Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 7 Apr 1956, p. 1

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Weatner rorecast Showers this afternoon and early evening, Mostly sunny tomorrow. High today and low tonight, 55 and 35. ; TIMES-GAZETTE TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classfied Advertising.. RA 3-3492 All Other Calls. .......RA 3-3474 THE DAILY TIMES:GAZETTE Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle TWENTY PAGES Price Not Over 5 Cents Per Copy /OL. 85--NO. 82 Authorized as Second-Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa ERGEANTS' GUEST % OSHAWA-WHITBY, SATURDAY, APRIL 7, 1956 GAZA GUNS BLAZE | | | | 4TH STRAIGHT DAY 1 . Full Scale War Feared: Tanks Seen As Vital Jordan, Syria Involved In A Nucle | if War JERUSALEM (Reuters)--Fight-|abandon their nets, the spokesman ES ing between Egyptian and Israeli] said. i | forces blazed up along the tense In a third incident, a Jordan Gaza border strip this morning|police outpost opened fire on an McQUIGGAN | "In the first battle of the|to test the Churchill tanks and we en. F . Worthington, di- and co-or dinator for civil Canada. General is known as 'The Armor" 'in the Cana- He is shown in top ght as he greets WHEN MEMBERS OF THE SERGEANT'S MESS of the On- tario Regiment st 1 their 90th annual dinner night, the; had as their guest ed soldier and an Maj.-Ge last 1 ure army. at a distinguish- old friend pic G.M. Workers F our Must Sta WES Su --- [}) Lt.-Col. S. Wotton, officer com- manding the Ontario Regiment Below are executive member of the rgeant"s Mess, They are, rear, left to ht, Staff | sergeant P, J 1 WO2 J. R. Parsons nd Trial ri Hurt In Crash In Bingo Conspiracy Case EDMONTON (CP) -- Four per- 1s charged with conspiracy and On Way Home fraud in connection with two big PETERBO! Pp (CP A Cavan to k ! Friday on Hi southwe were I Dead i elor widowed Two of t Civic H as lan Burns, mean, I was not Police was cros side road broad occupat their jobs at th plant in Oshaw e | games were commit. for Supreme Court trial Walter Dupre re- for dismissal of date has not yet 1 ) istrafe his wife Lucille, and Ted Petryga bail of $1,000 put up by Mrs Pasek on vho mot after and a separate laid car in January ed originally with winning the house ions Club bingo Jan. 19. The was withdrawn Friday. The club disqualified him 'as * of the house. crown maintained during the day preliminary hearing that 0 cards were altered counsel Neil Maclean were won a week 1st de b 1 five-d the bin Defence ast only his sister 1 on Pasek argued that the ¢ suspicion on Pasek and not ever wife and Pet said that was taken erased prior to the it is inconceivable Frank Pasek bers within si during the gam A surprise dey the last d of hearing idenc two mysteriou taining parts sent to Mr lice. The said ider dence ¢ susp ppo. an 1 i stamped ne ht of other elopmer the e 1s lett of a bir Maclea: lott le typewritt "People cent. Cards were pose. Enclosed lawyer will receive a cop The bingo card enclosed signs 'of having been then reprinted in ilar to other card introduced en to police inno a pur Pasek er C { 1sed are red for altered manner sim which had been as evidence in a showed and | "w WOl E. Ww, WO2 W. J. Milne, J. H. Jonassen Adams and WO2 The latter Ic president. (Please turn to page two for other pictures and story on Ser- geant's Mess dinner), Time -GGazette Photos Grace Plans Redecorating Her Palace ABOARD AP)--If life f Monaco ever S.S. CONSTITUTION the royal become and why in palace the least hould i then herself by muse 1 thoard this | Prince Rainier III Vionaco, and can plan instead of dream vid te they are planning to first only the prince's at apar « five roor Vhich Grace--if she needs to do--just 1 more d t's only eave omething to r ] rooms edecorate, By KENNETH (Staff Reporter) Are tanks obsolete for modern warfare? Don't you believe it. Somme", General Worthington told his audience, many of thy veterans |like himself of the Fikst World War, "We (the British) lost 57,000 More than ever, tanks will he men in one day's fightirhg. Later the nece: shield for troops in|when they again met) Luden- nuclear w e. | dorf's army only one thousand men Unshielded troops wouldn't stand| were lost when they used tie tanks a chance, but properly shielded to shield the soldiers as thelv press- troops in tanks is the answer for ed forward. taking and holding enemy territory) A MIGHTY or protecting our own. WEAPON | "This proved to me," aid the So said Maj.-Gen. F. F. Worth- General, a member of tile Black ington, C.B., M.C.,, M.M., director| Watch at that time, "that 'the tank and co-ordinator of civil defence was a mighty weapon and" had a for Canada, here last night. tremendous future. b) PERHAPS U.S, WILL "They've been trying to tell 'nme Known affectionately to thous-| for 40 years that tanks are through ands of Canadian soldiers and ex-|for warfare," thundered the Ger¥- soldiers as "The Daddy of Armor", eral, known affectionately by his General Worthington was guest of men in the Tank Corps as "o1M honor at the 90th annual dinner|Blood and Guts". of the Sergeant's Mess of the On-| "Tanks won the second world! tario Regiment, war and I can prove it," said Gen- The general, a sagacious and eral Worthington. witty speaker with a crisp, articu-| "The Canadian i delivery, was roundly applaud-| best armoured arm ed Famous as the soldier who fin- ally convinced the Canadian high! - command in Ottawa that 'tanks' were indeed necessary in the Sec-| ond World War, he continued: "The Canadians won't build the necessary tanks and test them, per- haps the Americans will, but we won't." ! The speaker said tanks won the Second World War and "I can prove it." General Worthington said the cost of soldiers in lives lost and | pensions paid by the government! would more than pay for tanks. He said that the life of ome soldier killed in battle in terms of cost of training, and cost of pensions to the family would pay for two such! 88 tanks. ! "The Americans have tried track i jand men in ap A bomb sald General Worthing ton. He said that he had been there when tanks with men in them had been taken within 1000 yards of the blast area right after the| # A-bomb blast, and no one suffered! ¢ any ill effects, The tanks would have to be supplied by air support and not by ground forces. The General said in the next war, if it comes, the infantryman would not be able to advance across a field | that had just been blasted by a | nuclear bomb. I'he radiations would either burn him to death in- stantly or he would not feel any | thing right away and then a fe {hours or days latter would die a | horrible death, { GENERAL SHOWS 'HIS INITIATIVE Canada's civil defence co- Ec ordinator and director was joh forced to display some of his jm. well-known initiative to keep an Oshawa appointment last night. § of Maj.-Gen. F. F. Worthington by almost missed the 90th annual sng dinner of the Sergeant's Mess of , Army was the y in World War" Two," said General Worthington. "The Canadians were the first § ¥ | : y t 9 iy ir not having bee previously, will be remember: {for her work in plays at the D'Arcy Smyth appeared with t Oshawa Little Theatre Late Christopher Bean" capade"' The role present and 'I ing of "Stage Manage | will be played by George Rapley,|years, he has played a major role in| increasing the membership from few | the Ontario Regiment, where he * ||ast seen as the schoolmaster was guest of honor. : ned|"Escapade" and as "Tartuffe' A strenuous round of civil de- toc ithe play of the same name fence inspections kept him busy 11S | prolly Thursday in Windsor so that he ©, was unable to get to bed before b 2 a.m, Friday. When he overslept yesterday morning, he missed his Toronto- bound plane. Then he took a bus, but the bus broke down. Not easily stopped, the famous general started to hitch-hike. Fin- | ally he got a ride with a motor- ist who had known the General in Saskatchewan. This Motor ist also had a plane and trans- ported his guest to a town where an army car, with escort, was waiting. It was clear-sailing from containe. manv ath # being congratulated here by Martha Mayer, of Scranton, Pa., for having been proclaimed win- h be 2] °n seen in Oshawa grand knight JONI PROCLAIMED WINNER Joni Ross, left, of Chicago, is | made them into good tanks, as | tanks go. We used to get about 80 per cent efficiency out of them while others got far less." In 1939 when General Worthing- ton was in charge of a small par- cel of "tankmen" and tanks at Camp Borden, he was told by Ottawa to send all the men home (or put them in other brigades as there would be no tanks used in that war. A short while later Adolph Hit- ler vindicated the fiery General Worthington and Ottawa was glad that they had such a fire-eater to head up the new tank regiments that were quickly formed. General Worthhington started off his remarks in a relaxed manner, - bringing back to mind many in- cidents of the Ontario Regiment's stay in England during World War Two. Praising their initiative and teamwork in tank work as well as catching the English rabbits, the General said that he had always had a keen regard for the Ontario Regiment CHARLES JOHNSON K. of C. Pays High Honor To Member | hs | he a y ut. bis im led nd w mn ne nis 1p- a hi Coun was recently paid St. Gregory's the Knights of Drive, honor by 2671, of be hus hd) He was named as the counci al bestowed twice previously by t le group. J J. Bawkes, and J. J. ed were the previous recipients. ed Mr. Johnson is a fourth degr Kel Bowmanville High School knight of the Cardinal McGuigan he Assembly in Toronto. He is al in "T h e/ chairman of the membership com-| is- mittee and formerly held offic |up to deputy grand knight. r"|member of the K. of C. for in 40 to 300 during the years In May, past he will a ad Ri er ttend a ral ¥ ¥ | d | | 1 | ner of the Miss National Press | Photographers' pageant. Both young women are press photo- graphers. that point to Oshawa, but the general was two hours late, Charles Johnson, of 78 Sunset] Colum- Knight of the Year, an honor only! present for the fourth straight day, an Is- Israeli watchman Friday at Na- raeli military spokesman an- harayim, south of the Sea of Gali- nounced. |lee, the spokesman said, Egyptian positions opened ma-|NO IMPORTANCE | chine gun fire on an Israeli out The seriousness of the latest post in the Kissufim area, and Is-/ clashes was played down by. a raelis returned the fire, the United Nations truce organization spokesman said. . | spokesman, Albert Grand, who Israeli and Egyptian positions|said: "The night exchanges of fire have been f{rading machine-gun reported are of no importance. and artillery fire for the last three| He said Maj.-Gen. E. L. M. days along the Gaza strip in| Burns, Canadian chief of staff of clashes which have caused acute the United Nations Palestine truce anxiety to Western officials fear-| supervisory group, will lezve for ing a possible new Arab-Israeli Rome Sunday "if the situation re- war. | mains as quiet as this morning In a second incident, Israeli/to meet Secretary-General Dag fishermen in the Sea of Galilee| Hammarskjold, who is on his way were fired on from the Syrian side(to survey the Arab-Israeli border this morning and were forced to|situation, Hammarskjold To Talk Peace "TABSURB Yves made what was described ae ta. parents that youths or children If you stay in a bath too long might be responsible and said the will your body absorb some > detonators can he set off by the water? No, it won't. The human skin [heat of the hand or a slight jar. | lets water through only from inside out. It's absolutely water- | | proof from outside in. But the inside story on making | money outside of your regular job -- Classified Ads! Want Ads sell unneeded ar- ticles, rent spare rooms -- quick and easy! Call RA 3-3492. Cus- tomers are pleased inside out with Want Ad results. JUICE EXTRACTORS VEGETABLE ano FRUIT 4) Fresh Iu » source of natural vitamins and minerals WARN OF DANGER HAMILTON (CP)--Theft of 500 dangerous nitroglycerine - loaded| detonators from the magazine of, the Canada Crushed Stone Com-| pany, West Flamboro township, {has sparked an intensive search' ST. GREGORY'S CHURCH announces CATHOLIC INFORMATION (LASS OPENS Monday, April 9 ot 8 p.m. NON-CATHOLICS AND CATHOLICS We need a lot more," said General Worthington, "and I urge all ex-army men to use that train- ing they got during the war to help in this great work , , «+ we need all' of you." WILF YEREX (sa A BROOKDALE AVE. TORONTO -M gh| cil | I's he | ly| ee s0 | es Al 27| ly When askeu rp laxness was perhaps, due to the news of the tremendous develop- ments in inter-continental flying bombs, etc., he said he thought not. | "The people just have to be told more' about Civil Defence," said the General. "If the government French Rush Fresh Troops To Algerian Mountain Battle ALGIERS (AP)--rrench troopsbushed a military convoy near today fought two strong Algerian Nedroman not far from the Mor- | nationalist bands in the third day occan border. Five French soldiers of a see-saw battle in the Nemen- were Killed and four wounded be- tcha mountains 100 miles south of fore the insurgents were driven Constantine. off. / i : Fresh troops were brought up by| Meanwhile, two ships carrying helicopter as the French sought to|several thousand fresh troops from Tax Field Redistribution Urged By Commission By RICHARD DAIGNAULT Canadian Press Staff Writer QUEBEC A Quebec commission f return recommended forms inces all tion The drastic ation f | ahout commissior ume re night. Bu be to res ' t not to nee two released ing exclusive of these as indirect use taxes irn [i the increased rev- provinces would take ibility for all social se- sures, the 1,500,000-word recommended ¢ "such radical departures wctice cannot be affected " the board suggested two plans. One it termed "temp- and the other "'intermedi- as be responsible fo curity measure The based public certain socia hear CF ret commi port on 470 heard hear 1 province. The commi formed in Feb. 19, 1953 ished its work June 1 then it has been preparing it port. Headed by Chief Judge Tremblay of the Quebec Court of ssions of the Peace and as the royal commission on consti tutional problems, it by Premier Duple tionale government the premier was en ter dispute with the ernment over ta The government 97 th 0 eC f sion wa fin- Since re- ielc Thoma know I'he temporary plan calls for the provinces and the federal govern- nent to operate concurrently in the m field. The provinces uld have exclusive rights to suc- lon dutic ind the federai gov- mld provide equaliza- to the province ol Na- about : Frid wl | » e tax time wher y taxes on line Under province personal i inheritance 1 with all privin the federal d in a hil federal gov. and on : ve xation agreement t binding on t Duple t here H vi and their s light to ho Hinjot report is ne 1 intermediate plan the nd low nt would receive said at a pre tion collections that it will be ¢ provinces and would lof facts," i : Labrador' Frank G Malenk apnraaors vre - » bd Denies Guilt Flits Home al ee CHATHAM (CP)--Frank Genyn, . . |dislodge the rebels entrenched F rance arrived yesterday in Oran, 23, of Wallaceburg Friday pleaded By THE CANADIAN PRESS (natural resources also were dis- 20008 giant ocks a. the wild ter Move help SPAN Zuilty a charge of eriminal x : A prediction that the future in-|cussed in the Nova Scotia house rai. i . % h llett ri hg aay > iki ~ n traffic deaths. om ritain | dustrial power of the United States| while Manitoba legislators faced! Soth sides Hore Know 10 Nave iy ; on bail for pre- | wi depend on the "mineral an extended session to permit suffere Eres na. Is hg t t] April 25. LONDON (Reuters)--A beaming | wealth of Labrador" was made in| completion of investigation into ities sal hey Were nak Ci 0 gel} tobert Tott of Wallaceburg and|Georgi Malenkov left Britain to- the Newfoundland legislature Fri- brewery prices and profits. |any mmecia ® ua y the si \ Hannon of Tupperville,|day after a popularity - winning|day by Liberal Premier Small-| Dr, J. A. Langille, Progressive|.nere Were Fo 5 biol ae pro. wo IO n led in a head-on collision|three week tour, promising that|wood. Conservative member for Cumber- E1€5S of t ® Nig ving a March 31. | what he would tell his Kremlin, Mr. Smallwood said three min-/land East, said the Nova Scotia| Of men its of violence : mm--s---- e------------------ - { superiors was "all good." ing companies engaged in develop-| Liberal government's practice of Scattered Yopors varts of east | t in en The Russian ex-premier, now ing the resources of Labrador --|giving exclusive mineral rights on|PouTeC EN fom belief Par that no, --e Fletcher Man minister of power stations, flew|Newfoundland's wilderness empire|tracts of land to large companies e™ u goTia a is possible with| MINDEN, Ont. (CP) -- Two back to Moscow after a final plea/on the mainland-- 'probably netted|is causing mineral bodies to re-|negotiation Dow ) P seven- year- old Hamilton boys . for British-Soviet friendship in a $25,000,000 last year'--their first/main undiscovered. He was sup-|the inflamed rebels. were drowned Friday when they D I C h genial airport farewell. full year of operation. ported by the CCF. LYNCH TWO . (fell into Lake Boshkung, 45 miles 1€S in Lras |" He flew off leaving British press| The great steel output in the| Individual operators were being| In Constantine, two rebels wholnorthwest of Peterborough. The ( THAN > yhelap ANd politicians admiring his skill|{U.S. continued to increase '"'and|discouraged by not being able to threw a grenade into a crowded bodies of John Witzel. son of Rev. HATHAM (CP) -- Joe Phelan, |," propagandist, but perturbed |it is to Labrador in the main that|go in until closure holders took|barroom, injuring four patrons.| nq Mrs, John Witzel, and Robert 70, of Fletcher, was killed/y theleffect his visit may have [the United States must turn for|what they wanted from a tract.|were lynched by an enraged crowd! Campbell were recovered ,by On. night when the car injpaq on resistance to communism, iron ore." World demands were in-| There was the danger the holds | before police could reach them. |fario Provincial Police. Mr. Witzel h he was riding left the road| "jis three-week tour has been an [creasing rapidly. Some 12,000,000 might not bother to develop their| Fourteen rebels were killed in alis a United Church minister in plowed into a six-foot ditch] tect lesson in how to win friends |tons of ore would be produced at|areas. clash with French troops in the Hamilton. The two families were county road four miles south-/ 3nd influence people. Everywhere Knob Lake in Labrador this year| Mines Minister W. T. Dauphinee northern part of Constantine prov-|yacationing. if {he has gone people have fallen for | compared with 8.000000 tons in|maintained the closure system had|ince near Oed Zenati, Three miles| John and Robert were playing Mrs, Rachel Phelan, his charm, his chubby smile, his/[1955. Another 3,000,000 was ex-|{proved beneficial. The government|west of Constantine an Algerian|on the . lake, covered in most conference | Alfred, were taken|attention to children, his confi-| pected from Lake Wabush, {announced earlier this session that| policeman was killed when rebels|places with ice, when they appar- re with undetermined dence in plunging into crowds to/PRACTICE CRITICISED closures would expire held up a bus. {ently ventured foo close to open shake hands all round. ) Prospects of prosperity through) 1957. - In western Algeria, rebels am- water and fell through slushy ice. mn pital here died in the Dec. 31, rm ls i

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