TIMES-GAZETTE TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising RA 3-3492 All other calls . . .... . RA 838-3474 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle As Second Class Mall WEATHER REPORT Sunny and a little warmer to day and Wednesday. Winds light. Price Not Over 7 Cents Per Copy YOL. 87--NO. 170 OSHAWA:WHITBY, TUESDAY, JULY 22, 1958 Ae ote TWENTY PAGES ffice Department, Ottawa sudaira of a compromise plan to ease tension in the Middle t. At left is China's Tingfu Tsiang, and at right is UNITED NATIONS Secretary | inary steps toward strengthen- Dag Hammarskjold, centre, ad- |'ing the observer group in dresses security council saying | Lebanon. His speech followed | E: that he had taken some prelim- | propesal by Japan's Koto Mat- | F. Canada Asks Prompt . Talks At Summit Level contin OTTAWA (CP)--The Canadian tion should be undertaken by any ernment," Mr, Pearson government wants prompt talks ration in any place beyond Jor- ued "'at the highest level" on Middle "an and Lebanon." ( da had That would ensure that the East problems, says Prime Min- asked for assurances on that meeting in question would be at ister Diefenbaker. point the top level of governmental 4. Canada expected, too, that representation, but it would also Describing Middle East tension : } ha as "explosive," the prime minis- the status quo in the troubled ter said in the Commons Monday area would be maintained, and without elaborating that the! 'in particular that all. members United Nations Security Council [of NATO will exer cise the now in session "offers possibili- greatest caution in national ac- ties." " tion which might involve the alli- Opposition Leader Pearson, ance ry hole, i Minister supporting the government's ° Gxtenal Aflairs Minster stand, proposed that the top-level | Smith was remaining in New meeting be held under United YOrk to head Canada's delega- ensure that it would be held un der the auspices of the UN and udeed under the chairmanship of the secretary-general of the UN." At a subsequent press confer- ence Mr. Pearson said the Khrushchev letter was an obvious move that anyone could have ex- nected. "It would be a great mis- take to turn the thing down flat Nations auspices as a subcommit- tion while the Middle East was| "= down would be the very tee of the Security Council. Hinder Security Council discus. yp. they (the Russians) want." sion. (For text of External Affars REPEATED IN UN APPEARS REASONABLE Minister Smith's statements at a 8 A The composition of the meet- UN Security Council please | Canada's plea for "highest, o proposed by the Soviet leader level" consideration of the prob- em was repeated by Mr. Smith action Monday during Security Council turn to Page Five.) That was the Ottawa re INCE appeared reasonable enough, Mr, Pearson told reporters. pip n iii Ast among | streng 2 of the UN observer leaders of the United States, Brit- corps in Lebanon. ain, Russia, France and India, Mr. Pearson's suggestion in the with UN Secretary-General Dag|Commons, which Mr. Diefenbaker Hammarskjold present. said was "very close' to an idea Mr, Diefenbaker, in a special alreadv under study, was that the statement at the beginning of the Security Council set up a special Commons sitting, announced: subcommittee to consider the 1. He' had directed "urgent" substance of Mr. Khrushchev's messages to government leaders proposal. The subcommittee of the UK. the US. and India would comprise the powers in- asking "positive and immediate | vited by Mr. Khrushchev with In- the Khrushchev dia -- not a council China.' The Liberal leader added thai the West, in its approach to the Middle East, 'should not try to force any country in the Middle East into the East-West conflict.' "That's a debatable subject," he added, "'and it strikes at the roots of the Baghdad pact." Both Mr. Diefenbaker and Mr Pearson agreed that the language response" to member-- of the Khrushchev letter was proposal. itting in "by special invitation" provocative and insulting. Mr 2. Talks about the Middle East, and Secretary General Ham- Pearson told in the Canadian view, should be marskjold as chairman references to the U.S. and U.K held "at the highest level" and "It could be suggested that the as "aggressors' made it difficult "as soon as possible." countries appointed to it be rep- for them to accept its proposal fusband, Ve Princess Ends rs. Short Holiday - Shooting Spree VANCOUVER (CP) -- A hus-| KELOWNA B.C. (CP) -- Her|time relaxing beside scenic Okan- band and wife are recovering in Short holiday ended, Princess agan Lake at 25-acre Summer- Vancouver General Hospital from Margaret today begins anew the grove Farm. bullet wounds they suffered Mon. round of official functions laid out; She found time for sun-bathing, day when a neighbor went ber- | for her as British Columbia's cen- swimming, boating anda barbe- serk and opened fire on them tennial year guest of honor. cue while here. She cooked steaks near their home in Sechelt, B.C.| She leaves this interior B.C. for about 20 guests Sunday even- The ncighbor later shot himself city at 11:30 a.m. when a sea Ing at a beach party. to death plane picks her up at the lakeside The weather was perfect. Skies Mrs. Doris Webb, 34, erippled home where she has spent the|Vere cloudless and temperatures by a shoulder wound, ran scream- last four days i the 80s. Her dress had been in- 3. Meanwhile, "no military ac- resented by their heads of gov- ing for half a mile to the home She then flies to Penticton Jorma Summary. frocks and low- of a friend to report her family where she will transfer to an ps Ss Ios a try." she told had been attacked when they RCAF plane for a flight to Ab- Ive Ws country," she told members of the royal party, "I just love it." The princess stuck to the pala- tial grounds of the temporary royal residence Monday night. The heat was tempered somewhat by a brisk southerly wind Lake Okanagan kicked up stopped their gar on the road a botsford and her first of four mile from home. days on the lower mainland. RCMP officers identified the For the princess, the last few ngighoor as Robert (Bob) Doh-|days have been the most carefree erty. They said it was a clear of her tour. Monday was a day case of attempted double murder off. There were no official cere and suicide. monies, no formal greetings and Mrs. Webb and her husband no miles of travel whitecaps shortly after 7 p.m Charles, 37, were flown here from| Her seclusion was guarded by forcing cancellation of whatever Sechelt, 35 miles north of Van- about 100 RCMP officers and she plans the princass had for water couver on the Strait of Georgia.'and her party spent most of the skiing or boating. Instead : she ~ = went horseback riding with four others The princess wore riding togs and a white sheer blouse, Mysterious Tremor Shakes Toronto TORONTO (CP) --- Experts] Seismograph readings from the hoped today to make some sense University of Toronto and the out of confusion caused when a Dominion Observatory at Ottawa mysterious earth tremor rippled were expected today. its way around the western end!. Seismologists at Buffalo said no of Lake Ontario Monday night. |reading was indicated on the first Cause of the shock wave wasiof their three machines Monday 48-Hour Cyprus NICOSIA (Reuters) Sirens wailed at dawn today to signal a 48-hour curfew which British authorities hope will halt the mounting wave of bloody feuding between Greeks and Turks pondered by scientists and ex-inizht hut photographic readings , RN Jr . perts in Toronto, Ottawa and Buf- from two more sensitive .ma. q C0 ernor Sir Hugh Foot or- dered the second within 10 days and gunfire k general curfew falo, N.Y. A spokesman at the chines were expected to provide after bombings David Dunlap Observatory north!more information today. of Toronto said the observatory The tremors were reported 4 ed five more per- lacked equipment to determine from 9:50 to 9:55 p.m. EDT from sons us broaght the total for the exact origin of latitude of the!piinis ranging from B iffalo 2e i to a record 36 dead tremoi but he believed it was a round the lake to Toronto. Resi vi a toll for the month minor seismic disturbance be- gents in Hamilton reported see oy a 59 , . uthorities inued an inves neath the earth's surface. ing a brilliant flash in the sky but ios oor eS continued an inve pital " ligation today into an explosion this was later discounted as a'yi, .q.. a cals: Mol day near a police vehicle in CITY EMERGENCY " . Nicosia. The. blast injured a po What was described as a "far liceman and in a subsequent bat PHONE NUMBERS . (away explosion in St. Catharines tle eight Greek-Cypriots were. in sent residents running into the|jured. One died later streets and in downtown Toronto] A Greek Orthodox ¢ hureh POLICE RA 5-1133 the police swithboard wa *d leader, the Bishop of Kitium, an | | To Hold Talks $ WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pres- mit conference at Geneva com ident Eisenhower yielded to Brit-| posed of the government chiefs of| ish insistence today and agreed the three Western nations, plus| to go along with a summit meet- himself and Prime Minister ng of the United Nations Security | Nehru of India. He also asked the Council if that is generally de-|attendance of United Nations Sec-| sired by the Western powers and |retary-General Dag Hammarsk- Russia jold i A White House announcement France objected to the hostil to this effect shortly after noon tone of the Khrushchev note sen i : ig| |today apparently ended a dispute/to India and the Western |with Britain over whether the three but generally favored con- Columbian representative Dr. Alfonso Araujo, current presi- dent of the security council --AP Wirephoto | Eight Persons | Killed In > SIDNEY SMITH Western big three should move| ditional acceptance of the idea of ---------- openly and directly toward a U summit session or merely indirectly in notes to Mo '2-Car Crash CHICOUTIMI, Que. (CP) -- A cate two-car collision killed eight per-|"°% ; ' t hai be possible. ons--including five members of one family--near here Monday About night vo others were injured The cars smashed head-on at a curve at St.. Ambroise, 15 miles west of here Dead are: Charles Henri 'ais and his wife, the former ranged Irmance Girard; three of their! The five children, Guy, 5, and two|Lloyd said, daughters aged three years and|the Middle East six months; Giselle Girard, 18,/would not act on any all of Kenogami: Paul Fortin, 27, unless there were general agre and Leonard Savard, 35, both of St. Ambroise The fourth Maltais child suf- yg STATEMENT an hour earlier the House of Commons in Londc that Prime Minister Mal- of the Security Council were a the purpose of crisis but taken, indi- Foreign Secrelary Selwyn Lloyd had told Macmillan would attend if a special meeting |" meeting, would be to discuss resolution | © ment that such action should be Na summit conference. As efforts to draft the Western s- replies went forward jointly Mon- that such a meeting might day and Monday night it became apparent, diplomats reported to day, that there was a split over the degree to which the reply an should open the way for an ex |traordinary Security Council ses 0 Eisenhower and Dulles, who were cold to the idea of a hastily- arranged meeting at the summit {favored simply pointing out to it | Khrushchev that he has full op- _ | portunity under the UN charter to get the Security Council to en- large its consideration of the Middle East problem if he wants to do so Britain favored a declaration of e- Oshawa Gas Prices Hit Pre-War Level Oshawa service stations now selling gas at the prices since before the war Local dealers questioned today searched back in their memories and came to the conclusion that in the words of one downtown re- 'The public never had it tailer s0 good." Prices are so low (the average are lowest Proposals Would Change Program UNITED NATIONS (CP)--The| External AMairs Minister Sid- Soviet Union sought today to|ney Smith, who flew to New York write into a Japanese Middle Monday morning to occupy Can- Fast peace plan a new demand ada's seat in the renewed Secur- for the immediate withdrawal of ity Council debate on the Middle U.S. forces from Lebanon. East, followed up Prime Minister Delegate Arkady A. Sobolev Diefenbaker's afternoon state told the 11-nation Security Coun-|{ment in the House of Commons cil the Soviet Union cannot sup-|in Ottawa by passing it on to the port the Japanese compromise Security Council members in a plan in its present form | brief Submission just before the - é . overnight adjournment, He offered a Series of amend. The Canadians called for cone menis completely e anging the sideration without delay of Ruse character of the Japanese com- sian Premier Khrashchev's Fe- promise already accepted by a quest for an immediate summit majority of the council and Le |.oncorence to deal with the situa- banon. tion touched off last Monday by The Japanese resolution pro-|the revolt in Iraq. But in doing so {vides for strengthening the pres-| they open the wey for such a con. ent UN observer group in Leb-|ference to be held within the anon to such an extent that it/framework of the UN, as Secre- | would guarantee the political in-|tary-General Dag Hammarskjold | de pendence of the strife torn!apparently favors. (Middle East country and permit! pie was the first statement by the withdrawal of U.S. forces a Western power at the UN in The Soviet amendments would|support of the Khrushchev call, condemn the United States for in-land aroused interest in view of a tervention in Lebanon and de-|probable failure of Japan's last- mand the immediate withdrawal|ditch attempt to keep the probe of U.S. forces lem in UN hands without the ne- The amendments were sure to cessity of calling an emergency be rejected, opening the way for|session of the General Assembly. the expected Soviet veto. Russia, through delegate Are At the suggestion of Sweden, |kady Sobolev, indicated strongly |the council adjourned until 3 p.m. Monday that the Japanese motion to permit consultations. for an extension of the powers On Monday night Canada sug-|of the UN observer corps in Le- gested . in the Security Council banon was not acceptable in the that a summit conference be ar- draft terms made public during fered a fractured thigh and an unidentified man a fractured skull. They were being treated at hospital in this town, 120 miles Press Secretary James C. Hag-| more positive readiness to attend is around 33 cents per gallon erty said at the White House: such a meeting, and Macmillan|with some dealers as low as 31 "A United Nations Security and Lloyd faced the necessity of cents) that many dealers report Council meeting of the character making a statement to the House significant increases in their out- ranged within the UN. ithe weekend. debate on a compromise Japa-| "If Mr, Khrushchev had really had nine youngsters. nist gers In & car driven by Maltars, aly d » n ; J , cabin -- would join in following this or-'as a result the Unitéd States cents off, but now it's our turn at |they landed there last week. north of Quebec City. Fortin, driver of one of the cars, was the father of four chil dren. His companion, Savard, suggested by |templation of the (United N tions) charter. derly procedure." tLloyd is clearly within the con- Foreign Minister of Commons today. This public announcement of a- [British policy evidently forced "If such a meeting were gener- as London, 5545 tl ti States Some diplomats predicted that probably will make concessions bat, A Bond street operator said: of Bri "Even people from Toronto are coming in to Oshawa to get gas before a trip and on their way - | Meanwhile, it was learned, Sec- in its position during the day. B C Ferries retary of State Dulles had re-| , : Zi . 0 : The result would be to make a vised a proposed United States summit meeting at UN head. note to Soviet Premier Khrush aves fithin th xpecte al chev to bring it more into line quarters hg w Iie ie Teme with Britain's insistence that the WOrk of the Security Council very = Western powers should open t n peration way clearly and unmistakably f VANCOUVER (CP) Black extraordinary session of Ball Ferries are expected to be!curity Council back in operation on the Pacific a back-to-work court order issued Monday against striking officers and engineers Resumption of operations would restore steamship communica tions between Vancouver Island | and the B.C. mainland, The National Association of Ma- rine Engineers and the Canadian Merchant Service Guild staged the walkout last Friday in an at- tempt to force federal govern | ment action in the tieup Canadian Pacific Railway coast steamships ; The CPR fleet had been tied up new Iraqi republic, since May 16 because of a strike The officials by the Seafarers International| favor some form Union and the officers and engi- neer unions. In each case the is- Time, Cool To LONDON (AP) -- Governme officials reported today that Br Washington but Turkey, heads of government to attend an was over the Se- Premier Khrushchev proposed on Satur-|power summit reporters that its coast today following issuance of day a five-power emergency sum- eva, beginning today. East Pact Allies of in and the United States are con sulting with Baghdad pact allies on the question of recognizing the said London and recognition for the revolutionary EARLY Iran and srobable. he! PI »bable or. The debate among the Western reply to Khrushchev's call urday for an emergency meeting at the allies five Gen- Republic nt|{ever, they want to be friends it-'with the West Pact informants said next week's meeting may be post- poned until about September, pre- sumably to allow the Iraqi repub- lic to make up its mind on its of foreign policy intentions. RECOGNITION As of now, the informants said, | | Pakistan are cool to the sugges- one school of American and Brit- sue is wages tion. --- | The informal exchanges on th Light Winds Fan question 'have assumed special|the de facto urgency because the premiers of ' 50 B.C. Fires the Baghdad pact nations are meet in London next week. PRINCE GEORGE, B.C. (CP) United States is not Light winds have fanned the of the alliance but hore than 50 fires in the Prince!some committees George forest district into new fury. A few scattered cially renounced showers fell the pact, but its alliance grasslands dication of a new foreign polic | The winds, although practically line. Nasser fis The a member be withheld until the rebels show serves on themselves ready and able to con. The Iraqi regime has not offi- membership in ish diplomatic opinion leans in he favor of recognizing the rebels as| (effective) govern-| ment of the country. Full-scale to de-jury (legal) recognition, in the view of these diplomats, should duct their international relations and commitments in what Wash- ington and London consider with {proper fashion. Monday afternoon but they had| President Nasser's United Arab no effect on parched forests and|Republic was accepted as an in- however, Iran and Pakistan, are reporied strongly Turkey, 'y opposed to recognizing a regime vehemently op-|that seized power by force and negligible. nullified the efforts of [posed to the Baghdad pact, of may be politically hostile to all 600 fire fighters. The fires|Which Iraq was the only <kipped over boundaries and be. member Zan burning new areas. | Spokesmen for - ary regime have the revolution insisted, how- Arab the Baghdad alliance stands for The alliance's headquarter was in Baghdad and with it the Broup's secret papers. Diplomatic Moves | BEIRUT (CP) n anoeuvring and internal politics/and in Tripoli appeared today to have taken Wik hati some of the heat off military ac-\hanon port where the rebel ou tions in the Middle East, at least break started two months ago, were temporarily reported northern Le- Cutew Stars Ease Tension In East Diplomatic |forces fought sharp battles here|said. all forces in Lebanon have atomic capability. A defence de- partment official said in Wash- ington, however, that it could not | foresee any situation calling for t Minuclear action in Lebanon. an exchange of rifle and machine- In Paris, Soviet sources said ah : « rp. Bun fire lasting several hours. Hey salc But in Jordan, tension was re- Several bomb explosions: were Moscow might - send troops to ported rising after a series of heard - hete and government Syria if a proposed summit con bombings in Ammar Sunday forces turned: artillery' on two ference could not find a solution night and Monday and an unsuc rebel emplacements following. a to Middle East tension cessful attempt fo incite a gen-!' ' ) a . eral * strike BN ON Lh sudden outbreak of swiping. If the situation is not regu ein's ¢ a Ean ry Y S. Marines jofned govern- lated, there is every possibility $ gov t ? A pent anti-sniper patrols in an ef-/the United Arab Republic will NO one was injured in the!font to flush out rebel sharpshoot-|asK us to station troops in Syria bombings and swift police action ers who have been firing on ma-|and we will," the sources said. | topped the bid for a ge neralirines and planes flying into the Some Western sources trike. But Britis} t | ares, oy SUIK > ilish para Toups nearby international airport. ever, were sticking to their earl- were carrying arms on the; pe she vader 1 15 r a . ins rebel leader here again ier beliefs that Preside a streets for the first time | ident Nasser SINCE threatened to form a rebel gov ernment 'unless parliament {of the U.A.R. does not want So-| Sat-. ot-town trade. B.C. Oarsmen Win For the last few years, not only did we have very little out-! ° n_trips woul outside | wo y d LLB oy evil gels ow " o . " back too As for the future of the price war, opinion is still sharply di- Some dealers. feel that the end will come around Christmas in the near future and gloomily pro phesy long years of cheap gas for vided while others can see no end Oshawa residents. CARDIFF (CP) -- University, Gert Polgieter of South Africa ish Columbia oarsmen won |won in 49.7, shaving a full second Canade's first gold medal in the off his own recognized world British Empire Games today. mark and lowering the unratified The UBC eight-oared crew-- (49.9 set up last month by Glen winner at the last games in Van- Davis of the United States. His ouver in 1954- and silver medal- cld racord was 50.7. list at the Olympic Games in Australia's David Lean, whe Melbourne two years ago -- was held the games record before to- {timed in five minutes, 55.1 sec- day, finished in second place in onds today. 50.6. Australia was second in 5:56.1 B. Rotich of Kenya, who fin- and England third in 6:10.6. «shed third, also exceeded Lean's It was the openigg rowing event (1954 games record of 52.3, which | TODAY'S THOUGHT of the day at Lake Padarn, a was broken a total of seven times Welsh resort north of here. in the various stages of the Meanwhile, track and field rec- event. | Drive as if all other motor- | ists were pluperfect fools, and you'll be right about half the time and safer all the time. 14 WRECKAGE OF STOLEN The muddy wreckage of a stolen car was recovered from the bottom of the Oshawa har- due| viet tropps moved into the Middle| bor Monday afternoon. In the ortly before it was d unce reek gove " For 4 . ™ : N N pum [Shorty before if ¥: L nounced Greek government] For the first time sire United |to meet Thursd: Vv, elects an ac-|East. They have said Nasser may| picture one of the heavy cranes FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 °N d : in ould. su wf { ie a rus ques- States Marines landed here a!centable compromise presidential feel that any Soviet move will| operating at the harbor coal | Ne tiamage Or uries were re 0 Ly nited iions Gen- week ago in response to an: ur-! candidate sither impla the i \ fi } boa " . {ported although dishes and win: eral A«comh : : ; Sponge. 1 andid: either implant the Anglo-Ameri-| dump lifts the water-filled car HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 Jiows rattled ood coo nd win if embly again within the zer rom President Camille = There was a brief flurry Mon- can forces more firmly or even body fo the surface 20d. orite | shook. next month, {Chamoun, rebel and government day when a, marine spokesman | spark warfare. the pier. The automobile was ords were falling at Cardiff Arms Canada's Geor g e Shepherd, Park con the third full day of com. Port Colborne, Ont., was sixth ia petition in the 1958 games. 52.8 seconds -- the fastest time The first two finishers in the he has ever made, comparing final of the 440-yard hurdles with the Canadian native record 'broke the official werld record. |of 54.1, CAR re| ited stolen in November, [ A crowd of spectators had ase 1955 from Court street by Wil. sembled on the pier to watch proceedings. The car body was discovered in the harbor by the dredve now operating on the harbor basin. (Please turn to age 3 for story.) ~Daily Timez Phote liam Schnegg, of 97 Bruce street. Repeated attempts, to lift tiie car wreck to the sur- face with a tow truck failed due tor the weight of the car. Osh- awa police supervised the lift- ing of the wreck to the surface Soa