WERTHER REPORT Mostly cloudy tonight and to. morrow with occasional showers Friday afternoon. THE TIMES TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising RA 3.3492 All other ealls ...... RA 83-3474 rf he Osha Gimmes voL. 88 -- NO. 48 OSHAWA-WHITBY, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1959 "Vout Office Depertmans; Oiowe MAGMILLAN TALK IN RUSSIA FAILUR eo TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES. MRS. A. DMITRIEW (left) gets her first glimpse of her 10%-month-old grandson David, #8 she is re-united with her son iW. Dmitriew and his wife after A 17-year separation, She last waw her son in thelr home town "Let's Complete 'Seven Arrows' Frost Urges TORONTO (CP) -- Premier Frost sald Wednesday he will urge the federal government to for completion of seven un- ed arrow aircraft at the A. V. Roe (Canada) Limited plants in Malton. | & 3 Baie A of Krasnodar, Russia, in 1942 | just before he was taken pris- oner by the German army and sent to a POW camp in Ger- many. Mrs. Dmitriew had shown her anti-Communist feel- ings when the town was occu- 'OH MY SON' pied by the Russians and when the Germans retreated she was forced to flee Russia. She spent the next seven years trudging through Europe seeking news of her son. She subsequently moved to the United States. Mr. Oshawa Man Finds Mother Mrs. A. Dmitriew hi tarmac burst into tears crying "Oh my) The premier's statement fol- 200 fowed a discussion on unemploy- ment at the Avro plants with of-| ternational Association of #hinists (CLC). #t $150,000,000. "It wil Laurentian avenue, 2a Thus ended a 17-year odyssey former Ottawa to spend this money to/showed him a copy of a Russian Word," published embraced | prisoner by the Germans in 1942.| er son Thursday night on the, Mrs. Dmitriew had travelled all of Malton Airport and over Europe, looking for her son,| |but with no luck. SETTLED IN N.Y . wit intments and| Finally she came to the Unit- ficials of District 717 of the In- PE hpi of her son,(ed States and settled in New "|The son, W. Dmitriew of 729/ York under the sponsorship of a : Samuelson of the Episco- Cost of the Arrows Is estimated Russian soldier, learned of his Palian Church. Rev. Samuelson mother's whereabouts, on Sun./helped her to continue her search| From End To End Nyasaland a year ago after 40 i Rev. 'a lot cheaper for Toronto for her son, for over nine years. | be oe day. Whe) & fricsd from Turoblo Both Mrs. Dmitriew and her complete the aircraft now being|janguage newspaper, 'The Newson are strongly anti-Communist. | @ssembled," Mr. Frost told the gyssian in/It was because of this that she| Dmitriew first knew of his mother's whereabouts Sunday when he saw an adverti t i |two per cent and added a special { {charge on jet flights. The action added $30 to the| = Plane Fares Boosted Over Atlantic PARIS (AP)--The International Air Transport Association today boosted all transatlantic fares cost of a round-trip economy or tourist transatlantic jet flight. signed by her in a Russian language newspaper published in New York. increase ts to $40, The increases were demanded by many lines which do not yet have jets in transatlantic service and were losing business steadily SPECIAL EDITION PRINTED FRIDAY The 1959 Progress Edition of The Oshawa Times will be published tomorrow, Friday, Feb, 27. The beautifully illustrated edition will carry a complete picture of Oshawa's progress during its 35 years as a city. Please obtain extra copies early as the souvenir value of this special edition annually creates a heavy de- | mand. {on their propeller-driven craft. The new rates go into effect April 1 subject to the approval of the governments involved. The new rate on first-class fares will be $440 one-way from New York to London. The addi- tional charge for "de luxe" will be $60--an increase of $10--and Jet travel will be $20 more. Economy one-way flights New York to London will be $257, with $15 extra for a jet. The new rates are subject to revision against next year. general transoceanic air cargo rates an average of five per cent. SALISBURY, Southern Rhode- six union members who met with/ New York, containing an ad-|left Russia and started the search| sia (AP) -- Prime Minister Sir him A special meetin aude Jodoin, president of to his whereabouts and Ba Be ai i ve inice being taken wrote Alive ing tal retreated from her home town, Kr: i ) on a Ro n n 1945, to Russia hn ier several letters an assumed name frying touch with his family ES -- . | i ELEPHANT VISITS bu hears nothing in reply. vertisement seeking information|for her son after the Germans Edgar Whitehead declared a thee pertaining gress as an illegal org jon. | Whitehead acted to prevent the ispread to Southern Rhodesia of |nationalist unrest generated by |the congress in neighboring Ny- state of emergency throughout Riots Tear Africa years of self-imposed exile. Whitehead said a grave situa- tion similar to that 4 Nyasaland B Southern unless immediate steps are taken: So far, the only threatening un- rest was reported at Kariba, For the first-class passenger the| § The IATA also agreed to boost | Vi od Pakistan mountain s of Swat, after a partridge | [said here today. : |is agreement ona formal | {munique next Monday, : [spokesman added. |speech. i (flew off to Kiev without Khrush- {|mier indicated a further cooling {|ish leader and his Soviet host. |Khrushchev told Macmillan at a {where 4,000 striking Africans KIEV, Soviet Union (AP)--The Macmillan-Khrushchev talks have ended with neither side "budging an inch," a British spokesman The only outstanding business com- the At the same time he confirmed earlier reports that the British prime minister's visit to the So- viet Union came perilously close to ending abruptly two days ago in Moscow as a result of Soviet {Premier Khrushchev's Kremlin MOSCOW (AP)--Prime Minis- ter Macmillan warned Premier Nikita Khrushchev today that any attempt to interfere with Western rights in Berlin would be fraught with danger, British sources said. Then the visiting British leader chev, who had been booked to go along. The Soviet premier did not show up at Vnukovo airport to see Macmillan off. The absence of the Soviet pre. off in relation; between the Brit- A British spokesman said meeting in the Kremlin this morning he had a bad tooth and must have It filled. Diplomats wondered whether this was a dip- Khrushchev Icily Snubs UK. Party |conference. : It became known that Macmils lan and Khrushchev have virtue ally ended their formal and formal talks on world probl The expectation was they wi meet formally once more t Monday to draw up a commu nique. : The talks thus appeared 'fo have made little headway in ree onciling British and Western = icles with those of the Soviet ion. re In a chilly political atmosphere, Macmillan made it clear tb Khrushchev at the meeting in the Kremlin that any attempt to In terfere with the Western powssy! position in Berlin "would lead't a dangerous situation," British informants said. A Tass communique omitied any reference to a friendly A mosphere at the latest Macmil lan-Khrushchev meeting, But "a Moscow radio broadcast insisted the morning's talks were "warm and friendly." Leaders of the Communist-or- iented World Peace Council strove to put a good face on t They » aid chev believes Macmillan's visit will be a good one even if ho hard agreements are reached. Henri de la Vigerie, a French member of the council's presid- ing bureau, said Khrushchev told him the Soviet Union will not use lomatie illness. force to solve the Berlin question, Avro, Go OTTAWA (OP) - vernment - ter Diefenbaker today held his/receiving third--and shortest--meeting with] Mr. Gordon declined to com» Once here in Oshawa he wrote asaland, which is united with (have brought work to a halt on| again under his own name but Southern and Northern Rhodesia the Zambezi River hydro-electric still had recejved no reply. in the Central African Federation PFolec! The row apparently He was told yesterday by his/of the Commonwealth, - Scart | over rages, but Bthish {mother that according to news| Most leading officers of the 0iticials say "there is something she received from Russia, while congress in Southern Rhodesia | definitely political about it now." Upheld By C U t S| 8 t p lin New York, his father is dead. were arrested in pre-dawn raids.| In the Union of South Africa, oO r make Seep: that the 8 IStussions auols Jet gine IgE: a : : yp | a hotbed of anti-whi -| ! No trace can be found of his| There was no indication, how. 1008 Of MEWHItS 1a yraAWA (CP)--An appeal for She was shot through the heart don and a cabinet committee. |delegation from the International | " Crawford Gordon, president of ment. A. V. Roe (Canada) Limited. Last Friday the company The meeting lasted 10 minutes. closed its Malton plants and dis- Mr, Diefenbaker said cement in he A all 14,000 employees on QUEEN MOTHER JINJA, Uganda (AP) -- A wild elephant called on Queen Mother Elizabeth Tuesday night. His arrival was announced by her footman Wally Taylor Schollle, C of the machinists. that he had no announcement to|the Arrow interceptor. and Ire. BE PRESSED » Employees of Avro and Orendal #re unlikely to be pressed for| sg 2 . payments by finance companies| Who uid the Queen: does and acceptance corporations, ; Fred Oakes, a director of the dam (brother, who they believe is still ever, that arrest had been OF al tne, aging police a new trial by 49-year-old Palwith a .22-calibre pistol. The committee comprises De- Association of Machinists, repre- {behind the Iron Curtain. dered for the head of the com ee a Police (Salamon, former Hungarian free-| Salamon had been rooming in|fence Minister Parkes, Defence|senting company (workers, fo- _ He has asked his mother to gress, Dr. Hastings Banda, a 54-00 0 a0 and were met with a(dom fighter sentenced to be(the apartment with the woman. |Production Minister O'Hurley, Fi- gether with Claure Jo- join him here in Oshawa but|year-old London-educated physi-| | hanged March 18 for the murder/her husband and her four-year. (nance Minister Fleming, Labor doin of the Canadian Labor Con- The Queen, resting in her Canadian Consumer Loan | safari camp lodge at Murchi- son Falls National Park, hur- ried to the window to look. Then game wardens drove the beast off into the jungle. sociation, said most firms would Mkely send out a form letter to district managers suggesting spe- al consideration. The CCLA represents 62 firms b the loan field. | | she would like him to move to cian who returned to his native 1&0 of stones. The walkout ofl a London, Ont, woman, was New York and live with her in New York. Mr. Dmitriew, an assembly line |worker at General Motors, |that he has no plans for the pres- 'ent. said "NOT HOPEFUL' hE Sob West Fears Crisis At Berlin In Spring + WASHINGTON (AP) -- West the Western position In West Ber- n fears of a dangerous Berlin jin and to move supplies into isis late this spring are build- that city ng up again under the impact of . Nikita Khrushchev's oratory. J r Unless the Soviet government lin blockade has been considered gan be drawn into high-level ne- ever since Khrushchev last No- jotiations on German issues invember suggested the Western ie next two or threc months, povers get out of Berlin, He an- authorities here are not surenounced plans which in effect Second, Eisenhower sald that the U.S. and its allies are "al slightest area or region in which to negotiate." Rut he added that he could not see "very much use for confer- Arson Feared In Trenton Fire TRENTON, Ont. (CP)--Police say they suspect arson in a ware- Wednesday night which destroyed the furniture of dozens of army personnel sta- tioned with the 1st Dragoons at Camp Petawawa. Fire broke out in the Fox Cart- age Company and spread quickly through the building and its con- house fire dockers demanding more money has paralyzed the port of | Durban, stranding 25 ships. On the west of the African dismissed today by the Supreme Court of Canada. continent, in the Belgian Congo, violence flared again after sev eral days of calm. European po- lice used tear gas at Inkisi, 90 miles from Leopoldville, to dis- perse a crowd of unemployed old daughter. orig his trial, he said he ¢ oved the woman, that she had The ruiing was 6-1 in favor ofliolq him she was not married to the appeal with Mr.|Ajexander and that they had dis- Justice J. R. Cartwright di t ing. He would have allowed a d marriage th Mining Starr and Transport Min- ister Hees. There was no indication how long the talks, aimed at finding alternate work for the idle Roe plants, might continue or when Mr. Gordon would again see Mr. new trial. Salamon was convicted last) THOUGHT FOR TODAY year of murder in the death of| Diefenbaker. The two conferred late Wednes- day for half an hour, together gress, met the prime minister for 90 minutes. Afterwards Mr. Jodoin said the union made specific proposals for both short-term and long-térm projects at the Roe plants. In other meetings the union group conferred with Labor Min. ister Starr and later' Mr. Gordon held a further talk with a four after they had stoned European|Mrs. Joyce Alexander, 31-year- automobiles. There were reportsjold mother shot to death in the of many injured. bathroom of her basement apart- One Mogadisclo newspaper ment in London July 26, 1958. blamed the rioting on two na. Queen's Cousin with five cabinet ministers, and man cabinet committee. afterwards minister] Meanwhile there were further told reporters the fact that the|critical questions ia the Com- talks are continuing *'indicates'mons. People who keep pumping up the balloon of inflation sooner or later are left hold- ing the bag. tents, forcing firemen to concen- trate on saving a house only a few feet away. | Items of furniture and appli- ances varying from deep freezers and stoves to baby carriages and {ways ready to negotiate when the beds were lost. Damage was esti- | The possibility of another Ber- other person will give us the mated at $125,000, | Police Caief Jack Taylor said| | "we highly suspect arson and are |investigating." Fire Marshal A)| {Williams was called in from near-| {hy Belleville. | | One fireman, Lieut. Elmer| hat may happen. But they see would turn over to East Ger. ®Ces" or much promise for ne- grace d 3 4 . all y, suffered burns around the increasing possibility that in/many control of the Allied access Botiation if the present Russian|face and was treated at hospital | his present confident mood the routes to West Berlin. | soviet premier may try some -- attitude continues. but not detained. | risky moves. United States officials still hope| Khrushchev will agree to a for-| eign ministers meeting for late] April or early May. His speech) fh Moscow Tuesday rejecting the fea of 'negotiations about Ger-| man reunification does not con- | itute a real answer to the West. | n proposal Feb. 16 for a big four session, informants said. | IKE CONCERNED | * But President Eisenhower gt his ress conference Wednesday seemed to reflect a growing un-| certainty over the possibility of} actually getting serious negotia-| tons started | + Noting that the speech came in| the midst of Khrushchev's talks| with British Prime Minister Mac-| millan, Eisenhower said the de- velopment "is not one that, cer-| tainly, you could call hopefull. "He then defined a two - point policy for the United States in the present situation. First, he ghid, "We are not going to give one single inch in the preserva- tion of our rights" to maiatate _ CITY EMERGENCY | PHONE NUMBERS David Campanella, 15-year- . Es = Id son of Roy Campanella, and POI. A 5-1133 0 PI POLICE R his sad-looking mother, Ruthe. FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 leave Queen's Children's Court HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 | atter $1000 bail: was posted for | Ye a March 11 hearing on a burglary charge. It was David's second appearance in the court in two days. He was released first with a severe reprimand | | ({L! pum t 4 2 : | » oa tionalist parties campaigning for Dies In London postponement of elections March LONDON (Reuters)--Princess|§& 5-9 to pick deputies for the Somalia Legislative Assembly. Arthur of Connaught, 67-year-old cousin of the Queen and 17th in Police Search line to the throne, died today of For Avro pneumonia. | y e was a trained nurse and| Worker's Son [mes Se Working hut spent 15 years working on hosp tals as Nurse Marjorie. She TORONTO (CP) -- Police con- opened a nursing home in 1940 tinued their search today for/and ran it as matron until her | three-year - old Ricky Culford, retirement in 1949. missing from his Toronto Island| In 1913 she married Prince Ar home since late Wednesday after-|thur of Connaught, a nephew of noon. her royal grandgather, King Ed- City workers today chopped ward VII. He died in 1988. Their |} through mounds of ice on Ward'sonly son was killed In action in Island for the boy, son of an Avro 1943. aircraft company worker. | The princess inherited the Every available policeman dukedom of Fife from her father {combed the snow-covered island in 1912 and as the Duchess of Fife| and vacant buildings, across the was the only British duchess in| harbor from the city. her own right. The title now |} Harbor police began dragging passes to her nephew, Lord Car- } operations, negie, 29 Cl 3 ne " | y | DOWNCAST CAMPANELLAS COURT | after being found guilty as a | juvenile delinquent for a night | street fight. He was arrested shortly afterward on a charge of robbing a drugstore. | --AP Wirephoto | LATE NEWS FLASHES | Father Of Two Hangs Himself HAMILTON (CP)--Wilfred Michael Jess, 40, father of two children, hanged himself with his own socks in Central police station cells early today, police said. Police said the man, charged with drinking while on the interdicted list, was found hanging from the bars of his cell. General Electric Gets Giant Contract TORONTO (CP)--The Canadian General Electric Com- pany has been awarded a $9,000,000 United States Air Force defence contract, it was announced today. The contract is for height-finding radar equipment for the Pine Tree radar line in northern Canada. UAW Men Picket Super Motors Ltd. LRN KITCHENER (CP)--Automobile workers from St. Tho- mas today picketed the plant of Super Motor and Electric Limited here. Member of Local 1235, United Automobile Workers (CLC), are protesting that the company is doing assembly work for Allis-Chalmers, Limited. The local went | on strike Feb, 4 against Allis-Chalmers after contract nego- tations broke down. " CAN'T BUDGE THIS MOOSE Quebec Game and Fisheries | roped by a posse after the | Genevieve. The moose was Department workers strive un- | animal was found sleeping in a | finally put to sleep with an in- successfully with a tractor to | construction company yard in jection and bundled off to the Granby, Que. Zoo. move a half-ton bull moose | the Montreal suburb of ste. | --CP Wirephoty &