Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 16 Dec 1957, p. 1

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WEATHER REPORT Cloudy and colder tonight. Mainly sunny, Colder Tuesday. ~ TIMES-GAZETTE TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising .. RA 3-3492 All other calls .......,, RA 83-3474 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZ Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle OSHAWA-WHITBY, MONDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1957 ' OPPOSITION FORM TO U.S.A. PROPOSAL U.K. Firms Seek President Urges i Export Increase Military Buildup | LONDON (CP) -- Some 200|trical equipment for use in Can- British industrialists today jam-|ada. One said he has waited nine atice to arm' themselves with ths med into the chambers of the months for the association's ap most modern nuclear weapons dollar exports council, seeking proval and still has received no| and said mot doing so would information on how to increase reply. Another said he has waited leave the Soviet Union with a nu- exports to Canada. {two years. clear monopoly in Europe. £| It was the final session of the| One questioner asked what the interview phase of the Canadian|50-man mission will do to main- MISSILES OFFERED ps Adenauer. and Gerhardsen TWENTY-FOUR PAGES Over Copy ' Price Not Cents Per VOL. 86--NO. 293 PARIS (CP) -- Opposition to President Eisenhower's call, for nuclear missile bases in Europe appeared to be developing today at the opening of the NATO sum- mit conference. Eisenhower's plea for heroic will he available as a candidate for the Liberal party leader- ship. Opposition leader St. Lau- rent will 'step down as leader next month and a leadership Paul Martin, former federal health minister, has his arms | raised by happy supporters at Windsor after announcing he 3 son, former external minister, had said MARTIN TOSSES HIS HAT INTO THE LEADE convention will be held in Otta- wa Jan. 14-16. Lester B, Pear- affairs previously that he will be available as a RSHIP RING candidate. Mr. Martin made his announcement at a meeting of the Essex East Liberal Associ- ation. He represents Essex East in the Commons. trade mission's month-long stay |tain the "drive" created by the in Britain. The flow of questions |visit here. | was heavy. In some of them, 'We won't make the drive, you there was a slight tinge of anger. | make it," replied Hugh Crombie One questioner said he had in-| of Montreal, vice-president of the vented a "colossal" engineering Dominion Engineering Company. tool and wanted to set up manu-| facturing in Canada. Just what| VALUABLE PUBLICITY told was the mission going to do to) British industrialists were told | help him, he demanded. the mission would be disbanded "Pack your bag and get out to{When it returned to Canada Canada to see for yourself what Thursday, but the publicity given the market is like" he was fold. [British judustry 3b Camada, "was| The 'questioner said the answer worth millions of dollars." It| was the "best publicity British | LAUGH ENDS TIFF lindustry ever had." Sir William Rootes, chairman, 'The Canadians have made a of the dollar exports council, ap- great impression in Britain," Sir | parently trying to smoothe ruf- William said. *'Some of them fled feelings, said if the invention may be a little critical but the is "colossal" he would join with|Canadian market has a great fu-| the inventor in setting up a Ca-/ture and we cannot afford to] was unsatisfactory. | nadian shop. That raised a laugh. |leave any stone unturned." Other British industrialists| The mission will start prepar- |complained that the Canadian|ing its report Tuesday and will GEORGE BURT Burt Urges Abolition Of Auto Tax | lefforts to build up NATO mil- itary strength "while the margin spoke out before Eisenhower had of power is still ours" was coun- [presented formally to tie" .sum- tered by demands from some |mit meeting an American offer other North Atlantic alliance [to supply missiles and stockiile | 1 in Western = leaders that a final decision on Pp rocket bases be delayed. fope. he proposal already. had | Disagreement over missiles|Peen informally circulated, {bases and atomic stockpiles ap-| ®VE through diplomatic eham- [peared a te very outset of the In his opening policy sists The conference opened with a|™en" enauer _advocated..a8 brief public session at noon, at|Study of the Possibility ol Sst which Eisenhower spoke. It went|0Mic moves fo penetrate the into a closed working session in|Viet satellite Soumities Ho over. mid-afternoon but -statements of | Some the pa tion of Europe: |government heads were made NATO. he said, could also acfle public as delivered |tightep economic ties between 3 i |the est and Middle Eastern GERMAN ASKS DELAY powers. German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer expressed wi Jo Adenauer backed the principle ness to negotiate diploma that -- in Adenauer's words --|with Russia on Moscow's current NATO should be equipped "'with|peace offensive but stressed that advanced weapons equalling{in the meanwhile NATO must TORONTO (CP) -- Three de: |those of our potential enemy." stand ready to repel any -ag- Hotel Has Yet Adenauer said all military|gression with '"'modern weapons Standards Association took too|fly to Canada late Wednesday mands to curb unemployment-- questions here need "very thor-|which are as good as the equip- long in approving British elec- night. abolition of excise tases on Cana: r he equi ough study," with a decision put/ment of" our opponents. Y dian-made cars, a $100 cut in the | : off until next spring. | He insisted, too, on a n f i Youths Charged Reds Announce [Ei SEES wid fhe Be Spee | Premier Einar Gerhardsen of| "common basic policies' £0" After Near Riot | 4 surance Fund--were made Sun. Norway informed the conference|W Or ked out in consultation - BARRYS BAY, Ont. {CP 'Organization Tisis. government's reduction of the| [Of intermediate Sy among the alliance members-so Yoo Five youths were charged | Of Producti I u on excise tax to 7% from 10 per cent| missiles. WARNS OF DANGERS day by the Canadian Council of that his country has no Plans iy "rsoiceq states "as the leadis me United Auto Woreers, [oe to let stockpiles be esta- er" could act quickly MONTREAL (CP)--Five fires day in connection with a near eorge Burt, council president, |, "4," construct launching sites" within 10 days in the 650-room riot Saturday night in this East-| Windsor Hotel are to be reviewed ern Ontario Fesort town, 35 miles| by experts at a meeting is southwest of Pembroke. ( -- n | ¥ n oo |week, fire director Raymond The five were arrested after alg MOSCOW Reuteys) Kusgia would amount to about $45 off on| Gerhardsen said that if neces-| Eisenhower said mighty nes {Pare said Sunday. {mob of 30 to 40 youngsters y nigh e re-| Economic Co-operation Major NATO Item - PM PARIS (CP)--Closer economic, Britain and the United States several NATO-member govern Five Fires eo-operation among NATO mem- have said they oppose any move ments. In 10 Da S bers will be a "major item" for|toward such talks until Russia] The prime minister suggested the NATO summit meeting to indicates by action that it is/that a committee made up of thrash out, Prime Minister Die-|ready to sit down with the West scientific representatives of each| fenbaker says. {in good faith. But several Euro-|NATO country be set up to bring The Canadian leader said in a/pean countries and the Scan-|ahout the Oet. 25 Macmillan- press conference Sunday that the dinavian powers have indicated Eisenhower declaration of inter- eold war so far has prevented they favor a move to break the dependence. Sees ; blished on Norwegian territory |with NATO support in any future 0 e quarterly session the range ballistic pa ath SF {mail The pr nl ¥ X and pre-meeting calls on other Western lead- ed interest in economic matters, including me Minister reliable sources indicated Can- {ada feels two military matters He declined comment on re-rank just as high if not higher 4 Bulganin sent a "peace ap- * gladstone said the stabbing oc NATO from working toward this cold war deadlock. dems Diefenbak leo would be He made the announcement in ation ! fire published in London thation the list to be considered, da is to act as a 'go be- These are the stockpiling of nu- tween" in seeking East-West high|clear weapons at bases to permit level talks. Informants indicated, quick and effective retaliation in Bowever, that Canada broadly the event of Russian aggression, favors a course which would set and the setting up in Europe of|{supreme commander of NATO. talks with Russia in suitable|Intermediate-Range Ballistic Mis-| A Ca acs. | Science of one Joust iy, Ve A : the waalg Inst ave lo deter "Sunday when country could make its contribu- tion nationally." honor Sunday night at a suppe at the Canadian Embassy here. which melted 'siles. Both are a sore spot with!vices, inform the ami said. | Firefighters were summoned flames spurted from a pile oi papers in a section burned-out Dec. 10 in a thre "and then each Diefenbaker was the guest * ice in mild weather, Earlier, he met with Macmillan A secord blaze in a room next and British Foreign Secretary|to the damaged portion destroyed Selwyn Lloyd and Field Marshal a mattress and a chair. Viscount Montgomery, deputy -- 45 Canadians Die He also attended church ser- Reds Want 'Wheels Only Clue To Missing Plane HAMILTON (CP)--Two landing ator in the Fort Erie-Port Col- I e a {Wheels found bobbing in Lake borne Erie were the only clue today in wreckage. i inal the search for a twin - engine prem WHEELS Swiss To American plane which disap- peared with its pilot in a snow. | storm Saturday. Two U.S, Navy helicopters were to join 11 aircraft, imelud- ing RCAF planes based at nearby | Mount Hope, in the search. The last message from Robert West, president of the West In- strument Company of Chicago, was picked up by the pilot of a Trans-Canada Air Lines passen- BERN (AP)--Soviet Premier Bulganin hinted last week that Russia would like the Swiss to propose again an East-West sum mit meeting, the Swiss govern- ment disclosed today. peal" letter to the 80 member states of the United Nations and to one non-member, Switzerland. The latter was similar in con- \ tent to those addressed to the ger plane. It said: other countries. But a covering 'T am 2.000 feet above Hagers- note recalled that the Swiss gov-i ville. Both engines are out. Am ernment, in November, 1956, losing height rapidly." : urged an immediate summit Hagersville is about 20 miles meeting of the heads of govern: south of Hamilton and on the ment of Britain, the United Foute from Rochester, N.Y., to| . ., Detroit that West was taking on Saree, France, Sussia and Livi his return from a business trip. : = The first clue to the plane's gaused BE fight- whereabouts came Saturday search turned up the second. | operations. 'boats from the lifeboat service at| 'In Safety Week TORONTO (CP) -- Forty-five persons died on Canada's roads and highways during the Dee. 1-7 National Safe Driving Week-- |mates by the Canadian Highwa Safety Conference, it was an- nounced today. : But the conference executive sighting | .ommittee meeting was told, is evident Canadians did try to drive and walk safely during safe-driving week and may justly area reported The report brought to light the first wheel at Point Abino near Crystal Beach. A shoreline lives duriiz the week." The {igure was 22 fewer than the toll durin the 1956 safe-driv- ing week and 28 fewer than the same period in '1955. 2nd Earthquake boats trom the Lil Hits West Iran Saturday. TEHRAN, Iran (Reuters) The 'missing man's brother. Three hundred persons were un- Maj. William West of U.S. Air oificially reported killed today National Guard and vice-presi- and 500 were injured in an earth- dent of the instrument firm, ex- quake in western Iran, No con- amined the landing wheels but firmation or official figures of said he could not determine casualties' were immediately whether they were from his available. s brothet's plane, The new tremor struck as res- RCAF authorities said a yellow object sighted off Point Abino proved to be a sunken raft but |U.S. coastal boats were directed to the scene (to start dragging A helicopter from the U.S naval base at Buffalo, N.Y., and the search : evening when a pump-house oper- Bulganin's letter said: -- "The Soviet government ex- a a sses the hope that the Swiss government, consciods of the Bill Gives No dangers of the international ten- sion, will , . . take the necessary measures which could contribute| to the maintenance and strength- ening of peace between the na- tions." OTTAWA (CP) --- The Cana- The Swiss government said it dian Federation of Agriculture will decide "at a later stage" on Says the government's new agri- a reply to Bulganin's letter. cultural stablization bill gives no} definite assurance it will improve | |the economic position of the far-| . {mer, Child Stabbed | Federation President H. H. !Hannam said in a statement Sun- day right that whether the farm- In Farm Fracas BRANDON, Man. (CP) -- One child was fatally stabbed and an. other injured in a Saturday night fracas at a farm home near Plumas, 52 miles northeast of here. The father was held by po- ment in its adminjstration. The Progressive Conservative government proposed in the House of Commons Saturday that Par'iament approve mandatory price floors for nine key agricul- tural commodities and that the government be enabled to use its own discretion in setting the level of price guarantees to be provided for other products "The new bill contains some| important features which repre-| sent progress in price su islation."" the CFA said. guarantees are to he all fimes on key tommodities: other 1s that price supports will he reviewed annually and estab-| e. i victim was Shirley Robin- son, 4. Injured anfl in good con dition in hospital at nearby Glad. stone, was Murilla Robinson, 2 RCMP officers here said Al- pert Robinson, 34, a farm la- porer, was being held on a cor- oner's warrant in connection with the death. Coroner Dr. J. H. Morre .of rred following an argument in wolving Mrs. Robinson, 24. The en and the mother were from the one-room farm |months im advance. Farmers' Federation Says omission," it said. Boost leg | planes were to begin ho statement at dawn today for One of these is that price believed s n effect at!fljopt aN- about 270 miles east lished on key commodities twelve <ateying Mr. and Mrs, Su | debris left by rriday's earth- | ~:ake which took hundreds of lives, injured thousands and left | many more thousands homeless |in the cold and snow of the west | Iranian mountains. [cue workers picked through the Assurance ome of the blazes uoknown to us," three more than hte figure esti-| claim to have saved more than 20 Yh wrested ope of their companions organization of her four main th Ss of thes t n n rd The mini im miged 'with obstructing. fhe those of the aviation, defence, aw an the Highway Traffic Act are Ray- mond Zilney, Mark Yantha, Law- rence Cybulskie, Ronald Cutos- kie and Bronas Glysinski, all of|agehcies, these ministries were Barrys Bay and all between the ing industries. Together with other specialized |charges, Police said the trouble began submarines and rocket missiles. | when Chief Constable William i Serran seized a case of beer from| Under the reorganization, the la youth in a restaurant. About 30|four ministries are all reconsti-| {other youths in the establishment|tuted as state committees, sub- |attacked the policeman and took [ordinated to the Soviet Council] |the beer from him. of Ministers--the Soviet cabinet. | Blonde Credited | With Boy's Return TORONTO (CP) -- A blonde|published a picture. A man who| switchboard operator who once had seen Ronnie saw this picture {ran away from home herself was and phoned Mr. Jaremkow."" | given generous credit today for| piss Heffron said she became {her efforts in trying to locate 14-/interested in the missing boy| year-old Ronnie Jaremkow, found after reading an earlier .column| jasi Thurgaay after disappearing by Mr. Young published Nov. 13.| ays ago. "I phoned Mrs. Jaremkow Ronnie ran away after being| " , i -|about it," she said today. "When suspended from school for smok she broke down on the phone II ing. For a time he worked at knew I had to do something." | Toronto's Woodbine race track| {and later on a farm at Campbell-| Mr. i said this is what |ville, 15 miles north of Hamilton, ® | where he was found. His father ARRANGED RADIO, TV | had walked Toronto streets 100k-| Arranged with at least three ing for him evenings and on the 1oronto radio stations to broad-| | weekend. |cast personal appeals for Ron- | Scott Young today devoted his|nie's 'mother, got police permis: | with coutraventions of radio techniques and shipbuild. S% bY 'amadian farmers and work-| NATO's p the thousands have been | glum's Paul-Henri Spaak, called|freedom over despotism is fmeve. | out of the market and will 'take a péw bring them bac cut will do it." roac us 000 fo ease unemployment. a h to . 1 think the $100 e nf $100,000,000 from the $850 - priced cars. This, he sary a solution to disarmament forces were beginning to "gel said, would not be sufficient to must be sought "through direct|pall world.' & over diplomatic negotiations id ers." Ti s 8 cl : tion for Ande) tussian tal bel he side © civilian chief, Bel-|and that the eventu s./time 1s on ition all 15 members of the alli- itable. the | Mr. Burt tol : ges of 18 and 20. Police said| for the p fon of | fold, the counc] ihe orel nn ra eo {there may be further arrests and such weapons as inter-continen- 006.000 insurance trast fand is tal missiles, atomic planes and needed as an immediate stop-gap HERON REEVE WHITBY TWP. BROOKLIN -- William A. Heron is the new reeve of Whitby Township and Nor- man Anderson is the deputy- reeve, The two switched positions which they held for the past . two years as they were re- turned Saturday by acclama- tion. Thre e cnadidates were suc- cessful in their bid for coun- cil seats. John Goodwin, with 414 votes, led the council race. Goodwin, who is 25, is be- lieved to be the youngest councillor ever to sit on the township board. Gordon Me- Mahon was second with 368 votes and*Mrs. Ed. Lovelock was third with 342 votes. The two defeated council aspirants were Mrs. John Hamer with 306 votes and Mrs. Gladys Gentles with 58 votes. Balance Drops ; OTTAWA (CP) - Canada's un-, Exports to the United States avorable foreign tra alance [showed a small i |dropped to $737,500,000 at the end | op 4 $258 Yep trop Ie |of October after hitting a series | 0 Sedliy U1 Om. 3e8%e {of highs earlier in the year, the 600,000 and to the end of October {bureau of statistics reported to- were above last year at $2,438, |day in a preliminary statement. 600,000 against $2,399,902,000, | The figure compared with] The import surplus with the $755,200.000 at the same period of [United States for October was 1956 and was brought about by thus sharply lower than last year an October drop in imports of at $69,000,000 versus $109,000,000 {$61,300,000 compared with Oct-'and for the ten months amounted ober of last year, |to $992,300,000 compared to $1- | Imports to 'the end of October 093,200,000. were estimated at $4,783,800,000] Imports from the United king- compared with $4,782,000,000 last dom continued to advance in-@ct- |year while exports were $4,048,- ober with a small rise to an-esti- {000,000 compared with $4,028,000,- mated $44,300,000 from $43,700,000 |000. [bringing the cumulative value of | October imports were placed|$437,700.000 from $406,900,000~ a |at $481,200,000, against last year ago. year's October record of $542.-| Exports .dropped off in |800,000. Exports were $405.000,000 month to $55,800,000 from "$67, {compared with $456,000,000. {400,000 and for the ten months More than accounting for the Were down to $604,000,000 from |drop in total imports, purchases | $659,500,000. rom the United States in Oct-| The export surplus with th ober fell an estimated $66,900,000, United Kingdom in October why |to $327,00,000 from $394,600.000 thus about half last year's at $11, |last year. bringing the ten- 500,000 versus $23,700,000 and Diopts total under last year's at down nearly a third in the tem entire column in The Globe and); Mail to the efforts of Eleanor(Sion, 0, broaticast {hem #74 ac. ,430,900 compared to $3,- months at $166,300,000 1493,100,000. to $252,600,000. compared Heffron, now 18, about whom he ow during. her radio appear- (said: ance. At one of them the mother SPARKED PUBLICITY Broke down and Miss Heffron "There is no telling how much took over, beginning her appeal impetus one-girl effort like this| With: Ronnie, you don't know |piles up. But for nearly 47 days ™€ but. . . . [before Eleanor Heffron started) She arranged similar appeals not taking no for an answer, over television and for the miss-| {there had been practically no ing boy's picture to be flashed publicity on this missing boy. In in front of television cameras. four weeks she got lots of pub-| Miss Heffron said she once ran licity. Last week the Toronto away from home and went to| |Daily Star reviewed the story, | Quebec. She returned voluntarily. "'On the other hand, the bill has serious shortcomings. The three. year average of market prices fo! be us2d as a basic price formula gives no recognition to the farm- ers' parity position. , . . "While the bill sets the levels of minimum floor guarantees on a number of key commodities these mostly work out at less| Dave Beck, SEATTLE (AP) -- ers' position will be improved by than 70 per cent of parity as the Who climbed to the top of the learned that Beck's lawye use of price guarantees under the CFA calculates it legisiation will depend on what|,,o guide as to the level of which fortune on the way, was con- when arguing for a new trial: {immediate indication when sen- decisions are made by the govern- , ico supports should be estab- victed Saturday of the theft of The new trial motion was filed tence would be passed. He re- the absence of teamsters union and amassed a lished annually on key commodit- $1,900 frei the sale of a union: ies or on other commodities owned Cadillac from time to time is a serious, The 63-year-old Beck, who has handled millions of dollars for |the teamsters, was found guilty |of grand largeny involving an| amount totallind only a fraction of his personal wealth. He is re- Search Starts ima. For Small Plane sumer tout urs of ree TO ' -- erated eight hours and 17 min- VANCOUVER (CP) Three tes to decide his fate. They took! gin searching |onjy one ballot. 2 smal plane The case had an extraordinary fo Cranbrook aftermath, hovever, as Judge * George H. Revelle and counsel . . for both sides soon went into con The B.C. Aero Club plane was|ference in the judge's chambers Boger with a court reporter recording ; the proceedings. i @ " have here to from jir of Vancouver, said it] Beck could be sentenced up to rs will|15 years in prison for the grand jurors |larceny conviction. There was no | The Seattle Times charge misconduct by shortly after the verdict was main free on $3,000 bond. brought in and arguments prob- _ 2 ably will be heard next week. ALSO INCOME TAX QUESTIONS CONDUCT member teamsters union faces The Times said the motion will new court trouble next April] say at least one juror did not when he goes on trial on charges) answer truthfully while being he evaded $240,000 in income questioned before being accepted taxes for the years 1950-53. { as a juror and others were guilty] Beck's conviction came exactly| of misconduct outside the court-'two weeks after that of his 37- room during the trial. ( |year-old son, Dave Jr., on two Beck received the verdict with counts of grand larceny. The a faint smile on his lips but with younger Beck was accused of his gaze fixed on the wall. Later pocketing $4,650 from the sale of he raced down seven flights of two other used, union - owned stairs, saying "no comment" re- Cadillacs. peatedly to newspaper men. _Judge Revelle sat on the trial "You could ask me a thousand of both Becks. He already has| questions and 1 wouldn't ans- been notified the younger man's| wer," the union chief said. conviction will be appealed. | dents D. Beck Found Guilty Theft Of Union Funds | The president of the 1,400,000-| f Ee Eight injured in seven city and district acci- dents during the weekend but none seriously. One of the agei- involved the two ve- . persons were 8 INJURED IN 7 ACCIDENTS ON WEEKEND hicles above. A car driven 'by | day. Hermarn is in the O r y. : shaw. Jazga Hermann, 29, of Chad- | General Hospital with chest hw | wick avenue, Oshawa, crashed | juries, broken ribs and numers | the rear of a transport when | turn to Page 3 for roundup | traffic stopped suddenly on | story.) Highway 401 at midnight Sun- } ~Photo by John Mills, yin

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