The Oshawa Times, 21 Jul 1959, p. 1

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THE TIMES TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising RA 3.3492 All other calls cere RA 3.3474 dhe Oshawa Times WEATHER REPORT Very warm and humid with variable cloudiness and likely scattered showers Wednesday, Tee TV, NIT OVP Authorized As Second € Post Office Department, Moll owa EIGHTEEN PAGES VOL, 88--No. 169 10 Cents Per Copy * More Jobs Than Ever In Canada OTTAWA (CP)==A record 6,053, (ers--T731,000 compared with 740, 000 Canadians held jobs at mid- (000, Nonfarm employment June, the bureau of statistics re- jumped to 5,322,000 from 5,139,000 | ported today, as unemployment at mid-June last year fell sharply under the impetus of| The bureau sald 'fairly widespread" recovery employment gains were in con. The bureau said its labor foree struction , logging and domestic {survey found 234,000 persons with: trade, {out Jobs and seeking work in the| | week ended June 20, This marked Diego | Ottawa bank, Thay were stop ln drop gn unemployment of 100, | | | {second quarter of the year was| ; , , "fairly widespread," it sald, and a 8 y ne the (000 from mid-May and of 90,000 3 ) y ed by Sun Dice police at the from a year earlier |atfected most industry groups, In AP Wirephoto | Those without jobs and seeking manufacturing the main strength work made up 3.7 per cent of the|came from durable goods, partic. labor force, compared with 5.2 ularly the manufacture of motor hd Ii E d . 33 [per cent in June, 1950 |vehicles, Mee, household appl. | { Meanwhile, the labor depart (ances, wood products and railway Brief F 1Nng n S | Indians ar ment israel another set of figures rolling stock, lon the labor situation showing (920 927 unfilled job registrations Bosides the 234,000 persons In Ottawa Court [Job Roads OTTAWA (CP) -- Two slight To Seaway electrician, drove to Smith's Falls, on June 18 at National Employ-| Without jobs and seeking work at iment Service offices across Cana. mid-June, another 14,000 were not dapper teen-agers arrived hom by plane Monday night, hand fin CORNWALL (CP)--Mohawk In then started hitch-hiking, They dians of the Six Nations confed | paid an unidentified OTTAWA DETECTIVE L, E, | accompanied from San Ullrich stanas with Ottawa | back to the Canadian capital youths Gerald Leclere, left and | The youths are charged with Richard Boudreau, whom he | the theft of $73,264 from an had obtained from. a clothing store during his lunch hour, He and Leclere, an apprentice be cha a greater they 1 QUEEN HURRIES RETURN TO U.K. the largest | [ Employment recovery in the ' |ada, This was a drop of nearly at work due to temporary lay- 1266,000 from B85,480 on May 14|0ffs about the same number as land was some 205,000 lower than|a year ago--while 58,000 worked Ithe 526,480 unfilled regintrations less than 38 hours in the survey {in mid-June last year, week because of short-time and cuffed to two big policemen | The government says these fig: job changes, The youths will rel formas UNGT I conmestion, Viv) G ke the _oeracy on Cornwall Island today t i ol ' the ¢ motorist $100 to take them across blocked off A0CORS roads to St on ae the ( S. horder in Lawrence Seasvay Jobs on the is Dominion Bank --a theft trunk of his car. They then flew \..q4 in protest over what bank didn't discover until California When wearin and gaudy of Toronto inada-l the that the alter led rald ures, however do not represent Ontario registered 0 ¢the suspects had absolute unemployment since an Richard Boudreau been arrve ted, the boys were right of over Indian prop brimmed cowboy erty shirts bought in| pine officinle said no On arrival here each has heen paid them hy up in suit authority since March total amount was nol clear hey were taken to a police car Varying amonints are owed to va they lous Indians Negotiation are wa (ie Wide and Leclere, both 19 adjoining Eastview, were arrested July 12, while trying to cros Mexico in a taxi from San Die A Calitornia bordes satisfied with identification ers the boys produced searched their luggage and found $71,550 : American police quoted dreau, a teller at the bank two years, as saying he had lef! the bank at closing time Friday with the money in a suit box he from hals money the sea The since sunday a drugstore into was spruced a shirt way 0 | pap sald the, and tie patrol, ne near the plane ramp, where about seven sminutes for to be delivered, Durin took legal official of Indian affairs to settle the dis pute walled are under way ba that pictures Tage time, photographers Hou for from all angles Only a few curious teen-agers met the youths, Their families LE env. feo we Fail Identify Oil Area Control |Youth Killed 'Sought By Rebels On Highway BROWMANVILLE (Stafh Provincial ave secking identify killed riding on CAIRO (Reuters) Fighting celebrations of continued today in the Kirkuk oll area of northern Iraq reaching here indicated Payek el Samoural, a forme the frst anniver ary of the republican revolution led hy Premier Abdel Karim Ka em police youth while High 11.40 pm a reports a motor-scooter way 35 mear Orono at Monday wight Lawremre Sherwin Unconfirmed reports from Le Iraqi diplomat now in Cairo, Wld | panon put the death toll in the reporters that reports reaching week of at 1.000. Other him called the situation In Iraq| estimates, regarded as more reli 'explosive, He added that "the it was 20 to 60. Communists are struggling against the nationalists with KILI the outcome of the fight in doubt Kirkuk Communists were re Other reports said the week: ported to have killed the deputy long violence around Kirkuk was commander of the 2nd Army Di sparked by a revolt among Kur vision dragued his body (dish army units there, Cairo through the streets newspapers called the revolt 'part of a Communist plan 'spread chaos in Iraq BOMB REREL POSITIONS oceupied a police The Egyptian-controlled Mid gation in a Kirkuk suburb and dle East news agency said Irawi aided its armory air force planes had bombed Juba] Jiians. Other Sehuite said niéht quoted what they called the reinforcements into the Kirkuk "'andestine free Iraq radio area aying Iraqi army units The continued violence re With groups of ported 1%: days after the Bagh Anah township dad government claimed the sit uation in Kirkuk had returned to normal after the death of people' in fighting last week The clashes broke out during Proposals By West Rejected GENEVA (AP) The Allies have warned Russ will break off the Big Four ference if the Soviet Union tines to insist East West Germany negotiate re unification as equals as the price for a Berlin truce US. State Secretary Christian Herter gave the Western warnin to Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko during a private "Gumus a so ot ie STEELWORKER SWITCH violence 19. of Ovono able, said the youth out lights front of rider sald the scooter, with ARMY COMMANDER I had been him proceeding and north The wouth taken to Bow manville Memorial Hospita where was pronounced on arrival, The hody. stated he in uw badly hattered condition is at the Morris Funeral Home Howm gnville I'he body of a youth Was ald Communist-led sistance group army control, members popular ostensibly under Reports also 10! the of re he is described as that possibly about as years old, about &' 10" in height had with medium light brown hair Commu Poliec state that they are expect ng someone from Toronko of the today for possi Cairo press sources Monday clashed was nists at Kirkuk west view hoy ident ification LATE NEWS FLASHES Appeal Post Office Edict BRANTFORD (CP)-The Canadian Institute for the Blind is appealing a post office decision to close up a candy bar stall operated by a blind main. The office has notified Ray Rutherford he cannot continue operating the stall in the lobby of the Hrantford post office many Ottawa Youths Remanded! OTTAWA (OP) Rnchard Boudreau and Gerald both 19, 'were charged today with theft of $73.20 Ottawa bank and were remanded a week for plea Leclere, from an We they con Tass Breaks Red Silence but LONDON ( Rewters broke a 24-hour The Soviet news ageney Tass today Russian silence on the cancellation of Pres mier Nikita Khrushchev's Serndinavian tour next month In the first Russian public announcement Tass today said the trip was being 'postponed perhaps for a vear bes cause of an unfavorable atmosphere for it had been created in Denmark, Sweden and Nor veay that and on Gromyke did not at that say the Soviet demand for a German committe © ton unalterable. But quently he gave a preliminary re jection to a new Western proposg for reunification negotiations the Rig Four and said Russia would not agree to any hat barred direct negotiations be € on m was | al by plan tween the two German he Western pla East and West as othe B Hators, with d taking place German governments only the Rig Fow necessary v§ NEW { eDonald Germ t YORK Pre W \P len sMeelwa k |] nod 1 teel un 0,300 of A strike would shut down W per cont of US alu production } ON Workers he advisers or Mon David on resents abou take aluminum ¢ rect wersonally them with hoping between the hand alks abowt om settlergient minum the panies a considered here might shorten see MANY LAID OFF The strike that began a week ago in the basie steel industry has made idle 300.000 workers and shut down about 80 per cent of the steel output in the US, It K€ MeDonal wage altemp 0 in aluminum 'was an unusua Alu lustry settlements usu th sett hy Nin inereases CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS [ilo POLICF RA 5.1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5.6374 NOSPITAL RA 2.2211 considered step attern © patie \S wought wmemplo 40.000 coal nore thay wi Contracts with twee allied fields trucking and railways Joseph PP. Finegan, head of the federal mediation service, big Alu Alcoa, Rey expire Juty 31 about 58.800 minum nolds and Kaiser The firms employ companies they term delinquen cy in payments for HIGHEST IN AUGUST 'in in Ottawa between seaway authority despite a slight decline from last| launching today at Cape Canav: arriving and the department | year in the number of farm work. eral, to driver of the car which struek| ers meeting--Is known on excel:| suddenly appeared in|view that Soviet Premier' Nikita Is presumed the south and then made a twa to go back ylof Communist China, dead MUST SHOW PROGRESS to 18 provided there is progress at Gen | 3. Eisenhower is convinced the to ble Strive For Aluminum Contract Settlement Fwomeer iseek In steel | | { than seasonal rise in employment, unknown number of registrations are from persons wanting to change jobs, Missile Finally Completes Flight The bureau's survey fgure showing 6,083,000 job-holders at mid-June compared with last year's peak of 6,025,000 reached! CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla, (AP) mid-August when farm em: | An Atlas intercontinental ballistic "| ployment normally 1s heaviest, missile logged its first successful] FIRST DETACHME the previous record was 6,047,000 flight in more than five months! expected hall million persons with jobs in August, 1937. (and a Thor Intermediate-range| "'eampesinos This year's mark was achieved rocket exploded seconds after| rural people are shown on in Havana Monday, are gathering for the ' of an Cuban farmers and They Summit Talk Chances Dimming, Ike Thinks WASHINGTON (AP) Presi ova, That means Soviet recogni. dent Eisenhower believes the(tion of Western rights and re | jor war chances for a summit conference ponsibilities in West Berlin, Soviel miscaleulations or {have become steadily dimmer Inf 2 He thinks the real Russian|feries of developments the last 10 days, He feels Rus ghjective may be to split the touch off a conflict, ala's attitude regarding Berlin western allies, particularly the now Is tougher than ever United States and Britain, | This Eisenhower pessimism Eisehhower believes based on confidential reports . {from the Geneva foreign minis. | But he is fearful coule ern Allies would have to decide shares his reluctance about sum. concerned, it would depend mit talks, Britain, in the presi:|W dent's opinion, 18 much more|the country, eager for such talks because she| 8 The greatest fear of the So lent authority, It embraces his {Khrushchev may not want a summit meeting, It also is kmown on high au thority that Eisenhower still is dead sel against any recognition WON'T BOW TO PRESSURE L 8. J Eisenhower remains adamant [ploskide, Fisdiower itl that he never will go to the sum- | We oN Ale a poy on mit under circumstances that|™® 'Yestern eR would be just about as poor as possible mor BOMBER BOSS 'COACH DRIVER to Soviet * pressure OXFORD, Eng. (Reuters) Sir Winston Churchill had an unexpected reunion here dur. ing the weekend with an old wartime colleague now driv ing a 19th-contury coach and four Churchill showed visible surprise when Sir Arthur Harris, 67 « year « old former commander - in = chief of the Bomber Command, drove up in the coach to take him from Oxford to Blenheim Palace, Harris explained that he had taken the unpald job as coachman, driving tourists to the palace, because "I've als ways been keen on horses. even {with anyone other than Khrush-(is a resurgent |ohev, strong Communist China It can be reported, too, on sim Har authority that 1, Despite his pessimism, Els enhower remains perfectly wills [surrendered ing to attend a summit meeting, /resarding Berlin BLACKIE REPRIEVED | Friend In Need For Sad Spaniel COBOURG (Staff) Blackie, a sad-eyed cocker spaniel, was ajdered to leave town, {dog with a price on his head Mon-| Rut not Blackie. Blackie was # (day, condemned to death through prisoner in the dog pound and the {the frailties of his friends price of his release was four dol. His owners, Mr. and Mrs, Wil-flans" The Bells had less than a {lam Hell. hiteh hiking to Belle: galiar between them [ville, were picked up Saturday! outside the courthouse they morning hv a police officer al 10aded with the dost catcher, "'It| mile east of Cobourg on No. 2iyanll anly let us take Blackie! highway, They. were lodged infih ys" begged Sally. "well Cobourg jail, Rlackie was sent to!sond vou the mone from Belle. the dog pound ville." Monday Magistrate RK. B. Hilton Ferguson was tn a quan. Baxter dismissed a charge of dary, His heart wanted to re vagraney against William Bell, lease the dog. but his duty and Sally Bell pleaded guilty to being his ndgment said the 'law must intoxicated in a publie place, and he obeyed Was fined $10 or two days. Since, «ie you haven't got four dol: she had been in custody SinCeiiany t gant lot you have him," Saturday morning, she Was vein 'said "That's the law" Sally eried. Her husband plead fed A small crowd gathered | "I'm sorry," sald Mr. Fergu:| json. "There's nothing 1 can do, If 1 let you have him without al fee, I'd have to let other people! have their dogs. There'd bhe'B rouble.' He paused, had some leased with her husband and ore frowning sort of offer, 1 might "If you security to | keeper to one side. '1 don't do this for those two he sald "but! the ttle guy in the dos pound, What'll happen to him if} they don't pay the four bucks®" Ferguson shrugged "After hours | got to shoot him." "Okay," said the man. "You| know me. I'N be their security Let them have the dog. If they {don't send you the. meney, I'll} pay the four bucks." Blackie almost wagged himself apart when reunited with his friends, He didn't care that his master had no money or that his mistress had been drunk, He loved them. They were together again. That's all that matters to a dog { talked with both sides Monday but said he saw no early solution More separate talks for today McDonald said he would step into the aluminum talks---perhaps today The union's aluminum strategy aparently is to try to win a wage increase in aluminum, then use this gain as a wedge to end the resistance of the steel companies to any increase in labor were sel " COSNIS The steelworkers seek the same annual 15-cent-hourly in crease in aluminum they This carry well licenced pounds It that load but wack 80,000 under wage that was the Soviet leaders do not want a ma- | that had some group of his peasant supporters French | Whether to use nuclear weapons, | President Charles de Gaulle/So far as the United States is|'eader on | visit hat Is best for the security of |gun-bearing guards, to discuss the premiership, which In event of any new Berlin his res believes | ye ofl July 26 revolution, anniversary of the to cheer and sup. port Fidel Castro, This group arrived from Guantanamo at | the other end of the Island. J ~AP Wirephoto Cuban Boss Delaying Decision HAVANA (AP)-Fidel a midnight snack with {in the kitchen of the »[Cuba's prime minister again, made an unannounced with a group of machine He refused he resigned Friday in a Ma juel Urrutia out of office, Betting was split evenly { whether Castro would withdraw signation today or announce decision Sunday to a vast throng of cheering supporiers at the celebration of the anniversary |of his revolution, : [ "I am sorry for the United | States," he told a reporter, com {menting on the U.S, Senate com. {mittee which has been hearing testimony by his former air force chief, Maj, Pedro Diaz Lanz, who accused Castro of being a Com. | munist "I am tired of explaining things, the revolutionary chief added, 'Please tell the American people the truth," Castro returned Monday from a weckend at the Isle of Pines, [off Cuba's southern coast, and held a discussion of the prospects of Havan's Sugar Kings, Inter national League baseball team with the club's president, Bobby Maduro, THOUGHT FOR TODAY Quite a lot of executives play fat work In the morning and work at golf in the afternoon, | Will Fly LONDON (AP) - Queen Eliza: beth will fly straight home at the end of her Canadian tour instead | of returning in the royal yacht | Britannia, Buckingham Palace reported today, The announcement followed the Queen's round of medical consul. |tations, She has suffered an up. wot stomach and British newspa- [pers are expressing anxloty that {the "15,000-mile tour is undermin- ing her health, The palace sald the decision to got home earlier was taken In Home At Tour's End {Canada and royel aides in Lom. don did not know the exact rea | son, "I should think she would lke to get things arranged for her summer holiday apa get a chance to see the children earlier," a palace spokesman sald, Under the present program the Queen and the Duke of Edin. burgh would have embarked on the Britannia at Halifax Aug, 1. The palace announcement fol lowed expressions of worry by London newspapers. a a -- ------E Castro a Havana | {Hilton Monday night and refused | 4. If war should come, the West: [to say whether he will become), The bearded revolutionary prince Philip had advised his wife Queen Recovers From Sickness EDMONTON (CP)--The Queen|to cancel the Canadian tour and has recovered from her stomach to return home, upset and no further departures , * LTR "The duke would not let her from the scheduled program go on today if he felt 8 the Roya! Tour are anticipated, vo 0% " it was announced here today. shoulda. Md Mr, Butler, "Nor This was announced aboard the|"° 8 doetof royal train as it began moving] The press secretary also ane slowly Into Edmonton from the|nounced that upon completion of secluded rallway siding near the|the Royal Tour Aug, 1 the Queen RCAF base at Nanao where the|and the prince will fly home to Queen and Prince Philip had|England instead of travelling on spent the night. the royal yacht Britannia as orige It came from Esmond Butler,|inally scheduled, This had beep the Queen's press secretary, who!announced a short time earlier by sald Surgeon - Captain D, D,|Buckingham Palac in London, Steele-Perking had consulted with| The decision to fly home had Her Majesty this morning. He "nothing to do" with the Quecn's found her well rested after|iliness, Mr, Butler said. It had {a relaxing weekend in Whitehorse'been under consideration for 10 |where a stomach upset forced days and reasons for the change [cancellation of part of her north-(are plans for a three-day visit of land program, the Royal Family to the Shetlands At a press conference, Mr, But-|in the north of Scotland. The r also denied reports in the Brit- Queen and the duke also are ane ish press, cabled to the train, that|xlous to see their children, Prince (Charles and Princess Anne, Health Of Queen . 'Worries British hd PM [ is convinced it is pointless to deal|viet leaders, Eisenhower believes, (Noeuvre to force President Man Germany and a LONDON (CP)--British news:|pleading with her to cut short the {papers expressed anxiety today tour and fly back to London, (that the Queen's Canadian tour| Don Iddon of The Daily Mall |1s undermining her health, [said that the Queen is "desper- | "Save the Queen," "The Queen ately tired" and charged that {1s Exhausted---Bring Her Home," 'politics are playing a consider [were two headlines, able part in this extraordinary The Queen cancelled appear-|drama of a sick Queen and blune ances Sunday and Monday be- dering officials," {cause of a stomach upset, and| Iddon sald Prime Minister Die. {British reporters on the Royal fenbaker is anxious not to have | Tour cabled that the Queen's ill-|the Yukon blamed for the Queen's | ness was more serious than Cana: [illness because he has grandiose {dian officials cared to admit plans for the area. The coast-to - coast tour has| In a full-page article, the tab. {brought her "almost to exhaus.|loid Daily Sketch asked: "Do we tion," Peter Moorhead said in a|value our Queen's health, or do dispatch to The Dally Herald, we think that she should go on "I am no doctor," Moorhead waving and smiling untll she continued, "but 1 would suggest drops?" that the Queen is heading for complete breakdown if the tour|5%00 HANDSHAKES continues at its present murder-| The Sketch estimated that by ous pace." the time she leaves for home, the Queen will have shaken 5,000 hands, made two TV broadcasts and 50 speeches, will have visited 136 places, attended 61 formal presentations and 81 informal functions, | |PRILIP CONCERNED | Prince Philip was reported by {the British press to be greatly concerned about his wife's health, |Several newspapers had him TOO HEAVY FOR OLD BRIDGE to in 1907, the bridge was design | bined with heavy ed to carry much lighter loads | bridge could not carry it. Built [ysafely, Today's traffic, com: | committee tn gharge of the oading is | county road system. See page for the | 2 for story Photo by Joh Mills. creating a problem

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