Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 9 Nov 1957, p. 1

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TIMES-GAZETTE TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising .. RA 3-3492 All other calls ... . RA 83-3474 Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETT WEATHER REPORT Occasional snowflurries today. Sun- ny, eold Sunday. Authorized As Second Sis Jal Mell Post Office Department, Ottews VOL. 86--NO. 262 OSHAWA-WHITBY, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1987 Prise Not Over 8 Cents Per Copy EIGHTEEN rowel IN OSHAWA'S MAYORALTY Attersley To Run Ald. Thoma Ald. Gordon B. Attersley will| run for mayor of Oshawa at the coming municipal elections. The alderman made his announcement late Friday night. "I have been on city council for six years," stated Ald. Attersley, "and I want to make my exper- fence available to the residents of Oshawa." "Unfortunately," he continued, "this will effect the removal of several aldermen from council. ! We have had an excellent city council in 1957." { Ald. Attersley announced that | he would base his election plat- } form on general efficiency and lowest possible millrate for 1958 DECISION NEXT WEEK Ald. Attersley's decision brings to three the number of candi- dates who will compete for the mayor's position in 1958. Ald. Christine Thomas has not yet decided whether to run for mayor. In a telephone interview the alderman said that she had been urged by many organiza- tions to run. "I am not vying for the top position," she said. "I have the general welfare of the city at heart. If four or possibly five al- dermen would run for mayor, it would remove experienced men from council. This is the danger I can see." The alderman felt that would definitely decide week. Ald. Walter Branch has decided this week to run again for alder- awa must have man. The alderman has just fin- ATTERSLEY the traffi GORDON board of works and committee. This leaves only Ald. Gifford she next 3 new arena. cil. He has been a member of the Play hockey, Girl Beaten |a campaign which he hopes wil [put him in the mayoralty sea when the |are counted Dec. 2 | Strongly emphasizing The day has arrived when Osh- Tco many Oshawa people today ished his first year on city coun- must go elsewhere to skate and and to see hockey | Alderman |Lyman Gifford today teed off on civic election ballots that a s- May |Brady, Ald. John W. Dyer and |Ald. Dr. J. Edward Rundle on the | waiting list. Neither of them has| indicated his intentions one way| lor the other. Ald. Atterlsey, the most recent candidate for mayor, has been| chairman of the city council fi.) nance committee for the past two years. BORN IN OSHAWA He has also served in the past ! on the property committee. In 1957 the alderman served as a Imember of the labor relations |committee, the Oshawa Childrens' | Arena Commission and the Public Library Board. The candidate was born in Osh- § awa. He was educated at the |OCVI. He has a record of 26 years |of employment with General Mo- |tors of Canada, Ltd., and works {now in the parts procurement de- partment. He is a member of the Oshawa Kinsmen Club and of St. George's c Anglican Church, where he start- ed as a choir boy. He is married John G.'and has three children. Wants City Arena "overwhelming" support of the majority of Oshawa's citizens, "The people are thoroughly fed, up with the present arena set up. The Children's Arena is a credit to the community. It is efficient- ly run and well managed, but it only supplies part of the answer. We need an arena for adults. Our| people want action, not a lot of] idle words vague promises and confused thinking," he said, Mr. Gifford said he did no 1 t Al Some 26 planes, COMB PACIFIC FOR 44 ON MISSING AIRLINER Searchers Spot Blinking Lights HONOLULU (AP) -- A Pan, From Flintridge, near Los An- American Stratocruiser carrying geles, an amateur radio operator |86 passefigers and a crew of said he had been told by a cols |eight was definitely down in the league on Wake Island that the [Pacific today and reports cir-|plane was down about 957 miles culated blinking lights were east of the Hawaiian Islands. {sighted near it's last check point.| The coast guard sent three The four-engined Romance of| cutters into the search while the {the Skies presumably would have tankers Monmouth and Avila run out of gas at 3 a.m. PST. were diverted east of Honolulu: It was due in Honolulu from San|Two submarines, en route here Francisco at 9:45 Friday night. (from San Diego, also were The coast guard Jeporied a/brought into the search. military air transport plane ra-| dioed that blinking lights were SISTER SHIP DITCH sighted about 120 miles north of| A sister ship to the Romance, |where the plane last reported in,|the Sovereign of the Skies, That would be from 900 to 1,000 ditched in mid-Pacific a year ago miles east of Honolulu. and all 31 aboard were picked five coast{up by the coast guard weather guard vessels, two navy sub- ship Pontchartrain. Coincident marines, four merchant ships ally, the Sovercign's number was and the liner Matsonia joined the 90943, the Romance is 90944, search force. Hoping against hope, the coast {guard had searchlights turned on STILL HOPEFUL at Pearl Harbor in case the "The aircraft must be pre- plane had power trouble making sumed to be down," Robert B.|the compass and radio inopera. Murray Jr.,, Pan American ex- tive. ecutive vice-president, said. "The| Brown, a father of five, is a {crew is experienced and well 15-year Pan American veteran. trained and we are still hopeful."| The passenger list included the Murray said two Pan Amer- names Hugh Clark and family, ican planes would leave from Scott, Nancy, Kimi, Bruce and San Francisco at daybreak to Anna, of Midland, Mich, and join in the search. Robert Alexander, his wife and | The search covers a 100-mile two children of Los Altos, Calif. wide area between 650 and 1,100 Alexander is a Pan American 'miles offshore. employe. new arena was one of his pet projects -- '"We must overcome this attitude of indifference and| inertia in cegpain high civic} favor a fund raising plan by pr |vate subscription as such a plan owuld be slow and not popular, "I will have much more to say | this plan during the next few Unemployment Is Not Serious --PM OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis-|as 9.5 per cent of the labor ter Diefeshakes has described force, With these words And Kicked In OCVI Lot places" -- he pledged himself to| | prompt and efficient action in the On i A 17-year-old OCVI student was early construction of an arena days," he added, attacked and beaten by a man| which the city could be proud of. Mr. Gifford said he was inter- with a flashlight in the ocvi| He continued: ested in the proposed plan for a Jot Friday night at ap-| "Do you know that 22 Oshawa |civie sports centre, including an . 8:25 p.m. as she has hockey" leagues wil play their A arena, made by representatives ut her way to the school's annual | |tire schedules out of town this/of the South Ontario Agriculture © mmencement exercises. Jawintet hicsiise we have no arena Society at a recent aie said s? Do you J i scores of our figure. skaters, and| * Yor Bed] fans who to see hockey, | the must travel elsewhere for such) ing, esp leasures? This situat or) is .de- we ; ~_OCYL HONORS OUTSTANDING BOY AND GIRL STUD of The Osh yfataniing gir) ao Boy I gE en Cane. FF, the The | Edmondson Va t yi | teachers' certificate at then | sit 7 ¢ eg a i ded i tario Tepchers' pai Toron- Vocati: hal os itute for the | outstanding boy was awar: arioret Dangey (right, to. ee: ldman (left), Mr, Mrs. erts, (centre) Johool 2 he te ad a Dancey, 6 Rogers road. Both | two award 169 Warren avenue. The Misses | graduates are pi hls for their ~--Daily Times iy Dloyed, he beta | PILOTS' STRIKE Blackout = ER Refusing Jobs sure that, to the greatest degree "It seems clear," |possible, no individual shall suf- "that the strategy of the high News Of ews Said Illegal 'Moon Dog OTTAWA (CP) -- Federal au- manner jn which they proceeded ter.' |command of the Liberal party is In this connection some amend- t, spread fear and gloom and LONDON (Reuters) thorities have told 52 St. Law-/was in no way consistent with Plackout on news about the dog rence ship pilots their action in normal labor relations." They |ments. to the Unemployment In-| preach doom and to pretend that | surance Act are being considered where unemployment exists this {he said without elaborating. (Progressive Conservative) gov. n | n Sputnik II continued today as Jalusing assignments appears il- had quit their 'ork before the (Ne world wondered if she was It was also suggested here Fri federal government received dead. their demands. Mr. Diefenbaker said unem- ernment is to blame." day to a pilots' delegation that Moscow Radio's regular early The government group also met ployment as yet is far below The levelling off is due in part that of 1954 and 1955 when con- fo international conditions, he the men, who handle vessels be-| morning news bulletins merely tween Montreal and Kingston, Friday with representatives of repeated Friday night's com- Canadian deepsea shipping oper- sidered as a percentage of the said. But he blamed the former total working force. In 1954 and Liberal government for not main. 1955 -- the last peak unemploy- taining Canad a's international ment period -- the percentage markets and for monetary poli might be liable to penalties. munigue abouc the second Soviet The delegates were asked to ; earth satellite. ; have the pilots reconsider. They ators and Great Lakes operators." This communique the first topped handling ships Monday, The operators outlined conse quences of pilots' refusal to take on n_ assignments, an official said lor at 'anada radio network ol Cy free-time political series The Nation's Business, he said, is: the OCVI Theft Trial Is Adjourned PETERBOROUGH (CP)--The Crown completed its case Friday against Kenneth Soutter, 49, a {former union official charged with theft by failing to account| for $9,000 in funds belonging to Local 599 of the International Union of Electrical, Radio and |Machine Workers (CLC). The trial was adjourned to Nov. 25. Thursday night, Crown Attor- ney John A. Bradshaw agreed to withdrawal of a second charge that Soutter converted some $10,- 000 in union funds to his own use between July 1, 1954 and Feb. 21, 1957: He said, however, he would not agree to the count being dismissed. BRUINS RUIN 'HUNTERS DAY CHAPLEAU. (CP) -- Hunt- ing is.over for two unidenti- fied United States moose nimrods----the bruins ruined it. The two camped on Neme- gosenda Lake in this North- ern' Ontario area and the first day their tents and eider- downs were ripped to pieces by bears. The second day most of their food vanished and their gasoline was spilled Angered, the third day they borrowed new equipment and went hunting bear. The fourth day another bear stole the carcass of the one they killed That home, ; 8 | 3] griculture Society plan, but I A Mr. Gifford, a fiery veteran of _ like to inves! ate it fur. attendant, struck her om the face | the political wars and one of the|ther before giving it my whole with the flashlight after hitting most outspoken members of city hearted support." a blow on the head from be- council said nh. had pledged him-| Mr. Gifford said he would give self to the new arena project be-| his views on attracting new indus. rls he believed it had theltry to Oshawa next week. Found Not Guilty dar cheese now is 34 cents a pound. In reply to a question in the House of Commons from Blake Huffman, Liberal member for the Ontario riding of Kent John Charlton, parliamentary assist- ant io Agriculture Minister Hark- ness, said the question of as- sistance to Ontario cheese pro- ducers was a matter for the gov- ernment to decide, He said when a decision was made it would be announced, The cheese producers them selves were not immediately availale for comment. Execu- tive members of the Ontario cheese producers marketing board met here Friday with rep- resentatives of the trade to dis- cuss the setting of winter prices on rodder cheese. Their meeting broke up about noon and most of them left town before they cold be reached for comment. It was U.S. Changes Plan Will Launch Moon By ELTON C. FAY WASHINGTON (AP)--The U.S | | amounted to 6.9 and went as high cies Which froze development, Due To I ity that failed to mention the dog-- stating they were overworked created speculation she may) KITCHENER (CP) -- Richard the Watérloo widow in the Beam and lacked job security. have perished in the globe-gird- Beam, the 30-year-old man who apartment May 31. Two cons The pilots, who met with 3 gov ass sald. ling race through space. once plunged his hand into a stables earlier quoted Beam as ernment group headed by Deputy Rev. Dr. Soper to return to Russian territory of Mrs. Augusta Taylor, 47. nia and "most certainly would ister Hees. from the Sul, The broadcast| The Jury brought pack a ver-\not be able to distinguish be- They want compulsory pilotage In UAW Hall gave no details, dict of "not guilty by reason of {ween right and wrong" the day fees to be paid into their organ- ~ CAN'T REACH SCIENTISTS [insanity " th : 4 1| MTS: Taylor was shot. ization by all vessels traversing) Rev. Dr. Donald Soper will con In Moscow, no one seemed) efore retiring, they were told Dr. C. 8. Tennant of Toronto, {the area, including those whose treatment immediately. : . vight at 7:45 p.m. in UAW Hail Soviet scientists. Their telephone , |found disturbance of emotional want to be sure pilotage revenue ns a Arlt Tis subject will Numbers and whereabouts were, Delence and Jose ution med-|},01ance," said he considered the won't he cut down after the open- pe "hy Kingdom Come' guarded secrets. jjzul witnesses disagreed te alth | incidents consistent with the type 2, scheduled for 1959, of the St. PR . * ride i i 3 9. v pa. hr leg for 2958, 01 She St. { It is expected that a large num- Friday's Moscow Radio Sputnik Three psychiatrists testified on| of Neurosis from which Beam [plify the now-tricky, navjgation in| ber of Oshawa and district resi- never split pegsonality. at a ti me; destroying some of his the pilots they appear to be in-|of an overflow crowd. Dr. Sope o> paintings when someone admired volved in a violation of the Can- ill preach in Trinity U Inted| APPEARED NEUROTIC them; stamping on a watch when did it. #hey set off |ada Shipping Act. Church, Bowmanville, Sunday A Toronto psychiatrist for thelhe noticed a defect in its erystal Mr. Baldwin said it was drawn morning. On Monday he goes to Crown disagreed, but said Beam and squeezing goldfish to death to the group' s attention * "that the! Western Ontario for a crusade. However, Warsaw Radio quoted| goldfish bowl and squeezed the | admitting he shot her, Transport Minister John R. Bald Polish press reports from Mos. | life out of the fish, Friday was| pp, Cecil Mickelson of Kitch: win, also were told thelr case is cow that the dog was expected found not guilty of the murder ener said Beam had schizophre- to be reported to Transport Min | duct the final meeting in Oshawa able to supply news of the space| [By Mr. atc Sib Se ofl, hen asked by defence counsel captains don't want to take of his current campaign, "Mis- dog. Reuters correspondent Vi [be put in a mental hospital for|il he considered episodes from aboard a pilot sion To The Nation" on Sunday cent Buist tried vainly to contact P P Beam's life as showing '"'pro- Informants here said the pilots (II comngsnique said only that Th ent trxy an , ursday and Wednesday they|® 5 [the river. dents will attend and it has been| fasurchents are continuing. *|thought Richard Beam was suf-| The episodes included: Staring arranged to have King Street |fering from schizophrenia, or at a spot on the floor for hours Mr. Baldwin said later he fold United Church available in case appeared neurotic. oy plunging his hand in their Beam was accused of shooting bowl. aloft since Oct. 4. The second, launched last Sunday, is an elon- Army, some of whose scientists gated vehicle we i ghing 1,120 | {have claimed they could have prunds. It is carrying a dog. {launched a satellite long before! A communique Friday night Russia, has been given a chance from Tass, the Soviet news to show what it can do in this agency, - said Sputnik II was field. : about to complete its 82nd cir- In a major switch from previ- cuit of the earth, covering more ous policy Defence Secretary than 2,359,800 miles. | PM To Lead Armistice Service In Ottawa will march to/Sunday in many centres across For the first time in history|that city's services with veter-|the land, particularly in Quebec. | Canadian Remembrance Day|ans and government officials, Lieutenant . Gover Gaspard services Monday will be led by a| Smaller ouiport settlements with-|F'auteux of Quebec leads religi- prime minister. himself a war out' memorials will hold services|Ous, provigciai and civie dignitar- veteran al special shrines or plots set ies in Sunday ceremonies at 3 announcement that the| John Diefenbaker wounded aside. oI The 3th Miitia Sroup un . ha : der Brig. Pau! Triquet, VC, wi 3s entering the satellite! orsens during service with the| In Halifax, the ! Snow Driven Into Ontario By THE CANADIAN PRESS |between three and five inches of Howling blizzards drove heavy snow, if predictions were correct, snow into northwestern Ontario, Toronto, Hamilton, Windsor loveraight as temperatures top- and towns along the shores - of | pled across the province and win-|Lakes Ontario, Erie and Hurom {ter began to move into Southern all waited for flurries and sub- |Ontario. freezing temperatures. Northerly gales brought as| In the south and East, the much as 15 inches of snow north | winds reachea velocities of 55 and lof Lake Superior while southern|60 miles an .iour and were ae- regions waited for flurries and! companied by as much as a halfs sub-freezing temperatures, inch of rain The weather bureau reported at; The sno 4 am. that Kapuskasing had 13|voughly from Port Arthur inches snow, while Fort William through Sault Ste. Marie, north {had 5. Heaviest snowfalls today|to James Bay and south to Kap. |are forecast for James Bay and'uskasing | Timmins- Kapuskasing regions In London The strong winds caused dam- {blew out a age here and 'here, blowing down |window trees, signs and telephone poles In Toronto a mile of plastic Below freezing temperatures strips covering a new lane on the {will prev ail in the northern part|Queen Elizabeth Way at the wests lof the province today while injern entrance to the city were [the south the: maximum will be ripped up and sent flying into in the low J0s rush hour traffic, causing seve The weatherman forecast Lon- eral minor accidents don and communities along the | Toronto also reported fallen shores of Lake Huron and Geor- [trees and féemporary power cut- gian Bay would be hit hardest-- offs caused by the winds, By THE CANADIAN PRESS |St. John's, Nfld,, Canadian Leg- MISSILE CZAR area Friday extended Killian, presi- dent of the Massachusetts In- stitute of Technology talks to newsmen in Cambridge, Mass., after he as appointed by President Ficenhower as a spe- cial assistant of science and technology. Killian, 55, scientist and adminisirator with a rec- ord of government service, was emnowered by the president to crack down cn any interservice rivalry. to prevent needless de- | lays and to give priarity to cer- tain top-secret projects ---AP Wirephoto Dr. James B ) winds glass the plate I'riday 10-foot City police today described the 2 P d t M G t no hat, The girl was driving the family The girl told police that she competition, will likely become was struck on the back of the Canada's next agricultural prod- to her knees and shouted hyster- cial guarantees to help market ically. Her screams frightened the 1957 crop after which the out of the OCVI parking lot about 'will no doubt be approaching that time as she walked along Oltawa to secure a satisfactory Mr. G. Roberts, OCVI prin | cheddar cheese, Federal officials cipal, ee Rok the commence- ndicated it might be supported any information on a man of this description, but none was volun- Non-Payment ttaw: f civi i pi By a a of a civil action py aniets. Up to now, the Amer-|satellite's dog passenger, Laika. ican earth satelite program- There have been reports the Rus- counsel for Ernest Desjardins, ajwill "supplement the present! The Pointe-Gatineau resident, had the! Vanguard program." army w Nov. 5 Quebec Superior Court Elroy said the army would use |cal Observatory at Cambridge. |ca, i remain open, observing the trad. lifts. Jupiter-C test vehicle h [Ma sary of the end of that conflict. after some servicemen objected " ae' sian rm. a judgment. pi a huge | Mass. "Ser ices at Ottawa will be typi.to attending services conducted itional two minutes' silence at 11 ardins' 11-year-old son, Miche, HAVE CRITICIZED ment, Dr. John P. Hagen, head a wars and the Koren i Forum 4 nsorship. 'This|Jervicemen will parade, as the A on A ; of the na v " a & inder gon Sponsors. . 5 st enant.g APROT > o in July, 1956. Desjardins claimed| weEirov's action came against navy-directed project Van-| Fred MacFarlane, archbishop took lieutenant-governor and the pre- tary, said Friday night he had satellites with two earth| "previously annvunced plans for [firs t husband at Vimy Ridge ns Cane an international aspect as|in downtown Vancouver The Air made out a cheque and placed it pe two Soviet space. vehicle project Vanguard call for sending [the First World War. Three sons|Canadian and United States serv- Force Office Association will Age, 25 to 30; height, five feet, Federal Support ear. The man, standing with a head as she started to walk to- Uct to get federal price Support. the man who ran from the park-| Province will drop entirely its Mary street. support price or cheese." ment exercise, attended by more Satomi CCNIS a pound. The teered. POINTE GATINEAU, Que. The truck was not seized. It Project Vanguard--has been un-|sians might try to parachute the writ issued after the municipal-| There were reports the army effort was welcomed Frida ¥{196th Battalion in the First World ion will hold its usual parade parade Mr. Desjardins had filed a rocket it usea more than a year Hynek said "I am certainly| of those at cenotaphs and|by teaders of other faiths. am, In Montreal Dominion the boy's mame had thus been|y background of criticism of the Suard. said the public will be in| M: 70, of a Catholic mier of the province lay wreaths In the village lawyer's hands. still are Sy ace vol up small test soheres sometime [died m the Second World War.|icemen take part along the Main e its pill dawn patrol and GIVE DESCRIPTION 11 inches; stocky round face, curly hair, wearing a three-quar- ter length dark green town coat, flash light at the north entrance TORONTO (CP) Cheddar) to the school guided her into a cheese heavily stockpiled in On! parking space. tario and facing stiff foreign ward the entrance of the school ( io Agi ire t The girl said she was hit on Goodfellow said ge Ontario the head repeatedly as she fell has increased by $1,000,000 finan- ing lot. present financial guarantees be- Miss Jean Smith, 15, of 3g 5" 'P 191. Mary street, saw a man running, And, he added, the producers Det.-Sgt. John Powell and De. In Ottawa it was understood tective K. Young of city police the federal government would are investigating, ikely grant price supports for 0 p LY: ic J " than 1000 parents, relatives and Ontario Wiicle ale price of ched friends, to give a description of the wanted man. He asked for The girl said she had seen her assailagt before. (CP)--A bailiff today placed a lien on the municipal fire truck Yell McElroy Friday night or-| For the second consecutive over non-payment by this village ered the army to go ahead with | night, the Tass communique from preparations to fire artificial Moscow made no mention of the will be available for fire-fighting der the navy exclusively. dog to earth but there was no --but it cannot be sold. The defence department an-'sign such an attempt had been | J. Harold Maloney of Hull, nouncement said the army effort made. led to pay $50 damages might be ready to go i anks 3 sders ves willl ity fai pay mages 1 be ready to go in less than ment, Dr. John P. Hagen, head|yw.." iii "isin Governor-General] the cenotaph. No religious cere.|, Banks and federal offices will and $541 legal a and court|six Svea Zier some modifica- of the satellite-tracking program Massey in Confederation Square monies will be held there. They be closed Monday but business awarde esjardins in a|tions of rocket i p - > 5 bs 4 obo nies he he "Te. *) ices res generally wi costs J al 3 © 4 equipment. Mc- for the Smithsonian Astrophys in Oftawa on the 39th anniver- were banned three years ago offices and stores generally will $1 900 claim for damages, claim- 480 in firing a test device more looking forward to having some f ; ,»| Square will be the centre of serv ng Constable Jean-Guy Therien than 600 miles high and 3,500 United States satellites to { some fie Ids: of remembrance all over| A 'festival of remembrance: jes. pi) alsely imprisoned" Des miles distant Beiore McElroy's announce. the country for those who died inihowever was held Rov 850 Bali At Winnipeg, 1 200 veterans and i § C. 0, N.S., will join the Ottawa |part. A protestant churchman of-|, 2 | slandered, his playmates called Eisenhower administrati ,.|formed within an hour or so of | Truro, , | ; i A at the cenotaph him *"Jailbird." cause Russia ot i i nite the time when a U.S. earth satel. HoT ice as a Yopreseniative of ficiated last a) More than 5.000 are expected Louis Lamarche, village secre- Siates into space ite is Jatnched: |Canadian mothers he lost her| Ceremonies. in New Brunswick |; at the Moriday morning services at next month, with.a fully instru. | David L. Burgess, president, will| border. Nov. 11 is a general holi- cadets will form a 4 A i: guard of honor Payment would soon be bout iy 000 les an hour. The mented satellite due for launch- [represent the Canadian Legion. |day in New Brunswick o ceremonies across the harbor waged , small sphere, has begnling in March, ¥ Memarial umversity students in! Religious services will be held|/in North Vancouver, | ar-

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