TIMES-GAZETTE TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising RA 3-3492 All other calls ... RA 3-3474 DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle WEATHER REPORT Mainly sunny and cooler today and Saturday. VOL. 87--NO. 190 Price Not Over OSHAWA-WHITBY, FRIDAY, AUGUST 15, 1958 Authorized As Second Class Mall Post Office Department, Ottawa EIGHTEEN PAGES 7 Cents Per Copy Fo 4 OTT DOU AWA AGREES TO AID GM, UAW Meetings To Resume TORONTO (CP) -- Representa- tives of General Motors of Can- "| ada Limited and the United Auto| HD "4d MR. AND MRS. John Pen- 1 girl for 17 months and were | dam, she boarded flight which nock bestow kisses on daughter, | doubly happy for she was to | broug her to U.S. safely. She Marijke, 17, centre, after her | have been aboard ill-fated KLM n t ve been one of the 99 arrival from the Netherlands at | Dutch airlir hich crashed | | rd the other plane, Idlewild Airport, New York | in the A esterday. In a from Detroit. City. Parents hadn't seen the ' last minute switch in Amster- | (AP Wircphot9) Searchers Give Up Hope For Survivors h continued through- 2 seal the ni SHANNON, Ireland (AP) -- Alljever occurred came hope was given up today of find-|possibly an explosion. An under- out ing any survivors among the 99 taker said the condition of the HIT BAD WEATHER persons aboard the giant Dutch first bodies brought ashore indi airliner that crashed in the At-!cated an explosion A KLM lantic off Ireland's west coast Ships and planes of five nations 1 We The Canadian destroyer Crus- were in the area about 100 miles ader announced the search was|off Galway Bay. Shij ere pick being abandoned after a scouring |ing up bodies and wreckage. One of the area where the KLM air-| body recovered was that of a boy liner crashed Thursday failed to! wearing a lifebelt show any sign of life A spokesman for KLM By mid - afternoon, 35 bodies nouncing the search for sur had been recovered wvas being given up, said "nothing EXPLOSION POSSIBLE further has been seen today in Evidence piled up that the su- the Eres per - constellation, carrying 91/FURTHER SEARCH passengers, either ploded or| He said that in the event of hit the sea with terrific force. |"some special circumstances de Pieces of wreckage were found veloping there, a further search scattered over on area of four | may be carried out, but at the miles. Life jackets had been moment there is no possibility of ripped to bits, this arising." The plane, en route to New| Small ships which picked up York, had climbed into a violent bodies were heading toward pic- storm. A KLM official said what-/turesque Galway Bay. suddenly, Ss the all tl investigation be- vn 1s the ather soon men, 38 and ron, a recovered injuries, a indicating up high bodies wed no f s KLN ar he plane did not I up in the air "So far as is known the planc must have p in pieces on impact tesman said. T Ww ditching proce "Whatever it was, it is obvious that it happened suddenly," said KLM sta manager Lawrence Melling After all, four engines and four radios do not cut out {immediately." spokesmar no evidence of any dure "Stele6"ANid Union Return Men Sift Strike Issues ToToronto HAMILTON (CP) -- Reprset and businesses In Claim Probe atives of the United Steelworkers steel production. -~ oh : of America (CLC) and the strike-| A cartage company Thursday, TORONTO ft Pp. bound Steel Company of Canada jaiq off 30 drivers and is expected on mel Te Je today continued to sift non-mon-\{; 1ay off 60 more: between 200 tive 4 : etary issues of their contract dis-i 5,4 300 construction workers ap Ged pute. There has been no sign of|pjieq * for unemployment insur a crack in the deadlock on wages.| ance and a National Employment The union and the company geryice official estimated 12,000 reached agreement Thursday on could face unemployment if the continuing the group insurance|givive continues. plan with the union picking up NT xy 2 : . the tab. But the company's five-| E+ v. Rippingille, gener al man. cent package offer, which has ager of the General Moto Two Toronto men--including a been rejected by the union, was . plant in London, s I Wil claims supervisor with the insur- still its last word on wages. The be forced to vente production by|.nee company-were arrested last union - seeks a 33-cent an hour|Mid-September if the strike con- k and polic r further ar- package deal. tinues another two weeks 1s. they con- The company announced Thurs-, For group of tigation into false day night that pay cheques for|emy the th the company for work before the strike, which|learning something $100,000. started Tuesday, will be mailed keeping the hard way out next week to the 7,500 em The. men are members ployes involved. Most of the Stelco's supervisory staff who arc workers have seven to eight days' ided down in the plant to main connected with Two Monc- urned to To- it by a detec- police contin- igation of 17,000 New York rs Insurance Company se their claims Underwrit Sgt [i the Ww John Mullen arrived by plane with John S. MacMillin, 25, and William J. Whalen, 26. Both were charged with fraud e ve rests are expec a 450 company tinue their inve strike about means house- an The claims were for non-exis- tent fires and car accidents, po timated ol C supervisor Theodore in Canada Joins | Peacemaking Efforts At Un By LLOYD McDONALD Canadian Press Staff Writer UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CP) Canada today joined in peace- making efforts at the United Na- tions aimed at offsetting a stub- born position expressed by Jor dan against any UN intervention in that country to supplant Brit- ain's protective force The unexpected opposition by Jordan's delegate at Thursday's| on. of the | A ¢ y! the N on ses emergency Middle -al ger a Inco the the 100K ne tone f rea and co-operation manifested the of the debate which opened Wednesday In that meeting a long- to 1 tog 1 yhlem | it outse week re sal for 11 ty was fol-| n offer to work s in private dis Middle Ea rilowed by a these S out the problen POLICE RA 5-1133 in FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 the lefended her pay coming. in the e pment so furnaces am, 30, of Moncton was Labor minister Daley of On- can be brought back into produc- charged with fraud involving tario repeated earlier statements tion with a minimum delay when 2500 and Gillert Vail, 28, of To together again when he feels the, The men work, eat and sleep and fal od involving 3.902 time is opportune. z in the plant, although they are MacMillin, arrested by RCMP Meanwhile, the strike bdgan to not under siege as in the last|in Goose Bay, Labrador, faces arrested in Moncton, is accused ud ho of fraudulently obtaining $192.42 ego 1a 101 1 from an automobile insurance TORONTO (CP) Negotia-|informed of the break-down A designer of women's Sb x .| clothes says it is his job to four days of conciliation board] Mr. Solski said the company hearings between the Interna-had made no concessions to the gatisfied with the clothes they tional Union of Mine Mill and union's demands in direct bar-| jaye There are few, if any, The end of conciliation board/and had refused to change its attempts to reach a contract set-/ stand throughout the conciliation tlement between the parties was|Proceedings. dent of the 14,000-member Sud-'per-cent pay increase and five bury Local 598, and spokesman'days' pay for four days' work for the 2,000-strong Port Colborne Other demands included: A union meeting to discuss the of credit union deposits: properly new development is to be held in Levack, 22 miles northwest of| Sunday night in Sudbury Sudbu for a union hall; Nickel Mines, Casmda's second visions, overtime pay, vacations jargest producer of nickel, are health and welfare and pensions expected to be resumed Tuesday WOULD BAR INCREASES ducer : wage line and give no direct SEVEN-DAY LAPSE wage increases in the next two A strike by the Inco workers years. During the board hearing after a report by the conciliation six months of this year were $21 poard is made public by the min- 401,000 compared with $45,601,00( ister of labor in the same period last vear Inco's bargaining committee, said nickel market had forced i Kast Thursday night he had not bec v off 1,600 workers at Sudbury and Port Colborne and place re CITY EMERGENCY ther 'han lay off veteran attitude during p fe days leave no room for doubt mind that and simply end t ( n Jordan, saying ings because of slat y that gal government of that obligations to do so." that he will call the disputants|the strike is settled. ronto charged with deceit show its effect in other industries!strike in 1946. charge involving 616 claim, tions collapsed Thursday after discussions. keep women continually dis- Smelter Workers (Ind.). gaining which started last Aprill easier jo! announced by Mike Solski, presi-| The union was demanding a 10 Local 637. The voluntary payroll deduction Negotiations at Falconbridge changes i+ statutory holiday pro is the biggest Canadian pro- = Inc | ' The company wants to hold the would only be legal seven days aid its earnings for first! Fred Benard, member of claimed depre 1 Gene maining employes on a 32-hour PHONE NUMBERS Mr. Solski said "The compan ntention 2 had asked for protection ¢ |Senate debate was in prospect to-|Hagerty said Eisenhower had or- Whalen, [Which the United States might "(that would nullify and surrender- yzed the w {crown : Workers (CLC) will resume nego- ions here Monday for a new ffecting an estimated rated employes, meet here to consider by the contract 15,000 hourly Union officials will during the weekend a J offer comp, Mor $ first since tal w s meeting will be the were broken off here July 30, en the company prog that present contract ecments be extended two years. | The company's new contract offer includes a genciral 14-cent- an-hour increase over two years and continuation of a cost-of-liv- ing allowance which now totals 19 cents an hour, Workers affected are employed at McKinnon Industries Limited, St. Catharines; GM Diesel Lim- ited, London; Frigidaire Products f Canada Limited; Toronto; and GM of Canada plants at Oshawa and Windsor osed PARLEY-VOUS Commons Speaker Roland | speak French. Left to right, fac- Michener gives a reception for | ing Prof. Peloquin: R, J. Me- Professor Edouard Peloquin of | Cleave (PC--Halifax); Prime Montreal and his parliamentary { Minister Diefenbaker; Mr. "pupils" who are learning to | Michener; Senator W. Ross FRANCAIS ? ORS TO RUSSIA Will Contribute To Transit Costs OTTAWA (CP)--Justice Minis- would be understood to desire to ter Fulton today announced fed-|remain in Canada "subject to all eral government agreement with|laws, municipal, provincial and | British Columbia to send the long-| federal, governing Canadian citi troublesome Sons of Freedom zens and privileged as hertofore Doukhobors back to Russia. to enjoy the rights and liberties In an announcement to be|of such citizenship." . issued at the same time in Vic-| The announcement follows {toria, Mr. Fulton informed the|weeks of negotiation between the Commons that, providing there is federal and provincial gover Russian approval, the federal ments over the problem of deal |government will contribute to re-|ing with the Sons of Freedom re [tutning Freedomites' transporta- ligious sect, who came to Can. tion costs. ada from Russia at the turn of [ The B.C. government would as- the century. ist the Freedomites to get set-| OPPOSITION SUPPORT led in Russia, providing an| ore amount no greater than the fed-| Opposition Leader Pearson wel» eral contribution for transporta- comed the minister's statement = [tion. and said he hopes the arrange. #| But both financial aid offers ment will work out satisfactorily, are available "only to persons| H. W. Herridge, deputy CCF renouncing Canadian citizenship," |House leader who represents the minister said. | Kootenay West in the heart of the s |Sons of Freedom area, said he | SEPT. 30 DEADLINE trusts the federal-provincial co- Mr. Fulton said Sons of Free- operation will result in a solu dom who want to "take advant-|tion of this "long - standing and age" of this offer must declare most difficult problem" to the their intention of doing so by satisfaction of all concerned. Sept. 30. Leaders of the fanatical Douke | 'Arrangements will be made to|hobor sect have said 3,000 meme {complete migration as soon as bers have made plans to move to possible after this date." a selected site in Siberia, 1,600 » | Macdonald, Senate Opposition leader; and Erhart Regier (CCF aby-Coquit! | (CP Wirephoto) DISTRICT HIGH ; MINISTER TESTIFIES: SCHOOL RESULTS DEPUTY ' Montreal Senator Applied Pressure Youth Killed | PP Page Seven. Pickering High School results appear on Page In Salam | Corners Crash Six. PETERBOROUGH (CP)--Floyd Clarke, 17, from near Little Brit- ain, was killed Thursday night when the car he was driving col- lided with the rear of a trailer loaded with hay at Salam Corners about 30 miles west of here, OTTAWA (CP) -- Maj.-Gen. whose bid was a little more than H. A. Young, deputy works min-|half that of the Montreal concern. ister, testified today he was sub-|The contract was for a moving jected to pressure by Senator job between the old bureau in Ot- Sarto Fournier, now mayor of/tawa and the new one. Montreal, to favor a Montreal The Ottawa firm of Hurdman firm in. connection with a con-{Brothers had bid 144,553 and the Itract for the government printing | Montreal firm of J. B. Baillar- | bureau, |geon had bid 285,000. The testimony mentioning the, The Ottawa company, Gen. Liberal senator came out in the|Young said, was the lowest ten- {Commons public accounts com-|derer and got the contract. mittee's continuing investigation| He said he was backed up in into the way some $16,000,000 was his stand by the then Liberal . {spent on the printing bureau in|works minister, R. H. Winters, Police report that a plank of Hull, Que., across the Ottawa who was defated for re-election the trailer smashed through the|River from here. in the general election of June, Yinishleld J. The car and hit| It was brought out under ques-| 1957, larke on the head. Cause of tioning of the deputy by David a death was given as 'massive Walker (PC-- Toronto Rosedale) | LIBERAL OUTCRY brain injury." who suggested to Gen. Young| Questioning of the deputy was The tractor-drawn trailer was that Senator Fournier had threat-|greeted with an outcry from the driven by Franklin Lake of Cress- ened the deputy with being fired|Liberals of "McCarthy-like" tac. well {in 1956 unless he helped the tics. : J. W. Pickersgill Shea . IMontreal firm contract. it came from J, W. Pickersgi Clarke's mother, Mrs. Eva Mus- Quire] my goa ae was |(L--Bonavista - Twillingate), for- selman, lives in Toronto. threatened with firing, but testi-|mer minister of immigration and Peter Anderson, 76 of Little!fied he was under pressure from | citizenship. Britain, a passenger on thelSenator Fournier. Lionel Chevrier - (L--Montreal trailer, is in hospital in Lindsay Gen. Young testified the con-| Laurier), former Liberal trans- with a fractured pelvis. tract eventually went to a firm [port minister and former presi- rr ere ------ dent of the St. Lawrence Seaway U.S. Debate Seen iin Surrender Study way," Mr. Walker snapped. WASHINGTON On the questioning of Gen, |Young on the moving contract, |Mr. Walker--armed with a bulg- |ing portfolio of departmental cor- \respondence -- asked who had » made objections to the deputy's recommendations that the Ottawa firm get the moving contract. (AP) New surrender of the United States. day over reports that the defence dered an immediate investigation | department has been studying of the reports about the surrender SENATOR NAMED possible circumstances understudy. "Senator Fournier of Mont- X real," Gen. Young said. surrender in an atomic war. a even os tue hatore raged "Did Senator Fournier try to The subject set off criticism in that the defence department was have you fired?" Mr. Walker speeches Thursday night. At one undertaking any special surrender | 25ked point an unsuccessful attempt study. A spokesman would only! : was made to close the galleries|say that it was st to the press and public. ! The senators were indignant | that the U.S. military should be| having even the slightest fought], THe, JUNOT, apparenlly ted of any surrender, , the Rand Corporation, an inde- Democratic Senator Richard B. pendent, non-profit organization Russell of Georgia proposed tack-|which engages in national secur- ing onto a $3,594,000,000 supple- ity research. Rand, which has a! mental appropriations bill a rider [contrast with "obpect," interjected Mr. andard proce. | Chevrier before the deputy could dure to consider all eventualities, |TePLY: even those unlikely to arise. . N.Y. Pair Charged AMSTERDAM, N.Y. State police arrested a man and the Air Force, anal-/a teen-aged boy Thursday and ays in which other accused them of a series of bur- ! r an countries have surrendered in the giaries in three states and On- ments in connection with it. | past. : | tario. IKE WOULDN'T AGREE The study, completed last year,| Police estimated that Joseph At the White House, Press Sec-|Was published recently in book |W. Larusso, 25, and John B. Con- retary James C. Hagerty said |form with the title Strategic Sur-|nelly, 16, both of New York, had President Eisenhower "certainly render, the Politics of Victory |stolen thousands of dollars since wouldn't agree to any talk about |and Defeat. a Ml RE But Rand denied that the study| Among burglaries charged are| dealt with any possible American ($330 from a gas station near setback. Bowmanville, Ont. LATE NEWS FLASHES Boy Killed By Train TORONTO (CP)--Three boys wire trapped on a railway bridge by a Toronto-bound passenger train today and one was killed. Police said the other two ran to the end of the bridge spanning the Humber River in suburban York Towne ship and jumped about 10-feet i: safety. They were not in- jured study contract and bar any pay- their trip began July 13. | Princess Anne Marks Say LONDON (AP) - Princess Anne celebrated her eighth birth- day today sailing on the Irish Sea with her brother Charles the Prince of Wales, the Queen and Prince Philip. The royal yacht Britannia is making cruise among islands| off the west coast of Scotland The party in the dining | room of the yacht, The princess got her parents there, while up above radio operators were re messages from her was Stolen Money Orders Recovered OTTAWA (CP)--Police raided a hotel here Thursday night and recovered postal money orders valued at several hundred thousand dollars stolen this spring in St. Thomas, it was learned today Evacuation of 1800 Troops Ends BEIRUT (Reuters) The US. Marines today announced eompletion of the evacuation of 1,800 men from Lebanon in a two-day operation ceiving friends. The cake was square, sur- rounded by flowers and emblems of the and dominions, and surmounted by an icing re- production - of King Edward's | colonies Bowmanville Theft (AP) --| Freedomites who do not accept miles east of Moscow in the Als the offer within the specified time tai region, NOTICE OF INTENTION PC's To Divorce CBC And Board OTTAWA (CP) -- The govern-|ated by Parliament therefore and ment today gave formal notice of |also to provide for the - its inientiop Sais Jatliomentaty ance of a corporation shy Con session tablish a 0 R broadéast e . -the purpose: of oer governors ent i of the CBC to regulate broadcast-/ating a naticnal broade ing in Canada. service in Canada; and to i Notice of a resolution introduc- further for the payment, ing legislation to this effect in-|neration salaries and fees of cludes provision for the continu-|officers and employes thereof. ance of the CBC to operate "a| Perhaps the biggest change-- national broadcasting service in|and it has been forecast--will be Canada." {the establishment of a new body The Government's action was|to take over regulatory powers forecast in the speech from the now held by the CBC board of throne read at Parliament's open-| governors. It is not known ing in May. | whether the board would be a full Notice of the government's in-{time or part-time operation. tention appeared on today's list| But the government has given of prospective Commons busi-|no hint that it plans a major up {plow , 3 Iness. Revenue Minister Nowlan, lheaval of the national broadcast |ployes, now averaging $80 a yn, reports to Parliament for the ing system, made up of joint pub- eg. |publicly-owned CBC, is the spon-|lic and private enterprise. eginnings of a beer drought sor. a appeared Thursday night when| The notice says the resolution | FAVORS PRESENT SYSTEM Ottawa's suburban Eastview hotel [introducing the legislation is to| In fact, Revenue Minister Now- ran dry. Other hotels were re-|be presented in the Commons on (lan, who reports to Parliament ported on the verge of closing [Caturday. The legislation itself | for the CBC, has said in the Coth- tavern doors as bottled supplies likely will come before the House mons that he favors the present continued to dwindle. Most hotel next week, possibly on Tuesday.|SYstem which combines the pub- {taverns have run out of draught FEW DETAILS CITED Ls beer. o Apart from 1,200 store employ- 'Hotel Beer Supplies Start To Dwindle TORONTO (CP) Ontario {hotels began to go dry today as spokesmen for Brewers' Ware- | {housing Company Limited and {the United Brewery Workers of America (CLC) continued talks, There was sign of an end to "the strike 'which started last ursday in nearly all of On- |tario's 270 retail beer stores. Breweries are producing only for export, The only measure of agree- ment announced Thursday night after talks opened was a decision by both sides not to make any public statement of results until they are finished. The union seeks shorter work hours and increases of $9 to $14| a week for its 1,200 store em-| ue y-owned CBC and privatelys owned stations, especially where is com Few details of what the legis- network programming . : : {lation would do are provided in|cerned. es of the warehousing company, | the brief notice. It reads: While the CBC would lose its {owned on a co-operative basis by| "Resolved, that it is expedient direct powers over private broad the breweries, production Jolin establish a hoard of broadcast |casters, its responsibility to set ers and others employed in the|governors to regulate broadcast-|the pace of broadcasting, includ= trade have been laid off as there|ing in Canada; to provide thatl|ing its initiating role in network {now are no channels through |the expenditure of the board shall broadcasting, likely would res which beer can be sold. 'be paid out of money appropri-'main unchanged. Iron Curtain Bride' Awaits Whitby Dress In a little church in Commu- long white one which everyone| Canada in 1952, a few weeks {nist East Germany a happy 18- Will admire." |after her sister, Mrs. Osinga | walk own Years passed 'hen a few weeks Moved to Oshawa where she later {year-old bride will 1 A i ago a letter dropped into Mrs, [met her husband. the gisle soon wearing a long Osinga's mail box from Erika| "I would like to be present at white wedding gown sent to her saying she had met the boy she Erika's wedding in October but {from Whitby, Ont. |was.going to marry and remind- it's just impossible for me to go [ he gown, vill_be : Wedding ing her sister of her promise. |over Jere gt present But I ied for Crandon wl y Whitby. The Today Mrs. Osinga told the or rae wave lbride who will wear it is her Daily Times: "I must find a "I am. sure the gift will not [sister, Erika Oharek, who lives in [Pretty wedding dress for Erika. I| 10 ake Brika happy when she |Eisleben, Saxon. Nave Mb aitised Ju The mes marries her fiance, who is a Osinga made 'a promise 1h a jet. Phone calls and Pm going to look (278 [Ser BIC MISE mY HOCH ter to Erika. She said: "When at the dresses offered. You see 1 us, even though we are sepas wedding gown. from Canada. Aly rors through: the custome, So ies, MIs. Osinga added. I'm looking for one which is in good condition but not new. "Erika is looking forward so much to getting the dress that I have got to find the right thing for her." After the war for political rea- sons her family which was then living in Czechoslovakia was split up. Her mother and some of her sisters, including Erika, and a brother went to live in East Ger- many. Mrs. Osinga, who was then 14, and another sister, Rose, aged 12, had to stay behind in Czecho- slovakia. Mrs. Osinga got a job and managed to support them & both. S CROSS BORDER In 195¢ she and her sister cross- ed the Czech border for West Germany. They stayed there for two years then decided to immi- grate to Canada. Rose, who is now married, lives in Toronto. Shortly after her arrival MRS. JOHN OSINGA in HER SISTER ERIKA