/ TIMES-GAZETTE TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising RA 3-3492 All other calls ...... RR 3-3474 Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE Weather Report Sunny with cloudy intervals today and Saturday. A little cooler. VOL. 86--NO. 191 Post Authorized As Second Class Mall Office Department, Ottawa ' OSHAWA-WHITBY, FRIDAY, AUGUST 16, 1957 Price Not Over § Cents Per Copy TWENTY-TWO PAGES 13 FIRMS ACCUS Unit Snubbed | Guards Say By DAVE McINTOSH Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP)--The militia in ; . 9 and the Governor-Gen-|of the Governor-General"s Foot general eral's Foot Guards in particular arrange: 1 n lizabeth's visit| an insurance company executive are up in arms dver ments for Queen E to Ottawa in October. Traditionally the foot in peacetime a reserve army unit, provide the gugrd of honor for the governor-gefieral at the G They have been doing this for 50 or 60 opening of Parliament years, But when the Queen opens Par- ments for the royal guards, good | Queen ; The lonorary lieutenant-colone enough to look after the {Guard is Hon, Brooke Claxton former defence minister and now Mr. Claxton declined comment but it is understood that he and other senior militia officers have made official protests to Defence Minister G. R. Pearkes and Lt "Gen. Howard D. Graham, of the general staff, over the shunting aside of the foot guards 1 chief Officials in charge of arrange- visit de- |liament Oct. 14, the guards of clined, or were unavailable for, {honor will be provided by the comment. Regiment of Canadian Guards, a| |regular army unit. | said: One aroused militia officer| "If the Canadian Guards ! years. "They don't think we're good|provides the guard of honor, the enough," said a senior militia of-|Queen will be getting second ficer. best. "For decades, in the snow and| "All the Canadian Guards have rain and sleet, we provide the|is drab old battledress. The Foot 'Pedlar People Ltd. In Combines Case OTTAWA (CP)--The bulk of|The eastern section was dis. Canadian facturers produc-|b d in 1952, The western sec- ing metal culverts have, been|tion continued with headquarters accused by the Jesiriciive trudelat Winnipeg. | practices commission of having| The commission ¢ Y participated in an illegal price. | the pl Sion, soncluded that fixing combine over a period of acted only in an administrative way. | It stated also that three of the smaller producers, Corrugated Pipe, Rebertson-Irwin and Poun- der, played only small parts in the price-fixing and that none 4 The commission, in a report to- day to Justice Minister Fulton, recommended that court action be sought if necessary to break up the combine to change the in- Justg's. ra icles to give initiated policy proposals. Culverts are used mainly for, Mr. Fulton, in making the re- drainage. Big Canadian buyers port public, said he would give are federal, provincial and mu- the usual consideration as to nicipal governments, railways What steps the government and airports. should take against the com- panies. GUELPH FIRM BIGGEST i Thirteen firms were named in The cominission said there was 3 evidence 4 the producers main. the commission's report, devel-| ig i oped after initial esti om Laned Tifia and uniform \prices and accusation by combines re- search director T. D. MacDon- ald. Biggest of these is Armco Drainage and Metal Products of for a great many years. The commission urged: 1. Elimination of the western section of the culvert council. guard of honor. When the plum|Guards are the only ones wiih comes along, we're tossed aside. MRS. JESSIE TOOLEY is home again in Oshawa after a lone pilgrimage to her soldier son's grave in Italy. But as she JOURNEY TO GLORY Mother Sees Hero's Grave By ARTHUR GRIFFITHS Times-Gazette Staff Writer When 78 Oshawa people step- ped out of the gleaming DC 7C @irliner which took them to Man- chester Airport, England, for three weeks' vacation last month, one woman left the airport alone woman, Mrs. Jessie Tooley, of 331 Kingsdale Ave, at his memory looks down (inset), the still lingers Times-Gazette Photo picture of him ernor - general. If we're than anticipated. New figures to be published by the bureau of statistics late to- day may show that Canada en- |byterian minister and his family. { She then moved on to the French Riviera, still alone, and {at Nice she had another letter of introduction. It was from an Osh- awa man, Robert Miles, who has relatives these owning a Scottish- style téarvom. han the 540,500,000-bushel i than the 540,500,000-bushel carry- TOURS PARIS - over estimated by the bureau for 2 A After a few days in Nice, Mrs. last year and the previous high was to make a sentimental jour- Tooley caught the night train to of 602,000,000 bushels in August, ney to a small grave hundreds of paris w she toured the tour-/1954, The low for the last 30 es, away in a war-scarred jst mecca. She strolled, a lonely years was 24,500,000 in 1938, ' ore RY, PL agus Tyover 's the amount of 4 her son Rex, [chateau of Versailles marvel ng wheat left over after deductions sot far from the spot where hela jis begatiful Hall of Mirrors. are made for exports and do- and an Englishman died heroic- gut Jesie Tooley had for- | mestic needs. The increase, year than 700,000,000 bushels. This would be sharply higher "It's a direct insult to the gov- good skins, red tunics and blue trou enough to look after the Queen's sers with a red stripe down the representative in Canada, we're seam. 'Wheat Surplus May Be Greater Than Expected OTTAWA (CP)--The new Pro- federal officials have found er- gressive Conservative go ver n-|rors in their previous estimates ment may find itself confronted of wheat acreages and production with a wheat surplus far greater!and that these may be revised ly in a murderous cascade of gotten the land of her birth an mortar shells while try. Soden ih ir %o build a bridge across ato visit her aunt, Mrs. Gray, in ravine. | Shotts, Lanarkshire. Earlier bridges in that Second, She thought she would surprise World War battle had been blast- her. Mrs, Tooley walked up to od by withering Nazi fire many the backdoor of the house and @mes. Another bridge was vital asked her aunt: "Have you got #o the advancing Allied armies. |any current cakes?" -- a favor- Although Rex and the English- ite type of bun in Scotland. man called Vickery died before, But the joke misfired for a the crossing was made, their moment, Mrs. Gray stared then valor was not forgotten by their she remembered the niece who Canadian comrades it was left Scotland twenty years ago for called the Tooley-Vickery bridge Canada. and their names were painted on, It was a happy reunion but in it, a few days the sentimental jour- ney was over, and Jessie Tooley BACK HOME : joined the other Oshawa people, Last night Mrs. Tooley arrived all members of the city's Old back in Oshawa after seeing the Country Club, in the flight home where her 22-year-old son from Manchester to Malton Air- led at Forli, and his grave at port. Cesena, near Bologna. "There were hard memories to Here is Jessie Tooley's own relive," she told The Times- story of her pilgrimage to the Gagette, "but those were three town where many Canadians lie weeks I shall always remember." fn a graveyard shaded by peach te m-- and almond. frees. "I arrived late at night by train the little war-battered town of ena," she said. "I know no Italian. With pic- tures of my son's grave and one a 0 or two words of Italian I had ed, I tried to explain to a; PETERBOROUGH (CP)---Fifty driver that I wanted a hotel workers at Greyhawk Uranium and to use his cab the next day. Mines 60 miles north of here "But me misunderstood and walked off their jobs Wednesday took me immediately to the!night after the company accused graveyard. However, nearby we a driller of violating the Mining met an Italian woman who spoke Act and fired him. a little English and we were able] Reg Small, national representa- to understand each other and Ijtibe of the International Union of found an hotel for my two days' Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers stay there. (Ind.) said the union leadership "The kind woman, Signorina knew nothing abouf the walkout Santini, showed me around the before it happened. following 'ay and I saw my son's]! But he denied that the dis- grave, which was beautifully missed employes, identified as tended by Italians under the!J, D. McDonald, had broken the supervision of the War Graves provisions of the Mining Act. He Commission.' said McDonald had refused on At Forli she found a new bridge order to drill near a hole drilled had replaced the one on which for blasting in which the powder her son, a bombardier in the had failed to explode. artillery, had died. - -- But from the side of the ravine she saw a name engraved ... the words were just a little too far away for her to read them. MANY REMINDERS In Cesena, too, there were many other things to remind her of Rex -- a courtyard she recog- | nized from a picture which he gent her in 1944, | By WARREN ROGERS Jr, And when the time came to! WASHINGTON (AP) leave Cesena, Signorina Santini United States has made public a and the friendly Italians, who had carefully vague reply to Canada's shared those war days with Cana- demand for assurances that such dian soldiers, were sorry to see incidents as the Norman case the little gray-haired woman can never happen again. leave. But for all its seeming ambigu- Before she did, Mrs. Tooley ity, Thursday's note apparently had another mission to carry out cjoeed an incident which had for two other Oshawa mothers strained the traditionally warm who lost their sons in the same (jas of the two countries. area The Canadian demand was She visited Bavena, where the ... Ary % dave son of Mrs. Amy Cope, of Leslie made last April 10, six days after street, and the son of Mrs. Thomas Loreno, of 183 Oshawa Blvd., South, are buried In Switzerland she had bought three wreaths, one for her son The other two she placed on the other Oshawa graves US M by jumping from an apartment house in Cairo. The Canadian note told the U.S. in bristling language that Canada would quit giving secur- But there were also happy days ity information about its citizens in Mrs. Tooley's vacation. She 0 American agencies unless it went on to tour beautiful Flor. received assurances that, without ence, Pisa where the tower leans, |its express consent, such data| and Genoa, picturesque port on WO! the Mediterranean and birthplace s of Columbu On Italy's sparkling Riviera she r ved at the millionaire"s resort At the time of Norman § San Remo where she had a Canada's then external of introduction to a Pres. Id be withheld from congres committees tl ITOUDS « which c ¥ ach has no control suicide affairs > h Herbert Norman, Canadian am-| wprono bassador to Egypt, killed himself cot un atteill. ascnrity data upon the by year, has caused a tremend- heavy carrying charges. | There was some indication that dress uniforms." The Foot Guards wear bear upwards. Canada Limited of Guelph, a sub- sidiary of a U.S. firm with plants in almost every province. 2. Manufacturers be forced to quit discussions and meetings among themselves on such sube Previously, the bureau of sta- tistics ferop for 1956-57 at placed Canada's wheat 537,800,000 tered the new crop year Aug. 1/bushels, up from 494,700,000 in with a wheat carryover of more 1955-56. This production, together with the carryover of 540,600,000 last year, brought total supplies to 900,000 in 1955-56. | Now there are some sugges- Itions that Canada produced even | more than 537,800,000 bushels last year--perhaps as much as - 000,000. All of the bureau's pro- duction' and supply picture may ibe 'revised. " | Actual 1956-57 supplies may She fle on to Glasgow ous storage problem involving have been well over 1,100,000,000 | bushels and perhaps close to 1.- 4 OSHAWA YOUTHS CHARGED WITH ROBBERY, VIOLENCE SWIFT CURRENT, Sask. (CP) -- The Crown completed presentation of evidence Thursday in the trial of four Oshawa youths on charges of robbery with violence. The youths, Raymond Allen Wood, Donald Wood, Blake Cheseborough and Grant Bernard, were charged in connec- tion with the Aug. 3 robbery of a Chinese shoe repair man. The four are accused of having entered the shop of Roy Lee, bound and gagged him and made off with $35. It is also alleged Lee was hit on the head with a gun. U.S. Security Note OTTAWA (CP) -- A United States note on security informa- tion on Canadians provided to the U.S. by Canada has been de- {scribed as "not explicit" by Prime Minister Diefenbaker. | The U.S. note, made public in Ottawa and Washington Thursday was in reply to a Canadian re- quest last April 10 that security on Canadians sup- U.S. by this country American administration. Signed by Robert Murphy, dep- uty undersecretary of state, the note was delivered in Washington {Tuesday to Norman Robertson, {Canadian ambassador to the U.S. | It said: "The procedures which have {been followed by the security agencies: of my government in the past and which they will con- |uted it to nervous colla |newed persecution." A CAREFUL NOTE The latest note in the exchange was handed to ambassador Nor- man Robertson here last Tuesda} by Deputy Under-Secretary State Robert Murphy Murphy, a veteran career dip lomat, sidestepped the Canadian demand for assurances. He wrote in eicec that there nothing with the protective system up between the two govern ments; thus seeming to imply that there simply is no way of guarding against 'leaks in any system, no matter how good. "The procedures which have been followed . . . are consistent with the assurances you seek," {Murphy wrote He outlined the procedures as follows 1-1 agencie ' a I the RCMP, abide by anv tions imposed by the sender of oo |, is S. and Canadian t FBI and restric of Mine Workers | "Not Explicit" -- PM tinue to follow in the future, in- leluding the handling of informa- tion received from Canadian sources, are consistent with the assurances you -seek." A statement issued later by Mr. Diefenbaker's office said in part: 'When asked to comment upon ithe United States note published today concerning exchange of se- curity information, Mr, Diefen- baker noted that the views ex- pressed in the Canadian note of April 10 on this subject had been passed on to Congress and said that his general impression was {that while the United States note was not explicit, it seems evident that the directive given United |States agencies concerning their | procedures in handling security |information is consistent in sub- |stance with the assurance Can- ada had sought." akes Reply To Canada's Request |eurity information to outsiders without the consent of the agency which sent .them such informa tion, This means that if the FBI gets security data from the RCMP At would have to get RCMP appro- val before passing it along to the Senate internal security subcom mittee, for example. In turn, the subcommittee could not release this data to the press unless the FBI said it was all right, pre sumably after first getting per mission from Ottawa. There was no comment on the Murphy note from the Senate subcommittee which is headed by Senator James Eastland (Dem Miss.), nor did the Canadian Embassy here have anything to say. Murphy's note apparently tried valk the thin line ( dian ng § mm ence. from both quai ters indicated that he had suc ed, |, to ween the » he 1956-57 an unprecedented 1. 500,000, compared with 993, re : Bw ii A | RUSSIAN PLANE WRECKAGE LIFTED FROM WATER Wreckage of the Soviet air- | gined plane plunged following | Ilyushin 14, Russia's standard i liner is hoisted yesterday froms } flight from. Moscow via Riga. | airliner about the size of an | Harbor at Copenhagen, Den- | All 23 persons aboard died in |' American Convair. mark, into which the twin-en- | the disaster. The plane was an | {AP Wirephoto) Other firms named: Canada jects as prices, terms and condi. Culvert Company, London, Ont., tions of sale. Corrugated Pipe Company, Strat-. 3. No manufacturer affected by ford; The Pedlar People Limited, the inquiry should supply culvert Oshawa: T. J. Pounder and Com- price lists to other culvert pro- pany, Winnipeg; Richardson ducers or follow any system of Road Machinery Company, Sas- exchanging price information. katoon; Robertson-Irwin Limited, 4. Discussions, communications Hamilton; Westeel Products Lim- or other means designed to re« ited, Winnipeg; the Rosco Metal |sult in the submission of uniform Products Companies: of Toronto, bids or calls for tenders be ended St. James, Man., Regina, Cal-|if not already done so. gary and Vancouver, | 5. A court injunction be ob- | Evidence in the commission's tained if necessary to get compli |157-page report was that the ance with the recommendations, price combine first was devel-| 6, Customers should be given oped some 30 years ago under an|the chance of providing their organization known as the Metal own s hipping arrangements Culvert Council. 'Eastern and|rather than have to pay for the western sections were formed. pipe on a delivered basis. LIBEL CASE | Defence To Drop "Shockers" Today Fra Ha choi 10S ANGELES (AP)-'The de. this 'matter out indef) fence expected to start tossing its piling up cumulative evidence." promised fidential and Whisper magazines. Arthur J. Crowley. counsel for the scandal publications, said he would bring movie stars .into court to testify whether stories about them in the magazines were true, The magazines and their al- leged Hollywood agents, Fred and Marjorie Meade, are being tried on charges of conspiracy to commit libel and publish lewd and obscene matter. The defence has scattered 117 subpoenas among Hollywood cel- ebrities, and is trying to slip 40 more into the hands of unwilling stars. Crowley wouldn't say in ad- vance which stars, or how many, he intends to call. "If 1 can prove that this charge is as ridiculous as I think it is," he said, "I will not drag Bell Asks Transport Board | For Right To Increase Rates | OTTAWA An application| | seeking approval to increase tele- {phone rates was filed today with| ithe Board of Transport Commis- sioners for Canada by The Bell Telephone Company of Canada The proposed revisions in Bell Telephone's rates would affect the users of the company's telephone services throughout Ontario and Quebec. The company requests the board to make the new rates effective not later than January 1, 1958 Increases in operating costs re- sulting in inadequate earnings were given as the reasons for the application. The company - the increases are somewhat high-| service in Oshawa and of 45 cents er in some cases. for 1-party residence lines are Bell Telephone's present gen- proposed in Bell Telephone's ap- eral level of rates became effec- plication for revised rates filed tive on March 1, 1952 in Ottawa with the Board of The increased costs of opera- Transport Commissioners for Ca- tion have included: nada, according to J. W. Lowry, Higher employe expense, up 63 the company's manager here. per cent, to an- estimated $123,-| The proposed increase for 1- 000,000 in 1957 from $75,000,000 in| party flat rate business service is 1952, due to higher wage rates|/$1.15 monthly and for 2-party and a 36 per cent increase in the business service it Is 90 cents number of employes to 41,700 monthly. from 30,600. A comparison of present and The higher corporation income proposed rates for typical classes tax rate effective this year and of service in Oshawa follows higher municipal taxes Present Proposed The higher costs associated ) grenades today in the libel trial' of Con- JUDGE'S RULING Crowley was left in a position {to summon the celebrities when Judge Herbert V. Walker des clined Thursday to rule on the admissibility of their testimony until they take the stand. | Crowley said he would call witnesses to prove the truth of a Confidential story which alleged that actress Maureen O'Hara and an unidentified "Latin boy friend" made love in the rear row of a Hollywood theatre. "We'll call witnesses to prove the truth of this 'story and the others," Crowley said, "and they'll be veputable people--net what Mr. Linn (prosecutor Clar- ence Linn) calls, in his mid-Vie- torian phrase, 'ladies night." As for Miss Crowley said: "Let the prosecution call her-- we'll cross-examine." O'Hara herself, states that to cover its expenses land earnings requirements its |operating revenues must be in creased by $24,000,000 for 1958. The proposed rates for local service include increases in all groups into which the exchanges are classified. The proposed increases in long |distance rates -- within Ontario and Quebec only -- are less for station-to-station calls than for| person-to-person calls, Adjust-| ments are proposed in initial per- with the raising of large amounts of new capital to carry out the company's construction program due to the sharp rise in the cost of money, both debt and equity, in the past year. Increases of 30 cents per month for two-party residence telephone $4.60 $3.60 $1.25 v 2-Party Ext. telephone BUSINESS 1-Party line 2-Pe line P.B.X. trunk Ext. telephone $9.55 $7.65 $14.30 $1.85 LATE NEWS FLASHES Plane Wreckage May Be Raised From Bog Today ISSOUDUN, Que. (CP) -- The|grave near the scene of Canada's broken body of a chartered DC-4| worst aviation disaster, and a | plane that carried 79 persons to|permanent memorial erected om |their deaths last Sunday may be|the spot. Both Anglican and Ro» | raised clear today from a soggy,/man Catholic church leaders 25-foot-deep crater in a farmer's have approved the plan. |field near here. Searchers said they believed they have uncovered all remains they can find of the 73 Toronto- bound passengers and the plane's six-man crew, but the remains were beyond recognition, "We can't give any hope to rel- " said an investigator, as iod rates which would result in maximum increases of five cents Canadian Dollar Opens At Top | for station-to-station calls, and of er nr . . " ' 95 cents for person-to-persoft NEW YORK (CP)---The Canadian dollar opened at a calls, between points up to 200 record high of $1.05% In terms of United States ewrency miles apart. For longer distances, today. Pur ge Wave Strikes Hungary {INQUEST NEXT WEEK | Coroner J.P. Pouliot announced that an inquest will be held in | Quebec City, 15 miles northeast, {probably next week. He said no remains have been found to permit positive identifi- cation of any of the plane's vie- Mine Called Unsafe Just As Caves In DRESDEN (CP) -- An official of the Keillor Construction Com- pany said Thursday that a few days before Wednesday's cave-in se due to] 2. All U.S. agencies are under | which killed six company work- The overwork and 'the feeling of re-|strict orders to transmit no se- |men the construction boss com- {plained that shorings in the hole {in which the men were working were not safe Douglas Bentley said the con- struction boss appealed to the foreman to increase the BUDAPEST (AP Another wave of arrests and trials --and some executions-- of persons charged with opposing Communist regime is sweeping Hungary. be ¥ 10-foot #8 shorings in the 35-foot hole to 30 feet. The foreman declined to do 50, he said Mr, either Jentley did man not identify Wednesday night 200 clay, steel and concrete mm sfx Dutch-Canadians working on ¢ extension of the water- works system of this community, 12 miles north of Chatham The sixth body was recovered Thursday night, partially en- cased in a trough of hardened cement lescue workers strug- gled 'through steel beams and clay before finding the body at the bottom of the As 1 e worl ntario fons of caved in pit halted John labo {| 0 depart n tor from Toronto, or dered that the pit be filled in, |pending a decision on re-shoring. THIS IS THE SCENE OE T A HE CAVE.IN AT DRES digging operations were halted tims. For the inquest, other iden- for the night. tification--clothing, passports and If relatives agree, the 'bodies personal documents--will be used will be buried in a common'to provide legal proof of death. DEN WHICH KILLED 6 PERSONS