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The Oshawa Times, 25 May 1959, p. 1

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THE TIMES TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising RA 3-3492 Al other calls ....... RA 83-3474 Ds haw & WEATHER REPORT Increasing cloudiness Tuesday with scattered showers during afe ternoon or evening. 2 VOL. 88--No. 121 Fhe > Price Not 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA-WHITBY, MONDAY, MAY 25, 1959 Author Post Office a ized As Second Class Mall TWENTY PAGES so Secre WASHINGTON (AP) -- Foster Dulles people who knew him tended to drop the John--was a man of ironclad moral opinions. In his book--he was a staunch Presbyterian, and his book was the Bible--black was black and white was white, This undoubtedly gave strength to the convictions of the former secretary of state who died of cancer Sunday at 71. It is for his- tory to say whether, as some of his critics suggest, it also made him too unbending and sell- righteous to see the other side's point of view in international tions. 'Inflexible" was a word often applied to Dulles, sometimes in praise and sometimes in blame, Nobody denied he had energy. CONSTANT COMMUTER He flew the Atlantic and some- times the Pacific the way most people take a streetcar. He visited 46 countries, travelling about 600,000 miles, in the pro- gress, du his six years as reds. duns. worked incredibly long hours--often in great pain as his fatal fllness developed. In his state department role he was the original do-it-yourself man. Administrative details he left to his helpers. Big foreign policy matters he handled him- hb hd pe A could do this because Pres- fdent Eisenhower had utmost confidence in him. The two were not especially close socially--|to declare his faith and affec- Dulles was not a member of Eis-|tjon, | enhower's golf - playing set--but| Dulles' p y is hard to} correspondent Tributes To Dulles the president leaned on Dulles in| matters of state and never failed referred to 'pawky chap." This Scottish ex- pression has two meanings--| either cunning and sly or saucy and lively. | Neither definition tells the whole story. Dulles was both) blunt and subtle. He was, in his! Pouring In |Geneva Talks By THE CANADIAN PRESS gus =x: Take Breather p ay y while the Western JOHN FOSTER DULLES Thurs foreign| with Gromyko on arrangement: All World Mourns tary Dulles ter and saw international law in the making. At that time Dulles was a junior at Princeton Unis versity, He seldom was away from foreign affairs for the rest of his life, He was criticized in many quarters for his incessant travels. 1Seme people thought he should stay in Washington, plap high policy and run the state depart- ment instead of gadding off to Paris or Timbuktu. AT HOME IN PLANE But Dulles, who could put on old-fashioned carpet slippers and be almost as comfortable in a transatlantic. plane as in his own living room, wanted to be where the action was. And there he went. Sometimes he needed time out. He headed then straight for his island retreat in Lake Ontario, where there was no telephone to ring. He sailed and thought and read and bird-watched, and if a crisis stormed -up he figured he could always be back in Washing- ton in time to cope with it. The president and Mrs, Eisen' hower will attend the Wednesday funeral services. Dr. Roswell P. Barnes of New York City, a sec- retary of the World Council of 'Churches, will officiate along with Dr. Paul Wolfe of the Brick | TORON FEARED CHILDREN KIDNAPPED TRAFFIC, BOATING 43 Fatalities Over Weekend By THE CANADIAN PRESS . Traffic and boating accidents, accounted for 40 of the 43 fatali-| ties reported in Canada during] the weekend. | A Canadian Press survey from 6 p.m. local time Friday to mid- night Sunday showed 27 persons dted on highways, 13 by drown- ing, two in a. fire and one when| a racing car turned over. | The accidental death toll in-| cludes traffic, boating and swim-| ming accidents and other violent deaths connected with weekend | activities. | D Quebec led the fatality count| Town, with 17 deaths, pushed up by two 3 R d Groves, 18, of Hillsdale and Pat Gendron, 16, of Port Severn, are in hospital, William Joseph Devlin and his |wife were fatally injured Sunday {when their car was struck by a train at a level crossing in North {say. multiple - fatality boating acel- dents. Three sons in one family occupants of the other car, Jean § 5 Youngsters | Father Reported On Oshawa Trip TORONTO (CP)--Two young|was telephoned at work by a she would {| children of a tailoring firm ex-/woman who told her ecutive were reported kidnapped|never see the children again. Po- today from their home in subur-|lice quoted Mrs. Harris as saying ban North York Township by a|the voice seemed to be that of a woman who told a maid she had| mentally disturbed person. come to take them to a park. The maid, Mrs. Irene Herska, Police said Ricky Harris, 4 and said the father, Jack Harris, was his sister Alana, 5, were taken|in Oshawa today on business. from the home about 11 a.m. The Harrises have another The children's mother, who|child, Sharon, 10, who was at works for an advertising firm, school. "LIFE IS BORING' | Prince's Wife Sells Washers ministers fly to Wi Christian ~. e Herter will take with him Brit- {lunch with Gromyko and to talk Selwyn about much the same thing. Se Wanton Charen rake hia. Forelen Sea e Lloyd and French Foreign Min- long-standing rule against mek-|ister Maurice Couve de Murville.| ing public statements to issue|mpey jeave Geneva Tuesday night| Yin Sibnpe: Dull after a brief session of the Big i, oster es Was a man Four conference, and they return B ie long J lames | Feiday. dip ¢ sated! "| estern diplomats specu! bered by those who put thelr | that Soviet Foreign Minister An-| trust in freedom and fair dea "| drei A. Gromyko also might go to| {the funeral, but there was no| word from Soviet headquarters confirming or denying the specu- . A great American has 1. tion. 6 stooped man, ruddy of counte-in Washington. retary of state, Dulles was. | state for President Benjamir | Queen And went there with grandfather Fos- today sent a message of condol- - hia TIRE y John Foster Dulles, My husband Couve de Murville also was ot were drowned in the Matapedia River and four fishermen were drowned when their boat sank at Lake Quevillon, Que. 12 ONTARIO FATALITIES Twelve fatalities were recorded in Ontario. Traffic accidents ac- counted for mine, two were drowned and an amateur racing driver was killed during a pre- race warmup. The other provincial totals, with traffic fatalities in brackets: New Brunswick 6 (4); Saskat- chewan 2 (2); Alberta 5 (5); British Columbia 1. Gerald Chinn, 23, Toronto, ht iE Bas Josie neu vive in 3 tue) OSE Sunday at Victoria Harbor near Midland. Two of his passengers, Paul Dubeau, 22, of Penetang, and Donald Kitching, 24 of Mid- land, were seriously injured. Two MOUNT CLEMENS, Mich. (AP)---Five young people were drowned today when their small boat overturned off Strawberry Island in Lake St. Clair. Three teen-aged girls were rescued. The Macomb County sheriff's office said three boys and two girls were lost. Names of the victims--all from the East Detroit and Harper Woods areas-~were not immedi- ately available, Rescued were Marilyn Cily, 17, of Detroit; Mary Lou Gonyea, 17, 3 + reported in good condition at St. oseph Hospital in Mount Clem ens. | The eight young people were aboard a 16-foot cruiser, at Presbyterian Church in New York {and Dr, Edward L. R. Elson of public days, a tallish, somewhat the National Preshyterian Church nance, white - haired and end-| An official funeral, as directed lessly active. |by the president, differs in many If any man was born to be sec- ways from a state funeral. He was a 'grandson of Gen. | John Watson Foster, a civil war soldier who was secretary of| Harrison. | He cut his diplomatic teeth at the Hague Convention of 1907. He A. en LONDON (AP) -- The Queen ence to Mrs. John Foster Dulles and to President Eisenhower on the death of the former secretary of the Queen said: 'I have -learned with . very and other 8reat sorrow of the death of Mr. Joins me in sending our heartfelt sympathy to you and your family {in your great loss." The Queen also requested Brit dor in Washingt The West hoped to reduce the sterile argument over positions|ain's amb which now are beyond comprom-|Sir Harold Caccia, to convey to ise. | Eisenhower deep sympathy,| Priority, so far as the West is| 'with the president and with the) concerned, is to find a way of de-|/American people on the death of fusing the powder barrel of Ber-|this distinguished and courageous lin. |secretary of state." The Western powers are firm| In London, Prime Minister in their resolve that any arrange. Harold Macmillan praised Dulles ment for a stopgap agreement on (a5 a true and great American pa- Berlin must leave them no worse (riot in whom the highest ideals off than they now are and musi Were supported by a signal force 4 |of character." | 'Mohawk Indian Raised To Deacon KINGSTON (CP) -- Rev. R.| TEEING OFF British Prime Minister Har- old Macmillan finishes his backswing on the first tee as he begins a round of golf at Gleneages, , Perthshire, Eng- land. The prime minister and his wife spent a few days at Mr. Brant will be temporary| Gleneages before going on to LONDON (AP) -- The blonde| English wife of an Indian prince got bored with all that palace life. She's selling washing machines in London. 'Just cal me an ordinary girl," said the Maharani of My- mensingh, who once was mistress of a 20-room mansion. a big staff of servants and five automobiles. 'Forget the title. I'm Janet Hicks again," The lovely 23-year - old was d Y ating a hing ma- chine in a west-end store. She pushed a shirt into the soap suds imi NEVER HAPPIER |" "My days of luxury may be |over, but I've never been hap- | pier," said Janet as the machine {whirred into life, Miss Hicks and the maharaja met three years ago in an Eng- lish hotel. He was a guest, she the receptionist. They were mar- ried after a whirlwind courtship and Prince Dulu--as she called | him--whisked her off to high life lin Calcutta. 'It was just one long round of parties and idleness," said the reformed maharani, the eyes of a crowd of housewives. thing useful and earning: my own living." The beauty who gave up a pal- ace now shares a small apart. ment with a girl friend. Her bud. get no longer allows her to buy rich clothes, Her hopes of being an actress have faded. 'I've given that up," she said, dropping the dripping shirt into a spin dryer. 'I have no more flu. sions about the stage. It's a vastly overcrowded profession," NOT DIVORCED Miss Hicks is from the ain Dot oars es pom no divorce. . 'In the meantime, I'm just a working girl," she sald 'Sometimes, in the middle of doing some humdrum job, I re. member the past and it seems like a dream . , . just lke it never really happened." She switched off the spin dryer and held up the shirt. The house- wives drifted away, Khrushchev Glendon Brant, 24, a Mohawk In-|incumbent of Ameliasburg parish dian from Detroit, is the first of in Prince Edward County during Damaway Castle in Moray- shire for a vacation, 'It got so boring I wanted to take a job. But Dulu wouldn't Arrives his race to be raised to deacon in the history of the Anglican the summer, later going to Trin- ity College, Toronto, to study for --AP Wirephoto hear of it. 'Now at least I'm doing some- | also leave the door open for Ber- |QUICKLY AGREES {lin's restoration as the capital Sir Anthony Eden, former Prime Minister Diefenbaker, |prime minister whom Dulles op- his bachelor degree in sacred |Church of Canada, theology. He was one of three made expressing the sorrow of his gov- ernment and Canadians, spoke of Dulles as "this man whose pro- found moral and spiritual beliefs, courage and devotion to the abid- ing principles of freedom caused | Gromyko agreed in a telephone |conversation with Herter to the two-day suspension o/ 'the confer-| ence, He said he fully understood Herter's wish to attend the fun- city of a reunited Germany, [posed over the Anglo-French in- |vasion of Suez in 1956, said he| was "deeply grieved" to hear THOUGHT FOR TODAY Dulles had died "after a long ill- s so bravely borne." bim to give so freely of himself [eral and expressed c lences | so that in truth his life was given|on the geath of the former sec-| to the cause of liberty for free. retary te. dom - loving peoples everywhere, The recess comes during. 'a in the world." 'critical week for the conference. Said Opposition Leader Lester] The Western ministers, ap-| Pearson: "Free democracies parently with some agreement or| have lost a great champion encouragement from Gromyko,| whose like we shall not see|are planning to engineer a grad-| again." ual shift from the formal debate In a message to Eisenhower, oyer the mutually rejected Soviet Presiden C Baries de Seuelam Western plans for.Germany : o "" to active negotiations on more Phlies 'eonstitutes for voursel, Pliable issues for vour country and all men at-| Herter, Couve de Murville and tached to freedom." | Lloyd's deputy, Sir Anthony Rum- Negro Boy Barred From Dance Party TORONTO (CP)--Liquor Com- panied by two chaperones to take missioner W. H. Collings of On-/part in the program. tario said today he will demand, Mps. Muriel Schranks, one of a government inquiry into the the adults, said master of cere-| case of a Toronto Negro student monies Pat Fagan told her the who was asked to stop dancing switchboard was swamped with with a white girl on a Buffalo calls from angry viewers and television program Saturday. asked her to "plea do some- Mr. Collings said he will ask thing to alleviate the situation. Labor Minister Daley to invest- BOY WALKED OUT igate the incident which occurred gue said she asked her son on station WGR - TV's Dance popald, an organizer of the trip, Party program. The labor depart-/to speak with Clayton. He did so| | Foreign Secretary Selwyn | v € {Lloyd said he and Dulles had dif-| extricate himself from the [fered in the past but it was| horns, of a dilemma, he gen- ("quite untrue to think of him as| erally falls into a quandary. |an inflexible person." I When a person manages to deacons Sunday in ceremonies at the Cathedral Church of St. George. The young Mohawk deacon was born in Detroit, son of Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Brant, who moved there from Tyendinaga parish at the Mohawk reservation near Deseronto. Rt. Rev. Kenneth C. Evans, Bishop of Ontario, said that when Mr. Brant is raised to the priest- hood, his ordination will be held LATE NEWS FLASHES In Albania BELGRADE (Reuters)--Soviet DEE fh Sat vi to a 12-day official visit, the in the Mohawk church at the re-| servation and that it is likely he will celebrate his first commun. ion using the portion of the fa. mous Queen Anne silver com- TIMMINS (CP) -- Mayor to the town's supply for new i OTHER APPOINTMENTS |New Boyne and Lombardy near | | Smiths Falls. service kept there, The service was a gift of Queen | Anne to the Mohawk tribe when| they became communicants of the hue of Engiand in the early 1700s. The Mohawks brought the plate with them when they fled to Can. ada from New York at the time of the American Revolution. The| service was divided equally be- tween Deseronto and the Mo- hawk reservation at Brantford. guards. Fishing Party Missing north of Quebec City. Trouble Predicted For MONTREAL (CP) -- Hal Lack Of Bearskins In Timmins at a nearby farm Sunday night failed to add any bearskins CHIBOUGAMAU, Que. (CP) -- Six persons who set out on a fishing trip Sunday have been reported missing in the lake- studded, wooded area near this mining community 250 miles the Seafarers' International Union, says James Hoffa, presi- dent of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, will be in for a fight if he intrudes on CIU territory in Canada. ian radio reported. Khrushchev was accompanied by Defence Minister Marshal Ro- dion Malinovsky. Mlinosky's inclusion sug- gested to Moscow observers that the announced friendship visit might turn out to be more than just courtesy call on a friendly Some observers in Moscow be- lieve Khrushchev may he plan- ning to meet political leaders from other states during his ab- sence from Moscow. They 'spoke of a possible meeting with Pres- ident Tito of Yugoslavia, now en- gaged in an ideological dispute with Moscow, or leaders of Arab countries. Leo Del Villano's five-hour vigil hats for the Buckingham Palace In Quebec Hoffa Teamsters C. Banks, Canadian director of | The other two who hb deacons Sunday were Rev. James Riesberry of Bramp and Rev, Cyril Betts, who has been incumbent of the parish of 'MEET THE PEOPLE' 'Color Bar" | | | { By THE CANADIAN PRESS - 'Wins Over gw Haiti Counle , snr ctr eer soa MONTREAL (CP)--Jean Oreste, iSSue out of the fact he has been Ontario Party Chiefs Stump The Ridings |When I offered to go to Lindsay Welland and Cooksville, explain- {he was too busy and when we|ing how United States visitors {were both in Windsor last week!/would help to pay for Ontario he backed out again." {road expansion through the reve™ | vol unable to get Premier Frost to| The premier, who began a two- nues from toll-road entrances to hy Lo wile have Siven agree to a public debate. {day rest Sunday after a full week Southern Ontario. ' *| Mr. MacDonald, who has been | of campaigning, wasn't available| ment enforces Ontario's diserim- and Clayton walked out of the ination laws. studio. Mr. Wintermeyer pushed his He suggested he may take the Mr. Fagan said the incident case to Canadian distilleries and Was a "slight misunderstand- breweries that advertise over the ing." Negro' youths often ap- Buffalo station. He called it a peared on the show over WGR- "shocking affair." TV but never danced with white girls, he said The student concerned comes The students were angered. from Malvern Collegiate, located, we Jay the blame squarely on in Mr. Collings' provincial con- the MC said Donald Schranks.| stituency of Toronto Beaches "He asked for three couples from Clayton Johnston, 15, of To-jour group to do the spotlight ronto was dancing with school-'dance and one of the couples mate Patt Banks when the calls picked included Clayton." started. They and 44 other stu-| Leonard Johnston, Clayton's dents had gone to Buffalo accom- father, said his son "felt lousy. | Clayton left rather than be put CITY EMERGENCY in this position." Mr. Fagan said the station has no policy regarding Negro PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1138 |® mole bl besaid FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 |station's general manager, said youths. "Now all this publicity--| {they're making a mountain out of to tak: y ac- HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 Igo "se 2'remuit of the incidiat | OWNER OF PLANE IN GUN-RUNNING PLOT Dominic Edward Bartone | federal agents. The plane was was identified as the owner of | loaded with guns and ammuni- the C-74 transport plane that | 1p eounter-revolution in Cuba. wag seized at Miami, Fla, by | Behind Baritone at right is |convinced a 'color bar" was {their undoing. The Haitian-born couple left by {bus for the United States Sunday night with their Canadian-born |infant daughter. » | They plan %o settle in New |York, where an aunt has ar- ranged accommodations for 'them. | 'Hf we weren't colored I'm sure |we would have beer, permitted to remain," the Quebec-trained tex-|pr tile technician told a reporter be- i |fore leaving. | 'It would seem that the present | It | Mr. Other Haitians in the same Pposi-| Wel tion as ourselves were granted |John Wintermeyer uled to be in Sudbury June 3, eight. days before the provincial] election. The mayor invited Mr.| acDonald t6 come and 'make a real party." WILLING TO OBLIGE 2 a The CCF leader said he would government has racial prejudices. gladly change his scheduled visit| {be assured of a debate with the {entry to Canada by the former premier. | Samuel Eugene Poole of Tam- |Liberal government in Ottawa."| "I challenged him in the legis-| turned down three times in re-/for comment on the proposal. cent months, issued another chal- {lenge to the premier at a Sud- bury dinner meeting Saturday. came after Mayor Joseph Fabbro of Sudbury told him that and Liberal Leadef were sched- Frost land on that date if he could pa, flight captain of the plane. | Volcy, 27, and his wife, Andrea lature and he agreed," Mr. Mac-| fied federal deputy marshal. |club singer, left after withdraw-|a-pl ,--AP Wirephoto |ing an appeal against deportation. ' tion believed destined for use | Man in centre is an unidenti- Jeanne Louis, 22, a former night {Donald told 212 persons at the $5- ate event. "But when I hired| .'Massey Hall be was too busy. | ¥ | {vigorous "meet the people" cam- Saturday Mr. Frost spoke at paign into five more Toronto rid- lings Saturday, shaking hands |with hundreds at two shopping SLAM-BANG |plazas after an extensive motor- |cade in which he waved from a DEMONSTRATION "mie vive | The Liberal chief flew to Win- CALDWELL. N.J. (AP) -- |Dipeg Sunday and was to catch a Science teacher Dante Fiore |train for Kenora today, opening promised his physics class he 2 quik tour of northwestern On- ou prog ee lightning. | The premier said the province As he made ready to flick {plans tolls on the new interna. the switch on & high voltage [tional bridges at Queenston and coil to loose a miniature [Sault Ste. Marie, the new en- storm, nature took a hand | trance to the Niagara parks Sys- Lightning struck the build |tem and on He Jey Lake hin fem a small por | "Our (American) visitors, who injured fag |are completely used to tolls in The students witre properly their own country, will assist us impressed. in providing great traffic facilis . (ties « + J"

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