3 JTIMES.GAZETTE TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising RA 3-3492 All other calls ....... RA 38-3474 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE "~ WEATHER REPORT ° Mostly sunny and eool today, and Tuesday. Winds light, Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle OSHAWA-WHITBY, MONDAY, JUNE 2, 1958 Authorized As Second Class Mell © Post Office Department, Ottawa Price Not Over TWENTY-FOUR PAGES 7 Cents Per Copy JBROAD POWERS GIVEN \TO GENERAL DE GAULLE Unrest Grows [FNS Rule By Decree In Algeria | 8 For Six Months PARIS (AP) -- The French plans, saying this would be dong [National Assembly today voted|in a bill to be submitted soon. 322 to 232 to grant Gen. Charles] The assembly committee ap- |de Gaulle sweeping powers (0iproyved, 27 to 17, the request for govern by decree for six months. giv months of full power after an | The measure was sent immed- a) . night session during which |iately to the French Senate where yice premiers Guy Mollet and de Gaulle supporters hope to ram pierre Pflimlin pleaded that the fit through today and clear the|general be given a chance te . and shouts "Pflimli (way for the mew premier's trip|push ahead with plans to revitale i house, people were talking and po He im lo the) be X ) to Algeria to restore govermment je France. acting almost as if they had been| Knots of people expressed be-| j / 4 : Sutherite over the rebellious ter-| mye committee vote fuliowad betrayed. |wilderment as' to why Gaullist ; 1% wi i y | Tre vote was almost identical | Pitter debate in the assembly After 20 days of pressure ap- Communist rioting against de deputy Jacques Soustelle was { gd with the vote of 329 to 224 by 3 plied mainly through mass street Gaulle in the streets of the eap- VOL. 87--NO. 128 | Wl . ¥ | : [ : ! ALGIERS (AP)--Signs of sharp ; disappointment with the newly in TER OVER PFLIMLIN ' A - vested government of Gen de A particularly bitter pill was a Gaulle increased in this insurgent ihe cabinet post given outgoing wr capital today. premier Pierre Pflimlin. His. ef , # ---- | From the streets of Algiers to|figy had been dragged through > y the back offices of government the streets of Algiers on a rope 4 ' condemned "tule of parties" for [the stalwarts of his pew cabinet. SUPPORTERS OF General | which broke out in the French ; new government is to re-write | former governor-general of Al- reet left off the de Gaulle list. The which the assembly invested de the constitution and end |demonstrations of near-hysterical France's chronic political in- stability. y . | capital before thé general was Charles de Gaulle and anti- named premier, Rioting sub- Gaullists clash on Champs Ely: | sided in Paris strats after the sees in Paris in demonstrations ! appointment. Purpose of the proportions throughout the coun-|B€ria has given political back- try, the insurgents reached their|Pone fo the insurgent move since tdeclared goal: A Paris govern- he fled Paris to come here in ment headed by de Gaulle. support of the rebellion, { : ae The Algiers committee of pub-| But, instead of the expected yi. gafary met today in the U AW, Car Firms Hold ee nr Cl a ee we Angry Wake On Talks Patiesln Among other things, they dis-| B 1 1 DETROIT (AP) -- The threejunder stern' orders from their panies to sit down and bargain e g u cussed preparations %or de! Gaulle's -expected arrival here big American car makers and the chief, Walter P. Reuther, not to with us the way they should. We United Auto Workers Union held strike or provoke any incidents will get a 1958 contract, whether (AP Wirephoto) Reuters news agency reported Leon Delecque, yice-president of 3 I 24 hours earlier. Gaulle hardly. 1 Some The group voted not to take wp In the final version of the mea- until later today de Gaulle's re- sure, de Gaulle's supporters ac-|quest for authority to amend the |cepted amendments restricting constitution. By that time the as the general's power to govern by sembly would have launched de- decree in such fields as civil lib- bate on the, full-powers bill. erties, labor legislation and social| Another committee voted to ex- security. However, the bill incor- tend special - powers measures porated al mo st everything the which de Gaulle's predecessors general asked to. enable him to have had for dealing with the Al- |govern for six months while the gerian rebellion. assembly takes a vacation. | Thus the general passed his The gerieral maintained con-|first political hurdles. Observers stant contact with the assembly noted, however, that he did se % 4 |through cabinet members report-/only with a push from four ¥. |ing to his downtown hotel head- | liticians representing wide sha quarters. He was reported per-|of non-Communist political epin- Tuesday or Wednesday. | an angry wake today over their | After the meeting, committee dead contracts. Deadlocked bargaining, talks | members declined comment, | with the union were broken off Sunday midnight at Ford and Chrysler just as they were Fri- day night at General Motors. The eompanies and the union blamed each other for the unprecedented situation in automotive labor re- lations. For the first time in more than 17 years the UAW goes to work] at the big three without contracts. | Some 500,000 UAW members that could give the companies an excuse to shut down their plants All three firms have stood firm on their proposals to extend 1955 contracts for two years, includ- ing the built-in annual wage in- creases of seven cents an hour plus cost-of-living increases. This would amount to at least 16 cents spread over two years. Reuther vowed that he is going to have his way with the compan- ies if it takes all summer. After the breakup at Ford early today Reuther told reporters: it takes two weeks, four weeks or Deadlocked the all-Algeria committee of pub- lic safety; flew to Paris Sunday eight weeks . time is on our side." BRUSSELS (Reuters) -- Bel-|night, It was believed he had] Reuther has said it would be|stalemate today as semi-officiallt0 de Gaulle about some mem. | insane to strike now when the in-| : . bers of his new cabinet, | dustry has 750,000 unsold 1958-|Tesults from Sunday's general model 'cars. | election failed to give. either ma-| But in setting their own terms Jor political group a majority in| E for keeping plants in operation, Parliament. | the companies cut off collecting] A loss of six seats left the out-| dues from UAW members and going Socialist-Liberal coalition| turning the money over to the|Wwith 105 seats in the 212-seat| union, Now the union will have lower house. The right-wing So- to collect its own dues. #'hie.com- (cial Christian (Catholic) party panies also dropped the union/Won 104 seats, the Communists 1ONDON (AP) {two and the Flemish People's .caction to Gen. European urope Reaction On French Wary NEW L Jean Lesage, 46-year-old for- | gium was faced with a political/gone to express "some reserve" | mer federal minister of north- | Quebec Liberal Party. TPlease ern affairs, raises both arms in | salute following his election | EADER Saturday as new leader of the | turn to page 17 for sfory). (CP Wirephoto) A big question in Europe was Search Ends As Body Of Boy Found " JOLIETTE, Que. (CP) -- The turbed by committee bickering. ion. All four have been chosen by But the general's forces thus far had the votes to beat down amendments which would ham- string his program. Meanwhile, de Gaulle's contacts with the Algerian insurgents took on something of a cloak-and-dag- ger aspect. Gen. Raoul Salan, French commander in Algeria, annpunced he hat received a tel |ephone call from de Gaulle say- ing the general wolld arrive here Wednesday. De Gaulle's of- |fice confirmed the phone call, but only after several hours. it was learned too, that Leon de Gaulle as deputy premiers, Popular Republican. (Catholie) 'opular epublican ( i Pflimlin, de Gaulle's demands wehbe pressed by Louis Jacquinot and Felix | phouet-Boigny of the Rally of can People. : They were called to testify be- fore the eommitige nas er employed by the big three are/"We will ultimately get the com- chop, Gaulle"s ac-|whether de Gaulle would try a party one. body of frail Andrew Brown, 11, The UAW's Local 222 at Osh-| : | cession to power] ranges from|separate approach to Moscow. In issen, for in- who. disappeared in the Lauren. Delbesque, a fiery political leader in 'the Algerian junta, had come 1000 LEFT HOMELESS awa, will present contract/ In the Senate, the Liberal-So-fear and cautious. approval down|the Rhur city of Fi | amendments to General Motors|clalist coalition losts ils absolute{to the laughter of political car-stance, Socialist Carlo Schmid toonists. Asian and African reac- {of Canada today. Union officials tion was scant and mixed. say they call for "substantial" wage increases. , majority over the 108 seats filled directly by Sunday's balloting. | THREE-WAY SYSTEM told a political meeting: "A man from Paris will prob- ably get to Moscow ahead of the tian wilderness mear here two weeks ago was pulled Sunday from the turbulent Assomption River near St. Come, Que. to Paris for secret talks wil Gaulle, i SECOND VICTORY The assembly vote on powers] Its Tank Car Blast Kills Two Men GMC has 10 days in which to {call a meeting for negotiation of |the new contract. Of the remaining 69 senators, 46 are elected by the provincial councils and 23" are appointed by the Senate as a whole, Germans. Then, not only NATO but the idea of European unity {will be threatened." A group of searchers led hy Gerard Lemarche, 55, spotted the body floating in the river six for de Gaulle was the second par- liamentary victory for him in this Sporadic outbreaks of leftist-led violence were seen as an omen busy legislative day. Earlier the of trouble ahead, but calm pre- { In Norway, the Conservative | Welder Unhurt {newspaper Morgenbladet said |north of here and 65 miles north miles from St. Come, 15 miles) 4. ties voted 337 to 199 to con-|vailed throughout France this ote: [tinue the government's special|morning. In Explosion {Russia "may make contact with CHATHAM (CP) -- Hurled 50/de Gaulle, give him concessions, |feet through the air by an explo-|and in this way try to split NATO sion * that demolished a smalljand the unity between the West- building 'afld blew a 1,000-gallon|ern allies." tank 175 feet, a Chatham welder| The paper said, however, there road tank car spread devastation some weighing several tons, were A b H t 2 through this town of 1,500 persons hurled a quarter of a mile. Id I ur y | lute majority in the Senate. The, : Po : Prd, : hy 3 hy 0 # .cigot to his feet uninjured and|is no indication de Gaulle will set provincial councils will appoint brought the flames under control.lup a dictatorship because it Sunday, leaving some 1,000 tem-| The shock of the wave shat ] d R t senators from their own number| "prank Kerkhof, 36, couldn't -un-|"would mot agree with his per- porarily homeless. tered windows and tore off doors, Two railroad men were killed | porches and sidings of homes and JERUSALEM (AP) -- The Is-|next week and are expected tal qorstand why the tank he was!/sonality." raell police fired today on a select about 25 Social Christians. | ond Insist d snd one was injured seriously. other buildings throughout the {welding outside a machine shop - group of Arabs near the Hadas-| More than -a score of residents townggy, were hurt by flying glass and . debris. These senators then would vote blew up at all. | Damage was estimated by town sah Hospital compound in the|With the elected senators to bring| "It has been empty for a year," | Mount Se litari "|another 12 Catholics into the up-|he said, "and the last time it was| fount Scopus demilitarized yone. per 'house, making the Sociallused to carry water. I heard a| Jordan said one Jordanian was| Christian represent killed and two others injured, |more than an absolute majority. what it was, and I stood up. | officials at $1,000,000. Officials sald a survey indicated two-thirds 8 of the town's some 400 homes ation 91--three hissing sound, haven't any ideal Jordan complained to the Political observers say a three. Right then it blew and the next| it i x _. | party coalition of the Social Chris-|thing I knew I was 50 feet away United Nations - truce organiza- |g. nc Socialists and Liberals/on the ground. I got up and ran tion. One report sald the Arab | In Algeria, where right-wing The remains were found near|STacigency powers it Ager, French colonists and army of= where Andrew was last seen! se government to. govern. ficers seized power May 13 and When he disappeared May 19 "ro fhe last three years. |touched off the crisis, a wary while on his first fishing trip with Th ssembty voted the tall calm prevailed. his father, two brothers and two _:1€ Bese oY lead : tol Members of the ruling junia friends. Jim face Wartime oo ih Sa °'who had been shouting '"'de His disappearance sparked one Cot Aly loan tod that | Gaulle to power" quickly pro- of the biggest hunts seen in this}, °° be gr a 2 free hand to et claimed the general's installation rugged ares. Some 125 soldiers | py ance for the next six months, a5 a victory for their forces. joined the search parties made up|" 5 : | Privately they were disturbed by of provincial police and volun- The general made his sweep: y MOUNT PULASKI, Hl, (AP)--|and 30 feet deep where the tank were divided as follows: Social| The shattering explosion of a rail- car had been. Chunks of steel hristian 54, Socialist-Liberal co- alition 51, Communist one. Political experts said the Cath- olics are sure to obtain an abso- Israelis Kill 5 were directly elected senators| remain in town. He was found * not guilty of National Guard troops were or- murder but guilty of being an dered into the town to aid in the accessory in dumping Setty's dis- cleanup and to prevent looting. membered body from a plane Several nearby communities, over the Essex marshes some 20 miles away, were re. He was sentenced to 12 years ported shaken by the blast, which He was released last February tore a crater about 35 feet across'after eight years. Ike, Dulles To Hold Talks About France By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER 10} Expected To Enter Race | i i ix. Dis inclusion of such men as - [teers probing: the dense forest. |'M8 demands in a cold, calm Six p in and Mollet in his cab- Man Confesses Swede Social A coroner's jury Sunday re- minute speech to the hushed Hin he sai " Still ore they resented the T Sl » drowning. be said 10 seers thrsakup ad snubbing of such Men as veteran were damaged and not immedi 0 aymng THREE CHIEF REQUESTS | s there ave ately habitable. | . - B A Fi h | id h d semhly deputy who had rushed Police ordered the town evacu- SENN (Reuters) : A former Ti ht Election ow, I'TOwW 1S De Gaulle said he was demand-|t, Algiers to take a leading part ted after the tank car filled with| business executive confessed Sun- g ii 3 i ' . could be the outcome of the elec- back to the building and grabbed] STOCKHOLM (Reuters)--Swed- Tournament Held sep owers to rule included in the cabinet. and flames threatened two other Story to the 'slaying of a car group was trying to go to Jerus-| tion stalemate. . lan extinguisher." en's ruling Social Democrat party, WINDSOR. ( (P) Cc | a ath ergency p era h fo IFEDERAL IDEA tank cars filled with liquid chem. dealér for whose murder he had alem and was attacked by five . ac 185 erat os Y{2 WINDS , Ont. (CI an- by decree for six months fo c ear| : 4 al f the blast was not| been acquitted. Israeli guards from the hospital. . as squeezed through to A. gen. ada's first carp fishing tourna-|up the current crisis/ Parliament Reports swept both Paris an joia: Cause of the plast L DE e's. sald le hi G P d t eral election victory--with * the ment by bow and arrow was held would take a vacation in' the in- Algiers that de Gaulle is thinkiig DURING SWITCHING Sunday Pictorial confession that gig he Saap baud of ahem 120 erman resi en {of power. Sinday. {2 Authority to revise the con-|gerian dilemma--an_autonomdils The tank car was one of 43/f.¢» Oot. 4 1949 2 carrying " Bopha id election Sunday was pre: The provincial government al-| stitution to give a stronger execu-|Algeria in which the Moslems ears on an Illinois Central Rail-| ,, Sri It was in the hospital area that | cipitated by the Social Democrats|lowed bow and arrow fishing ex-|tive rather than the parade of|{would have equal status with the road freight train which was|, I Stabbed him to death witha Lt.-Col. George Flint of Canada, after their plan to supplement perimentally to see what was weak regimes which have been|French colonists and which would switching in the yards. After the dagger while we were fighting, chief UN mediator between Jor- [old-age pensions was rejected by caught and thé effect on the num-|at the mercy of the assembly. |be federated with France. It 'is fire was put out, some 500 resi- '® said. {dan and Israel, was killed May 26] OTTAWA. (CP)--Theodor Heuss,|ceding our own, which has) J1¢ ON > - At his trial in 1950, Hume de- While trying to arrange a cease-| scholarly 74-year-old president of brought such tragedy to the peo- April 25, Winner for weight, was David organize relations between French colonials there 'have badly damaged were permitted to nied he killed Setty. fire in an Isracli-Jordanian gun-\west Germany, today praised|ples of the world, relations be-| Results declared early today|Lovell of Windsor who shot a|France and her overseas territor-| fought bitterly. fight. [Canada as a country that "'offers/tween Germany, whatever her|Showed the Socialists had gained|carp weighing 19 pounds, three ies. De Gaulle's aides said he wants Lt.-Col. James Earl Rickee of immense opportunities for [six seats, giving them a total of ounces. Bow fishermen from To-| Both constitutional reform sito fly to Algeria this week for a appointed [those who face the future un- were of a peaceful nature," he chairman of the mixed armistice/afraid, and who love freedom." said today. stake. Sound and Wiadsor took part. [the people, for approval, rather The insurgent authorities in north commission succeed ing Flint] "This country," he told the] "Then foHowed the two world They failed to secure an over-| Second heaviest fish was shotithan to the assembly first. De|Africa obviously will bide their Rickee his been a UN truce ob-| joint Houses of Parliament in an|wars, the first brought about by |all majority but the Communists, | py Al Kusick of Galt It weighed Gaulle did not spell out in detail time until they can talk with server previously at Tiberias, in|address delivered in the Com-|political misunderstanding and|With five seats in the new house|18 pounds, six ounces, the constitutional changes he him personally, efforts to give prosperity to ev-|arrogant worship of power. . , .|clared themselves i- favor of the | eryone and to preserve peace| "Out of these many battles| Pension bill and their support willl I among the nations." |there emerged mutual respect for|enable the government to push Speaking in German, the pres-|soldierly gallantry, and then the|the plan through. | ident said Canada and Germany understanding that it would bel T i tage and have a great deal in|yes! for one another!" common, both intellectually and| In his 800-worq address Dr.| |culturally. His words subse-Heuss said Germany appreciates | quently were translated by Heinz| Canada's contributions to interna- Weber, Dr. Heuss's personal in-|tional harmony in the form of her| n net turned a verdict of * accidental chamber. He needed the powers, D ts Win ing three major things of the as-'in the uprising there. He was not a petroleum product exploded day in a front-page newspaper An Israeli Army spokesman {Communists holding the balance at Cedar Beach, west of here, | terim. of a "federal" solution of the Al- {*"I murdered Stanley Setty in my P ; C the lower house of parliament pers of coarse fish. 3. Constitutional reform to re- just this solution which the dents whose homes were not too : all form of government, and Canada| 10 of the T3T Tower L A ( e ¢ d Canada today was - ouse seats at|rofito, Hamilton, Brantford, Owen|would be submitted "directly to|first-hand survey of the situation. Galilee. mons, "will help humanity in its|ineptitude, the second by evil and| for a loss of only one, have de- - Sa share a common spiritual heri-|better to live with one moter; terpreter. INATO commitments on German] Volt Bat in Premier Khrushchev Saturday liver a' commencement address! WASHINGTON (AP) -- Presi dent Eisenhower and State Sec- retary Dulles scheduled a major foreign policy conference today to discuss relations with the de Gaulle government in France and map a new reply to Russia on nu- clear test talks, A White House statement call- Russia and other countries later this month Khrushchey ralsed several agreeing to open talks among scientific experts of the US, noints, - concerning place and membership, which required a presidential response. BUSY DAYS AHEAD Saturday, capital day then return to the U.S. London sources said Sun- that Lady Dorothy Mac- The statements were included soil, flying training young Ger-| in a text of the address, released mans are receiving in Canada, In Manitoba to the press before delivery. |and support of the "German peo- SPLIT BY TWO WARS ple's demand for reunification by "Throughout the centuries pre-'peaceful, democratic means." millan will accompany her hus- band to'the US. and Canada. SCIENTIFIC PROBLEM The immediate issue on nuclear tests is how to organize a pro*| WINNIPEG (CP) A record 181 candidates are expected to he nominated today to contest the 57 seals in the Manitoba legis- {lature in a general election June| | 16. | posed conference of scientific ex-| LATE NEW S FLASHES | The number of candidates al-| |ready named is well above the! ng for 'intimate and friendly re- jations" with Francé under its pew premiership get the tone of the policy which the United States administration hopes to develop. But officials said privately that everything depends now on how far de Gaulle is willing to go in Allied co-operation. On the nuclear test issue the president received a letter from CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSHITAL RA 3-224 - | ition 4 The afternoon meeting between Eisenhower and Dulles opens a busy 10 days in foreign policy work, In mid-week West Germany's President Theodor Heuss, now visiting Canada, is due here for a visit accompanied by Foreign Minister Heinrich von Brentano. A week from® today British Prime Minister Macmillan will ihegin two days of intensive dis: cussion here before visiting Ot- tawa. Besides dealing with Frenéh-Allied co-operation, these talks probably will concentriite on the prohlem of ,obtaining-/an in ternational agresment inc luding Russia for suspension. of nuclear weapons experiments. Macmillan is} ngton al ash Friday® fly De Pauw University in Indianapolis to de: fo verts. Their task will be to try] to work out means agreeable to both Russia and the Western| powers for detecting "any viola-| tions once an agreement to halt 'esting is ratified, Eisenhower, in a letter to Khrushchev May. 24, suggested that both sides send stientific ex-| perts to Geneva in three weeks! to work out the detection system. | He proposed: including British, | French and probably other scien- 'ists along with three American| physicists Khrushchev 2 Bandits Hold Up Clerk TORONTO (CP) Y- Two armed bandits tied up a woman clerk and a janitor in a cigar store in Maple Leaf Gardens today and fled with $268. In two other robberies during the | morning rush hour, a stregtcar conductor was held up for a small amount of cash and a pedestrian knocked dowr by a man who took $51 and a $130 cheque. Man Jumps Into Niagara River NIAGARA FALLS, .Ont. (CP) An unidentified man, believed 50 years old, plunged to his death over the Horse- shoe Falls today. Two tourists told Niagara Parks police they saw a man cycle up to the railing at the brink of tlie falls, climb 'over and jump into the water. IC i |C replied Saturday | that he was agreeable to the pro-| posed starting time. According to| official informants, he also raised | the question of including Polish nd Czech scientists and possibly having men al from neutral countries such as lodia. 1 Girl Bitten By Dog : TORONTO +tCPy A girl sereamed and ran as she was altatked and bitten about the legs hy a German shepherd dog at-a suburban shopping eentre today, 16-year-old 0 Mayer Stephen Juba peg; sive |didate, 68 who competed in the last gen- [eral election in 1953. As the nomination deadline ap- iproached, the Liberal - Progres-| sive government Progressive supporters and Conervatives each| had nominated candidates in all| but one riding. In the Winnipeg} of Logan, of Winni- re-clection as an| appeared likely to] "ity constituency secking ndependent, be opposed only by the CCF | INE COMMUNIST | The CCF party had nominated| 48 | Credit party 15. In ddition to Mr. candidates and the Social were five others, | Con | Juba there ndependents and three ncluding two Independent servatives and a Labor-Progres (Communist) party can PRESIDENT THEODOR ! Heliss of West Germany, left, Li] rected on his arrival by | Jobo -Diefenhaker and Gove ¢ d a t a \ traip at Ottawa's Union Station | nor-General Massey. With Dr, Sia Hai Heuss is his official interpreter : 6 J " 1 Saturday by Prime Minister Heinz Weber, night, a re) Lt. CPW