THE TIMES TELEPHONE NUMBERS 'Classified Advertising RA 3-3492 'All other calls ...... RA 3-3474 lye Oshawa & ¢ mes ' Cloudy and mild with scattered showers tonight and Tuesday. VOL. 88 -- NO. 74 OSHAWA-WHITBY, MONDAY, MARCH 30, 1959 Authorized Post Office Second Clos Mall , Ottawe SIXTEEN: PAGES SOVIET UN 0 MINISTERS ION AG PARLEY 'TI AM SWISS' Millionaire Deties ZURICH, Switzerland (AP) -- OSHAWA FAMILY HOMELESS Dazed by the second fire to leave him homeless in nine years, Gordon Burns, of 299 Bloor street east, tries to com- fort three of his four children. His home was destroyed in a blaze Saturday, The previous fire, which took place in 1950 took the lives of four of his children, Shown with her fath- er's arm around her. shoulder is Donna, 14, the only child to escape the 1950 blaze, standing in front is Douglas, nine (left) and David, seven, The fourth child of the Burns' is three-year-old Dennis, who was taken to hospital along with his treated for mother who was and | shock. Swiss multi-millionaire Rene Lang returned to Zurich today with his seven-year-old son, Fran- cis. and announced grimly: "You watch, I'll go and get the other boy as well." Lang, a handsome 40-year-old Swiss department store owner, referred to his nine-year-old son, Gerald. The boys' mother, Mrs. Marian Rothstein of New York, accused Lang of abducting Francis Sun- day in Manhattan. She had a con- tempt of court warrant sworn out against him in New York. The warrant charged Lang de- fied a court order giving tempor- ary custody of the two boys to Mrs. Rothstein, who is living in New York with her second hus- Court were smiling -- until Lang an- nounced his intention to obtain Gerald. They came here after a brief stopover in Paris, where Lang said he intended to go back for Gerald in two weeks. There Lang told reporters: "I am Swiss and my children are Swiss. "American justice had no rea- son and no right to counter the justice of my country. I did not kidnap Francis. I only took him back." He sald Mrs. Rothstein took the boys from Zurich Feb. 17, while he was honeymooning in Florida with his second wife. | The temporary court order in --Oshawa Times Photo. band. A "OFF FOR HEAVEN' Man Marches Naked In Easter Parade By THE CANADIAN PRESS which he had been released on|Church of the Lilies at Pictou, Footsore and weary, 21 pil grims _ Sund : u ices this In T the Joats past. In oronto,. the: cross, symbolizing Christ's caves was laid on 'Roman | cefled, a v Catholi¢ Church in Victoria after the four-day journgy. Elsewhere in British Columbia, | wo! rs turned out in thou-| sands to commemorate the Res- urrection. Cold and squally weather greeted some 6,000 peo ple who attended the sunrise service at Exhibition Park in| Vancouver. { probation, The temperature was ter than for, many on parade was 'can although many people waited along its regular route, Weather in Eastern Canada, for the most part, was cool and clear, An estimated 5,000 people vis- ited the famed 111 « year - old In Prince Albert, Sask., Prime] Minister and Mrs. Diefenbaker attended the 11 a.m. Easter serv-| ice at First Baptist Church in their home town, and then re-| turned to a special railway car| and received friends during the] rest of the "day. | Edmonton, for the fourth year, | held a sunrise service In a drive. in theatre in mild but overcast | weather, Paraders in Hamilton, surprised to see one man striding along without even the protection of an Easter bonnet, The 28-year-old man told police who picked him up that he had received divine instructions to re- move his clothes and set off for heaven, The officers returned him to the Ontario Hospital from Red Brutality | Reported From Hungary WASHINGTON (AP)--Refugec circles have been receiving alarming reports about an all-out Communist drive to collectivize la in Hungary. They are con- firmed by diplomatic reports) reaching Washington, The reports, diplomatic and others, are almost unanimous in describing the drive as most bru-| tal. Methods of the Stalinist era) are applied to 'encourage' farm- ers to join collectives. Reports reaching the U.S. con- tain an unusual amount of detail about atrocities committed by special Communist party squads/ supported by contingents of se- cret police agents and--it is sug-' gested in some cases--by Russian Army troops as well. An untold number of farmers resisting pressure have been re resentatives defence appropria-|neth Metcalfe, 35, Bewdley, was| ported jailed, many of them tor. lions subcommittee, Burke said|charged with tured. In Gyoerszemere, a village Ne thinks the U.S. already has/and driving without a licence fol- in County = Gyeor, six' farmers 00 much atomic retaliatory lowing a Sunday morning colli-| committed suicide by hanging themselves in protest Hungary always has lagged be hind other satellites in land col- lectivization. Bulgaria, for vari- ous reasons, heads the list of those having "advanced on the road to socialism™ most effect ivelv with about, 95 per cent of its land belonging to the state or to collectives. CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 tence HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 [jar slop Ra were | ying Lang here was his second wife, Maria. All three tion in the New York state Su- preme Court. Detectives said Lang flew with Francis and his second wife in a N.S. to see, for the sixth year in| ji a i pm LG mous of th SOufrefatltn to te \ began white he Easter Su . The donor owns a large lily plantation in Shelly Bay, Bermuda. The traditional parade was, {held in Halifax in bright sunshine {with paraders wearing -winter| furs over their Easter finery. | | The pilgrimage to Victoria en-| |countered near - torrential rain| during the gruelling march, but| one of the group, Mrs. Wilfred| Maundcote-Carter, said the trek| Moa , DRIVERS RUN INTO OBSTACLES NAIROBI, Kenya (Reuters) Drivers in a motor race through East Africa ran into a number of obstacles Sunday ~live ones. R. J. Roy hit a lion on the main road near Natrod ain port. His bumper and' a- tor grill. were badly dam- juries. Harrison struck a [In Tanganyika, smashing the car radiator and headlights. Jim Heather-Hayes said he narrowly missed an elephant that loomed up-on the Nairo bi-Mombasa road. The drivers are participat- ing in the East African Coro- nation Safari Motor Rally. The course extends through Kenya, Uganda and Tangan- yika, private plane to Toronto. There they boarded a regular Trans- Canada Air Lines flight to Swit- zerland. The plane stopped for DALAI LAMA Red Puppet Rule mE el Qa Up In Tibet NEW DELHI (AP) -- Prime Minister Nehru today rejected Communist China's attempt to cut off discussions of the Tibetan revolt in the Indian Parliament. But he took no firm stand to- ward the Red military campaign to suppress the revolt. Criticism mounted in Indian newspapers of Nehru's failure to back the Tibetan rebels' attempt to free the Himalayan country of Communist control. ndian deni Red i ceotse of fhe. Tevol 13. Times Now will be made again next year.» 180,000 Indians' Plan Unification MIAMI, Fla. (AP)---Thirty-six| According to Indian law dele- T. KELSO CREIGHTON Lawyer From Oshawa Heads Land Inquiry | chiefs and braves claiming to|gatee to the council vill carry the] TORONTO (CP) -- T. Kelso represent .|American Indians discussed for- tions for final approval, mation of an Indian United Na. MOSTLY CRITICAL a ADMIRAL BURKE US. Leaders Certain Of Invincibility' _ WASHINGTON (AP)--U.S. mil- itary leaders have assured Con- gress the United States would be invincible this year in an all-out war--and more power is in sight. Admiral Arliegh Burke, chief of naval operations, said that if Russia starts an all-out. war "'we would break her back." In a censored version of his testimony to the House of Rep- power. Burke and Gen. Maxwell Tay- lor gave testimony before the commitiee last January and Feb. ruary, Taylor is the army chief of staff : Gen. Nathan F. Twining. chair man of the joint chiefs of said .a Soviet nuclear ass lelivered today, would ¢ most entirely from ma craft. And Russia's air threat, he { added, is "not half -as hig as ours and not nearly so effective." Burke said that in an all-out war "we can destroy her (Rus- sia) many times over with the weapons we now have in exis There is no w that i she an stop that, We w break tions at a pow-wow Sunday of the home grounds of Florida's Mic- cosukee Seminoles, N They said the move to unify all [ti Indians of North, Central and gression against Indians and the some 180,000 North plan back to their respective na-|Creighton of Oshawa, a specialist in municipal affairs and former Progressive Conservative mem- {ber of the Ontario. legislature, has| Operating In 'New Home All departments of the Oshawa Times are now operating in the | paper's new quarters at 86 King street east, The major job of moving equip- ment from the Times' former quarters on Simcoe street south has been largely completed. There are still some kinks to be ironed out before the opera- tion is functioning again at 100 per cent efficiency, but that should be accomplished in a few days. The management wishes to take this opportunity of thanking readers for their co-operation and patience during this big job. The new home of The Oshawa There were many speeches, been appointed counsel for a ju-|Times is indeed a show-place of mostly critical of white civiliza- on and the governments, Mad Bear, Tuscarora brave of |South America was proposed to|the Six Nations, sounded the key- lhe will probably begin his own stop "the encroachment and ag-|note. . After quoting a long section of assimilation by the 'U.S. Indian|the U.S. Constitution to prove In- dicial inquiry into suburban York Township land deals. The Oshawa lawyer said yd preliminary investigation this] week. He expected the inquiry it- self to get under way in three or bureau and the Canadian minis-|dian land rights, he proceeded to four weeks. ter of citizenship and immigra-|call the constitution icvalid. tion." | The get-together, 30 miles west| of Miami in the Everglades, in- cluded delegations from the Six | Nations of the Iroquois, as well] |as the Delawares, Pottawamis, | Chippewas, Piutes, Miamis, Utes, Hopi and the Blackfcet. |der the name "United Indian Na- st 80 Homeless In Tenement Fire TORONTO (CP) -- Fire broke, out in a row of old houses in| They announced tentative Midtown Toronto early today. agreement on a plan to unify un-|3r'Ving at least 80 people into the reet. | Occupants of the 10 four-storey| agreement to station Jupiter mis- | buildings, on the corner of Church |siles on her territory is expected \ {and Wellesley Streets, ran intolto heighten the importance of the | | cam weather in their night|Atlantic Pact 'strategy confer- an arge clothes as flames shot through the 'ence opening here Thursday. roofs. No one was reported in- « jured. After Head- ore of the houses On Crash Fire started in the basement of Washington for preliminary talks, and a tenant| diplomatic officials Sunday night an into the street to call for reported that Italy, after a year| help. which the entire community can be proud. At a date to be an- nounced later, the public will be invited to inspect the néw quar- ters. Meanwhile, don't forget the new address of the Oshawa Times is 86 King street east. in chants that ine tisns Sanenen Lame. the com-| Despite Red 's el PANCHEN LAMA (frontier town eof Kalimpong. Russia's Communist party organ, Pravda, echoed the charge that Kalimpong was the seat of rebel- lion and claimed that National Chinese planes were flying arms to the rebels. Communist China meanwhile was expected to launch an all-out drive to communize Tibet follow- ing its replacement of the Dalai LONDON (AP) -- Russia today handed notes to the big three Western powers agreeing to an East-West foreign ministers con- ference beginning in Geneva May 11, Tass agency reported. Tass said "according to infor- mation received," the Soviet gov- ernment agreed to attend the par- ley "in order to consider ques- tions concerning Germany, in- cluding the peace treaty with Germany and the Berlin ques- tion." Tass said Soviet Foreign Min- ister Andrei Gromyko received the British, U.S., and French am- bassadors and handed them the Soviet note in reply to the three Western notes of March 26. The notes had differences in emphasis, but all looked beyond Lama's rebellious government by a pu by the was uing lous sectors outside the capital, . Border reports' sald Chinese rule extended only 20 or 30 miles south of Lhasa. A rebel "na- tional defence army" was said to be collecting taxes in the south. A rebel radio was reported oper- ating there, Even Pravda said rebel rem- nants still were holding out in remote sectors of Tibet, but it claimed 'the armed adventure of a band of traitors has suffered complete defeat." The whereabouts of the Dali Lama remained a mystery. Some Indian press reports said the 23- ear-old god - king was fleeing south toward the Indian border. Other reports sald he had swung eastward after finding the southern roads blocked by the Chinese. One account sald the Lama was injured after falling from a 21; Lhasa, widespread resistance in var- Tibetan| EASTER BLESSING Wearing three-tiered crown, Pope John XXIII blessed thou- sands of pilgrims packed in St. Peter's Square in Vatican City on Easter Day. The 77-year-old pontiff stands on the loggia of St. Peter's Basilica, the same loggia on which he was crowned ssupreme sovereign of the Ro- man Catholic Church less than five months ago. He gave his | special blesing to the city and the world -- in a pouring rain, --AP Wirephoto, hill while making his . The report, which could not be con- firmed, gave no details. | THOUGHT FOR TODAY A lot of people are so heav- ily loaded with time payments they don't know where their next instalment creditor is from. Bolshoi Ballet To Visit Toronto in Toronto and Montreal. Ai ident of C. Concerts and Italy Agrees To Jupiters On Her Soil WASHINGTON (AP) -- Italy's As foreign ministers of the 15 member nations gathered in lof negotiation, had approved the | PORT HOPE -- (Staff) -- Ken. | careless driving LATE NEWS FLASHES sion in which three persons were injured Metcalfe's car was travelling north on Highway 28 when it col. lided head-on with another car driven by Mrs. Gwen Watkins, 86 John street, Port Hope, about 1230 p.m a curve al a de- tour of Highway #1 bridge workings north of tows Mrs. Watkins was injured in the right knee and suffered shock. Metcalfe and a passenger, Matt Row, 40, of Camborne received facial cuts. Rowe also suffered a shoulder injury. Damages to the Metcalfe ve hicle were estimated by OPP Const. Don Henderson to reach $600, with $500 estimated for the Watkins' car, on Youth Reported Berserk COMBER, Ont. (CP)--Provincial police were rushed to a farm near this hamlet this morning after a youth was re- ported to have "run berserk with a gun." Provincial police headquarters for Essex County, at Maidstone, had no furth- er information. IRONWOOD, Mch Evacuation In Ore Crushing Plant (AP)- A fre n the ron ore crushing plant of the Penckee mine today forced the evacuation of | 35 miners working half a mile beneath the surface. Offi- cials at the mine in this upper peninsula community at first estimated damage at $100,000 but later said a check showed it amounted to only several thousand dollars. Police Cruiser Sideswiped RICHMOND HILL, Ont. (CP)--Police constable was in serious condition today with injuries suffered when his police cruiser was sideswiped by a car being chased after a serv- ice station break-in, placing of intermediate - range missile bases in northern Italy. From these bases, a Jupiter could reach southern Russia. The agreement, expected to be formally announced in a few days, means that part of the program set up at the Jast North Atlantic Treaty Organization meeting had been achieved. In December, 1957, the foreign min- isters agreed to build IRBM bases in the North. Atlantic area. area. MARKS 10TH YEAR This year's conference, which marks the 10th anniversary of NATO, will be preceded by vital talks among the foreign ministers of the United States, Britain, France and West Germany. They hope to ly out the master blueprint for negotiations with the Soviet Union at a foreign ministers conference in May and a probable summit conference in the summer, Talks will begin Tuesday with the arrival of British Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd. He will confer first with acting state sec- retary Christian Herter and French Foreign Minister Couve de Murville, who flew in Sunday. Foreign Minister Heinrich vo {Brentano of West Germany, who require joint approval {arrived Saturday, will join the|Italian government and the At- conference Tuesday or Wednes- day A statement issued by the So- Base stage for the week of meetings. Although U.S. officials saw noth- ing new in the statement, it con- spicuously omitted the usual loud and bitter attacks on NATO. The statement, distributed by Tass, the official Soviet news agency: 1. Asked NATO to sign a non- aggression pact withe the Soviet- led Warsaw Treaty Organization. 2. Called on the West to accept| 3 |the Polish Rapacki plan for with- drawal of foreign forces from a | Central European zone and a ban {on nuclear weapons in that zone. 3. Again proposed that Berlin {become a "free" city, and 4. Repeated that the Soviet Un- ion would agree to a foreign min- isters conference if the West wants one before a summit con- {ference. SECOND TO ACCEPT In approving TRBM launching sites, Italy becomes the second West European nation to accept the most powerful operative weapon in the NATO arsenal. Bri- tain earlier completed similar ar- rangements with * the Un ited | States. Under the Italian agreement, diplomatic officials said, any de- fcision to use the IRBMs would by the lantic Pact supreme headquar- ters. The British agreement re-| quires joint approval by the] iviet Union Sunday helped set the|United States. and Britain, Y i Artists, made the announcement one-week visit to Russia. The company will perform for one week in Toronto, starting June 8, and in Montreal, starting June 15. EES Talks To Start In Geneva May 11 the foreign ministers Ssafetaty to a summit meeting later in year, The Soviet government ex pressed regret in its notes "that complete mutual understanding has not yet been reached on the question of the participation of Poland and Czechoslovakia in the conference of foreign ministers." The Allies have suggested the two Communist powers should join the later stages of the talks, Miscow said it "'considers it possible that the question of the participation of Poland and Czechoslovakia should be solved during the conference." It added: '"The question of representation of the two German states at the conference of foreign ministers can be regarded as mutually agreed." The West has proposed tha both West and East German rep resentatives sit in on the parley as observers. i Noted Prospector Of Pickering Dies a Ey ay Ontarle mine at Timagami in 1934, died) Sekinday at his home inthis viv MONTREAL (CP) -- Russia's famed Bolshoi Ballet is to make its Canadian debut this summer Nicholas de Koudriavtsev, pres- Saturday after returning from a Nild. Premier ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP)--New- foundlanders observed Easter Sunday without the black drapery that hung from public buildings mourning Prime Minister Digfen- baker's decision on financial as- sistance to the province under terms of union. Premier Smallwood ordered the drapery removed early Sunday, officially ending the three-day, mourning period. He sald an ex. tension would not 'have been im keeping with the spirit of Easter." The premier Saturday offered to resign his office if Mr. Diefen~ baker would give Newfoundland a "fair deal." The offer brought no comment from Mr. Diefene baker, spending an Easter vaca tion at his home in Prince Albert. The 59-year-old Newfoundland Liberal leader made the offer on the assumption that Mr. Diefen- baker's actions in connection with the three-month-old loggers' strike and the federal aid deci. sion were prompted by a grudge against him. "If Mr. Diefenbaker is acting towards us the way he is because of a grudge against me, I now make this offer through The Ca- nadian Press that if he'll treat us fairly and give us a fair deal, I'll resignf Tuesday." British Chancellor of the Ex- chequer, D. Heathcoat Amory, poses with the 'Budget Box' in BOX HOLDS A SECRE SRN his' Londen 'office' He will pre- sent his budget to Parliament April 7, ~AP Wirephota, 7 A e---------------- pe --_--, ERE