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

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TIMES-GAZETTE : TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising .. RA 3-3492 All other ealls . RA 38-3474 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle WEATHER REPORT Cloudy, then clearing. Mainly sunny Wednesday, a little cooler. & SIXTEEN PAGES' Authorized As Second Class Meil Post Office Department, Ottawe YOL. 86--NO. 228 Price Not Over OSHAWA-WHITBY, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1957 $ Cents Per Copy - AT PETERBOROUGH | Clean Slate Given To Chief, Force mESITISOROUH, (Ch. Te of t July's ing nto the activities of the Peterborough lice force criticizes the use of leggers and petty lawbreak- ers as police informers. #In his most strongly-worded aph Justice 'F. G. who conducted the royal commission investigation, said bootleggers were "openly, fla- grantly and for their own profit" allowed to operate in return for information supplied to police. The 49-page report, which con- faing no recommendations, was read to city council Monday night. The inquiry was ordered L: Attorney-General Roberts of ntario following widespread complaints' that the force permit- ted unrestricted bootlegging, en- gaged in wiretapping, had an ab- normally high unsolved - crime rate and was poorly adminis- tered. Mr. Justice MacKay was ap- pointed to investigate administra- tion of the force and Deputy Chief N. A. (Bud) Clarke. SOME DISAPPOINTED Council referred the report to the police commission without comment. Some councillors, how- ever, 'expressed disappointment A & that no recommendations were vakia mustered only 25. sich, wita Reld another Pros: cop- ; i . "Something is wrong, ¢ eventy-eight of the 82 - ' 4 neighbor, called police ~'te'] " 5 jade. oomniasi found that CHIEF OF POLICE JOHN NAPES bly i hod Dallots. em ference Monday, would say di-| eight-year- old Patricia Hess ran Hise ot ey aa 4 8 slow rectly whether they would prefer to his door and said '"'something|" The son may have been ats i SOVIET VIEWPOINT to oust either Canada or Japan| is wrong with daddy." | tacked first, police theorized, ax Mr. Justice MacKay said one bad result of the informer sys- tem was that the Peterborough detective branch used it to such an extent that other more con- ventional methods were ne-| 1954 to discontinue use of inform- ors. He said Clarke had assisted er Geoffrey (Gyp) Feeley WIFE KILLEL Canada Wins Council Seat UNITED NATIONS, N,Y, (CP) sentation on the council on a geo- Canada, Panama and Japan won|graphical basis. ] election to the United Nations Se-| gince a "gentlemen's agree- curity Council on the first ballot ment" was reached in London in! today after Czechoslovakia's 5@-/1946 on geographical distribution viet-supported bid for a seat was|the Soviet delgate told a press resoundingly defeated. conference, many Commonwealth Canada received 72 of the Gen- (countries Had achieved independ. eral Assembly's votes in the se-ience and thus should be classed | cret ballot, Panama ad 74 and|j; the Asian and African geo-| Tire majority was ne- graphical areas. | cessary for election, Czechoslo- a nejthor Hummetsov nor, cael to win a seat for the east Euro-| Because the U.S. was support- ber-- | pean . ing Japan--a new UN for a council seat, most of the] Ullrich repeatedly stressed at Soviet - bloc opposition was re-|his press conference that the only| garded as being aimed against issue was that eastern Europe BY AX HUSBAND QUESTIONE - Son Wounded, Condition Grave® KINGSTON, (CP) -- Mrs. Edith|ter, with whom she was sleeps FY SpE TA "|Jean Hess, 39, of nearby Barrie-|ing, The warning probably saved field died of axe wounds early their lives, iL was Mrs. Hess was not dead wi William, was taken to hospital in she was taken fo hospital at critical condi ion. |a.m., but she died within a Another child, 14-year-old Bay| hor, desbite Smergency eff bara was also taken to hospital.| . Her condition was not serious. | TE, daughiers 10 to Ih AE rovincial Police said Bernard called police, They found band, was ost, Sycariia fe walls and furnishings spla Police sald Hess had j early today and is being held in|" custody pending further investi-|jae0 the lake earlier, but gation. Police said Percy Beckett, aPiisd himself out. today and her 19-year-old son, | os somes terrified Mrs. Hess died of axe wounds | the mother tried to save him to the head. They said there was| thon was cruelly attacked |no apparent reason for the slay-|self. The youth was beaten ul: ling. | conscious. | | Patricia apparently received a| The home is a {glancing blow from an axe, but|house in Barriefield, in a plan which led to the arrest of men on an attempted extortion charge and later tried glected. = . {the former enemy state. But last "Clarke said in evidence that|week Russia's deputy foreign he had a number of informers minister, Vasily Kuznetsov, made and that other members of the some pointed remarks about the |should "be represented on the] |council, and that the big West: ern powers: had for the last sev- eral years bent their efforts to pee [che managed to arouse her sis-least of Kingston. ER MN 5 te ing these representatives. detective branch also had other validity of C: ealth repre- 2.55-£= <5 PAST POLICE WORK LAUDED (| IN BOWMANVILLE BURGLARY type of breaking and entering is| committed by people who are not residents of the i BOWMANVILLE :--Two Toronto men were | remanded until Friday for senbemce, when they pleaded guilty to a charge of breaking, entering, Hoffa's First | | Strength Test 16 By JIM THOMASSON day. He withdrew as a candiddla | MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP)-|for president with an appeal ? |The first major test of strength|/the other candidates to unite | in the battle for presidency of|a stop-Hoffa rally of strength, [the International Brotherhood of| But Vice-President Willianh | ih and that in sach cases it would be unlikely that they would patronize local bootleggers or, even if they did, would divulge any information to the bootleg- gers that could be passed on to the local police." | During the inquiry it was dis- closed that Clarke operated a business installing burglar] and theft, before Magistrate R. B. Baxter, today. hoa Teamsters was in ' prospect at|Lee of Chicago i Alam A Ee MocRaY ad Raymond Joseph Tremblay, 25, and Arthur | RECOGNIZE FELLOW ? the Miami Beach Auditorium to-of the coalition: and : ow Dette: i) fat Clatke 2a George Cole, 26, both. of Toronto, admitted | Can you identify .this white- ed by women with ex- "Fo of the leading conténders' ork snuphod It A DEPUTY CHIEF CLARKE © oC On Cr on. ghd through their counsel, John Reagan, that they | firred animal which lives on a sive tastes. (For details for, She Bn be ted in . "eauversaty condition is general and not eon-| [He WOK this regular du.| Dro Into Hooper's Jewellery store, King street | {Ir Wa DUMINA SSC NUCL | please win to page tw) |james R. Holfa of Detroit and| Hoifa opponents" are bask ; MORALE NOT BAD ties and charged for paid to] west) Bowmanville, ember 24th. ._ i. | leather gloves? This i ~Times-Gazette Photo |Thomas i , : onthe threat tha 7 ALE ; the city, & te work done by| '=~ Tremblay is foreman on a local farm, [TOT SARTRE HIE Ta K J An x pernision pe a ried adh ul. 2 hr ign, move to unite thf Seattle and Sidney 5 ae tie Shot By Gunmen {gia iii srs : : . : a | x new SE Ts ep, ys BY -- . (a Fim of Stenificalt fans ehieal Practices w, whic © i. 8 : /magistrate noted that Bowmanville police had | yopry VERNON, Ind: (AP)--{state trooper Robert Pond, 28, (Deck Calif aitompled to get|sters fo. clonn house. within TOO : arge All | very few clues to work on, but that, working with A killer calmiy surrendered in a were wounded ia a gun Datléla coaiftion drive under way Mon-Idays is based. ! Sito of tn other police departments, they had arrested the |Mhicket foday in a mamhunt Lha|with the gunmen near North Ver foes 7 A : 4 : v : ; Y Nie In Fatal bedi iin wes | [ENR bE Chamber D : 8 A 4 ~ Yield Posts BT, sue nen io © NAMbEr Drops 3 ' Whitley, 26, of Granger, Tex., Was| The shooting spree started! A 3 unhurt when a mile-long line of | yout five miles south of Clinton, | L b R 1 i t 3 LE pn soo ean, zr cos Cal Crash + |Support Canada [reas Brae ids ii2 = Labor Resolution longer had a military guard as from the car of a deputy sheriff| Trooper Vogel stopped two at followed Arkansas national guar 8 5 men over from ral para- | i they left for home Monday but| BRIGHTON, Ont. (CP)--A 31-| they still rode in an army station year - old transport - driver was| wagon. charged with criminal igence OPPOSE FAUBUS following a head-on crash Mon- itize xed! 92Y between a car and tracior-| A group of citizens worked trajler in which six Toronto men | uietly Today to organize a show | were killed. of opposition to the way Gover- h bout nor Orval Faubus handled the ra-|, The accident oocusted about 7 sig ingegration problem at the|sf road 22 miles west of Belle- school. i Only about 30 national guards- Tlie ahd two, miley West, of here Only about paratroopers were on patrol duty when the 158rd Infantry took over shortly after 7 a.m. Military officials said patrolling at the school now 1" \will be done entirely by the na- n. took over at the| i he had held hostage. cars--one a Police have not identified Whit- ley's partner who was killed in a gun battle with police Monday night near North Yemen. eu they were stopped at a e. Dead after the gun battles in two states were troopers Dugald A. Pellot, 23, of Clinton, Mich., and William Kellems, 27, Scottsburgh, Ind. Michigan trooper Douglas A. On Trade Talks By HAROLD MORRISON Canadian Press Staff Writer MONT TREMBLANT, Que. (CP)--Canada was reported fo- day to have scored a victory in her plea for an 1l-country Com- monwealth conference to develop ways of expanding trade ampng for help. intercepted there are a lot of developments Re SPonding going on n the world which made it imperative that the Commonwealth should be streng- thened as a democratic instru- ment of the free worlds ASKS ACCEPTANCE and Pellot was gunned down. At Jaenson, Mich., station wagon--to check an apparent traffic viola- tion, Vogel was shot by one of the motorists but raioed his post troopers vehicles about two miles west of Clinton about 40 of miles northwest of Clinton, the two men bound and gagged Mrs. Gordon Lecromier, 35. They left VICTORIA (CP) -- A contro-|the Argument; thi versial resolution gn labor I |sentation of 1allon was described as "too to handle" and referred back by. the Canadian Chamber of Com- merce convention to its national policy committee. The declaration, submitted on Monday by the Edmonton Cham- ber of Commerce, concerned em- ployer-employee relations. The contentious part of the declaration dealt with strikes, a declaration fore it was id back fo © 5 k WOULD HALT STRIKES y The Edmonton declaration, as. presented to the national ¢ tee, proposed that "all strikes prohibited during the term ofa collective agreement," - The legislation would, f 5 proved by the federal gov ment, render sympathy Since they {men were on patrol duty whe: f E i i i-|her in a Stud ay after ri- patrol duty when| cy i004 is Glen F .|the partners and turn them into vents moved quickly to a cli-| Vogel, 27, was reported in seri- her in a Studebaker and escaped strike on a " lolst ai. {Students began arriving today. nam, miles north Ki Par a more powerful jc bloc./max at the ministerial meeting|ous condition at Ann Arbor, |in her 1955 Buick, Wa, subject under major discussion|jurisdictional strikes, BI borne Division gradually have re-| Meanwhile, the FBI stepped up| He escaped with face cuts, Fox| The four-day meeting of fi-| here after Finance Minister Don-|Mich., with pistol wounds in his| The Studebaker h ad been|at the convention, keynote ofeting and secondary boye: ? axed the cordon about the school. its search for leaders of the moblis the father of seven children. nance ministers, held to ider|ald F 8 Monday opened his/back, face and arms. stolen at Springville, Mich., west|which is Productivity, Key fojillegal. The resolution. said t "Street patricades were taken Violence, indicating it was about] The dead, all believed to have|the Canadian proposal, is sched- plea for acceptance of the con-| Lester Kenons, 38, i North ot 1 mn, ere ihe .gunmen|Prosperity. such 'strikes and laborssti recently arrived from Italy, are: |uled to wind up today with public|ference idea. Vernon poli and Ind : the other car and sta-| The more than 700 delegates| "are 'inconsistent 'with the tion wagon, attending the convention heard : and traffic began| to bring charges against some of | them. | In another development, fed- eral Judge Ronald N. Davies was assigned back to his home|Miguel Quattrin. court in North Dakota, but said] The accident had a touch of {he would retain jurisdiction in|irony about it: Fox, a driver for the Little Rock integration case.| Frontenac Transport Company, The judge, assigned here temp- Kingston, was ing a load of | jorarily, refused to modify court|tiles to Toronto when the trailer! orders for immediate integration|collided with the car carrying the {of Central High. This brought | six men employed by. Toronto . Of Action - him heavy e¢riticism in Little! Tile and Mosaie Limited. Rock. His replacement is Judge The WASHINGTON (AP) -- Four Roy W. Harper, a Missouri Dem-|anchi's -<guthern governors are carving ocrat. Davies is a Republican. "=. Yhite House today at leas an of action" for solving MODERATES MOVE s of troop-enforced school] The -moves by"moderate on in Little Rock, Ark./took several turns down Monday Governors Peter Bottos, Carlo Beltrame, Mario Luvisotto, Antonio Bian- chi, 27. Giorgio Orazi, 22, and car was registered in Bi- ) name. His sister said jearlier today at his home that {group of tile-setters for Kingston | groups where they were working on new hospital, munique, word was received of ment, agreement of the six . country west European common market and planned to participate in the so-called Bianchi left at 5 a.m. with the|union of western Europe. ceremonies. and an official com- dian' way of life." atime. erstond. L ib or al S Ch oose Leader In January wealth approval of the Canadian scheme, (See Page 4 for comments As ministers drafted the com- OTTAWA (CP) ~ A national{The former prime minister has Liberal convention to choose a announced he is resigning his new leader likely will be held in|leadership as soon as a successor Ottawa next January, It may|is chosen. ' Also coumder Pg praisal of The federation president said, § the June 10 election defea however, there will be no major President Duncan K. MacTay-|Shift in what the party stands ish of the National Liberal Fed.|for- He sald the party believes d/eration Monday said Ottawa ap:|\'s basic principles appeal to the Pe people of Canada, But the party § the fall of the French govern- France had ratified the industrial free trade Canadian officials, while mak- g no direct reference to the ren ch situation, overnor Frank Dement oo k i at if nobody| a. with 4 better one "I FRENCH GOVERNMENT FALLS definitely infend to offer a plan of ac'ion" for ending. the inte | ao ey from the Arkansas state capital. > Joining him in the meeting as Caretaker Cabinet | pea red in prospect a the site ofl 0c modern and would make as the time. He was interviewed any changes needed to keep pace following a one-day meeting of with the times. the federation's 32-member exec-| He said the committee came to no firm recommendation on'an utive committee, Mr. MacTavish said the meet- actual date, although the Ottawa locale appeared firm enough. It ing went into the question of a reappraisal of party principles.|was the most likely site because the federation does not feel it Rod Certainly, he added, the question should move its substantial staff representatives of the solitiern governors sqpierence or hi would come before the eonven- ernors Leroy Collins Avidree tion called to choose a successor|fo another city for the conven. Luther Hodges of North Carolina \ : tion and Theodore McKeldin of Mary- By GODFREY ANDERSON even partial self-rule for Algeria were angry. over either the price to Opposition Leader St, Laurent. jand. PARIS (AP)--A tak .|promised France a rough time in|ceili th de- A ) caretaker gov gh ti ceilings or the government wage | The Tennessee EO plan| ernment ruled France today after the current United Nations Gen-| freeze. t clined to give National Assembly defeated|eral Assembly, where Arab de- PLEASED FEW ' 13 the before he had ou lined them: Premier Maurice Bourges-Maun-| mands for Algerian independence his Se iwer. But in advance 0ury on his proposal to give par- are mounting. dent Doechiaot caucus of the state tial sell-rule to Algeria. {AS EVIDENCE ecutives and their afternoon; ~ Bourges-Maunoury, 42-year-old] Bourges-Maunoury had hoped in intment_ with the president, middie - of - the - roader who has|to present his plan to the assem. It would have créated nt said that "I amr cau-been in office only since June 13,|bly as evidence that France was seven local assembliek in 4 sly optimistic " {immediately handed his resigna-|trying to meet the demands of|bellious North African' tou RIENDLY BASIS tion to President Rene Coty. [the Arab nationalists, at least in|/At least two would ON FRIENDL SI The Algerian hill pleased few] in France's wide" political spec-110 Killed In Train Crash trum BAN CANNSTATT, Germany (AP)--A passenger train '§ smashed into a train unloading commuters in the railway station here today, killlmg 10 persons and injuring about 40. e 12-car passenger train virtually destroyed the last car of the other tarin. | ta Orders Killing Of Enemies PORT AU PRINCE (AP)--The ruling 1 Coty refused to accept the res-| part, dominated by Fren There was evidence the gover- jgnation "'at this time and in the| Coty began his search for a Who fear they mags mors feel that the approach to/present circumstances." Bour-| man to head France's 24th gov-|by the Arabs in Eisenhower 'over the Little Rock | ges - Maunoury agreed fo stay ernment since the war against a|rule. France wou should - be: on -alonly 'until 'his successor can be background of econorpic unrest. [final sovereignty, military junta, ontroversy : A x : friendly, courteous basis, with|found The unpopularity of Bourges:| The right win eeking to 'avert a possible widespread political rebellion, || the thought that as spokesmen The no-confidence vote of 279 Maunoury's austerity. program to|measuve for fear Id the people of Haiti today to kill on sight anyone they | 4 for millions of people ih "thelto 253 was short of the absolute combat inflation, particularly his the Algerian Ara! NE isider ,an enemy of the state. } 4 southern and border slates Sey Majority o the otal 596 depu-|price-fixing measures, certainly! thority and migh Ww EX] { Duncan' X, MacTavish, Jeff. ; peat itu © ; trying to be 'helpful In ajties which wou ave forced|contributed to his defeat. Butch secede from Frg mi 5 a2 : : a aad] S A DYOS ER grave situation. Bourges - Maunoury to resign.jers, vegetable growers, metalland Communis foup of mex son, mitted To Rev ew Grain Marketing | president: of the National Lib-y ing. in JOttaw: A 3 But a couple of protesting This left Coty free to ask theworkers, shipyard hands and posed the bill {aya CA mn Past Pris Ap Appointment of a committee to review eral - Federation, sets' ¢ Jan: | execuli¥é. He motes were sounded outside the premier io stay in office ta A 2iiroadmen all were on striké|gerians were 'the back row pi ion od i tre Mipgdures in Ontario was announced today uary convention 'in Ottawa fo | delegates, left fomroal e Hiectian 'afiar threatening to' walk' out. Thavidrafting it. = Ted Stewart front row, frof Goodfellow, amin. 1 choose & new party leader ap- | Immigratioh 'Mig ! . 'rms; n Gi Mooney, educy 2 . ' : \ . ¥ . 5 - oo

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