THE TIMES TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising RA 38-3492 All other calls ...... RA 3.3474 he Oshawa Times WEATHER REPORT Mostly overcast with occasional showers developing late tonight and Thursday, VOL. 88 -- NO. 71 Price Not Over 7 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA-WHITBY, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 1959 Authorized As Second Class Mall Post Office THIRTY-TWO PAGES Two Bail Out At Uxbridge UXBRIDGE. (Staff) Two test pilots bailed out from a top- secret DeHaviland aircraft near Uxbridge yesterday, seconds be- fore the twin engine plane crash- ed in a woods. One pilot escaped injury and the other suffered a back injury, which is expected to keep him in hospital for two days. In the Cottage Hospital, in Ux- bridge, is Walter Gadsos, a test pilot for the Department of Trans- port. Uninjured was George Neal, a test pilot for DeHaviland. The two pilots were not avail able for interviews, nor was any- one permitted to Inspect or take photographs of the wrecked plane, which smashed into a woodlot on the farm of Percy Pearce, on the 7th concession of Scott Twp., eight miles north of Uxbridge. Neal landed on the farm of Ir- vin Leask, two miles south of the crash scene. He told Leask that he and Gadsos had been test- ing the new aircraft, a DAC 4 Cariboo, bearing U.S. Army In- signia, and were putting it into a dive. The plane dived from about 8,000 feet, he told the Leasks, and when the test pilots attempt. ed to pull it out of the dive, the stick came loose, Leask said that Neal stayed for dinner and later [éft Yor Uxbridge to visit his companion. He said that Neal suffered a cut finger] which occurred when the stick] came loose from fits position. Gadsos landed in a field on the farm of Melville Kennedy, the Leask farm. Kennedy sald that he was first aware of the crash when the pilot walked up to the house telling of his landing and complaining 'of an injured back. Kennedy and his son went out to the field to bring Gadsos' opened one of the hatches as one was permitted to inspect the|of recession. the men considered bailing out./wreck. parachute in. . of the bach and hung on by his the plane's controls tempt to let it crash on Lake Simcoe, then he bailed out, too. PERCY PEARCE | Kennedy said that he took Gad sos to the Cottage Hospital in Ux- at bridge and on the way, had been|of the woods, Sandford, about eight miles from told that the pilot had suffered a| sheared eight feet from the top of is similar injury a few years ago He said that he was told that after the two pilots discovered their aircraft would not come out of the spin and that the stick wa of no more use to them, Gadsos PORT HOPE Queen eg hy 'PORT HOPE -- Queen Fliza- Phil Anglican Church at' 11 a.m., Sun- ronto.. He served for day, July 26, it was announced vears in the Maritimes. Tuesday in Port Hope. The announcement was made by the rector of St. Mark's, Rev. Gerald Moffatt, to end much local speculation. Mr. Moffatt said he had been notified about the plans of the royal couple by Lionel Massey, secretary to the governor - gen-| eral, in a special message from Rideau Hall, Ottawa. The royal couple will worship with regular parishioners rather than with a special retinue of guests. Sightseers are expected course of a brief report to the Street West at Roncesvalles Av- to find difficulty fitting into the House of Commons on his return enue near the CNR's Sunnyside strength and railway station small church. The royal couple is scheduled, to stay the weekend as guests of the Governor-General at the Mas- sey home, Batterwood, north of the Allies have agreed definitely above street level in 104 Port Hope at Canton. St. Mark's church was built in 1882 on land donated by the Smith family, one of the earliest fam- ilies to settle in what is now Port Hope. 1t is considered one of the old- est churches in central Ontario, and has been in cortinuous use except for about a decade from 1860-1870 when St. John's Angli- can church was built west of the Ganaraska. Previously St. Mark's had been known as St. John the Evange- list church, but whes re-opened in 1870 it adopted the present name, The rector, Mr. called to Port Hope in August, 1958, and is married with six children. He replaced Canon C H. Boulden, now retuned and liv- 4ng in Port Hope where he is padre of the Port Hope Branch 30, Canadian Legion, BESL. Mcffatt, was Royal Crew Lose At Tiddlywinks United Arab Republic was one of LONDON (Reuters) Prince Philip's champions went down to an ignominous defeat at tiddly winks here Tuesday night despite a last-minute appeal from their royal patron to play dirty in the best tradition of the game. Before their match with the unbeaten Cambridge University team, the eight-man Empress Club received a telegram from Philip, now touring the South Seas in the royal yacht Britan-t dlied nia. "1 expect the contest carried through in the thoroughly unsporting manner which befits all great tiddlywinks j matches. CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5.6574 HOSPITAL RA 3.2211 2 to be t or I Get usual ¢ noun To See Mr, Moffatt was ordained in; stu of several | EA Mac Indicates Summit Talks LONDON (AP)--Prime Minis ter Macmillan indicated today an East-West summit meeting will be held this year regardless of, the outcome of preliminary talks among foreign ministers Macmillan's statement in the from his talks in Ottawa Washington Opposition Labor party leader Hugh Gaitskell asked whether to meet Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev at a summit meeting "whatever might be the outcome of the (preliminary) foreign min isters conference." Macmillan replied: "I ought not to say anything in détail before the presentation of the joint note to the Soviet gov- ernment which I. hope will be Thursday afternoon. As regards the likelihood of a summit meet- following Iraq's withdrawal from! the the anti-Communist alliance. ing, without {terms of that note, I that everybody seems that there will be one." prejudicing would say to think Mutual praise 'is the cur- rency we exchange and de- |; posit in the bank of vanity. It is invariably highly inflated currency. I S "1 have chosen the Empress Club as my champions on this In Toronto | TORONTO (CP)--A 123-store Sct onl declining at the year- end, ings in the world, may be bu | n Toronto, it) x today. hen 030000068 LE strue- of Toronto Transit Commission |'0%000.000 property in the city's west end | months. The rise In consumer /by Warner Holdings Limited C | TTC a written offer of $50,000 for|2ny quarter since early 1956. a 99-year lease on the property. | door parking, office space, res. | June-September period, climbed taurants, banquet rooms, and an bY eight per cent in the last three hotel facilities pronerty of the alliance Tuesday in a move both THOUGHT FOR TODAY President Nasser and the Soviet from the Iragi capital, where the Iran, Pakistan, Turkey and Brit- ain. ments and -- which supports the alliance but is Kassem activities since he overthrew the pro-Western monarchy last July | The alliance's headquarters now are in Ankara + Gadsos, he sald, was sucked out could-reach the rip- cord, then he left the plane. Leask said that Neal told him that after Gadsos had left, he set in an at. I The plane crashed eight miles C ) d short of Lake Simcoe. [ dna d S Percy Pearce, on whose farm| the plane crashed, said that he | . was in the house when it went Production over, pilotless, as it turned out.| He said that he heard a sound | which led him to think that snow| hd a had fallen from the roof of his $32 Billion barn, Later he learned that it| was the dying aircraft, shearing] . ' off treetops and finally coming to] OTTAWA (CP)--Canada's econ- rest in thick woods. {omy turned out to be a little| He said that police at first con-|Stronger in 1958 than the govern: sidered barring his entire farm ment anticipated, with strong up- | to the public. ward trends showing in the last However, when the public and|three months of the year. the press arrived, it was to find a| The gross national product-- wide area around the plane|value of all goods and services blocked by members of the On-|produced -- ciimabed to $32,200, tario Provincial Police, the Geor-(000,000 from $31,400,000,000 in gina Twp. Police and later se- 1957, a gain of $800,000,000, in- curity police from De Haviland. stead of the $600,000,000 increase In the field next to the woods, [forecast by Finance Minister| where the crashed plane rested, a Fleming in hie budget last June.| ski plane landed with DeHaviland| The bureau of statistics, in| officials. measuring the growth, said today| § Police refused to let any unau-|there was a small rise in volume thorised persons near the aircraft of less than one per cent. The re- and prohibited any picture tak- mainder was attributed to higher ing. prices Before crashing in the centre| Compared with previous years, | the plane had the over-all rise of 2.5 per cent small, coniiasting with a a long pine tree in an adjoining growth of nine per cent in vol field and had cut a wide swath yme in 1955 and seven per cent through the woods leading to the/in 1956 and a post-war annual crash spot. There were no signs average of four per cent. EF of fire. But there were definite signs Police declined to state why no/that the country was coming out| In the last three| {months of the year, the economy | 8 == |responded to a sharp rise in con- sumer spending, a strong ad- Monster Hotel vance in exports of goods and services and a halt in the drain . {of business inventories -- the| May Be Built | stockpiling of goods on shelves. | The year thus ended on a stronger note, the bureau sald, though business outlays for new| & factories, offices and other con-| § and new equipment] % apartment « hotel which be among thie tallest bulld-|*'Cociaren wi "me aver-all t| $32,200,000,000 for the year, the n, {gross national product was ho FOREIGN MINISTER Selwyn Lloyd of Great Britain picks up Prime Minister Harold Macmil- lan's hat as the latter chats spending, including the purchase| With Acting Secretary of State A new automobiles, was the Christian Herter before leaving highest in October-December for| Tke To Spell Out TTC streetcar barns and a turn- sharp in spite of the adverse ef- View On Talks ng loop now are located on the|fect of industrial disputes during| WASHINGTON (AP) -- Presi-|next month to co t J ; the quarter." The rate of climb in gent Eisenhower may spell oo [est --. will plete, the. oa No height is mentioned in the labor earnings also was a little hic summit conference views posals they will present in the proposal. The site is on Queen higher in those three months. more fully today at his first press Geneva conference. § | While the economy showed new conference since meeting with| Diplomats sald there still are! in October-December, prime Minister Macmillan of significant differences among Canadian factories didn't get the Britain. Western leaders about the condi-| The tallest building in the world|full benefit of the rising pur-| Advance expectation was that|tions for going into a summit now is New York's Empire State chases. About one-half the rise in he might emphasize again his de- meeting. Building which towers 1,472 feet|/spending in that period was met sire for progress toward settle-| Essentially Macmillan still con- 3. " ining at an annual rate of $32 ure would be built on 5% acrse in 'the last three United States and British of- ficials, on hand to see him off algary firm. The firm Tuesday made the Corporation profits, which had The building would provide in.|Shown a small decline in the indoor swimming pool, along with months of the year, the rise ap- pearing 'to have been fairly for London. Macmillan dropped | after his talks with President the hat at National Airport, | Eisenhower. British Ambassa- Washington, while talking with | dor Sir Harold Caccla is in right background. --AP Wirephoto FROST HINTS AT PLAN ALTERNATE FOR ARROW Tight Secrecy Around Details TORONTO (CP) -- Premier ited; Vice-President H. M. Grit Frost hinted today an alternative|fith of the Steel Company of 'Can. program is being found for the ada; Chairman Ira G. Needles of A. V. Roe plant closed last month |B. F. Goodrich Canada Limited; by Ottawa's cancellation of the Vice-Chairman W. A, Osbourne of Arrow jet interceptor production. {Babcock and Wilcox and Goldie« He told the legislature: McCulloch Limited; President A, "All I can say at the present|A. Thornbourgh of Massey Fer, time is that in the estimation of guson Limited; and President this government there are some|Thomas Edmonson of Ferrantie very interesting possibilities. Packard. "The negotiations that are pro-| Premier Frost sald "there has ceeding, however, are delicate|not been any marked hardship" and involved. Anything that{so far on the 14,000 employees might be said here might have a|left jobless by the shutdown, detrimental effect rather than a|owing to separation pay, unems beneficial one." Plovient insurance and new em- The premier said any alterna- ployment. , tive program must "come by way| "Neither has there been any of licence or other arrangements marked effect to date on the mu- with either United States or |nicipalities, and this effect can- United Kingdom interests or|not be accurately assessed for both" because one of the weak | several months to come." Bosses " the Aw Jie. FEDERAL GOVERNMENT on was tha seemed to of interest only to Canada. But he emphasisbd the federal "Planes, missiles or other air- governme us Sr Some Fe sponsibility for any unfavorable borne equipment should . not bel ttects that might come: left out of consideration. "I have on other occasions TALKS WITH LEADERS made statements as to the respon. Mr, Frost said his discussions sibility of industries which have on the problem have included|brought together very large nume meetings with leaders of the In-|bers of workmen. ternational Association of Machin-| "I am bound to say that this ists and spokesmen for the Cana-|applies to both Avro and the dian Manufacturing Association,|Canadian government, and 3 plus a battery of the province's|there are unfavorable effects. ds top far as this province and munice ipalities are concerned, I that there is a very definite re. ian Traction; Ian F. McRae, sponsibility which cannot be ansy board chairman of Canadian Gen-|wered merely by a change of pols eral Electric; President W, H.licy that provides nothing in its Evans of Honeywell Controls Lim- place. ; | 's Itinerar Slightly Changed | OTTAWA (CP)--Several com- Royal Tour Commission that they munities are to be added to the be added to an outline itinerary men, He listed J. Grant Glassoc, ex- ecutive vice-president of Brazil- » HONESTY EVEN ON PAY TOILET LOUSVILLE, Ky. (AP)-- How - honest - can - you - be department: The Kentucky Fair and Ex- position Centre has received an unsigned postcard with a dime taped to it saying: "This 10 cents is for use of pay tollet during Shrine Cir- cus when I had no change." itinerary for this summer's royal announced Jan. 20. It had been Tour of Canada, it was learned /found possible to add some in today. There also will be one or|Saskatchewan. two deletions. It now appears that the royal Royal Tour organizers are ex-|party will visit Dawson City, Yu- pected to announce the changes kon, which was listed only as a in a revised tentative itinerary | "possible" stop originally. If the next week. [trip to Dawson is made, there Queen Elizabeth and Prince aso will be a stop at Mayo {Philip are visiting Canada pri-/Landing, between Dawson and [uapiy to Jen the St Lawrence Whitehorse. {Seaway at Montreal an orn-| {wall June 26 and 27, but will stop One major change possible is in {at as many as 85 other centres the Queen's plans for return to |from coast to coast between their|the United Kingdom. The early {arrival June 18 at St. John's and|itinerary called for a return by their departure Aug. 1 from Hali-|air from Halifax. It now is un- fax. {derstood she may travel all the A tour spok an sald many way aboard the royal yacht Brit. storeys. by a sharp rise in imports. ment of the Berlin crisis in ad-|siders a summit conference in-| (with Russia on the time and eign ministers fail to make pro- [place of a summit meeting. |gress toward a German solution. ag a ac AGREE ON NOTES |" Eisenhower believes that the| Britain, the United States, work of the foreign ministers| France and West Germany have/must justify a summit confer- LONDON (AP) -- The Baghdad|disdain. The semi official Middle agreed on the wording of differ-|ence. | ent but similar notes to Moscow | Basie differences apparently |concerning a May meeting of for-|continue also on other points. Pact is looking for a new name East news agency, repeating the chev of a later session of govern-|forces facing each other in Cen- old, charge aay the pect sought ment chiefs. The notes will be|tral Europe. Diplomatic inform- to destroy Arab nationalism, said delivered as soon as they are|ants said Eisenhow i Premier Abdel Karim Kassem i | Jouower promised to formally pulled his country out seemingly designed to please the pan-Arab followers of loc The alliance took its name pact was signed in 1955 by Iraq, But the other four govern- the United States-- not a member--already had writ en off Iraq as a military ally. had boycotted all pact the Turkish cap- tal The first reaction from the occasion because I believe they are capable of an ever dirtier game than the Goons (whol failed to win for the prince last year), LATE NEWS FLASHES "They had better win this time shall see to it that their winking licence withdrawn in there and fight." But despite the royal the Empress Club was out winked to appeal tid Cam for 1 humiliatin bridge men core of 88% 5 About 200 tiddlywink enth asts (all men) watched the hy 18~ } teams flipping small disks into| a cup during a match that lasted| two hours. The proceeds go tol the National Playing Fields As-| sociation, one of Ph charities p's favorite The Cambridge ed he prince to play. himself next |year, BMC Announces New Car Model BIRMINGHAM, Eng. (Reuters)--The British Motor Cor- ton today announced a new version of the Morris Ox- its d standardize body styles in its range \ same body pressing and the M.G. Mag- edan of make s the Austin A. : nette, n ive to U.S. Asks Olympic | | Games In Detroit ) DETROIT (AP)---The United itor said he interpreted States Senate Tuesday passed a; inviting the Interna- Olympic Committee stage the 1964 athletic games in Fire Hits Orangeville Factory ORANGEVILLE (CP) Fire swept through the Earl Harrison Motor Company building in this town 40 miles northwest of Toronto early today, causing damage estimated at $15,000. Explosion OAKVIL today in th solic council's resolution in December resolution to indicate council did not intend tional killed or to have a plebiscite unless di rected by the OMB There were other matters, he'ich, Germany, April 22-28. eign ministers at Geneva and an| Macmillan advocated a limita-| this also was the aim of "Kas: cleared with the NATO allies. [study this idea but the United sem's policy 'as well as the pene- Further, it was learned that the (States is decidedly cool to any tration of Communist imperial- British, French, US. and West|such arrangement not tied to ism into Iraq. German foreign ministers plan ajsome procedure for the reunifi- "Arabs who opposed the Bagh. meeting of their own in Paris'cation of Germany. dad Pact ever since its creation EI RE will today resist for the same | reasons Confmunist influence and Al subordination," the U. A. R . mas aps | agency said. | Nasser has accused Kassem of | joining the Communists In a campaign against the U.A.R. and! £ awa us an Arab unity. Kassem, backed by) Sov jet Premier Khrushchev, has| Ald. Christine Thomas today|said, which the Municipal Act| accused Nasser of fomenting the criticized a city application to'stipulated should be subjected to| recent abortive army revolt in the Ontario Municipal Board to|plebiscite. Usually the OMB| northern Iraq ; . dispense with a plebiscite on the agreed to dispense with a plebis- | Diplomats said that Kassem,iquestion of granting the bus fran-/cite on the city's application. | though publicly trying to ignore chise to a private Windsor com-| Mr. MeN : HS wan ilk Nasser's attacks,.may be feeling/pany. lt "i r. McNeely said the city was] the pressur of the UAR. Jead-| Mrs. Thomas said that at mo Tying Pu avoid the confusion] er's pan Arabist movement. time had the question of dispens- hich, SeTeioped in puterbayugh ing with a plebiscit 3 11s local, {ore city 2 I cite: come be procedures, including the holding "It is w rong," she said, 'for of a Plebiscite, before going to the city i try to influence the Jou ful approval municipal hoard by this applica- i tots apt wid Hon before it has been discussed board hos Juuisdiction to Neal with by council, FY i "The public has a right to de- father: he said. | cide this matter by plebiscite." ale Jearing has been set for Mayor Lyman A. Gifford told fl. am loronio. 3 The Times he was satisfied with : Oshawa Traffic Committee the application and had every Chairman Ald. = fig 3 atker onfidence in city: sc E a x Saw no. nee or A Nelly ho is handling it @. concern over the application. Mr McNeely observed city We are not trying to evade a council in December agreed to plebiscite," he added. | grant the franchise to the Wind ee sor group and authorised him to seck necessary OMB approvals. He said the application to dis- pense with a plebiscite was sim- ply the procedure used to bring Rips Through Home the Question before the OMB, LE (CP An explosion ripped through a home ( munity midway between Toronto and Ham- n. It was » known if injured. First reports said the house burst into flames after the blast. | 4 to | mmediately anyone wa --|vance of any firm agreement evitable whether or not the for.|-- nae, 57, mand Detroit.. The IQC meets in Mun-| RCMP April 1, is communities have asked the|annia. KS HE 8 & offer to Russian Premier Khrush-|tion of Communist and Western| | A § ho % SMILING FAMILY OF RCMP BOSS Charles Edward Rivett-Car- vho {es over com- the 3300-member seen with his of ! wife, Mary, daughter, Frances, | resigned when the federal gov- | \ 19, and the family dog, Sally, | in their Ottawa home. The new RCMP chief succeeds Commis- sioner Leonard Nicholson who | ernment declined te meet a Newfoundland request for RCMP reinforcements to hane dle a loggers' strike dispute. irephoto