THE TIMES TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Adve-tising .RA 83-3492 All other calls ........RA 38-3474 ab Os hava dimes WEATHER REPORT Cloudy with occasional ..smow flurries tonight and Sunday. Continuing cold. Price Not Over 7 Cents Per Copy VOL. 87--NO. 287 OSHAWA-WHITBY, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1958 Post Office Department, Authorized As Second Class Mail Ottawa EIGHTEEN PAGES APPEAL TO OSHAWA Comm. Chest Drive Lags, $32,000 Needed ciation -- indeed, all 17 agencies that participate in the Community Chest. With less money they will be able to do less work -- and the work they do is vital to the welfare of the commu-~ nity. With sharply = reduced budgets, some may virtually have to suspend operations, If this happens, Oshawa will suffer --and the conscience, as well as the wel=- fare, of the community will be blight- ed. Next week there should be a supreme effort made by the Community Chest's executive committee to give the cam- paign new impetus, And there should be a supreme response by the public to the committee's effort. Let us not live for a year with fail- ure on our consciences, Let those who have already donated re-examine their abilty to donate, and let those who have not yet donated re-examine their hearts, The prospects of an extended indus- trial peace in Oshawa now appear bright, It is appropriate that this brighten- ing should come at the beginnng of the * season #h which peace, goodwill and charity 'are the inspirational themes. But all is not well in Oshawa, There ay be peace and goodwill, but there Seems to be a shortage of charity, The Greater Oshawa Community Chest campaig) is lagging. The fund is still $32,000 short of its objective of $175,000, If the objective is not reached, the activities of the agencies which depend on the Community Chest must be ser- fously curtailed, In blunt terms, this will mean less money for such organi- zations as the Victorian Order of Nur- ses, the Red Cross, the Canadian Le- gion's Poppy Fund, the St. John Am- bulance Society, the Christmas Cheer Fund, the Community Recreation Asso- | PM In Sidney On World Trek SYDNEY, Australia (CP)-- Railways Suggest Arbitration. Order yi sts MONTREAL (CP) -- Canada's; Following hearings before the wealth can live and expand and major railways have suggested board, the parties would have a develop depends on the success compulsory arbitration as a/l4-day period for further negotia- of its attempt to achieve econo- means of staving off nation-crip-|tions, mic prosperity among its Asian pling rail strikes when other If all efforts failed to produce members. 8 methods fail, a settlement, the board would This Commonwealth cannot They proposed to the federal issue its binding report. survive half prosperous and half government that whenever a ma-| "The power of railway unions starving," he told a luncheon rail strike threatens, an ar- by a strike or threat of strike | gathering of leading Siting Spon. tration board should be set up/to create a national emergency|sored by the New South Wales v PAY HIKE FOR 10.000 ONTRACT Strip Minister | 0f Standing For Gambling TOPEKA, Kan, (AP)--Maurice |D. Tulloch, who gave up the life lof a Baptist minister to become la shill in a Las Vegas gambling| | casino, was stripped of his min-| isterial standing Friday. The action was taken by the { | | | -- | executive committee of the Kan- sas Baptist Convention. In a res- olution the committee said: | | "The circumstances associated (with Maurice D. Tulloch have |been carefully reviewed, . . . In order that the Christian ministry inot be lightly regarded or held lin disrepute, we are led with a {profound sense of sorrow to this resolution. Maurice D. Tulloch can no longer be recognized as a minister in good standing in |the Kansas Baptist Convention." Tulloch, 50, was pastor of the | First Baptist Church of Sabetha, [Kan. last Sept. 29, he walked out lof a meeting of Baptist pastors in Hutchinson, Kan., and disap- | peared. for "final determination of the has been demonstrated time and government. dispute, |again in the * post-war period," ~ dbury rief submitted to Labor the railways said. pe Sept. 30 and made | The brief also suggested that u public Friday, the railways said railways be allowed lo hire em- the cabinet should name a Su-|ployes other than union mem- preme Court of Canada judge bers; that "employe" be re- and two other high ranking |defined to distinguish clearly be- to the special board, tween labor and management, The 13-page submission was and that notice of demands for, SUDBURY (CP) -- For a city banded to the minister in re- new contracts be doubled to 120 that has lost a $1,000,000-a-week sponse to his call for views of days. | payroll for 11 weeks, Sudbury is interested parties on a possibl |the liveliest ghost town you ever strial Rel did see. fevision fo the lad When the Red-led International investigation THOUGHT FOR TODAY all a nae re precios e A A that Sudbury would dead duck in the event of a long of man rablw psi ting in Canada, in- ing he formerly thought he og the CPR and CNR. knew about women, APPO ey Ri port 2 PAWN IN CRISIS hig og Rg Roget : U.S. Flier Held By East Germans | and he reports that a strike ap- likely, it says, the cabinet should appoint the special board. Hope Fades a pawn in the Berlin situation, Space Talks An East German official indl-|cess to Berlin, cated Lieut. .Richard Mackin, Soviet Premier Khrushchev has UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) would be returned to the U.S. threatened to turn over to East Set For Christmas Inco Men (strike, It hasn't turned out that way. There. is Titirdship in individual miners' families. Small mer- chants are being squeezed finan- cially. But none has gone to the wall yet, ad However, s could change i for another a of , as gould well STILL BUYING PLENTY _ iy i REN ob + " y r Sculptor~P eft; vis 'of. protest critics. | Woodford district in his London ide his# "fhe two-ton, on, omic. which Churchill eted statue of Sir'| tue of the British was t nearly compl Winston Churchill which drew | paid for by the loyal fold of : Auto Workers TORONTO (CP) -- The United (CLC), a new three-year contract with General Motors of Canada in hand, turned attention today to the business of making a deal with Ford and Chrysler. UAW and GM negotiators brought 10 weeks of daily meet ings to an end Friday by an- nouncing they had agreed on the terms of a contract providing, for the first time in history without a strike, the full settlement reached between the U.S. auto industry and the union. The Canadian pact will give 15,000 GM workers annual wage increases of six cents an hour-- or 2% per cent--and an eight-cent hourly premium for skilled work- men, It was not known when the UAW would approach Ford and be next. LONG NEGOTIATIONS been dickering for on a daily basis for 10 weeks. The settlement finally ham y at Oshawa, Toronto, vote Sunda; St. London and Wind. hy But right now Sudbury on a Saturday night is lit up like a Christmas tree. Business is not| what it has been, but the hard rock miners are still buying plenty. | It's hard to figure what keeps the neon lights glowing in this Northern Ontario city of about {44,000, with 13,500 people on | strike. Striking miners are drawing on| BERLIN (AP) -- A United| This affects both the Mackin case qin sayings, Workers from| CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla, (AP) ified Jupiter States flier who parachuted into and Russian efforts to make the [otehboring. communities -- in-|The army launched a 15-pound ballistic missile, East Germany was held today as| United States, Britain and France cluding the uranium-rich area of|gold -- plated cone thousands of deal with East Germany for ac-|g|ljot Lake--come in for Satur: miles into the sky today but its|instrument-packed probe past the |day night buying. And a lot of fate was uncertain, lcredit is being extended. "The effect on the economy is ling fast enough Giant U.S. Moon Rocket Up 40,000 Miles, Flops intermediate-range head of the army's missile ord- {nance command, said that "'cer- tain tolerances' were allowed in the assigned goals for the probe. He said it would take further Wil- tracking and computing to deter- The army had hoped to fire the moon and possibly out into an Scientists said. it wasn't travel- orbit around the sum. or in a high| But in Washington, Dr. Hope faded today for East-West Army only through direct negoti- Germany in six months the Rus-|gerious," says Bob Hollingwood, enough trajectory to carry it to|liam Pickering, director of the| ... pow far into spate the 2% agreement on outer space. DID-lations with the East German sian controls over transportation secretary-manager of the Sud-|the far reaches of space lomats reluctantly prepared to satellite regime. Mackin became from West Germany to the iso- push through the General sembly a U.S. plan to set Up a pon Curtain Wednesday. Germany. bury Chamber of Commerce. As-llost and bailed out, behind the lated city 110 miles inside east|"But Sudbury is far from dying the space agency in Washington ogy, estimated it had reached 40,000 probe definitely would not get as on its feet." Ld SHidY Commission despite So Meanwhile, the Communists ac- A number of small nations cused West Germany of trying to pave tried unsuccessfully to get Proven Sermon Ste aton, the United States and Russia to- est German ne : or al] gether on the disputed space issue| Pod. Adenauer sa 4 ; oy Re) before the assembly takes final/ West should settle the Berlin action next week authorizing es problem before getting bogged tablishment of the new commit. down in other long-stalemated | German problems such as unifi-| CHICAGO (AP) -- Two lawyers cation. The East German Com-\who dabble in art sleuthing and munists charged Adenauer with collecting have picked up $1,500, opposing any move to bring to//000 in masterpieces, says a Vati- The plan would create an 18- gether the Western and Eastern can art expert. nation committee to do the Germany states. The lawyers' outlay for the groundwork for a permanent UN| The Western Big Three who oc- three paintings was $2,200. body to steer international co-|cupy. West Berlin refuse to rec-| "Extraordinary luck, says the operation in utilization of outer|ognize the East German regime|Chicago artist who advised them space for peaceful purposes. or have any negotiations with it, to take a chance on their pur- Giant Columbia River May Be Harnessed OTTAWA (CP)--The way may Canadian side of the river would| Power from these two sources soon be cleared for harnessing be owned and controlled by Cana-|would provide the Vancouver British * Columbia's giant Colum-|dians. {area with electricity at less than bia River to provide a vast quan- The mighty Columbia rises in four mills a kilowatt hour. . tity of low-priced power for the British Columbia and flows, Mr. Green emphasized that the province's lower mainland. through the power-hungry north- federal government still stands Acting Prime Minister Green western US, to the Pacificiready to help B.C. in the power Two Art ee. The Western proposal was ex-| Jicted to pass over Soviet oppos-| tion. Sleuths Masters chases," "just like finding dia- monds in the street." | Prof. Amadore Porcella, catal- |ogist for the Vatican Gallery of |Art, Friday pronounced the 16th century paintings authentic. He| | described them as: | Christ Carrying the Cross, by| |Glorgione; Sacred Conversation, |by Giovanni Bellini; and The | Massacre of the Innocents, by Raphael Sanzio. "miles from earth the Space Administration, told a|whether the small satellite would | press conference here three hours go higher than the 79,000 miles after the firing rocket miles an hour to achieve the WON'T ORBIT EARTH nearly 25,000-miles-an-hour speed needed to pull clear of the earth's main gravitational grip. LOW AND SLOW stage | grees below its pres |was attributed to a premature what more optimistic. {burnout in the first stage, a mod-| jet propulsion laboratory of th alifornia Institute of Technol inch-long, 10 - inch-wide, cone told reporters fhe space might venture, Asked whether the probe even- far out as the moon, some 220,000 tually would fall back and burn Dr. T. Keith Glennan, head of miles away. up, Medaris said this was 'highly National Aeronautics and. Pickering declined to estimate questionable." STOPPED TOO SOON Medaris said the failure of the |probe--called Pioneer III -- to |achieve the planned peak velocity | . a | was due primarily to the fact that | He sald the probe definitely the booster engine of the Jupiter would not go into orbit around first stage cut off three seconds | the earth. Another Washington too soon. scientist said the vehicle "willl pioneer IIT had J L as its prima Glennan also said the four- certainly fall back and burn up goal the attainment of Rai ry rocket travelled 3% de-|as it reaches the atmosphere." |iance in a flight of 33 hours. If it 'ribed course At a simultaneous press con-|,.hieved that, the army would The lower-than-expected speed ference here, officials were some-||.hal the effort 90 per cent suc- cessful. | Pickering was asked in Wash- |ington whether the army try However, as of 5:15 a.m. EST(C 60-ton | achieved by the air force's Pio- 1,000 neer I luner probe Oct. 11, the by that carrier failed Maj.-Gen. John B. Medaris, The lawyers are Rudolph Va-| salle and Paul DeLaney, BOUGHT IN CHICAGO Delaney told a reporter he bought the 17-by-15 inch Giorgi: one for about $1,000 {rom a Chic-| ago dealer who apparently knew little of its history. | The-painting, one of the last by Giorgione before his death in |1510, was valued by Porcella at 1$1,000,000. The Venetian artist |painted only about 12 master- | pieces. | The other painting owned by |DeLaney was termed by Porcella | could be rated a success." "Obviously it was not 100 per cent successful from the scienti- {fic point of view," Pickering said, | "But it was very close to suc- cess. From the engineering point fof view it was not (successful)," {INSTRUMENT LOAD | LATE NEWS FLASHES Night Watchman Stabbed In Robbery MONTREAL (CP)--A' night watchman was stabbed early today during an attempted robbery at an Italian restaurant. One man was arrested. The victim, Vincenzo Matani, 35, was reported in fair condition in hospital. He had been stabbed twice in the back, once in the shoulder and three times in the head Three Persons Dead In Fire DECATUR (AP)--Three persons died early today in a | these devices: 1. transmitter weighing 1.1 pounds designed to transmit steadily for 75 hours on a frequency of 960.05 megacycles. | sald Friday 'steps are to be Ocean. The big issue is the split- development task. But he indi- "the great lost masterpiece of taken at onde to complete an|ting of downstrram power devel- cated he would not like to see Bellini." The lawyer said he agreement with the United States epements between the two coungsome other power project in B.C. hought it in 1955 for $1,000. The whi will make possible co-oper- tries. {given priority over the Columbia catalogist says it is worth $300,- ative development of the river."| What Canadian authorities may plan. 000. Later in an interview he added suggest is that B.C. get half the, Mr. Green seemed to be aim-| Last July, Vasalle walked out the negotiations would be on a additional electricity developed ing criticism at B.C.'s plan to of a Chicago auction house with government « to - government on the American side in returnimove ahead with Peace Rivera small 11by-16 inch painting for level, indicating that » lot of the/for Canadian payment for admin- power development which he paid $170. groundwork had already been!istration and regulation of the At Victoria, premier Bennett, That one, says Porcella, is the covered by lower-echelon work-' year-round water flow, welcomed Mr. Green's general Raphael. He called it "Raphael ing groups on both sides, This possibily would entail con- statement but maintained devel- at his best - one of his "We are very keen on this pro- struction of a number of Cana-lopment of the Columbia River mostcharmin g compositions ject and we want to get ahead dian dams, with the federal gov-| would not mean cancellation of with qualities of a masterpiece with this as quickly as possible," ernment helping B.C. financially.|the Peace River plan. despite its small size." Value? he said. In addition to the American elec-| "We want them both and the $300,000, declares Porcella. Whatever agreement is reached tricity, lower B.C. would also get sooner the better," he said. "The| Advising the lawyers was Ale] with the Americans would stipu-/power from the proposed Mica more power we have in B.C. the ander Zlatoff-Mirski Chicago art| late that any projects built on the Creek project. more industries we will attract." restorer and sculptor. fire which ripped through a frame home. Earlier, police said witnesses first reported seeing seven bodies, some of them stacked on the porch. West German Police Crack Sex Ring KEMPTEN, West Germany (Reuters) Police have cracked a sex ring here and charged a policeman, school teachers and married couples with taking part in the orgies at which photographs were takep 21 Dead In Wreckage Of Airliner MADRID (Reuters) Wreckage of a Spanish airliner, missing since Thursday with 21 persons aboard¥ has been found, the plane's owners said today. A report receiVed at Barajas airfield here said it was found near La Losa in 5 via Province, and the Cifra news agency said there were no survivors 2. Two Geiger-Mueller tubes, clectronic devices to measure radiation in space and report the {measurements by radio to earth, 3. A photoelectric sensor de- signed to we felt we had a right to get. But, short of a strike, it is the best we were able to negotiate, '"We should have had a closing of the gap between United States and Canadian wages." But at least, he added, the deal that was won "assures us that the gap will not widen." Canadian GM's President E. H. Walker said the agreement "brings promise of real and im- mediate benefit to both company and employees' because of a backlog of orders. "This means that General Mo- tors people can look forward to full work schedules plus the prob- ability of a considerable amount Chrysler to begin the stretch | drive negotiations toward a con-| tract, or which company would Actually, GM and the union had six months and locals in five Ontario plants had authorized a strike if neces- sary. The discussions had been mered into shape Friday will be put before the membership for a , the UAW's Cana sald t UAW Turns To Ford, Chrysler of premium-paid 'overtime in the weeks to come." The base rate at GM now is $1.85 an hour. The first six-cent hike is retroactive to Sept. 1. OTHER BENEFITS Other features of the contract: A one-cent hourly increase in the cost of living allowance of 19 cents, retroactive to Nov. 17; incorporation. of 12 cents of this amount into the basic rate to pre. vent a loss to the workers if the consumer price index falls, An increase for various wage groups in life insurance, extra accident insurance and dismem- berment insurance providing am average of $500. An increase in the weekly sick~ ness and accident benefits rang. ig froin $13 a week u e s will cost the emplo noth. ing additional, PoYees Improvements in the plan and supplemental unemploy-~ ment benefits, Severance pay for employees permanently laid off with two or more years' seniority. The agreement, signed in To- ronto, closely parallels settles ments reached last October in the United States GM and the UAW, It will become effective as of Dec. 5 if ratified by members ship of Union locals in the five GM plant cities, Injunction - entrance of the stri ternational Nickel Company re- finery at Port Colborne. Earlier, it was learned Labor Minister Daley has met with company officials in another bid to settle the 73-day strike by 14,- 800 Inco workers at Sudbury and Port Colborne. The injunction was granted by Mr. Justice Samuel Hughes to re- inforce a temporary injunction obtained earlier by the company on grounds mass picketing was resulting in ineidents at the Port Colborne plant. The temporary injunction was defied by 200 strikers Wednesday but no action was taken, § § W § The Pioneer III cone contained A battery - powered radio | send a radio signal | when triggered by reflected light ' from the moon when the probe was within 20,000 miles of it. 4. A device to slow the cone's spinning from the 400 revolutions a minute imparted to it at liftoff to six revolutions. The cone should rotate slowly near the moon so the spinning does not in- terfere with the ability of the light sensor to detect the lunar glow. THE JUNO II rocket rests on its la ing pad at Cape Cana , Florida immediately before the U.S. Amy's first moon shot attempt. The rocket is seen through the radio an- ; SH tenna which is used in tracking it. Juno II basically is a Jupiter IRBM with elongated booster to increase fuel capacity. --AP Wirephoto CITY EMERGENCY COMMUNITY --" $30,000 $50,000 $70,000 $90,000 | $110,000 |__ $130,000 $150,000 $175,000 PHONE NUMBERS CH EST . HOSPITAL RA 3.2211 a AE -- --------------------S-------------------- 142,590. | | . "he $ 5 86 POLICE RA 65-1133 SCOREBOARD FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574