 'Macmillan said.

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