THE TIMES TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising RA 3-3492 All other calls ....... RA 3-3474 The Oshawa Times WEATHER REPORT Tuesday Sunny With A Few Cloudy Intervals. Cooler, Winds Light. ay" Price Not Over 10 Per Copy OSHAWA-WHITBY, MONDAY, JUNE 1, 1959 AER Second Class Moll Post Office ide Ottawo TWENTY PAGES VOL. 88--No. 127 Ast oni Firing Of UK's Lloy LONDON and denials lay greeted a re- port in the n Times that Prime Minister Maemillan has given Selwyn Lloyd to under. stand that hie days as foreign secretary are limited. A responsible British informant said "I can assure you that the prime minister and the foreign {secretary have never had anv |such conversation.' | The Times report was that {Macmillan had told Lloyd he was to have another cabinet post after the approaching parliamentary elections, In Geneva, where the report| caused excitement among dele- gates to the Big Four foreign min- isters' conference, a British offi- |eial declaréd it appeared entirely | out of the question that Lloyd would be shifted from his job be- fore the general elections due perhaps in October "SPEAKS FOR ITSEL But an official of ¥he Tuges, | informed of the stormy reception of its story, said: "The artigle speaks for Hself. What it says is still the view of {The Times. We can't reveal its but 1 shouldn't worry [about it," Lioyd, busy with a round of (AP) irequested officials to make no 'LIAR, RAT, SKUNK' in Geneva, was not solos for comment. Nor was there any formal comment from either the foreign office or the {prime minister's residence. Informants said Macmillan had comment for the record, ap- parently because he did not want|' to dignifr the report with an of- ficial denial. The fact that the report ap- peared in The Times, often re-| garded abroad as an authorita- tive mouthpiece of official British thinking, created fears that it would undermine the Britsh po- stion at Geneva where the for- leign ministers' conference is at a critical stage In the dispute over Berlin an' Germany, the Macmillan govern- ment has attempted to play the role of Sopciiator. in we days ahead, the chances even a RF stopgap Berlin settiement could MONKEY BAKER depend a lot on the role played "ann v2. wer: ADE, Baker & Stay Under --| Observation Russians to agree not to disturb the status of West Berlin despite) Soviet Premier Khrushchev's dec WASHINGTON (AP) Able and Baker, the little monkeys | rocketed into space aboard 'an KRESTOVA, BL Jon op-a 5 58- 2 Som of Fi of unityial Doukhobor Fails In Try For Unity rg Va laration that he won't bargain for) a settlement. | American missile, will be kept | under observation for some time to see if they develop any follow-up effects from their trip. | Scientists say the two weren't {hurt by their 1,500-mile flight, But | hey want to keep the monkeys | under long - term observation to 'make sure the h weightlessness of space travel hth | Sid cause harm that might h| show up later. ormer supporter of a in and peace. abot appears to have lost! fake over leadership of thé Zadical sect from & comin, ; . ; ite chp 0 er, Le showed innlig day b orm from the start and push: men in the cro ed his three-wheeler along with |Lebedoff and his REFUSES TO DISROBE |. Many visiting chiefs of state re- icelve less attention than jand Baker got at the press con- a week to repent. Yater he has no plans|beats of the space pair acceler he fears led as their Jupiter missile took le ia off early Thursday from Cape Canaveral, Fla. his feet on the ground at a tidy | One pace which would probably [vat, skunk' after he have beaten all comers any. [advocated that Doukhobors live way. He didn't use the pedals. |on communal land and refuse to | aceept old age and other ern He can't quite reach them | ment . Deneliis. She --Oshawa Times Photo {as " Sothed hd was led from LH TO TAME SECT bombing in the interior over the 8 ga like crude animals, hobors, Radicals { 'PRICKS AND JIBES' Mr. Wintermeyer said a Lib- eral government would pursue a |vigorous policy of northern devel- under a special depart- ment of government. Roads would be built, secondary in. {dustry established and freight rates revised 'Now is the time 0 do some thing about Northern Ontario. not personal | 10 years from now.' The Liberal leader also ap-| By THE CANADIAN PRESS An attack on Premier Frost's {Progressive Conservative cab {inet was loosed Sunday night by Leader John Winter Table- Thumping Election Drives {to. North Bay today was at his LATE NEWS FLASHES Elvis Presley Gets Promotion, Raise KFURT, Germany (AP) -- Rock 'n" roll singer Elvis | v hae had a promotion and raise. The 3rd Armored Division announced today that Presley, a jeep driver, was p join oF gue first class to specialist fourth class, a rank eq . Af a private, Presley got $99.37 a month, al, pA $122.90. Rabbi Raps CBC For Program TORONTO (CP) -- Rabbi Abraham L. Feinberg of Holy Blossom Temple has accused the CBC of making a hero owt of former German SS General Kurt Meyer. Rabbi Feinberg, in an address Sunday at a confirmation service, was com- menting on CBC TV's News Magazine, televised Sunday, May 28. The program included a filmed interview with Meyer in his home in West Germany Rains Ease Quebec Forest Fires QUEBEC (CP) -- Rains have easew the forest fire danger in eastéth Quebec and, at least temporarily, have ruled out the prospect of a bah on forest travel. Indian Fisherman | Saves RCMP Man NEW WESTMINSTER, BC (investigating a braw: on the Col. (CP)--A wild drive at speeds up|ony Farm Indian reservation near from 150 emergency donors saved target for a 22-calibre rifle {the life of an RCMP constable/ Const shot Sunday on a nearby Indian dren. was felled and would have reserve. bed to death from a half-inch _ Const. John. D. S. Clack, 20. was wound in his heart but for the quick thinking of an Indian Hsh-| erman visiting the reserve, John Robertson, 27, of Prince] Rupert heard the shot and found {the Mountie struggling to call for] | assistance over his cruiser radio, | Robertson, commended by RCMP officers for his 'coolness and courage," fired the consta- ble's revolver into the floor of the {car to scare the gunman away. {INEXPERIENCED DRIVER Robertson had driven a car jonly twice before and did not hold be started a three - day swing a drivers' licence. But he drove through northeastern Ontario in [the cruiser at hi speeds to his campaign for the June 11 Pro-|y. conctanle dri ex vineial election, he is in fair condition. Premier Frost, sched to or uled to fly 'I called for police on the car home in Lindsay and it was left|radio," Robertson said. '1 knew to Lands and Forests Minister how to work it becavse I've nsed Spooner to give an answer to the nes like it on fishooats, 1 drove Libera): lender as fast as 1 could. 1 did't think i 8 coun 1] 1 |DENIES CABINET OLD about much except that the offi: 8. radiation or Able brin pe mi and was reported that the heart-| whether 8 ears, He called for a return to the true faith of the Doukhohors. ccuse ASte bir direst == "We Lebedoft ust 1 not hi "SUDBURY (CP) -- Former of-| quoted Mr. Longridge as saying: re forgetting God." of International Unlow of | "I suggest you forward the $11,-] A committee of women took Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers 000 as soon as possible." over control of the sect April 13 (Ind.) Local Bos spent union funds| Mr, Stewart told the member. after a meeting vote out the 52- on luxuries Without membership| shin ghat "it was obvious to alll men fraternal count Stthorization. Sadi tor Alistair byt the most blind that every cent Mp. Stewart said the union of- (Lots 58 sould lay Xs hands on| C lide fictals under president Mike Sol-| | ips 0 ski "developed an extraordinary | "While the national office was arvogance" and that it was a {dunning the local union for A Ww 11 d tightly-kmi¢ group which had al { ohey fo hake good national ol t e an close bond with the national of-|1¢ commitments, the 1o¢ | fice. union wes issuing an appeal a PORT COLBORNE (CP)---Nav-!|___ The former CCF rnember of NP" ligation on the Welland Canal was Partiament brought in fo audit, EXTRAVAGANCES LISTED . [tied up for four hours today when union records, said the local was two freighters sideswiped. treatod ac a "milk cow" by the AF am Example of the 'extrava:| 'The Wallan freighter Elettra goa as 2 onic gant luxubies" on which the union Fassio, bound for Lake Erle, and| i cio 018 od "every officers pent money. Mr. Stew- the Liberian freighter Tyrus side- cent ry oid Joy igi on fart said Hig swiped about 3 a.m. sendng the during the strike against. the In- In November, 936, pen and bow of the Tyrns aground on one ternational Nickle Company, the Pencil sets and wallets costing bank of the canal and its stern| national office was "dunning" it $122 were given away; on SH et Hindman pulled for money, he said In February 1957, luggage va-\.o "mone bound for Lake On-| $1,500,000 TO HQ Jued bod was charged to |tario, off the banks about 7 a.m. Mr, Stbwar tod the in In 1955 the union hired an art-| Some 25 to 30 ships were wait-| membership Sune ay sat the 10- ist for $200" to paint murals|ing this morning for downbound| cal had paid more than SL500- over the bar in the union hall' s| ge through the canal. In the| 000 to the national office during pheverage room: and additional | last 24 hours, 32 ships navigated | LB Sean tod. bY paintings ware bought from the|the canal, 15 upbound and 17 ua ous rtist for President Don Gillis and his sup- ki downbound. Fal fu the March election steal--but wasted union hot he said gio the Inco strike last fal, | said Mr. Stewart, a letter was received from the national office pressing for $11,000 to help with construction of a Mine-Mill hall at Elliot Lake. ot pariier the local had agreed to] foan $21,000, the estimated cost of the hall, but national treasurer William Longgridge asked Local $98 to increase its Joan to $35,000. The union agreed but the money was not paid all at once. | By the time the strike started, $20,000 had beep advanced STRIKE IGNORED "In the middle of the strike, an- [Libera sett fetier Sd Rom ae He told a table-thumping crowd "There was no mention of the of more than 0 Liberals at a strike and po mention of the $1.50-a-plate huMet Jlnner in Tim gravity of the situation facing the MINS members of Local 508 1 am not one for "Instead, there was a request|Villification but the Tory cabinet for more money." The auditor|ls the weakest the province has [had in many years 'A year ago they criticized us CITY EMERGENCY for not having a program--now ONE NUMBERS {we have one and they are with-| PH out one. The Liberals are a party POLICE RA 5.1132 that is not afraid to take hold '. ' » he FIRE DEPT. RA 5.6574 HOSPITAL RA 3.2211 and make changes, Progressive changes, while the Conservatives {ave satisfied with things the way they are.' la Mr. Spooner. seeking re-elec- cer was dying.' hy [thon hrane South, spoke at) Police cars met him on the) convention of Catholic campaign meeting in Holtyre, route and led him to hospi Women's League of Omtario a8) 4s ils. miles east of Timmins. He|Doctors gave Const. Clark is Sleep BRITISH GIRLS ABROAD SHOCK TO CONTINENTALS LONDON (AP) -- 'Tradition has it that British womanhod abroad Is in mortal danger from smooth Latin lovers and | the constant threat of a fate | worse than death, Not so, says News. It's' the English girls who are on the prowl--and the Con- tinentals who gel shocked. "Shrinking violets who would not say boo to a goose at home are turning overnight into flir- | tatious, immoral and often vul- the Empire garly dressed good-time girls | | once they set foot on European | | soil," Empire News says. "They are asking for trouble, And many are getting it." The paper ordered its cor- respondents in holiday spots to investigate the vacation behav- | tor of the English female and these were the results: Italy: Scandalous behavior of many English girls has shocked the Italians. French Riviera: British women are getting their coun- try a bad name. In Nice, the mayor has demanded a ban on outrageous swim wear, British girls usually are considered the worst offenders, Paris: No use blaming the French for leading English girls astray. They ask for it, There are no girls in the world | so easy to pick up as the Eng- lish, Five Killed In Iron IRON RIVER, Mich: peninsula mining town, IRON RIVER, Mech, seriously explosive iron mine near here. £ Up some of alive or poly or mined room, which had {walled off for several years. Si phurous slate, which is highly 1 flammable when exposed to air |collapsed and sent fumes through the shalt. { | | [Damage to both ships was slight. |i, 100 miles an hour and the blood | Coquitlam when he became the Clark, father of four chil: EARL BENNETT, centre, ers as he emerged from the | _emerg enéy opening through 'Canada Slipping OTTAWA (CP)--Canada's min- ing areas -- Ontario, Saskatch-|-- ewan and 'the Northwest Terri tories--showed a gain over 1957, Total value of all mineral out- put eased hy 3.1 per cent to $2. 122,153,000 from a record produe- tion of $2,190.332,000 in 1957, the bureau of statistios said today in preliminary report. Petroleum, despite a decline of $52,000,000, retained its lead as the largest source of in terms of value, followed by wra- nium. Po't non tel with the {was sora ad of J. iftermey. peated transfusions of ler's servative cab-|{0 negative blood while they | THOUGHT FOR TODAY net is old and tired Eight of the sewed up the wound in his heart. 0 abinet ministers are under ¢ picked up a ma Almost everything goes ne tail erve 'in conmestion over the head of 2a man who 'Mr, Wintermeyer should take shooting. A charge hoops bie mind in the gutter. le look at bis 4pw yanks." 0 be laid today, », & L Downward t 8 were shown n some base mel , AS comer output was down by $26.07°.000 , sinc hy $7,000,000 (AP) Five men were killed today in a brought to the surface with us| cave-in and explosive fire 2,200 face Disgheied by gas, feet underground at the Sherwood stepped iron mine in this Michigan upper !* 'belching as wok by Why (AP)w- Four men were trapped 2,200 feet underground today and several red in a cavedn and at the Sherwood Rescue workels w were still the 35 men ake Tur Mineral So hi a Mine officials said the cave-in| |warned Sunday night that any was in a large underground stope, attack on. the Soviet bloc would been| 'tantamount to suicide," = "lhe sald that the West's "'reck- spe hastening [Bel be! suffocating | the time when mankind, will gets helping hand from rescu- | Mine One of the rescued men, aga cutoff ing Girl Ladder Climbed To Second Floor TORONTO (CP)--Police were/was awakened by the front door \lovking today for a man who being slammed and the cries of raped an eight-year-old girl as she lay sleeping in her home hospital Sunday night in downtown Tor- ond e gi) was taken to ao ronto. Police said the man put al TORONTO (CP) =~ A firebug ladder against the two - Storey [early today set fire to six homes house and entered the girl's bed-ljy the midtown Bathurst and Col room through an open window, lege. streets area, forcing dozens The - girl's mother, sleeping| : downstairs on a chesterfield wait. °f $ people into rain-soaked streets ing for her ?. Nish to return, nd doing about $10,000 domagn District Fire Chief W. E, Qil Strike In Sahara Desert | ALGIERS (AP) -- Oflmen ex- ploring the heart of the Sahara [have reported striking oll in the western part of the vast desert. | The discovery is likely to in- |crease considerably the estimates {of the 'black gold" hidden under {the sun surface of the| Sahara, iki 8 ¥ : effilze 2 | " Full Inquiry In Khrushchev Back On Old Tracks | LONDON (AP) - Soviet Khrushe! le oh inevitable' {town of Viore, less" policies were able to bury capitalism deeply which he and two other miners | | 'days of entrapment at Beaver. | dam, Kentucky. About 100 men | Mining In Keep Cool, Wait Miners Narrate BEAVER DAM, Ky. (AP)--The main thing when you're trapped {underground is to "keep to- | Rether, keep level - headed and] "This the 39-year-old is way eral production slipped in value|jake Lewis of Harlan put it|the rescue. "We're just thankful last year as.only uranium-produc-| after he and two other uninjured Lindsay Workers Return To Work LINDSAY (CP) -- Members of Local 4925 of the United Steel workers. of America (CLC) who have been on strike since last Wednesday at the Dominion) Brake Shoe Company have agreed to return to work today under previous conditions of emmloyment Ihe strike began when a com 'ref"sing to work overtime. - and were brought out after two | Belleville Asked TORONTO (CP)--A, ies by a har pr hey: hoy agai Cou |city of Belleville , iy ie In a speech in the Albanian] Khrushchev provinel the city's nancial backs, The audit was ordered wy| 1 Munieipal Affairs Minister War- render following complaints that estimated $57,000 was mis. ant to keep the championship) leville McFarlands hockey| eam operating The petition states that unless le M hockey defie of 1958. "The deficit the hockey club announced the city's financial roubles, say- mis- Appoki jing x $75,000." also manager of the hockey club. Municipal Affairs Muster Warrender has said he would hesitate to order a judicial in. quiry to the citys financing 'of its hockey team if evidence of a |department audit showed the needs, $700,000 Contracts For Ajax | OTTAWA (Special) -- Equipment of Canada [Ajax has been awarded {major contracts by the {ment of Defence Product [ling close to $700,000, | Stark Electronic Inst were awarded one of $200,000. Dowty were awarded two sepa rate contracts for the repair and overhaul of aircraft components during the year ending March 31, 1960. One was for $406,000 and the other for $285,000. | were in the rescue teams which | effected the rescue. ---AP Wirephoto equipment during the same fis {cal year. The GM contract was {for the supply of automotive spares. od {but exhausted mineis crawled to] Announcements were made in safety Sunday after 41 hours of {imprisonment in a western Ken-/a release of unclassified defence tucky coal shaft. contracts awarded by the "I'm thankful we got out, we felt real good," said Lewis after|Defence C: {to the Lord and to the men that "|done. it," | A continuous mining machine that cuts and loads coal in the same operation dug rescuers a path to resch Lewis, Earl Ben- nett, 50, and Don McClernon, 53. A rool cave-in Friday caught {the three miners 90 feet under of some 215 contracts was million. All were unclassified. Man Remanded On. Robbery Charre ° Limited} ground and 500 feet from the shaft entrance at the Ken Coal Company mine. They had a watch to tell time, small lights to see their way around the room and plenty of fresh air, George Siblock, 39, of 253 street, was remanded for a by Magistrate F. S. Ebbs today, when he appeared in Oshawa Po- {They drank water and milk piped through a tube ordinarily used as a sprinkler svstem. An unbroken telephone cable '« sxpected flead by $8,000,000, aickel by $62, {pany employee was suspended for kept them in touch swith the out. Iside. lice Court on a charge of tempted armed robbery > Siblock, hs. by Ter. ence V. Kelly, is charged dwith. the npted holdup of the mans er « of Oshawa Brewers' Were. house, Friday, May 20. § °