2 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Monday, December 5, 1058 Theatre Party Es DISTRICT MINISTERS DISCUSS OVERSEAS MISSIONS and United Church congrega- | tions were present from as far | away as Peterborough. One of} ther main discussion points was es. Rev. H. D. Cleverdon is | chairman of the local com- mittee. Ministers representing Anglican, Baptist, Presbyterian missions. The area conference was sponsored by the depart- ment of overseas missions of the Canadian Council of Church- Nearly 40 ministers, repre- senting four denominations, met at St. George's parish 'hall in Oshawa to discuss overseas Khrushchev Gets Political | i x RANGOON, Burma (AP) -- Rus-| RANGOON, Burma (AP)--From independence in 1948) did not exist/Paris, a band of Russian exiles| ging ti highest leaders a seat in ome of the Buddhist|before William the Conqueror. |tried to "liberate" him, but thei i, Burma's hinterland today on| world's most venerated shrines,| "Your temples are 2,000 years/Russian party went to a French ip ain "selling tour" " | Russia's Nikita S. Khrushchev to-jold and theirs only 1,000 vears--| police station to escape the crowd|aqia day launched a bitter, impromptu yet they call you savages and bar-land Vlasov subsequently accused| 1, Washington, tirade against the "stupidity" of barians. the French police of trying to "kid-|pijes joined Portugal's the Western powers. "How difficult history is to[nap' him. The French security po- Red-faced with anger and point-|change--because there are some|lice said they were only trying tol ade by the Soviet leaders on Reds Push On Burma: From Sacred Buddhist ShrineDulles Denounces Remarks pushed |announced i of southeast/sians into 'the he | where arme State Secretary|been active. Only two days ago an| foreign|armed minister in denouncing remarks myo in northern Burma and seized! Is Held Here The Kinsmen Traffic safety the atre party was held Saturday morning in the Regent theatre. Following is-a list of the-win- ners of special prizes: Irene Cher- | kar, Carol Clements, Jacqueline |Elliott," David Burns, Sharyn Bal: |dry, Douglas Taylor, Robert Whit- brend, Larry Comries, Byron Dumontelle Karen Westlake, {Mary Ann Fursay, Terry Bowman, Robert Huddleston, Kath Gowlett, {Joe Koene. The prizes were awarded to stu- dents who currently answered louestions on traffic safety as laid down in the Elmer The Safety Elephant rules. The parties, sponsored by the {Kinsmen Club of Oshawa, will {continue next Saturday morning, {The Oshawa Police Department {and the Oshawa Safety Council will assist. More than 700 children attend- {ed last Saturday. | OBITUARIES MRS. JAMES W. COWLE | In poor health for the past four | years Annie Philip, beloved wife {of the late James W. Cowle, pass- |ed away at Fairview Lodge, Whit- {by, on Sunday, December 4, on her 86th birthday. Mrs. Cowle formerly lived at 56 Bond street | east, A lifelong resident of Oshawa, the d d was a daugh of the late Joseph and Catherine | Philip. She was a member of King Street United Church. Her home and her family were her chief interests. \ Predeceased by her husband in 1944 she is survived by one daughter, Mrs. Roy Trimm (Rita) of Oshawa and three sons, Frank, Theodore and Charles, all of Osh. awa. She was predeceased by one son, William, last year. Also surviving are 13 grandchil- dren and 14 great - grandchildren. The funeral service will be held reason for the change in plans was| fom the 1S no megh Funeral The current trip takes the Rus {December 7, followed, by iy e at of the region, Rev. M. A. Bury, minister Co 2uerr as nave 'ong|.¢ "King Street United Church, will conduct the services. MRS. PETER MINAKER The death occurred suddenly on how to get the men of the con- gregations to take a more ac- tive part in mission work. Times-Gazette Photo band descended on May-| as hostages two doctors, one Ital- Two Ontario air frame tech- nicians with the RCAF at Moose Jaw, Sask., Aircraftsmen First Class Michael R. Hickey, 18, left, of Oshawa, and Leading Aircraftman R. J. Newmann, 24, of Pembroke, adjust the wheel brakes of a Harvard air- craft used to train NATO stu- dent pilots. AC1 Hickey, whose parents: Mr. and Mrs. J OSHAWA MAN IN RCAF Hickey, reside at 188 Verdun Road, here, trained for his trade at Camp Borden. LAC Newmann was previoysly stationed at Gimli, red to Moose Jaw in June, 1953. ing his finger wildly, the Soviet/people who refuse to change it."(find out whether the architect Communist party chieftain accused] Next came a discussion of archi-|\wanted asylum. the United States and France of|tecture--and of the case of Rus- ATTACKS REPORTERS attempting to kidnap a Russian vis-|sian architect Alexander V. Vlasov, : I itor. He also had some derisive|whose work was censured by the Khrushchev . switched to colonial- words for Britain. Soviet government while he was|/ism, declaring: "We Russians are Khrushchev spoke out as he'touring the U. S. and France with the only ones that are always fight- rested in the 2,000-year-old Shwe|other Russian architects. |ing for the cause against colonial Dagon (golden pagoda), after] "Be careful or you might be in-|ism." As Bulganin stood silently by,! their Asian visit as an attempt/ian and the other Burmese, from "to foment hatred between the/the local headquarters of the East and West." {United Nations - affiliated World The Russian's host, Burmese Health Organization. Premier U Nu, cancelled earlier|AID DISCUSSED plans to join Premier Bulganin and! Before taking off, reliable {Communist party secretary Nikita sources said, Bulganin and Khrush- 8. Khrushchev Sunday in Man-{chev discussed possible Soviet eco- dalay. He will remain in Rangoon nomic assistance for Burma with Man., and was transfer- Sunday night, December 4, at 188 Alice street, of Mary A. Mclvor, widow of Peter Minaker, in her 73rd year. Born in Manvers township, the deceased was a daughter of the late Thomas and Jane Mclvor. A resident of Oshawa for 25 years, Eisenhower Administration climbing nearly 200 steps to the|vited to America,"" Khrushchev told| "What about East Germany?"| a until the Russians return Monday heart of the famous temple. He/a Russian architect named An-|one American correspondent asked. | for another two-day stay here. No| U Nu cabinet. and key members of his of Knox Presbyterian Church. {she had been an active member The d was pred and Soviet Premier Bulganin were|driev, who is here to help Burma|"What about Latvia and Estonia?" | touring Rangoon shrines on the sec- build a national stadium. |asked another. i | ond day of their week's visit to] "There are some very stupid peo-| 'ou don't know what's going on Burma. {ple in America," Khrushchev cou |inside East Germany," Khrushchev| LASHES BRITAIN (tinued. "After we criticized Com- replied. "What the East Germans Chatting with Maung Ohn, Buj-/rad Vlasov, they tried to persuade are doing you would not understand 3 f Page 1) mese ambassador to Russia, a'dfhim to stay. The French also re- because you are a paid slave writer| (Continued from Page ' accompanying foreign correspon (peated this stupid mistake thejof capitalism. If you wanted to) op demand of the UAW-CIO if dents, Khrushchev --admirsd the Americans had made. {write something good about Russia an other issues' are: settled temple's wood carving then| Actually, there was no reported you would starve to death--because| With the full union shop in force lashed out: o effort by Americans to persuade|the capitalist press would refuse all GM employees: would be re. "England (which grarfed BurmaiVliasov to remain with them. In'to print it. quired to join and maintain mem. fe bership in the UAW-CIO. | 1 3 » ah : ship Pould mean a union request oney ay eCl o 0 GM for dismissal. \ | - { The company appears opposed . a : 'May Cont d n inue |ing that an employee's security in 1V1C eC 1011S VICTORIA (CP) -- Preliminary retaining his job would be subject | surveys of the 1956 economic situ- to the desire of local union lead- i Dv, " A rhe onl Union demands for general wage This was election day in most|{DOW elect their mayors and coun pansion, Trade Minister Howe Said, eases lave been zene with company offer, contained in the prior to the strike, of a 5 cents per hour annual improvement fac tor for each year of a three-ye | ; 2 Says Expansion f re to maintain mefnber | ta an unlimited union shop, claim By THE CANADIAN PRESS day in three more centres which a¢jon indicate another year of ex-|€rS in power. package rejected by the union sreement oH Cntario municipalities. cil annually, There were ballots! Saturday. The weather office forecast sunny un this issue in Toronto, where it| py. 14 (he Assbciation of Pro- periods in some localities and Was previously rejected, Brantford| co gional Engineers of British snowflurries in others and de- and Sudbury. The two-year term | on .t.. scribed expected cooler tempera-|is also on the ballot for North| "poise a now at hand concern- tures as seasonable. Bay's election Dec. 12. : ing next year's investment plans Some cities, towns, townships! This is an off-year, under the|, ii (ec that capital expenditures lages held elections during two-year-term plan, for such cities by governments and business in the st week. Others will hold/as Ottawa, Kingston, Hamilton and 1956 will be at least as high, and theirs withhin the next month. For Windsor. : probably higher, than for the. cur- the most part, however, the fates) Cold and rain were partly to onivoar, which is in itself a rec- of Ontario's aspirants to civic offic- bl2me for a poor turnout of voters ord year. es will be decided today. Saturday when Plections Were . "There seems to be no lack of In the way of ide' issues, Toronto ,.Joonto S suburban 4 o town pioneering projects to be under- has the bigget money bylaw at/ship, Weston and Swansea. ® |{aken as opportunity offers. I am stake--a $20,000,000 city hall. Strat-| Less than 22 per cent of 65,000 happy to say that this prospective DETROIT (AP) -- Negotiators ford is voting on an $800,000 rail- eligible voters turned out in York expans jon is not limited to any plased fh ow attempt oh alors way underpess and a $50,000 township, largest of the three mu- one area, but seems to extend from noon to end an AFL stereotypers' bridge. Belleville will decide on a nicipalities Only contest for top coast to coast. LS aC cu oh ypers $115,000 offtreet parking lot, Wel- Municip) o% iii in York, ig "Building activities during 1956 has kept Detroit's three metropoli- land on 33.000 Suy Jatt, Reave od 2 Pipi ay are more likely to be limited by, tan daily newspapers closed down Sault 3 Marie is voting on a zh 7 Ace re] ome Cer 0. Shortages of materials rather than since last Thursday. new $200,000 reeve Walter Saunders. York vo 1ag orm Dr ikiag Ste aay vs Local 9 ahd te wice be ters approved a two-year council bY a shortage N OO 5 Moca 22nd jected twice term ital the Detroit Newspaper Publishers ayers ter " + zen iati ro FeNEeW NOZo- P The two-vear term of municipal! All liquor outlets are closed.| The remarks were included in a Association were, $0 renew nego office, in effect in 16 of Ontario's |Polls opened a 10 a.m. EST and|text of a speech issued to the press| Eli OE ay alter 25 cities, was up for decsion to-|will close at 8 p.m. 'before delivery. § third poststrike bargaining ses- or | | The city's newspaper famine con- | tinued meanwhile, except as re-| | lieved by the Detroit Reporter, aj daily startetl Saturday by the CIO | Detroit Newspaper Guild and AFL | printing craft unions. It ran an | eightpage edition of 100,000 copies | Sunday and planned an edition of | the same size today. | James H. Sampson, international | vice-president of the stereotypers | union, was scheduled to/sit on to! |day's bargaining session. George Robinson, Local 9 presi- | dent, declared in advance that "we ere meni Siesta Play in re- rate- ice building, fore by its of available cap- romp mm ---------- | | | | | MONTREAL (CP) Robert Schlesinger, who pledged! his love for actress Linda Chris-| {tian with $132,000 in jewels he! {allegedly bought with a swindled ° |cheque, leaves here today for New ments in a Louisiana oil develop- {York to answer eight counts of |grand larceny. | Schlesinger, son of fabulously- irich Countess Mona Bismarck, was| |seeking him in eight countries for six months. He agreed to re- (turn "voluntarily," | by Leonard Newman zr. |assistant district attorney to ap A Ipcar on the $330,000 swindle ENGINE TO SKI CLUB IMs PRESENT The 37-year-old playboy skipped of Canada | line. Pictured at the presenta. | president Doug Clark: Bunt lout of his Milwaukee home when | yesterday presented the Osh- tion (above) are (from left), | Marsh, the club's membership the indictment was returned in REE Chk ail a . x | W. L Pierson, GM's Production | chairman; and GM's experimen- (New York June 1. | awa Ski Club with a truce Control Manager: Ben Fallman, | tal engineer, W. A. Woodcock, Manhattan" district attorney! engine to. power the club's tow | one of the club's founders; club | who presented the gift __|Frank Hogan said Schlesinger ------ ---- " 7 2 {would not be placed under arrest FARM MEASURE LONELY SPOT until his plane crossed the United Furlong as a measurement, 226 Pitcairn island in the south Pa-!States border. The move would vards, is believed a corruption oi cific, settled by the mutinéers from'avoid the red tape of extradition "furrow-long"" measure|the Bounty in 1790 only two | proceedings to force him to return {square miles in area. ito New York, General Motors | SCHOOL RADIO Scotia in 1928 was the first ice to organize reg- of radio broadcasis|the ancient iol a l0-acre field. ular p is for school studies. TALKS TO RESUME | tional 15 cents hourly a 1 health "| union Sept Plan New Attempt End Paper Strike |day. Other craft unions refused to Boy-Present-Give On 8 Larceny-Charges Playboy OIL SCHEME mother, when her second hushand died, had {traced to Montreal Sunday by New invested $500,000 in the project and {York detectives who have been Planned fo invest another $500,000. | other accompanied | Stopped payment on it when he be- N attan ame suspicious. anha 20 legedly used the cheque to buy $132,000 in jewelry from Van Cleef and isinger covered eight countries and'68 for a total of 275 lett, in March, 1941. {ed away in 1948. by her first husband, Alfred Kel- She later married Peter Minaker, who pass- | She leaves to mourn her passing Total increase would be 15 cents/one son, Lawrence Kellett of Sol- within two years. hike would be effe agreement was signed. since the firstina, ctive when the] | Mrs. Also surviving are three sisters, Ethel Irwin and Mrs. Lor- The union wants wage rates at etta Livingston of Toronto and G est rate paid for each classifica- tion in the industry, with addi- M increased to match the high-| Mrs. 'Gertrude Brown of Oshawa: |and two gran , David and Donald Kellett. : ctoss the] The funeral jervice will be board. from the Luk¢' - Mcintosh Funexal An offer of a limited guaranteed Home at 3.30 p.m. on annual wage plan was made by|December 7. Interment will be jn the company prior to the strike, Mount Lawn Cemetery. Rev. 8. and the union has indicated wil- Coles, minister of Knox Presby- lingness to accept. |terian Church, will conduet the In the face of a GM offer tol services. program should be fully company paid 19, and there is no| MITCHELL, Ont. (CP) -- An indication of further concessions, historic landmark, the former {mated by firemen at $30,000. | Fire destroyed 50 hogs valued pay half the cost of a medical Historic Mill No ecpnomic offer has been made by the company since the -- | Thomson oatmeal mill built 125 years ago, was destroyed by fire lat $27,000. Cause of the fire was {not determined. During the past 20 plan, the union insists that the troyed GM package was rejected by the Is Des Io Sunday night. Damage was esti: years the building was used as a Tries To Rebuff Policy Raps By GEORGE KITCHEN Canadian Press Staff Writer WASHINGTON (CP) -- The Ei- senhower administration, beset by diplomatic setbacks on the German ,| board question, in the Middle East and in the United Nations, is trying to shut off criticism of its foreign po- licies in the 1956 presidential cam- paign. The move isn't likely to succeed. Republican leaders have quickly jumped on a routine statement by Senator Walter George, Democra- tic chairman of the Senate reign relations committee: 'as a spring- from which to call for a truce on foreign policy in cam- .|paign speeches. George, who originated the idea of the Big Four "summit" meet- licy and that regardless of who wins or loses in 1956 our foreign program will go on substantially as it is." Administration leaders, including President Eisenhower and Vice- President Nixon, promptly en- dorsed this statement on the basis of thgir own interpretation--that George was suggesting debate on foreign policy be removed from! the 1956 campaign tion costs be added to costs which their contract at midnight Wednes-|of God's creation including spiritu- stereotypers, | Club high scores: Mrs. M. Clarke R. MacKenzie and J. are no closer togethe the strike began." He took issue|Stratford. with a publishers' statement that "the stereotypers, in effect, are de- manding that prohibitive produc- OSHAWA AND already are skyhigh." Stereotypers walked out at the DISTRICT morning Free Press and afternoon News and Times at 4:30 a.m. yy following expiration of] The completeness and integrity 1 al man was brought out at Chris- cross picket lines, shutting down|tian Science services on Sunday the dailies which employ around! December 4. 4,500 and have a circulation ofl OSHAWA DUPLICATE BRIDGE about 1,400,000 daily, There are 116 The Oshawa Duplicate Bridge The wage scale in the expiregd/and Mrs. E. Wadsworth 81% contract gave journeymen stereo-| points, J. Condos and A. Vallin- typers $3.08 hourly for a 37'2hour|court 75 points, Mrs. N. Daniel daytime week and $3.33 for a 35- and Mrs. E. Southey 65 points, hour night week. |Mr. and Mrs. O. Hobbs 57% The publishers said in a Sunday | points, statement read over Detroit radio! Buchanan 53% points. stations as a paid advertisement] Next bridge will that they had made two offers Sat-/Simcoe Hall Wednesday, urday which were rejected 7th at 7.30 p.m. Dec. I Schlesinger is accused of bilking|provinces: Bogota, Richard and John M. Herzfeld of Milwaukee o. $30,000 each and Ro- bert B. McCulloch of Los Angeles f $120,000 by promoting invest- enos Aires, Argentina; Portual; Genoa, Italy; and Miami; and Halifax, Chicago Mont- be held at included the following cities and | Colombia; | nima, Peru; Santiago, Chile; Bu-| Lisbon, | DOUBTS AGREEMENT George subsequently said he was sed doubt any agreement eould be reached to ward off campaign dis- | cussion of critical foreign policy| issues. | State Secretary John F oster| Dulles, the man most likely to| come under campaign fire, quickly| moved in with a call of his ownlin the company whe seek promo-| bladder cramps, nervous for the 'same bipartisan unity" | which in the past has given au} thority, vitality and much success to our foreign policies." Dulles told a press conference | that he, for one, would avoid any "politicking" on foreign affairs and immediately put that policy into effect by refusing to comment on recent criticisms by Adlai Steven- son, leading candidate for the Democratic nomination next year. Dulles said he has nothing against '"'comstructive" eriticism but he again sidestepped the issue when a reporter asked whether he himself had been constructive in Deemocrats were 'dancing to whatever tune the Soviets chose to play." FEAR EFFECT Dulles ested that statement, when read in full, did have a con- structive "quality. At the root of the administra- tion's desire for a truce, apart {from d tic embarr t in ment ex] ance of a divided Boat at home might undermine position in other countries. They realize that the hurly - burly of American politics, with its washing of dirty not easily understood lands. litical linen, is a Dulles himself put his finger on ing "is not as fi his 1952 i h. that the|this point when he told his press Apa eB conference that eampiign politick. y discounted abroad as it is discounted by) the sense of (the : the. ns il A at the Republican tacties in the Korean war campal issue, keep silent in ' Also, many Democrats ' charg ing, issued a statement a few days the campaign, is a fear of the ef-| with responsibility in Congress for ago saying the U.S. "must assure| fect election criticism may have| foreign policy feel the eam; the world that we are capable of on American allies--and on its dip-| the proper pla having a non-partisan foreign po-|lomatic foes--abroad. State depart-| to the administration's weaknesses perts fear that the appear-'in the foreign field. paign is ce to give an g CPR Denies | Discrimination MONTREAL (CP)--A Canadian Pacific Railway official Sunday | denied accusations that the com-| |pany is discriminating against! | Negroes in its hiring practices. | Sidney Blum, secretary of the | barn on the farm of W. F. Levy. |not barring "constructive criticism | Toronto Joint Committee for Hu-| r than when Mitchell is 15 miles northwest of OF legitimate debate" and expres-|man Rights, Saturday claimed tne; CPR had instituted aptitude tests as "a subtle discriminatory screen-| ing device' when considering job applicants. { A spokesman for the railway| here said the aptitude tests are the same as those given junior clerks) tion and are of 'a general and| elementary nature." The tests are designed to measure the appli- cant's ability to read, write, add | subtract and multiply, he said. Negroes employed by the rail- way have equal rights and oppor-| tunities, he said. I after backache | trusted ACTIVE RESCUER NEWCASTLE UPON TYNE England (CP)--An inspector of the} royal society for prevention of, cruelty to an s reports climbed year--rescuing cats. . 97 trees and roofs last YOUR BACKACHE -are KIDNEYS TO BLAME? Your kidneys filter harmful wastes fromh blood. If theit, ustion is faulty, or retain non-specific germs, nature you know with a nagging backache. Kid | and bladder irritation may Sheumatic pains, burning, ifcking p udy urine, ing . prop 4 or Be I depressed feeling. Now Buckley's have » wilh oh] Ur-o-fen) that ¢ and sti culation through' stron) Ll (say ! It increases cir with a refreshing antise, with uct of W. tories, Money back Ur-o-fen, or show 54 SIMCOE ST. N. SENSATIONAL MEAT FEATURES for TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY CLUB STEAKS * 45: emtoh real, Toronto, Hamilton, S wan and New Brunswick. He was finally traced to Fro- bisher, Sask., where he was work- Ing for an airline company, and from there to Montreal. Schlesinger is the son of Coun- [tess Bismarck by her first marri- lage, to a Chicago industrialist. She |later married Harrison Williams, who left her a $100,000,000 estate. | Early this year she married Count | Albert Edward Bismarck. ment. Hogan said he told the men his who inherited $100,000,000 McCulloch gave Schlesinger an- cheque for $150,000 but Schlesinger al- Arpels, 2 manhattan firm. He gave the jewels to Miss Chris- | TAKES $15,000 EVENT tian, then the wife of actor Tyrone| HAVANA (AP)--Mike Souchak, Power but since divorced. When|of Grossinger, N.Y., Sunday won the cheque bounced, Van Clee Arpels sought to have her return| golf tournament with a three- the jewels but she refused. | under-par 69 final round for a She later chapged her decision | 72-hole total of 275, and lawyers said she was paid an| Souchak, leader since the first "undisclosed sum' by the jewelry round, picked up the first prize firm. |of $2,000 as he finished 15 under MARITIME SEARCH par for a two-stroke lead over Ed Hogan said the search for Schle-| Oliver of Newark. Del. Oliver shot sr | f and the $15,000 Havana invitational | | | STANDING ROAST -- 6th & 7th Prime Ribs . LEAN PORK Spare Ribs 9 u°l LEAN MINCED BEEF PORK . 39° . 39° LEAN LIVER uw 19° BRISKET . 15° DEVON---brEAKFAST BACON ce. 48 TUESDAY ONLY STEAK n. BG. und BEEF KIDNEYS 0X TAILS 12: unless watished druggist this adv, 93-