Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 1 May 1958, p. 29

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INTERPRETING THE NEWS Malta, Aden Seen U.K. Trouble Hotspots By JOSEPH MacSWEEN Canadian Press Staff Writer Britain's colonial troubles, for a! Westminster. posite, » The Aden rebel Arabs want to '2%2H0n- get away: the Maltese want to or else break away |onial declaration of a state of emer-|1as! week, an action that resulted gency shows how dangerous thel/in the resignation of Dom Min- toff, Malta's socialist prime min- ister, and a violent strike, The British governor now has situation has become in Malta | the tiny Mediterranean Island that set an inspiring example of courage in War. The economy of Malta, a naval leaving bastion, has been badly hurt by square-mile island and its 320, the British switch to a nuclear- people in uncertainty, doubt and tyre defence. The Maltese have anger. been demanding greater financial Commonwealth Board Probes . Monorail Plan TORONTO (CP) vestigate the femamanany 10 10 tectorate sultanates, ing elevated monorail along existing railway rig way to transport commuters = neighboring Yemen. [SOVIET ARMS ond subway for Toronto are to be ident Nasser May 3 ask the city planning board to re- port on the possibility of using a beleaguered for the suggested monorail Metropolitan Toronto councill- area in recent years ors favoring a monorail system! But say a 12-mile service could be|get progressively built for $1,000,000 a mile approved in principle, is to cost thanks to Nasser's about $200,000,000 to cover priximately the same distance nist nations Britain countered with an offer of reduced aid and an integra- Malta and the Aden protec-|tion program that would fall torate have become hot spots of short of Maltese representation British critics reasons that are just about op- 5aid the Maltese want the ben- 57 ) op |efis of the welfare state without | 1956-57 Crop years, Conditions have been going come closer on their own terms, from bad to worse since Col- Secretary Alan Lennox-\, sooo tion Jan. 30 by Trade Governor Sir Robert Laycock's|Boyd announced Britain's terms | yinicter Gordon Churchill that cha { the " ithe pools work out a scheme for | Allen, chairman of the cout jcil's legislative committee, said | Sen ceinan tea inane The situation in Aden is an en-' and closer links wi e tirely different affair, resulting ian would cost the f ; mother country. Otherwise, they from continuing enmity of some |b 00! Jus federal reas threaten to break away from the Arab sheiks who now are being i, aided by Communist arms from gay 000 for 1955-56 and $138,300,000 - On Conciliation Level Start MONTREAL (CP) -- New wage Provincial apprentice training ex. | tals at the conciliation level be- tween representatives . Canadian presen Lakes seamen 2tions for graduating apprentices and their employers are expected in the motor vehicle repair trade, to open here early next week. Labor Minister Michael Starr nesday by the labor department, ||/was reached at a two-day meet- | lawyer H. Carl Goldenberg as PZ this week between the fed- chairman of a conciliation board |r set up to hear the dispute, d Involved are the Seafarers' In-|Tectors of apprenticeship. ternational Union (CLC) and the| 4 | Association of Lake Carriers of and Prince Edward Island-- Canada whose fleets comprise Which have signed apprenticeship the bulk of Canadian commercial agreements with the federal gov- inland shipping Major issues in this year's bar-|7€W program gaining are the SIU's demand for a 40-hour week plus | creases and management's argu-/start in 1959 for the motor trade. | higher wages would weaken the dome st ic fleet's conference said it is hoped that chances of coping with foreign the system of national standards shipping once the St. Lawrence in examinations will be extended Seaway Is ready next spring. Aden, a colony on the Red Sea, once was important on the Brit- |ish-Indian sea trade route, It em- braces 75 square miles in Aden Board of Proper and thousands of adjoin- - ing square miles including pro- An oil re- finery is one of Aden"s main as- The kingdom of Yemen, Merits of a monorail system as federated with the United Arab an alternative to a proposed sec. Republic led by Egyptian Pres- has long claimed considered at a public meeting sovereignty over the western bor- der protectorate that is the scene Controllers voted Wednesday to of the current trouble. The British operation to rescue garrison and a existing rights of way as routes/British official is' merely one of a series of small outbreaks in the the fighting appears to more danger- The!ous with each incident east-west subway, which has been tribesmen receive modern arms, friendship ap- with Russia and other Commu- Western Wheat 'Labor Relations Act Called Pro-Employer By Unions TORONTO (CP) -- A group of |of conciliation boards because | Windsor union leaders Wednesday 'they only result in further frust- Pools Submit 'To Cabinet Plan OTTAWA (CP) -- The western joccribed the Ontario Labor Re-|ration." wheat plan to the cabinet under which the Canadian wheat board would |, oc make deficiency payments on ' wheat, oats and barley delivered to the board in the 1955-56 and were {Manitoba Pool Elevators, the Saskatchewan Wheat the Alberta Wheat Pool following consideration by the government. | "The case for deficiency pay- | production and to Canadian living standards," statement. he pools estimated that the Abolition of conciliation boards, improved certification procedures would continue to negotiate in and one-man arbitration boards 5 among the changes urged The plan was devised by the py the Windsor and District La- bor Council in a brief to the leg- Pool and iia ,re's select i bor relations. The brief, submitted by Ralph "However, we are pools have submitted a 1a1ionc Act as pro-employer and| "if an employer knew that 2 called for a string of amend- conciliation officer was the last | stage in conciliation proceedings under the law, then both parties good faith rather than stall to have all possible time elapse be- fore reaching a settlement." Similar arguments were ad- d inst multi ber ar- Yoitration boards. A single arbit- rator would take less time to ap- point, the brief said, and all ar- "It is our contention that jur- cognizant of [tions of the utmost importance proper decisions in a matter un- it our der arbitration." about $228,130,000. This would be made up of payments of $89, for 1956-57. MANY ISLANDS Lake Nipigon, covering 1,580 square miles in Ontario's Thun. der Bay district, has more than Queen And Prince To Visit Ghana LONDON (AP) -- The Queen and Prince Philip will visit Ghana late next year, Bucking- ham Palace announced Wednes- day night. The royal couple have been in- vited by Ghana Premier Kwame Nkrumah Last royal visit to Ghana was in March, 1957, when the Duchess of Kent attended. ceremonies marking the establishmént-of the former British colony as an inde- pendent country within the Com- monwealth, The palace announcement gave no date for the royal visit other than "late in 1959." now as rebel ment Wednesday that | . ' Made Uniform | OTTAWA (CP) -- Federal and perts of eight provinces have agreed to give identical examin- of 5,000 The decision, announced Wed- appointed Montrea sory committee and provincial di- All provinces--except Quebec ernment are participating in the The program of national stand- wage in- ards of trade competence will A statement issued after the 'to other trades. = RE 4 \ i PLUS FEATURES On All "Regent" Bicycles At Ms OPEN FROM 9 A.M.-6 P.M. WED. TILL 12:30 -- FRL. TILL 9 P.M. Ride With Pride On The Finest Bicycles In Canada! 'REGENT' The Bicycles of Champions! EXCEPT [rections 98 the get. ice oa ats sola we men familiar ments is based on the principle ganized labor but to protect the the Second World ruled out the possibility of a gon 10L grein, Producers edie. [companies "ip po Ee i i of the. pg [Lion 3 ue farm Shas Wil Dear 2|the fact that this committee will|'n a court of law but fail to give| not eliminate the act in its en- the pools said in a trety =» Me Hus. sul revi. "he brief asked for Siteatisn Apprentice New Wage Talks | Exams To Be | VOL. 87--NO. 102 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE OSHAWA-WHITBY, THURSDAY, MAY 1, 1958 PAGE TWENTY-FIVE | ists may be able to render deci-. al apprenticeship training advi-! | Getting a little hungry and | as big as he is. The youngster thirsty waiting on the pier, and his parents arrived in New nine - month - old Wolfgang Im- | York from Austria and are rich sniffs a wine jug almost heading for Woodstock, Ont. {and C. D. Schultz. lies: Jury To Be Picked In Sommers Trial Bribery-Conspiracy Jury Trial Opens By H. L. JONES |with matters of business relating Canadian Press Staff Writer to the government of the prove VANCOUVER (CP) -- A jury ince." trial of the drawn-out bribery- The Crown charges that brib- conspiracy case involving Robert ery and conspiracy revolved E. Sommers, former British Col- around Mr, Sommers' action umbia lands and forests minister, {while minister in sanctioning cer- opens today in Supreme Court. tain government timber licences First legal procedure in the giving certain firms the right te case which first broke in 1956 and cut timber on crown land. |entails Mr. Sommers' actions! It has filed a dossier of details |while a minister of the crown, alleging that Mr. Sommers re. {was selection of a 12-man jury ceived considerations -- include from the 120 empanelled. The!ing rugs for his Victoria home Crown and defence can make a to a total of some $15,000 and total of 64 challenges. that there was an arrangement Appearing in the dock of the for split of funds accruing as a |assize court along with Sommers result of certain timber licences. are H. W. Gray, John M. Gray, The five charges are a revision and consolidation of the crown's Also accused are four compan- case which at a three-week pre. telegram Edwin T. Ontario Sick | PRICE COMMISSION TOLD Aid Scheme To 'Start In Month | | TORONTO (CP) -- Ontario's| program to provide nursing and homemaking services for families {hit by illness should be in opera- | tion within a month, Welfare Min- ister Cecile said Wednesday. By HAROLD MORRISON Canadian Press Staff Writer FOR BOYS OR GIRLS B ENGLAND'S TOP MAKER YOURS FOR ONLY 5 0 Weekly Services Commission and indica- tions are that "most of the larger/ ers have grabbed control ~ Gamblers Have Grip On Potato Market up by welfare officials in co-oper-| Agriculture told the royal com-| ation with the Ontario Hospital mission on price spreads Wednes-|1o he some confusion about the | LONDON (CP)--A speed limit day that speculators and gambl- issue Some people were willing |of 60 miles an hour for new roads of [to take the risks and store pota- in Britain is suggested in The Pe- Evergreen Lumber Sales liminary hearing in March in- Limited: the Forestry Engineer- volved six charges. The revision ing firm of C. D. Schultz and has cut the maximum possible engineering and sales firm of years from 14 years. Pacific Coast Services Limited; and a big timber sales concern, | IB.C. Forest Products Limited. FBI Asked To Mr. Sommers resigned his cab- | cial government ordered a police investigation which resulted later | in the laying of the charges. He Q h 1 1 Ne BR t lature as a private Social Credit nn as S member for Rossland-Trail. NEW YORK (AP) -- The Na- Mr. Justice J. O. Wilson is pre- tional Council of Churches said CHARGED UNDER CODE |sehool bombings in various states All the accused are charged un- May be the result of an organ- der Section 102 of the Criminal zed campaign. It asked the Fed- upon the government." Each S'eP In : faces five charges which refer to, The council in a loans, rewards and benefits for signed by President ercise of influence in connection, 'The National Council of Churches has noted reports of the bombings of a Negro school and a Fla., and the attempted bombing of Temple Beth-El at Birming- ham, Ala. Miami, Fla., and Nashville, Tenn, are also considered, these events suggest that there may be con- " " several states to commit violence In a very unstable way," in-|against religious institutions. terjected Mr, MacDonald. "We feel that this situation |Company, Limited; the timber penalty on each count to five |inet post in 1956 as the provin- Probe Church, |still retains his seat in the legis- siding |Wednesday recent church and Code, the section headed 'Frauds €ral Bureau of Investigation te co-operation, assistance and ex- Dahlbert, said: Jewish centre at Jacksonville, "When the recent bombings at certed action involving people in Mr, MacDonald said New York warrants a thorough investiga. CHARLOTTETOWN (CP)--The gpeculators influence the market| bsicni 5 ioni: |tion by the FBI , . rovincial Co - operative Union i Regulations are being drawn 5 ov the ronciar Ry Ein of out of all proportion to their va | lue. Dr. Stewart said there seemed SPEED LIMIT "" a1 tied i 5 Ted - =} : centres" will be participating by United States and Canadian po- oes for future sale in spite of destrian, the magazine of the Pe« [the end of the year tato markets The program is expected to shorten stays in hospital under f " the new hospital insurance plan ald MacDonald said potato grow which begins next Jan. 1 ers have no real security Be Municipalities and counties are ause of the speculators activi to enter the program on a volun- ties, the potato market price a {tary basis, sharing costs with the provincial . government The Victorian Order of Nurses is to provide the pursing care while specially are to look after elderly or dis-|cial four hours. The union and federation main resources speculators Mercantile Exchange so as ~---- control potato prices in the U.S STARVING, SELL CHILDREN 20d Canada. CALCUTTA (AP) -- Parents in HAVE A PLACE famine - stricken North Bengal! Commission chairman Dr. An- have sold children for 70 cents drew Stewart of Edmonton said apiece to save from starvation and to raise defend commodity exchanges he money for their own food, reports believes there is a place in so- reaching Calcutta Wednesday ciety for the speculator said. Four authenticated child He said that by buying pota- selling cases were reported from|toes and storing them the specu- Baiganj, main town of the West lator might actually be aiding in Dinajpur district Lr stabilizing prices of a mother or relatives 3 Speed Gears on the level with world-fam- ous "Sturmey-Archer 3- speed gear shift. Simply change gear at the flick of your finger. No Extra Cost! A) [Y [LLL a Jl PLUS REFLECTOR PLUS MIRROR Bright ond red safety re- Unbreakable, adjustable flector, rubber cushioned . at @ glance you see der for on rear fender for safe oc greater safety. night ridmg CHOOSE FROM 3 EXCLUSIVE MODELS TO -- DAY! 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Red and green for boys, 56° blye and green for girls sacl carves ONTARIO'S LARGEST HOME FURNISHERS ONTARIO DIVISION OF GREAT UNIVERSAL STORES OF CANADA LTD. 38-40 KING ST. W. - OSHAWA - TEL. RA 5-6535 103 BYRON ST. S. - WHITBY - TEL. MO 8-2933 Ride easly up hill and fast | DISHES and OVENWARE With the purchase of 6 gal. or more of ggsoline at the "VIGOR LAKEVIEW STATION" VIGOR GASOLINE | STANDARD NEW SUPER HIGH TEST 39-. 43. Stove Oll may be purchased In eny smount at this station, VIGOR GIL CO. LTD. 1615 SIMCOE ST. S. AT LAKEVIEW PARK RA 5-2843 Union Secretary-Treasurer Don- and prices. - trained homemakers tained that by using large finan- are »d pers d the illness'able to manipulate the New York abled persons during the illness % | Conniian Press Stalf Writer the youngsters|that although he didn't mean to _ night, in production /destrians' Association. At present was normal there is no speed limit outside populated areas. changes This seasonal - practice. 50-50 ios, might change as much 3 UK. Trade Goods Could 60 cents a bushel in a period of Compete With Canadian By HARRY CALNEK | The delegation was putting sell jing fire pecause of the inverse | tr, wi o/ t HALIFAX (CP) -- Sir William (1 K Dey v- Ransds ug iin (Rootes, chairman of the Dollar from Canada as you buy from |Sterling Trade Council, says ex-|,q * panded British trade in Canada| 'we can't compete with Cana- could mean competition Wwith|dian or United States low-priced Canadian goods as well as United articles and we don't want to," States articles. au! said Sir William. "There can be If 'Canada put limits on the nq question of lowering the qual- type of goods to be traded she lity of our goods. If we should would be limiting any increased sacrifice quality for mass produe- trade with the United Kingdom, [tion we would be su..." the leader of an 1l-man trade] gp. O'Brien, public relations mission told reporters Wednesday adviser for the delegation, said whatever the mission might ae- On April 21 Alan D. Foulis, re- |complish in Canada, the real sells gional director of the Dollar Sterl-| ing job would have to be done by ing Trade Council, said the Cana-|British manufacturers. | dian trade mission had told their| "We will have to start with an | British counterpart ". 9. We are increased campaign of public re- | not looking for competition for lations and advertising," he said. | Canadian firms." | Sir Norman Kipping, director "There has been no mention of | general of the Federation of Brite | barter deals between Canada and |ish Industries, said it was in the |Britain," Sir William said Wed- technical and scientific fields that nesday night. "We don't like bar- [the U.K. stood its best chance of |ter, we like real, honest-to-god expanded trade. He mentioned competition." is farm equipment and aircraft. UK. Teen Crime Gets Out Of Hand LONDON (AP) -- Crime among |closed thesc iigures on Juvenile | Britain's teen-agers is threaten- crime: ing to get out of hand. | Almost every man enjoys WHITE OWL | Lord Mancroft, minister with. | Since July 1956 the population out portfolio, spoke)in a House of [In Borstals -- detention institue Lords debate on prisons and dis- [tions for delinquents up to the 7 age of 31 -- has jumped to nearly 14,000 from 2,600. Convictions in the 17 - 91 age age group increased by 19 per |cent n 1956 over 1955, { The first six months of last year showed a further 25-per-cent increase over 1956. Lord Mancroft did not break down the type of crimes but re- ferred to indictable offences -- murder, manslaughter, assault, burglary, robbery, theft and the like Ee ia youths are Britain's war 4/babies -those who were born or gan to grow up during the war § vears "If this dreadful level of crime is carried forward into the full effects of the (post-war) bulge in the birth rate, the situation in a few years: will be appalling," Lord Mancroft said. "We might expect the Borstal population to flood far beyond the figure of 5,000 and that might be almost unmanageable."

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