TIMES-GAZETTE TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising RA 3-3492 All other calls ....... RA 3-3474 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle OSHAWA-WHITBY, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1958 Post Office Deportment, Authorized As Second Class Mell WEATHER REPORT Mainly cloudy with scattered showers Sunday, a little milder. EIGHTEEN PAGES YOL. 87--NoO. 220 7 Cid Andy Jacobson of Tilley, Alta., lost his left leg above the knee in an accident 22 years ago but he hasn't allowed it to interfer with his profession as a trapper. Here he gathers in a skin from the Louisiana Lakes project, one of the Ducks Un- limited developments. The 53- ' 4 3 4 4 3 IN OSHAWA FAMILY KILLED IN CAR CRASH 4 ~ Quick Rejection Of Russ Warning WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pres- hower put full blame for the cur- # ident Eisenhower is expected torent crisis on the Chinese Reds. reject promptly Premier Khrush-| In general, the Khrushchev let-| chev's new warning that the|ter was considered here for its | United States abandon the Na-{tough tone and the specific warn-| tionalist Chinese stronghold of ing that if the United States did | Formosa or face '"'expulsion" by not withdraw its forces from the Communist China. Formosa area it risked "expul-| In a letter to Eisenhower Fri-|sion." day, Khrushchev dismissed Ei-| '""We stand fully by the side of senhower's suggestion that the the Chinese People's government Soviet leader use his influence to/and the Chinese people," Khrush- year-old native of Czechoslovak- ia started trapping as a boy near Prince Albert, Sask., and has been at it 44 years. (CP Photo) Reuther Takes Chrysler Negot DETROIT (AP) -- The Unitedjand Chrysler. General Motors Auto Workers prepared today for and Ford also declined comment strikes against General Motors! nema : So and Chrysler but expressed hopes DEPENDS ON PROGRESS both disputes could be settled The Chrysier strike time was without a waikout. left to the discretion of Reuther jp > and other UAW officials in light UAW President Walter Reuther|of what progress -- if any -- is assumed personal command of made in efforts to reach contract the UAW's negotiations with ggreement Chrysler today and told report-| 'In the case of General Motors ers that "if Chrysler would get the union was much firmer. It end the Far Eastern crisis. chev said. "We have always sup- Khrushchev said Formosa be-|ported their policy and shall con- longs to China. If the United|tinue to do so in the future." States does not pull out Amer-| He said neither China nor the ican forces, he said, "no other Soviet Union would be way will be left to People's China |idated by what he called "nu- except expulsion of armed forces|clear blackmail." And he said hostile to it from own ter-!China never would accept "the ritory." severance of its very own ter- The Khrushchev letter replied ritory' or the concentration of to a letter from Eisenhower Sept. |U.S armed forces in the For- 2, In that letter Eisenhower told mosa area Khrushchev that if he really was| UN Argument interested in working for peace| he would use his influence to get Over Formosa - - Still Possible o inti] | \ t LJ fer to wrap up Chrysler first Reuther said, 'because it is a less compiex situation than at {GM and would result in a quicker consumation of a con- tract." He said the UAW accept at General Motors or Chrysler carbon copies of the three-year contract worked out with Ford Wednesday. That is the Chinese Communists to stop 'aggressive acts' in the For- mosa area. The mainland has been bom- barding the Nationalist-held off- shore island of Quemoy since Aug. 23. The Chinese Reds also would not down to serious collective bar-iset a Tuesday, Sept. 30, deadline agreement came after a seven- gaining, we could have an agree- for the walkout, Reuther said the hour strike involving 98,000 work: ment by Monday General Motors problem is much ers. Chrysler declined comment on/tougher since it has four times, The Ford settlement provided have been threatening broader military action aimed at even- tual capture of Formosa, 100 Reuther's announcement that the as many auto plants as Chrysler union's 25 - man internationalland hundreds of unsolved griev- executive board has sanctioned ances in local GM plants. miles from the China mainland. The 13-page Khrushchev lester was tran slated at the U.S. Em- bassy in Moscow before being increases variously estimated at from 24 to 30 cents an hour in Ford's company-estimated pres- strikes against General Motors "It is fair to say we would pre-'ent average hourly pay of $2. 'transmitted here. A summary UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CP) General Assembiy debate of the Formosa crisis was approaching today despite a preliminary U.S. |vietory in shelving a wrangle jover UN membership for Red China. The debate could develop next | | | | 4 i Father, Mother Young Child Die Three members of an Oshawa family were instantly killed Fri- day night in an automobile acci- dent near the southern Alberta city of Lethbridge. Killed were Garland B. Hoag, 45, his wife, Lois, 36, and their four-year-old son, David. The family live at 1120 King St. E., in Oshawa. Three other persons, all Al- berta residents, were taken to hospital following the "two-car collision. DRIVING TO BANFF Mr. and Mrs. Hoag and their son left Oshawa last Wednesday night to drive to Banff, Alta., to attend a convention of colport- eurs of the Seventh-day Adven- tist Church in Canada. Secretary of the publications department of the Seventh-day Adventist Church in Canada, Mr. 'loag came to Oshawa in July of last year from Baltimore, Maryland. He had served his church as director of colporteurs in India and Pakistan from 1941|of Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Bowen, of to 1951. Chattanooga, Tenessee, was a Mrs. Hoag, who is a daughter|graduate nurse. She served as a missionary nurse in Ethiopia for ber of years. DAVID HOAG CHILDREN SURVIVE MR. AND MRS. GARLAND B. HOAG SUPPORT STAND ON GM's OFFER Three children, by a prior Railwaymen May marriage, survive. They are: Lynn, 18, "a student attending A crowded GM Unit meet- ing Thursday of Loca' 222 UAW members unanimously endorsed the decision by the high school in Newmarket, Vir- ginia; Marilyn, 19, a student nurse in Washington, D.C.; and Danny, 13, who is a student at Canadian UAW top negotia- the Oshawa Missionary College. Officials of the Seventh-day Ad- ventist Ch here stated that Mr. Hoag had recently attended a church sales convention in At- lantic City, N.J., and returned to Oshawa to pick up his family before driving to Banff. - The funeral services will be |held in Chattanooga. was broadcast by Moscow radio week when backers of a move to before the state department had|seat the Chinese Communists are |time to notify Eisenhower, vaca-| certain to try to overturn the| | tioning at Newport, R.L, that al American victory in the steering! {new message was on the way, !|comniittee. There was no immediate com-| The committee voted 12 to 7 ting committee to reject the offer by General Motors of a nw contract which inclu' ded an increase of 12 cents graduated over two years. The meeting was the unit's first since the beginning of the vacation period. 4] More Supplies | Now Reaching Island Fort T U.S. commander in the Pacific said today considerable progress as been made in getting sup- plies to Quemoy during the last two weeks. As he spoke, the Na- Fight Teamsters | By H. L. JONES [tation workers will be put before ment from Eisenhower an d the Friday to a U.S. resolution that VANCOUVER (CP) -- A juris-|the convention. : 3 state department withheld com-|this assembly session reject any|dictional war seems to be shap- He said anything Kone' woul! be ment. proposals on Chinese member-|ing up between Canada's biggest, Within the framewor of the Po, But other officials said the ship. Nationalist China now holds railway union and 'the powerful|icy of the Canadian Labor Con- Strike D 1 oy a FA Eg LRN tho BEY Spoil Busi HAMILTON (CP)--This city of|by Stelco chairman H. G. Hilton. 241,000 appears to be suffering The letter urged employees to go little in the ninth week of the back to work and accept the con- strike at Canada's biggest steel ciliation board's recommendation plant. of no wage increase to is," | Sudbury's Mayor United States has no intention of 3 UN seat. International Brotherhood of|8ress, with which the union is af- i ---- abandoning Formosa under The United States opposes an|Teamsters. i filiated and which has a Bo threat assembly debate on seating, It probably will break into the|raiding" pact with the teams- Al hd R b 1 did not consider Khrushchev's | cussion of the fighting in the For- vention of the Canadian Brother- The CBRE had no. wish gerian e e S letter an ultimatum, but rather almosa Strait. However, U.S. dele- hood of Railway Employes make "war" on the loamslers, to matchlgate Henry Cabot Lodge may|which opens here Monday. The| But the proposal brought a |propose separate: discussion of 35,000-member group will go af-|quick r gsponse from Charies the Formosa crisis. ter union control of transpor- Gower, Vancouver teamster joint 2) ew uppor This would happen, informed tation workers now unorganized, council secretary. i that's What United States sources beiieve, if particularly in the road transport/they want, it's warfare," he said. the current Warsaw talks do not field which the teamsters con-|' 'We can get a little aggressive : I nz | French colonies of Morocco. and have teamed up with the Al- U.S. and Chinese ambassadors in| A rail union official said a pro- CBRE already has been Creep: Tunisia put Premier de Gaulle's|gerian rebels in laying the Warsaw, Jacob Beam and Wang posal for a more aggressive pol-/ing in" on teamster jurisdiction./government into a diplomatic | groundwork to unite the western Ping-nan, are scheduled to meet|icy with regard to organizing) A main topic at the five-day|quandry today by backing the part of North Africa--called the again Sunday. [road and other general transpor- convention is expected to be the|ney Algerian rebel government|Maghreb--with a permanent sec- . contract dispute between the rail-\i, its war against France. retariat and consultative assem- ways and their non-operating em-'" pp. two newly-independent na-|bly. ployes tions flanking France's big North| With establishment of a formal . French warning that any country (three lands now might put their Girl Cleared recognizing the exile republic of Maghreb idea to work. Algeria would be committing an! Communist China hailed the unfriendly act. proclamation as a '"'telling blow If de Gaulle follows up thejto de Gaulle's colonialist ,policy warning by breaking diplomaticfof annexing Algeria." Peiping relations with Tunisia and Mo- radio, however, did not mention Western diplomats said they which probably would involve dis- open at the 50th anniversary con-! ters. E PARIS (AP) The former; Tunisia and Morocco already produce concrete results. The sider their union property. ourselves." He added that the {African territory defied the government for Algeria, the Of Connection SUDBURY (CP) -- Mayor Jo- seph Fabbro called on Sudbury citizens Friday to pray for guid- ada accused of '"'union-busting."|terms. Stelco has made no at-| Admiral Harry Felt flew in for S€Pt. 12. In that note, Eisen- had small effect on the cit embers by claiming they voted] Asked whether the United, "The things we expected just day night in the sudden fury of HONG KONG (Reuters)--Scheduled talks in Warsaw on RECEIVING AID as the deadline approached average pay of $2.35 an hour. |International Nickel Company Cross-fire between union and '"'The truth Mr. Lisson tionalists announced another sup- No sign of a settlement has re- tempt to negotiate a new con-|conferences with Nationalist Chin- a sulted from daily negotiations|tract. Instead, as this letter in-|ese President Chiang Kai-shek at, . - since the walkout of 7,500 work-|dicates, they have gone all out inlthe start of the fifth week of the| F K lled ers Aug. 12. an attempt ta, break the union." |Formosa Strait crisis. Felt de 1ve 1 merchants. A survey Friday|"yes" in the strike ballot "in the|States has sufficient forces in the! In Car Crash showed most stores doing a nor-|belief that such votes would only|Pacific to deal with any situa-| mal business. A few specialty|be used as a bargaining weapon|tion, he replied: "The forces are| shops complained of bad business and that there would not be a|very, very strong and quite ade ear awd LATE NEWS FLASHES OTTAWA (CP)--Five persons aren't developing," said the man- ager of a downtown department store. "Nobody can say what the a head-on car collision on the | B 3 ic d Communist Chinese en- next couple of weeks may bring Trans-Canada Highway 15 miles Sunday between the American and Co On the picket line, members of the United Steelworkers of Amer- jea (CLC) are getting financial| assistance as they wait out their| : plant : Local president doin Lisson Meanwhile, there were spo- issued a statement Fri ay a radic waikouts among the plant's tacking the letter sent to strikers 13,000 workers ? come off on schedule Wednesday and there'll be no more wildcat |walkouts. Mike Solskl, local president of Solh slipped quietly out of Le-lit js." He urged workers to avoid banon today. Two attempts had|work stoppages in the meantime, been made to kill him during Le- however. banon's four months of insurrec- ,Unrest seethed throughout Bei- rut today only four days before a new Lebanese regime assumes er. through kidnappings and other|week of its trade deliberations lawlessness. {with some far-reaching decisions [This has forced the authorities but appeared to be heading into to clamp a curfew on Beirut and| food price supports, Britain balked but Canada stepped in CITY EMERGENCY with a compromise proposal that PHONE NUMBERS may finally resolve part of the POLICE RA 5-1133 = pre r world prices be fixed FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 nternational agreement. Thi vould tend to discourage unecon- emic production. management re sumed Friday said, "Mr. Hilton wants a com- piy convoy had cracked the Com. S{rongly-worded reply The loss of $3,000,000 monthly Mr. Lisson said the ietter in-|scribed the situation as serious put other stores reported higher strike." quate." four of them members of nef but at the moment no one has demands for benefits amounting ance There was still no decision Premier Quits {the United Steelworkers of Amer- tion. As time for the government its suburbs beginning at 8 p.m. issue |1ssue, BOSPITAL RA 3-2211 with the Steei Company of Can-|plete surrender on Stelco's|munist blockade. the tone of Eisenhower's note of payroll, strangely, seems to have|sulted the intelligence of union|but "'T am not discouraged." than average sales. Quebec family---were kilied Fri-| Postpone Warsaw Talks any rea: cause to complain." to 33 cents an hour over their for a strike at the city's giant from union leaders on Labor {Minister Daley's offer to mediate Lebanon, Mob Unrest Grows ica (CLC), said he will confer with other officials "but right One report said he had gone to Turkey. Another said he had changeover Tuesday approached, | the rebels were increasing ten-| MONTREAL (CP) -- The Com Monday "until further notice." It| New Zealand failed to sway the probably will last 24 hours, per-itrade conference Friday?with her | Canada proposed that, to pre- vent price supports from rising -on condition the strike won't BEIRUT (AP) -- Premier Sami| now the strike deadline stays as headed for Switzerland. sion appdrently purposely,imonwealth completed the first haps even longer, appeal for a gradual reduction of too the spre ad between them and lo Asks For Prayer 'ister Daley to intervene. Food Surpl a split on the sticky food surplus| Imeans of ending cut-throat com: ports for domestic producers. east of here The dead: Norman Kirkpatrick, 50; his mother, Mrs, Margaret Kirkpatrick, 70; his father, Mayor Fabbro set Sunday aside as a day of prayer for the city's 46,000 citizens after a conference with jocal clergy. Said the mayor: "I call upon you to offer up prayers to the Almighty at home and in church this coming week end to ask His guidance and help for a solution to the economic condition presently existing in our community." There were other appeals, too Two members of Parliament Rodger Mitchell of Sudbury and 0. J. Godin of Nickel Belt, sent a telegram to Labor Minister Starr in Ottawa asking for help. The Chelmsford - Blezard Mu nicipai Association, representing WELLINGTON, N.Z. the bill takes effect April 1, teer units of 7,000 men. Charles, 76; his brother, Earl, 48, all of Mille Isles, Que and Rene Savage, 32, Ottawa The sole survivor was Mrs.| Agnes Kirkpatrick, 49, wife of Norman, and she was still un- conscious in hospital early today] The Kirkpatrick family was re- tuming home from a holiday at Moose Jaw while Savage was bound for Ottawa from Corn. wall, where he was employed, for the Sunday celebration of his first wedding anniversary. So savage was the smashup and so mangled the corpses that| it took police eight hours before positive identification of the vie- tims could be established. chi Savage was the lone occupan t| seven municipalities with 16,000 of one of the two late - model residents, joined Mayor Fabbrolcars. The five members. of the! and McKim township surround-|Kirkpatrick family were in the ing Sudbury in asking Labor Min- other when the crash occurred at| dusk. B.C. Canners VANCOUVER (CP) lof British currency restrictions |may have brought about the big- gest windfall for the British Co- lumbia salmon-canning industry. | The Vancouver Province says |that 24 hours after the announce- {ment the entire surplus of this |year's re cord - breaking pack, amounting to 700,000 cases @of in pro-|sockeye, has heen gobbled up by ; . {British buyers ducts as jute, tin, aluminum, and Prices ranged: from $37 to. $40 a case, a total of more than $26,-| en- 000.000. | anadian plan to set up| Approximately 300,000 cases us Sticky t Conference Earlier in the week Canada at- petition tacked Britain's controls on im- ports from the dollar area, and, {Britain almost immediately re textile |plied with a sharp reduction that; They also enthusiastically won the praise of ai] member|dorsed a ( : coutries. 1,000 scholarships for 'an ex-|from this year's catch are being reserved for the domestic mar- Next week the' conference be- change of students and teachers; the newspaper says gins specific study of ways of among Commonwealth countries. | The sales manager of one big expanding trade and providing|gritain wil, pay for half of {packing firm here described the more Capital Jo needy. coun [the ie; Canada for a quarter {British order as "'a staggering re- aca Ra oe] Food surpluses provided a ma-|action:" ceo] ments on her current Colomboli°" stumbling block. New Zea "It came as a miracle," he land, which lives by its dairy and|said. '"This is the first freedom such basic voys have been postponed until Monday, Peiping Radio said today. It said the two ambassadors agreed to defer the meet: ing for '"'administrative" reasons. Needed For Different Classes VATICAN CITY (Reuters)--The Pope Roman Catholic church believes there is a need for differ- «cot 'classes in society. The pontiff said differences between classes are "a guarantee of an order that is not static but dynamic. They do not mortify man but recognize him Compulsory Training Ended (Reuters)--Parliament ished compulsory military training in the Socialist poses to expand the regular army to include a brigade group of 5.000 ready for service overseas and for supporting volun- Suggests U.S.-U.K. Pool TORQUAY, England (Reuters)--Britain should pool her defence resources with the United i bomb Liberal Party Leader Joseph Grimond said today. Plan and other contributions. {meat exports, has accused coun-{the English buyers have had in In other major developments,|tries inside and outside the Com-|20 years and they are taking full the 11 member countries tenta-'monwealth of barring New Zea- advantage of it." tively agreed to seek Sino-Sov land by import quotas| The B.C. salmon indi par pation in ir nd and at the same|no hint in advance that commodity ¢ e ment time high price sup-jwould again become a market, had Britain major products 1a tional a cmbargoes agr a granting | day. The Big race against Brit- ' Double Slaying BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP)--A mis- sing girl was returned to Buffalo from Toronto early today and im- mediately cleared of any connec- tion with the slaying of Fred and |Frank Aquino. | Betty Ann Miklos, 18, of Lack- |awanna, N.Y., who disappeared |Aug. 24, had been sought by po- [lice on the basis of reports she {knew the Aquinos. Police had ex- pressed fears for her life However, police said she de- {nied any knowledge of the Aqui- nos: or of any of the associates off the two brothers. | Betty Ann was found in a Tor- |onto restaurant after Toronto po- {lice informed authorities that she| had been seen there. said today the today abol- After pro- Zealand government New States and give up H- Windfall For | -- Lifting | CLOSEUP OF ain's Sceptre starts today. Nav- igator Harry Sears, head of Col- umbia syndicate, at the wheel. Designer Olin Stephens America's test spin Crewmen of defender Columbia mainsail in practice Cup new Fri- is | rocco, he will eliminate them as recognition of the new possible intermediaries in any ment. future peace talks to end the Al-| |gerian insurrection. France has {SABOTAGE ATTEMPT . refused to negotiate with rebel! A measure of the jumpy situa- Headers. tion in France came Friday from . the naval base at Toulon, where TROOPS STILL THERE Admiral Pierre Barjot reported A break with France also could Algerian frogmen had tried to (force Tunisia and Morocco to|sabotage France's only battle. {seek support and financial aid ship, the Jean Bart, plus a de- elsewhere -- possibly President|stroyer and a submarine. Nasser's United Arab Republic] Two hours later his office or the Soviet bloc. France still backed down somewhat and an- has some troops in Tunisia and|nounced that authorities had Morocco and contributes to their been unable to confirm that: Al- economies. |gerians had been involved or that Nasser was the first fo recog-|on attempt to blow up the ships nize the Algerian government af- had actually been made. ter it was proclaimed Friday in| However, the admiral then is- Cairo. The new republic of Iraq, sued emergency decrees closing the kingdom of Libya and Yemen|the Mediterranean port to all un- followed within hours. authorized traffic. govern- i | i Ah E) THE COLUMBIA stands just ahead of Sears. Cor- neilius Shields, alternate helms- man is seated centre, looking after, and next to him is skip- per Briggs Cunningham. {AP Wirepholo)