Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 4 Oct 1958, p. 1

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TIMES-GAZETTh TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising RA 32492 . RA 3.3474 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle WEATHER REPORT Bunny with a few cloudy intere vals and cooler on Sunday. VOL, 87--NO, 234 OSHAWA-WHITBY, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1958 Authorired Post Office As Second Clos Mel a TWENTY PAGES y wr : ] Hy | Yigg ) Ri I Ed = % Ek b - a OLD CASE MEDITATES This 68-year-old man stood | happy. His New York Yankees | ed, would be another, | behind a fence Friday and | were two down to the Milwau- day a i Jankots went out bo Vas Bam. ry for ier first victory am watched some young fellows in | kee Braves In the World Ser a Series comeback ' batting practice, He wasn't | Jes, Today, Casey Stengel hop- | (AP Wirephoto,) Nuclear Tests, Arms UN's Next'Headaches™ By LLOYD McDONALD |Geneva at the end of this month personal references to the se UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CP) to discuss a ban on nuclear tests tary-general 4 y and some kind of inspection sys-! Foreign Minister Gromyko ac ~The United Nations assembly on, to make such a declared ban cused Hammarskjold of "misin has wound up its third week un- realistic, der the sadow of the Formosa BACKBONE OF DISPUTE crisis with no overt attempts to August emergency assembly ses | Nuclear test bans and control: niadiat 3 . P ¥ ation bring the world organization into}; cpection form the backbone of British and the Chin.se-American dispute. |g," gic mament issue either in tervention The 13th assembly's general de: (he UN or outside the world ore anon bate, which corresponds roughly ganization, Thus there is a he to the throne-speech debate In the jief that the assembly will be pre Canadian Parilament, is due o|pared--aithough not without con wind up Tuesday, The assembly siderable oratory then will turn its attention to the Geneva talks progress disarmament problem, The assembly's debate has cre- East, and without Russia's ever As In the case of the Far East 410d little excitement in the last tacit agreement might find him crisis, the disarmament debate week, and even Russia's bitter at-'self at a dead end, may be |:ss decisive because of {40k Thursday on the position off Nationalist China's the prospect of negotiations out-ithe U.S, and Secretary - General refusal side the UN framework Dag Hammarskjold in the Mid: {from the offshore Islands The U.S, Britain and the So- dle East was regarded as little also create dead end viet Union are due to meet In more than routine, except for the other side of the dispute De Gaulle Awaits Yankees Seek In the dispute American armed in in Jordan and Leb ay In the prospect that Hammar skjoid may be called on--should to see how the (he Geneva talks fail continuec coule on r| cre. terpreting" the resolution of the! year later slon which gave him the task of{1953 when he over Coronation Medal in commemor-| to make alyag similar perce mission to the Far Chief Constables' Association of down, I didn't know what to im: to consider withdrawing the League and for many years was| 187th Street OUTRAGED HUNT WOMAN'S KILLER | K 'No Indication Of Break In | Civic Strike WINDSOR (CP)--A new round of bargaining talks was sched. uled today but there was little in " > dication of a break in the dead. d8y to a university president's 10ck between the city and 400 view that. shopping abroad for striking civic employes weapons instead of making them A six-hour meeting of eity offi. 'n Canada will send this nation's cials, public works employes 0p brains to the United States and Local 82 of the National looking for jobs {Union of Public Employes Three university spokesmen (CLC) ended early today. The 8greed with Dr. Norman Mac talks will resume at 1 p.m Kenzie of the University of Brit Mayor Michael Patrick said the! ish Columbia, who said the gov meeting had resolved none of the ernment decision to buy issues, But, he added, "we might Bomarc ground - to - air missiles be a bit closer to agreement." eemed to indicate that weapons Contract der is involy- research would be done in the ling ges, vacations. a 12month US. and, "if this be true, that {work suarantee and similar! bright young men and women) ringe benefits invoived ini Will flow across the line where the dispute t brains, their abilities and Wednesday 200 public their training can be used partment employes Three disagreed their jobs, leaving garbag Dr, Murray Ross, vice - presi lection, street cleaning and other dent of the University of To. services unmanned ronto, said "I agree 100 per Kingston Chief STEP BACKWARD "We need to develop funda Constable Dies Cancer Blamed mental research (and) if we pur KINGSTON (CP)--Police Chief chase missiles (from the US {John T, Truaisch, 49, died today we go back a step further," Very Rev. Henry F. Legare, rector of the University of Ot in hospital of cancer following a {long illness, He headed Kingston's police department for 11 years tawa, said Dr, MacKenzie's state ment "seems to be hitting the nail squarely on the head." A native of Belleville, he joined |the Ontario Provincial Police in {1933 and served with that force Dean David L. Thompson, vice. president of Montreal's MeGill for 13 years. He would have been 50 on Monday, University, said Dr, MacKenzie He was stationed at Port Ar- thur, transferred to Sudbury in hi An pI , Reptegiber TIT to tae oharge we of 'thé OPP detachment here, NEW YORK (AP) -- An un-| A month later he was appointed identified pilot: made a perfect By THE CANADIAN PRESS There was mixed reaction to are 4 heir high county constable for the :anding early today on an upper|Airport, At Teterboro, officials Company Lid, was stolen from {said a plane took off at 12:20/two women just Inside the door-| county of Frontenac and held Manhattan street, then fled from both positions until his appoint. [the single-engined two . seater {ment as deputy chief of Kingston craft "police in 1046 and police chief a Police sald they were seeking for questioning a man who landed h was honored in|a small plane in a city street two was awarded the Years ago. The plane with a wing spread 'lation of Queen Elizabeth's Cor.10f about 40 feet, set down on lonation for the arrangements of heavily travelled, 60 - foot wide police protection during the visit! Amsterdam Avenue at 187th Chief Truaisc The significance In this attack here of the Queen--then Princess Sireet | Elizabeth--in 1951 A motorist, John Johnson, 34, 1 In 1055, while in hospital, he told police elected president of the! "I saw something coming V Ontario and last year was elected agine. I slammed on my brakes | first vice-president of the Cana- and the plane skidded over the Idian Association of Chiefs of Po-|top of my car and made a perfect ice, landing ahead of me A keen sportsman, he was| 'I saw a man get out and run prominent in the Police Athletic/toward St. Nicholas Avenue on | The plane turned out to belong | to Donald Hulse of Paramus, jk a member of the Cataraqui Golf {and Country Club, | RETREAT IN NORTH Source Of Arms Sparks Argument | Painters Mark Big White X's On Crosswalks TORONTO (CP) Roads de- partment painters splashed giant whit, Xs on streets today as part of a program to make even more obvious the pedestrian cross walks which three persons "is right" but "I would put it the other way." "If Canada were to engage in production of important defence weapon it would tend to hold Ca- nadian scientists and engineers in this country," CORRECTLY TRAINED Dr, Andrew Stewart, president of the University of Alberta, said "it seems to me there is no rea on duced 18 days ago. Officials of Metropolitan Tor- onto council pulled men off other painting jobs to get the warning markers down on either side of have died since they were intro-, Iu TROOPS 2 Cypriots Die In Big Roundup | FAMAGUST (CP)~Two Greek| Shouts and screams rang out ypriois died of injuries as Brit- | from one interrogation shed, ish troops rounded up suspects| Four regiments of British in the fatal shooting of a British troops moved into the city to serviceman's wife, a uth orities carry out the roundup but only 8 said today. few united remained today to Another 150 Greek Cypriols re maintain the curfew, ceived hospital treatment for in-| Hundreds of windows were ries suffered in the hunt for|smashed and the streets were Iit- three young terrorists, British of-|tered with debris, Mayor Andreas ficias said, The killers presum-|Pouylouros said hardly a door |ably were members of EOKA, thelhad not been battered down by Greek Cypriot underground fight-| searching troops and houses were ing for union with Greece ransacked, son there should not be alterna tive opportunities in Canada" if Canadians were correctly wained, 'i don't see why this de ci fon should attract many young Canadians to the States Dr. H, H, Saunderson, Univer- sity of Manitoba president, said "I am sure the Canadian govern ment will continue to have agen cies under the department of na- fonal defence which will con- tinue to study weapons develop ment and weapons systems "There will be a great many opportunities in these fields for people with the proper training." Dr .. Kerr of Dalhousie University, Halifax, said it is "inevitable" that some young scientists will go to the U.S, "But a large proportion of them will be glad to stay at home or to the broad white lines that mark the walks | The thoroughfares, on which pedestrians are supposed to have right of way, already are marked with roadside signs Robert Clark, deputy chief con-| stable, said it was 'absolw'ely un- true that anyone was killed or wounded during interrogation by police." Toronto city council asked INJURED IN ROUNDUP Metro Friday to install pedes-| The injuries were suffered Fri trian-operated traffic lights at the day as British security forces got crosswalks on which a woman Greek Cpriots onto trucks faster and a ld were killed, a second!than they wished to move, Clark woman was fatally injured and said, The two died Friday night five others were hurt, All exis to this east coast port Metro traffic director Samuel of 17,000 persons were sealed Cass refused on the grounds that after one English housewife was {the lights would double the acci-| fatally shot and a second severely dent rate and severely hamper wounded, traffic EOKA circulated leaflets on The Ontario transport depart Friday accusing the British Army ment approved the eotinued Ine of using "cowardly methods" of the crosswalks Friday. {against the population of Cyprus, q------) lated human rights and the rules "Not even Hitler's hordes vio-| Pouylouros sccused the troops of 'indiscriminate vengeful ate tacks against innocent citizens," An army spokesman reported 150 Greek Cypriots were Injured {during the roundup, But doctors sald 300 were treated at Fama- gusta overnment hospital, YOUNG GIRL DIES Two persons--a 12-year-old girl and 8 Greek Cypriot youth--died |after the interrogations. The girl (died from what officials called |"shock' and the youth sue. cumbed after *'heart failure," A soldier was shot to death ae- cidentally during the roundup, British soldiers were outraged by the slaying Friday of Mrs, Catherine Cutliffe, 40, the mother of five children and the wife of | Manhattan Street As Landin return if we have more scientific developments In Canada that are not primarily concerned with war--developments in which they can participate." London Police Hunt Robbers $4160 Payroll LONDON, Ont, (CP) A "polite" gunman and his accom- g Str i TFa plices who staged a $4,160 pay- ] | roll robbery Friday were still at 3 large today despite an ali -outisy " hunt by police. td Anak A pelice cordon | 3 of war to the extent to which the # British mess sergeant, {British Army in Cyprus has Sbe, her daughter, Margaret, done," the leaflets charged, and a friend, Mrs, Elfrida Famagusta was deadly quiet| Robinson, also the wife of a sol- |today as troops enforced a strict|dier, were shopping on Murder house curfew and searched for Mile, Famagusta's main the killers, ping street where the EOKA Streets were littgred with bi.|underground organization has leyeles, carts, an odd shoe, a claimed many victims, {broken watch strap and other| The women had just Jeft a signs of a hasty retreat or hasty shop. Two youths approached and arrest, (whipped out revolvers, The More than 1,000 of Famagusta's, women screamed, turned snd eitizens were arrested Fri-\ran, The gunmen pg the wornen in roe wire soreoning poms 1 en du thysbout was N.J., who operates an aesonaut- around the city soon afer les msehool at Teterboro, NJ. [payroll of London Pure a.m. without navigation clearance or radio contact with the control tower, On the block in which the plane sisters, had picked up the money landed are apartment buildings from a nearby bank, varying in size from five to 10, The gunman was waiting part storeys. lights, way of the mid-city plant, Mrs question Thomas Fitzpatrick, 28,'the dairy. who on Sep! 30, 1056, 'hor rowed' a small plane from Hul- Miss LaFrance, "He said, "par. se's school al Teterboro and|don me,' and 1 never even landed it safely on St, Nicholas thought of a holdup until he jab- Avenue at 101st Street in Man- hed a gun in my ribs." hattan, NICK ELECTED AND REJECTED SYDNEY, Australia (Reu- ters)--Most Sydney Univer. sity students crawled Into their shells Friday and re fused to talk about the elec. tion of Nicolas A, Chelona as student council president, re - election has been called--with Chelona's name absent from the ballot, A ' Mailman Dragged | From His Vehicle LONDON, Ont, (CP) Two vouths dragged a Royal Mall | truck driver from his panel truck at a city intersection Friday [night and made off with the truck It was the second mail truck to be stolen in three weeks. Driver James Dolphin, of Lon- |don, after being attacked, made | his way to a nearby home. "He was very polite," sald(i, M, Hall Friday because, ~ |racetrack--in the police car, Drink And Cards Chief's Downfall | GODERICH, Ont, (CP) ~ The| Reported the commissio" a is {police commission fired Chief| judgment: "It is amp" proven it{that the aceused sper' aitogether |said, he played cars and drank too much time at ¥ « stables and [in the town council chambers, race track." It wecused Hall of hung around with bootle; gers taking the police car to the races and spent too much time at thejalin t every day last winter and | spring This behavior, it added, was BOOTLEGGING [likely "to bring disgrace on the The commissioners ~~ who ine pollee foros of this Lake Huron clude Mayor Ernest C. Fisher, A hid {Magistrate Dudley Holmes and Chief Hall, head of the force| judge Frank Fingland--also sald Since it wap set up.in Jd. Yha| Hall knew about bootlegging go P tt ts Commason beta Ives om ng mr, 177 DO |22 charges against him, He was| The chief replied that he had convicted on eight, both points under observation, {OUT OF SIGHT {The commission sald observation \wasn't good enough, The commission sald the chief yan Hoo findings said, even admitted playing cars and drink-\ort the country and went to the ing in the council chambers but United States--the border is 70 John Patricia Short and Miss Eileen LaFrance, who are way Inside the door, leading to Authorities said they wanted to!the second floor front office of Even Eskimos Cannot | A short time later the mail|@rBued that no one could have miles away--with a prisoner last truck was found abandoned a|®een him do it. He contended that nMarch 4, The chief said this was {short distance away, Police be- other officials were doing the|correct but gave as his: reason : First Victo French Reaction Ty council official said: "He's not representative, he's not a student--and we're not even In Third Game By GEORGE McARTHUR the right-wingers because off NEW YORK (AP)--The worl AJACCIO, Corsica (AP)---Pre mier de Gaulle returns home to. day to test France's reaction to his offer of sweeping economic ald to Algeria and amnesty for rebels who lay down their arms There was some consternation among right-wing French col onial leaders at de Gaulle's pol icy declaration and the outline of a five-year plan for Algeria that he announced in Constantine Fri day The plan calls for trial and housing construction and better opportunities for Al gerian Moslems, but leaves vii tually all political questions unan swered After hours of consultation the revolutionary May 13 committee, whose uprising helped return de Gaulle to power last June, said through a spokesman the pro gram is "excellent, going beyond our expectations." Infor med | sources said, however, that the Europeans have no other course but to back de Gaulle. Initial comment among the North Africans who make up the bulk of Algeria's 10,000,000 people was reserved Unrest among right-wingers in Algeria was intensified by a re port unofficial but circulated widely in official quarters--that Gen. Raou! Salan, supreme com mander of the 500,000 . man . French army in Alseria, is being| Hunt Woman, Children kicked upstairs Sali A A PETERBOROUGH (CP) The hunt continued today for The report is that Salays"hero Mrs, Tusin Corman and her three small daughters, missing since Tuesday when they vanished Into dense bush 45 miles CITY EMERGENCY north of here as a Children's Ald Soclety official approach. PHONE NUMBERS ed to take the children away Lay Second Murder Charge POLICE RA 5.1133 FIRE DEPT, RA 5.6574 GALT (CP). Frank Martin, §1, HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 is to become inspector-general. or Stadium with baseball fans won chief of staff of French armed forces The right-wing committee of({tW0 Eames in public safety in Constantine was champion Braves appalled by de Gaulle's offer of, The Yankees were in a sim tmnesty of the rebel nationalists ilar predicament two years ARC who have been waging war against Brooklvn Dod against the French since 1954 perhaps gers groun proposed after completion back by winning three straight coup. to win the series in seven games by Don Larsen, who pitched perfect game against Brooklyn in another restraind friends for anger was members army Their other vast indus dressed the rebel leadrship and manager Casey Slengel's choice program to give Algeria's Mos. to oppose him was Bob Rush, an lems more land, more schools, other righthander, more jobs and greater represent. A crowd close to 70,000 was ex ation in the National Assembly. pected LATE NEWS FLASHES Intelligence Agent Missing BERLIN (AP)--West Berlin police today disclosed: a Western intelligence agent has disappeared from this Com. munist encircled city. He Is believed to have been abducted into Communist East Germany, Police identified 'the miss. ing man as Karl Behnisch, a 48-year-old German citizen They did not say for what cbuntry or countries he worked freed from a charge of August rearrested slaying of Mrs. Helen operated a groeery was found slain on murder at a preliminary hearing in today and charged with murder in the Rahman, The 43.yearold widow, who store at Rahman Corners near Hespeler July 20, was his part in the May 13 uprising, series resumes today in Yankee the dering whether the Yankees can hounce back after losing the first| Milwaukee to the| The Yanks lost the first two games in|tense cold wave lasting possibly | : A Witnesses sald some of that Ebbets Field and then bounced decades forced the Eskimo to re-|pology at Michigan State Univer. of the speech to call on their at Yankee stacium and went on|Island about 700 years ago, El-|dian National Museum, says his!erly land mass At one point de Gaulle ad-'the fifth game that year, was the one that supposes decimation appealed for co-operation in his as starting pitcher today, Named hoth | | Always Endure Cold McINTOSH | The Eskimos migrated in at Scientists least three waves from Siberia that | Across Alaska, the northern rim of mainland Canada, the Cana- dian archipelago and into Green: |land, D1, Maxwell, curator of anthro- By DAVE OTTAWA (CP) [have turned up evidence even the Eskimos can't always {stand the cold They say they believe an in treat from northern Ellesmere sity who was acting for the Cana- {northern Ellesmere has not been {occupied in the period of written history but was inhabited during a warmer Arctic period 1,000 to lesmere is Canada's most north This theory would tie in with lieved the youths had a car {parked where the truck was found and made a transfer, Postal authorities began check. [ing to see if anything had been | stolen sure he's a 'he Nicolas A, Chelona turtle Nicolas beat out five other candidates after a sponsor wrote in the student news. paper that he had spent three years in the mical departs ment, was a keen student of natural science and was sure "to prove a much faster worker than members of pre- vious student representative councils," As to Nicolas' surname, Chelona is Greek for tortoise, hy cold of Eskimo settlements on 3.000 years ago east and west coasts of Greenland at about the same time, Conclusions of the scientists are only tentative and more def inite ones will be arrived at only after further research The scientists who took part in |the Canadian expedition in 1057 today's News: ' V I I ( t \ t 8 n, e | 58 to Lake Hazen on northern El |discoveries, But anthropologist Dr. Moreau §. Maxwell and his riers were honored Friday after- tory iobservance of National paperboy Day, . . Police Officer land Mrs, T. Colgan, 114 King's |erescent, Ajax and Eugene Tur- | {Turchin, 221 Conant St, Oshawa, | ORILLIA, Ont, (CP) A pro- received awards of honor pre civilian driver were killed Friday tion Managers' Association night when their cars collided at/ The presentation was made by {bypass on Highway 11 manager of The Daily Times | The victims were identified as| Gazette, Barrie, OP P detachment, and award for being the outstanding Stanley Simpson, of Graven [carrier outside of Oshawa and The mishap happened where a as the outstanding carrier within t four-lane bypass highway nar the city lesmere are still assessing their| colleagues reconstruct this his: noon in connection with Patrick Colgan, 13, son of Mr . | Second Man Die {ehin, 15, son of Mr, and Mrs, M, |vincial police constable and ajsented by the Canadian Circula- the south entrance to the Orillia| Robert €, Wilson, circulation | Constable Willis J, Jacobs, 32, of Patrick Colgan received the hurst Eugene Turchin was singled out {rows lo two lanes, The winners were picked by the © Two Dally Times-Gazette car-|circulation staff of | Gazette for displaying qualities of | 8 {newspaper business who essential to its growth and influ lowed 2 Newspaperboys Receive Awards The Times: ntegrity, enterprise, inteiligence, levotion to duly and good citizen- hip. They are two of 306 carriers vho deliver The Times-Gazette In a letter of greeting to the nation's newspaperboys, J. A, tankin of Topeka, Kansas, presi. lent of the International Circula- lon Managers Association ingled out newspaperboys as ital salesmen and distributors of he newspaper product He said: "There certainly is no ingle individual engaged in the nore nee than you. You bring the in pivation of youth to a business hat through the years has mel and may even have be ome a little staid on occasion," ROBERT WILSON, circula- | tion manager of The Times: | same thing: the ieyroads. There was no fur. Hall also pleaded guilty to con-|ther explanation, sorting with bootleggers and al-| Hall also was accused of falling lowing a race horse he owned to to discipline a constable seen be trained and taken to various leaving a bootleggers "in an ine tracks by a bootlegger. Itoxicated condition," -- -- --- re e-- Gazette, makes presentation to outstanding newspaperboys Patrick Colgan, 13, of Ajax, and Kugene Oshawa, Turchin, 15, of Times-Gazetle Photo,

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