WEATHER REPORT Mostly fair with slowly modera~ ting temperatures on Sunday, light winds. THE TIMES TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising .RA 3-3492 All other calls ........RA 3-3474 The Oshawa Tes Authorized As Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa TWENTY PAGES Price Not Over 7 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA-WHITBY, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1958 SEVEN MORE SAVED FROM D VOL. 87--<NO. 257 EATH MINE |. STRICTLY ¥ | | Live Chickens Dumped On Main Street It was trick but not quite a treat Friday night. The trick was played on Art |Cox, 13 Eigin street east, who | found in foot high letters in black 4 |paint scrawled on the side of his parked car the vernacular Anglo-Saxon imperative for dis- |missal. | The treat would have been for the policeman who recovered the five live chickens dumped mis- | chievously by the occupants of la car at the 'Four Corners' at 19.35 p.m.--if he had been allowed ve . PRINCE VISITS INJURED MINER JOE MacDONALD AND WIFE "A PRINCE OF A MAN" He avy D amage Royal Visitor Tours | Bsfire Hits Saddened Mine Town fusion: i ili ed her life |ness, Prince Philip," the mayoriby car, and later resumed his 58V 8. | | said. 4 journey across the Atlantic. ls The fire Which broke OL ai In All Saints' Hospital Prince] The prince made brief stops at d am ay po mos Sop id Philip walked among the many|the armory, the Red Cross relief og roy J e a at 65 Fern. | nj oP with cheerful words centre set up in the Baptist and kd i ag] " Harold ap ouragement or comforting Church and a Salvation Army ps3 oulevard, Sawa, ox condolences to' those whose. Kin the Hospital he walked with imately' $10,000, acording to Fire| ; are still missing in the caved-in : x 2 |Chief H. R., Hobbs, joavel, gescribed 2° impres-| 4iogins. More than 30 men were hands clasped behind his back. Oust HB Hote: art was Mis. sions of Prince Philip. [killed in the accident. [JOKES WITH SURVIVOR The prince paid a surprise call h |Monaghan, who was knocked un- | | wap Rid e ry PY fo her home Friday night during| Mavor Gilroy conducted the "I'm glad to meet you conscious for a few minutes by| royal visitor through the hospitalitold Levi Milley, the miner who/the impact of her daughter land-| us I mitite one ow this gis where jay the 12 "miracle" sur-\kept spirits high during a six-|ing in her arms. { #51 8 bef, oul d il? Aaper Hus, | vivors brought alive from the day entombment by talking about A pet budgie was the only other | jours ore had buried her hus-| ine early Thursday. chicken farming. |casualty. It was killed in its cage| "The prince just walked in and| The prince visited the No. 2| The joking miner told thelin the blazing living room. The | ha The courage of an 1l-year-old| recovered iirte more chickens girl in jumping out of a second dumped in a downtown area by By JOE DUPUIS SPRINGHILL, N.S. (CP)--"He| wasn't like a royal prince but like a prince of a man." In these words Mrs. Raper, widow of one of the vie- fims of last week's mine up- OTHER INCIDENTS [tion with Hallowe'en, lot at Ritson road. caused to a freshly plastered wall Elmgrove avenue. Mr. Bol ble. Nerman Down, RR 4, Oshawa, school said that beoke into the sc = lights and removed some fuses. the Whitby detachment, {pithead on his tour and talked prince how he helped pull aM hans' dog was 1 held my we hands in his until 1 with mine rescue workers. | miner to safety by grabbing his|fire fighters. 4 . |leg. Mr. Monaghan, a maintenance "I didn't even hear him come|/AT EASE WITH MINERS | h hi ral Mot fn the door. I didn't even say| The prince was relaxed and|jeqrs oat How he broke wie ps Bei ig dn | |leg?" the prince asked. Every-lout when the fire broke out. He Your Royal Highness. I Just said talked easily. with the miners. [body laughed. | was taking home some friends of | 'I'm very glad to see you. | He grasped their -calloused |the family who had been visiting Her description voiced the sent- hands and was thanked for his| . the home earlier. of many in this saddened unexpected visit. E D Mrs, Monaghan and her daugh- community of 7000. He twice by protocol . by ire estroys ter had gome to. bed shortly after INFORMAL } dad the visitors left with Mr. Monag+ Was the keynote of 8 orks! J Herd han, Just before 3 am, Brn royal from the moment|daughter--a flower g was awakened aby 10 rns a eo vot 10 Canada vit 15) Fl] Harvest [iviee oom door sud wes, met to e. ; which rocked| The royal visitor interrupted! mire destroyed a barn and al. rast of flame that singed) In the Cumberland No. 2 eoillery his homeward flight to London) of Jersey cattle on the farm | "Cents to get upstairs hpcautel mr aus, Raglan ad Black. Oct. 23 from Ottawa to visit Sprinhill. [of james Shipton, three miles Oh DT ais Joc stock, a 8 ip wd "Boys--here's His Royal High- He traveiled here fram Moncton gact of. C1 t. Friday night. | oh cic burning stairway, she ran but privies: manag clu : east of: Claremont, Friday nig! | outside to thé rear of her house some main streets this morning. Ho tin the BE and shouted to awaken her daugh- : s an : the fall harvest of hay and grain, | Io; The, girl, appeared & he Whitby Farmers ana 1an Xpor No Sstimate Jos cade of mother to jump. a large implement shed next oles Bg gm gincials _be- Get Long Terms the barn. Damage was estimated | 1 r suffered worse TORONTO at $12,000. fan arm OF je" -|John Ward, 23, and Alvin Hibbitt, Of Gas Blocked [=m = minim ales em he Jono, |night. Mr. Shipton was examin-| Fire Chief Hobbs said that sentenced Friday to 12 years and 1 " {ing a sick cow in the barn when ' 110 rs respectively for rape, By GEORGE KITCHEN fields to Eastern Canada, lacks he heard a roaring noise. He further investigations had to be years resp y . WASHINGTON (CP)--The fed-|sufficient gas even for its own '¢ . "wall | made to determine the cause of Police said the two.grabbed a ; : *riday|Canadian customers, let alone "28,0utside and found ome walls "0 [16-year-old girl on her way home eral power commission Friday| hag ol ns ol Bone of the barn in flames, [ne ire, Ifrom church. night turned down an ambitious pr vie a surplus for expor © Claremont Fire Department | Plan to SuppLy fuel hungry Jxeas nny {was summoned but the flames n the north-central United Slales RiyALS LOSE, TOO {were too advanced to control. with natural gas from Canada but 4 i | pr ----------------------a | cxpressed. conviction the' CALA os reson ssses' out saves (aLe 'Two Weeks More dian Jus) grentually will find # tions of two rival American pipe- | Hicer Calls ( a x AI »ilines -- North Natural Gas Com-| . * N Bisnis is Froigund regrets {pany and Michigan - Wisconsin| . t 1r 1n \ commissiol i a "| Pipe Line Company--which were| F A 1) a Bransmission Company, a U.S, coher, vith Midwestern for or. =e ance HY (the four-state market. It found| onstable E. W. Trowel ~ . pipeline, for permission to imPort Northern had no feasible gas|of. the Whitby detachment was| OTTAWA (CP) -- Another vor Friday > Tait Cgiiada Witnets 204,000,000 cubic feet of gas daily| storage project while Michigan|forced to call for assistance at|weeks of evidence and argument|--political economics Professor A. from the Trans-Canada pipeline wi. in's pl " -18 . appears in store for the air trans-|W, Currie of the University of isconsin's plan was uneconom-|3.30 a.m. today when a group of ! a 3 Y Dakota, W { | : (Toronto--c and seil it in North Dakota, Wis-|j.q) 25 to 30 teenagers pelted him with|port board on Canadian Pacific Toronto--suggested to the board consin, Minnesota and Michigan. 1; ottawa, both Acting Prime vegetables. Airlines' attempt to crash into the|that it might be wel over five It did so, the commission said, Minister Green and Trade Min-| The constable had attempted to|domestic transcontinental field, |years before there should be com- because evidence indicated ister Churchili said they had no|prevent the youths from placing] Informants said it looks as|petition with TCA on the trans- Trans-Canada Pipe kine Limited, comment. Also declining com-la hayloader across Baldwi n| though this biggest of Canadiah| souitinental runs, Just now completing a 2,200-mile ment was Henry Borden, whose street in Brooklin. air hearings in many years willl He said he would like to see pipeline from the Alberta gas royal commission last week rec-| Four cruisers loaded with con-|go on until about the end of the "the whole question re-examined {ommended that a committee by stables armed with night-sticks| week after next. |at some. future time," but he |the formal Liberal government to/raced to the village to find the| The CPA application is being could not specify whether this All-Out Hunt allow Trans-Canada to export gas/mob dispersed. They patrolled the|fought strongly by the publicly-| might be five, 10 or 15 years. {be disallowed. viliage for more than an hour. |owned Trans-Canada Air Lines. . =» | |least," he said. For Missing | y Dr. Currie was under question- ' | LJ ing on his evidence Thursday | - when he said that the present is é er | not an opportune time fog intro- / | > . Yucing 0 ai nl in : competition MONTREAL (CP)--Police and against Trans-Canada. ad ah ail ow mk or» 23] Pring 1 m onton SAYS BEST POSSIBLE - old Ottawa bank teller] ' Another TCA witness -- com. rr for questioning in Bnd By THE CANADL | A i | pany sales director John E. Nick- tion with the disappearance of > " CANADIAN PRESS (temporary hospital for injured |otes loose from the Borden Park son--said Trans-Canada has been $260,000 from a bank in the na-| Wee- goblins in bed sheets | miners. zoo. Police, who called it "a|trying to previde service to East. nec ital. soaped windows and begged NOISY ELSEWHERE {stupid trick," had to shoot two ern and Western Canada in the en hast chief teller at Sweets across Canada Friday . of the animals but recaptured the best manner possible. Mr. Nick- Boyne Johnston, chief teller a night Elsewhere in the country, the other three [son will continiie on the witness the Imperial Bank of Canada g th an hat Might rode along to its normal AR stand Monday branch on Ottawa's Barks St ' pm vi Sg ye ws at 1 oisy conclusion, In the Victoria suburb of Saan- a disappeared . © em to : lia i i 0 day, an It ot the ans! The children of Springhill. N.5,| There were some incidents otf ee Loud Five Hane ED dont of Fa Poot 5 showed the cash gone. [didn't go out Friday night, violence. At Toronto two youths ij"hocs high school locker and Gran McConachie before the The slightly-built teller, a na-| Many of them cried themselves Wearing masks robbed delivery| . ae in his bedroom drawer board that competition against tive of Renfrew was traced to ato sleep. Boy Jack Johnson, 16, of $13 and | yi yoo "Police said "any one of TCA would have developed new Montreal hotel--police believe he| Last week, children of the dis- Fan away. + would have blown the roof Canadian airiiie route patterns, flew here from Ottawa Sunday--|aster-struck Nova Scotia mining] Women wearing long male un- |g the house." |and he took issue specifically put thereafter his trail is dim. [town were told by their school derwear and Indian costumes in-| : |with Mr, McConachie's plan to Police said they believe he may | teachers not to turn out for the|vaded the smoky interior of Ed-| The lad and his chum Were fly east » west directly between have bought a car in Montreal {usual Hallowe'en hijinks. Most monton's men-only taverns but Placed on probation after getting) Montreal Ottawa - Edmonton ta- and driven either for the United [didn't have to be told. {police sald they wouldn't *'pay|2 tongue-lashing from a magis-|ther than have east-west flights States border, 45 miles to the Nearly every one of them has|any attention to them." | trate. south, or to the Laurentian re. a relative -- perhaps a father--| One tavern closed for a whilel! In many cities the hideous now does. sort area north of the city, among the dead, missing or in-|to stave off the unwanted female masks that loomed up. at front| "Analysis has shown us that it jured of No. 2 colliery. trade. Otherwise the Alberta cap-|doors were accompanied by do-|is better to provide more frequent The TCA official challenged a| | | | IF | | Fernhill Home |to, ee ther. would also have| #5 been for the other policemen who| | The vehicle sped off to the south, Three other incidents were re- ported to police Fridav although hey appeared to have no connec- A spare wheel, tire and tools were stolen from a car owned by Earl Hood, RR 8, Oshawa, | while it was parked in the oe at the home of T. Bohdan, 349| hdan | & told police children were respon- told police gasoline was stolen from one of his tractors and tank | caps stolen from two others Fri- | day. In the ditrict, no serious dam- age was reported. Grant McDon- ald, principal of Port Perry high young men , turned out The village was well patrolled Police Chief Archie Menzies three OPP constables from In other district centres, Brook- (CP) -- Farmers |22, both of nearby Whitby, were | "I would think five years at the in | routed through Toronto as TCA| condition--better, i |than 12 brought out Thursday| i |after being imprisoned for six| ft | found today. Forty are still mis- S d Miracle For Springhill By HARRY CALNEK heat them talking but they de- SPRINGHILL, N.S. (CP) -- cided not to try reaching him. Seven more men were found alive| His air supply was good while in the caved-in Cumberland coal [they were bothered by bad gas mine early today and within 4% conditions, For a time they hours had been safely brought out | feared the gas would kill them. and taken to hospital. The gas is not in itself poison~ They had been buried for 8% ous. The danger lies in the ab days but were described as in|sence of air. excellent condition considering| The six men were imprisoned their ordeal. lin a space thee Jeet high, JS |feet wide an eet long. They maarst contact with the men Not had food and water for the first the seven was carried through a|four days. It was exhausted om crowd of cheering people at the Monday. mine entrance at 9:16 a.m, |ANOTHER MAN DIED 100 HAVE SURVIVED A seventh man was with them The second miraculous rescue but he died last Tuesday. He hay in three days brought to 100 the not been identified. number of survivors of the gi-| The men had no light after the gantic upheaval nine days ago inifirst few days. " the heart of North America's] Maurice Ruddick led them-ff deepest coal mine. {singing and they 'prayed alot." "Though some of the seven were| After running out of food the injured, all appeared to be in/men ate bark off mine timbers good in fact,|and coal. They said they were confident they wouid be found. They had heard sounds of rescue crews three days ago. . Rescue crews digging through debris 13,000 feet from the mine days in the same general area of the 13,000-foot level as those ing. An estimated $10 damage was| A pet canary died in a fire | cued. He is shown with fire that swept through the home of | fighter Danny Hubbell, who rried him to safety after find- Mr, and Mrs, J. Monaghan at | 2 hi i 65 Fernhill Bivd. early today, ing him unconscious at the back of the house. but a spaniel, "Muzzy" was res- --Times Photo 'WONDERFUL THING' Mourning Wife Gets Good News SPRINGHILL, N. 8. (CP)--| Herbert's brother Robert, Herbert Pepperdine's wife mine surface worker, capped a screamed, then fainted, as she reporter around the shoulders and heard the news of her husband's [said: "Boy, it's good to see you. rescue from the Cumberland coal|I just couldn't picture Herbie mine today. | gone." She ran to the pithead to be on For Frank Hunter, coming hand when her husband, one of {Rome presented a strange para- seven found alive early today,|dox, was brought to the surface. His wife Ester, 43, lost her His ailing mother said: "This speech three vears ago and has is the best medicine I've ever been suffering strokes since then. had. He was a beautiful boy . , .| Her sister, Mrs, William O'Far- so good to us. I'd give every-|rell, said: "The doctors told us thing I have to keep him out of she must't have any excitement. that mine from now on." [She survived the 1956 mine ex- The 74-year-old woman spoke plosion with all the worrying and to a reporter at her bedside. She now she's survived this one." had lost a boy in the 1956 ex-| Frank was one of the last of 88 plosion, another boy in the last| survivors rescued in the explosion war and a daughter Helen was two years ago today. burned to death in a house fire| Mrs. O'Farrell said with tears 1945. in her eyes: 'Frank's coming His father, George, said: "Isn't home probably thinking that Es- it a wonderful thing? I don'titer won't be there to meet him." know how I feel.. You know, She said Ester was bearing up Herbie's wife woke up this morn. well under the exciting news, ing by screaming in bed. When| Will Frank go back to the pit? we heard that we said, 'Well,| Mrs, O'Farrell said: "I know Herbie's gone.' She had good Frank will go back. He knows 2 hopes right along but she broke down badly last night," [vo other work and he needs money to make Ester well." LATE NEWS FLASHES Cobourg Plan Rejected COBOURG -- It was learned unofficially today that the Ontario Municipal Board has refused permission for Cobourg council to go ahead with financing the $112,362 cost of pro- posed town hall renovation. Official information could not be obtained for the report this morning. PM Learns Bbout Rescue EDINBURGH (CP)--Just as the news flashed over the wires of the finding of more surviving miners in Springhill, N.S., publisher Roy Thomson led his distinguished visitor into the telegraph room of The Scotsman. That was how Prime Minister Diefenbaker got his first word that seven more survivors had come from Cumberland No. 2 mine, May Let Writer Travel LONDON (Reuters) -- Russia will permit Nobel-prize« winning author Boris Pasternak to go abroad to receive hig 2! derground Martin remained in an entrance reported that at 4:48 am. AST (3:45 a.m, EST) they First man brought out today, heard moans and voices from be- less than two hours after the|hind a barrier of fallen rock and seven were discovered, was|coal ONE MAN WAS ALONE Police Blame Oshawa Youths Hast} man is Jeported ay, Oct. by Ontario Provinelal Police to A colliery official sald "the have suffered a smashed hand as hope of more jife is getting slim-|a result of trouble which broke mer and slimmer." out after five carloads of leather- Men working through the area/jacketed youths arrived, in the where the latest group of surviv- words of one police spokesman, ors were found have reached the| just looking for a fight". top of the 18,000-foot wall. The of-| Extent of property damage in. ficial said there is "no sign or|curred during the Hastings fight sound of life" along the wall, wal a mown. catio. Provine cial Police from Camp OTHER BODIES FOUND tachment reported that the Bodies of dead have been seen|youths had fled south on high- but no count was available im- way 45 and Cobourg detachment mediately. ordered two cars to establish a There is still 150 feet of rock, roadblock at Baltimore. coal and debris unexplored on the When the expected cars didn't 12,600-foot 'ievel, It is from there! show up, the police, reirfforced by that some rescue crews are dig-|several officers from the town of ging toward the top of the 13,000- Cobourg Police led by Sgt. Gene foot tunnel Butler, moved north to look for the cars. They found three cars a few miles north of town, near open pocket about 75 feet away Fenella, with the other two ve- from the six others. He could'hicles nearby. During more than 200 hours un Surrounded by jack ©' lant- | Fridoy night. They are Lonny erns, witches and skeletons, | Dunn 8, and his sister Char two young Oshawa youngsters | maine 6, children of Mr. and pause for a brief rest during (Mrs, Lon Dunn of 15 Sandra St, prize if he wishes to, the Soviet news agency Tass said today. their trick-or4{reat campaign' Oshawa Times Photo | The annual Sadie Hawkins|ital reported a quiet night--ex- nation boxes for the United Na- service to the West via Toronto {dance at the Springhill armory|cept for one hectic interlude|tions International Children's rather than non-stop Ottawa to PHONE NUMBERS {wasn't held. The armory is a'when pranksters turned five coy- POLICE RA 5-1133 Emergency Fund. {the West," Mr. Nickson said, FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 (HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 ' L! Support Your 1958 Community Chest Campaign J ¥ 5