TIMES-GAZETTE TELEPHONE NUMBERS Weather Forecast Sunny and warmer Sunday, with AILY TIMES-GAZETTE Classified Advertising All Other Calls RA 3-3492 RA 3-3474 Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle thundershowers during the after- noon. OSHAWA-WHITBY, SATURDAY, MAY 26, 1956 EIGHTEEN PAGES S$ Cents Per Copy VOL. 85--NO. 123 _-- CANADIAN AUTOMOTIVE EXECUTIVES HOLD MEETING IN OSHAWA Members of the Canadian Sec- tion of .the Society of Automo- tive Engineers held their annual spring meeting in Oshawa on Friday. During the afternoon many tested their skill at the As Effort To St OTTAWA (CP)--Donald Flem- ; said Friday his suspension| the Commons was part rnment's whole on ? pipeline The Progressive nember for Toronto Eglinton said| suspension in effect represents! "the suspension of any rights of] I didn't seek this," he told porters moments after he| alked out of the Commons after he House voted 431 to 55 to sus- pend him on a motion by Finance [Minister Harris, government [House leader. "I deeply regret this action that been taken. I regret it with | my heart. But there was noth- ling premeditated or arranged." Mr. Fleming said his suspen- on was the result of the "arbit- rary refusal" of chairman W. A. Robinson of the committee of the hole House to hear him on a stion of privilege to which Stanley Knowels (CCF---Winnipeg INorth Centre) and J. M. Macdon- nell (PC--Toronto Greenwood) had poken. FIRST SUSPENSION i Jovking very calm an posed, the 5l-year-old WT. Conservative ing said the incident Oshawa Golf Club and later ga- thered for dinner at Hotel Gen- osha when R. E. Kauman, as- sistant chief engineer, Chevro- let Motor Division, General Mo- tors Corporation, was the speak- eming Sees Suspension ifle Debate Mr. Fleming said he back in his Commons seat day when the House meets at p.m. will Mgh- 230 was 'very disturbing." ! "I think that my record of 11 years in the House always has been one that shows I have con- ducted myself both in the House and in committees with the utmost respect and deference at all times." He regrets pentent "I do not regret nor depart one inch from my stand in the House. "The government with its ma- jority has suspended me. That of itself is of small importance. But iwhat is important is that they sus- pend the rights of the Parliament of Canada--that to me means the rights of the Canadian people." Mr. Fleming said his suspension gives no call for a general elec- tion. There were plenty more reasons for a general election he unre- while is indicated that the incident he IN 12 YEARS er. Caught by the camera dur- ing the proceedings are, left to right, William A. Wecker, OBE, president and General Manager, General Motors of Canada, Limited; Mr. Kaufman; A 4 "SOMEWHERE THE SUN IS SHINING" Hopton, general manager, Dom- inion Rubber Co. Ltd., Kitchen- er; and R. S. McLaughlin, dean of the society and chairman of the board of General Motors of Canada, Limited - Ottawa Surplus: $90,614,000 cal year with a budgetary surplus of $90,614,000 in the first month, | compared with a surplus of $32- 519,000 in April, 1955. Finance Minister Harris re- ported the rise in his first monthly treasury statement with the com- ment that federal revenues ad- vanced more quickly than an in- crease in expenditures. Revenues in April shot to $295,- 371.000, up $66,359,000 from the to- tal in April, 1955. Expenditures in- creased by only $8,264,000 to $204,- 757,000. Most tax fields yielded higher revenues for the federal treasury. It collected $60,612,000 in corpora- tion income taxes, up from $48 - 357,000 last year. Personal income taxes advanced to $97,159,000 from $80,808,000, suc- cession duties to $24,154,000 from House Ousts Fleming To Climax Pipeline Row By DON PEACOCK Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP)-~The Commons pipeline debate, roaring to new ights of bedlam and dramatics but otherwise standing still, Friday saw Donald Fleming suspended om the chamber for the last 1% hours of the sitting. He defied hairman W. A. Robinson's re- peated order to sit down. Suspension of the 51-year-old Progressive Conservative member for Toronto Eglinton by a House ote of 131 to 55 climaxed a day packed with explosive action. It as the first suspension of a mem- in 12 years. The procedural wrangle out of hich the suspension grew, plus n unprecedented number of op- position questions put to cabinet ministers at the sitting's opening, onsumed most of the time avail: ble for pipeline debate. The day's developments posed ome speculative questions as tg uture Conservative tactics. Chief among them: Will other Conserv- ative members invite suspension s a means of provoking further procedural wrangling? DEADLINE NEARS June 7 is the deadline set by the government for Parliament's ap- proval of the bill to lend up to $80,- 00.000 to Trans-Canada Pipe Lines Ltd. for construction this year of he Prairie leg of its $375.000,000 atural gas pipeline from Alberta 0 Montreal I the deadline is not met, ans-Canada is released from its greement to complete the Al- berta - Winnipeg ection of ' the ,200-mile line by Dec. 31. Nine itting days remain and the bill ust pass through the Senate hen the: Commons inished vith it Eyiday' jon of the Thursday sitting's am, which erupted over the brnment's tactics to drive egislation through in time : e¢ only hoshed moment Fri- tay ea 'ter 1! susnending meson, preposed by Finance Min- he ontinua- bed gov the dehate was a ister Harris as government House leader, was passed. Mr. Fleming rose, howed stiffly to the chair, turned to make his deliberate way down the length of the centre aisle to the main door. But after that one suspended moment, Conservatives and CCF members rose in the places and sent him off with a ringing cheer STARTED THURSDAY Mr. Robinson's difficulties began Thursday night when Trade Min- ister Howe moved that considera- tion of the first two of the bill's seven clauses be postponed. This prevented debate on them. It was an apparent government strategy aimed at setting up the clause-by-clause study stage of the bill for an all-inclusive debate-lim- iting closure motion. But Friday's developments, aris- ing out of debate on a procedural point raised when Mr. Howe tried Thursday night to postpone debate on the third clause, concluded with the House voting 131 to 52 to sustain a challenged ruling by chairman Robinson that the min- ister's motion was in order Debate on clause three still remains unpostponed. So far the opposition has stalled the govern ment there It was a time of testing for Mr Robinson's patience, With the House giving detailed study of the bill in committee of the whole, his job since Thursday has been tg maintain order in this compar- atively informal stage At one point Thursday, cribed the chair as 'a hot During that sitting, opposition members challenged five of his rulings HULS BITTER WORDS He was trying Friday an opposition tactical move oui of ordei hs ran trouble from . Mr leming. Mr Robinson heard opposition argu ment on the point for an hour. Then he decided he had enough advice to make his ruling Mr. Fleming jumpe d he des- seat." to z x intn up and demanded to be heard on a ques- tion of privilege. Mr. Robinson directed him to take his seat while the chairman made his ruling. Mr, Fleming was adamant. Mr. Robin- son finally reported him to Speaker Rene Beaudoin and the suspension followed. Mr. Fleming flung bitter words at Mr. Robinson while the uproar from other members thundered. "You are making a farce out of these proceedings . This is not any way to run a peanut stand, let alone Parliament." It was reminiscent of an uproar- ious point Thursday when Davie Fulton (PC--Kamloops) voiced an angry, measured charge that Mr. Robinson and the. government were "rapists"' of Parliament's liberties. No action to censure Mr. Fulton was taken, however After the chairman reported to Mr. Beaudoin, Mr. Fleming said he had stood his ground "witrout departing one inch from the respect which in the 11 years I have been in this House I have always given to the chair." said, his volume increasing, "when a higher duty is owed, and it is a duty to Parliament itself, to the long centuries and tradition of parliamentary freedom." Owen Sound Fire Takes Two Lives OWEN SOUND (CP)--Two bos were burned to death early today when fire destroyed their farm house at Parkhead, 10 miles west of here Dead are David Rexford Cruick shank 11 Richard, 4 The boys' mother, My Cruickshank, is in hospital sible. 'hroken bac suffered che fell from an upstairs window while trying to rescue her sons Mr r Rexford with a pos when Cruickshank and two daugh Faith, 9, and Joy, 2, escaped from the burning house Le MORE and his brother, Norman ! . com- OTTAWA (CP) -- The federal | $3,369.000, /import duties to $38. Flem-| government started the 1956-57 fis-| 620,000 froin $27.347,00, sales 'tax $16,599,000, to $27,757,000 to $19928.00 from other excise taxes from $21,870,000. " Interest charges on the national debt increased slightly to $44,367, | 000 from $40,527,000. However, de- fence spending declined to $56,065,- 000 from $60,502,000 Family allowance costs in- creased to $32,560,000 from $31,- 269,000. Meanwhile, the deficit of the old-age pension fund dropped to $6,500,000 from $8,600,000 Pension payments in April to Ca- nadians 70 or over increased to $31,400,000 from $30,300,000 last year. Meanwhile, revenue from a special two-per-cent levy on sales and personal and corporation in- come rose to $24,900,000 from $21,- 700,000 The deficit off charges against the treasury. written Trained Personnel Lack 5 by! FRENCH SURROUND REBELS IN ALGERIA House Tense As Fleming Expelled OTTAWA (CP)--It was a tense moment of high drama in Par- liament's Ristory. | Speaker Rene Beaudoin read the results of a Commons vote on a motion to suspend Donald Fleming for the rest of Friday's sitting. It was in favor of the suspension, 131 to 55. The stocky Progressive Conserv- ative member for Toronto Eglin- ton rose in his front-row seat on the opposition side of the chamber. He took two paces forward, stopped, turned and bowed with dignity toward the Speaker's chair. The House was hushed. Then Mr. Fleming turned about, Holding himself stiff as : plank, he strode slowly and dleiberately the length of the centre aisle. As he passed, Conservatives and then CCF members rose to their feet. They thumped their desks and cheered him to the door. FLAG ON DESK At the bar of the Commons, a brass railing just inside the main door of the chamber, Mr. Fleming stopped. He turned, bowed again to the chair, turned once more and strode stiffly through the door. At that same moment, Mrs Ellen Fairclough (PC--Hamilton West) slipped down a side aisle to Mr. Fleming's seat. She carried !a huge Canadian Ensign. Deftly, she draped it over Mr Fleming's vacant desk. Then she i slipped back into her own seat. All the while CCF and Conserv- atives remained on their feet. | Their creers: rang through the | chamber. Liberals and Social Credit members, who voted with the government to have Me. Flem- suspended, were At last the ! members The House we line business. But all menibers seemed still conscious of the Ensign. It lay across the empty desk red as a blush. NO INTENTION OF JUMPING NEW YORK (AP) Joan Lynn, 26, was indignant Friday when police appeared on the scene to snatch her from a third-floor ledge on which she was lying N Miss Lynn said she had no intention of jumping, that she just liked to lie on the ledge and watch the traffic below. The police left. i on with its: pipe- | | | Curbing Canada's Expansion By FORBES RHUDE MONTREAL (CP) Canada's growth is so fast that there aren't enough trained people to handle it and the situation, if we dog't look out, will hecome worse instead of better. This seemed to he a central theme in formal talks and corridor discussions during the three-day annual meeting of the Engineering Institute of Canada. That is, it was a central theme among the topics which were understandable (o laymen. For this was primarily a meeting of' engineers and the bulk of the ad- dresses and discussions 'were on technical matters of interest to them in the day-to-day doing of their jobs. With a total registration of some 1,500, including wives, it was the| | biggest gathering of engineers and their kind ever held in Canada. | They wound it up Friday night with a dinner in which they wel- comed a new president, Vernon| A. McKillop of London, Ont., and paid tribute to their president of the last year, Dr. R. E, Heartz of Montreal. LATE NEWS FLASHES Royal Family Slammed LONDON -- The lef Nation today criticized t for "lack of social respon Al Simmons Dies MILWAUKEE Al tist New Statesman and he British Royal Family sibility." Simmons, a member of basebell's hall of fame, died today. He was 54. Firebug Hunted VANCOUVER -- Pc fireburg who started five ing the night. The fires lice here today sought a fires in a small area dur- caused heavy damage. A firewarden said the fires were "definitely set." Europeans Murdered ALGIERS A throats of 12 Europeans at of Biskara, today. Robbery At Clarkson TORONTO A nearby Clarkson was beate ban se laws todav. Fierce ric in protes Algeria, of the Oumache, 12 miles south d cut insurgents rvice station operator at mn and robbed by two out- broke out here today against the sending of more reservists to heering died. i § their = oo i Poilus Tighten Iron Noose Aided By Planes, Tanks ALGIERS (Reuters)--French in- band of insurgents killed a Euro- fantrymen supported by tanks and pean and set his car on fire. A planes today formed a tightening French squad, which arrived as iron noose around some 500 North|the victim was being searched, Arican insurgents trapped in the killed three insurgents before the Bou Zegza mountains southeast of rest of the band escaped. here. In another hizhway ambush Fri- The French force has already day a truck was overturned near inflicted heavy losses on the Ain Touta, in the Constantine de- fringes of the trap area. partment. The driver and two pas- Guerrilla arms caches in' moun-| Sengers are missing. UAW: Cut Hours, | Spread Work DETROIT (AP) -- With unem- spelled out any specific aims, but ployment and layoffs continuing to the UAW chief has said repeatedly mount in the auto industry, the 500- the union expects a four-day, 32- man General Motors council of the hour week within 10 years. |United Auto Workers union has| Reuther said the effects of auto-! thrown its support behind a drive mation, atomic power and other for a shorter work week. technological advances will deter- | On the layoff front, there have mine how short a week the UAW been these developments: will ask. { Studebaker-Packard Corp. an- CONTRACTS RUN TO 1958 h : nounced Friday it was shutting | Under existing contracts, nothing tain caves have been taken, and| Meanwhile, Morocco's outlaw down its Studebaker assembly op-/can be done until 1958. Current|the command post of one of the "liberation army" released five erations in South Bend, Ind., for agreements between the UAW and|S€VeD trapped insurgent bands was| members of a French patrol-cap. a week, beginning Monday. It said|auto-makers do not expire until | destroyed by French troops near | tured last Tuesday. Two other several thousand would be left idle. then. The average hourly wage of Palestro in the Algiers depart:| members of the patrol who had Chrysler Corp. said 13,500 em-|auto workers now is around $2.19] Ment. been wounded were released Fri- ployees would work only Monday under three-year pacts signed in| The all-out campaign was day. : 1 and Tuesday next week. The shut- 1955. {launched following the ambush of ae downs will affect all Plymouth] Under those contracts, however, a French supply patrol near Pales-| . plants and most of the firm's body- workers laid off after May 2 be-|tro last. Friday, when at least it Varsity Honors Harold Hale, Retired Edi Retired Editor making plants. All the latter are come eligible June 1 for supple-| of the 21-man squad were killed TORONTO (CP) -- Communism in the Detroit area mental unemployment compensa-| by guerrillas TINY CAR |can best be combatted by keeping {up a constant guard on the rights The Michigan employment se- tion from company-financed trust| Insurgents blew up a dam and curity commission on Friday re- unds in states which approve or damaged the intake of a hydro- of the individual, Chief Justice EASILY STOLEN Patrick. Kerwin of the Supreme PASADENA, Calif. (AP) ported the state's unemployed at do not object to payments on top electric station near Boghni. about 220.000, with 128,000 of them in of regular state unemployment 60 miles east of here, Fridey night. etroif. compensation On an eastern Algerian road, a UNANIMOUS APPROVAL Supplemental benefits will be The UAW's GM council voted in limited in weekly duration in the Court of Canada declared Friday A at a University of Toronto convoca- David Cantor, 24, an engineer- |tion. ing student at California Insti- Honorary doctorates of 1 3 C WE tute of Technology, reported to |were awarded Chief Justice Ker- police his small sports car had disappeared. Detroit Friday for "a substantial | first year to permit trust funds reduction in the work week with|to grow. After that, they are de- full 40 hours pay" to end what it signed to give laid-off workers up described as the "morale-breaking|to 60 to 65 per cent of normal take- |win: Sir Archibald Nye, United Kingdom high commissioner in The little car showed up |Canada; Kathleen Edith Ri 11, Friday--in the basement of the [director emeritus of fhe yer | assembly haii. it had been dis- | ] . Har. assembled, hauled into the [Old Hale, retired edi of the short work weeks." home pay for up to 26 weeks. | sity's School of Nursing: huildi dir {Orillia Packet and Times an |Ch ter Walters, retired pra ler of finances for Ontario. Spokesmen for the council said All layoffs thus far have been Drew Wants Toronto Greets | Police Claim Gus Kr {the resolution won unanimous en- attributed to what the companies dorsement, "even if it means more|describe as 'an endeavor to bal- layoffs." Walter Reuther, UAW ance production with the retail president, supported' the resolu- market." Retail dealers have in- i ventories of around 900,000 new cars. Ce Sits, Sit Received 20 Stolen C h Fleming, rogressive nserva- { | OTTAWA (CP) Opposition Live member of Parliament for ecelv ) 0 en als [leader Drew Friday gave verbal | Toronto glinion who made an MONTREAL (CP) -- Provi [notice his party will seek to have| gaveruntary egy from Parliament If 1d Friday. might ncial) Lieut. Victor Corbo and Sgt. the Commons censure W. A. Rob- ot" By reanas a. iumpysl ye iday, Foi eves Brest Chateshaid he n to . 8 8 en au a the arrest of a Toronto man in| squad said so far 25 cars have Oshawa a week ago. been recovered in what they inson, deputy speaker and chair-| man of the committee of the whole] Mr. Fleming, expelled by House. majority vote for one day during He gave the notice after Speaker @ heated exchange over the pipe-! The man, Gus Knutson, was| termed an Ontario-Quebec stolen Rene Beaudoin informed him that line controversy, was greeted at| arraigned Friday in Sherbrooke.! car ring. if any member or group of mem- Malton airport Friday night by a Que., charged with receiving 20| They said most of the autos were bers wished to challenge the con- Cheering crowd of supporters, | automobiles stolen in Ontario. He stolen from dealers' lots. One duct of the Speaker or of the bearing placards reading "Wel- will appear for preliminary hear- apparently came right off the 5 ling June 1. | assembly line of an Oshawa plant. Asians, Africans, Ask UN: Halt Algeria War motion of censure which would be debated by the Commons. Mr. Drew's announcement came after an exchange between him- self and Mr. Beaudoin on an appeal of a ruling that a govern- ment motion to suspend Donald Fleming (PC -- Toronto Eglinton from the Commons for the re- By WILLIAM N. OATIS their governments. Laos, Libya encourage the nationalists and re- UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (AP)|and Nepal were not represented. |sult in 'large publicity." The United Nations African-Asian SAY UN HAS NO RIGHT Then, he said, the. Sroup By dor group has decided to ask the Se-! * The Frenc i i a special session. Failing in that curity Council to discuss the fight- i euch Jelegalion, Ne ok it could seek a debate on Algeria ing in strife-torn Algeria. France has been fighting against|i the assembly's three-month reg- U Paw Htin of Burma, group a nationalist rebellion in Algeria | ar session to begin next Nov. 12. | chairman, announced the decision |since November, 1954. The French | The group's complaint to the: Se- after a 90-minute caucus Friday |government considers that North curity Council, it is understood, mainder of the day's sitting was not debatable. Marilyn Deamude night. He said details will be| African region as part of France will be that the situation in Algeria worked out later, itself, and holds that the UN has|iS a threat fo international peace The opposition leader said he appealed 'because it is scandal- ous that a decision of this kind be made without an opportunity of discussion on the matter." Wins Nursing Prize |" wi rosters that 20 of the| no Heh to mtervene. aS WEIL celine, Indlagmue KINGSTON (CP)--The Queen's 23 countries in the group, the UN's| Last July, 13 Arab and Asia dele- | interested "delegations copies of University School of Nursing Fri-|biggest, were on hand Friday and| gations asked that the Algerian| Prime Minister Nehru's proposals day announced Marilyn Deamude that a majority favored the move question be put on the agenda of for an Algerian settlement, put for- of Fort William is the 1956 gold| which Hussein Ait-Ahmed, Alger-|the 1955 General Assembly session. |ward in Parliament at New Delhi medal winner among nursing stu- ian nationalist spokesman, pro- It was voted onto the agenda Sept. Tuesday. dents. posed. 30. The French walked out and| Nehru favors formal declara- Lois P. Dedrick of St. Wililams,| Other informed sources said 12 came back the following Decem- tions by both sides for ending vio- Ont., 30 miles south of Brantford, countries were prepared to join in| ber, after the assembly resolved| lence, French recognition of the is the winner of the Jean McMar-| an appeal to the council. Only the to drop the issue. | "nationality entity and personality tin Weir prize in nursing. The| Phillippines and Turkey declined to| Ait-Ahmed said that even if the|of Algeria . on the basis of prizes will be presented at the do so and the remaining six lacked |group failed to get the council to freedom," and direct negotiations school's convocation June 2. |the necessary instructions from/|discuss Algeria, the effort would| based on these ideas. tion. Neither the council nor Reuther ¥ | wi MAYOR NAYLOR PROCLAIMS KINSMEN WEEK Bill Hunter, president of the | the Canadian peopie wiih ite acs club; Mayor Naylor and Monty tivities and service work of the Cranfield, governor of district 8. | association's member clubs in ws. | Kinsmen Week is held for the | the various communities. Club; | primary purpose of acquainting ~Times-Gazeite Staff Photo, Kinsmen officials visited him at city hall. Above, left to right, are, Ted Reed, president-elect of the Oshawa Kinsmen Week across Canada | Monday, May 28, Naylor = yesterday when group of Kinsmen commences Mayor John announced #®