A i TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising .. All other calls ......... RA 3-3492 RA 3-3474 Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronic THE DAILY. TIMES-GAZETTE WEATHER REPORT Sunny and mild today. Cloudy with: showers Friday. E al a ad ais g VOL. 86--NO. 254 Authorized As Sssond Clete Moll OSHAWA-WHITBY, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1957 8 Cents Per Copy THIRTY. \ STUDY RUSSIAN SECRET POLICE FILE Dr. C. Easton Rothwell, left, ' director of the Hoover Institu- Alon at Stanford University, holds dossier which includes ar- rest order for Leon Trotsky, - Paris to the U.S. in 1926, were opened at the director Witold The files were is assistant Sworakowaski. after secret files, shipped from Y part of collection of Basil Mak- institution in | | Palo Alto," California. At right | | PC's Amend 'Advance Cash (Grain Bill OTTAWA (CP) -- The govern- ment Wednesday amended its Prairie grain cash advances bill, | The government in the Com- mons, made a last-minute change |that wiped out a clause whi I] | estDrive | : The 1957 Greater Oshawa Community Chest Drive still lagged far behind its objective of $156,90 stipulated that a farmer who today, but chest executives were hopeful that the tide' had not delivered enough grain # to cover an advance received in one crop year would not he eligible for an advance in the {next year. | The amendment would ensure| {that congestion at elevators, re: | ' |venting deliveries, would not pre- {vent farmers from obtaining the $3,000 maximum advance avail |able, | The change will bar only farm- lers who are in default because they decline to deliver grain on which they received an advance. preak, Unemployment also took| He paid special tribute to oie) =30 Children Escape Death In Bus Crash TORONTO (CP) -- Fifty chil- | lakoff, last pro-communist Rus- sian ambassador to France. Under an agree.nent, the files were to be kept closed and secret until Maklakeff's death. He died in Switzerland last July. Scot Wins Nobel Prize OLM (AP) -- A Scot- biologist today was obel prize for awarded the for his fundamental re-| Foi the matter inside the est of wo t Pos i phvics: lor, DEIPRg AIL| sip oy Bd BR y ¢hemistry prize was to Sir Alexander who has been professor of or. {bic chemistry at Cambridge | ersity since '1944. Todd, 50,| is chairman of the British advis-| council on scientific research. | "he joint winners of the physics rd are Dr. Chen Ning Yang, ear-old professor of physics| at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, N.J., and Dr Dao Lee, 30, professor of sics at Columbia University in ew York who is on leave and| also at the Princeton institute, They removed important ob- on nucleotides and co-enzymes, which includes the compounds! that are present in the nuclei of | cells. Together with proteins they form part of virus ules, | 8 {dren escaped unhurt today from| a chain-reaction vehicle pileup in- volving a school bus, a transport truck and 11 cars on fog-shrouded Highway 10. | Three adults were taken to ies Blood Bandit pital in Brampton, two miles south of the accident scene. One Robs Spokane Plasma Bank of them, John Lagemann of To- ronto, may have to undergo a SPOKANE, Wash. (AP)--A PO- leg amputation. lite gunman, who was careful not| ny. s pileup began when two to Bolt his Weapon at a female| ry collided in front of the schoo! attendant, robbed the Spokane pn, . By driver Wallace Foster, blood bank Bf Jour pints of blood 95 "of Cheltenham, slammed on Wednesday night. | his ! "I won't hurt you, my IR id Drakes, one of a Sertain (yuo of sugar, f al one a nitrogen se. A wha » Ty i The truck dliarge sumber of these are then|*s a hs, bound together to form macro. he 8i the man. whe tthe side of the bus molecules. By breaking these| down, Todd and his co-workers have been getting at not only the| biological function of the basic| elements but also their chemical reactions. Common's Salaries Won't Be Increased OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis-| the yobber told Billievelyn Mili, VISiDUity was limited to 10. feet) ) bank. "bavaly avoided Sdon't net. FO collision belw T od dq: ? aned peared "very calm and sweet," into the wreckage of fandom cars held a small pistol in his hand ahead, bowling over three per- when he approached the counter sons on the road. where she was typing blood sam- Tiffee more southbound cars pra hit the back of the bus, knocking | I'd like to have five units fae! of the children to' the floor. | of low titer (reaction) type O | |would change and that many citizens -- so far, de- linquent in their obligations towards the drive--would = co-operate without delay and thus help to put the campaign over, COMMITTEES LAG . hi i Like it : canvassers in 'this group will " de amu y Chest iiives give us their results before leav- year, notably Toronto, the Osh.|in8: Let us clean up all the busi- ova campaign was. dealt {ness we can before November 9,' a "4 2 severe blow by the influenza out-| MM: McConkey said. its toll, but these setbacks are group of canvassers--the women, practically non - existant today| "'They are right on .the job, and there is a greater spirit of|bless them, and visiting our of- optimism around headquarters/fice several times daily with as a result, |cards," he said. Lew W. McConkey, executive- LARGE FACTORIES secretary of the fund drive, again| Large factories, with a few ex emphasized that some of the| x committees in his organization | ceptions. have not turned in their A ; : | contributions yet, but the returns were lagging in their work. He| OD . expecially pointed out the follow. have been good from small in- ing groups -- Special Names, ' ££ a One of the more favorable re Garages, Bakeries, Outlying Stores, Dentists. |sponses has been that from the Mr. McConkey pointed out that|8roup at the Oshawa airport, in the weather had favored can- charge of George Slocombe, man- vassers and again asked this ager of the Ontario County Fly- group' to do all in their power|ing Club. Their total already is to get their lists turned in|more than 500 per cent higher promptly. {than their 1956 .total. "For instance, the deer huni-| The downtown retail stores to ers will be busy tomorrow and date have also topped their 1956 it is our sincere hope that any'figure by a considerable margin. | Sweep Winners LEW McCONKEY | Provinces | . ¥ 'To Discuss 'Tax Sharing | OTTAWA (CP) -- All 10 pre- |miers have agreed to atfend a {federal - provincial conference {here Nov, 25 and 26 to review {present tax-sharing agreements, | However, two of them--Manitoba {and Saskatchewan -- have asked {that the question of aid to muni- |cipalities be included on the agenda, along with other topics. Letters from all provincial | premiers were tabled in the Cong- mons Wednesday by Prime Min- ister Diefenbaker. They were in reply to his letter Sept. 16 pro- posing the conference and sug- gesting the dates, There has been no official tal t, in Mr, Diefenbaker's Cry And Yawn rt ands of dobar Bilston i n A await TAD i e held $140,000. tears. 'ancouver saw | Three persons $140, ager yawned and went back totic on bed. A low-paid Trenton, Ont. one held a half share and five worker was amazed at the num-had $56,000 tickets gn Heritiere. ber of new friends he suddenly| Two -- possibly three -- Cana- made. A Kitchener father of dians held $28,000 tickets on | 7 |shooting of his wife last summer, # |was found guilty today of man- ? islaughter and d to PICTON (CP) ~ Clarence A. Jones, 52-year-old Picton grocer charged with murder in the PICTON GROCER GET LEVEN-YEAR SENTEN Wife Slayer Pleads Guilty plea without leaving the room, Crown witnesses d three-day trial testified Mr. 3 Mrs. Jones were heavy 1 years in penitentiary. Ontario Supreme Court said after sentencing: "You have been convicted of a severe case of manslaughter, but there have been many extenuat- ing circumstances." Jones had originally been charged with murder in th shooting of his 51-year-old wife Mary at their nearby summer home July 17, © This morning Jones' counsel, Arthur Martin of Toronto, en- tered a plea of guilty to man- slaughter. The jury accepted the! Itage, three miles Prithy (nesses this evidence. Mr, Justice D. A, Wells of the --- become a last few years" and to drink much before b intoxicated. Dr, Gerald Allison testified he exami fot the rifle to inti nto giving him a bot which he thi fw "fle Jones' body July of LIQUOR QUESTION Alberta Of More EDMONTON (CP) -- A firm |vote in favor of a greater var corded Whether this will eventually mean such things as cocktail bars will be determined by the government. first in Alberta since the prov: ince voted to end prohibition in of those vot would like a wider variety of liquor, beer and wine. The government, however, the vote made it plain before der ax. AHA RAFAH province, ny _ Most premiers in their fet + Premi wan, meeting deal tions of "unfinished letter or elsewhere, of what pro-| ree ques- business expression of opinion binding mand 1 It also mad a They "wit attend "the" conference. fety of liquor outlets was re-|l in Alberta Wednesday. it Results of the liquor plebiscite, h outlets for sale| In Fgvor Outlets: ang 1923, showed roughly 64 per cent|*8 that the result would be only an negative blood," the gunman said quietly and in technically-correct language. Miss Miller replied there were i only four pints of such blood ing stock and the man said he'd take. them. After getting the blood, the| stacles to the understanding of ter Diefenbaker said Wednesday man asked for four administra- the functions of the atom and the upiverse by proving that the par- ity law in 'nuclear physics was WIOng. AWARDS WORTH $42,000 Each a ward carried a cash value of about $42,000. They are te last Nobel prizes of 1957. n making the chemistry award, the Swedish academy cited particularly the British biol- "there has been no consideration and no intention of increasig the indemnities of members ts liament." He was replying in the Com- mons to a member who asked for assurances that the government is not thinking of suggesting an increase, Members of the Commons and the Senate now are paid $8,000 a year plus a $2,000 tax-free e ogist's work in the last 15 years pense allowance. {tion sets -- hookups of plastic tubes, filters and needles used for giving the blood. Then he walked out. Police speculated the blood may have been taken for an il- legal operation or a wounded person. " | Two northbound cars piled into [seven didn't take time off work|Fairy Stone, third. One ticket|{rom previous federal-provincia each other (rying to avoid the| wreckage, and four more going an the other way collided or spun nto the ditch for the same Tear on d said he'd stick with his 1951iholder listed for Fairy Stone car. |failed to show up in the official The Irish Sweepstakes Wednes- sweepstakes result and a check day showered about $1,400,000 was under way. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CP) The quiet diplomacy of Secre- tary-General Dag Hammarskjold | ; {appeared today to have warded |been inclined to call formally on Dag's Diplomacy Wards Off Split OTHER PRIZES Besides the fat slice of more| than $825,000 on the first three winners, there were 282 Cana- dians each drawing $1,100 for| tickets on 82 of the original 85 entries, Thirty - eight horses started Wednesday. definitely aimed at aiding this.| About 1,550 persons won resid- Neither Syria nor the middle{ual or consolation prizes ranging powers, until Wednesday, had/from $2,300 to $56. The winners: Syria For $140,000--Mary Schiedel, 41] talks: Aid to municipalities, re- sources development and the na- [tional hospita] insurance plan. Premier Campbel! of Manitoba, emphasizing the financial needs |of municipalities, urged that rep- resentatives of those local gov- ernments attend the conference as "official members." Israeli Minister Out Of Hospital JERUSALEM (AP) -- Foreign Minister Golda Meir, one of five ROME (AP)--Italy's Commun- ist party organ today predicts Russia's leaders will issue a "severe verdict" against Marhal Zhukov and hints he will be ac- cused of "Bonapartism." L'Unita says the ruling Praesid-| jum of the Communist party cen- tral committee has completed a| two-day session on the case of | the ousted defence minister Tues- day night. The Moscow correspondent of |P® Communist reporters have bees able to get more information by the censors than other Westers reporters. Boffa's dispatch reports in er Comm rs in the West that Was Jemoved hecdute he, party political activi military forces. But Bolla that he learned the also took up the * case" of the off an East-West voting split inithe assembly or action. the United Nations General As-land Russia had been content to sembly on the Turkish - Syrian keep the issue in world promi- Kitchener; William Richardson, government leaders wounded in 22, Trenton, Ont.; Manny Allen, the bombing of Parliament Tues- Boffa interprets The dispatch, by Gites) Boffa, suggests that Zhukov, ike Western diplomats in Me |border dispute. nence through the assembly de-|Calgary. day, was released from the hos- jtal today. e Napoleon, had wanted to advance [rite his ambitio were reported still from command of the armed| without : forces to fulfil a "political am. | bition perhaps unlimited," {Since par, Boffa says the Praesidium's| " decisions will be published and matglal wil get 'a 'new': joh The Mocow press and radio still" Meanwhile the Soviet Ams have made no mention of Zhukov newspaper Red Star urges beyond the bare announcement of {ary men to "rally more elo his ouster, however. around the Communist The L'Unita dispatch wasistrengthen their cleared by Soviet censorship. the people." -- jer, |P Larry Bernier, | ther word on the Zhukov Chief Nikita KI Tuesday nigh Farm Price Prop System Proposed | OTTAWA (CP) -- The govern-/be asked fo pass measures to ment proposes to introduce a assure farmers a "fair share' of § widely-extended system of price Canada' national income. 4 props for farm products in new Just what vardstick the govern. attempts to stabilize farm prices ment will use for measuring a and increase the flow of revenue "fair share" has not yet been tof producers. made clear. There was a Sug- i014 bate, and the Western position-- For $56,000 -locay ' 2 Shortly after Hammarskiold| 2 ¢ strong undercove. backing Kitchener; Ronnie Ellsworth and| Hospital authorities sald Pre. f |announced Wednesday night that : J Ie A . ..|mier"David Ben-Gurion could go he planned a statement, possibly|by the United States--had been|F. L. Burt, both Toronto; How-|} me "Githin two days. He was / |toady on the Western proposal all for a local settlement of the ard Smith, 54, Port Alberni, B.C., wounded slightly when a hand that he intervene in the dispute, dispute undet mediation SHered ad Harvey Ashman, 32, North|grenade hurled from the gallery assembly President Sir Leslie{by King Saud of Saudi : a $28 Hugh McLeod, 80 by 2 young Iraqi Jew exploded a Munro of New Zealand ruied a T {000 3 + 0, yard away. . | . 'oronto; Douna Patricia Aubert," M Meir le b : i > SUmp- . " rg, Meir was pale but smiling [phous postponement oil 10750 No Election Till 4, Vancouver, An H. K. Lean, when she was brought to her car a. m. EST Friday et . C 1d 1 S {hometown unlisted, was the un-lin a wheel chair. She was Jaco, EST Frida oispiial be Spring, olawe aY8 certain winner. wounded in the right foot. e Wester : vas i h LONDON, Ont, (CP) -- CCF |aimed at thwarting a Soviet Ant | {backed Syrian resolution cxtting | pader Coldwell said Wenngsday Jnvolved will Be a lifting of the gestion in some quarters the {for a UN commission to investi-| fo 00" spring i lid on federal kinds available for vardstick might be farm produe- {gate Syria's charges of Turkish "yo ""eoiiuell referred to. a this purpose, boosting the ceiling tion costs. ; | aggression, Rothe vig VR b# $50.000.000 to a new high of Currently./ price support has yg : | Faced with two opposing reso-|Diefenbaker i n House of Com} fag doa. os peen extended to butter, eggs. [lutions for assembly considera mons Tuesday that an election griculture Minjster Harkness pork, skimmed milk, fowl and| tion today, Munro said he made|will "not be too long delayed." ye notice of a Commons resol- turkeys, In most cases the sup- ; ; wi , 8 é Bg ) A i 4 & the postponement on the grounds Geographically it is impos. uffon Wednesday. the Sustomary WOR, BHice is below the current CE Do er a pot a ible Ea cn. elgotian peor geliminary move hefore legisla- market price, 2 ' ' "|ste 0 4 ol : fio is introduced. Both Hon. The new legislation. it is under- quest for more time for consult spring.' Mr. Coldwell Ja, 0, Paul Martin (L -- Essex East) stood, would be applicable virtu- DIES AT HOSPITAL [ater J is too difficult to organize it be- fd Hazen Argue (CCF Assini-/ally to everv commercial farm | This followed persistent reports cause of the snow and climate bata) urged in the House thatiproduct, Products to be covered George Walsh, La Salle (Wednesday night that some kind|in many outlying regions. Neither| other business be pushed aside will be named in the legislation Court. for many years doors, of compromise settlement was in the candidates nor party leaders| and that the measure be intro- but the way will be open to have| man at the Regent Theatre, 'the works, and Munro's ruling/want the expense or bother im- fied immediately. Mr. Hark- the cabinet add other items to| Who died at the Oshawa Gen- was regarded as having beenimediately." . 8 made Wy direct reply the list later . eral Hospital this morning, The he bill would be in line with! The scheme would be admin.| funeral service will be held at | gressive Conservative elec- istered by a board, as in the ex-| the Armstrong Funeral Chapel 1 ron promises to aid farmers isting operation, and there would| on Saturday. Mr. Welsh was fight a 'cost-price" squeeze. The be an advisory committee prob-| prominent in music, dramatic | throre speech. at the opening of ably made ur of producers and| and 'Canadian Legion circles * . Pariiament, said members would |perhaps consumers for many years. oi r : Find Body Of Woman, 71 BOWMANVILLE -- The hody of Mrs. Hattie Moffat, 71, al way en P n Irms was found by police in her apartment today after a neighbor complained of a dog barking in the woman's apartment. Dr. Charles Austin, coroner, said death was from natural ver a o 0 down causes. Mrs. Moffat complained of illness Wednesday night. . . | Chief of Police Eric Smith found the body after forcing open the front door, LONDON (AP) -- The leader bent on obtaining an unspecified| Some 7,500,000 British workers o of 400,000 British railwaymen pyt 'substantial' wage increase besides the railwaymen are de sounded an angry new challenge ior its members. The Macmillan today to the Conservative goV- government had warned the Brit- |manding pay raises totalling ap- {proximately £400,000,000. Arab League Backs Syria CAIRO (Reuters)--The nine-country Arab League council ernment's wage holddown. ish transport commission, which Ending a two-day economic de today unanimously decided to support Syria's complaints bate in Commons, Chancellor of the Exchequer Peter Thorney- croft restated the government's refusal to help with pay raises. "The government does not in- tend to find any more cash than Arrested Employes Released they have & y p "| Set » fliey Lave rea Jound: oF a BUDAPEST (Reuters) Three arrested employes of the a crisis atmosphere," said James pinch off much of Britain's cru- "Wages have been running ahead British Legation in Budapest, one of whom.had been held for Campbell, head of the National|cial export trade. Success by thelof the nation's ability to pay| two months, were Yeleased Dy. Hungarian potice today, They Uion of 'Railwaymen. "It mustirailwaymen in winning raiseg/them or to find the goods to| are 36-year-old interpreter Joszef Molnar, Elemer Kovacs, be held responsible if a crisisimight open the doors for raises match them--and that is wha 56, a telephone operator, and Mrs, Clarissa Batyka, 49, prin. | develops." fall across the strained British needs to be kept firmly in every-| eipal of a school run by the legation for children of British €ampbell said his union still is'economy. |body's mind." fo and other foreign diplomats in Budapest, i ¢ The government, meanwhile, runs the state-owned liries, that won a 307-to-258 endorsement In it will riot subsidize pay increases the House of Commons of its = out of the treasury. to grant wage increases de-| = a fsa fo meet the. bigher cost ECONOMY STRAINED of living. The vote was on party! A test of the government's. de, termination might result in a lines. "The government has created | costly railroad strike which would against Turkey about threats to her security, The decision was cabled to United Nations Secretary-General Dag Ham- marskjold TURKS ON THE MARCH NEAR THE SYRIAN BORDER a; Turkish troops swing through "key apparently kept its guard | the United Nations recently | ed States backing a plop an unidentified Turkish village | up while a tense situation con- against Syria. of: sear the Syrian border as Tur- | tified in the Middle East, In ' RUScis MAD accused the Unit- or a J