The Oshawa Times, 31 Oct 1958, p. 1

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THE TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising .RA 3-3492 All other calls TIMES .RA 3-3474 The Oshavon Tunes Clear tonight ] becoming cloudy " around midnight. Partly «cloudy, cooler Saturday. VOL. 87--NO, 256 Price Not Over 7 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA-WHITBY, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1958 Authorized As Second Ci Post Office Department, joss Mail Ottawa SEVENTY PAGES T RUSS RENEW DEMAND IMMEDIATE TEST BAN 'Diefenbaker U.S. Nuclear Test Macmillan | Suspension Starts Russian Delegate Tells Big 3 Talks Hold Talks By ALAN DONNELLY Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON (CP)--Prime Minis- {ter Diefenbaker had an informal 1.500 feet. B ATOMIC TEST SITE, Nev E (AP)--An era of nuclear weapons! the effort, testing ended at midnight. | Alarmed bv a spurt in radioac- And in its wake: Renewed fur- tivity over Los Angeles, Mayor vre over the dangers of radioac-| Norris Poulson tried Thursday to tive fallout. get the AEC to call off the shot President E is e nhower's an-|that never materialized, protest- high winds balked 75-minute talk today with Prime nounced one-year suspension of jng to commissioner W. F. Libby Minister Macmillan, but post- tests went into effect today. Big|that wind was blowing fallout poned discussion of specific sub-| Three talks in-Geneva will deter- from Nevada tests over his jects until next Tuesday. mine how long it lasts. " ; | The last atomic shot went off| as ve lagioes Met In fae Sab in a mountainside tunnel with an| - freind . '| earth-jolting shock. It was as big 4 No other officials were presnt. as the atomic 'bombs that des- not hazardous. Later, a spokesman for the Ca-|{;5yved Japanese cities in the Sec-| Measurements by the Los An- |padian prime minister said the ond World War. It lofted a 500- geles city health department {talk was *'general as far as topics] foot.wide column of rock and dirt| showed that the amount of radio- were concerned It was merely 1 000 feet above the mountaintop, | activity in the air was 20 per cent a "personal" meeting. Huge bolders crashed down thelabove' the level considered safe "The official talks will be on gions, |for human consumption over a city. Libby said the amount of radio- activity over Los Angeles was | ' |the start of negotiations with PRESIDENT EISENHOWER GENEVA (AP) -- Russia to- day reiterated its demand for an li diate and per t sus {pension of nuclear weapon tests. | Soviet Delegate Semyon K. | Tsarapkin made the demand at the United States and Britain {for a joint suspension of tests | under' international control, Tsarapkin said a permanent | undertaking by the three powers to stop tests should precede ne- | gotiations on & control system to detect violations. The West has refused to agree to a permanent cessation of tests unless the con- trol system is set up first. WESTERN TESTS STOP Meanwhile, voluntary British fment from the Russians, Irriae o od of 4 Tuesday WINDS BALK LAST TEST potiod. of month |VARIETY OF CALLS An immediate flurry of excite-| and American cessation of tests for a one-year period went into Workers Back, Atomic E ner gy Commission ment, apprehension and anger fol-| The Canadian prime minister |g. effect today. But both countries whether a control system is ap- proved. 2. The U. 8. and Britain an- nounced a conditional one-year suspension of their tests, effec- tive Thursday midnight. The con- dition is that Russia alsp cease- firing nuclear explosives. NO RUSSIAN COMMENT There was no immediate com- how- ever, as to whether they would join in the suspension, di the del are Ambassador James J. Wads- worth of the U, S., Semyon K. Tsarapkin of the Soviet Union and Minister of State David Ormsby-Gore of Britain. New Soviet notes sent to the Western Powers Thursday sug- gested State Secretary Dulles, H rs PRINCE IN CANADA Prince Philip shakes hands with Governor-General | min ientists kept trying to set off|lowed. then drove off for a 15-minuteanother weapon right up to the] Mayor Poulson said there would [call on the Archbishop of Canter nignight deadline. A blast was tobe "repercussions" if the AEC bury at Lambeth Palace. (have gone off under a balloon atl!fired another shot. Afterwards he and Mrs, Dief- -- eeiemma---------- batts {Queen Mother at Clarence House Pope May Raise Cardinal College | Today he was to leave by air| for Edinburgh and a weekend spent privately in Scotland. To- night he and Mrs. Diefenbaker will be dinner guests of Roy Thomson, Canadian publisher of The Scotsman. By WILLIAM L. RYAN get closer to the people by using VATICAN CITY (AP) -- Pope less complicated language. John XXIII's , activities stirred] {speculation today that he will| 0 VISIT FRANCE |call a consistory soon--perhaps! _ Al|before Christmas -- to increase and strengthen the College of Cardinals. Writer Still Retains Rights STOCKHOLM Soviet diplomat. says writer Boris. Pasternak "natur- ally retains his civil rights and also his economic rights." Pasternak still is living in his villa near Moscow and 'nothing Venice's auxiliary bishop, Msgr. Giuseppe Olivetti, reported (Reuters) - Russian | The-new pon |distinetive mark of the reign of] In modern times popes have | his predecessor, Pius XII, left the tiny Vatican state only i But Vatican observers picture/to go to the papal summer pal- Pope John as anxious tolace at Castel Gandolfo, 18 miles strengthen the College of Cardin-|south of Kome, and even that le- als in the light of the vastly com-|gally is Vatican territory. {that P John is considering a b (visit to France next meng day i ork on passenger- tiff oid the|trip thabowould. oh ; a wastmpe a |i more than'a century Supplier plants in the U.S., 126 ' GM Production In Full Swing All General Motors of Canada Ltd. employes in Oshawa were back on the job today for the first time since layoffs began to take place in mid-October. More than 8000 of the com- pany's normal working force. of 9500 had been laid off due to strikes at GM. supplier plants in the United States. The company is shipping cars at a normal rate today and a sman Snnouneed that a full] wo !in number, went on strike early| in Oct. The result was that GM | have given notice they will re. sume testing If Russian tests con- tinue, Tsarapkin did not refer directly to the Western suspension offer, but said Russia "will immedi- ately discontinue its experimental explosions' if the Western pow- ers are willing to conclude an agr b for per t sus- pension. This was assumed to in- dicate that the Russian test pro- gram has not been discontinued as of today. All three powers professed to favor banning the tests, but a continuing East - West split was underlined by these develop-| would not Foreign Minister Andrei myko and Foreign Secretary Sel- wyn Lloyd sit in later to speed agreement. MODIFED POSITION This modified the Soviet pro- posal a month ago that the meet- ing be raised as the start to the fireign ministers' level. The U.S. and Britain indicated Dulles afd Lloyd would take part aa 4 ent a ed ly. "The Russian notes delivered were worded in a more concilia- tory tone than usudl, Western officials said the notes seemed to indicate the Russians insist on a and ments on the conference eve: |America 1. The Soviet Union insisted the must lead g ately and forever, regardless of in Oshawa was obliged to lay off| Effort To the bulk of its hourly-paid poi ployes' as the flow of imported | parts came to a standstill, Local automobile production was curtailed to the point where get fa Okay four-day visit. The Duke | was termed a "perfect ambas- of Edinburgh won acclaim at | sador" for England. (See story on hig arrival in Ottawa for a | of English Speaking unions and ~~CP Wirephoto Suspect Charged | . . . | Further Robberies Spring hill Fund TORONTO (CP) William Eagles, 38, awaiting trial on N cer and armed robbery, was| ears $400,000 charged Thursday night with the armed robbery of the downtown| Barclay Hotel on Sept. 3) and) BY THE CANADIAN PRESS Huntsville, $6,200 through the ap- with anmed robbery on Oct. 4 in Assistance for Springhill, N.S.,'peal of radio station CKAR. Pope John XXIII donated $5,-| Eagles was one of two men ar-| i . ed gun: battles with) day With donations coming. in|Cross added $3,000, the Ontatio| Ee af baltlen with trom smaller communities ad or. (districts of Muskoka-Huntsville.| * {§auizations. Parry Sound $3,000 and London, | Three armed men took $1,800] Recent contributions include|Ont., residents $5,000. in the hotel holdup. Nova Scotia Light and Power| The A. V. Roe group of com- | The car robbery charge i ; volves an incident in which Fred| Telegraph and Telephone Com-/ion Steel and Coal Corporation, prevents him from receiving his Johnston of Toronto was accosted | pany Limited $2,500 each; Imper- Operators of the Springhill mine, fees and royalties," said Soviet by a hitchhiker as he waited at/ial Oil Limited $5,000; Dominion|has pledged the largest single charge d'affaires Nicolai Voinov. a stop light. Johnston was forced |Stores, $3,000; Mer sey Paper contribution of $100,000, | Voinov was commenting Thurs- from his car at gunpoint. {Company $2,000; and the town of| The provinces of Ontario and|day on a message from the Swed- and the Canadian Quo Vadis Foundation, operating a receiving centre in Toronto for the national fund, reports cash ahd phoned pledges of more than $25,000. Mass r fassey the third post-war conference on page seven.) charges of shooting a police offi-| which a car was stolen. { edged toward the $400,000 mark The Ontario: Junior B in-|Company Limited and Maritime | panies which includes the Domin-| ---- |Nova Scotia each gave $50,000 Intended Victi » Churches and trade unions have ish Authors Association request-| i the Soviet Writers Union to . ; . wT Pasternak's rights and| There still are 17 vacancies in make it possible for him to re- tte college, whose norma : : bin Tn. strength is 70. consider his rejection of the No- strength is : bel Prize for literature. MIGHT NAME NEGRO only slightly more than 1000 em- ployes were working and only a small fraction of those on produc- tion. Original plans called for a re- 'turn to work for all employes on car production within five work- |plex problems of administration |facing the church in the modern - ' Miner's Body pn The far-flung affairs of the Ro-| Is Recovered Meeting Fails UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CP)|Russia on the nuclear fest-ban United Nations efforts to put a question in an atmosphere of stamp of approval on the Big goodwill. Three nuclear talks opening in| But these efforts failed, and at Geneva today ended on the eve|today's outset even a first-stage Holds Man At Bay SANTA ANA, Calif. (AP)--"1 would make them kneel down. With the gun on them, I would tie this five-foot piece of rope around their ankles. Then I would loop it up around thir neck. Then I would stand there and keep pulling until they quit strug- ng Calmly, almost boastfully, a mild-mannered television repair- man thus confessed strangling three models and leaving their bodies in lonely southern Califor- nia desert areas. All of the vetims were raped first, said officers who jailed Harvey M, Glatman, 30, of Los Angeles on suspicion of murder. FOUND WITH FOURTH GIRL He said he used the same piece of sash cord and the same pistol in all assaults. The weapons were fn his car when highway patrol- men fouhd a fourth intended vic- tim. holding the gun on him after a desperate struggle in a car Monday night The slender, sandy-haired ex- eonvict, who served prison terms in New York and Colorado for Kidnapping and rape, confessed after two days' questioning and a lie-detector test, said Chief In- vestigator Joel Hays of the dis- trict-attorney's office. Officers said his fourth in | man Catholic Church would seem The body of Joseph Gerhardt, [to require a continuation of Pius| brother-in-law of an Oshawa resi- XIl's policy of stressing the dent, Mrs. Gerard Landry, 2 Hen- 13 church's universality, It would be|ry street, was recovered from the On OPP Building no surprise, therefore, if Pope|(13,000-foot level of the Springhill John named at least two new mine early Friday morning. Hon. Dr. Matthew B. Dymond, | Latin - American cardinals, one/ Mrs, Landry received the news provincial minister of highways, African who perhaps would be|in a telegram from her sister, announced in Toronto today that/the first Negro cardinal and at|Mrs, Gerhardt, a few hours later. tenders have been called for con-|{least one more Asian. Mr. Gerhardt, originally from | struction of a new detachment] The new pontiff has departed Czechoslovakia, had worked in {building for the Ontario Provin-|from his predecessor already inthe Springhill mine for about 14 |cial Police in Whitby. other respects and has filled sev-|years. He is also survived by a The building is to be located eral posts which the late pontiff|daughter, Joanne, 13, and several |near Highway 401 at the Haney had left vacant. | brothers in the United States. street overpass. There are reports that he has| Mrs, Gerhardt and Mrs. The building will accommodate |instructed the Vatican newspa-| Landry are natives of Bathurst, |per, L'Osservatore Romano, toIN.B. also arranged special collections | and contributions for the wives and children of killed or missing | in the mine upheavel, The com- "Suddenly he pulled out a gun|pany will pay each victim's fam- and pointed it at me. Instinct-|ily $1,500. ively I grabbed it on the muzzle, | "Then, although I still held the gun, and was screaming, he picked up a piece of rope from {the seat and tried fo force my other hand in back of me. 'Just 0 as I tell you and you won't Ponders Called : Pole Finishes lis nice of the prince to come and | "I'd like to meet him." It could be a week or more |before dog-tired rescuers bring up all the miners trapped deep tended victim was Miss Lorraine vised against the prince entering Rescue diggers were reported by the bump Oct. 23. operation, settled, however, GM here speed ed plans so that most of days of the final settlement. ing days of the settlement of the last strike affecting the Oshawa As more U.S. strikes became up back-to-work production] the employes were back within two of the Switzerland meeting in a gloomy impasse at the world or- ganization's headquarters. The prospects for today's ses- sion of the UN's 8l-country polit- |ical committee were that East {and West would split again .in a {vote that would point up the ap- parently insoluble differences be- | tween them and leave the Geneva amb dors little hope of agree- THOUGHT FOR TODAY { ment, Right through Thursday even- When a person sits around and waits for his ship to come in, the hearse generally arrives first. |ing efforts were being made here |to arrive at an acceptable com- |promise aimed at starting the talks among the ambassadors of Britain, the United States and disarmament agreement at Gen- eva appeared virtually a lost cause. Russia remained adamant on its stand that no agreement is possible unless it is an uncondit- ional and perpétual one, Britain and the U.S., backed by Canada and a group of 14 other members at the UN, want a temporary agreement on suspension -- one year the period 4 mentioned while the big powers work toward a solution. Both sides appear convinced that further testing might pose a threat to the whole world because of the radioactive results of test- {of Thursday's 12 survivors said it © Vigil, 28, of Los Angeles, whom He dated Monday night, ostensibly for picture-taking in, he told her, his "studio." Instead he sped about 35 miles south and"parked. He produced z pistol, tried to tie} her hands and tried to assault her. They struggled. The pistol went, off and the bullet grazed the in- side of Miss Vigil's right leg. But ghe grabbed the weapon and was holding Glatman at bay when pa- trolmen happened by. SHE BECAME ALARMED Miss Vigil told of her date with Glatman: "I did not become alarmed un- til we entered "the Santa Ana Freeway and he began driving at a tremendous speed. He wouldn't answer oy questions or even look at me "We eventually reached a lonely section and he turned off into a little tiny side road. CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 the shaft because of the danger|Making good progress today as| Assistant rescue director Frank : involved and officials said later|they tunnelled their way into the Doxey holds only *'slim hope' for [the warning will be heeded. last section of the mine where!the entombed men. Mine spokesman Arnold Pater- Were Is any hope men may be| mp. fate won't be known until (be. taken "right "down tp the| . THEY were approaching the sec. 3raeSermen and bave faced min {trouble spot if he wants to go." tion on the 13,000-foot level from, | dred feet of k d | Aid a a i * two directions. One crew ad-| hung more lee! Tock. - an But mine spokesmen said later |vanced 200 feet during the night debris. they had been advised the prince}, 4 had. 200 feet to go. Another| Only scattered groups wait at would remain on the surface, op was reported inching|the pithead--that magical, bleak | The prince is expected to aT | ahead at a rate of about 20 feet building through which rescued [Five hers about 5:30 p.m. AST in an eight-hour shift. men first see daylight. In Thurs- ths Son = Tana spend Shout Twelve men were found alive day's grey dawn 12 "miracle \ urs ; . on the 13,000-foot level on Wed- Survivors were brought out on visit disaster survivors at All nesday after being trapped al- stretchers after 6% days of dark- Saints Hospital and then 20 10 most 61% days without food or ness, hunger and thirst. | the mine where 49 miners are water Since then no signs of life. People called it a miracle. {still missing. have been found. They remembered the cold, wet OFFICIALS TO MEET [SHORTAGE REPORT DENIED |night two years ago almost to the Nova Scotia's Lieutenant-Gov-| A mine spokesman denied rum- day when an explosion devastated ernor E. C. Plow and Premier ors that a shortage of fresh res-| No. 4 mine here and killed 39 Stanfield will meet the prince aticue workers had deveioped. The men. Moncton airport and drive the 55 rumors were that some men de-, Little thought was being given miles here with him clined to return underoround be- a Wednesday night statement by | Rescue director Gordon re: cause they were overtired. Sir Roy Dobson, chairman of |turned to the mine at 9 am, to-| Press spokesman Patterson/A. V. Roe Canada Limited, that | day, after taking a day's rest on said '"'everything is g oi n g fine" |No. 2 mine would not likely re- {his doctor's orders. and there are plenty of men for open 'although it is Springhill's } The prince attended a meetingithe job. 'major industry and employs 900. Cont ial 0 ontroversia get hurt,' he said. Wi a T FELL ONTO STREET innipeg ree iy , however, that he] WINNIPEG (CP) -- The Wolse- go of the gun. Somehow, with the national prominence last year a ii hand that was in back of me, I/when axe-wielding women held ® LJ ® ® hd opened the door on my side and|off city workers who were at-| Prince Philip (®) 1s1t "We rolled over and over on|doomed. the shoulder of the road. Cars| A hydro pole, rotting at the millions of cars, passed, but none base, toppled down early today| J o "I bit his wrist and he cried two. Grief- tric en own out, then suddenly I found I had| Within the last year the tree the gun in my hand. I turped it| which sits in the middle of Wolse- | "If T had known how to fire it, |idential district of Winnipeg has| Prince Philip will visit this grief- Ottawa this week. He decided to brought a warm response. : I believe I could have killed him. three times been under the death stricken town today but will not go|break his return journey to Lon-| «1 think it is wonderful," said But he just stood there and sentence. But each time district into the mine where disaster don to visit Springhill. [Mayor Ralph Gilroy. the police came." lit. | Reports earlier today were that| week's upheaval in No. 2 collfery| . {the Queen's husband might go un-|is 32. The 32nd body was brought : derground into the caved-in Cum-|to the surface early today. Of the LATE NEWS FL are being pressed in the search|@ total of 93 survived. Another | {for 49 miners still missing. 49 are missing. Rescue chief Harold Gordon ad- PROGRESS IN RESCUE Frank Connaghan, 45, his son Fred 22, and William Lis- combe, 27, of Reach township, were sentenced by Magistrate Frank S. Ebbs here this morning for assaulting Port Perry sentenced to three months in jail for assault and to one month consecutive for drunk driving. His licence was sus- pended for three years. Fred Connaghan was sentenced to for intoxication. Liscombe was sentenced to one month in jail for drunk driving and fined $50 and costs for assault. Inquest May Serve For Inquiry an extensive inquest might serve for a public inquiry into the multi-million-dollar explosion that rocked midtown Ot- tawa last Saturday. OTTAWA (CP)--Police said today they have lost. the trail of bank, teller Boyne Johnston, wanted in connection with the disappearance of $260,000 from the Ottawa branch Canada Rejects Protest OTTAWA (CP)--Canada has rejected the United States protest against the new Canadian anti-dumping legislation, knew t {would kill me and I wouldn't let|ley Avenue elm tree which gained 3 officers, we both fell out onto the street. [tempting to cut it down may be would stop. and split the 95-year-old elm in around and pointed it at him. |ley Ave. in the west-central res.| SPRINGHILL, N.S. (CP) --|of the English-Speaking Union in] News of the prince's visit watched me and after a while women fought authdrities to save struck a week ago. The known death toll' in last Mrs. Hugh Guthro, wife of one berland Mine where operations|174 men buried in the upheaval, Three Men Sentenced Police Chief A, C. Menzies last week. Frank Connaghan was three months for assault and fined $25 and costs consecutive TORONTO (CP)--Attorney-General Roberts said today Police Lose Trail Of Teller of the Imperial Bank of Canada. qualified authorities disclosed today, | CALEB RUSHTON, the 12 miners brought from the one of deeps of No. 2 coiliery Thurs- day has a smile for his wife Patsy, who visited him at All [ Saints' Hospital Thursday afters | noon. Caleb wears on his wrist, the watch the 12 miners used to keep track of time while en- tombed in the mine, --CP Wirephoto Support \ t Your 1958 Community Chest Campaign

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