The Oshawa Times, 12 Mar 1959, p. 1

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re THE TIMES TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising RA 3-3492 All other calls RA 3-3474 he Oshavn Times WEATHER REPORT Cloudy with a few clear inter vals tonight and Friday, little temperature change, Price Not Over . VOL. 88 -- NO. 60 7 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA-WHITBY, THURSDAY, MARCH 12, 1959 Authorized As Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa TWENTY-SIX PAGES SEAWAY TOLL DETAILS GIVEN TO PARLIAMENT Report Denied By Mrs. Whyte TORONTO (CP) -- Mrs, Bertha "Mom" Whyte said in hospital Wednesday night she would not register her Bowmanville Chil-| dren's Home under Ontario's Children's Home Act. | Welfare Minister Cecile said in the legislature earlier this week that he had been iniormed Mrs. | Whyte would comply with the act. ! The new bill, approved in prin. cipal by the legislature Tuesday, | stipulates that children lodged in unregistered homes would be con-| sidered neglected. Anyone lodg-| ling a child in an unregistered {home would be liable to a $200 fine. Mrs. Whyte underwent surgery | in hospital here two days ago. She said her home is a mission, | not a boarding home. She has| |said that to comply with the act| would mean turning away chil-| 0 : ; dren because of the max- § sons id imum accommodatior. require-| MA ILLE ments under the act. | tied young. She tried to make a | Hawaii Closer parachute jump this year, but | | pilots told her the weather | | was too cold. | WASHINGTON (AP) The| House of Representatives was| geared today to take final con- gressional action to make Hawaii the 50th state. The Senate voted 76 to 15 Wed. TT T-- ' STARTED IN BOW "It's spring and I've always | main street of Springfield, Vt., wanted to be a soldier," said | with a borrowed gun and hel- Mrs. Eugenia Frazier as she | met. Mrs. Frazier, born March celebrated her 93rd birthday | 10, 1866, in Bowmanville, Ont., Tuesday by parading down the | says fun helps to keep her Nfld. Tension Higher --AP Wirephotc | | Registration | Miraculously, no one was seriously injured when this car was involved in a collision with a tractor-trailer on slippery 401 highway, west of Oshawa this morning. Mrs. Alice Eaton, 101 Wood St., driver of the de- molished car, was admitted to ' DRIVER'S MIRACULOUS ESCAPE - to the tractor-trailer. The car Constable Ernest Collinson, Whitby OPP, investigated. In the picture, the Oshawa General Hospital with cuts. Her condition is described as satisfactory. Truck driver Carmen Placido, 104 Heslop Rd., Milton, was east-bound. police said, when Mrs. Eaton's west-bound car spun out of con- trol, There was $1000 damage was a total loss. man under the car is mechanic. --Oshawa Times Photo OTTAWA (CP)--Shipping tolls for the St. Lawrence Seaway to take effect April 1 were an- A d in the C today Transport Minister Hees. Designed to amortize the $451,- 000,000 Canada-United States in- |vestment in the navigation facil- |ities over 50 years, they are un- |changed from those recom- {mended to the two governments last year and reported unoffici- ally earlier this week. Mr. Hees also announced that {a Canada-U.S. agreement on the [tolls, contracted in an exchange {of notes dated March 10, includes Ia provision for a joint advisory {board of four members to hear complaints and make recommen- dations on them to the Canadian land U.S. seaway agencies. #| The agreement provides, too, for a review of the charges in five years following a report on |their operation by Canada's St. {Lawrence Seaway Authority and {the U.S. St. Lawrence Seaway Development Corporation. *|ON INVESTMENTS The division of tolls between the two countries will be on the basis the navigation seasoa. Lakes Ontario and Erie. nesday night in favor of stateh she is ding an esti $29, of their respective investments in the seaway, due to begin -opera- tions this spring with the start of Canada will collect all charges a |on vessels going through the all- Canadian Welland Canal between on which Board To Hear Any Complaints The respective investments in this portion are $300,000,000 and $122,000,000, as estimated now. Canada's share of the tolls is payable in Canadian funds, and the U.S. share in American funds. Canada will have the responsi- bility of collecting all tolls, through the seaway authority at Cornwall, but the U.S. agency will participate in some of the financial operations and share in the cost. As originally recommended by a joint tolls committee of the two countries, the domestic package goods traffic--both in Canada and the U.S.--will receive a financial break over international carriers. Point-to-point traffic within Canada and within the U.S. in package commodities will be billed the same as bulk cargo, which will carry rates about half that of normal package trade. Mr. Hees told the House the rates of tolls are unchanged from the originally - proposed ones, though some "changes and clari- fications" have been made in the definitions of bulk and general cargoes. He did not specify these. Here are the tolls: For the entire seaway between Montreal and Lake. Erie: six cents per registered ton of each vessel plus 42 cents per ton on bulk cargo and 95 cents per ton on general cargo. Between Montreal and Lake Ontario: Four cents per regis- "tered ton plus 40 cents bulk and for the mid-Pacific islands. 000,000 for the seaway. The Well-\9 cents general. For partial tran- House approval of a conforming measure would send the bill di- THIRD STRAIGHT rectly to Presid isenh and tolls will be based on this cost--mot on Canada's original in- Fresh Demand vestment in this largest of the ca- sit of this seven-block stretch ,15 per cent of the complete toll for each lock. . Injured Officer Dies America (CLC) District 2, said of | prevent disorder special police the constable's death: "I can't be | jn to keep the dle SOrTOW.|peace. He not elaborate, Mr, Curtis has said "many hundreds' of men in the area volunteered to serve in a vigilante police force. very, SOrTY. It was the first death resulting from the violencesmarked strike la the duglo-Newronndiail Development Company by 1, i iousness. Details of negotiations between tured skull #44 brain injuries in IVA doggers. The strike began the new union, the Brotherhood the battle Tuesday night. | Nine loggers arrested after the|of Newfoundland Woods Workers Curtis said it was a matter of | pane. 108K sturbance were (nd) and Anglo-Newfoundland deciding how manv murder| op arged by RCMP Wednesday] ave not been disc osed. | charges will be laid. Nine 1088ers)| jth unlawful assembly. They| The IWA, which had its two | were arrested after the battle.| 0 oh anded in jail until Fri-|Newfoundland locals decertified| They have been remanded to jail|;, |by an act of the legislature two| without bail until Friday. ? Premier Smallwood told the(weeks ago, asked for a five-cent| About 70 police and 300 loggers Jegislature Wednesday "we pray|increase over two years in the| were involved in the battle atithat a charge of murder will not|basic hourly wage of $1.05 and| Badger, 20 miles west of here. have to be laid" as a result of (the work 'week shortened to 54 Attorney - General Leslie Curtis the incident. He said RCMP hours from 60. said the constable was "hit be-lseized a picket who allegedly . tween the eyes with a piece of struck Const. Moss and a piece . pulpwood." {of pulptvood used in the attack. N CNR L The tall, 195-pound officer was, There were fears of new vio ew ine sent here early last week from lence as the signing of a working . He suffered a frac- CAROLINA BEACH, N. C. (AP) --. Police in this resort town figured the 67-year-old va- cationer was overdoing it in making himself at home. They found him cooking his meals in a telephone booth. booth on OTTAWA (CP)--The Ci 29 per cent of collctions. anada and the U.S.|tial transit of the canal, half the will receive, respectively, 71 and|full charge regardless of how may locks § used. Sweden 5-0 Ei iess mands for a federal-provincial tax conference, using words of PRAGUE (CP) -- Canada took; Czechoslovakia and the United/Bovernment members to bolster at least temporary possession of|States, tied for second place in/their arguments. first place in the world hockey|the standings with four points Liberal and CCF members go wii Inside the littl d were a small oil stove, a fry- ing pan, cheese, some eggs and cooking oil. "We found out," said city manager William Gary, "that he couldn't cook inside the room he had taken in a room- ing house, so he went to the beach but the wind blew into his food out there and he | moved into the booth," Officers made the vacationer sweep out the booth, then found him a room with cooking priv- ileges. than 100 RCMP and | | St. John's with about 25 other agreement between an independ. | R Ths h H members of the constabulary tolent loggers' union and Anglo- uns foug | More | reinforce a 100-man RCMP de- Newfoundland appeared immi- . . Pickering Twp. tachment. The Newfoundland nent. constabulary, which polices St.! TORONTO (CP)--CNR Presi- dent Donald Gordon Wednesday night announced an $80,000,000 plan to shift the Toronto main operations of the railway to a 33- mile line arching over the city's! northern suburbs. Mr. Gordon said the new facili- Touchy Decision For Government OTTAWA (CP) -- The New-However, since then there have Joundland labor Siustion oh [been indications it may be more|tion of railwa rg Ln delicate decisions |iNclined to disallow the legisla-| Toronto lakefront area and clear i. : . {the way for industrial, commer-| taking office almost two/"0n. ; » Mai d since, jane | With violence again marking cial and residential expansion. Fear the core of the problem is the labor dispute this week, dis! by the Newfoundland legislature the faster way to settle the situ./the Metropolitan Toronto plan-|was deposed a week ago by the|the Indian affairs branch. standings today by each, meet in tonight's game. Al-| Wednesday dug into old records defeating Sweden 540, though two teams are tied,|0f Commons debates and election The title defenders, undefeated |the Czechs have played one Go speeches as they opened loco [now in six tournament games|] than the U.S. in|0OR a government proposal to con- : {and with the big win over Russia oid iy st po Ph tinue for another year the exist. TORONTO (CP) -- Police ranjthe man had nothing to do with {under their belts, thus took an-|tie again with Canada. (ing tax-sharing arrangement with down more than 200 tips Wednes- the Lupton case. |other toward the 1959) The scoring was spread among|the provinces. |day in their search for a blue and] Rewards totalling $6,500 have siride crown ty are the prohibitive|five players with Wayne Brown, The government wants to stand|grey car believed to have been favorites to win, |Goose Gosselin, Bart Bradley, (Pat on the Shauge it made inused by the Slayer of 12-year-old The Canadians, showing some|lke Hildebrand and Lou Smrke|J/anMuary last year, increasing to|Patricia Lupton. effects of their Porson, J 3.1|getting the goals. {13 per cent from 10 the prov-| Calls pourned in after Police Police Tracking = Strangler's Car been offered for information lead- ing to the killer's arrest. Early today police were still checking the 999 cars which bear li in the 149 series. About win over Russia Wednesday, took| Playing-coach Hildebrand put; neces share of federal personal Chief Sane Mackey the lead early in the first period Marv. Edwards, a native of North| Tigie fax idick Gerib at Se car, with a licence num- Ia aude] tu goals ih Sook' Bay, Out. Win the Sele ielead], Widow Beuifieisnk Lbsrellier Scguiing wih He Fewes he second and third periods. [of regular Gordie Bell. Bel lhad| ) , g nS 13) 5 The win gave Canada a total of| the toughest workout he has hagiclection SPesthes Prime Minister ping centre pind is Sp Where six points In the final round-robin |in the tournament against Russia ren alker ol inance Minis-|a nan vas 0 Pick Latricia up standings' | Wednesday, kicking out 28 shots {fer eming both promised to callland take her to a baby-sitting INDIAN REVOLT Trouble For Six Nations ties, to be completed in four| OTTAWA (CP) -- The federal reservation an years, would relieve the conges-|g0vernment plans to act quickly tion, y operations in the/to maintain peace and order on/ the Six. Nations Indian reserva-'action will be taken was sent tolopen defiance Wednesday night [tion near Brantford. : The "CNR president revealeq. The reservation has been torn Citizenship Minister Fairclough, Minister Fairclough. | legislation unanimously approved allowance .might be considered the plan to representatives after|by strife since its elected council responsible for administration of | March 6, which decertified two ation and avert possible future ning board had unanimously ap-|confederacy's rebellious heredit- proved them. ary chiefs who proclaimed the|lowed within hours the arrest The 1.150,000-member CLC has| asked the federal Progressive Conservative cabinet to disallow the legislation of the Liberal prov-| | A HAS THREE AVENUES | The cabinet has the CLC re u Quest under consideration. Three courses are open to it: SUDBURY (CP : islati hy ) -- A 12-man|last year against 1. Let the legislation stand. group pledged to seek affiliation |tional Nickel locals of the International Wood-|strife. fncial government of Premier Smallwood -- an action fraught 2. Disallow the legislation. \with the Canadian Labor Con-|ada. using an absolute power over any|gress has won control of Local workers of America (CLC). -- with political implications. ovincial bill that is granted the 598 of the International Union of WIVES PROTESTED North America 'Act, Canada's con-| (Ind), stitution. { Aslate headed b Gi ; As 3 y Don Gillis, 8. Submit the legislation to the reeve of nearby Garson-Neelon Bupreme Court of Canada for a Township, scored a virtual clean ruling on its validity. sweep in Tuesday's voting, re-|,0 2 Vi A decision is likely to be sults of which were announced | continue the walkout. reached soon, possibly before the by the union Wednesday. Week is out: The 14,000-member Sudbu a J § ry lo- A few days ago. the cabinet|ca] is the biggest Canadian unit Was reported leaning toward ain Mine-Mill, which was expelled reference to the Supreme Court.|fpom the old Canadian Congress {of Labor 10 years ago for Com-| CITY EMERGENCY {munist domination. The Congress PHONE NUMBERS {of Industrial Organizations in the POLICE RA 5-1133 | | United States took similar action {a year later. 2 [saw nearly 9,000 ballots cast, FIRE- DEPT. RA 5-6574 |were president Mike Solski and HOSPITAL RA 3.2211 10 of his 11 executive strike a committee of strikers'| wives defied a union protest and|2 staged a public rally at which|® received threatening telephone, jcalls telling them to call off the, threats. over Mr. Solski, ies in the elections. Nels Thibault, national presi-| members dent of Mine-Mill, said there were HG A ge gt po ge Tg 5 a. [the groups and felt the new ex-| |ecutive would continue with ral cabinet by the British Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers During the late stages of that| militant, fighting union. lection drive about three weeks| resolutions were passed calling|280 supported by union members| for a vote of strikers on whether | Who have opposed Mr. Solski's| group Several of the wives said they| Others who were dissatisfied with */the last strike. | Group Local the Interna-lupset campaign. He said there Company of Can- was no major division between] | "yl | Observers here said Mr. Gillis nd his supporters began their | for several years and| ederal - provincial conference job. ¥ ' hat Bin reach an amicable Det detives Stig they believe the ax-sharing agreement satisfac-|car, driven by a dark-haired man Jump In Lake ! - - Indian Chiefs Tell Mini ell Minister Brewing half had been checked and ruled out. They said one of the best de- scriptions of the wanted car came from Russell Beatty, a groce- teria meat manager in the shop- ping centre where Patricia was to meet the strange caller. De- scriptions by Beatty and others indicate the car was a 1954 Pon tiac with a blue body and grey top. The man who called Patricia's home to ask for a baby-sitter is believed to have obtained her telephone number from a notice were questioning a man who was being held on an indecent assault tory to both sides. in his early 30s, took Patricia to BRANTFORD (CP)--A threat : * di charge. Investigators said later| the lonely road in suburban Scar- THOUGHT FOR TODAY of federal government action Wednesday night it was re- ported that Scarborough police countrymen checked up on his prophecies which she and three other girls posted on a supermarket bulletin board three weeks ago. : borough where she was found strangled less than an hour after In many a case a prophet is without honor in his own independent na-'faced the rebellious hereditary| chiefs of the Six Nations Indian' she left home. country because his fellow A strongly-worded warning that| confederacy today after their F the chiefs Wednesday night by|of a warning from Citizenship|: One Indian spokesman said Mrs. Fairclough could "go jump) in the lake." earlier in the day of one of the| The chiefs, meeting in the coun- branch's Indian employees on the|cil house which they seized in al: & Mrs. Fairclough's action fol- reservation, school teach er|quiet uprising last week, read a je Gores Hjgaver: on a charge of|tclegram from Mrs. Fairclough! which threatened federal action Beaver, she said at a press!"to restore and maintain peace conference, was illegally arrested|and order" unless the chiefs stop- and Yetained by the chiefs' "po-/ped "molesting citizens." | lice force," charged with "'trea-| rhe minister's telegram fol-! son," tried and finally freed with|jowed reports of a "treason trial" a warning. The whole procedure af the reserve Wednesday at took three or four hours. which George Beaver, an Indian|: She said Beaver's detention teacher hired by the federal gov-| was the result of a letter helernment, was reprimanded for|: wrote to the editor of the Brant-|criticizing the chiefs in a letter: ford Expositor, in which he criti-| published by the Brantford Ex- cized the hereditary chiefs. positor. LATE NEWS FLASHES The group campaigned under [Fally. Lo Bi said the wniodfthe wile or umitice pres informed by a reliable source that a new contract will be signed [sented a 10-point program headed | Mr. Gillis, who will take over|by the CLC proposal. Other pro- the president's post April 1, won|Posals call for greater unity in an overwhelming personal victory|union ranks; economy in the lo-| 5,629 votes to/cal's finances; enlisting of unor- |3,830, Other members of the new|ganized workers and the elimina- Defeated in the voting, which|group also scored decisive victor-jtion of "petty politics" from {union affairs. "We need the support and coun- 3 € sel of the CLC," Mr. Gillis told Iwho organized an 87-day strike|only "trivial local matters" in the!union members. ; a Logger Contract Reported GRAND FALLS, Nfld. (CP)--The Canadian Press has been later today between the strikebound Anglo-Newfoundland Development Company and the newly-formed Newfoundland Brotherhood of Woodsworkers (Ind.). ' " 3 -- ht "4 - ; :. CAR TRANSPORT A car transport struck the | soft shoulder at 11.45 pm. | a side of a house just west of | Wednesday. The driver was a Cobourg on Highway 2 when it | reported to be Barry Hemma- left the road after hitting a Macmillan In Germany BONN (AP)--British Prime Minister Macmillan flew into Bonn today to see West German Chancellor Adenauer and said the West must adopt an elastic position in trying to meet the Soviet challenge to Berlin, "We all stand together, but in the methods of defence we must remain elastic," Mac- millan told reporters at the airport, HITS HOUSE C occupied house way of Kingston, who resides [Law Nelson of Cobourg. t 306 Pacific avenue, Osh. wa. He was unhurt. The une is owned by ¥

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