Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 20 Nov 1957, p. 1

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) TIMES-GAZETTE TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising .. RA 3-3492 All other calls ......... RA 83-3474 THE DAILY Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle WEATHER REPORT Cloudy, eold, scattered snowflurries . or snow squalls foday and Thursday; : i TIMES-GAZET Authorized 'As Second Class Mell Post Office Department, Ottawa OSHAWA-WHITBY, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1957 Price Over B Conts . TWENTY-FOUR PAGER ot Por YOL. 86--No. 271 > Sia CARS LITTER YARD IN U.S. RAILWAY ACCIDENT A general view of overturned. of the Boston and 'Maine Rail- | an overpass. The engineer and | jured. The derailed cars litter- locomotive railroad cars of the | road which jumped the tracks | his firemen were both killed. | ed the yards. crack Montreal-Boston train | at Medford, Mass., Tuesday, at |= Twenty passengers were in- --(AP Wirephoto) TextileUnion Yeéggs Crash Home, Brief Urges Shoot Man, Rob Others . Protection CHATHAM (CP) Three|one, the smallest of the trio,/money," he said, "and 1 guess masked bandits shot their way carried a gun. He fired several they got my life too." OTTAWA (CP)--Canada's tex. into a Chatham Township farm times before gaining enfry, one| As the men left, the way they A of the bullets striking Mr, Seev- came in, one through the window, tile unions, in briefs submitted to home 10 miles northeast of here ers, |two out the back door, they left the tariff board, have called for| Tuesday night, wounding one of ro ceevers. his brother, Jo- (Instructions not to call police. Bollcies which will protect the the six occupants and robbing soph 74 "and his nephew, Wilfred| 'We won't tie you up," they said, dian wool cloth industry Others. and his family, were present in| 'but don't call the law for two from foreign competition. goo anty - sight year-old James|the small two-storey farmhouse, hours il re 1 come back and i evers was shot as e SWUDg with the two children. 4 Ce own. » eat rift Tegulations place, ironing board at the pistol The family did not know STATEMENTS REFUTED - 4 SEAMEN RESCUED FROM LAKE ISLAN @ Lifeboat Reaches Safety In Storm * PORT ARTHUR (CP) -- Four sighted no s fives. men, missing since their tugboat) a search of the entire island went aground Tuesday in Lake prevented by a steep 'cliff. a Superior, were picked up today, The fishing vessel Clara {by the searching tug John C and and the tug John C, which 5 being taken to Nipigon, Ont, 65 failed earlier in attempts miles northeast of here. reach the island, circled the Search headquarters reported land looking for fires. None the men were firs{ sighted at sighted. 9:56 am. on Evelyn Rock, a/HEARD S 0 8 {small island nine miles southwest) The search started when {of Hawk Island, centre of the freighter Everton pickéd up gi search, by an RCAF Dakota from|s 0 8 from the tugboat D { Trenton, Ont. {which said it had gone Dulles Trods On Tender Toes OTTAWA (CP) -- U.S. State|Washington statements but that Secretary Dulles has trod on ten- he was a couple of years pre- | der Canadian sovereignty toes. | mature. He beat a hasty retreat Tues-| But if any agreements are ) day, however, before there was reached, Ottawa wants to an- ; | any swelling. But not before nounce them at least as soon if Prime Minister Diefenbaker pol- not earlier than Washington--es- itely deflated his statements. pecially agreements which would The U.S. state secretary said have a bearing on Canadian sov- is Washi 5 fer. ereignty. A OP ataboy Ias| Most officials shrugged off the nuclegr warheads and missile|incident. Some said it was merely bases in:Canada. He soon another Sas wl Dulles putt- amended this by saying that if|{ing his foot in his mou the warheads aren't now in Can-| NEED MISSILES ada they could be placed in this It is recognized by defence of- country quickly. L |ficials here that Canada Will re- a Dieteshaer said ip He Quire anti-aireraft gWided mim Commons in respons -liles to augment the tion questions that he could only ye aun based in Canada conclude that Mr. Dulles was and it is expected they will be misquoted or misinterpreted "in| ghtained in some two years. his original statement. | But the question of the nuclear He said there is no agreement warheads for then is Atloher between Canada and the U.S. for| matter. Present American law the storing of nuclear warheads| prohibits the U.S. rom supplying in Canada. Outside the Commons its Allies with nuclear weapons. he added that this goes for the| President Eisenhower Jas ii. three American leased bases in cated he will seek amendment to Newfoundland as well as all other this law from the U.S. Congress. Canadian territory. But if 'he doasirt Shea the changes, it might raise the pos- TALK mT ovER & Cana da] Sibility of American tops belle iscussions between a | station n Cana andle and the U.S. on ways and means | atomic arms. to improve the North American A more likely possibility, how- air defence system take place ever, is that the nuclear war. continuously. heads would be placed near the There is little doubt that the|Canada-U.S. border so they could subject of anti-aircraft missile/be put to use at Canadian bases ty x, JOHN FOSTER DULLES { | Attn nur | The John C, scouring the area on Hawk Island but its four- | with fishing vessel Clara Lee,|crew could reach the island. - {picked up the four, all in good| Aboard the tug were John | condition, at 10:52 a.m. and pro- Kenzie of Fort William and ceeded to Nipigon. It was ex- Raymond, Ernish Bishop [pected to arrive there about 3:30 Brian Trevor, all of Coll Oshawa Ma p.m. They Jere headed for | when the accident occurred BOAT ON "ROCK ; |/ing a blinding snowstorm r Nn _-- hissing mews Sughaat was 3 am. Tuesday. ry" on the] Capt. R. W. For Found Dead shore of Evelyn Rock, {Art iy marine obey of the { The brief report on the finding|the RCAF .when an uniden fof the men was relayed first from tug circled the island early {the RCAF Dakota to the 4,300-ton|day night and r&borted it could n oom Ireighter Briecldos, als in the/see no sign of the missing tiie s , and then to the airport| boat, - The body of Robert B. H. Rob- at Fort William, | Two planes from the R inson, 56, (# is believed to have|, The Dakota piloted by FO|base at Trenton, Ont., one died on Friday last, was found|Harry Moore, took off from here|ing searchmaster Fit. Lt. on the bed of his apartment at|about § a.m. to search the area|Ross and a para-rescue 66 King street west on Tuesday|around Hawk Island, about 60|rived here Tuesday night. A third morning. Coroner Dr. J. B. Pat- miles east of the Lakehead. It had|plane from Winnipeg, also terson announced that death was|arrived from Trenton, carryingiing a para-rescue team, caused by a heart attack. There|Searchmaster FO Glenn Ross and|leave early today to join fhe wl hot Je an indiest, lp 3 Paraescue kid Another Da-| search. o- e y was discover y | kota, om innipeg, arrived ' William Ward, proprietor of the early today but not partic- de Cars Lee 4nd John Ca apartment house who was in-ipate in the search. eight miles from Hawk vestigati 1 3 cstigating complaints = from| Two boats also were searching|for the night. They will aid Other r s, of an ant|the area. A Dakota from Winni- RCAF in search operations bo : : welding robber through a broken NEAR THE WINDOW {whether their assailants drove len and worsted industry in the hob g Six-year-old Rebecca as sit: | away in a car og, not. fat is in h it ting on her great-uncle's lap at e wounded man's brother RR, ospital in) he dining room fable near the ran nearly a quarter of a mile "hands of foreign manufactur- ors," said the Textile Workers Union of America (CLC). bases in Canada has been dis- cussed and will be again. Officials said Tuesday Mr. in an emergency. This matter will be discussed at the NATO| Council meeting in Paris next| peg which arrived here this|day. morning was standing by until] Capt. Forbes said: the Trenton . Dakota returned] "We have no idea where the from the search. Tuesday, sailors|tug might be but we Mr. Robinson was last seen at about 6 p.m. last Friday by Gor- don Cox. in Ward's Poolroom. shoulder wound. The amount of window which was shattered by down the road to the farm of Joseph Ondrich, the nearest Dulles had the right idea in his/month, informants said. Mr. Cox told police Mr. Robin- from the 4,300-ton freighter Bri- During the last 10 years em- mt in wool textile mills money taken is not known. Mrs:! Wilfred Seevers a niece by mar- one of the bandits. § The three men forced Wilfred neighbor, and phoned the police son came in to purchase a news- or hope that its cal paper. Mr, Cox said he had seen|c01d0¢ fought their way to Hawk dropped from 17,246 to 11,373, the brief said. The impact has been felt most in small towns which 7 i x ivi d ambulance riage, said she had $29 in her Seevers back into the living 2M ance, purse, room at gun point asd made him, le gachelor Sogver Grothers il rip out the telephone, en . While the elderly Mr. bot Cos him to "look after the old man. | Township land for more than 50 ; with his. "mag ' or year: The brief pia and vid cibs mani Ti v nd raered! ie on 4 k door of ; Seevers to go upstairs and | : o, the room, Here er The brother ox the wounded from the United Kingdom Mr. and "Mrs. fred Seevers|man, Joseph. 74. or they would! and the skyrocketing of ship- and their daughter, Susan, hi 7, "take the kids." | ments from other countries, par- were watching television. While the robbery was taking, Sieularly Italy." | All the men wore stockings/place, the wounded man was ¥ {pulled over their heads, but only conscious. "They got all my| Education Board With seven members to be elected this year, it would appear a keen contest is looming up for the election to the board of education for 1958-1959, 2 part of fhe, 2 EN REALLY FRIENDS OAKLAND, Md. (AP) -- They'ze- Friends, but they're not really friends at all. Game warden Leo Friend brought charges of illegal pos- session of wildlife against Carlos Woodrow Friend and Magistrate Barl C. Friend heard the case. None of the three men is related. Carlos Friend was free in $1,750 bail on 23 separate charges. Robbery Suspect To Stand Trial was positive of the identification | of Fillion during this morning George Fillion, .47, was com- mitted for trial by Magistrate iF | | |Island, but did not find |of ¥he men or their EBOM, sp Battling high seas on Lake Su- perior and a 45-mile-an-hour gale, they a lifeboat from the Paterson Line Mr. Robinsem retire to. his room after making the pufchase. A lifelong resident of Oshawa, fhe 2 was a son of the ) and hax el Rob- RG a : Ta, . Mr. Robingon had been an em- loye of General Motors for 23| a member of|i Local 222, UAW; an i ol member of the Oshawa branch of the Canadian Legion and a for-| mer member of the Oshawa Rod | and Gun Club, | the fresh = fallen snow andltiny islands, He leaves a sister, Mrs. Mar. jorie Smith and niece, Mrs. Fred " 7 H ital Plan: ospital Plan: | i Taylor (Joyce), both of Oshawa. | F ; The memorial service will be 2 held at the Armstrong Funeral | Chapel at 2 p.m. on Friday, Nov.| 22. Internrent will be in the Osh- awa Union Cemetery. bed Blis OTTAWA (CP) -- Hospital in- Mr. Diefenbaker was speaking f Butcher Suspect ShOWS GC ADISON, Wiss Tap) -- ein appea show no morse, a state criminologist Tuesday night, after more th five hours of questioning in nection with the slaying pe : of here. It is jan among the objects in n S1Gein's farm home." He added n- that Mrs. Hogan was a S4-year- St or Coat ces wh widow and the finding of 10 hu-|disappeared in T of 19 man skulls in his farm home. Ifrom the rural tavern she oper- Charles Wilson, head of the|ated at Bancroft, about six miles Wisconsin state crime laboratory, (from Gein's farm. {said he "could not ata ot any CLAIMS "DAZE" remorse, "just a sort of detach- i d i me during. Hs esionng oy Sk, ReDyRan and, some the 51-year-o achelor. ! A th Gein, brought to Madison tor|that the skulls and o her ura A . 8. Ebbs this morning on a! Three of the four retiring mem-|charge of armed robbery. The bers, Stephen G. Saywell, J. L.|charge was laid following the Beaton and Mrs. Clayton Lee, will hold-up of the Pickering branch again be candidates for another of the Canadian Bank of Com- term of office. Mr. Saywell and merce on May 28 last. Fillion Is Mr. Beaton are veteran board being held without bail. members, while Mrs. Li pleting her first two-year term. ee is com-| During the hearing five wit- nesses testified for the Crown Among those who have decided |They included N. R. Shortreed, to stand for the Board of Educa- tion are Murray Sparkes, Pedlar court sesson. Mr. McEachnie said he had Ch seen a black Pontiac speed away | 1 UAW from the bank. Iys er, dir Todo 8 festimony was "R T 11 the effect thal she ha ent a new model, black Pontiac to esume da i - to as 'George' with Hancock in At Detroit To Toronto. DETROIT (AP)--Chrysler Cor- Harry Hancock of Hamilton and had seen a man who was referred Called by defence counsel, poration and the United Auto Ja long missing woman. interrogation by Wilson in con-| "while J: D. Cleverdon, rector of Christ|Sirance may come one stepjon a CCF non-confidence nection with the buichering of +g i ft while Nemorial Anglican Church, will CIOSer next week. which was beaten a few minu s. Bernice Worden of Plain-|' Was In a daze-like. |conduet the services. Prime Minister Diefenbaker| later by a vote of 142 to 32. Wis., faced further ques-| Gein's lawyer said he had 5 Suet SE thinted Tuesday in~the Commons Liberals sided with the tioning today. verified Tenors that parts of Hl (at federal moves which may put|Sive Conservatives to defeat the As Gein's grisly story of grave|female bodies had been found in avor ©IMVYN [the hospital insurance plan into motion which was supported robbery and butchery was being|Gein's house. He sald an liieer Y Y leffect "'at a far earlier date than|the Social Credit group as investigated, Sheriff Berhertat The Gein farm So him Shere {has been anticipated." That date 2s the CCF. FS Wanserski 'said he recognized one W! § DSes S ks 8th T is generlly conside: to bel e motion urged immediate of the skulls found on Gels found, Beltep added the officer fo erm p;.. O50, onsid god Ontang| federal Payments ander na Farm near Plainfield as that offie wil he ey di WHITBY -- Mayor Harry Jer. Plan is scheduled to go into oper- Pifal Insta plan jo . z layo y Jer-\oion.. care plans | Wanserski told reporters hel Sheriff J anserski Joie, Teport. os WIL seek his eighth term LA Prine minister referred to force. P plans aw. does not believe Coins slorylers iligt file heads found in the announced today. the federal-provincial fiscal con, . caeral hospital insurance manager of the bank: J. N, Mc- Millan, bank accountant: Mrs People Limited office manager, and Fred Britten. twice a de. feated candidate and for the last Year a member of the vocational advisory commiiteq of the hoard. Others who are considering standing as candidates, according to reports received by The Times. Gazette, are George Fletcher, p i young busi man; George K. Drynan solicitor? Wil- liam Minett, secretary of the Robert Dixon Company, Limited and Gilbert Murdoch, solicitor, It is also understood that a of labor did will} be placed in the field for the board of education to make up! a substantial . list of candidates for the seven places to be filled 5 Barry Murkar, of Pickering; Wil. liam McEachnie, Pickering un- dertaker; and Ruth. Todd of Hamilton. Mr, McMillan testified that two men burst into the bank waving revolvers and shouting "This is a hold-up." The shorter of the two men ordered him to] lie on the floor. He said that the! taller man fired a shot through the door of the manager's office. The witness said that at a line- up, held at Whitby on Ocf. 8, he had identified the accused as one of the men engaged in the! hold-up. He admitted that he had picked another man, John Moson, alias John Hall as involved in the hold-up when he first looked on the board the line-up over; but had decid- Last year there were 12 candi- ed, after faking a second look, dates for five seats on the board.'that Fillion was invelved. He Moson, told the court that he was| Workers Union agreed Tuesday in custody in the Don Jail at the to resume negotiations today time of the hold-up. Continuing|aimed at ending a strike which he said all six of the persons|shut down the company's Ply- who viewed the line-up had pick-/mouth engine plant Monday and ed him out, made idle 2,000 workers, : The testimony of Constable J. If stretched out, Chrysler said Tullock of the OPP, who was in|the strike would affect another charge of the line-up, was to the|11,000 workers in Detroit and 12.- effect that four of the six persons{000 in three regional assembly who saw the line-up picked Plants. Moson; one picked the accused The strike was called by UAW while one was unable to identify Local 51 in a production stand- any of 'the men, ards dispute. The union accused The officer said he had been Chrysler of a speedup. The com- told by Moson that he had been|pany said the union insisted on confuséd with the accused on Werk standards "far out of line several occasions. with those prevailing elsewhere Crown Attorney A, C. Hall, QC, in the industry." prosecuted the charge. J. A.! Negotiations were broken off Faulkner of Toronto. acted for the Monday when Plymouth engine Indoor Arena, Won't BotherRe TORONTO (CP) Indoor arenas and artificial ice won't] bother the Russian hockey team in its seven-game swing through Ontario and Quebec, team offi- cials said on arrival here early today. These conditions aren't new to them. Moscow has had a 14,000-seat| arena complete with artificial ice| since 1956. So the Russians, who| toppled Canada from its Olympic rch in Italy last- year, aren't foxing for any excuses against junior and senior teams. "it won't be difficult to play under these conditions in this country," said) Col. Pavel Korot- kov, chairmar'of the Soviet Ice! Hockey Federation, in an. inter- view, The players might find it a| little bothersome to adjust them- selves to atmospherié¢ conditions, but they are quietly confident" they can hold their own on the Jee; ainclothes police took pre- cautions against any anti-Russian demonstrations as the team checked into their hotel. A squad of police scrutinized pedestrians in the vicinity of the hotel and others were assigned to duty at Maple Leaf Gardens where the team was to practice later in the day, Weary after more than two days in the air, the Russians headed for their downtown hotel and sleep shortly after their ar- rival by plane at 5 am. They left Moscow Monday morning and have practically been in the air since. They ar- rived at Gander Nfid., early Tuesday znd took advantage of a stopover to practise. They took a| milk-run journéy to Montreal, stopping off ai Sydney, N.S., and Halifax en route and their plane landed at suburban Malton air: port nearly two hours late. Col. Korotkov. who heads the 26-man party. readily admitted: through an interpreter that this wasn't Russia's strongest team, Nor is it the team that will play in the world amateur. champion- ships at Oslo next Feb. 28-March 9. "Some of this team will play in Oslo," he said. But personnel of the club for the world champion- ships won't be decided until after the European tournament at Stockholm early in December, The Russians, who brought | along their own equipment and club doctor, open their tour Fri- day night here against Whitby Dunlops, Canada's representa-| Hives in iae world championships. accused. plant employees walked out. | Ice Light Snows Hit Ontario d Team rg mw They then play in 'Windsor, Sud- Southern Ontario in the wake of bury, Kilchener. Montreal; Ot. heavy snow storms in the last tawa and Kingston before head- 24 hours in norgfjern sections of ing for Stockholm Dec. 8. the province. Canadian Amateur Hockey As- Light snow wag falling in down- sociation officials met them at town Toronto at 9 a.m. Montreal and Toronto, The CAHA| The weather office forecast a is sponsoring the tour and few widely scattered snowflurries George Dudley of Midland, over most of the south today, A CAHA secretary - manager who forecaster said Barrie might get headed the welcoming delegation @s many as three or four inches al Toronto, estimated it would of snow during the day. cost the association $30,000 to| In the north 18 inches were look after the Russian- team, a|recorded at Pagwa, 210 miles composite all-star club from the northwest of Timmins in the last Dynamos Soviet. Wings and Cent-| 24 hours. TORONTO (CP) -- Scattered that he had taken the assortment of skulls and grisly human re- mains from cemeteries near Gein's home. The sheriff said: "We have farmhouse had been skinned. The detached portion, he said, | made up "faces of a regular size, well preserved, with hair, lears, lips and nose." Ro LONDON (CP) ~-- Telegrams showered on Buckingham Palace today as well-wishers of many lands congratulated Queen Eliz- yal Pair Mark 10 Anniversary himself for her anniversaries. She usually wears it at her first public engagement afterward. |islation, passed by Par last spring when the = Lil were in office, requires that Mr. Jermyn was first elected ference here Nov. 25 and 26. mayor in 1950, was inactive in| He said he plans to discuss the| 1951, aud has held the office| hospital plan with premiers of fore the central gov Be Ie lige, X th chin Provinces which have indicated) starfs paying its share--a of to Whithy a pi Yoeyesiy approval of the scheme. If there imately half---of provine vg will OE Sanel and were 'reasonably unanimous" | pital care plans, there must Stan Martin, Tao. ony ReeVElagreement among them, the plan fegislation for hospital plans Bo Indeed the the will ii would start "at a far earlier date|being in at least six p : TU than has been anticipated." having a majority of the for the deputy reeve's chair. |: A Everett Quantrill and William| After the meeting, the govern-|try's population, Hurley. ment would introduce at this or| Seven provinces have Harry Inkpan has also a the next parli tary ion|acceptance in principle of ed that he will make his third|/any changes in the Hospital In-|plan. They are British Col try for a council seat. surance Act needed to bring the|Alberta, Saskatchewan, On Nominations will be held Thurs-|plan into effect at the earliest|Manitoba, Prince Edward day night, possible date, and Newfoundland. |" Millions of Britons t will {be able to join the royal couple abeth and Prince Philip on 10th wedding anniversary. in their anniversary when the| : _|BBC shows on television a film | "They have no public engage- record of 10 years of royal mar- usual, and for some hours both "2B€: Paris Police spokesman said. | Prime Minister Macmillan sent, {a message saying that he and his colleagues know that in 10 years both 'have attained an| abiding place in the hearts of the people." Elizabeth and Prince Philip will give a small private dinner friends. Queen Mother Elizabeth will be there and Princess Mar- garet will join the party after dinner for a movie showing. Presents given by one member of the Royal Family to another are not normally made public. But Prince Philip's secret has been given away in recent years because he has given his wife a piece of jewellery Wesigned by ral Sports Club of the ministry of defence in Moscow. The CAHA will pay all ex- penses, including air transporta- tion back to Moscow. It should be easy to do because the Rus- LATE NEWS FLASHES ciars will play before sell-out} crowds wherever they go. The rinks take 50 per cent of the gate recei'ts and Dudley is confident the CAHA will receive about $45.- 000, enough to send a Canadian team to Moscow next year, A busy sthedule has been, lined | up, for the Russians. They will practise at Maple . ' » Lea Gardens berween 2 pm | Trapped Miners' Bodies and 3 p.m. this afternoon, attend | ' . a press reception and tonight w MUIRKIRK, Scotland watch the Chicago-Toronto Na- tional Hockey League Kame. this area today in connection arrested near here last week, 9 (Reuters)--Rescue 3 pulled the 'bodies of 17 men from the gas-filled depths of a . ¢oal mine shaken by an sxplosion Tuesday might. Police Open Murder Probe SASKATOON (CP)--Ontapio Provincial Police anc Royal Canadian Mounted Police began an investigation in the with the Oct. 9 shooting of a Blind River, Ont., bank manager, Two Ontario men were charged with murder, Found crews today party tonight for some of their| End Search § For Algerians PARIS Reuters)--More than 250 police today ended a dusk- |to-dawn search of hotels and| cafes and an identity check in| Eastern Paris suburbs where! |killings and violence among| North Africans have flared in the| last few days. "1 Main roads were sealed off] and licences of all drivers enter- ing and leaving the area Were examined. Police said arms and docun- ments were seized, 700 North Af- ricans were questioned and some were detained. Early Tuesday, 10 Algerian na- {tionalists burst into a small hotel in Bondy in the eastern suburbs and massacred six North Afri cans with pistols and sub-ma- chine-guns. It was the latest bloodshed among rival nationalist organiza- tions which levy "taxes" on Al- |gerian workers in' France. The tmoney helps-pay- for the insur- Irection against French rule in ia. | 1 | i FLOODS CAUSE DAMAGE IN KENTUCKY A. National Guardsman pa- | heart of the downtown area af- | of families' were evacuated and trols the main street in Hop- | fer the raifi-swollen Little Riv- | te Hon ap mage caused' ) is Mayville, Kv. av boat in the | er everflowed its banks. Scores | AP Wirephotol : of : gr . an

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