Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 22 Mar 1958, p. 1

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WEATHER REPORT Mainly sunny Sunday with lite tle change in temperature, winds northerly 20. EIGHTEEN PAGES TIMES-GAZETTE TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising RA 3-3492 All other calls .. RA 383-3474 THE DAILY TIMES.GAZETTE Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle OSHAWA-WHITBY, SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 1958 HINA EAGER TO BUY MORE FROM CANADA Burt Says Big Car Order Lost WINDSOR (CP) -- The Cana-|have been from Tom Lilley of the dian chief of the United Auto Ford international division at Dee Price Not Over Authorized As Second Class Mall Fig vidi ot AR Post Office Department, Ottowe 4, VOL. 87--NO. 69 1 | A 1 3 Trade Promoter Tells [Rebel Planes Tale Of Thousand Cars yo? io Capital VANCOUVER (CP) -- A busi-|was prepared to supply the cars,|cerned have refused to consider] ear api a nessman who tried unsuccess- he added, and went so far as tothe orders, in others the federal fully to get a Communist Chinese agree on the commission to be order for 1,000 automobiles filled paid, then cancelled the deal be- |in Canada says China 'wants to|cause of "U.S. government regu- do big business" with Canada. lations." licences, he said. He cited as ex amples an order for pharma- | ceuticals which he attempted to "Trade with Red China could SAW CARS IN CHINA |place with a Montreal firm but government has refused export d | SINGAPORE (Reuters) -- The Workers says Ford of Canada) troit and it read in part: {Indonesian rebel radio at Pa- could have sold 1,000 automobiles | "Mr. Ford has referred to me ang claimed tonight that two to Communist China but the par-|your letter of Feb. 12, 1957, ad- |planes from the rebel North Cele- ent Ford Company in the United dressed to Mr. Marshall Johnson |bes bombed Bandung, about 100 States vetoed the sale because of of East-West Import-Export Corp. miles from the Indonesian gov-|U.S. government regulations, in respect (to the proposed | ernment capital of Jakarta. George Burt, said the Ford Mo- sale). We are not in a position put Canada back on its feet and keep us busy for the next 50 |years," said Marshal of East-West Import- Limited, a Vancouver {firm through which he promotes Canadian trade in the Far East. Mr. Johnson said in an inter-| Mr. Johnson said that during Johnson! his 1956 visit and another which order for ball bearings which he he made to China last year, he saw European cars from many different countries and a number of American models. He was told the American cars view Friday night the order for had been imported through inter- [1,000 low-price models was "one mediary countries -- 'probably Wheat, he said. of many orders" for Canadian goods he obtained during a 2%- month visit to Red China in 1956. | encountered many problems in and automotive machinery, fluences in President Sukarno's Washington declined comment, re-| attempting to get Chinese orders/ chemicals, pharmaceuticals, ma-' government, General Motors to consider He said fused outright order. the BLUE BENNIE THE CORK Britain or France." Mr. Johnson declared he has filled in Canada. Ford of Canada at first| In some cases the firms con-/ferrous met: Figure $251 Too Much For One Lonely Ballot was rebuffed and a $2,000,000 "myis was the first report of a tor Company of Canada, like all [to furnish a quotation because of juivecs Sr attack on Java by the canadian subsidiaries of Ameri-| the Policies of the U.S, govern. |rebel forces. | i {ment."" a facut but an export if can firms, must abide by U.S.| dian inguiiacuiter ou POTY Fighting in Indonesia in the jas prohibiting trade in strate-| The union quoted the letter fur- permit was refused. [last month has been confined to|; : ! : The Canadi ; ty 3 aA |gic goods with Communist coun- ther as saying the U.S, embargo ie Canadian government has the oil-rich island of Sumatra. tries. |"as interpreted by the governs restricted exports to Communist, Insurgent forces in the North ; "» : China to chemical fertilizers and|Celebes threw in their lot with|. NO responsible officer of Ford ment" applies to Ford of Cane it w rai . ada. the Central Sumatran rebels in Detroit was available for com Red China i ially inter-|shortly after the revolt began Ment Me pure said J 2 Maddow ed China is especially inter-|shortly é * nell, acting Canadian trade min ested in importing agricultural against alleged Communist in-| The U.S. state department at; i \ hod tol Don Brown, Libe . A eral member for Essex West, in Mr, Burt said in a prepared the House of Commons Dec, 18 i I-istatement the Peiping govern- that the only way the American ber of casualties is not known." ment order for the vehicles was | government could affect exports p---- Mt - 'Meanwhile, ship owners In handed to Marshal Johnson of the by Canadian subsidiaries would . Singapore are planning to ask for| East-West Export-Import Corp. of be by exerting influence with the INCO Stockpile British naval protection in waters| Vancouver who relayed it to Ford parent U.S. firms, ~ near Sumatra following an Indo-'of Canada. "That," Mr. Burt said, "ig ex- Plan Of Roberts gt oi 4 Sage: QUOTES LETTER actly what our information says s . has h Aud KINGSVILLE, Ont. (CP)--At-| The owners claim the Indo-| The union official quoted from | EN appened investigation "Has torney-General Roberts of On-inesian navy has been ordered toa letter--it was not known f0|g00n thic situation pertains mot tario says the giant International | shoot on sight at any craft which whom it was originally addressed only to automobiles but to ap- {Nickel Company should aid the appears to be heading towards --which he said the UAW has in| liances chemicals and "'other |fight against unemployment by Central or North Sumatra. |its possession. It was said to goods." managed to place with a Cana- | | A : ' | | chine tools and ferrous and non-| Padang Radio said: "The num-| Is, Mr. Johnson sai {Keeping its Ontario staff working FORT ST. JOHN, B.C., (CP)-- known up and down the Finlay and stockpiling the metal they | Helicopters are flying ballot River, has great hopes for the produce. | boxes to Finlay Forks, Manson future of Fort Grahame, 600] Mr, Roberts told a Progressive Creek and Germansen in the miles north of Vancoufer. Conservative political meeting | Rocky Mountain trench area west| It was once a flourishing Hud-| Friday night that management, of here for the March 31 federal son's Bay ompany post, but the as well as government, has a election. |company closed down its store responsibility to discharge in Eon PORTIO LC N OF THE PENNSYLVANIA TURNPIKE FRIDAY | Tricky Fielding Job In Moscow He noted the Canadian govern. ment had decided to sell 350,000 bushels of wheat to Red China and ". , , there is no reason why Canadian-made automobiles can- not be sold to China without a lot of name-calling." Thousands of Canadian auto workers, he sald, are without | However, Returning Officer Some years ago. times of unemployment. |John W. Baker draws the line| at sendimg a 'coper to old Fort Grahame. : cast there in last June's election | Quick Thaw Is Danger After Coastal Storm [iaEss NEW YORK (AP) -- The bat- the Washington weather bureau homes still were without power| Ben "Cork, a one-legged war| fered Atlantic seaboard from Vir-|/warned that '"'a sudden and ex- (today. ginia to Maine struggled today tensive" thaw would pose a ma- in years. [ flood potential areas extend from|inches. Many minor roads, how-\pyTURE PROMISING Hundreds of thousands of northern and Eastern Pennsyl- ever, were reported still choked" wpennie the Cork," as he is| tomes still were without heat vania northeast through Eastern with snow . Power failures af- | and light as the storm -- which United States and New England. fected some 250,000 families. : . started Wednesday, then made a| The governors of Pennsyl:) Rhode Island communications RCMP B mockery of the advent of spring|vanie and New Jersey each pro- and power were the hardest hit egins Thursday night -- continued into|claimed a state of emergency. since hurricane Carol in 1954, but Friday before tapering off. |{Linemen worked through the|state officials expected to re-| . . Power crews were working night in Pennsylvania to clear store most services by tonight. | nvestigation around the clock to restore serv- fallen wires and restore service High tides and heavy seas added | {ces to the areas hardest hit by to a million homes left powerless to the storm headaches. - the storm -- Easter Pennsyl- by the state's worst snow storm! The snow was due to taper off Of Vote Lists vania, most areas of New Jer-/in 40 years. Snow in some sec-'over Northern New England to-| sey, Maryland, and New York tions of Eastern Pennsylvania day, and light flurries were pre-| OTTAWA (CP) -- The RCMP City's Long Island suburbs. reached depths up to 40 inches. dicted for th seouthern sections. has begun an investigation into At least 45 deaths were at, In New Jersey, snow which! = The Virginia - Maryland - Dela-| alleged irregularities in the Que- tributed to storm-caused expos- ranged in depth from 14%; inches ware area, the first to bebec South voting list for the ure, electrocution, traffic acci- at Newark Airport to 35 inches smacked by the storm whichiMarch 31 general election. dents, and excessive exertion further north, started melting moved inland from off the Caro-| Chief electoral officer Nelson leading to heart attacks. fast as temperatures climbed|lina coast, was slowly getting Castonguay said Friday night he As the storm itself waned, above freezing. .Thousands of back to normal. ordered the examination follow- > Ld h candidate Frank G. Power. It is the third known inquiry in Mother, Five |Soviet Research [.iiniieben . Mr. Castonguay Thursday or-| Child D dered a judicial inquiry into a 1 ren 1e | o S u S | suspected attempt to pad the vot- . . . ers' list in Montreal Cartier. Mr. In NY. Fire | OTTAWA (CP) -- Russian Arc-| ' The chart shows that Russian Justices Wiria Lapse of 1h Que lite research likely will hel p|scientists have in the last two head the Montreal Cartier dnd GASPORT, N. Y. (AP) -- Fire ypited States submarines find years gathered considerably Dogring the R swept through a small frame cot- their way to the North Pole un- more information on the Arctic ath own alleged list padding tage near this Niagara district der the polar ice pack this sum- Ocean than they possessed in Chief Justice J. C.- McRuer of ommunity early today and took mer. i EVO ¢ > io § Court w. bi Hh of a mother and five of Informants here say the sub-| In 1954 a Russian chart showed the Oa Spree te oe her children. marines, two of them atomic- the undersea Lomonosov moun- whether the returning officer for 3 i powered, likely will use charts tain range as extending almost in , . od Trapped in the single bedroom 7 iled f Soviet. sources a straight line across the pole Toronto St. Paul's constituency of the three-room structure were OMplied from Soviet sources, FARR ne across the pole y , 5 wingly or negligently ap- Mrs. Gladys Burrows, her daugh- The federal department of from New Siberian Islands 10 hointed unqualified enumerators. | tors. (aly I . >" mines and technical surveys has Greenland. : : | ter Josephine, 13, and her sons : dhe ffs y : rai « wewin |A new enumeration in more than " 8 es I ae . "prepared a bathymetric chart off The new chart displays varia- half of the riding's polling divi- Joseph, 11, Terry Lee, 7, Ronnie, | (,."Arctic Ocean based exclusiv-|tions in the range's direction, - dered by oo Gaston. 5 an Garey, 20 sig 19 A ely on information gathered from especially north of Greenland Sons yas ordered by Jun. Sto wo older sons, John, 19, and Ryssian publications. A bathyme- and Ellesmere Island, Canada's A : tae Robert, 17, were in the kitchen tric ind gives the contour of the most northerly land mass. | a Souguay gai Friday when the fire started in the bed. ocean floor. Ability of the Russian scientists, 5" fi an Loner yi na with room. They were trying vainly to] Informants say they believe the to plot the ocean bottom on the hoy gat oF Que oe 03 Jae re-enter the cottage when fire- chart is the only one of its kind Canadian side of the pole con- Fogressive ali val of list men arrived. in existence in the West and that firms that scores of Soviet land-| USS *lynn, compained i The father of the family was at it--or one similar to it--will be ings were made on the per- work. He is a night watchman in used by U. S. submarines navi- manent ice pack within 200 miles nearby Lockport, N. Y. gating under the Arctic ice. of Canadian territory between -- ---- 1954 and 1956. to the electoral chief. was held by Mr. Power in the Truck Industry Help Suggested TORONTO (CP)--The trucking be 18.46 cents a gallon. A tax of industry may get a concession 18.5 cents was recommended from the Ontario government. aos | The chart also makes clear {that the Russian scientists have {carried out research near north- ern Alaska, far down the east coast of Greenland and off the northwest coast of Norway. One line on the chart traces the south- ern edge of the polar cap as rec- orded in April. ator C. from 1921 until his Senate ap: pointment in 1955. It has sent a Liberal to the Commons since it was first established in 1914. fines against vote padders. In-| fractions in Toronto St. Paul's in > : the general election last June 10 The ( S. Navy announced tail a . . March 6 that the nuclear subma- =f sulted Fd Jat sentences and t debate, Reg Gisborn rines Nautilus and Skate and fines to offenders. He wrote the returning officer here, assuring him that he would March 31. Mr, Baker looked over his Fort Grahame records for 1957 and found that the account showed veteran renowned for his Irish|five payments in favor of Bennie New England was rapidly dig- wit, is "the" man st Fort Grah- [the Cork, He got $175 for flying| to get back to normal following|jor flood threat for the northeast! ing out and returning to normal ame. He conducts a small trad-|in the ballot box and ballots, | the most devastating snowstorm United States, The more critical today after snowfalls of up to 17/ing post for Indians of the area,/drew $25 for enumerating eight| UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) "In addition to the responsibil- ag Hammarskjold headed for ity of governments there is very |D. | be delighted to help out by acting|definitely a continuing responsi- [Moscow today to discuss with The reason: only one vote was as deputy returning officer bility on the executive and the Russian leaders the East-West management, and on the labor disarmament deadlock and the |unions and the workers to co-|Soviet-proposed summit confer- operate and work toward a settle- ence. |ment of the problems of the mo-| The United Nations se cretary- ment." general, who has. 2 c= cess in sensitive missions to su Red China and the Middle East, left here Friday night and is due in are sometimes vague, but these views have emerged: 1. "It might be easier to get somewhere' on disarmament by view--than through the Western "package" approach. get Jesuits on to some mi to delay." negotiating bit by bit--the Soviet 2, Both sides sincerely wish to disarmament day he knew of a hal muchivision to China work yet auto companies in this country 'were prevented by the U.S. state department from fill ing an order for 1,000 cars for China." At Detroit a General Motors Corporation spokesman said Fri no The GM spokesman said any decision to halt sales of the coms Rose Shower possible voters and smaller sums Moscow Sunday. He is expected 3. A summit conference would for court of revision expenses, rental of the polling station and as wages for serving as deputy returning officer. For the $241.50 expended, the lone ballot cast was that of--who else but--Ben Cork. "Shure and it's a shame to close Fort Grahame polling place," Bennie wrote Mr, Baker. Mr. Baker says there will be no more election expense money poured into old Fort Grahame. More Red Tests Detected By U.S. WASHINGTON (AP)--The U.S. |ing a complaint from Liberal Atomic Energy €ommission has master at the P. detection of two nuclear weapons announced the more Soviet tests. "The first occurred Thursday at the wusval Siberian testing grounds and the second Friday north of the Arctic Circle," the AEC said. The Russians have been con- ducting a test series in both CMP is helping areas that began about a month --or at le ago. The tests reported today were the 33rd and 34th reported by the AEC. be useless '"'unless very carefully pany"s Canadian division prob« out Soviet leaders. prepared" (Western view). ably would be made by the Ca- En route home he plans to 4. It would be "perfectly ap- nadian government rather than * propriate" to hold such a parley by the American state depart. stop off for several days in Lon- |, UN headquarters, and Ham- ment. ¥v 8 Duel Threat a fo get : Weglern ep marskjold is keeping the door| The U.S. maintains an em- yo ammarskjol s open. bargo on American trade with CS ike jarauls de idea of his views on both Issues| FEB April 10 he will embark WIT s Cha, Best nione oY He Friday night in a shower of rose 2. Nis periodic press conferences nis second five-year term as a|U.S. and other Western countries : pg an offstage threat of N'er®: Where he is known for hisiresult of his unanimous election were intended to stop shipments a duel nearly stole the show talent at fielding tricky questions jast September by the Security|of strategic goods or material 1t all. began when Nas without overstepping his neutral Council and General Assembly. that might be used for aggres- , ¢ | Position. jHammarskjold's first term was sion, particularly during the Ko Chilean-b randson-in-law of " SRO iE PAson ney pl His replies on delicate matters generally hailed as outstanding./rean War. | Rockefeller, was warned by the| Society of Dramatic Authors that| [) LJ [nis troupe was forbidden to dance' h) |the Black and White ballet by 1X- i ax 0 1 a Serge Lifar, the marquis' one- time friend and former ballet| aris Opera. There | P ' =" Pearsons New Plank | De Cuevas ignored the warn-| : ing, and at intermission in the A novel political platform| Mr. Knowles said publication less, while Mr. Pearson repres- {Champs Elysee Theatre Lifar|plank--a six - week holiday from of a recent opinion poll predict- ents a great mining area in strolled by and dropped his hand-|paying taxes--has been shaped jing a Conservative election vic. Northern Ontario and could be kerchief in front of the marquis.|by Liberal Leader Lester Pear- tory will play a tremendous part depended on to provide real sup- The latter promptly picked it up son. in rolling up support for the CCF. |port for mining. and flung it in Lifar's face. He unveiled it Friday night be-| The poll, right or wrong, had| At Montreal, Tim Buck, leader In days of old, this meant war fore 2500 party workers in a To-/led Mr. Diefenbaker to predict of the Labor-Progressive (Come ast a duel. A few min-|ronto rally while Prime Minister conservative re-election with the munist) party, said at a press 52, announced he Diefenbaker was being heckled greatest sweep in Canadian his- conference that the voters were by boisterous Queen's University | tory. Reaction vf the voters wes (swinging back to the" Conserva- | students at a meeting at Kingston 'what an awful thought," Mr. tives this time without realizing to spend all next week sounding was no indicat had decided on the ban, utes later, Ifar, |was sending his seconds to see {the 66-year-old marquis. FRENCH POP-OVER attended by nearly 4,000 persons. Knowles said. Mok that neither party had the ans- i roadcast from| At Quebec City, Justice Minis- wers to their problems. Mr. Wel J levisich broadesst dep- [ter Davie Fulton said his party | Buck's party has 17 candidates in uty CCF leader. said a Conserv-|recognizes provincial rights and|the field. Premier To Block Bill PARIS (Reuters) -- The Na- padding in a March 17 telegram tional Assembly early today|it is passed by the council of the the earliest. Canadians would | passed a reform bill to help halt republic in the upper house. The seat, a Liberal stronghold, the constant turnover in French THREE FEATURES cabinets, but the attempt to solve last Parliament. His father, Sen-|France's governmental ills may| °% G. Power, had held ititake a long while before it is are: | put to work. Premier Felix Gaillard failed to coax a sufficient majority from the assembly to prevent the The Election Act calls for stiff bill from going to the electorate ber of the assembly must vote-- in a national referendum. Although the measure was passed by a vote of 308 to 206 it failed by one vote to receive a three-fifths majority. Thus it Wentworth East) de- conventionally-powered sub Half- scribed. as "bunk" contentions beak will operate around and un that Canada's recession was der the Arctic ice cap this sum caused by wage increases out of mer. The Nautilus reached. a line with production boosts point within 180 miles of the Transport Minister Allan tabled a report in the legislature Friday which recommended reducing the LATE NEWS FLASHES tax on diesel fuel to 18.5 cents a gallon from 20 cents. Premier Frost has told the House he is "not adverse to" the reduction. tax on diesel fuel | to 20 cents a gallon lag ile the gasoline tax » 13 cents. The seven-ceit ice was designed to take it better mileage with diesel fuel and the policy of mak- ing heavy ks pay more for using highways. Mr. Allan's report was made on the basis of an Invest by the Ontario Research Cor Studies of weight, mileage and| "Fluor fuel factors were made on truck|less of guns in Ontario with the conclu-|else does." Mr. ohm that an equitable tax would'is inevitable." He said that in 1948 the aver- North Pole last summer and re- age weekly wage was $30 and to- mained under the ice nearly six tal production $3,735,000,000 while days. in 1956 wages averaged $67 and production was $10,780,000,- 000. Wages had doubled but pro- duction had tripled Columnist J. V. McAree TORONTO (CP)--J. V. M of the Toronto Globe and Mail suburban Mimico, p.m. in Wesley United Church Train, Truck Hit | Canadian workers are "in 3 Driver Is Killed stranglehold," said the CCF 1 0a executive, "Their only sal WOODSTOCK (CP)--A {rans tion the trade union move-|port 'driver died in the mangled ment." wreckage of large transport A Toronto| truck which was struck by a Ca- High Park called for permis-'nadian National Railways train ion to let Ontari Eastwood five miles east of »s fluoridate th eir|here, early today Police thheld name until l They said damage ck It] and the diesel locomotive was ex tensive. The was ra year raise differ into acc PETERBOROUCH, Ont of the postmaster at Marmora borough, was killed early toda was travelling struck a tree here. Hickey "attended Queen's graduate next month. Plane Lands, Crew Ill PHNENIX, Ariz. .(CP is a Cowling (PC) cil. | water the are dri n to the A es V Cowling said. | Funeral services Dies cAree, 81, veteran columnist died today at his home in will be Tuesday at 3 , Mimico. Postmaster's Son Killed CP)--James Hickey, 22, son , 37 miles northeast of Peter- y when the car in which he in Kingston, it was reported University and was due to situation approaching a tele- ion play plot caused a transcontinental airliner to make an emergency stop here Friday night with two crew mem- bers stricken by food poisoning. . " {that Mr. Diefenbaker has given| At Calgary, Mrs. Ellen Fair. BUYS Soverument yi two large | is word to respect the teas clough state secretary, said government under the Liberals. of those rights. {emergency action by the govern- At Timmins, former Liberal ment is having "a definite good Mr, Pearson told his supporters yea th 'minister Paul Martin said effect on the unemployment sit- that a Liberal government would (tye government's announced pub-|uation." make a $40,000,000 tax cut re-|j. 'works program is nothing] At Montreal, former Liberal Wroachive to Jeu. 1, 1958, bring More than the total of routine|transport minister Lionel Chev- |must be sent to a referendum if| gown a budget before May 31 at Rorks projects passed by Parl jrier said ina Frenc B Janguage Mr. Martin also said that Mr. ductions advocated by the Liber- Diefenbaker's support of gold |als amounted to '"'a clear and mines-assistance legislation is so simple equation' for solving Can- vague as to be almost meaning-|ada's unemployment problem. Fails have been paying taxes at the [old rates up to that time. The main features of the bill HOLIDAY ON TAX So, Mr. Pearson said, he would credit taxpayers with overpay- ments made through payroll de- ductions and declare a tax holi- day for six or seven weeks. Mr. Pearson said about $100,- 000,000 would be added to the {take-home pay of Canadians in a six-week period beginning June 1. Purpose of the reductions would be to get money into the pockets of people in lower-income groups quickly. Expenditure of this money would stimulate economic activity and create jobs. Mr. Diefenbaker, amid the heckling, got in some licks at'the Liberals, He said at one point: "When I read the record of promises that are made daily, I make this challenge: If you know of anything the Liberals have voted against in the last seven years in the Commons you'll find it in the new policies being enum- erated by the Liberal leader." The prime minister said that as a result of government pol- icies it was expected that by June or July unemployment would be reduced to the average of the last two or three years. Mr. Diefenbaker at Welland Friday promised protection for Canadian farmers against price- depressing imports of agricul- tural products. He did not spec- lity what action would be taken. { 1. Single assembly members can be overthrown only by adop- tion of votes of censure or votes of "defiance,"" and every mem- by proxy if necessary. Absten- tions will not be permitted. 3, The government may dis- solve: the assembly and call for new elections, but the president of France may override this de- cision if he considers the ecir- cumstances so serious as to make dissolution of parliament undesir- able. FEAR REFERENDUM The reform bill was the first serious attempt in 40 years to end France's chronic turnover of governments. The turnovers are a result of the multi - party system which makes we ak coalition govern- |ments a virtual necessity. The Iresults have been 24 govern- |ments since France was liber- |ated in 1944. Observers are not sure how the French voter would react to the referendum if it is held. Pol- iticians are afraid of any refer- endum because they fear might be turned into a public |demonstration of hostility to the present legislature. PEARSON ANNOUNCING TAX PLEDGE

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