Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 10 Jun 1958, p. 1

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TIMES-GAZETTE TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising RA 3 3492 RA 3.3474 All other calls THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle WEATHER REPORT Scattered showers tonighty clearing Wednesday morning. Price Not Over 7 Cents r Copy OSHAWA-WHITBY, TUESDAY, JUNE 10, 1958 Post Office Deportment, Authorized As Second Class Mall Ottawa SEVENTY-FOUR PAGES VOL. 87--NO. 135 Macmillan of Great Britain smiles as he puts his handker- chief back into his pocket as v tl PRIME .MINISTER Harold he walks at the White House | arcade betiseen the White with President Eisenhower. The | House and the Executive Office |at first it was an earthquake.| Another Oshawa resident who fire. Turkish Cypriots two national leaders appear at | Building nearby. | ease as they walk along the MACMILLAN TELLS STUDENTS Approach Peace By Discarding Arms (AP) Macmillan called for a start toward building world peace through a "little by little" approach to discarding all big weapons--atomic and others. Macmillan addressed com- mencement exercised at Johns Hopkins University where he and President Eisenhower were given honorary degrees by the school. A text of his remarks was re- leased to the press before deliv- ery. The British prime minister said the Western world alliance has served its purpose well and must be continued as a shield against Communist aggression. "But I am not without hope," be said, "that we may succeed Ike Proposes Talks For July 1 WASHINGTON (AP) -- Presi- dent Eisenhower today proposed lo Soviet Premier Khrushchev that technical ta#®s begin July 1 in Geneva on methods of policing any possible future ban on nu- clear tests. The White House made public a letter from the president staf- ing that the Swiss government has agreed to the Geneva site, iby little; if 'mot all at once,| Macmillan said both the United today (in making some progress toward States and Britain have rightly | world." the relaxation of tensions in theiheld that a beginning ean be made in controlled disarmament MUST BE WILLING jm both nuclear and conventional Macmillan said it would be weapons. foolish to expect any summit] meeting to bridge the gap be- h tween East and West. He added, however, that "if! conditions are favorable and if the will is there they might make, first, a little progress here, and then a little there and co bring us out of a condition of stalemate into. one of negotia- tion." But he said it can be done "only if both sides are willing-- we on our side certainly are wili- ing." "Control is really the essence." e said. As he did in an address Sunday at De Pauw University, Green- castle, Ind., Macmillan urged lowerivg of trade barriers which restrict the flow of goods be- tween countries. He also cailed for aid to ynder- developed countries both in de- veloping their own resources and in assuring them a high and sta- ble demand at reasonable prices {for their products. | UAW, Firms Adopt | Wait, See Plan DETROIT (AP) The auto companies and 'the United Auto With respect to neutrals, Eis- Workers union appeared today to enhower told the Russian premier have adopted a wait-and-see atti- that "we have no objection inityde in their negotiations on new principle to their joining later in... |the discussions if it is agreed BA Bs : during the course of the talks The union scheduled bargaining |that this is necessary or useful" sessions again at General Motors, | That might let such countries Ford and Chrysler. No progress as India into the talks. was reported from talks at all Eisenhower's letter said: three companies Monday, The union indicated it is wait- NEXT DOOR TO BLAST | | "Get our coats," they were preparing to go out.'go down to the basement for The time? -- 8.19 p.m. and/fear of a bombing raid. Woman Thought World Was At End said Mrs.|But when nothing else happened bad relatives at the scene of the | Harry Hanser to her husband, as/I told my husband we ought to blast is Mrs. D. C. Olmstead, 137| Helis related to Bert Olmstead, more important, the place, 1598 thought we would be safer in the the Toronto Maple Leaf hockey | Ritsor. road south, whose husband of | TORONTO (CP)--A violent ex- plosion knifed upwards from a| basement boiler room and blew | out the side of a four-storey brick apartment building on northend Bathurst Street Monday night. One torn body was recovered from the rubble today after an| all-night search by workers who : | feared at one time that eight per- sons were trapped in the massive [that had lost their doors. © [tangle of bricks, mortar and shat- | |Bathurst street in Toronto, next street and we dashed down from club. | door to the fateful number 1600 our third floor apartment into the, Mrs. Olmstead's sister, Mrs. C. |which was demolished by an ex-|street and were the first people Minty, was a resident of apart-| | plosion at 8.20 p.m. Tuesday. there." . [mex No. 8 at 1600 Bathurst "We were in the apartment WANTED TO JUMP | preparing to leave," Mrs. Han-| *'My husband ran to look at the of John Armstrong, the building] ser toid the Daily Times-Gazette, partially demolished structure," |superintendent who was found| "when there was a horrible thud. said Mrs. Hanser, "and saw that dead this morning in the rubble I thought the world had come to an entire side of the building had of the building. lan end." |collapsed. There were people! Mrs. Minty was out at the time | Mrs. Hanser and her husband sticking their heads out of the|visiting a sick relative. She has |are indirectly related by mar- windows of the apartments which had a run of bad luck, losing Iriage to Sam Rotish of 254 Pun- were not destroyed and one wom- {many of her relatives by death shon avenue, Oshawa. Mr. and an became hysterical One person| recently and almost seven years Mrs. Hanser were unhurt by the|wanted to jump from one of the ago she escaped from the kitchen street next door to the apartment § PREMIER DE GAULLE Committee Rebels Against | --AP Wirephote | explosion. upper floors." "No windows in the apartment were plown out, and we thought|ed Mrs. Hanser. "It was a nightmare," conclud-: Vaughan road in Toronto, when| De Gaulle Rule | By DAVID MASON | ALGIERS (AP)--The insurgent [Committee of Public Safety re- |window of her apartment on the structure. was destroyed by 2 ARRESTED IN STOLEN CAR COBOURG (Staff) -- Police recovered a stolen Toronto car and arrested two men early this morning following an 80-mile chase" along High- way No. 2 between Cobourg and Colborne. Arrested and held for To- ronto police were Hugh Dev- lin, 26, of 110 Morris street, Toronto; and William Davis, 19, who escaped from Guelph Reformatory last Saturday. Cobourg police first sighted the car on Division street about 4 a.m. and gave chase after alerting Cobourg OPP who set up a road block on Highway 2. The car drove | around the road block. . | Constables Paul Kraken- berg and Bernard Seale of bourg Town Police made the arrest after chasing the car |pomes and order was restored. around Colborne for several | | minutes. 5 Persons Die | In Car Crash [ag curfew was enforced by EDMONTON (CP) -- For the armed patrols in all the main second time in five days, a single) wns during the night. Governor Turkish Cypriots 'broke into Ni- cosia municipal market early to- day and looted Greek Cypriot pro- stalls. lone-hour curfew i ally designed to allow citizens to do their 'marketing. Greek and would not come in contact. It was reported the Turkish Cy- priots broke into the vast market place. serving Nicosia's 50,000 population because the authori ties were late in opening it up | were used throughout the night to |enforce an island-wide curfew. | This is.the largest number of troops used in this Mediterranean island colony since trouble [started more than tliree years '|car accident has killed five per- gir Hugh Foot ordered that it be sons in Alberta. | continued today in the old city of Five persons died Monday Nicosia, site of some of the worst {night in a crackup at North Star, | fighting between Greek and Turk- {350 miles northwest of here. ish forces. | Names of the victims were not| Six persons were killed and {released but it was known they more than 90 injured during the were from Claresholm in south-|three days' fightings. All but two ern Alberta. lof the dead and three of the in- It was reported the victims jured were Greek Cypriots. were travelling in one car and| Greece was to ask the NATO lwere a man and his wife, their|council to discuss the new out- json and his wife and child. breaks at its regular weekly which Eisenhower said would be . hese talks would be under- preferable to Moscow from the U.S. viewpoint. Khrushchev in agreeing to such | taken without commitment as to ing for the companies to come the 'inal decision on the relatiop-|UP With some kind of an offer. ship of. nuclear test suspension 'o The. SOMmpaLes Seemed to be in ; -./other more important disarma- "0 hurry to make one. talks had suggested they be heid ment measures I have proposed."| Operations were described as in his own capital. : Prime Minister Macmillan, [normal Monday at plants of all Eisenhower told the Russian here to confer with Eisenhower, three companies as the industry premier the U.S. would not objec | pad been informed of the contents moved into its second week of to the inclusion of experts from of the reply. |producing cars without contracts Czechoslovakia and Poland on |covering 500,000 workers. Russia's side. The union has instructed all its The Western powers participat- members to work without con- Ing, he said, would be the United |tracts and do nothing that might Kingdom, France, the U.S. and | cause the companies to shut down possibly other countries. [their plants. Eisenhower noted that Khrush- | Macmillan, Ike Attend VICTORIA (CP) -- Two boys accidentally started the engine of a moored float-equipped plane Monday night. One was cut in two by the whirling propeller and his companion spent a nightmar- ish 10 minutes in the water dodg- ing the lurching aircraft. chev has indicated Russia would not object to the inclusion of ad- ditional Western nations having experts in the field of nuclear Graduation WASHINGTON (AP) -- Presi- LATE NEWS FLASHES dent Eisenhower and Prime Min- ister Macmillan switch today {from cold war problems to the |ceremonials of a college gradua |tion. test detection. Watchman Charged With Murder SARNIA. (CP)--A 68-year-old retired night watchman | Propeller Cuts Boy In Half Navy divers prepared to search today for part of the body of John Marrison, 15. Robert Turnbull, 16, who was found huddled in the underbrush almost numb with shock, later told investigators what happened. The boys rowed a small boat out to the single-engined Aeronca Sedan tied to a mooring buoy on nearby Elk Lake, a favorite Victoria residents. Loot Greek Mart NOCOSIA (CP) -- Thousands of| meeting in Paris today. Theye vision stores, grocery and fruit|influence on Turkish Cypriots to The looting occurred during a| Britain has already done so in Turkish Cypriots were allowed| There were indications, how- out at different times so that they|€ver, that Turkey is not ready to {When the curfew break ended the| [Turkish Cypriots returned to their| More than 10,000 British troops | | belled today against Premier Charles de Gaulle's orders to get out of government. The committee issued a com- munique opposing de Gaulle's plans for local elections in Al- geria within one month and de- manded an end to the present system of political parties in France. The communique was issued with the notation that it had been approved by Gen. Raoul Salan, who was given full civil and mili- tary powers in Algeria by de Gaulle. The committee seized control in 13 mai h returned to power were indications Greece would ask NATO to call on Turkey-- also a NATO member--to use her refrain from violence. rg iee go e Gaulle made no official reply. in Fran Some committee members soured on de Gaulle, however, when he tered furnishings. John Armstrong, superintendent of the 30-year-old building at 1600 | {| Bathurst Street, north of St. Clair Avenue, was found dead under a moun; of rubble in his basement covered police located Mrs. M. {McGee and student Len Bartlett, the last of seven persons earier believed to be in the ruins. STILL DIGGING Firemen and steel-helmeted construction crews continued to dig out the wreckage in case vis- itors to the building had been caught by the blast, which col- lapsed sections of all four floors. Deputy police chief Joe Thur- ston, in charge of the search, said diggers uncovered a ripped. open furnace boiler which ap- peared to have been the origin of the terrific explosion. Owner William Isbitzer, who valued the building at $250,000, said it wili have to be demol- ished. Despite the heavy damage there were few injuries to occu- ts, Mrs, Mabel ig 57, rs. Ella Aldridge, 72, Rob- ert Veitch, 71, were treated at w "| ~Neighbors, staring awestruck at the 40+foot wound which opened almost silently in the building at'ing system. BODY OF CARETAKER FOUND IN BLAST RUINS Believe Boiler Caused Explosion (8:40 p.m. Monday, marvelled af the survival of most of the resis dents in the 34 apartments. Watching rescue work through their blast - shattered windows, tenants of nearby Parimots could see several apartme bared to the street, their pict {still intact on the walls and {clothes hung neatly in closets In the wreckage, piled more than a storey high at the foot of the slashed facade, parts of seve eral parked cars, bath tubs, mat. resses and pieces of polished {furniture poked through a welter |of broken brick and splintered dweiling. | timbers Just before the body was re-| | Heavy excavation machinery was called in to the clear the {rubble after the sagging building was shored up. With elect cut off to the area to avoid risk of fire, workmen soaked a fine rain toiled under the glares of a huge military searchiiithi powered by a mobile gene! NO GAS NEAR Officials discounted the poss flity of a natural gas expls R. B. Kiilmaster, distrib perintendent for Consumers Gay Company, said: '"'There is no gas service on that side of the streel for 500 yards on either side of the building." Emergency crews dug aldfi'h ne; road, however, buried gas main, Fire officials said ten 0 ye RTE Ft A hb boiler $41 ia 1} have been made to ti water in the Wig abd issue any public appeal to Turk- ish Cypriots. Informed sources in Ankara indicated the government reaction is that the Turks on the| island acted in self against EOKA, the terrorist,committee had called for a house- movement of the union - with- cleaning in Paris, and today's Greece movement. communique repeated the eall. | General Outlines Economic Plans PARIS (CP)--Premier Charles| Aides said #t was the shortest de Gaulle today outlined his|full dress session in the history plans for stabilizing the French|of the Fourth Republic and ap- economy in separate talks with parently set a pattern that will union leaders and employers. (be followed. The general told a delegation] De Gaulle told his ministers the from the Catholic Trade Union| names of a group of non-contro- Federation that he wants labor versial politicians and technici- given legislative and not merely consultative powers. inet ranks. The ministers ap-| Georges Levard, secretary of proved his action and the session the federation, said de Gaulle/broke up. said labor should have '"'effective power" in the new institutions he|debate," said Information Minis-| is planning. |ter Andre Malraux. "It was a| De Gaulle also met a delega- session similar to those known in| tion from the powerful French|Napoleon's time as 'meeting on Employers' Association und er|the formalities'." President Georges Villiers. De Gaulle turned to the French | Villiers said: "We owe a great|diplomatic mission to the Vatican| a cabinet. ignored the insurgents in forming Instead de Gaulle called in many of the leaders of the polit- defence|ical factions dividing France. The ans he picked to fill out the cab-| Bodies C JACKSON'S POINT, Ont. (CP) The search was to continue today by plane and boat for the bodies of four of the five RCMP officers drowned during the weekend when a small patrol boat cap- cized on wind-tossed Lake Sim- | coe, | Inspector W. G. Fraser of the |RCMP's criminal investigation {branch in Toronto said it was the| worst single tragedy ever to hit {the Mounties. "Not even in the |Riel rebellion did we lose five |men at one time." Attorney-general Roberts prom- ised a thorough investigation. He said an inquest wiil be held "There was no discussion, no| 'not only the fullest possible in- formation concerning this tragedy but also in the general interests of water safety, particularly with regard to the use of small craft." TWO QUESTIONS While scores scoured the big debt to Gen. de Gaulle. He has|to find a civilian aide to Gen. |lake, 40 miles north of Toronto, restored confidence in the coun- Raoul Salan, chief civilian and|two controversies were going on try and the month of July could military commander in Algeria.|among lakeshore residents: see a return to economic stabil-The post went to Rene Brouillet,| 1. What were the five officers ity." minister-counselor at the Holy doing on the stormy lake in the De Gaulle met his cabinet|See. black of night? briefly Monday in what a minis-| Guy Lamassoure, a career civil] 2. Was the 14-foot boat, equip- ter described as a Napoleonic|servant, was appointed prefect/ped with a 35-horsepower out- atmosphere. (governor) of Corsica, | board motor, capable of carrying Search For RCMP ontinues five men safely in rough water? The body of Cpi. Herbert Smari 33, of Toronto, father of tws young daughters and fhe only married man in the group, was recovered Sunday. Still missing 22, of Meiville, Sask.; Glen Far ough, 22, of Stockton, Man.; {Maurice Melnychuk, 22, of Prince George, B.C. and David Perry, 120, of Vancouver, + A pew underwater hnique was added to the search Monday A skin diver, equipped to stay under for more than an hour, was strapped to an underwater sled towed behind an outboard | las soon as possible to assure motorboat. Searchers estimated {the diver could cover 10 times the normal area using - this method. : Some residents at Sutton, near the south shore, said they be lieved the officers were planning to raid a community hall dance on Georgian Island, an Indias reservation in the southeast cor ner of the lake. There were reports the Moun. ties had been tipped off to the presence of liquor on the isiand, a violation of the Indian -Aet, when they arrested three Indians mm Sutton on drunk charges. Sat urday night. chased to shore by the plane and| § PLAYED WITH SWITCHES They climbed into the cabin of, the unoccupied plane, owned by| swimming and boating spot for ul them was > furnace boiler Monday night wi a oH . : are Constables George Ransom, « En 15 Bodies Found | In Bus Wreck ras syTahged iu te MAZATLAN, Mexico (AP) -- from the lawn of the White House was charged with murder today after the death in hospital of Mrs. Beatrice Dickinson, 41, shot in the head Monday night in a boarding house kitchen. Victor Dawson, president of the Victoria Floatplane Owners Asso-| ciation, and became intrigued #° Fifteen bodies have been recov-|; ered from the wreckage of an open-air bus which overturned and burst into flames on a bridge near here Monday. At least 17 persons died and about 20 others injured. Police said two of the injured died later. Police said several cans of gas- oline were tied to the front fender of the bus which was carrying a load of weekend trippers CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 iwidely -- to John Hopkins Un'versity at Baltimore, Macmillan will receive an hon orary degree and make a speech after being introduced by the president The highly public ceremonies were a far cry from the closely guarded private session the two eld Monday. It lasted 2'%%2 hours and range disarmament, nuclear testing, atomic power for peace missile-launching sites in Britain the Soviet econome offensive, the Atlantic Pact, the jarring note of discord sounded in France Macmillan confers again wifh Eisenhower at a White House din- ner tonight, following an after- noon conference with State Sec retary Dulles. He flies to Ottawa Wednesday for talks with Prime Minister Diefenbaker, Toronto Bank Held Up money was taken. the U.S Gen will fire three William Davis, 19, of Guelph Reformatory Saturday, road block at Colborne after" ! seen by police in Cobourg, 1§ TORONTO (CP)--A branch of the Canadian Pank of Commerce at Wallace and Lansdowne Avenues in west end Toronto was help up today, First reports said three bandits { were involved. It was not known immediately how much Shoot Rocket To Moon In August MILWAUKEE (AP)--Lt.-Gen. 8, E, Anderson, director of air research and development command, said today that Air Force will 'shoot Anderson told a press conference "lunar probes' this year. The others are sche- duled for September and October, be added. Cobourg Youth Recaptured Cob car chase ending at Colborne. with the instruments. | were playing with the collection |of switches and levers when the |engine roared. into life and the {plane lurched forward. | Marrison climbed from tie, |cabin first, apparently trying tol |get back into the boat. He either| | walked or fell into the propeller. | |The lower part of his body fell into the boat. | Turnbull said he didn't know, {what had happened to Marrison.| When he followed him he fell into} {the water and looked back to see| |the plane turn and roar towards) {him. | The boy twice swam in differ- ent directions but each time, he |said, the uncontrolled plane came |at him. When he reached shore| he threw himself inte the under- brush and the plane slammed into a tree. for the moon" in August. that the air force rg, who escaped from as recaptured today after a Provincial Police set up a avis and another man were miles west. Turnbull said he and Marrison| ° ji 5 5 ' a dw -- FIRE BOATS FIGHT Fire boats fight blaze aboard | entrance of new waterway to | er Artemis, loaded with oil, at broke out after collision with | » BLAZE NEAR another Norwegian vessel, Luk- ee | | the 10,945-ton Norwegian tank- | Rotterdam ' Saturday. Fire | sefjell. One of the crew mem- bers died from burns, two were 5 ROTTERDAM injured and another man i§ missing. The Luksefjell was able to proceed to Rotterdam, -AP Wirephotp

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