Weather Forecast Clear tonight, clouding over Wedness day, followed by scattered showers, Little change in temperature, Authorized es Second-Cless Mell Post Office Department, Ottawe SIXTEEN PAGES STEEL STRIKE IDLES 25,00 Falls 21 Feet, Dies situa: Ore Barges, Trucks Halted Newcastle PITTSBURGH (AP) -- R ai}|Northern Northern Paci roads and other freight haulers railroads ud the No 550 Lai felt the growing economic impact|ees would be laid off by the end of the United States steel strike|of the week following the today as union and company ne-/ment of a backlog of 600,000 tons | . Boy. b. In | | NEWCASTLE (Staff Reporter)-- After enjoying his first swim at a spot that had previously been de- TIMES-GAZETTE TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising. . RA 3-3492 All Other Calls ......, RA 3-3474 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle § Cents Par Copy OSHAWA-WHITBY, TUESDAY, JULY 3, 1956 Price mot Over YOL. 85--NO. 154 DOMINION DAY BABIES | gotiators awaited talks with the 1 ooenmmenrs chief labor me- | diator. The Pennsylvania and Baltimore {and Ohio Railroads posted fur- . |lough notices Monday affecting & |some 23,000 workers. And it was indicated more unemployment would follow if the strike contin- ues. Even as the layoffs were an- d, Joseph Fi steel was quiet. MRS. STANLEY WOODS 241 Marquette Street . + A Son on Dominion Day Fs EE TR TE FL iy "MRS. JAMES MOORE § (when he 16; 1 * |year-old David Meadows, son of nied to him by his parents, six- Mr. and Mrs. George Meadows, Jr., plunged 21 feet to his death from a CNR culvert, south of the village, late Monday afternoon. Accompanied by Jackie Aldread, Elaine Denney, his brother Donald, 7, and his sister Penny, 9, David had just finished his first swim in | the pool near the culvert. He :limbed up the stone steps of the culvert and was pulling on his shirt lost his balance and {toppled to the concrete slab below. | The accident was witnessed by Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Foster, 814] |Rowena drive, Oshawa, who rush-| |ed the injured boy to the Bowman- | |ville Memorial Hospital. He was | examined by Dr. Sylvester of Bow-| Imanville and taken to the Sick] | Children's Hospital in Toronto| {where he died at about 10.30 p.m. without regaining consciousness. | WATCH DEAL PROFITABLE CHICAGO (AP) -- Lasik Novem-| ber a stranger on Madison Street |tried desperately to sell to Cush | Bey, 18, a ladies' watch for $5. ife, Arteluar, ghause Be a few| This bus, loaded with passen- days, he bought | gers, slipped from a soft shoul- Recently, the catch on the| der on Highway No. 2 at Al- bracelet band broke and Bey took monds, between Ajax and Whit- by, on Sunday evening. The driv- er had stopped to let off a pas- senger, with two wheels off the shoulder. When the bus started, the rain softened shoulder BUS IN NEAR-TOPPLE ON SOFT SHOULDER OF ROAD crumbled and the bus tilted over to an angle of about 45-de- grees, The dri directed passengers in orderly fashion out of the rear door. Had any- one tried to leave by the regular door, the weight would have likely caused the bus to topple into a six-foot ditch. ~Photo by John Mills it to a shop, for repairs. The wate aroused some speculation and ther jewelers were as ap- 0! J watch, Be; 500. 'It has a diamonds of W: rubles on its face, case and band. DEATH TOLL UP TO 1,000 NICOSIA (CP) -- Fresh groups tor of the federal mediation serv- ice, arranged to meet separately here Thursday with steel workers and steel industry leaders in an attempt to get deadlocked megotia- tions under way again. An initial employment cutback of 18,000 workers was announced by the Pennsylvania Railroad, the largest in the U.S. The B. and 0. said 5,000 employees were put on furlough. Due to lack of steel business, many river barges were tied up at of the Great Lakes ore-carrying fleet went out of service. There were scattered reports of slight cutbacks in the trucking and fab- ricating industries. docks in steel regions. Four shipsg$2 STOPS ORE TRAINS At Superior, Wis., the Great 3 pr The walkout, shutting off 90 per cent of the country's steel produe« tion, climaxed a long Jeriod fruitless negotiations in New fo oh a oy pact, 0 lore bargaining eol lapsed, the union rejected an in. dustry offer of a 52-month pact which management officials said would have given workers a pack- age increase of 17 2-3 cents an hour the first year, including an immediate 7.3-cent hourly raise. Average hourly earnings had been The union never publicly put a price tag onthe 22 demands it e to th 'y at the opening of negotiations last May. It was reported its final demands were far above what the compan. ies were willing to give. SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (AP) -- A 13-year-old gick with remorse over the confessed slaying of a girl cousin, tdld police Monday erec a weird in a cant and visit! after the stabbing of | tained A Wises wil twine. 30 Stabs Kill Girl, 14, Boy Cousin, 13, Confesses shave of & pra. Moh. he » a piece of decorative tile a fence sticks and: Sam eluctant Pari Girls ©) REINHOLD ENSZ (AP)--Poland's munist party eracked down today stations on "lax and cowardly" officials it|said 289 were released after re- man frontier and block the west- Beaten, Robbed By Youths PARIS (Reuters)--Seven young took place either in & fashionable men have been arrested in Paris|flat near the Bois de e or on charges of attacking and rob-/n a country villa outside Paris, bing girls who refused to take| Highlight of these surprise par- part in pagan love-rites policejties was what was called "the St. sources said today. Germain baptism" --an orgy of They are alleged to have won|pagan love rifes, the police the confidence of attractive young|sources said. girls in the bars and cabarets of| Girls who refused fo take part Bohemian St. Germain-des-Pres, were attacked, robbed of their then invited them to ostensibly in- month and thrown out into the nocent *"'surprise parties" which!street, it is alleged. Bmerican Officials Unimpressed males in an effort to find : a By Russ Version Of Stalin Case |night 434 persons were treated in reported to have ordered out, Com-'Poznan hospitals and ambulance thousands of steel helmeted Or Fir efighers fod a Delng after the outbreak. It|treops to cordon off the East Ger-|fira in western Cyprus that has | defied the efforts of 1,200 Cypriot firefighters. The fire was officially B 1196 Ritson road south na r + + + A Daughter on Dominion Day aroused of ring io ead off the ceiving first aid. lard flight of workers who man- ly workers' revolt at Poznan. The attacks by the Communist aged to get out of Poznan. bee. : 3 ADN, the offieial news agency organs indicated the Polish Com: FIRING HEARD MONDAY |Sescribed as the higgest the island of Communist East Germany, munist hierarchy, jolted badly by!' A British businessman who| n years. . said Polish leaders have launched|the Poznan upheaval, was hunt-|flew from Poznan to Copenhagen,| [ven women were helping fight investigations to find out why ing for scapegoats. Denmark, said gunfire was still the blaze which was devouring {party members in Poznan *dis-! Rep reaching Berlin led to sounding in the suburbs of the limber near the area where 21 ST. THOMAS (CP) Elgin| played such a lack of vigilance." speculation the party axe already Polish city Monday morning. He British soldiers died in a forest |County's controversial nudistiit said they were not prepared to may be swinging against party| said he was told by an ambulance fire blamed on Cypriot terrorists {camp today seemed to have an| "counteract the planned provoca- and government officials, as well driver that more than 1000 dead|'Wo Weeks ago. indefinite lease of life as South|tion in time." |as against hundreds of workers|and wounded had been taken to| No casualties Dorchester Township Councillor! Trybuna Ludu, official organ of| jailed during the uprising. {hospitals during the first night of|from the blaze, John Charlaton conceded he hadithe Polish Workers (Communist) HINT AT CHANGES [the fighting. | Firefighting, however, did t {found nothing illegal about the party, rapped into party officers! 'There may be some changes! Communist newspapers andistop British forces from EG ie i venture. |it says scampered to safety when in the Polish leadership,"" said a radio stations in Poland and|ing to search for terrorists Toda y As a result of some vague, writ-| the uprising exploded Thursday Communist journalist on his ar- neighboring Soviet bloc countries they surrounded two Nicosi Ray ten complaints a month ago town-iand "did not return from hiding rival here from the riot city. |kept up their effort to fix thelurbs and searched all pose st 1 i ship council decided -- not too en-| until order had been restored.""| The journalist, who refused to|/blame for the uprising on what Ses and " thusiastically--to look into the NEARLY 1,000 DEAD be identified by nanie, said troops|they called the Western « linked arms. They also screened 18 gir] WASHINGTON (AP) -- Ameri-jcame up with a triple-barreled matter. Councillor Charlton sald] Meanwhile, estimates of the had been withdrawn from Poz-|" bandit underground." students detained on thei gir' can officials said today they are|alibl, officials said, and it eould | he would do the investigating. |death toll in the three-day upris-\nan itself, but the city was sealed) Denying any hand in the upris-lat the port of Limassel arrival) t 4 4 with the|D€ broken down this way: He told council Monday he had|ing continued to mount. Eyewit- off by a wall of tanks and ing, the United States state de- from summer vonasso Monday| definitely & IID eSser os ex.|. 1. Any move to oust Stalin was | interviewed the operators, ness accounts put together in artillery. partment has said the demonstra-|, ovo as. {Russian gmt did not op.| impossible because he had sues | scanned club rules, the Criminal|Vienna placed the total at '"close| The writer and Western trav-tions touching off the fighing| URKS ALARMED {Danton oh Wy are dictatorshin: cessfully fooled the Russian Dees "Code and by-laws, and found noth-[to 1,000." The Polish government ellers agreed the stern police|seemed to have been produced by| he political battle in Cyprus|Pose Joseph | H ple into believing he personally 7 ling wrong. |has admitted mo more than 48 measures make any further gen-|a surge of "pent-up bitterness on|COnkinued today when Fadil Kut-| 'They described the 6,000-word was responsible Charlton sald the camp|killed. eral demonstrations unlikely. |the part of oppressed and ex-|chuk, community leader of 100,000) document, issued Monday in Mos; tories against Nazi Germany. "4lrules bar liquor, frivolity and| Radio Warsaw said Monday The Warsaw government was ploited people." Turkish Cypriots, cabled the(cow, as a hastily drafted Fora 2. Opposition to Brain's xile | swearing, and cameras may be RE - i prime ministers' conference in|and sald it probably would fail to/would have risked disunity 2.8 % lused by mutual agreement only. London that granting self-determ.|satisfy the outspoken complaints time when capitalist _encire puma 4 | ination rights to Cyprus would| bY Western European Red chief- ment" threatened the future eof po make British bases here useless. tains. Russia. i Us. Coast card Ottawa Ponder S Easing Kuichuk also cabled Turkish| The central committee of Rus 3. Many of Stalin's alleged | | Premier Adnan Menderes thank.|sia's Communist party, led by|crimes were not 1 Seeks Quartet were reported i or the war vice Liquor Laws On Indians OTTAWA (CP)--A proposal to|(PC Prince Albert) | | | recom- their views before all Canadians. to give Cypriots the right of self- determination after a certain spe- cifed number of years, provid- ing British bases on Cyprus were guaranteed. Meanwhile, EOKA, &he under- ground organization pushing a ign of viol to unite Cy- prus with Greece, apologized to- R {found nat today for throwing a grenade into 4 ater. The i killed four calling for mass demonstrations rsons and wounded 20 others.|throughout the country on that Phe big knife crashed down on|day, the anniversary of the day for the June 16 bomb slaying|the neck of Laid Ben Ahmed, the French capture of Algiers in 1830. of a US. vice-consul in Nicosia.|third rebel beheaded in the 20-| In Morocco, where sympathy Letters from EOKA to news| month-old Algerian uprising. Offi- for the Algerian rebels is strong, correspondents termed the death clals feared 'the execution might Sultan Mohammed Ben Youssef of William Boteler "a traffic mis-|set off a wave of nationalist re-|appeared to be making progress take." bo {in reducing French influence. JUST ANOTHER TAX? Ottawa To License LJ 0 for | uld be judged and fined like he proposed liquor laws | T Indians would allow Indians tos p apy ing him for a statement Sunday|secretary Nikita Khrushchev, after he died. that ending British rule in Cyprus - {would be disastrous to the Middle » : I Ea French Decapitate Algerian 2 : i ' Lost In ke The British government has renc eca 1 a e pre & % tg # ¥ A > fs be A TOL . : . A . | give Canada's 155,000 Indians less| mended establishment of a royal| He said Indian treaties should been reported considering a plan 11: din 20 MRS. RUDOLPH ROZNIK | ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) -- The Toalriviive. liquor laws now is be-|commission to study the "tremen- be maintain and guaranteed or 1 ng our, oun g » . 3 | Indu ore the mmons. | dous problems' of the administra- and th should be a greater de- Of 250 Mitchell avenue fgoast ig Wg Mg aR It likely will be the most con-|tion of Indian affairs. self-government for the ORAN, Algeria (AP) -- The French authorities fear major . . » A Daughter on Dominion Day [drowned in Lake Ontario Sunday|troversial of a series of amend-| These problems, s through administrative French guillotined a 20-year-old| disorders » Thursday. They have |night when sudden squalls cap-|ments to the Indian Act intro-| not be Sojved by piecemeal Jap. p in the field and jn Oitava Algerian rebel in Oran at dawn tionalist rebel i y i duced Monda by Citizenshi azard amendments to the Indian quarters of '+ Indian affairs 3 She. body of Marilyn Karpp, 25, Minister Pickersgill y Zens Act | ree a 1S |of Rochester, who had been on| The proposed amendment would {one of the boats, was found float-| give Indians approximately the, \ rit t 1 n | f bel b ° . ing five miles off shore by thelsame liquor rights as now en. Diy spirits at liauor stores, pro |white men instead o helng sub. On D nion Day "sme nee Ml it vc the rovincal doveramens i fa" summary sprucio be omil 10 Y Others 'missing were Samuel) their home province and band ap- A referendum of Indian bandé pomted by the Indian affairs Kapp, 44; Joseph Donato, 37; prove. 1 | J : Mrs Arthur Bamann, 27, and her During discussi f I would have to be held to autMor-| branch. Three men anxiously paced~the| Oshawa and district men were fat- |p other.in-law, William Bamamn, | hy on 8, of A resolu.jse Indians to bring their fquor| Mr. Diefenbaker called on the of the Oshawa General Hos-|ed to become fathers of four brand|gg All are from Rochester |tion preliminary to Introduction of| purchases onto their reservés. (government to give Indians di- ps new Canadians . . . two precious| > ' {the measure, John Diefenbaker|™ At present, Indians may con-|rect representation in Parliament pital's maternity ward early Sun-| baby girls, and two bouncing baby { |sume liquor in public plates pro-|through the appeintment of one or fay Jorn fz. boys 'to join the ranks of the 16 THIS YOUNGSTER . |vided the provincial administra more of their leaders to the Sen- At gam. in the Lon Pony Hoes millions in this Canada of ours. al Y or er [tions Accept this provigion of the ae f th d amend pital Grant Camp of. Nestle- HER tha {Indian Ac f ne of e propose nd- on, Ontario, started pacing too. PLA Hospiilh "i thie Dor ACCIDENT-FRONE | i chat is the Situation in British ments to the Indian Act yolld i a He, me olumbia, ntario. Nova Scotia crease from $250, 0 L000, Al four nh Aad sqvera) things | inion Day, 2 daugihier was born SCHENECTADY, N. Y. (AP)- Wants Stalin and the Yukom. Manitoba has| the maximum amount the govern- 3} jeomimon, oy d fir y $ Is to Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Roznik| 5 41; year-old boy borrowed the {asked to have this privilege apply ment may lend to Indiar bands fd cigarets, chewe ; ngernai 8 of 250 Mitchell avenue, Oshawa family automobile. Monday and . ito its Indiggr H. A. Bryson (CCF--Humboldt-| uffered from imaginary pains, Ang in the Pori Perry Hospital|returned it with a crash. [ 1scusse ore INDIANS FOR SENATE (Melfort) said' Canada needs a Ie ower od S nd stopped pacing occasionally to at 7:15 a.m., just four hours later,| Michael J. Mangino, son of Mr . . 5 Mr. Dief¢nbaker said a royal Colombo Plan for its Indians and look up at a nearby nurse with nj. 'and Mrs. Grant Campbell of and Mrs. John Mangino, backed| NEW YORK (AP)--The Daily commissionj on Indian administra-/more instruction and supervision : : ! y e Pleading, helpless eyes of exX-Nestleton, became the proud fa-'the family car away from the | Worker in an editorial jodey, sug- tion should enable Indians to air!in the field of agriculture. OTTAWA (CP) -- The govern-, The regulations now governing was approved in plcipié The tant fathers ther and mother of a haby boy curb in front of the house, side-|gests continued discussion of the ment plans to develop a system of motor boats on minor waters, | Senate approved it after deleting Eighty-nine years ago to the day, But further news from the Osh-!swiped a parked car and hit a Kremlin high sinmand's eam [licensing for operators of Can-|such as small lakes and rivers,|a section that woud have = 34-statesmen of & pocket-sized Ca- awa General to the effect that this| free. Then he shifted into low paign: against Sia mn, : {ada's growing fleet of pleasure forbid excessive speed or danger- quired masters and mates of hy nada were pacing the floor in just young Dominion was still growing) He plowed over three front The American Communist organ | power boats, patterned after the ous operation. They are enforced ing vessels to hold certificates of such a manner. ' came at 8.02 am. when Mr, and|lawns, through a hedge and back printed the text of Monday's state 5 {licensing system for motor ve- by the RCMP. . competency. . They had mown anxiety. They Mrs. James Moore of 1196 Ritson(to his own lawn, where the front/ment by the central committee of _ : | hicles. Mr. Langlois was explaining to, Mr. Langlois said there are had suffered difficulties and de. road south, Oshawa, were blessed |porch stopped him. {the Soviet Commulist Barly which &s1 Slai | Once effective, it will wean the Commons pro vislons of 36,000 Jouee_ boats of fon vs. And they were impat with a lovely baby daughter And, oh ves, Michael was driv-{Sought to explain why the pres a that the power boat operator will amendments to the Canada Ship-ipower or mo : lags. And! pin of a patient to A Tho tion rk was ing i AD His left arm | Red Rulers did not denou Trip ayer n w 3 . that, an operator's licence to run|ping Act |Great Lakes alone. This presented dr $k to make one , anal uss 3 Wh i Stalin until after his death RREN, Ohio -- The violent death of triple- |i craft. OTHER CHANGES . |a growing problem of public a rea i's all aake ONG MTC CoiaV3lwas In 8 re wi Sie Wil h h hich hi old 1 loi i t The bill mak other changes safety y {call at 4:20 p.m. when nine-pound,, You might say Michael was ac-| Today's editorial says the slaver Alfred 'Buck' Wilson has lifted the fear whic | Leopold Langlois, parliamentary e bill makes c ges y. eed on the first | Lauri Anthony Woods, arrived to cil Last month: |wers given by the Soviet Cor hs aye : 4 . : ig assistant to Transport Minister| pertaining to registration of ships, Many power boat operators Queen Victoria, |Chrich the lives of Mr. and Mrs.| His arm was broken in a fall. nist leadership to questions ralfied; clouded the lives of residents of this amortheastern Marler, told 'the Commons Mon- relaxes requirements for engin: were responsible persons, con anada was born. Stanley Woods, of 241 Marquette] His nose was broken in a mis-|by Communists abroad would say: Ohio area for 12 days. Wilson toppled from a tree |day that, in addition, navigation|eers on fishing boats and makes versant with marine traffic rules. "became the Fa- street, Oshawa, to enhance this/hap with a toy mechanical horse. |isfy "many Marxists". The edit ii oy SON : | regulations governing operation of a part of the act an international But it was apparent there were a 'ame the Xa- icity and to add one more living] He was bitten by a dog ial adds, however. that 'rr $l with two bullet holes in his head and shotgun pellets |motor boats on minor waters will convention for prevention of great many "others who were not And he was stung by a bee will feel that the discussion! | T ; i 3 Ibe extended to all Canadian dumping of oil at sea 5 and were, in fact, irresponsible a __ | continue," ®in his arm, waters { The bill, which met no criticism, and foolhardy. hope to the dream of the 34 fa- the fourithers who made all this possible. | Dominion Day