Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 26 Mar 1956, p. 2

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Weather Farecast Milder today. Sunny with cloudy intervals and colder tomorrow. High today and low tonight, 45 and 265. TIMES-GAZETTE TELEPHONE . NUMBERS Classified Advertising. . RR 3.3492 All Other Calls RA 3-3474 HE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE : Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle Authorized es Second-Class Mell SIXTEEN PAGES Post Office Department, Ottawa OSHAWA-WHITBY, MONDAY, MARCH 26, 1956 VOL. 85--NO. 72 SKATING TITLES SAID 'FIXED' = " " gi: 1 O d d Papermakers | President Cirpo Denies .! nquest VIdere P Accusation Of Impeding 1 » and Norris Bowden of Toronto,| They declined to defend their Osgoode Death GoonSuike [if Eiidismaas : CORNER BROOK, Nfld. (CP)--|their chances in-internationdl com-|they surrendered their title was to world's largest integrated pulp and|both world and Olympic events Rois. Canadian pairs idle swag ig Mill In Big 1 TORONTO (CP)--Frances Dafoe world pairs title in 1954 and 1958, pions for two years, said today Ca-|day ni TORONTO (CP) -- Dr. Smirle| Dr. Lawson said a full investiga-jand kicked. The photographer said The gigantic machinery of the | petitions. They placed second in|make room for younger compet- Lawson, supervising coroner for|tion was ordered by Clifford Ma- his camera was damaged. Ontario, said today an inquest into the death of Herbert Attwood, 43, gone, deputy attorney-general IR Jaen sal would ap- | Ontario. men Were fo. the first time in 18 years as {quite withinatheir rights in inquir-|pachinists picketed the "Bowater paper mill remained silent today |this year. Miss Dafoe and Bowden both said that failure of the Canadian won by Bob Paul and Barbara Wagner of Toronto. t------ i+ pr 4 a 08] CAT-! watts "8 Highland and Sheldon Delbraigh. | that just about 'brought down the | fax area brought the March total) Claude Kewley of the Galt Re:| house'. She knew she still had a|!® 37% inches, with six days still porter wrote of Elaine Richards' chance if no else thought she to go. The previous record for the display: | had. "For sheer drama it is doubtful "At the conclusion of her per- if the more seasoned, senior perfor- formance she was applauded and mers will be able to produce any-| cheered, In a scant three minutes West Policies thing more nerve-tingling that the| she had scored 25 points more than MORECAMBE, England (AP)-- tled car driver, optician Ernesé Georgi Malenkov took a whistle-| Storey of Manchester. land Sunday for his first real| entire month was 32 inches in 1884, stop tour through northern Eng- SHOWED HIM AROUND Mrs. Storey, mother of three, closeup of the Western way of life.| showed Malenkov around the little He seemed to like what he saw. | trailer. Malenkov had some trouble The former Soviet premier was| getting his bulk through the door. brimming over with friendliness. "I, too, have three children," he = the confercnie The body of a 46-year-old mother ing fo Oshawa 18 years ago had liv-| [ three was found by a search ed in Kitchener and Toronto. She of the expanded to investigate charges| Reporter Andrew MacFarlane|ing about the news of the man'splant here. Figure Skating association officers] The Toronto couple said world fall down a stairwell. A clerk of Met by 10 to 15 young lawyers whol An autopsy performed during the|joand that sulphite production |favor of other competitors. petitions. rib fractures. with a membership of about 1,600|Cirpo of Toronto, pr A | oi | . . ° { Arab-Israeli Situation port sulphite daily. About 1,800 our chances in Olympic and world|tirely different in the world |tary-General Dag Hammarskjold him to arrange adoption of meas-|said they would ask permission sulphite plant to general plant Lodge Jr. was expected to intro-| ; prolong the debate considerabiy. men being calied back at night, Charity Performance The big Western powers had The Lebanese government mean- sometimes twice in 24 hours. This, ! ow et ane EST). Lodge requested the meet-|tended to leave right after Easter|gjon for a month and then to per- nual Easter Parade of Stars, a The American resolution asks| Delegates Rafik Asha of Syria|ceived any instructions to request was carried on Canada-wide tele- prepared to compete with other i . - ie er, interview it aters Secon Hit Marit Colbo said bis giant ranch 11 IViar1times At Port Tne |pasem, sid bis : (CP)! ritimes- today in the Canada Steamshi) of the third blizzard BA a . Two Oshawa skaters 'e run- ner Beverley Joanne Orr of|figures fest here was 7th, aitland. to London. plane IL dl le? iP Nova Scotia during the night and finished in Galt at the weekend. | E. Smith, 972 King street east. The|putation for a grandstand finish, here tumbling to a new low of 26.6 {new poieniial champion when he wallz, Rock afox trofy and i She opene her ladies' senior Canadian figure | 108. Winner of the men's cham- | tion freeze." Elaine Richards, of | championship. and began skating with the Osh-|took a tumble and the crowd] Shore but the rest of the Maritimes : second place in the junior wom- ing instruction from Bruce proceeded to give a performance LJ Cypriots Back At Work sais: junior women's title to Mar- NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) -- The alive from pro-Greek islanders shal Sir John Harding, ordered 2n year.old Hugh Smith, won the Crossland of Vancouver. Don Jackson, last year's junior distributed "peace badges" and/to see a good English family. I to work as usual today after the ssil siolence on the 135th anni- reports, also that another general possible violence on 5 son gave a dazzling exhibition of| opened the first session of the new| Union: momicter os Brides Bh ih Listy | son represented a potential senior defensive pacts in Asia i St | sia, a weekend trailer to the seaside Blackpool. The tenants, engineer r NEW REMAND title holder and one of the most| He stressed his couniry's desire|for the summer. | Ronald Smelley and his wife, Joan a.m.-to-4 am. restriction the Brit- of the Cypriot rebels. They had of the island's 500 Cypriots utor aces ish ordered to prevent an out- heen tipped off that the shadowy were restricted to the immediate wife in Oshawa on March 17, |more championship experience was dad pact and the eight-nation| "I wanted to see your house on| Mrs, Snelley showed him he the stree's and countryside again, Orthodox priest. THE Sr NEW YORK (AP) -- A high; mand. n his secret marriage to a petite Oshawa. Drobot is a Toronto By JONUN M. HIGHTOWER Greenbrier Hotel. U.S. officials two eloped last 'Jan. 9. It was his hower meets here todey with the NEIGHBORLY TALKS against their will to reverse the a dream," Wald told his teenage Comes After Money with the { not-door iw ying Stalin's last years oho gore in deh rd ' The : Kremlin-con- phim," Sydney sobbed. technical assistance to develop in-| o : du arrive North American powers. No one FO oa 53 elaimed by ain from Wa: hington : oi Su RY 0 ho- dent were married at Elkton, Md. |lowo, said Saturday. He flew into arrivals United States has many common. ai Tan bal we For Ost countries, but aside from 2 Soxe of Albama and many other| oll her family. at bringing the economic potential| Laurent of and President ,pheric security there 'are no im-i oo. "0 wiadiciaw Gomulka inl ants the secret. Iporations. { n light] The talks will bagin this evening. others who suffered with them. [4 at the Other sessions are scheduled for It would seem to follow from 1 ri port Tuesday, winding up with dinner the current Soviet denunciation of / fear the results will Hi h P » Th } . also have been afraid to face this|the beach about 100 yards south . hind the Iron Curtain suggests that| rent busin Bank attempt might involve competitive Owen Sound Woman There is no suggestion of foul play, | Py 4 © | A rect nent {CP) Agnes) The body was found by four city ment and hou ing at 00,000,- | prising. ritic § | ) came to! BORN AT KITCHENER at Osgoode Hall Saturday will be that newspaper men were attacked |and photographer Geoffrey Frazer| death and there seems to be ab- ¢ : ; [to send a second judge to th e|competitions are "fixed." Miss Das by ya |of The Telegram, sent to investi-isolutely no justification for their bt oke led his isan he | Olympic and world skating trials|foe said European judges tend to Mr. Attwood died in a 28-foot|8ate the accident, said they were being pushed around." job at midnight Sunday to back a|constituted "fixing" the results in|vote in Elocs on the skating com- the Law Society of Upper Canada, had been at the party. {weekend showed death due to ag nerintendent Albert N. Roche be| Miss Dafoe, a 26-year-old free-| Bowden said Cirspo had been {he had been attending a reunion| Mr. MacFarlane said he was severe skull fracture and multiple|qismissed. Four other mill unions|lance artist, criticized Herbert told experienced managers and |party in the hall's lounge room. knocked to the ground, punched ident of the|judg be sent overseas have agreed to support them. Canadian Figure Skating Associa-|with the Canadian team. The walkout, first since the com-|tion, for refusing to send a second| "If the CFSA had given more pany took over the mill in 1938, will |Judge to the Olympic and world|consideration the n de- cost $150,000 a day in lost produc-|skating competitions this year. |sires of competitors in interna. tion. The plant turns out 1,000 tons| She said Crispo "did everything|tional competition, Bowden ° of newsprint and 150 tons of ex-|in his power to impede and reduce|"the results might have been - LJ : )es C bed A £ E X 0 Ve ioe are affected. competition." Olympic competitions." Il 1 S1 | TO BUST EFFICIENCY Mr. Crispo later denied he had| Crispo said the association's gov- Mr. Roche was hired last fall to|acted to impede the Canadian en-|ernment council decided only one | UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP)|discussion with all parties con-jinformally requested postponement boost efficiency. tries in the world events, judge would Jo sent Be Ral |The UN Security Council met to- cerned and with the UN Palestine of today's meeting. Later, instead] Compny and union officials met a have at 30, time done any- eats as the only judge and |day to take up a United States|truce chief in Jerusalem, Canada's of following through with formal |Friday to discuss a switch of three | MITE of the Xin a eon. the TE eit for a Zecond, | proposal that would send Secre-|/Maj.-Gen. E. L. M. Burns. It asks|requests for postponement, they mi wrights from night duty in the e Dafoe-Bowden team won Telllagis TON lon a peace mission to the Middle ures to "reduce existing tensions" |to participate in the council de- maintenance during the day. | East. {along the armistice lines. |bate without a vote, If the Arabs' O'Rourke said the change re- 10,000 Attend Russ nwrap Chief U.S. delegate Henry Cabot | a py HOPES speak, 'so will Israel, and this i" ited in ie maintenance duce such a resolution formally] ¥ soon after the 1l-nation council|hoped that the resolution would be|whijle announced it would ask the he said, made their pay cheques] TORONTO (CP)--More than 10,- convened this afternoon (3 p.m. approved today. Hammarskjold in-| council to postpone further discus-|2% times larger than normal. [000 persons Sunday crowded into| moscow (AP) -- The Soviet | ; Maple Leaf Gardens for the an- overnment took the wraps "off ing to discuss the potentially ex-| for London, Paris and Middle East| nit all four of Israel's Arab neigh- 1 governm otis ' | plosive situation along Israel's bor-| capitals. But Arab manoeuvres hors to speak. But Sunday night variety show supporting sale of many of the secrets big new ders with her Arab neighbors-- during the weekend put this time-|an Arab source said he understood evere 0 ' Easter seals to aid crippled chil-|jet airliner Sunday. With fanfave, | Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon and Syria. | table in doubt. {the Lebanese delegate had not re- dren. Part of the 2%-hour show|ipe Russians announced they are Hammarskjold to undertake urgent and Edward Rizk of Lebanon first a postponement. Dee Snows vision and radio networks, nations on international air routes. Navi ation 0 e A. N. Tupolev, ihe famous aie ns craft design an | g P published 1 . aX ? ® a L | HALIFAX (CP) -- e bie| i oe : -jeold. ther nos! ; of the Ma: 3 3 Lines 4 ad aAmpioIis ale ann sind. Sa { Wer! Elaine "The. temperature ; below , Ohio, to load coal for Port|gecurit: . : J zero in several sections of eastern a x 4 * . ners-up for top titles in the Cana-| Toronto- 45 points behind Crosland. It 'wa ; p of , s one of the earliest clear-| sensation among some aviatiog ; dian Skating championships which Hugh is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Knowing the Oshawa girl's re- the cold snap sent temperatures ings from this port in many years. writ in the British capital | 1 fi t i a [] CAROL JANE DISPLAYS HER TROPHY Don Jackson, 15, emerged as a|couple performed the American| the crowd gave her a burst of ap-|f 'Mareh 5 : y ; aul fe un : i : Si "with a snmectaculay| Ihe snowstorm «iumped up fo a Carol Jane Pachl, of the Minto | Saturday night. Carol Jane, who | the final session of the contest, | skated his way to second place in go on ice to take the title. with a spectacular a? a en ov In our Skating Club, Ottawa, retained A is shown here with Charles Snell- | and had to be given an "injec- the senior men's figure skating He is a grade 10 student at OCVI| flourish, but a few seconds later | f00 along the. province's eastern * : : : shaw: i } " : a Skati v : ix : i the full brunt | . ; pionship, was suffering from a | Oshawa, placed second in the | Elaine Richards, 18, made a awa Skating Club when he was six.| thought it all over. missed Palle © i En land skating hampionship at Galt on | severe pain in the back during Junior ladies' competition, | dramatic grandstand finish to take In Taronto he has been receiv-| "Elaine leaped to her feet ana} The vedther office Jaid 2 wees: or g en's figure skating championship. Both performances brought the However the men's title went to # L Charles Snelling of Toronto and the As Britis] | ur ew ! | I) gie Crosland of Vancouver. : WINS TITLE gallant bed Elaine Richars of Osh- any other competitor." ; " By L. S§. CHAKALES the threat of new violence was The British governor, Field Mar- Another Oshawa Youngster, 16- gallant Ded Elaine Rithan hen he og in Are Defended He patted children on the head and| told the Storeys. "I am pleased -eking i t rolonial | absolute curfew in 15 cities and a | ian 4 ; : dl " , Li: ju i : | boxes of candy as he spoke to|give greetings to your family frome population of Cyprus went back iii Id A yal limited gin lin else where to avoid| Canadian ice dance title with part After Thursday's compulsory title-holder, made an ambitious| KARACHI (Reuters) -- Pakistan Englishmen through an interpreter, | my family." a or the challenge to Charles Snelling. Jack-| President Iskander Mirza Sunday| He is on a tour as the Soviet| Malenkov and his 14-car caravas British ended their unprecedente i ight break out later this versary of Greece's independence » 1 § 2 1 t S € | 24-hour curfew of the cast Mediter- Wire mig Jers: Aker Weds Pu il DROBOT GETS thrilling leaps and spins. |republic's National Assembly with| On the road Malenkov's big Zim| He visited a modest home on 8 ranean isiand colony. British intelligence agents! More than 160,000 Cypriots were gs | Observers at Galt said that Jack-|a firm defence o fthe West two| car overtook a family car pulling|new municipal housing estate near One killing and some minor vio- pressed a search during the curyisealed in their homes in the i5 lence were reported during the 4 jew fir the mysterious chieftain cities during the curfew, The rest ho Nicholas Drobot, 50, who is |Promising young skaters in Can- for friendship with other nations,| The big Zim stopped. Out jumped) had been tipped off only half an : in pg She 11 |ada. His talented performance and said this is whyPakistan has| Malenkov and his bodyguard. They |hour before that Malenkov would break Sunday on Greek independ- leader, known only as Dighennis vicinity of their ome: rally | | against a skater with five years| entered into the five-nation Bagh- waved the trailer to a stop. |like to visit them. ence day. after a legendary Greek hero, was the entire 18,000-man British gar- : 2 2 But with Cypriots free to roam | disguised as a black-robed Greek rison z1d the entire police force rave ar 6 Wag loday remanded in Mag considered most creditable. Southeast Asia treaty organization. | wheels," Malenkov told the star- home. moved about on the alert. . hic 3 ------ 2 -- - week. This is his second re- x . Reds Planning [school art teacher has been Drobot is charged with hav. t aurent 1Sen ower | charged with abduction and rape| ing murdered his wife, Maria, " ' M Re ersals | 53, at 326 Elgin street west, | brunette student half his age. | 4 ore v | George Wald, 34, was arrested, brush factory employe of ee or 00 wi d S | Sunday after the parents of Syd- Ukrainian descent. u gment {ney Silverman, 17, found out the | 4 - - HITE «© y 3 iG were cheered by a forecast of, NEW YORK (AP)---Soviet Satel- third marriage. Ni rian Pr Ww Ta His RIN mostly clear weather lite chieftains may soon be forced| "Don't worry, honey, this, is only ge a emier Fring . i i afin rigla: gai » sole Judgments of their notorious anti- pride. "Being with you is worth a| faders of Cana, and Movi It, Diplomat teal si, ole Fils 'a persecuions rm mn Jo MONTREAL (CP) Western Ni Ne emhower's idea, is to afford Las. 3 "I love him and I'll stick with|geria needs capital investment and neighbor neighborly talks among the three pul ges. : 2 o o E ; caster fiicopenny countries | police said the six-foot, 235- dustry and tap vast natural re- " (7:30 could recall a precedent for rom fry WAR of C he pound teacher and his former stu-| sources, its premier, Obafemi Awo- an te of } rio Gi in ad 3 ieee orem Hy AY. They have seen each other only on!Montreal on a lap of an inter- an Yaw jr : City were interests with each of the(other richo Kostov of Bulgaria, Koci weekends hecause they feared to/nationzl economic mission aimed | scastn Si gi eral interest in peace and hemis- jeading Communists execute d with| Growing tired of his lonely life, of their country to the attention = reside em. They destroyed the political| walg decided to tell Sydney's par-|of governments and private cor-! Adolfo Ruiz Cootines on e "ed, portant issues of common concern poio. i Ana Pauker in Romania, arrang to f to Charleston, to all three Paul Merker in Fast Germany and t 1 to receive Tuesday evening. All three prin- Stalin's rule of terror during his Ruiz Cortines at cipals will leave Wednesday morn- last 20-years as Communist dicta-| i : ite, the luxurious ing. tor that all these judgments must 1SS11n ot er -- ---------------------- be re-examined. Satellite leaders don't w 0 do it. The i hake their positions ak ir positions alik ontrea ees and ther regime 0 The Kremlin leaders in Moscow party early Saturday afternoon, on issue so far... But it looks as/of the pavilion in Lakeview Park.| though they can't delay much lon-| Mrs, Luella Parsons, the victim, ger. Information seeping from be-\ had been ill for several months MONTREAL (CP Threat of'scarce, there was question as to : : | and was last seen Thursday morn- highe: prices luks in Canada's Whether the full program could be Machinery is already in motion. | ing when she left her home at 473] present presperity, says the cur- Carried out, and danger that the Louisa street to visit a doctor. | di bidding up of prices nolice said of Montreal, and it indicates that, p months or more thelI¥: police sai. | some les cni 1 proposed activ- Bare ane mont Sad Sit 'e Dies At Age 100 Ns Inquest will be held or autopsy ity may b pe policy of credit restraint accom-| OWEN SOUND 92 OTIC. / forecasi|panied by a noticeable rise in in-| (Nagcy) Gamble who celebrated | fy v hi had put this year's planned capital terest rates--and in the current! her®100th HGR ob, 9, died residents, JohmColley, Joe Christie, investment in a new plant, equip- situation this could hardly be sur-! Sunday. after 17 ves n arth.| Tom Simkin and Bernard Owen-- isi { mem- after it had been washed ashore. ( "a rema 2k-par-cent r money, says the review, ber of an Ir Increase over | presumably acts in some measure the district iy 1 Gamble! The former Luella Groff, Mrs. With busine alread g as a deterrent to capital expend- for ma eral Parsons was born 2t Kitchener. record miles! She was married at Port Credit in |December, 1937, and prior to com- Presqu ile, ve north of here, ratin ind with alitures and thus reduced the de- store at materials alreadymand for goods and services. al or nea number of was on adherent of the United Church of Canada. Besides her husband Fred she leaves three children, Lawrence, Lorraine and Dennis. Also surviving are five sisters, | Miss Mabel Groff, Mrs. D. Jantzi, | Mrs. A. Kaiser and Mrs. O. Snider, | all of Kitchener, and Mrs. Eva Grose, of New York City, and three | brothers, Eli, Moses and Simean all of Kitchener. { The funeral service will be held] at the McIntosh Funeral Chapel at 2 p.m. on Tuesday, March 27, fol- lowed by jaterment in Mount Lawn Cemetery. The services will be] Ernestine Russell, 17-year-old | conducted by Rev, D. Summers.) windsor girl who holds the North | dents here. Miss Russell was the | rare feats on the balance beam. minister of Westmount United Ch + y , tod American senier women's divi- Prem Thidaw wi Ernestine's next goal--the Olym- | Church, and Rev. H. A. Mellow, featured performer Friday night pic contests in Australia noxt | minister of Northminster United] Sion championship for gymnas- | at the OCVI auditorium before | August. Her teachers recast Church. tics, displays some of her grace | more than 6350 students and | her as an "above average' stus | ERNESTINE RUSSELL DISPLAYS HER SKILL dent at Kennedy Collegiate in Windsor, despite the exacting schedule she follows in making public appearances and keeping in top physical trim. ~Times-Gazette Photo and agility before OVCI ie | faculty members. She performed TR sm------ .

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