The Oshawa Times, 4 Nov 1958, p. 1

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THE TIMES TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising .RA 3-3492 All other calls ........RA 3-3474 he Oshawa Times Price Not Over 7 Cents Per Copy VOL. 87--NO. 259 Authorize: OSHAWA-WHITBY, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1958 WEATHER REPORT Clear, except for. morning fog today and Wednesday. Continu- ing mild. d As EIGHTEEN PAGES Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottowa "BERT AND "MOM" WHYTE LEAVE COURT Draft New Union Contract For 8077 Stelco Workers By PETER SYPNOWICH strike doesn't really represent blast furnaces back i lost wages because "there nie on were coating thousands of Canadians who A a contract for 8,077 workers at|make wage increases now who ing Hamilton's Steel Company of Dever would have made them. The Canada plant, spelling an end to| The strike could mean lost cus- workers n g one of Canada's costliest strikes| tomers for Stelco. It also prom- package hourly tore: of the year. |ises an increase in steel prices-- with benefits won in ! Labor Minister Daley an-company officials warned even contract that expired pounced an agreement late Mon- before it began that wage in- Iwo members of a day on the 84th day of the walk- creases .would mean price in- conc liation board h out by members of the United creases. mended against wage Steelworkers of America (CLC).| As for its impact on the econ- Tye Inorty Tepe: He said only that company and omy, union and management 25-cont Incre oe AR : union 'officials "have agreed to| probably still disagree. The com- contract, 15 cents ir e a memorandum of settle-| pany's position had been that MINISTER INTERVE ment" and that strikers would higher wages and resulting price' |... rinister vote on it at a mass meeting increases would make it harder ,. © "i ico without Wednesday at 9 a.m. for Canadian firms to compete yi hid for a settler The agreement was expected to in world markets, worsening the ou 15 provide for a 26-cent, hourly wage| recession. The union has claimed ,; A1zoma Steel Cor increase spread over a three- that higher wages mean more Sault" Ste, Marie ab Year Soutract retivaciive to Aug. spending power, easing. the re- three - year contract 1. There was no indication of cession. : what fringe benefits might : LONGER THAN IN 1946 ne will duction lines would re still late strike began A demanding WITH LAWYER BAZOS are|tion and men at the end of pro- a Daley success. His two days after workers three successive wage increases totalling 24 cents and fringe bene- I additional SU ON "MOM SPEND SENTENCE > WHYTE BLOOD-SPATTERED BALLOTS Batista Loses At Cuban Polls lcalled for a boycott. With eight candidates killed during the cam- paigning, Castro threatened death to all other candidates and re- prisais against Cubans who voted. Government sources predicted, however, thai final returns would Ishow about 65 per cent had dis- regarded Castro's warnings and | voted. % BULLETS FLY At Marianao, the national mil- itary headquarters, soldiers shot at police in a patrol car, under the impression they were rebels One man was killed. A rebel suspect was killed by police fire in Havana Two gunmen fired from a car at the home of Vice - President Rafael Gaus Inclan. One was captured. The vice-president was not at home. Two soldiers guarding a polling place i» Del Rio province were wounded hy gunfire. A political agent and « bus driver were shot tember, pushing dead. . price index A congressional candidate was point to a record reported to have died of a heart from 125.6 on Sept attack at Cienfuegos after rebels of statistics report threatened to kill him. It was the thir ee monthly rise in th barometer based equalling 100. Si showed in all br: sumer spending ¢ ber. By LARRY ALLEN HAVANA, Cuba (AP)--Former premier Andres Rivero Aguero has won election by a wide mar- gin to succeed his politica: spon- sor, President Fulgencio Batista, incomplete returns showed today. A light turnout and bloodshed marked the balloting Monday. Unofficial tabulations from 3,717 ~or 43 per cent--of the island's 8,521 districts gave: Rivero Aguero 439,991 votes; Carlos Marques Sterling 100,528; former president Ramon Grau San Martin 68,649; Alberto Salas Amaro 7,754. By H. L. JONES | Returns were lacking on other 5 races. But government quarters VANCOUVER (CP)--Canada's expressed belief most of their work- 1ongest criminal trial could wind .andidates for Senate, House of up 'in the hands of an Assize Representatives, six governor Court jury today or tonight, 78 ships and 126 mayoralties wer? days after it began. being swept into office with Riv- Mr. Justice J. O. Wilson has|ero Aguero. oromised he will complete his : as on the bribery phases of MANY STAY HOME the complicated case whose cen-| Hundreds of thousands of 2,870,- tral figure is 47-year-old former 000 eligible voters--perhaps as lands and forests minister Robert many as 60 per cent--stayed Sommers. away from the polls. The one - time cabinet member. Rebel leader Fidel Cagro had has already been convicted ofl -- TT Gray Foom wham he is said to Miner 5 Still Hunt For Trapped Men have accepted bribes for minis- terial favor in the issuance of timber licences. {bump officials announced there . ote hope, any reed from their tombs' pi Sommers Case May End In Assize Court FULGENCIO Rises Fo Straight OTTAWA (CP) into opera- ume 78 12° with a 33-cent ase, in line 1e two-year March 31. three-man ad recom- increas alled fo twe-yeal me year, NES ug up inter- ment came Prices rose for ported fruits oration reed to providing in WOLF KILLED AT COBOURG COBOURG -- By JOE DUPUIS leggs, coffee, most and vegetables three -- 1 n 4 Bone-tired rescue: crews eontin- Cost Of Living two-fifths luring Septem- ambiguous and unapplicable to and rents, coal and electricity, furni- |ture, doctors' and dentists' fees.|@ Prope | These offset declines for pork,! ' Court. Convicts Foster Mother BOWMANVILLE -- Mrs. Ber:| Mrs. Whyte and her husband tha "Mom' Whyte was found | Bert were first charged for not guilty of not complying with con-|registering their farm home un- ditions set down in the Ontario der the act on May 7. They nor- Children's Boarding Homes - Act mally house an average of 90 or by Magistrate R, B. Baxter in ajmore children at the home. The crowded courtroom this morning. Bet stipulates that 30) Sime with At the request of Crown At-|five or more unrelated children torney he R. Deyman, of Co-|lodged therein must register. * bourg, the magistrate ruled the The Whytes have continually re- sentence be suspended indefinite- fused to register their self-styied ly and no penalty imposed. {haven for children on the grounds The crown attorney further that such action would limit the asked that a similar charge (number of children they could against Bert Whyte, *"Mom's"|admit. husband, be withdrawn, Magis-| The Whyte's legal troubles be- trate Baxter agreed. gan last Jae. 17 when they Nur "|. Defence Counsel Anthony C.|informed of the necessity, accord- Bazos, of Toronto, served notice 198 ai the Ontario Shildrenrs of appeal of the decision with|{ arcing ouse ac, ol regisiors Mr. Devman. . ng any home with four or more J Mr, Deyman pointed out, dur- unrelated children. I 3rd ing the hearing, that at no time| 'Mom™ Whyte refused to com- was it the intention of the court{Ply and, following a hearing, the to penalize Mrs. Whyte, but ra-|case was adjourned on July 29. M th ther, to establish whether or not|It was remanded on Sept. 16 and on her Whytehaven Home ior Chil-|again on Sept. 30. or dren came under the act. This| Mr. Bazos entered proceedings - Living costs having been established, Mrs. on the Whyte's behaif on Oct. 7, BATISTA rose to a new high during Sep- Whyte can be compelled to regi-| Magistrate Baxter reserved judg- ment at that time when present ed with a notice of motion, which {had been submitted to Osgoode, Hall, that tentatively restricted him from passing . judgment. The Ontario Supreme Court ruled Oct. 28 that Magistrate Baxter could give judgment. Chiang Uses Poison (as, y » sie rihe | Red Claim stic fruits Mrs: Whyte had received a-just) opp ye: Communis; trial-and that there were no ir- yout regularities in the Crown's case.{China today accused the Nation- consumer ster her home. of a WILL NOT REGISTER 126 on Oct. 1| Mr. Bazos said, "I have ad- 1, the bureau vised her not to register." ed today. "Mom" said, following the] 'd consecutive hearing: "I have no intention of e retail prices registering the home and will on 1949 prices continue to operate as usual."| The defence attorney described unenforcable. the increases nall : of con- the act as vague, inches "Mom" Whyte. He pressed for the charges to be thrown out and a new trial-held so that the ac- cused cpuld have time fo. have defence prepared. e beef, most im- vegetables, dome: ist garrison on. Quemoy of firin COSTLY STRIKE set 4 'pattern for Canadian indus- cost an estimated $50,-| 000,000 in lost production and|in Hamilton. about $9,000,000 in lost wages, or | tore than $1,000 per worker. A union spokesman said the!will take a week to get Stelc bloody battle for union recogni-| 1,73) tion that resulted in street fights wor If the strike ends Wednesday cents, ywill have lasted six days longer, Basic rate at Algoma had been an the 80-day walkout of 1946 a'31.71%., an hour, compared to at Stelco, but Algoma s had a bigger ingrement between job classes--six cents an compared to cents 51 5'% There'll be no immediate effect hour on cash registers in Hamilton. It{which in effect provided an aver s age advantage of four cents Ask Russ To Join RedDelegation Inspection Plan By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER WASHINGTON Western allies will ask Russia to|aircraft flight sand the join in developing a vast military inspection sy stem capable of blocking 'a surprise nuclear at- tack by any great power for per- followed--again depending on it haps 10 years. Any system worked out now would have to be overhauled after a decade, it was explained, (confronted with specific questions 78 to 0 to take into account new weapons | Of the location and area of inspec- ii oped during that|ti likely to be develop 8 proposed system into operation. period. U.S. officials hope the Russians will at least agree to explore the scientific possibilities of such a system. But it would mean an end to much secrecy in the Soviet Union, and officials are not opti- mistic. | TECHNICAL TALKS | The first round of talks opening Monday in Geneva is designed to be highly technical -- to see whether Communists and West- ern experts can agree on the re-| quirements of a workable inspec-| tion arrangement. | If the meeting makes progress. officials indicated, the United States is prepared to provide the Russians with some now-secret information about radar and probably other devices that could | Mother And Tot | Die In Flames MONTREAL . (CP) -- A young mother and the child she tried to rescue died Monday-in the flames of their burning home at Jacques Cartier, across the £8. Lawrence River from Montreai. Mrs. Simonne Guerin, 24, col- lapsed as she attempted to carry Richard, 3%, to safety. Both were asphyxiated. : Two other young sons, Pierre and Gerard, stood in the yard as flames licked at the frame house. | Their father, Raymond, was at work in nearby St. Hyacinthe. CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 ) HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 | [be used (AP) -- The|mobilization moves, missile and sia's return to the UN disarr Disarmament Talks Returns Rus- na ssured to of a com t in detecting military UNITED NATIONS (CP ment das co follo mise nclude the next nmission v Ke. ] n 1 appr | enlarg the all 81 members year Fillowin - U.S. and . Russian success--by later political negoti- agreement on the compromise ations. The powers then would be the UN political committee voted ght mission and POLITICAL QUESTIONS The technical meeting may be UN sroup N for to ap France Jordan on Monday prove the the and Cuba abstained was absent con on zones to begin putting A meeting of the assembly wa afternoon to said ' that he question called for this of zones at the conference begin- final approval ning next week. Allied negotia The Russians tors will not agree to deal with had boycotted the comm scion such matters .at this time, in- which the last assembly ex formants here said. Hence the panded to 25 members from 12 first round of talks at Geneva The Russians contended the com may be a wrangle over what mission makeup weighted should be talked about. against them, LATE NEWS FLASHES Asks Judge Be Relieved Of Bench Job TORONTO (CP)--Lawy Arthur Maloney, the Ontario Legislature for Toronto Parkdale may ask Premier Frost to relieve Magistrate Bigelow of his responsibilities as a magistrate. Magistrate Bigelow presided at a trial Monday at ch Mrs. Santa Ricci, 28, a mother of three children, pleaded guilty to theft charge involving $2.56, The Russians have they intend to raise t give for the last year was member of today said he S. Tupper Explosion Kills Two CNR Employes CAMPBELLTON, N.B. (CP)--A planned explosion of un- expected severity killed two Canadian' National Railways em- ployes on Monday, shook the west end of the city and caus- ed thousands of dollars damage. Killed were John Ross, 56, a bridge and building worker of Campbellton, and John La- mey, 41, of New Glasgow and Port Hawkesbury, N.S.. an operations trainee. Japanese Strike Denounced TOKYO (Reuters) -- The Japan issued a statement denouncing a nation-wide ed for Wednesday as a political and illegal action 4,000,000 trade unionists have been ordered test against government legislation to increa ers. e labor minister today strike sche More than trike in pro- police to 5¢ pow= rife here that a big female wolf shot just north of town yesterday afternoon by John Heenan, 20, of 161 Henry street, Cobourg, is the animal which has terrorized the Creighton Hgights area for almost two Weeks. Heenan, with some com- was out deer-hunting 3rading's ce sta- just nor of Cobourg, when he startled the wolf. He shot. the animal and knocked it over, and shot again as it attempted off. The second shot apparently broke the animal's back He nt over to the animal and it snapped at his foot. He put another shot into the wolf, Killing it He hopes to collect the $75 bounty offered by for female wolve People in the Creighton Heights area not con- vinced that the animal is the one which has kept children indoors at nights for the past two weeks ued to dig and scrape through |the death-filled No. 2 mine today {looking for 16 men trapped since Oct. 23 Fifty-eight miners are known dead and 100 of 174 trapped in the upheaval have been rescued. For those still trapped, there was no hope of survival. | Rescue work was going ahead at the 13.000 and 13,400-foot lev- els. At times it was slowed by recurring falls of rock. In some places the debris sifted into the narrow tunnels as fast as the men could dig it out The body of John Jackson was brought to the pithead of No. 2 colliery early today. That left 16 men unaccounted for. SEVEN FUNERALS TODAY The town continped to bury its dead. Six funerals were held Monday and seven more were scheduled today, As the hearses lumbered through the streefs in an almost |steady procession, the two mir- acles that returned 19 men from the dead were all but forgotten. Two days after the Oct. 23 panions ne tion to make the county On Wednesday, 6% days later, 12) The over-all price index high men were found alive. of 126 on Oct. 1 compared with { i ; 1234 a year afo. Wholesale | And Saturday moraing Seven prices during October showed | more men were saved, one Bryon I ane. The oer | Martin, buried alone in a space ind a hor, arg. ie i . he ize of roffin. or 1 ustrial ma 1218 pase Hie si a:c0 on 1935-39 prices equalling 100 edged ahead to 229.8 in the week Because of this and the fact that em ing an Oct. 28, application to Osgoode! poison gas at the Chinese main- Hall, to relieve him of jurisdic-|land. tion in the case, was denied, he] The Nationalists denied its felt judgment should be render-! forces were using gas and in turn ed. {accused the Communists of lay- Mr. Bazos pointed out that/ing the propaganda groundwork ig 4 Ba fy "ods . the act was set up to deal with fo use poison gas themselves. Sudo Det 24 trom 2294 in theo rmercial enterprises and as| The Communists claimed the 86 enced wept, such did not apply to "Mom'|gas attack: oceurred during Mon. For Killed Sheep However, the Canad farm whyte. He further challenged the|aay's blazing artillery duel dure products index, a based on Crown to prove that she had five/ing which the Reds pounded Que- BROUGHAM *- An attack by 1935-39 prices, 2 or more unrelated children on the moy and its smaller neighbors {two dogs on a flock of 32 sheep! from 212. premises, that she lodged them, | with 39,162 shells in 18 hours. The {on a farm in Pickering township| There was some indication, is running a commercial es-|firing subsided at midnight and |will cost township taxpayers al- amid the curre: tail price rise, tabiishment, that she did not|the Quemoy area was reported most $500. This was revealed at/that the consumer was losing come township council meeting in ground on purcha under one of the exemp- quiet today---an even-numbered sing power tions in the act and that the|day of the month on which the Brougham last night, -- Whyte Haven Mission for Chil. Communists are pledged not to Four sheep were killed out- dren was not an emergency shel-|attack landing areas. right and 20 more so badly bitten THOUGHT FOR TODAY |and mauled that they had to be that. made a maae rood old days was coudd then ter. Peiping Radio claimed 14 Com- | slaughtered after the attack not to live dan- Township To Pay A | ) x declined 21: convicted it would mean, techni-| the alleged gas attack and said: cally, that anyone having chil- "Should the Kuomintang troops dren as guests for a period of dare to continue to use poison gas weeks could be prosecuted under shells, our troops will reply with 'the act. | severe punitive action." ithaca - ---- Another thi them the that you whether gerously. He added that, if 'Mom' was|munist troops were "affected'" by {which took place on the farm of Walter Milne on Highway 7 early choose Monday morning. One of the dogs, which did not wear a tag was shot. The other escaped. W. C. Wilson, who as- sessed the damage, told counci! the flock looked as though it hac been painted red. or 200,000 Watch Pope's Coronation Ceremony VATICAN CITY (AP) -- Pope|ent, dressed in black peasant John XXIII today was crowned |Sunday best. They watched in the 262nd supreme pontiff of the awe, weeping with emotion, as Roman Catholic Church. their kinsman, the former Angelo Some 200,000 Italians and for- Giuseppe Cardinal Roncalli, went eign visitors in the great square through the coronation ceremony. of St. Peter's thundered a mighty! The act of coronation came at ovation as the successor to Pope 1 p.m. (7 am. EST), 3% hours Pius XII was crowned before after the ceremonies began. them. A threat of rain was in the Through it all the 76-year-old air and an occasional sprinkle! former patriarch 'of Venice re- fell mained serene, often smiling be- Nicola Cardinal Canali, pro-|nignly. His voice throughout the dean of the College of Cardinals, long mass and his greetings to placed the beechive-shaped tiaralthe Catholic hierarchy of the {of jewel-encrusted gold on the world remained clear and reson- {farmer's son from a little North! ant. Italian village after more than ADJUST CROWN HIMSELF four 'hours of glittering religious rites inside the vast basilica. The crowd began to roar as The coronation took place on 84-year-old Cardinal Canali took the same central balcony over- the crown in his hands and pre- looking the square on which Pope pared to place it on the pontiff's John made his first appearance head. The pontiff adjusted the a week ago today after his elee- crown hims2If and looked out into the crowd. : y <i The Pope rose slowly and FAMILY PRESENT chanted his *'urbi et orbi"--the All the ceremony of the Roman (raditional blessing of the pontiff Catholic Church was mustered/to the city of Rome and the for the coronation rites. But there World. The crowd remained silent was humility, too, in the presence| throughout his recitation, deliv- pontiff's family. Three|e¥ed in a firm, loud voice. a sister and numerous and were tion of brothers, nephews nieces pres- millions of West E | Montreal. For the first time in history, | iropeans wit-/ Italy, Leon Mayrand. nessed the coronation of a pope Sees through the agency of television. 3 The Vatican radio also broadcast - - i the long ceremony. The Pope granted a plenary in- dulgence not only to all those present but also to those listen- ing to the radio or watching tele- vision. The Pope slowly made the sign of the cross in several direc- tions at the 'end, and after the "amen," the crowd thundered wildly, shouting "Viva il Papa"-- long live the Pope--over and over. 50,000 IN BASILICA More than 50,000 persons had jammed the vast reaches of St, Peter's Basilica for the solemn pontifical mass and other relig- # ious rites that preceded the out door coronation. Representatives of heads state from all parts of the world mingled with church dignitaries in the audience to see the tiara placed on the head of the new pontiff. Canada was represented by Jules Leger, new ambassador to NATO and brother of Paul-Emile Cardinal Leger, Archbishop of mal beli He was accompanied to mern wend, after being by the Canadian ambassador to caught recently off African coast near Nairobi by a Kenya Sa oi "MERMAID" CAUGHT OFF AFRICAN COAST film unit. After film record of their behavior had been made, the dugongs, under government | protection because of their rar- This is one of an herbivorous two dugongs marine mam- d to have given rise a tail that is broad and crescent-shaped. Adult dugongs are from seven to nine feet in length. The unit was shooting a | film called "The Reluctant 'he mammal has flippers and ' Mermaid'. (AP Wirephoto) . ity, were returned to the sea. T COMMUNITY $30,000 $50,000 $70,000 $90,000 $110,000 | $130,000 $150,000 $175,000 CHEST SCOREBOARD $54,376 SUPPORT YOUR COMMUNITY CHEST

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