Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 13 Sep 1957, p. 2

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Weather Report Showers bonight and Saturday morn. ing. TIMES-GAZETTE TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising RA 3-3492 All other ealls ...... RA 3.3474 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle OSHAWA-WHITBY, FRIDAY; SEPTEMBER 13, 1957 PC'S MAKE EFFORT TO GUT TAXATION --_" Fleming Urges Inflation Fight Clearing mn afternoon. . Price Not Over EIGHTEEN PAGES ed As Sesond Class Mell Authoriz P ice Department, Ottawe ost VOL. 86--NO. 214 id Syria Pledges | | RON McINT ai YR E HURT ON NO. 2 HIGHWA By-Election Four Youths Hurt Results Hit | As Cars Collide | JDON o p on No. 2 Highway, at the top of [swerved to the south and swung LONDON Reuters) Prime Rouge Hill on Thursday evening. back to strike the Mcintyre car hor, defending a sea held pre- abrasions were thrown from the Goneau viously with a majority of only| "nriver of the other ear, Frank car, which is a convertible. fory was due mainly to many|jcal, head injuries. James Mar- are that the injured are in satis- former Conservatives backing altin, 18, euts, bruises and shock; |factory condition. mond, Labor -- 18,895; Francis Dashwood, Conservative 10, Just of Souiests sare Whi yout, Shareholders Say often steeply, and there WAS MONTREAL (CP) -- A multi-/diary of the Brilish Mawker Sid was on a bigger scale than in any hands of Dosco shareholders. would accept defeat if A. V. Roe of the preceding byelections,| Dosco President Charles B. obiained the required share mever has been accepled as an of directors favors acceptance. accurate index of what would But the unknown factor at this of Dosco stock. servatives would be swept out of proxy votes from shareholders to holders to a general meeting to office. battle A. V. Roe, holding subsi-| giscuss A. V. Roe's offer. | the victims were taken fo ws tas Man Injured In Shooting A 27-year-old Whitby man is in fair condition in the Oshawa Gen- Tospital following a hunting north of Whitby Thurs He is Hans Ey- n St., who was struck by pellets from a 10-gauge shot accident day afternoon id that he had been its at the farm of his on the third concession vy Twp. during the after- hunting rabbi Whith noon. When he started to come home he g ide on a truck which was hauling corn from a field As the truck started up, Eymann slipped from the running board of the vehicle and fell to the ground The shotgun discharged, send ing pellets into his hand and stomach. taken to the office of Dr. J. 0. Ruddy, Brock St. N., waniwy, and later rushed by am- bulance to the Oshawa General Hospital. Last night he under- went emergeney surgery for his wounds. { | RCAF Squadron Perfect Score | * COLD LAKE, Alia. (CP) --- An CAF jet team from Ottawa's 410 Squadron fired what ex- perts said is a perfect score in The offer was based on a pre-|Canada's first rocket meet at this requisite of getting 52 per ecent|portheast Alberta base. The CF-100 crew, Sqdn. Ldr. H E. Bodien of Sussex, England and FO Glen Emmerson of Mel fort, Sask., neeted 986 out of possible 1,000 points. Previous high was 969.8 set hy FO Don Luft of Kitchener and a PICKERING (Times - Gazeite,| Police have been unable to de Minister Macmillan's Conserva-| "pi bong alone was Ron Mec-|on its right front. 748 votes, increased this tenfold 7 Goneau, 20, Pinegrove, Rouge| All Liberal candidate in preference both of Highland Crescent, West Pickering Township Police in- 821: Lt.-Col. Patrick Lort-Phil- clear evidence that some party) Ci. dollar bid by A. V. Roe|deley group. where the greatest drop in the Lang has written so the share- holder acceptance. Another re happen in a general election. But stage in the negotiations was the, pp. Halifax Mail - Star quotes a In his letter, Mr. Lang said A. FO Tom Murray of Newfound No Aggression | 3 al DAMASCUS (AP)--Syria's mil-jia's army believe in nationalism itary chiefs have returned from and their unanimous aim is Arab urgent conferences in | Cairo, nationalism where they declared. Syria willl "1 am not a Communist and never attack anyone, including there is not one single Commu- Israel. nist officer in the whole Syrian Brig. Afif Bizry, leftist army army." commander, and LL-Col. Abdel| He gaid the U.S. divides the Hamid Serraj, army intelligence world into two parts--American chief, came back to Damascus non-American--and added: rsday re were no details I i a) ee oi alls You are either American and on their trip to the Egyptian cap- tie your country's policies and in- terests to those of imperialism or ital. you are not, and this, they be- Cairo newspapers quote them jjeve. means that you are Com- saying Syria will not make|pmunist, . . . To the Western im-! any aggressive military moves perialists every nationalist is a with the arms bought from Rus- Communist and everyone who sia. There were other signs of works for the interests of his an easing of Middle East tension country is a Russian agent." oY Sy. TO FIGHT BACK Premier Sabri Assali told re- oka Mab porters after another emergency Bizry told the Egyptian Middle § "= J, C . rial meeting of the cabinet that there East News Agency _ that Syria was nothing new in the situation|Wwill "fight back against any at- and 'nothing to be worried/tack. We will burn the sky and] about." Thursday's cabinet ses./the land to defend our country sion was the fourth in as man) against Zionists or others. Bizry accused U.S. State Sec-| a ERI retary Dulles of waging a war of NO RED CONTROL nerves against Syria The Cairo newspaper Al Akh- "we are not to blame that re-| bar says Serraj denied charges ations between Svria and the! that the Syrian army is control- JS have deteriorated to their| led by Communists present state. But we are not pre- Referring fo as U.S. pared to sacrifice our independ- arms shipments to Syria's neigh- ence for any kind of relationship bors, Serraj said: "The imper- with any country." ialists forget that an Arab willl Bizry said the Syrian and Egyp- never kill his Syrian brother." 'tian armies are a single force un- Serraj said the leaders of Syr-der Egypt's supreme command. LATE NEWS FLASHES Flu Breaks In King County | KING, Ont. (OP)---Dr. Robert King, medical officer of health for King Township, said today he has ordered an im- mediate investigation into an outbreak of a virulent type of influenza in fhe district. Me said i has affected hundreds of children sand adulis in she township, although exact #g- wres wére nnavailables or days Defence Chief Retires OTTAWA (CP)---F, F. Worthington, de- fence chief since 1948, is to retire Tuesday, i! was announced today. The 88-year-old retired major-general, called out of retirement CD structure, said he as an inductrialist, Canada's civil to organize Canada's is preparing to start "a new earecr Mystery Surrounds Death LONDON, Ont. (CP)--Mystery 25-year-old man whose body was found face down today be tween the Canadian Pacific Railway tracks on the Oxford surrounds the death of a MONTREAL (CP) -- Finance Minister Donald Fleming said to- day the Progressive Conservative government is making efforts to reduce the burden of federal tax-| ation. At the same time he pleaded with Canadians to save more to| fight inflation and to increase ownership of Canadian resources. In a speech before the 10th an- nual convention of the Newspaper | had undertaken to reduce taxes was to encourage Canadians te increase their investment in Canadian resources. "We believe -uite frankly that the people who earn their bread in the sweat of their brow can be depended upon to exercise just as great a sense of responsibility in the use of their owa income as can anv government Sok Therefore, we link our efforts Adverising Managers Asvocistion to reduce the burden of taxation the former Liberal administration With our plea to the Canadian with having harbored waste and|People to be saving and through extravagance in its departments their savings to participate in an and said this is being eliminated. |eVer-greater degree in the owner- "Without 'going into detail at|Ship and development of those re- this time, let me say to you that|sources and means of production the result of our efforts will not| Which in the days to come will be only be the elimination of waste|the buttress and mainstay not E i "* but it will achieve greater effic- iency in government operations. "There will be no sacrifice or reduction in government opera- |tions, There will, however, be no | sparing of effort to assure to the taxpayer a fair dollar's value for every dollar spent." (CRITICIZES LIBERALS Touching on the tax issue, he criticized the former Liberal gov- ernment as having been guided by the belief "that the people are not to be trusted with the fruits of their own labors and that ¥ Vi % 104TH BIRTHDAY "Granny" Baker -- Mrs. Wil- liam Baker of Uxbridge -- is preparing to celebrate her 104th birthday next Wednesday, Sept. 18. Born in Newmarket, 14 years before confederation, she has never visited a doctor in her life. She still does much of the 5 rk in th : her Housework on he Dome po |somehow all - wise governments west of Uxbridge, and uses |Can better manage the people's neither glasses nor dentures. (money than the people can them- Her recipe for long life? "I |selves. ais don't eat pies or cakes, and 1 | "Ideas of this kind have no get up at seven in the morning |Place in the thinking of the pres- and go to bed at eight at night," ent government. We believe that Her daughter and son-in-law, |the industrious Canadian people Mr. and Mrs. Tom Phillips, have shown that they want no claim that she is the oldest such paternalistic attitude on the woman in the province. part of their government." only of our national prosperity [but of our freedom." | BIGGEST BORROWER Mr. Fleming said that he per. sonally had never been a bor- rower. Now, as finance minister, he found himself under pressures |of national duty "the biggest bor- {rower in Canada." Earlier this week he refinanced |$700,000,000 of the country's mna- {tional debt. On Oct. 15, a new |Canadian savings bond issue will be launched. "I am appealing to all Cana- | dians to cultivate the habit of sav- |{ing," he said, emphasizing that inflation is a "lurking menace" and that the Canadian dollar has not been spared from this "fraud upon the people." "In times like these increased productivity can be the only just. ification for increased returns." Canadians had to exercise selfs discipline. It was government pol- icy to resist inflation. One reason the Conservatives La Plante { | OTTAWA (CP)---Dr. Sidney ¥ 'New Minister Urges Unity ./liament by way of A resignation WELLAND (CP)--Mr. Justice Smith, 60, on being sworn in to-| provided by Mr. Macdonnell, the G. A. Gale of the Supreme Court of Ontario Thursday declared a mistrial and discharged a jury hearing a murder charge against Thomas LaPlante, 22, of Hamil ton. The trial was in its third! day. ma {Canada - building after being Anew jury is to be selected sworn in by Chief Justice Kerwin, when the court reconvenes next lent additional support to the be- week. [lief that there will be little change Mr. Justice Gale ruled the mis-|in the government's foreign pol- trial "by reason of certain state-|icy. vided on foreign policy." .(conference on the sun-bathed day as Canada's new external af-| prime minister said. fairs minister, said "it would be regrettable if Canada was di- that Toronto Greenwood would be It had been reported earlier vacated through the appointment His statement, made at a press to the Senate of Mr. Macdonnell, who would become government steps of the Supreme Court of leader there. TELLS STORY Dr. Smith was asked whether he has some general views om foreign policy and he replied by telling a story: ments made" in the jury's hear- Dr. Smith, introduced to news- Staff Reporter) Four young termine the exact cause of the men were injured in a near accident, but from angle of im- head-on collision, one eritically, pact the west bound Goneau car dive government received a Int y Both total. wrecks. i yre, 21, of East Woodlands. He oth cars are v Jor shock today in the result of suffered a double fracture of the Mcintyre was irapped in the @ byelection in Gloucester. La-| cop "io 1 merous cuts and|driver's seat. Philp and Martin eo a plurality of 8,374. Hill, chest and internal injuries. Scarborough General Hospital. But the voting showed the vie-| David Philp, 18, condition crit-| Reports from there this morning #0 their own' party's nominee. Hill. vestigated The result of Thursday's vote, -- sanounced today, was: Jack Dia- ff . lips, Liberal--7,393 The election followed the pat- tern of contests earlier this year, adherents, angered apparently at ! mounting cost 1 A |Canada Ltd. for control of the! There were conflictipg reports tote In protest," % | Domisios Steel and Coal Corpor- on their aititude Thursday night The lection. at Gloucester ation appeared today ho be in the One report said both directors Conservative vote was about 12 holders to say that A. V. Roe's|port said they planned to eon-| per cent. offer is "fair and reasonable" tinue the fight, | Byelsction polling in Britain and that a majority of the board iticians noted that if the voting reaction of two Dosco Nova Sco-|y. Jodrey as saying that he and| ot Gloucester were repeated onitia directors, R. A. Jodrey and |p Sobey till 'hope to persuade] a nation - wide scale, the Con- F. H. Sobey, who had tried to get|;, ." 4irociors to summon share-| V. Roe's offer was "'substantially in excess of today's market val- ues' of Dosco shares. Negro Student Quits High School Ike Hopes Lg An gal ' 3 Anti-Negro - sharp-cornered piece of tin at her Solution got tense when I walked in the corridors because then I was all alone and 1 never knew what they were going 'o do They never, came in front of me. They always stbod in back "If 1 turned around, there head, she said, and then smashed NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) Presi. were 20 or 30 of them. How could in the rear window of her fam- dent Eisenhower is described as 1 say which one did something?" ily's car as her brother waited profoundly hopeful that out of his That, in a few sentences, to take her home for lunch meeting Saturday with Arkansas why Dorothy Counts, 15-year-old "I was afraid then for the first Governor Orval Faubus will come Negro, says she isn't going back time," Dorothy said Friday at a pattern for solution to school to all-white Harding High School. home. "I didn't mind the names. | integration troubles in the south- Her father, Rev. H. L.. Counts, But I was afraid what they ern states. a Presbyterian instructor in re- might do to me physically. That doesn't mean Eisenhower ligion at Johnson C. Smith Uni- "I'd just die if they ever hur! intends to set forth any new or versity here, made the with- my parents. 1 just didn't know startling formula when he and what they might do. Somebody Faubus confer al 9 a.m. EDT at kicked me Monday. I didn't know Eisenhower's vacation headquar- what these little things might ters here at the U.S. naval base. lead to. Lisenhower is understood to be . iba planning to do a great deal of| MAKE IT EASIER listening to the governor, whose] "But I just don't want them to suggestion it was that they *"'coun-| drawal announcement Friday night "It is with compa for native land and love for daughter that we withdraw think they've won a victory. Iisel together" in an effort to re-| hink it will be easier for other solve a federal-state impasse] Negroes to go to Harding some ver admitting Negro students! day because I did go . . . even if'to previously all-white public I didnt' go back." Three other young Negroes in three other white schools here have met with little difficulty. But 'Dorothy was greeted on the first day by spitting and stone- throwing. Wednesday, bovs threw a our our her High School," he said BEGAN LAST WEEK The tall, light-skinned Dorothy started classes last week at Hard ing with 1,160 white students Governor Flies To Meet With Ike On Negro Rift By RELMAN MORIN who is well known to both Eis LITTLE ROCK AP enhower and Faubus, probably Arkansas Governor Orval Faubus Will participate, in the discus- ix flying north today confer sions. Two aides also will go to with President Eisenhower over Newport with Faubus buf are not 2 landmark civil expected to he present when he the use of the sees Eisenhower National Guard to keep Negroes The struggle broke out in Little from enrolling in a Little Rock Rock last week when Faubus high school sent National Guard state militia They will mee! Saturday morn. men to surround Central High ing at the president's vacation School, with orders to turn away headquarters New t I Negroes attempting lo sign ap for The man classes between White Brook the as a student at Harding schools, co-operative," Hays said. "I be- lieve he is making an earnest ef- fort to do his duty." Fven as Faubus leave for Newport, partment of justice other legal action to case against him The department pleading in the office of the fed- eral court clerk in Little Rock, citing 10 cases in which federal courts issued orders restraining state nors from using milit- ry action to deny rights guaran he United Stales consti Ark prepared fo the 1.8, de- added an- support its fo i hattle state-controlled entered a in por who acted a Fau aove for Hou Ha governor I'm an optimis! DISCUSS PRINCIPLES "¥ the conference ere fined to legalisms, outlook probably would not he too hope ful. But the discussions do not have to go beyond principles that|tive boundaries of authority, the ean guide us and eeriainly willjcourl hearing eould become a onide these + fern nlite fo a ' court moe hearing on a preliminars nmnetion ton interference with the racial integration of the school If Eisenhower and Faubu agree in advance of that formula for ending the federal state dispute over their respec Fabs appear tinder summons i p h in 'federal Sept ution 1 Lat avd for a ¢ the neighbor Ing community North Little Roc agam ere quel. Negroes have made no further attempts to enroll and there were no racial incidents outside the school rounds. Guardsmen and police in sharply reduced numbers, re mained on duty. No crowds gath ered. The sifv Howl and of fepartur der FP can on a con the » ! otha nibenme land for North Bay's 414 Squad- ron. 5 it Who says Friday the 13th. is an unlucky day? Well, it just depends on where you stand in | the world. For instance, this unidentified senior student at " MNelm r ' LE ", Street overhead bridge in London West, requested that the nature of the wg + | statements not be revealed. |ing and contrary to rules of pro- cedure in a Canadian court. He paper men by Prime Minister Diefenbaker, said he plans to |stick his feet under his minister- |ial desk this afternoon, following a cabinet meeting at 10:30 a.m. He will go to New York Monday Important CCI UPPER CLASSMEN HAVE THEIR D 4 i | | LaPlante is charged with mur- dering Edwin Jones, 30, of Ham- 3 | ships. | until for the United Nations General Assembly. The assembly opens its new session Tuesday. Mr. Diefenbaker said he, too. will go to the UN next week and | that it is possible he will address the assembly. {NO SEAT PLANS ilton | Man Convicted On 6 Break-Ins Douglas Grant Lee was convict-| Asked what he will do to find ed this morning by Magistrate 2 seat in Parliament, Dr. Smith Frank S. Ebbs on six charges of |5&id he has no ideas at the mo- breaking, entering and theft jn ment on the subject. Uxbridge and Pickering Town-| Mr. Diefenbaker interjected: |""No announcement can be made Some of the stole goods were | at this time buj-one will be made found at the accused's home. Lee Saturday. An announcement to pleaded guilty to all six charges.|day would be presumptuous." He was remanded for sentence| But those who had forecast onday. {that J. M.. Macdonnell, minister | Constables E. W without portfolio, would vacate! Trowell and| W. L. Smith testified they had in. his Commons seat for Toronto vestigated six oreak-ins in Pick. Greenwood ) Ye ering and Uxbridge Townships S0urces of information," Mr. g "must have other and had traced the stolen goods Diefenbaker added. to the accused. The accused was| arrested in Keswick. "At no time was it considered 'that Dr. Smith would enter Par- Spot, N. Y. Times Says NEW YORK (CP)--The Times says the reason the appointment of a new Canadian external af- fairs minister is "front page news" is that "Canada now plays a role in world affairs which is of great importance." Commenting on the appoint. ment of Dr. Sidney E. Smith, former president of the Univer- sity of Toronto, to the external (affairs portfolio, The Times says: "The fact that Canada has had a remarkable foreign secretary in the person of Lester B. Pear- son during the Liberal post-war era would not by itself have iven Canada a top-flight posi- tion in the United Nations, the Commonwealth. Asian affairs and the like. GENERALS WON MANN CUP | Sept. 13 Back In 1929 #8 Big Day For Oshawa an unlucky or unhappy day. i ¥ 1 | t + Cy ; LY L Westminster- Salmonbellies, for 3th is not always|ny" Golden, "Toots" White, Bob! Stephenson, Pat Shannon, Albert Take Friday. Sept. 13, 1929, for Smithson, "Chu Barron, Norv. | nstance. Hubbell, *"Doddy" Doddemeade, That was a very joyous day| 'Shep'. Shepley, Mel Whyte. most people in Oshawa, at! Seven thousand saw the Gen- easi, because that was the day erals outplay the Salmonbellies, he famous Oshawa Generals re. 3-3. on the West Coas!, the east- urned here from British Colum. erners sewed the game up in the Friday the bia with the Mann Cup. emblem- last quarter with three goals as atic of the senior lacrosse cham- the opposition tired fast. sionship of Canada, | This victory brought the his- The Generals defeated the New toric Mann Cup to the east for two the first time since 1908. A sen- games to none. and the city wel-|Sational goal by Doddemeade, on SPECIAL ¥ AO AY IN THE SUN |: commonplace both at OCCI and OCVI, as students ob- served this annual day of hi jinks and fun, The pretty Grade 9 students shining shoes appear } | o: fhaly he ani together with his fellow senior students, because this is initia- | tion day -- the day when the frosh must toe the line, wear special clothes and dn pretty vA Dai! the gratulation civie prime minister. Ma Davidson " |a pass from Davidson. at the be- | fourth quarter the :omes them in gala fashion, pa ] ginning of the EDITION proved the turning point in a celebration and a close battle The snc cial paper also car The |butes from papers of {An article in the was edition of the ied editorial tri across Canada special edition alsn la pul special e edition out by Times surely one finest lacrosse editions ever by J. W. Borsherry, points out oul with messages of con-lthat the first lacrosse game mn from national and|Oshawa was played in 1872 Mr. | including the late |Borsberry was one of Oshawa's| kenzie King. most prominent citizens, . and! Members of the Oshawa team played on the first team here. ncluded Jack Carson, "Chuck" Teams in Port Hope, Bowman-| "Smoke" Fox, Kelly|ville and Millbrook, then all as i Wilean RiMlltacmn ar MArhan nlaved Wallap Aas a put leaders Val ay vere "Ollie" Sebert, veteran Whitby lacrosse star, recalled the fa- mous Maple Leats which won the title in 1878. Now deceased, he was the only living member of the team ip 1929. PHILADELPHIA (AP) -~ Phil- adelphia's Friday the 13th Club which ha: defied every hoodoa known lo superstition, tempis ils luck further today at a luncheon table loaded with 'horrors d'oenvres." A sampling of the menu: Sugar. ed bumblebees, fried grass-hop- fied ants, lotus. flower salted cherry blossoms, asseed whale skin, roasted caterpillars, fried worms, and rat{lesnake meat These deli- cacies were brought from Japan bv a food importer who 2 member of the club Philip Klein, club president, said if the members weather their epicurean adventure they will, as usual, give bad luck a gay belting by smashing mirrors, capering under ladders, lighting up three-on-a-match and holding onen honse for black cats and 15

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