TIMES-GAZETTE TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising. . RA 3-3492 All Other Calls .......RA 3-3474 Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE Weather Forecast Snow, temperatures unchanged. Light winds. Low tonight 25, high tomorrow 34 'OL. 85--No. 27 Authorized as Second-Class Moeil Post Office Department, Ottawa OSHAWA-WHITBY, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1956 Price Not Over S$ Cents Per Copy TWENTY PAGES 'FUN'S A POPPIN' TOPS AS GAY MUSIC BLACK ~ FACED CHARLEY | pin' ""--in UAW auditorium last FLEMIN night, The general public admitted to this musical revue for the first time. It has been presented twice for union mem- bers. Marriage has cut into the ranks of the original Unionettes chorus line, shown above with G, minstrel-show come- | 3 between two | dancers from the Unionetles | chorus line, Jean Webster (left) and Annabel Adcock. The group took part in the biggest local strike show yet-- "Fun's A Pop- FPR go the batons they twirl in the strike-show "Fun's A Poppin'." Only seven of the original troupe | of 10 are free to carry on. The girls, wh had no professional dancing experience before the strike, are directed by Freddie Bryant. They are, from left to was right (Back row): Vickie Yaki- myshen, Dennie Cairney, Anna- | bel Adcock, Cathy Pryback. | (Front row) Claudette Shortt, | Jean Webster, Grace Jackson. | (Please turn to page two for | story). Times-Gazette Photo A 16-year-old Whitby girl, San- dra Osborne, was placed on sus- ed sentence today when she leaded guilty to assaulting her| ather because he objected to her girl friend. The father Gordon Osborne, well known Whitby businessman, told Deputy Magistrate Fred Thompson in Oshawa court that the girl had been "difficult" to handle since she was 13. | "We have fried love and under-| standing," said Mr. Osborne in| the witness box. "We have fried to do everything to help her, but possibly we have failed some place." Sandra threw an ash tray at him and "scratched" him, Os- out of the area by 8 p.m. tonight. snow flurries, 'with a colder tem- perature, tonight 22- i in a five-care crash near Ajax today. the road to keep sluggish traffic on the move. Four.Inch Fall On Way ForOchawa And Area SE Another four inches of snow is expected to fall today in the Oshawa area. according to the govern ment weather forecaster stationed at Malton. This will bring to 12 inches the total snow-fall since Monday. Meteorologists blame the heavy snow on a winter blizzard, blowing in from the south-west. The storm is expected to move; The Oshawa works department reports snow-plows standing by, and 30 men at work clearing snow from. the streets, with 3 sanding machines in operation. About 70 men worked on snow- | clearance yesterday. At Whitby: the OPP detachment reports most of the highways and roads in the area well sanded. But Whitby Township police sa highway 401 is "slushing up,' wit! driving conditions becoming more difficult as snow continues to fall. Forecast for tomorrow predicts High today will be 30, and low Poor driving conditions resulted] Police have all available men on 'Hobbed UA wv WINDSOR (CP) -- United Auto Workers (CIO-CCL) say imports of United States cars robbed 3,500 Canadian auto industry employees | of a year's work during 1955. | The current issue of the union's | Canadian publication, The Guard- {ian, says number of U.S. built autos imported last year is esti- | mated at 29,000. It says this rep-| |ersents almost 40 per cent of the | production here of Chrysler Cor- | poration. | Commenting on the figures, vice- {president James Dowell of the | union's Windsor Local 195 said the| |imports represent 3,510 lost jobs| {for Canadian autoworkers and | probably another 1,000 lost in parts plants. | borne testified. Relating the details of the as- sault, Mr. Osborne said: 'Sandra came home with a young lady we didn't feel was the best influence We asked this person to Jeave, but Sandra opposed it and blocked the way, "When I tried to get her fo move, she (Sandra) threw a glass ash tray at me. I did slap her --| not severely, but enough to bring her to time, 1 thought. ed "With that, her mother got into it. T was in the middle and Sandra| scratched me." ! There had been a fight in which Sandra "was hit, he understood, | and the girl was being bothered by some man. Mr. Osborne said that his wife had been in ill health for the past few years. They had entered Sandra in a girl's school and he had even taken her down south, but she was dissatisfied and would not attend school, he testified: The accused girl, who was es-| corted to court by Whitby police, was put in the witness box but of-| fered no explanation. | In placing her on suspénded sentence for two vears. Magis- trate Thompson admonished her: "You must make a very defermin- ed effort fo get along with your! DENY.REPORT (ON HEALTH PLAN A spokesman for CIO United Auto Workers denied today that his union had decided to back up in its demand for a health plan fully paid by General Mo- tors of Canada Limited. "We are making an exhaus- tive study of the possible ef- fects on collective bargaining of the national health plan pro- posed by the Canadian Gov- ernment." he said. "We have made no decision one way or another, Press re- ports which imply differently ers Union . (AFL-TLC), timidation. intimidation charges. Crown Charges Intimidation KAPUSKASING (CP) -- Wayne| J. Sawyer, president of Local 2,995 that he was anywhere near the of the Lumber and Sawmill Work- was ar-| did not sanction the actions of the rested today and charged with in- The charges were laid in connec- are incorrect." The union held a top-level caucus last night. The meeting tion with a pre-dawn raid Sunday| on the Christianson Lumber Com- pany camp, 20 miles in the bush | Sawyer denied Wednesday night camp. He added that the union 75 bushmen from the time they) {walked off their jobs Jan. 3. Two| He appeared before a justice of| Other men Amade Letourneau and the peace in Hearst, 65 miles north-| fosaire L west of here, and was released on| intimidation Monday and Tuesday {$500 bail, He faces four separate|in connection with the raid. Rosaire Lacroix were charged with RCMP Questions from. Mattice, here: Twelve to resumed this morning, and is expected to continue all day. Negotiators in the 137-day strike at GM may tackle disputed - monetary issues with the union demand for Blue Cross and PSI fully paid by the company standing out as the main problem. 15 men working Icarloads of raiders, They {taken by car to Mattice and re- {leased unharmed. parents.' the raiders, police said. Canada Wallops Germany 10-0 aided|"¢ed8 some protection. CORTINA -d'AMPEZZO, Italy period, f (CP)--Canada bounced back from! finding the range, but the Cana- in the scoring. its defeat by the United States to dians opened up in the second tol Bounces Back 40 miles west of in defiance of the strikers, were forci-|y tomorrow, |bly removed from the camp by 25/¢ Some of the men said Sawyer or led and directed the activities of, He referred in the "Love Or Duty' OTTAWA (CP)--Senator Ralph crner, Saskatchewan Progressive |Conservative, Wednesday took is- {sue with his house leader on {whether lov or regulafions should prevail in the RCMP, 4 bop MRS. G. CLARKE, of Port Hope, is carried to an ambulance Highway 401 this morning. Two | others are in hospital following following a five-car collision on the ident which occurred dur- ing a snowstorm. Mrs. Clarke's car swung across the boulevard into the opposite lane, crashing into another car. This crash sent eh ad | other vehicles skidding into snow-. filled ditches and.caused a traf- fic tangle on the way. --Times-Gazette Photo, Queen Watches Thundering STRIKE SOLUTION SEEN Pageantry Of Durbar Show By RONALD BATCHELOR KADUNA, Nigeria (Reuters) -- Thundering hooves in a wild, yell to the case of six RCMP constables dis- charged in Alberta for 'breaking regulation: by marrying without permission before they had served five years. Senator Horner said a regulation le a regulation and the fact the men did not get permission to |marry "is good enough for me." | After all, he added with a smile, la young man of marrying age with only Buddy Horne| fact that all four defenc Refreshed by a day's layoff hel Gets 12 Months wallop Germany 10-0 today in the take a 5-0 lead on goals by Howie lowing their 4-1 defeat by the winter Olympic round-robin hockey Lee, Don Rope, Art Hurst and United States Tuesday, the Dutch- tournament, Phe victory improved George Scholes. Then in the final) men needed every tally they could the chanses of Kitchener - Water- period the Canadians doubled their| get against the winless Germans loo D."enmen for saving the title tally. shead a 'oarnament tie have to be decried by goal averages. Th2 & 4 hungry Canadians, open- with two. Bill Colvin had three day night. ing a ave to get back into the assists. Other scorers in the third| to fatten their goal average against Rope got another in the final/the possibility of a first-place tie |period to lead the goal scorers when the tournament ends Satur- For Shooting Girl KITCHENER "(CP--A Hespeler youth who shot a young girl in the leg through a church basement window Wednesday was given 12 Under Olympic rules, the team months' suspended sentence. Olynso'c 1 +le race after their up- period were Jim Logan, Floyd| with the most favorable proportion| Douglas Westwood was convicted set Joss Tussduy, hurled a steady| Martin, Jack McKenzie and Jerry of goals scored, to goals against, isfof woundinf: Joy Goebel, 12, daugh- stream of ruover this morning at| Theberge. German goaiie Ulrich Jansen. ranked first in the event The sustained power of of alter of Mayor E. the| deadlock, The Dutchmen's record |Hespeler while she was attending W. Goebel of ing charge by African horsemen, rising over the din of trumpet blasts. and rumbling drums and cymbals, burst before Queen Eliz abeth today in the greatest tribal rally Africa has seen this century. Fierce horsemen of the Jahi tribe, yelling "blood-curdling battle] cries, staged the breakneck charge across a vast durbar ground. The mounted warriors pulled up short 20 yards outside a pavilion where the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh and Nigerian officials watched. It was the first. durbar (review) held by a British sovereign since that held by King George V, the Queen's grandfather, in India more than 40 years ago. More than 8,000 warriors, in cos- tumes of every shade, gave a sa- lute to their "great white Queen." RESPECT TRADITIONS The Queen told the assembled home to me the respect which you have for your ancient traditions, I too respect those traditions and hope that in a rapidly changing world you. will maintain all that is good in them." The review was held on the sec- ond day of the Queen's three-day visit to Kaduna, capital of the northern region of Nigeria, an {Arabic land fringing the sands of the Sahara. / 34 Die On Roads, 52 In January 55 TORONTO (CP) -- Thirty-four persons were killed on provincial roads last month, compared with 52 in the same month last year. Attorney - General Roberts said Wednesday. The reduction was 34.6 per cent. During the same month there was a reduction of 40 per cent in the number of persons injured-- .363 this year against 604 last year. lot United = Auto Workers | Accidents reported decreased 30 tribesmen: "This great concourse Jansen held them off in the first' Canadian drive was shown by the'stood in dire need of improvement.ia young peoples meeting Noy, 14. of men and horses has brought Trumble vor ira rama per cent to 1,342, compared with 1,018 in 1955. J Health May Aid UAW TORONTO (CP)--Signs appeared Wednesday that Ontario plans for i a provincial hospital-care plan may offer solution to the main issue in the General Motors of Canada strike, now in its 137th day. George Burt, Canadian director (CIO- CCL), indicated "developments at long last on the legislative front" migh provide the key to unlock negotiations. Mr. Burt's statement was one of the first signs that the union might ease its demand for hospital and surgical coverage fully-paid by General Motors. At the same time, he said Cana- dian workers and the Canadian public have a right to expect more Plans spokesman that it will not meet ts Ci di petition." passenger in a westbound car driven : by Mrs. Gertrude Clarke, Peter - Street, . Port Hope, in serious condition with multiple injuries. MRS. GERTRUDE CLARKE, shock and undetermined ies whose condition is sérious. L. R. STAPLES, '54, hus- band of Mrs. Staples, a pass- enger who was asleep in the rear seat, with ankle and head bruises. The accident sent cars plowing into snow-filled ditches beside the road and snarled up highway traf fice -for more than an hour. Cars and transports backed up for more than half a mile as police ex- tracted accident victims and clear- ed away the wreckage. i LUCKY ESCAPE One driver had a lucky escape when two cars crashed in front of him, bounced apart and he swept between them "picking up the wreckage". His car was not damaged and he escaped wunin- jured. Police reconstruct the accident this way: Mrs. Clarke was heading West near the Ajax Cloverleaf when her car got out of control on the ice and snow covered highway. The vehicle swung right across the bou- levard and crashed into another car travelling east. As they bounced apart, another car sped between them and two more, cars side-slipped into the snow-filled ditch. Another car ran over the wreck- age and received a puncture to the right front wheel. SAW ACCIDENT Alex Lebskin, commercial travel ler, 3884 Bathurst Street, Toronto, witnessed the accident. k "lI was driving East at' about 40 mph when a green Monarch He referred to a statement re- ported Tuesday by company ex- ecutives that the company was standing firm on its position that the union would have to bear part of the cost of a health-and-welfare scheme. The company, one observer said, told the union that there is room for movement on some economic issues if the union would relax its demand for a plan fully-pzid by the company. A Said Mr. Burt: "Statements in today's press by General Motors executives that they will . never agree to equal payment with their Canadian competitors on Blue Cross hospitalization and P. S. I. (Physicians' Services Inc.) med ical care for their workers and de- pendents ought to remove all doubt from GM "than brute strength and ultimatums from its Detroit as to who has been prolonging the d me on the outside lane. He was driying careft ber cause he took so long to pass. "When he was two car lengths in' front of me I saw another car swing across the boulevard. A crash was inevitable. "I couldn't hit the brakes be- cause I thought I would overturn. The two cars just bounced .apart and I' went between them-picking up the wreckage. "I have never been so scared in all my life," said Mr. Lebskin. "There must be a guiding star over me." K. J. Marinier, commercial tra- veller, Machockie Road, Toronto, was driving the east bound car which hit the car which swung across the boulevard. PASSED CAR "I didn't see a thing. I had just 5 CARS CRASH 2 strikes (Continued on Page 2) SAH eh i io Sn TN SS SS He