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

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TIMES-GAZETTE TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising .. RA 3-3492 .. RA 3-3474 All other calls 4 2 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZET Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle : Saturday, TE WEATHER REPORT Cloudy, windy and colder tonight and VOL. 86--NO. 297 thorized Price Not Over Au gy Stats uy 8 Cents Per Copy Second Post Office Department, Ottawe OSHAWA-WHITBY, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1957 TWENTY-SIX PAGES - PRIME MINIST' LR John Die- | fenbaker of Canada, left, ex- changes greeting with Konrad Adenauer, chancellor of West MA | Diefenbaker Hoffa Trial Sworn Into | Jury Hung Privy Council NEW YORK (AP)--The -wire-|lian Doren, singled out tap conspiracy trial of James R.|Earle T. MacHardy LONDON (CP)--Prime Minis- Hoffa, president - elect of the] MazHardy said he was at- ter Diefenbaker was sworn in as|teamsters union, and two others tempting to resolve certain ques- a member of the Privy Council|ended today in a hung jury. The tions involving circumstantial today in a brief ceremony at|panel of seven men own evidence. A Buckingham Palace. | women reported a hopeless ead- rwo OTHERS CHARGED The ceremony, held in the lock. 11.10. 108 Sonvicuoh, On {rial with Hoffa were Owen presence of Queen FElizabeth,| The jurors began their deliber- B: resident 'of Detroit took place at a regular meeting ations at 4 p.m. Wednesday and |B. Brennan, president'o Ber: \ {wh ismiss t 12:50 a.m. to. teamsters Local 337, and B oe owed. meeting which 48: Sismissed ge Now, 5. |nard Spindel a professional wire- it ates Atto Paul W.|tapper. 3 lasted about 30 minutes, the wae ee Orne. Shere | They were charged with con- prime minister and Mrs. Diefen-| i > a spiring here to tap illegally tele- baker had lunch with the Queen, |Seriainly vil be Znother nal of phones in the Detroit teamsters Prince Philip was not present be- jt brought to trial at the earliest building to find out 'what infor- cause of a previous engagement practicable time." mation union subordinates were| at Tyneside, where he is spend-|" Highly elated at the deadlock 81Ving to official racket investi-| ing the day on an industriai iour.|Hoffa shook hands with his law-|gators. Conviction carried a max- juror JAMES HOFFA |lumbia by air July 12. approximately two weeks in the Later today the prime minister yer, Sol Gelb. |imum penalty o one year in jail | scheduled a call at Canada House| ong MAN HOLDS OUT {and a $10,000 fine. 5 for inf 1 tal vi The 44 - year - old Hoffa oh oa Seurge| The jury sent Judge Frederick|charged in another indictment | si 7 o VanPeit Bryan a note Thursday with committing perjury five] SIONgr 1 ie United Ringaom, night that 11 members were "in|times before a federal rackets . : ph *8: accord with-a decision" but that/grand jury in New York last Before leaving for Canada by |gne juror "will not give credence|April 3. That case has not been air tonight, Diefenbaker and EX-|{o circumstantial evidence." tried, Conviction could mean a ternal Affairs Minister Sidney Bryan summoned the panel sentence of up to 25 years in Smith are meeting the heads of and 'the jury foreman, Mrs. Lil-|prison. Canadian departments in London | ree - --- at a private reception at the |Drews' official London residence. MAN'S DISGUST said he was surprised to find the 84-year-old West German chancellor such "a young man." Germany, at a meeting in Paris Thursday on the final day of the NATO summit confer- ences. Mr. Diefenbaker later Last Padder Suspect Ordered To Stand Trial TORONTO (CP)--The last of five persons charged with padd- ing the voters' list in St. Paul's riding during the June 10 federal election was committed to trial Thursday. George Ewing, 57, faces 12 eharges--four of forgery, four of i yiola pd foul hle Roma: [idd) ollum, all Liberal ged Ee . - - oy and Kathleen earlier this week and sentenced to one month in jail and fined) $300. Middl was tenced Wednesday to six months in jail.| Testifying at Ewing's prelimin-| ary hearing Thursday, Mi Price said she had been told $50| might be paid to persons who/ "used up" votes. When asked what "using wp! After a few workers, were char, Mrs. Gamble ; an nauiry. gr one "using up votes" eould be = , 21, Was paid $50. trial that she helped add fictiti- investigation COSTS $10 PITTSBURGH (AP)--Mag- istrate E. N. Johnson Thurs- day levied a $10 fine against Joseph Dereno, 32, accused of ripping loose telephone wires and gas and water pipes in his home. : "I was disgusted," Dereno said. "I-"went into the cellar to fix the water tank and it jing to Kenneth Glancy, campaign and con- manager for defeated Liberal candidate James Rooney, Miss] Price said. votes" meant, she said: "I couldn't tell you," tended she knew virtually noth- ing about politics or campaigns Parents Of Abandoned Tot Found The parents of nine-months-old Michael left by "a man' in the| care of a Pickering township woman some weeks ago, have been found, a Children's Aid offi- RGARET TO VISIT CANADA NEXT SUMMER Plans Two Week Stay On LONDON (Reuters)--Princess Margaret will make her (first visit to Canada next summer, it was officially announced here. to-| night. . Coast later the princess visited the West Indies. Her trip to Canada will be her first to the North American con- |tinent. A statement from the princess' residence said she has accepted] the invitation of the government | of British Columbia to attend cen- tenary celebrations there in 1958. The announcement confirmed speculation on both sides of the, Atlantic that Margaret would | visit Canada next year. | The Clarence House statement] said she will arrive in British Co- "Princess Margaret will spend province after which Her Royal Highness will visit other parts of Canada during a period of about | 10 days," it added. "Further details will be an- nounced later." RECALL OTHER VISITS The 27-year-old princess' first major foreign visit was in 1947 when she went to South Africa with other members of the Royal Family. In 1949 she went holiday- ing in Italy and also visited Swit- izerland and France, Three Killed In Collision OTTAWA (CP) -- A big oil tanker truck and an automobile collided Thursday night on High- way 31, killing the car's three oe- cupants. The car's driver was identified as Magnus J. W. Malmberg, 56, of Ottawa. The accident occurred near the hamlet of Glasgow Station, about 30 miles west of Ottawa on a curve in the-highway. The night was foggy and the road wet and slippery. The front end of the car slid under the trailer just in front of the rear dual wheel. It took work. men almost three hours to re- move the mangled bodies from the automobile's wreckage. Truck driver Francis Burns, Princess Margaret and the Queen Mother toured Southern Rhodesia in 1953 and two years'senger immediately. 47, of Ottawa was unhurt. Police did not identify the pas- cial said today. Stanley Mason, acting director of the Children's Aid Society for Ontario County and the City of Oshawa, said that he spoke with both parents in Toronto, Thurs- day. This climaxes a province- wide search for the baby's par- ents. Pictures of the baby boy were printed in several daily news- | papers in an effort to assist ay- |thorities in locating the family. Mr. Mason said it was through assistance of The Daily Times, and had never voted herself. I WENT TO COTTAGE Miss Price told the court she 1 away Gi to "THOUGHT IT CHEAP" bl fell on me." AL \ al 'Bh er papers and welfare authori- ties in Toronto, that an authori tive lead to the baby's mother and father was obtained, "The family 1s confused a series hg IL 4 i mentioned Pearson Urge U.S-Red Talks TORONTO (CP)--"Serious and far-reaching" consultations be- tween the United States and Rus- sla, based on power and diplo- macy, have been advocated by| Lester B. Pearson as a means fo keep the North Atlantic Treaty Organization strong. Mr. Pearson, the newsboy son of a Methodist minister who be- came president of the United Na- tions General Assembly and won| the Nobel Peace Prize, Thursday night gave his formula for peace to 2,000 persons honoring him at a dinner on 'Lester B. Pearson Day." Civie officials said it was the fist time in memory that To- ronto had honored anyone by naming a day after him. "If the United States, after dis- cussions with its NATO Allies, | were now to make a move--not necessarily through a summit conference--to open up serious and far - reaching consultations with the U.S.S.R. on certain out-| standing problems, there is no reason in the world why that move should result in any weak- ening of the strength or unity of the alliance whatever," he said "On the contrary, if moves of this kind are not made and not attempted that undesirable re- sult may occur." RELATIVES ATTEND With him at the dinner spon sored by the Canadian Institute of International Affairs and the] United Nations Association in Canada, were Mrs. Edwin A. Pearson, his 89-year-old mother, his wife and Vaughan Pearson, | his youngest brother. His mother received a surprise presentation from the sponsors-- a picture of her son receiving the $40,000 Nobel award in Oslo last Dec. 7. She brushed away tears and kissed the picture as it was handed to her. The sponsors presented a sim flar picture to his wife. Mr Pearson received an illuminated scroll from the sponsors and a silver water jug from the city of Toronto. Speaking of NAT(O§ Mr. Pear- son said: "If an easing of fear brings| about an impatience with the ob-| ligations and commitments for co ~- operation and consultation with allies, then our coalition will be found to be too fragile a thing # survive a removal of the fear' plants. But the AFL-CIO action direct- spectre, creeping into the Commons. | | | | Ont. May Leave F Mart Field TORONTO (CP) -- The Globe|farmer" is the mainstay of the |ernment is seriously considering|accurate indications of opinion |withdrawing from all farm mar-|would be obtained if polis were | keting legislation, leaving farm| conducted by farmers' organiza- | members. | ns another SIFY, commenting a {on the reported policy shift, The paper: says: |Globe and Mail says withdrawal that it has become too closely |yeting legislation field might re- identified. with Iw enforcement | coneile opposing farm groups. later pressure from various groups. ¥ i "If the present thinking of the! testified! (:] p % goverment is ogi: ' a ai es organizations will be asked U - F i - fo assume the burden of deter- drinks, she uald, ery A. Mathews. of the | 0 U S With mining what farmers wish and| nions rom I i Ne forcing their! | RCMP said Ewing had tried to also 40 the job of en 4 | 4 / i her : { demands. } disguise his writing in a speci Movement i into voting . prac-| al ment, said "there's no change/ ous names to the voters' lists at tices, but said Ewing's writing] contemplated in our legislation-- , qu hich : tnd _|form-minded AFL-CIO acted to- Miss Price testified she met four applications to have voters'dent Eisenhower returned boli ioricalture Ministe T Goad- day to complete ouster of the Ewing in May in Mrs. Gamble's/ names added to the list. Washington today after a week's available for comment. teamsters, laundry and bakery vote with-him as his wife on elec-|lum, 50, also await trial. Mrs. lies drafted a blueprint for cop- Bay inki is ft it 1 t tion day. |Gamble faces 38 charges, Mrs. ing with the Communists in the government thinking is not ex-(© e united abor Inovement. Mrs. Gamble introduced Ew-|Vollum six [missiles age pected to influence votes under| The three unions already have » : -- i an : plane 'w |the Farm Products Marketing been kicked out of the big feder- f i yas [ayed more than three hours by and peach growers. But it would] George Meany, AFL-CIO pres- armer oun | AGW, have an effect on the hog pro-/ident, and William Schnitzler, "5 It made refuelling stops at ducers' vote expected next June. secretary-treasurer, followed up |Newtoundl ir Force Base, says The Globe and Mail, has|ordering the federation's more (Newfoundland, early today. {been influenced by the feeling than 650 state and local groups | Vice-President Richard - Niven that the "back concesslonto act immediately to sever re-| 0 e Held {led the American greeting party|---------------- [lations with units of the three at Washington National airport. . Eisenhower was smiling as he St I t d The orders could touch off a first place. An autopsy was to be performed with Nix d 1k th arr nvi e |Labos war around the United "That is the challenge and the|today on an elderly farmer whose; 2 "X08 anc the other mem. . States. | ; "| battered body was f i _/bers of the welcoming group, T L M t The powerful teamsters union dilemma facing NATO at Sais v. was found in a de- |,' 4 spite of a light drizzle 0 ee ng h | night. a | \f lines of| CHURCH AND STATE | Clifford Hooper, about 60, was| Eisenhower got a warm send-, TORONTO (CP)---F sderel La-|striking AFL-CIO unions to de:| A th honors found by three neighbors who be.|Off in Paris, riding through 13|p0F. MUMSIEr Sarr anc Labor mong ose onoring Mr. A miles of waving cheerin {Minister Daley of Ontario Will be and state leaders, including Sir he was missed from the farm he fap Yiat a meeting here Jan. 29. Leslie Munro of New Zealand, [rented near this town, 10 miles Field: Jug hus Torewsl) hed a nOS-| The meeting was suggested president of the General As.|northeast of Chatham. He is be- h Ss always for me Thyrsday night by Toronto and|May cause -- nnn id , t say goodbye to Paris," th inis i ,.| Hoffa has id tl te: t France, Norway and the United three days must ) © ministers could outline the govy-|Hoffa has sai he amsters| States. y "eel Me body was found at the foot| President remarked at an airport|ernment's views. |"never would fire the first shot| lof a ladder leading to the loft of] C€remony. French President | Vlaude Jodoin, president of the|in a labor civil war," but implied There also was Paul Martin, former health minister and Mr. | 1 ) " saw him off. | y ir Pearson's rival for leadership oe gerly Shans pockets were - _lalso be asked to attend. ready to return any fire. the Liberal party. buttoned and a pipe stem, a must establish 'a better peacel/lay strewn about him. than we now have . . . between, Hooper was pronounced dead the two worlds who now face by Coroner Dr. R. J. Sussex of gap of fearful hostility and male-|Chatham where the autopsy was volent ignorance." {to be performed by Dr. N. J.| **... We should avoid digging|Toplack. ! from which we can't get out." Sherman Carroll the neighbors| This did not t sing | Who discovered him, said Hooper | AWAY or ot mean throwingly aq" with his 17-year-old son, | i had no electricity or ru "Strength is today essential-- water. ¥ mning not for provocation or for pres: ------s------ er ---- n - of freedom--but also as a founda- B.C. Chief Justice tion for the kind of active diplo- macy 1 am talking about." Accepts New Post the architect of the United Na-i; ith | " {ice 'Gordon Sloan of British Col-| Hous Emergency Force, one of | ymbia has accepted an appoint-| e foremost citizens of the|ment a5 adviser to the provincial| Peace Prize award that has won|" He will resi x tusks Bo pr sign as chief justice] greater Ps tla im than that and take over his new duties Jan. | awarded Mr. Dearson. 1. The 10 - year appointment the world for the wisdom and 000. diplomacy he has displayed in| The announcement was made! the United Nations." Thursday by Premier Bennett. U.K. Government Wins Vote LONDON (Reuters)--The government today defeated by a vote of 289 to 251 a Labor Opposition challenge to its hand- Dulles Arrives In Madrid MADRID (AP)--U.S, State Secretary Dulles arrived here today for a five-hour visit with Generalissimo Franco and | and Mail says the Ontario gov-|province's agriculture and more |organizations to regulate Hieir Hous, | "1t is felt by the government ,¢'4y eo government from the mar- as a result subjected to too much! J paid ' "| conclusion it will mean that thought he was a vo ©" Miss Price testified at her own men taken in connection with the| Premier Frost, asked to com | Mrs. Gamble's request. matched fictitious signatures on] WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pres. | Ht is, Ju Je senaral elites, reminded AFLCIO acied to. office and he had suggested she| Mrs. Gamble, 44, and Mrs. Vol- trip to Paris where 15 NATO &l- * Tne story says the change in|Workers unions from all echelons Eisenhower's de- Act next spring among wheat ation on corruption charges. Dead Auto [Refiavik, Josland Thursday nightt The government's attitude,|this national-level expulsion by ' PSY that brought it into being in the THAMESVILLE Ont. (CP)-- "The ' left the plane. He shook hands moment." serted barn near here Thursday | {50k off his homburg. lg Rigg) ag Mov Pearson weré Canadian church gan a search several days after| to reach his plane at ie invited to discuss unemployment | DE a ti yacneral i" lieved to have been dead about|? moment of sadness when Ii District Labor Council so the taliate. President-elect James R. the ' doorless, rickety building. Rene Coty and other dignitaries|Canadian Labor Congress will|that the union would always be Mr. Pearson said the West jacknife, matches and a letter wry : ~ : i { bY AY \ { each other across a frightening Florence. His body was taken to] ourselves into policy positions Keith and Frances Ogleter and pth A "weakening our defence|y in in a shack on the farm. Ii tige, not only for the protectiol Sir Leslie called Mr. Pearso VICTORIA (CP)--Chief Just- world. I do not know of a Nobel|government on forestry matters. "He is best known throughout carries an annual salary of $50,-| LATE NEWS FLASHES ling of issues raised at the Paris NATO conference. other Spanish efficials, Two horror-struck men stand at the seene in Murphysboro, Il., where a tornado struck minutes before. The two unis "TORNADO RAKES ILLINOIS SECTOR dentified men were not injured when their homes were levelled at Murphysboro their five shildres next A couple and door | |bate as all opposition parties--| |objecting on various principles) {but not with votes--gave their ] support to a government proposal relief. | provinces. Cabinet ministers gave indica- ployment the mew Progressive federal govern: that the 8 full responsibility for unemploy- t |Conservative government is put- {ting together a broad general ment. | program |the unusually-high level of un- employment this winter. day was occupied on a measure all provincial unemployment will continue to provide tempo- rary shelter for Michael until such time as the mother and fa- and resume custody of child." Michael's parents other children. have no| {study undertaken TOP SECRET U.S. Danger Grave--Rep WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Washington Post says a cret. government d trays a United States in the grav- est danger In its history .. . ex- to an almost Mason said. "The Children's Aid|", day's editions, The Post says a|Office of Defence { | Dosiv and She National Sel ther can Te cstablioh ives ieaded by H. Rowan Gaither cil. Gaither, former president of by a or. ar ort -yCOUN- pictares the nation moving in|the Ford Foundation, headed the their frightening course to the status board. lof a second-class power." otherwise appears to be an inevitable ca. "To prevent what Elderly Brothers Beat Off Thugs DETROIT (AP)--The Cassidy brothers, 75-year- 78-year-old Dr. William, fine job Thursday on would-be holdup men. Two holdup men 'walked into their drug store at the edge o Detroit's downtown area. A third stood outside keeping watch, did af three Cassidy dropped the rifle and old Joseph and picked up a shotgun alongside it. | |Again the situation was his. He riding priority is the revitaliz pulled the trigger and the gun|O didn't fire. The shells were old {and defective. REFUSES COMMENT The White House has refused any comment on the report, call- |ing it a highly classified docu- ment. The Post story adds: "Only through such an all-out effort, the report says, can United States hope to close the current missile gap and to coun- ter the world-wide - Communist offensive in many fields and in many lands. "Established as the first, over in, the American retaliatory of fensive force, as principal deter- rent fo an all-out Russian at Still the holdup man stood tack." The brothers were herded into/the store where he kept a re- a back room. |volver. The thugs dashed for the "We need some money for door. Christmas. Where is it?" Dr. Cassidy, a surgeon who liver materials to strikebound once ran for mayor of Detroit, py, suggested they look in the safe. go. |ONE THUG WOUNDED Dr, Cassidy entered the fight. picked up another shotgun m the small arsenal the broth- there, not shooting. Then Cassidy REPORT ADVISES ran to a counter in the front of To meet the Soviet military threat, the newspaper says the |report recommends: | 1. "A rapidly rising military {budget through 1970, reaching im [the years 1960 and 1961 a peak {outlay of about $8,000,000,000 a |year in additional expenditures "I was hoping he would bend ars kept in their store. He fired|0ver and above the current $38,- thing," he said. | The holdup man didn't have to bend over to find out the safe was empty. Then Joseph turned and grab- bed a rifle from a nearby hiding place. For a second the situation was his. But the gun was no ling ousters in states and cities|over so I coulc smash him on the once, hitting one of the men in the teamsters to re- head with a bottle or some-/the side. The lookout raced into the store and he and his companion| {helped their wounded accomplice |outside. Five minutes later a bleeding loaded. |side him was a pistol. For some reason, the gunman | The pistol was a starter's pis- 000,000,000 defence outlay, An- |other $5,000,000.000 a year, for |several years, for a civilian shel- ter program, is recommended on a priority basis." 2. "A sweeping reorganization |of the Pentagon (defence depart- ment) command system and .of |youth was found unconscious onithe current roles and missions t/a porch three blocks away. Be- of the armed services, both of which are regarded as come pletely outmoded in this nuclear stood there motionlessly, holding|tol in track meets--and it fires age. A eudget study of such the gun, He didn't fire. lonly blank cartridges. 'changes already is under way." OTTAWA (CP) An unemployment, It dominated Thursday's de- Ito take on a greater share of un-| \ {employment relief costs from the government's general economiic| policy affects ions aimed at combatting A good part of the Common d yroviding for federal splitting of re Stanley Knowles, deputy CCF Knowles said the ceriyval |f t tl Mr. the nation's em- levels. Therefore the| ernment - should take, final | 1 The legislation, given fiscal arrangements t uring the election campaign. He won a measure of support e SPC Program To Fight Jobless Problem old set when the present relief act sons in a province unable to work keeps | was passed two years ago. | because of some physical or other | affliction. Provinces were consid- leader, led his party's followers|ered to have sole responsibility lin criticising the government's|for these unemployable persons. proposal for not taking ever full responsibility for unemployment Meantime, Welfare Minister J. Waldo Monteith, sponsor of the measure, expressed hope that all provinces will accept the addi ional federal contribution, =~ If hey did, it would total more han $20,000,000 a year, he said. So far six provinces have en- ered agreements with Ottawa for this federal relief assistance: Newfoundland, Prince Edward sland, New Brunswick, Manit- Commons approval, was a "poor oha, Saskatchewan and British substitute" for improved federal-| Columbia. Mr. Monteith said Ot 5' provincial the Conservatives had promised 113000 for the fiscal year that awa paid out to them about $5,~ nded last March 31, Removal of the .45-per - cent [lief 'costs. This was approved in|from J. W. Pickersgill (L--Bona-| threshold. provision would add | principle. [SHARES WITH PROVINCES the measure becomes he supported the measure as the berta, Quebec and Nova Scotia government | best available from the new gov-| will also sign up for this federal |shares with accepting provinces ernment, he would rather have | aid. [their costs of unemployment re- seen the federal administration| lief to those without jobs number- take over all relief costs for|the plan, relief charges to mun- injury |ing more than .45 per cent of a those over the .45-per-cent thresh- |1 also escaped serious |8 Until aw, the federal ration minister. | vista-Twillingate), former immi-| $2,450,000 a year to federal pay- !ments to the six provinces. But Mr. Pickersgill said that while|Mr. Monteith said he hopes Al- He added that if Ontario enters {icipalities in that province woul when their home was destroy- [province's total population. This|old than remove that minimum. be cut to 20 perveat from. fi. ed. Burning wreckage is in the | background percentage "threshold" for com. | n ; mencement of federal aid wasi'to represent the number of per-'Ontario would receive X The threshold was considered|p resent 40-pericent of ".y

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