Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 7 Jun 1958, p. 1

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TIMES-GAZETTE TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising RA 3-492 All other calls ....... RA 3-3474 " Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE day. WERTHER REPORT Mainly sunny today and Sune Cloudy late Sunday. Price Not Over 7 Cents Per Copy VOL. 87--NO. 133 OSHAWA-WHITBY, SATURDAY, JUNE 7, 1958 Authorized As Second Class Mell Post Office Department, Ottawa TWENTY PAGES De Gaulle Reports To French Cabinet come from Algiers. Committee committee members want. PARIS (AP)--Premier Charles ) : spokesman Lucien Neuwirth said] Just de Gaulle's cabinet moved today to put his program of equality for Algerian Moslems into effect quickly by calling for municipal elections there in about a month. The cabinet set Oct. 5 as the tentative date for a referendum throughout France, including Al- geria, on. the constitutional changes de Gaulle is working on. Meeting to hear de Gaulle re- I t ty port on his three-day trip to the de Gaulle if he doesn't do what'ians equal citizens. rebellious territory, the cabinet also agreed that an Algerian Mos- lem, not yet named, should 'be given a ministerial post. ? De Gaulle's spokesman, Andre Maraux, said the general re- turned from Algeria convinced that the Moslems there accepted his presence as premier of France as a guarantee they would get full equality. STRESSES SPEED Malraux said de Gaulle felt it important to get the Algerian elections under way quickly. As : _de Gaulle promised during his trip, Moslems and Frenchmen will have equal voting rights. The elections would be to fill the posts of mayors, town coun- cils and other local administrat- ive posts. Local administration in Algeria now is a confused situation, Many officials are appointed under mil- itary authority. Many are long- term office-holders who kept their jobs when the elections in Algeria were cancelled two years ago because of the rebellion. De Gaulle also reported to his cabinet that the army in Algeria, which supported the May 13 in- surrgction against the Paris gov- ernment, now is completely faith- ful to the government. De Gaulle confirmed Gen. Raoul Salan Friday as his per sonal delegate in Algeria but re- tained final authority himself. He made clear the insurgent com- mittees should not continue to rule the North African area, § IMPROVE CONTACTS . They should confine them- ¥ selves, under Salan's direction, to rs PRD Hi stepping up contacts between the i B - European and Moslem popula- li. reserve or conditions." refused to say whether the com- authority were questions th inet choices, which froze out the ately. extreme rightists. Leon Delbecque, a ik how much control de the group there would give de/Gaulle has established over the Gaulle its co-operation *'without|committees and how easy Salan But he|would find it to reassert central 'ittee approved de Gaulle's cab-|could not be answered immedi- After the first wave of enthusi- Another com mittee leader, asm, Frenchmen at home seemed voiced what|to be having second thoughts on sounded like an intention to defy|the desirability of making Alger- -- > at Recession Kept As Bargaining Lever TORONTO (CP) A union, leader says United States govern-| ment and industrial leaders are conspiring to maintain the cur- ent recession as a bargaining Cold Spell | Not Serious For Crops This season's spring growth, al- : sever against unions. i [ready retarded by recent cold dry James B. Carey, international weather, was even more serious-|president of the International ly affected by last night's cold| Union of Electrical Workers, told spell, reports District Agricult-|a press conference Friday that ural Representative Lynn Fair. |President Eisenhower, Vice-Pres- "The lack of rain and low tem-|1dent Nixon and other U.S. cab- peratures of the last few weeks/inet ministers had "made com- has checked the early growth of mitments" with the heads of Gen-| most crops," he said. "The hay eral Motors, Ford, Chrysler and {crop has especially been held General Electric to 'foreclose on back." i + | collective bargaining this year." Last night's low was unusually| He said their "illicit conspir- cold, reports the Malton Airport|3cy" was aimed at preventing [Meteorological Office which re-jcollective bargaining from oper- |corded a low temperature of 39 ating. |degrees; high yesterday was 62. Mr. Carey said the IUE's cur- Today the temperature is ex- es - m---- ms 1 {pected to go up to a high of 70 | and a low of 50. ! B 1 However, the temperature was Grammar evea S | not sufficiently cold to kill ay! |delicate crops, Oshawa and Whit-| . . iby growers report. August Geis-| Ype T1S 1an berger of RR 1 Oshawa said that| none of his tomatos set out in the| NEW YORK (AP)--Your gram-jmay have given yourself fully to| open were serigusly affected. |mar may reveal what sort oflit, "we". "By Jan Bubday all i 1 |Curitian you are. "WE" 18 BETTER mato plants along the north wa At least that's the theory of a| 7 were killed by the cold," said|language specialist who has lis. |, 25 8 few sxamples cited by| Bill Geisbergeri |tened to untold hours of ecclesi- <i Signy Be Ll may Likewise Red {Wing Orchards of astical conversation. "Wher someone begin, : den-| | Whitby, which /lost fruit blossom; The clue, says Dr. Robert J. tence with, 'the trouble with the {during severe frosts a month ago,|Cadigan, is not in the robust church 4 * nei hn H bE y xa think fi {say that none of its 80 acres of verbs and flashy adjectives--but|, oi Hwbie ig rent executive committee meet- ing in Toronto is planning to wipe out the Communist- dominated United Electricai Workers of America (Ind.) in Canada. IUE| had reduced UEW in the United | States to a skeleton but it had| held its own against raids from' the IUE in Canada, he said. He indicated his union may close down General Motors oper- ations in the United States in an- other eight days by calling its 18,000 members in General Mot. ors on strike. He said the unions 'no strike' policy at GM ends Wednesday. {Its members now are working {without a contract but will not continue to do so unless the com-| |pany indicates a desire for col- {lective bargaining, he said. tions, he said. BESPECTACLED FRENCH Lorraine, de Gaulle's symbol of The committees seemed in no Premier Charles de Gaulle car- | resistance to the Nazis in the mood, however, to pack up and ries floral tribute to the war | Second World War. At left is leave just because de Gaulle had) memorial in Oran, Algeria, Col. Gaston de Boniieval, the during his visit. The wreath is | premier's aide. in the shape of the Cross of --AP Wirephoto spoken. Signs of discontent eontinued to last night. "However this spell is holding back," said ploye. { |p long, Senate Approves Foreign Aid Bill WASHINGTON (AP) 'Makes Landing Without Lights BRANTFORD (CP) -- Airport workers scrambled to space darkened runway Friday nightland Yugoslavia. as a United States Air Force| pe measure authorizing con-| |ment. Reserve Capt. Wilbur Lewis of 51-17 Friday night. Tonawanda, N.Y., dropped his| The Senate approved the total lican and a former U.S. ambas-|Savage's expensive sedan The|Styles Bridges of New Hamp- Senate has approved a $3,712,900,- shire, chairman of the Senate |}; 000 foreign aid program after| Republican policy committee,! |beating back efforts to trim the moved to delete from the bill a {total and to ban any further as- congressional pledge to continue fiickering smudge pots along aisistance to Communist Poland aid for India's economic develop-| | Critics of Prime Minister Nehru transport thumped down on a yinueq military and economic called him a Communist and a e nude ; single-engine emergency landing. pop to free nations was passed phoney. But Senator John Sher- Patricia Wing, who has five chil- man Cooper, Kentucky Repub- dren, was found Thursday in Killed Woman, Man Admits AUGUSTA, Me. (AP) -- State police said Friday a respected Augusta businessman, father of hree sons, admitted slaying a 29- year-old Oakland mother in a side-road sex orgy. {police queted Everett E. Savage {Jr., 32, as telling them. on a 16-ton C-119 Flying Boxcar on an recommended by its foreign rela-/sador to India, said the Commu- | 10gging road in Fairfield Center, unlighted strip at Brant-Norfolk tions committee which had cut nist charge was not true. airport after it developed a "run-| President Eisenhower's request Bridges contended it would be Where she disappeared Tuesday away propellor'" on a training|by $229,000,000. The House of "a slap in the face" to other na-| Police Lieut. Parker Hennessey {only a few miles from Oakland flight back to Niagara Falls, Representatives' 'version, passed tions to single out India for spe-|said Mrs. Wing was slain Tues- N.Y., from Windsor, Ont. His seven crew members--five than the Senate total. reserves and two regulars--nerv-| The bill now goes to a Senate- a 47-35 vote. ously aware of the 1,200 gallons House conference to réconcile dif- = of fuel still in the tanks, praised ferences. Conferees usually split the "miracuious" landing. Capt. | their money differences roughly Lewis tucked his lumbering craft, |d0Wn the middle. y designed for runways of a mini- SQUABBLE OVER INDIA mum 3,000 feet, on to 2,600 feet, The hottest debate of Friday's of tarmac. llong session came when Senator Golf Club Blamed For Pollution | TORONTO (CP) -- The illegal|Don River water for green sprink- connection of a golf club's water|ling for more than 25 years, to public water mains has been| «There apparently was a con- blamed for pollution of part ofinection there between the mains suburban' North York's water byt I never knew it," he said. supply. ; _._|"What I can't understand, is how Reeve Vernon Singer Fridayithis should happen now and not night said the Rosedale Golf years back." Club's private system for water-\" Ontario Water Resources Com- ing greens was connected to the|mission engineers said low press- public system contrary to town-\yre in the public mains caused ship bylaws and untreated Don hy high consumption of water by River water was drawn into the residents resulted in the higher public mains. ._ pressure river water flowing into Mr. Singer said the townshipithe public main, serving Don- was not aware of the connection |cliffe Drive and Glen Crescent which was made more than nine! Road. years ago. Mr. Singer said any legal ac- Township water commission tion in the matter would be up to employees severed the connection Harold Amer, township bylaw en- Thursday after water test reports! forcement officer. showed a dangerous degree of| contamination. "} MUST BOIL WATER Area residents have been in- structed by health authorities to boil drinking water until Monday. | Residents in an exclusive section) of the suburb had complained the T NEWS FLASHES water was discolored and some; persons reported it made them i The two streets in the section Fire Threatens Manitoulin Town effected are served by a U- GORE BAY (CP)-<The worst fire in the history of this shaped tap-off from the main that little Manitoulin Island town swept through a downtown busi- runs to the golf club. The public ness block today and for a time threatened the entire busi- 16-Month-0ld bitten over his entire body. Police charged the father Hulon Campbell, der. ing he whipped his son, mad and bit him all over." bitten 50 or 60 times. said the father's explanation thing." Campbell is an expecting a second child, husband. |on reports from the health de- quoted Mrs. Campbell as saying |partment and the township water the case. bitten me several times." main was flushed and chlorin- ness section. Firefighters from five other island communi- ated to remove the contamina- ties joined Gore Bay volunteers in an effort to keep the tion. . . flames confined to the 50-year-old McRea block of three Club President W. 0. Twaits . stores and second-floor apartments said the club has been drawing CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 Woman Charged With Murder TORONTO (CP) -- Mrs, Ann Ritchie, 37, was charged with murder today in the butcher knife-slaying of Stanley Mitchell, about 45,.in a downtown rooming house Friday night, Boats Collide In Canal PORT COLBORNE (CP)--Traffic on the Welland ship | canal was delayed today after a collision between the lake- ship Royalton and the canaller William C. Warren. The col= | lision happened near Port Robinson, nine miles north of here. {the body until nearly noon Thurs- ! day. everything| : % Red Wing em. ment in the church is the manner The nude, beaten body of er orchard was | seriously affected|in the plain, elemental nouns and ronouns, coldish| Cadigan puts it this way: "The measure of our involve- in which we use or misuse cer- tain nouns and pronouns." PRONOUN FORMULA He doesn't offer the theory as any classification formula, but in way-it~works out;~you may 1. A first - person - singular church member -- rather self- |centred. 2. A third-person-plural mem- ber--somewhat aloof and reluc- tant, | 3. Or a dedicated, thoroughly tian, |work of the church. Whatever the attitude, it shows Up in. the pronouns, and refer- ences to the nouns. Cadigan, of Philadelphia, a one-time English teacher, writer |and now editor-in-chief of the |biggest . circulation denomina- * {tional weekly going, Presbyterian | '|necessary and they will not rec-| ommend it until evidence of its| The spokesman quoted the pris- unions." {Life, notes these distinttions: | You may think and talk about {earlier, is $110,000,000 smaller cial economic aid. The Senate|day, dying from a head injury, |the church and its agencies as re- {endorsed the India aid pledge by and Savage stayed in the car with mote, detached institutions-- | "they"; or you lyour own place in it, "I", or you part and really means, 'the |trouble with everybody but me HS. a | Or, for instance, when an offi- cer of a congregation returns |from a regional or denomina- | tional meeting, he could say, '"'we voted to raise more funds." But, Cadigan said, the officer is more 'apt to "they decided fo assess us & couple of thousand {dollars for some work they want to do." --emphasis on the "they." HAROLD Macmillan 'Macmillan Arrives In Washington WASHINGTON (AP) -- Prime Minister Harold Macmilian ar- rives today for a round of campus speechmaking, three days of conferences with Presi- dent Eisenhower, and a visit to Prime Minister John Diefen- baker. - Macmillan originally planned to Jand at Washington's National airport early this morning. But engine trouble forced his plane to return to London and this set [back his arrival time by about three hours. In addition to his talks with Eisenhower, beginning Monday, Macmillan is to speak at two U.S. colleges. He wili confer with Diefenbaker in Ottawa after leav- ing Washington Wednesday, Russia's new economic offen- sive is expected to get top billing in the discussions with Eisen- hower. of foul play, they said. d N.Y. and his son, Ben, 24, in| In Queb LA SARRE, Que. (CP)--An in. quest was to be held today into the death of John R. Bouck, 26-| | year-old American student, whose| | decomposed body was found in! {thick bush country where it had {lain for seven weeks. | | Police said the young man died| |of a bullet through the head. They "4ifound a .22-calibre rifle beside ithe body. There was no suspicion | George Bouck of Massapequa, | stigated a 50-man search party| {which Friday night found John's] body a mile inside the bush fring-| ing this northwestern Quebec vil- lage, 165 miles south of James) ay. | The Massachusetts Institute of] | Technology student drove here| | April 21 from Boston, parked his| {convertible on a lonely road and| walked into the bush. He wore a | windbreaker over city clothes. | Detective Marc Baribeau, one! Decayed Body ec Bush of three police officers on the search, said the body was, "lying on its side in thick bush." There was "one bullet hole through the head from right to left." He said it looked like a case of suicide. The body was found at 7:15 p.m. The search started Thurs day. Bushmen attempted to fol- low John's tracks but soon lost them, The men then fanned out and combed the area. The father and brother arrived here Wednesday to organize the search. John had been doing post- graduate work at M.LT, and was said to be worried about his stud- ies. His disappearance was re- ported to police when a resident grew suspicious about the aban. doned car. Provincial police said they con» ducted "three or four" searches after hearing reports of John walking into the bush but said they did not have enough money to finance a large search. Hits Unio WASHINGTON (AP)--Senator John F. Kennedy (Dem. Mass.) |said today a labor bill now ready | |for Senate action would be fully| {adequate to deal with union abuses. Kennedy, chief author of the measure, told a reporter he is hopeful the bill couid get through the Senate without major amend- ment, He cited two factors: 1. Support of the bill by Sen- ator John L. McClellan, Ark U.S. Labor Bill n Abuses bill, McClellan said he was 'not completely satisfied with it but that it had been strengthened considerably as a result of sug- gestions he made. vinced the bill "will drive many unreformed ex-convicts, racket eers, gangsters, and crooked offi cials out of the union movement, and strengthen the position of honest, decent unionism and. its leaders." Democrat. who is chairman of the in rackets investigating com] mittee, 2. The 121 vote by which the Senate labor committee approved 4th Salk Dose ' Needed -- Doctors health authorities disagree on| whether a fourth dose of Salk polio vaccine is necessary, it was {reported Friday. | The public health program in| Ontario includes three shots spaced over several months. | Provincial authorities say there northward between Syria and rect abuses, they are designed to is no evidence another shot is/Lebanon. The band was forced |weaken the bargaining position or worth is provided. | The doctors' group says a vear after the third injection. banon, he said. Israelis Kill One Capture 13 Others "I must have killed her," selfless first-person-plural Chris-| TORONTQ (CP)--A group of| TEL AVIV Israel (Reuters)-- wholly immersed in' the| Toronto pediatricians and public Israeli forces intercepted an armed group on its way from Syria to Lebanon, killing one and capturing 13, an Israeli army spokesman announced today. The spokesman said the clash took place Friday night in a part of Israel's territory that extends back into Syria. oners as saying they were on their way to Lebanon with arms may see only|hooster shot is needed at least a and ammunition. Documents found on them showed they were Metuali Moslems ffom south Le- Stabbed To Death the measure Friday. The bill would set up a union| democracy code and would re-| quire full public accounting of union financial affairs. Persons convicted of bribery, extortion, theft, embezzlement or burglary| could not become union officers. |" "This is a 100 per cent bill in | meeting the abuses uncovered by the McCiellan committee," Ken- nedy said. "Some senators wah} to add drastic amendments to it. | But these are not designed to cor- | the economic strength of the In announcing support of the | | Skipper Sentenced TORONTO (CP) -- Police said an unidentified man was found stabbed to death Friday night in a downtown rooming house. They said the body, stripped to the waist, was lying in a second- floor hallway. Several persons wer picked up for questioning. Fellow roomers said they heard no disturbance in the house be- fore the body was discovered. Police said a butcher knife was found in a dresser drawer in a second-floor room. UAW Officials Hold Talks On No-Strike Plan McClelian said he was coms . Unidentified Man (Lebanon charged in a United DETROIT (AP) -- The United Badly Beaten 27, with mur- | Police quoted Campbell as say- i i : p Jol other Liberal members on What|mons never got down to a study Taised the old question of patron- Robert, "pretty bad and then got | They estimated the child was| They scription of Mr. Pearson as a ; Was| Jeremiah. Both Mr. Pearson and| 'that the child. "wouldn't do any- unemployed | said. [ construction worker. His wife is| In other Commons business,| Police quoted the 18-year-oid|lined a "tripod" program sug-| mother as saying she witnessed | i the beating and biting, but that ated by his government to com- she. made no attempt to stop her| "It was his child and he could] Mr. Amer said he was waiting beat it if he wanted to," they|panded consumer spending power "As for the biting, he bites any-/of them carried to "entirety"| |commission before considering|one when he gets mad. He has|and none regarded as a solution] | [ge * : Disagreement Marks Dies, Dad Held Public Works Debate ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) -- A 16- month-0id boy died Friday night|disagreement marked after being savagely beaten and | debate on public works OTTAWA (CP) -- Belligerent|ter 'is never going to be con-|59 fiscal year--"by far the larg- Commons vinced we put one man to work|est this department has ever h estimates unless we drag the poor man | sought." It also was undertaking Friday. right here to the floor of the projects worth $152,000,067 for Works Minister Green crossed House of Commons. |other projects. lances with Opposition Leader] The debate continued in that! oN {Pearson, Paul Martin, former vein through much of the day's PATRONAGE {Liberal health minister, and|sittings. As a result the Com. rhe Public works debate also the government's public works of any details. |program had accomplished in| leasing unemployment. He refused to withdraw a de- age and political influence in the department's operations. Douglas Fisher (CCF -- Port | At one point Mr. Martin said |Mr, Green's approach might re-|Arthur) 1 inister' : , s auded t sult in keeping Parliament in ses- "pure and Re a miider's sion beyond September. (It has the subject on taking office. been reported the government] i . ¥ | This should eliminate suspicion hopes the session will end about 2 feat t July 31.) of patronage practices in the de- Wa partment, although he had noted The minister said his depart- various reports of defeated Con- ment is asking for $233,000,000 in servative candidates announcing works appropriations in this 1958-' future projects in their ridings. {Mr. Martin were gloating over| ithe unemployment situation, he |Prime Minister Diefenbaker out-| Nations Security Council debate Friday that the United Arab Re-| public of Egypt and Syria was | increasing Lebanese affairs.) its interference in) | ' Bowmanville | In Fair Condition | BOWMANVILLE -- Neil Allin, 8, is reported in fair condition in| the side of a car on Highway 115 Friday. the left side of a northbound car| Bowmanville Memorial Hospital| Wirin announced he |today suffering from external in-|tioned Supreme Court Justice | Chrysler's Plymouth body and {Juries received when he ran into/William O. Louglas to stay the assembly plants here. The com- driven by James Douglas, 79|stay, they Oriole road, Toronto. The acci-|crew) will be free to go to sea," cent occurred south of the Twin Wirin said. | Oaks Motel only 80 yards from| Last Saturday, the Golden Rule|laid off for refusing work at as- the Fourth Line where the boy got six miles out to sea before|signed jobs. A similar situation lives. He is the son of Mr. and|coast guard patrol boats brought developed at the start of the sec- Mrs. Stanley Allin, RR 1, Orono. |them back. To 60 Days In Jail| HONOLULU (AP) -- Albert Smith Bigelow, skipper of the Golden Rule, has been sentenced to 60 days in jail for conspiring to sail the 30-foot boat to the United States nuclear test site in mid Pacific. Bigelow, Navy comm 52, a fgrmer U.S. {Auto Workers union leadership |called a meeting today of offis cials from Chrysler plants in the Detroit area to discuss enfarce- ment of the union's no-strike pol icy. The union completed a full {week of operating without cone ander, was taken to/tracts at Chrysler, General Mot= jail Friday to join three of his ors and Ford. Its 500,000 mem- crew members who received 60-| bers at the Big Three are under day sentences each Thursday. At San Francisco, lawyer A. L. has peti- preliminary injunction forbidding| "If Justice Douglas issues this | } {orders to stay on the job and not provoke strikes. But trouble flared Friday at : |pany shut down operations--at while returning home from school the Golden Rule's crew from en- both plants, putting a total of tering the Eniwetok nuclear 5400 workers on two shifts out of Police said the boy darted into/bomb test area. { work. The company said two men (the Golden Rule's who had been union stewards inder the old contract set off a work stoppage after they were lond shift. {gested by economists and initi- bat the recession. | THREE PHASE? { Its three phases included ex- .|public works and tax cuts, none |in_itself. |] | In the acrimonious start to the, ° | ctimates debate, Mr. Pearson asked why in view of '"'amazing"| ¢ | public works activity claimed by [the government there were more| than 500,000 persons still unem- ; ployed. i Maurice Bourget (L -- Levis), {and former Liberal parliament- |ary assistant for the department, |called the government program |insufficient and in large part a !mere extension of Liberal plans and undertakings. % With estimates for $233,000,000, the program was only spending 1 $43,000,000 more than the Liberal {one for the 1956-57 fiscal year. | Mr. Green said the program is| | § |by far the largest ever sought. It| Sessa. had been accelerated to provide jobs otherwise unavailable this| year and "hundreds of thou- sands" had resulted. The ten nurses of the grad- | prior to the graduation exer- When Mr. Martin repeated {challenges to say how many jobs uating class of the school of | cises Friday. The nurses are, {had in fact resulted, Mr. Green DUrsing at Oshawa General | left to right Sondra James, |rgtorted that the former minis- Hospital pose for the camera ' Helen Parrott, Phyllis Jones, Anne Gatchell, Joan Burgin, | i Mary Atkinson, Maryanne Mayer, Eleanor Russell, Bar- bara Burton, Helen Honey. The | graduation exegscises were held | f) where Dr. M. B. Dymond, Min- % wh ly ~ CAMERA CATCHES OSHAWA GENERAL NURSING GRADS n the auditorium of OCVI, | c BSS ises, the nurses entertained their many guests in the recre- | ister of Transport of Ontario, | ation room of McLaughlin Hall addressed the graduating class. | nurses' residence. (See story on Following the graduation exer- | page two.) . De DEAD STUDENT FOUND WITH BULLET IN HEAD a ---- { yj.

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