Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 22 Oct 1958, p. 1

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TIMES-GAZETTE TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising RA 3-3492 All other calls RA 38-3474 Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE dy wi WEATHER REPORT Cloudy tonight, Thursday clous, th showers. OSHAWA-WHITBY, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1958 Authorized As Second Ci Post Office Department, lass Mall Ottawa TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES YOL. 87--No. 248 JOINT AIRLIFT EXERCISE A four - day, Joint Air Force | C-119 Flying Boxcars. Purpose | ing action for the UN. For- and Army exercise labelled | of the exercise, which began | ward terminus of the airlift is "Globe Trotter One' gets into | Monday, is practice in mobility. | Qatr El Quinte, actually Moun- GM SITUATION Only 26 Plants | Air Support element of the Ca- | nadian Joint Air Training Cen- tre in Rivers, Manitoba, and 1 Jet, UK. 30 DIE AS PLANES CRASH IN MID-AIR Liner In Collision NETTUNO, Italy (Reuters)--A British European Airways Vis- [of Milford Haven--who friends say had planned to become her {count and an Italian jet fighter husband No. 5--squabbled like an llided today, killing all 30 per- ns aboard the airliner. The collision of the four-engined old married couple on the door- step of a glittering society party. Also attending were Frank Si. natra and Lady Beatty, for whom full swing here at "El Crum- | For instance, the exercise plan tain View airport near Picton, lin}, in actuality Crumlin air- | includes a fictitious scenario | Ont. Taking part are: Squad- port near London, Ont, as | which presumes a battalion | rons 435 and 436 of the RCAF the 2nd Battalion, Royal Cana- dian Regiment, London. --RCAF Photo Still Closed Disputes in only 26 of the orig-, For the past two daws there Army troops file aboard RCAF | has been assigned to a polic- | Air Transport' Command; the | inal 126 U.S. strike-bound plants, have been approximately 2000 of SONS OF FREEDOM RELUCTANT ? -- An officialjto discuss the latest demands|ents refused to obey B.C. laws statement was expected today to/made by the radical religious/and send them to school. clear up uncertainties surround-|sect. J Mr. Bonner said the 'Freedom- ing the projected move of Sons ofl The Freedomites said Monday ites were turning the proposed Freedom Doukhobors to Russia./they wanted further negotiations move to Russia into "a farce. The Yeadine set by the federal with the governments. They god SUCCESS IN DOUBT and provincial governments forithe application forms, which| adh 4 ful filing of application forms by [would account for most of the|,, © Seater Sowia Freedomites who wish to go to|Sons of Freedom population dn Titaly Rab Russia ended at midnight Tues-B.C., would not be given to the| I EE i of Van. Be al DE yeruments until the talks Were/; ouver, retained by the Freedom- fo Calymbia po veTnment 3 heid and "until "extra conditionsf;i, said the new negotiations are jeyer ian 3 ! [were met. "fully justified and no reason for Freedomite leaders said they| % ho a oo were holding another 2,264 signed EXTRA CONDITIONS | fiyone, BEng Siew. fame t forms but wouldn't release them| They were: | he tw s A : to Be a indi have indicated they are prepaed until the two governments agreed. 1. The governments indicate to spend about $2,000,000 for to certain new conditions. how much money will be 35° transportation, relocation fees STATEMENT EXPECTED signed each of the emigrants. and property settlement to get! Attorney-General Robert Bon-| 2. Freedomite children at the {he Freedomites out of the coun- ner of B.C. fiew to Vancouver on provincial welfare school at New try. Russia is their homeland. Tuesday to talk with a Doukhobor|Denver, B.C., be released, "at/The Doukhobors must renounce delegation. He said he expected|least for the period of time when Canadian citizenship before they to make a statement today. the government of the U.S.S.R./moye there. Vancoaver .m s/will take them . . . and look after i i until: we arrive, domite delegates. were $0 meet]-.3. A deadline n 40 Nov proach against militarism and vi-! with Mr, Bonner here today for|15 be' granted imps folence, but have been blamed for] an official conference. The second point €dnc:rnec *he{more than 20 years of dynamit- Justice Misister Fulton was ex-(100 or more Doukhobor child en|ings, burnings and terrorism in pected to be in telephone cortactibeing held and educated at "e the "aotenay and Okanagan with Mr. Bonner today, probably welfare school because their i areas »f B.C. VICTORIA (CP | The Sons of Freedom' an off: shore sect of the Doukhobors, | Doctors Win | Fight For Life | Smallest Baby | | several thousand GM workers in|GM here. Of this number about L Stelco Talks Oshawa, still remain to be set- one half are production workers. |tled, a General Motors of Canada, plants which are specifically |spokesman said today. |holding up production in Oshawa Expected On Seven settlements were report-|at present include the Fisher ed today and the outlook was said| Body Fabricating Plant at Mans- to be bright. About four of the|field, Ohio, the Chevrolet Plant at Money Issues | plants where settlement has not | Indianapolis, Indiana and the De- been reached affect the Oshawaltroit Transmission factory. TORONTO (CP) -- Negotiators situation. Because of the uncer-| The Fisher plant makes large were expected to begin tackling|tainty about these plants, it was hody stampings required in some | the main monetary issues today explained, no accurate predic-|GM models. Oldsmobile transmis- as talks between the Steel Com-|tions could be made about Osh-|sion parts are imported from De- pany of Canada and the striking|awa developments. troit. United Steelworkers of America| Automobile production will rve- (CLC) headed for the crucial| Whig: five working days of| stage second full day of confer-| 250 More Negro Se semen oe lag Lom - . |fecting the local scene, e ces adjourn sday wi 5 i " Tous Fine, chiel conciliation of | Women Arrested |sosesman said, Truck, produc ficer for the Ontario labor depart-| ;oHANNESBURG (Reuters) -- working days of the final agr men t, Jeporting considerable Some 250 Negro women were ar-/ment. Progress on non. - monetary, .4 today outside a magis-| None of GM's 2500 salaried' em-| MoT, o and . union spokesmen trate's court where 500 other | ployes have been affected by the a not cormmont Ri it wag Women arrested on Tuesday were layoffs. Hourly-paid workers who| reported the government - spon-|eXpected to appear. ' have been laid off have been re.| sored talks were ready to reach| Ihe 500 were stopped during an) ceiving approximately 83 pert the vital wage question. Steleo Unauthorized march from the cent of their regular '"'take Botte | was said to be prepared to in-|nearby African township of So-|pay from supplementary emp wh crease its wage offer if the union Phiatown to the native affairs de.| ment benefits and unemploymen agreed to a three-year contract. Partment offices. The march was insurance. Labor Minister Daley brought staged in jhuutest against having both sides back to the bargain-|to_carry identity 5: ing table Monday--his third bid| More than 400 other women Vandals Open for a settlement. |gave themselves up voluntarily Stelco's last offer was of a five-|to police in the centre of the city = cent package increase on a one- because they said they were in witc year contract. The union is hold-|agreement with the marchers and 1 ing out for a two-year cqniract|should also be arrested. Huzt. with a 25-cent package jnevesyo. Thesdil £ Soday ahbap: asic w Bt, 71" ently were onstrati A { nee wage at Hiden Is FI re TT METHUEN, Mass. (AP) -- A| RANEY a - track switch opened by vandals or saboteurs sent a Boston and hd Maine railroad train hurtling into Science a r a e two standing freight cars Tues-| day night, Nineteen of the 47 persons hd aboard the passenger train were Life In Test Tube injured, none severely. No Cana- dians were listed among the in- |jured. WASHINGTON (AP) -- Science (of "ladder of life" as being con. |" A spokesman for the railroad) may be getting close to produc-|stituted as follows: |and Methuen Police Chief Cyril| ing rudimentary life in a test, (1) Nucleic acids; (2) viruses, | of si sai VO tube, the Smithsonian Institution which incorporate nucleic acids; Feugl) Saig the 1vecar Dassen | said today. (3) single-celled living things, {ack when it came to an open "The way seems open, follow- such as bacteria and protozoa; switch. The train hit the empty ing recent revolutionary chemical|and finally (4) multi-celled organ- | freight cars and then came to developments, to the actual la-|isms comprising all higher forms |rest at a tilt against a grain shed. boratory synthesis of a structure of life. |= | having most of the properties of| 'The barriers between these a living agent," the institution have broken down one after an- said. other in the last few years," said It did so in summarizing an the Smithsonian. article by Dr. Wendell M. Stan- ESSENTIAL PROPERTIES | ley, director of the virus labora-| '""This progress seems to have Bullet Wounds tory of the University of Califor-| culminated very recently, Stanley | nia, in the Smithsonian's annual says, in a demonstration by Dr. | NEW YORK (AP)--Patrolman report. H. Fraenkel-Corrat at the Univer-|James McDermott died of bullet Stanley has described remark- sity of California that one of the| Wounds Tuesday, leaving behind able recent progress in breaking nucleic acids may have all the the mystery of why he shot four down the barriers between non-essential properties of a gene or, men to death in a Boadway bar. living molecules and living organ- of a group of genes. Already pro-| McDermott, 34-year-old veteran isms, the Smithsonian's digest teins, building stones of life, have of 10 years on the force with a said. been produced from amino good record, walked into the Pic- ONE REMAINING STEP acids." a-Rib Restaurant Sunday and "The remaining essential step, This finding "nearly completes|shot down the four men without he says, seems to be synthesis of the connection" between non-liv-|a word. one of the chemically highly com-|ing material and that which is Capt. Patrick McCormack, plicated nucleic acids which undoubtedly living. | heading the investigation, said forms an essential component of| 'The remaining step," it said, |that as far as he was concerned viruses and of genes, the units of | "seems to be the synthesis of this|the case was over when McDer- heredity, This may be close at nucleic acid out of its constituent mott died. But police will con- hand." |parts . . . just as proteins have tinue, he said, to check any pos- The government research ag-| been synthesized from amino|sible connections between Me- ency said Stanley pictures a kind 'acids. {Dermott and the men he killed. . ¢ | heads for up to 20 minutes. CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 51133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 § Release Of U.S. Pri Sought HAVANA (AP)--For the second The Americans are Charles R. AP time in four months, the U.S. con-|Bennett, 35, the refinery super- BELFAST (AP)--A team of sulate in Santiago today sought|visor of 'maintenance and con. doctors and nurses has won a the release of Americans kid-|struction and Kenneth H. Drewes, fight for He life of a baby napped by rebels in eastern Cuba.{40, machine shop foreman. Slalitied 10 be the smallest ever yana said Ambassador Earl E, 7 [IDNAPPERS NOT KNOWN |' Teresa Toner, nicknamed Smith instructed Consul Park| It was not immediately known Penny, weighed only one pound, Wollam *'io take a firm position| Whether the kidnappings were or-!'six ounces when she was born 14 in his contact with the rebels." dered by Rebel Leader Fidel Cas- weeks prematurely at a Downpat-| Two Americans and seven Cu-/!'®. Who has been waging guer-|rick hospital Sept. 11. bans were abducted from a Tex-|illa warfare against President, She was taken to the Royal Ma- aco refinery near Santiago on|Fulgencio Batista for the last two|ternity Hospital in Belfast and Monday and taken to rebel hide-|years from jungle camps ° the placed in an incubator. She has outs in the mountains. The rebels| Sierra Maestra west of Santiago./been there ever since. told the Texaco manager theyl To dramatize the rebel cause| After two weeks, Penny lost would be returned shortiy, the last June, a rebel force headed two ounces. Doctors despaired of embassy said. by Castro's younger brother Raul being able to save her. Then she kidnapped 20 American and Ca-|gradually gained weight. nadian mining workers and 30 Today the baby weighs almost THOUGHT FOR TODAY sailors and marines from the two pounds, is 13% inches long U.S. navy at Guantanamo Bay,|and has a head circumference of The reason many a dreamer 90' miles east of Santiago. 9% inches. Doctors hope she will| never accomplishes anything Wollam and Vice-Consu: Robert be home for Christmas. is that his backbone is much |D. Wiecha obtained release of the| Penny is the seventh premature | weaker than his wishbone. 50 men after more than threejchild born to Mrs. Rosaleen ---- er-- -- weeks of negotiations. The last|Toner, 32, wife of .a postman. - releases came on orders to Raul Twins Joseph and Mary Eliza- Convicted Arm from Fidel Castro, who said he|beth, born two months early, are Y did not want to alienate the three years old. Four other S S a United States. !babies died after birth, ergeant Still 's Bight LATE NEWS FLA Says He's Right FORT JACKSON, S.C. (AP)-- An army sergeant convicted of 2 Farm Hands Get 10 to 30 Years maltreating recruits says: "I still POUGHKEEPSIE, N.Y. (AP)--Two young Puerto Rican think I was right. Everyone off farmhands each were sentenced today to 10 to 30 years in those trainees who testified was prison for scuffling with a youth and stealing a few crump= a problem child.' led cigarets. It was the minimum sentence allowed by law, Master Sgt. George Sovie, 30, " of Ogdensburg, N.Y., was con-| True Bill Returned Murder Charge victed Tuesday by a general| ' court martial board of five of SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont. (CP)--A Supreme Court jury seven specific charges of assault| today returned a true bill against Roland F. Sobourin, 30, and battery and recruit maltreat of Elliot Lake, charged with murder. His trial will begin ment. next week under Mr. Justice R, W. Treleaven, ; He received a relatively light RT] « . . sentence--reduction ote Erade to| Airliner Missing With 11 Aboard sergeant 1st class and forfeiture| toe : of $75 4 month of his pay for six| sen VANA SA Cuban Bes Sifliner camiying ii pas. . Maximum: penaity could] eT 5 ssing ay in the rebel country of eastern 1% years dmprison. Cuba. Jose A. Vilaboy, manager of the Compania Cubana de : Ora IE Hacharge andl Aviacon, said the plane was flying in bad weather and may hv U1 Ie JIhC . | have made a forced landing, forfeiture of all allowances and pay. . . Sovie was convicted of having Wine Keg Blast Sends Man To Hospital a recruit dipped head first into TORONTO (CP)--A 45-gallon keg of wine exploded with a mess hall grease trap, striking] a loud bang today and sent Andrew Mesaros, 38, to hospi- and kicking other recruits, fore- tal with severe injuries to the stomach and legs. Mesaros' ing two recruits to eat dollar bills wife told police he was making the wine in the cellar and and requiring others to' hold] went to stir the brew. heavy footlockers over their| - Overheated Chimney Causes Fire Fire sparked by an overheated chimney caused slight damage this noon at the home of Fred Vickers, 908 By- ron Street North, Whitby. Vickers said later the house was insured. Whitby Volunteer Fire Brigade breught the blaze under control, There were no injuries, |islands just of the confusions that existed in/manent. Chiang Promised U.S. Escorts If Necessary TAIPEI, Formosa (AP)--State|our country and in China." Hel Secretary Dulles' visit to Presi-|added there had been dent Chiang Kai-shek neared an|any kind." smaller neighbors continued, but end today. The chief resuit vis-| Observers anticipated that at| at considerably less intensity ible so far was a new warning the most the meetings would pro-/than on the worst days before the that the United states will re-|duce a bette: understanding of Red-invoked cease-fire of Oct. 6. sume escorting supplies to Que-each government's viewpoints] The Nationalist defence minis- moy if that becomes militarily and problems, and a joint dec-|try reported the Reds fired 6,626 necessary. |laration of their continued co-op-(shells at the islands in the 12 The American commander on eration. ; {hours before 6 a.m. today. This Formosa, Vice - Admiral Roland] Robertson, at a press confer- brought the total rounds to 21,507 N. Smoot, followed up with an an-lence, denied that the offshore|since the truce ended Monday r. 'ncement that convoy opera-|islands are being held by the Na-|afternoon. tions have not been resumed. |tionalists as a base for future in-| Presumably the Nationalist A spokesman for the U.S. de-{vasion of the mainland. guns were replying, but there fence command explained that | "The forces are there injwas no word on the volume of the eommand didn't think re-|strength (about 100,000 men) not fire. sumption of convoying is neces-|/for an offensive but for defensive Military dispatches said one sary yet because the Nationalist| purposes," he said. civilian ,was kilied and three - the China main-| Until the Reds ended the cease-|others severely injured when the land now are well supplied, {fire, Dulles had been reported Communists resumed shelling. Walter Robertson, assistant hoping to get Chiang fo withdraw| Dulles conferred with Chiang secretary of state, who accom-|a large number of them as evi- for nearly an hour this morning panied Duiles to Formosa, told/dence he did not plan to use the|at the defence ministry in down- reporters the United States sec-|islands as the jumping-off point|town Taipei. retary and the Chinese National-|for invasion. Dulles had hopes Another meeting was ist leader had made "very def-|this wouid induce the Commu-|tonight, after inite gains . . . in clarifying some|nists to make their cease-fire per- and Dulle: The Communist artillery bom-| "no rift of bardment 'of Quemoy and its planned | a state banquet, | s was expected to leave| 'for Washington Thursday. I which have caused the layoff of the 10,000-man force working at|§ Policeman Dies SENATOR W. A. FRASER Senator Unhurt In Car Crash Near Cobourg Fraser, 70, (Lib.,, Trenton), es-| caped injury Tuesday afternoon travelling went into a dtich fol- lowing a collision with another car on Highway No. 2 two miles west of Colborne. Woodrow Cook, A tucky, was picked up by Provin- cial Police near Belleville short- ly after the accident and charged with failing to remain at scene. unhurt. Police. did not disclose his name. : Cabinet System | Feared Wrong COLOMBO, Ceylon (Reuters)-- Prime Minister Solomon Bandar- anaike put into words Tuesday a fear fast growing throughout Asia --that the party-cabinet type sys- tem of government may be the wrong one for the area. "I have always had doubts whether the system is quite suit- able to some of our countries," Bandaranaike said at his first press conference in 18 months. He said the system was "quite excellent" in many Western coun- tries but pointed to recent mili- tary takeovers in Thailand, Pak- istan and Burma as evidence that it is incompatible with conditions in several Asian nations. | of Ken- turbo-prop Viscount and the Ital- ian air force F-86 Sabrejet took place over this little fishing port 30 miles south of Rome. Twenty six passengers and four crew were aboard the airliner. The Italian fighter pilot para- chuted safely. Both the Viscount and the jet fighter crashed on land between] Nettuno and the nearby port of| Anzio where allied forces landed | in the Second World War, e Viscount had taken off fi London airport at 8:25 a.m. this morning on its way to Malta by way of Naples. The collision occurred at 1 p.m. local time (8 a.m. EDT) in bad flying weather shortly before the Viscount was due to land in| Naples. ee-. COBOURG -- Senator W. A.| Airport authorities in Rome and | London both said shortly after the |crash that all 30 persons aboard (the Viscount were feared dead. |after the car in which he was| Rome airport authorities said |the Italian Air Force pilot para- |chuted into. the sea and was |picked up by a rescue launch. A police official at Nettuno said that after the collision "there was a terrific explosion." "The British airliner blew up. {Everyone on board must have | the been killed instantly, The wreck- fore |» LONDON (AP)--Jane Bucking- ham, London model who said ac- fress Eva Bartok took away her boyfriend, was killed in the Brit- ish airliner that crashed over Italy today. The auburn-haired beauty, 22, presumably was en route to Na- ples to woo back handsome In- dian Prince Shiv. "Shiv is mine," Miss Bucking- ham told reporters Tuesday. "He loves me and I love him. | "And that Eva Bartok is going to find out pretty soon." Miss Bartok's press agent an- nounced Monday the 29-year-old actress was '"'unofficially en- gated" to the 27-year-old prince from Palitana. As Jane fumed and cried for reporters, Eva and the Marquis the London papers have been predicting wedding bells, Jane and the prince had been dating since they met July 81, They talked of marriage, Jane said, untii Eva came along 11 days ago. Jane was interviewed in Pad. dington. Eva and the marquis were partying at Lady Northamp- ton's in Kensington, The prince was speeding toward Naples to see his father, the 58-year-old Maharaja Shree Sir Bahadursine hji Thakore Saheb, amid reports |he plans to ask permission te marry Eva, U.S. Election Campaigning Finally Starts WASHINGTON (CP) The campaign for the Nov, 4 U.S, gressional election is finally ting off the ground after flounder- ing around like the proverbial lead balloon for the last couple of weeks. | Entrance of President Eisen {hower into the fray--he's stumping the. west--has help sharpen public interest in year, Ci : Richard M. Nixon, the Republican vice-president, Democrats right and left, but his performs ance indicates he is more inter ested in priming himself as & presidential candidate for 1960 than in seriously winning votes in the current campaign. Former president Harry 8. True man has been carrying the ball for the Democrats, He made a swing through the mid-west and now is in the east, At stake in the vote, now a bare two weeks away, are 432 seats in the House of Represent. atives and a third of the 96-mems ber Senate. Senators serve a six year term, with a third up for election every two years. The full House membership faces election every second year. WHO'LL BUY THIS ONE? Postmaster-General William | Hamilton sold the first parcel to open the Ottawa Post Office Department's annual auction of unclaimed parcels. With him is auctioneer W, S. (Bill) Walker of Ottawa. Mr. Hamilton got $11 for the parcel bought by 23-year-old Gerry Barber who outbid several women. The par- cel contained women's clothing, --CP Wirephoto Support Your 1958 Community Chest Camp aign

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