Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 13 Mar 1956, p. 1

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TIMES-GRZETTE TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising. . RRA 3-349 All Other Calls RA 3-3474 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle Wednesday. Weather Forecast Variable cloudiness, a little colder Low tonight 20, high tomorrow 30. Authorized 'OL. 85--NO. 61 loss Moil es _Second-C Department, Ottaws Post Office OSHAWA-WHITBY, TUESDAY, MARCH 13, 1956 FOURTEEN PAGES BRITISH CLUB CY DRIVE wd RS (Pn *, x VE % C Boy In 'Rush Lad To Toronto After Auto Accident A 10-year-old Oshawa boy was in eritical condition In Toronto Hospital today after a 60-mile-per-hour am-| bulance dash from here last night. | David Elliott, of 521 Richmond street east, suffered a "compressed" fracture of the skull when hit by a car at the corner of Central Park boulevard and King street east about 8:15 p.m. David, the son of Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Elliott of 521 Ricmond Street East, was treated at Oshawa Gen- vral Hospital before his trip to To- ronto. The ambulance was accompan- jed by a police cruiser enroute, city, OPP and Toronto police assis- HE avid was to undergo delicate skull surgery today. A student in Grade 5 at Corona- tion School, David was walking | with Ronald Townsend, of 45 Cen- tral Park boulevard south, a friend, at the time of the acci- dent. g : David dashed ahead into the in- teresection alone while his young friend shouted at him of an oncom- "ie slipped and fell against the He slipped and fell agains car, Riu striking the door DAVID ELLIOTT hinge, in his sudden effort to stop, velling west on King Street East voung Townsend said \t about 25 miles per hour when he Police said the driver of the 'irst saw the youth about three car was A. Demmer, 32, of Dar- feet from the left side of the car. lington boulevard, RR No. 4, Osh- "te heard the boy hit the car. When | ava he stopped and looked back, the boy Demmer told police he was tra- wa: ving on the road Taller Than Empire State ST. LOUIS (AP velopment company mitted 1 1 ment and Development Company, headed by Ira Fleischman of St. Louis Fleischman said the structure also would have 18 levels below the ground for parking A Private de TT XY RATE STEADY Monday sub- A RARY 3 4 a pre plan to the HAMILTON (CP)--For the first St. Louis county council for a 120- time in eight years, Hamilton tax storey building--18 storeys taller Pavers will not 'be faced with a than the Empire State Building in tax increase this year. Board of New York ontrol Monday recommended a he project, which would cost tax rate of 49 miles--the same as an estimated $200,000.000.000, was last year--for 1956. City council proposed by the Andabon Invest- will consider the budget next Mon- LATE NEWS FLASHES | May Call Special U.N. Meeting OTTAWA (CP) Henry Cabot Lodge, United States ambassador to the United Nations, said today it is "quite possible" a UN Security Coun- cil meeting on the Middle East situation will be called. He here from Paris with General Alfred Gruenther, supreme Allied commander in Europe. arrived OA JOR E Dog Controls Reporter) -- take immediate steps to rigidly en- force the Dog Control By-law and arrange . for inoculation of all' do-{11.05 a.m. when the second report/Arab leaders took several secret | | Waterloo South), 4 Inspectors OCVI, education inspectors from the Department of | Education i jures Skul x AJAX -- (Times - Gazette Staff Town Council will mestic pets, Councillor Ben . Severs, chair-| man of the police committee, told council that the newly-ap inted | dog control officer had fr up| 5 dogs in the past week and 13led under 5d been destroyed. None of the logs were tagged. THREE CHILDREN BITTEN Three children have been bitten in the past week, two yesterday |by the same dog. The dogs con- cerned will be impounded 14 days. Jim McGivern, 10, of Exeter Street, was bitten on Je thigh by a dog in Parkside ScMool grounds. | Yesterday morning, Susan Cars- a fiw EO A=] pe ---------- et To Halt Aggression CAIRO (CP)--The 'big three" | well, 4, and Bruce Wulff 8, both of| King's Court apartments, were| bitten by the same dog. | were checking the first report at Police came in. Dr. Glyn Jones, MOH, decisions durin their five-da treated the children. | . Veylay Council has ordered a toor-o- Cairo conference which were not door check on dogs. Owners of un.|Mmentioned in their closing joint licenced animals will be prosecut-|communique Monday night, press the by-laws, as will reports said today. [ines So permit dogs to TUd| The reports said each of the de- | Steps will be taken to arrange for|Cisions was accompanied by a de- ja Nie where dogs can be inocu-|tailed plan drawn up by experts ated. {for its i The board of health is expected § implementation, to _make an announcement soon. 11n¢ heads of state of Egypt, Council regards the situation as/Syria and Saudi Arabia announced serious and has instructed the po-|in their communique that they had lice and control officers to enforce! . the bylaw drawn up a comprehensive plan to : insure Arab security against the Low-Rental Housing | "Pitifully Inadequate' TORONTO (CP) -- CCF leader Donald C. MacDonald said Monday the Ontario government's low- rental housing program is "piti- fully inadequate." He said in the Ontario legisla-| ture during debate on estimates of the planning and development de partment the government has built less than 5.000 low-cost rental units "a mere drop in the bucket" o what is needed Planning Minister Nickle said the province is ready to help any municipality asking financial aid f for low-cost housing. Municipalities $14,000,000 , were approved by the reported on the Israel-Jordan fron-|Niagara Falls, Ont., was arrested themselves were not willing to un- dertake building programs. The debate, developed into a heated exchange between Mr. Mac- Donald and the minister. At one point, Mr. Nickle told Mr. MacDonald: "Be quiet, 1 know more about housing than you will ever know." Premier Frost said a government effort to develop a low-cost pro- ject in Guelph which would have been "one of the best anywhere" was halted by H. A, Worton (L former mayor of Visit Schools M. F. Kirkland, principal of told the Oshawa board of last night that school are once again busy {here. Miner, 42, Killed In Fall SUDBURY (CP) -- Forty-two-year-old Mike Gawron was killed Monday night when he fell 140 feet down a chute on the 2,000-foot level of Garson Mine, miles north-east of here. He was in- stalling timber lining when he plunged to his death. | : | nine |week in Oshawa schools, Mr. Kirk- Four inspectors are working this) {iand reported. A meeting was arranged between Central Collegiate, : | be carried out during 1956, is divid- |ed between the city and private | abutting streets should pay, for a pavement made in this work so that right| works. | He said the inspectors expressed 44 feet in width, 30 per cent of the hand turn lanes will be installed |a desire to meet with members|cost of granular base and pave- When paving is extended on Went-| work are to be payable in ten an- lof the Oshawa Board of Education. ment and 100 per cent of the cost Worth St, east of Ritson Road pyal installments. |dangers of 'Zionist aggression and foreign domination." In the troubled area, meanwhile, Jordan accused Israeli forces to- {day of attacking a Jordanian bor- {der village, killing a 70-year-old {woman and *injuring three mem- bers of the Jordan national guard. IE THREE PERSONS had a mir- aculous escape from serious in- jury in two separate accidents in Oshawa and district within the past 24 ho The unidentified driver of the tractor - trailer, top left, got away with only a few bruises when the huge ve- hicle skidded down a hill into Harmony Creek early today. | | OSE ESCAPES IN TWO ACCIDENTS PRIOTS Deportation Of Makarios Rouses Fury NICOSIA (CP) -- British troops today went into action with clubs | | | tween a mail - box and another tree before crashing head-on into a second tree after it went out of control on the icy high- way. The two occupants suffer- ed only minor injuries. They are Miss Jeannette Pethick and Miss Gwendolyn Winterbottom, both | of Toronto. --Times-Gazette Photo The vehicle was removed from the ditch after an hour. The tractor-trailer was pulled along the bed. of the creek, beneath a bridge, and from there back up to the road again, The car in picture, right, crashed into a tree west of Oshawa on High- way No. 401 yesterday after- noon. The vehicle passed be- Broad Powers PARIS (AP) -- Premier Guy bill Jo aweeping emer- powers $0 quell rebellion went to the French today, either Wednesday or Thursday on the measure. It authorizes broad powers to impose martial law, shake up the Algerian administra- tion and break up vast landed es- tates for the benefit of Moslem ten- ant farmers, The Paris government's action to smother the nationalist rebellion came as a wave of Algerian troop desertions plagued the French Mollet Likely To Receive Alger-| of 463 to 82; 451 to 72 amct 465 to 49. approval athe National resident Have You Stake In This Horde? OTTAWA (CP) -- Names of nearly 10,000 persons who, forget- fully or om purpose, have left money "untouched in Canadian In Algeria 455 to 76. Earlier it had approved the three main sections by votes on the Section emRawering Molers on on g Mollet's | were i in Algeria, Rob- | today Their banks for nine years and more published by the government chiefly in savings swinging against Cyprus demon- strators as strikes spread through the Mediterranean island in protest against the banishment of Arch- bishop Makarios. Troops cleared Metaxas square, where one of the demonstrations took place. Two other charges were made outside the Phaneromeni Ca- thedral, where youths were ston. ing army vehicles, and near the Olympiakos Greek Club, where troops were stoned. Several arrests were made. Greek Cypriot workers were idle again today for the third time since the deportation Friday of the Greek Orthodox churchman, leader of the movement here for union with Greece. Stores remained closed despite govinment warnings that strikes with political motives are illegal under existing emergency regula- tions, and that it is an offence to take part in them. Life appeared to be going on normally only in the Turkish sec- tor of the capital. Schools remained closed. There were no newspapers, and only food stores stayed open. The British colonial governor, Sir~John Harding, today lifted a ban on long-distance telephone calls inside Cyprus and with Greece. It was'imposed just before Makarios was deported. Censorship on telegrams fo Greece, imposed at the same time, was also lifted today, With the ban raised, calls eame through to Nicosia reporting the strike spreading to other towns. Correspondents reported: "Nobody knows here how the word gets around. Shops are closing one after another on whispered instrue- tions." In two towns youths stepped into shops remaining open and told the owners to close down--and the owners did. alin dor. Grech ishop Yenn is, senior Greel Lr priest to the' 3 attached archbishopric, today made public bishop ec of martial law. 210.60, SUPPORTED BY REDS The names were published in the Only the followers of Plerre| official Canada Gazette as a re- Poujade, the anti-tax leader, voted | minder to the money's owners to against Mollet as a group. Com-|do something about it. Otherwise munist leader Jacques Duclos sur-|the long-dormant accounts, except holdings. and current accounts, total $231, The message, dai A was handed to Bishop Yennadios by the government, church sources said. It read: "Dear brother in God, the Almighty has reserved for me even this trial. I am now walk- prised most political observers| for unclaimed bank dividends, will when he threw his bloc of 150 votes| be turned over to the central Bank| of Canada at the end of this year. tection." to support the bill. ing calmly along the way of exile. "May God give us help and pro- tory. In a gession that went em past midnight, the National Assembly adopted Mollet's bill by a vote of SAVE MONEY IN BUYING LUMBER Buying the right kind of wood for any job to be done around the home is one way to save money and have the job done just as it should be. The annual Home and Builders Edition of The Times-Gazette, to be publish- ed before the ena of March, will give you some helpful and money-saving hints on the proper selection of wood for the many bs that can be done for home improvement. Guelph, who "blocked" the gavern., Lt.-Col, Mohamed Ishaq, Jordan ment plan . |delegate to the United Nations Mr. Worton replied no direct rep- mixed armistice commission, resentations had ever been made| claimed the attack was made Mon- to Guelph by the provincial gov-|day on the village of Bartha, which Pair Chased ernment. |straddles the boundary between Allan Grossman (PC Toronto|Jordan and Tsrael. St. Andrew) said there are fewer The Israelis claimed that Jordan persons today interested in low-/troops fired earlier Monday across cost housing than a few 'years ago.(the border at Bartha, killing a po- Modern young couples wanted the|liceman and injuring two others in best of everything at once, and|the Israeli portion of the settle- were unwilling to start humbly. ment. The estimates, for more than] It was the first serious incident legislat ure. tier in four months. At Brampton BRAMPTON - (CP)--Police today said they are looking for a man who outran them and ignored two warning shots Saturday during a chase over backyard fences. A second man, Raymond Finch, 36, an unemployed bartender from on a fraud charge. $218142 Pavement Plan Is Given Green Light A pavemept improvement pro- curb and gutter; for pavement 30, gram valued" at more than $218.- feet in width, 44 per cent of ganu-| 142 was approved by the Oshawa lar base and pavement and 100 per| City Council last night, cent of the cost of the curb and| The cost of the work, which will' gutter. LANES INCLUDED landowners as follows--city $158,- The work includes the construc-| 362, private property owners $59,- tion of right hand turn lanes for 779 south-bound traffic on Ritson Road, The pavements will be of asphalt South turning west on Wentworth | with concrete curb and gutter. The Street ; ; estimated lifetime of the work is It also provides right hand turn 12 years. {lanes for west-bound traffic on Under the terms of city by-laws,| Rossland Road East, turning the property owners fronting and NOrth on Simcoe Street North. directly on primary, In addition, provision has been| of the curb and gutter; for a pave-| South, and on Ritson Road South, the inspectors and members of the ment 33 feet in width 40 per cent south of Wentworth street board for tomorrow, at 4 p.m. in/of granular Oshawa base and pavement| This will enable right-hand tw and 100 per cent of the cost of the|lanes to be constructed for north (adopted by council through another bound traffic on Ritson Road South turning east on Wentworth street] and for westbound traffic on Went- worth street turning north on Ritson Road South, PLAN ADOPTED These details were contained in the report of City Engineer Fred Crome and he recommended that land be acquired to provide for curb return at the north - east, north-west and south-east corner of the intersection of Wentworth street and Ritson Road South. This recommendation wag later motion, presented by the Board of Special assessments levied for The work to be done is on] Athol Street East, Ritson Road 'outh, Rossland Road East, Went- worth Street, and Wolfe street. Army in the North African terri- MARGARET TRUMAN ENGAGED City. Margaret, 38, will marry The engagement of Margaret Clifton Daniel, 43, a newspaper- i Yarial wh x Truman, daughter of Ex-presi- dent Harry S. Truman of the | man, in Anvil. Mr United States has been announc- | at present assistant to ed by Mr, Truman in Kansas | foreign editor of the New T the Yous Times, has traveled widely as a foreign correspondent of the pa- per. His travels include two vears ia Moscow. The wedd- ing will be at Independence, Mo,

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