Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 31 Aug 1956, p. 1

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TRTARRSTA INAS TTA L} Fer tal eh d BE TIMES-GAZETTE TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising All Other Calls. ..... RA 3-3492 . RR 3-3474 Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE urday, with storms, A little warmer, Weather Forecast Variable cloudiness today and Sate showers. or thunder. VOL. 85--NO. 204 OSHAWA-WHITBY, FRIDAY, AUGUST 31, 1956 VOY Three blue war canoes paddled by 27 boys from the YMCA Pinecrest Camp stopped for lunch at Oshawa yesterday. The group are all 13- and 14- year-old boys on their way to E, where they will take Former U.S. Air Force Jet Pilot [Enjoying Best Time In Life | = | DENVER (AP)--Art Hare, who |used to be an air force jet pilot, | (has never had it so good. | { It began Aug. 1 when Hare, a| {former Cornell football player, | ost the lease on a house he was| renting just three weeks before he | was due to be discharged from| [Lowry air force base here. | But Hare had girl friends who | {came to his rescue. They ar-| ; (ranged for him to stay in a small; # {room off the office of a "girls| "@%8 only" apartment. The other ten-| 4 ants are 17 airline hostesses and seven models and secretaries. They setve him breakfast, lunch =] and dinner, mix drinks for him, serenade him with song and ukulele music as he lounges around the apartment pool--and keep him gell supplied with dates. Hare received his air force dis- charge on Aug. 20 and had a job in Chicago. Taking a drink served him be- side the swimming pool Thursday by a shapely model, Hdre sighed and said "I've got to leave within a few days; my separation pay ning out." $75,000 Wanted For Hockey Team 'To Be Sent To Meet Russians | KITCHENER (CP) -- Wanted, by the Canadian Amateur Hockey | Association: $75,000 towards ex-| penses of raising, training and| sending to Moscow next winter a full-time team to regain from Rus- sia the world hockey champion- | voyage are 17 feet long and are | for the trip by passing the Bow- | "The trip had been uneventful canvas covered. They are safe | man's canoe test involving un- | and everyone was in good and sturdy, weighing approxi- | dressing while treading water | health and spirits." The Voya- mately 200 pounds, and were | and then swimming 440 yards. | geurs are shown here as they 3 built to a special design develop- | Three members of the group are | were ready to leave Bowman- ship. ed by the Montreal YMCA. All university students. John Boy- | ville yesterday. Kitchener - Waterloo Dutchmen | of the canoeists were qualified | son, leader of the party, said |--Photo by Rehder, Bowmanville [lost to Russia last year the title part in' an Indian ceremony on y the waterfront today. They left Lake Muskoka on August 22, and have travelled all the way by canoe, except for a 12-mile por- tage from Bewdley to Port Hope. The canoes used on the TELLS MANCHESTER GUARDIAN Friends See Two Britons Penticton Vs had won in 1955. | | Sports editor Len Taylor of the! Kitchener-Waterloo Record quotes CAHA secretary-manager George Avoid Gaitskill Urges Eden LONDON (CP) -- Hugh Gait-| He maintained that even if Nas- (French | skell, British Labor party leader, Ser rejects the plan, "it does not/troops into Cyprus a "political|treatment. today appealed to the Eden gov- t to "avoid any sabre-rat- ernmen | : tling" during forthcoming negoti- measures, even if these operate Shions with Egypt over the Suez Gaifskell , in an 'interview with the "Manchester Guardian, de nounced Nasser's seizure of the canal, But he expressed concern that the dispatch of French troops Cyprus "may unfortunately give the impression, that I had hoped 4 overnment is 'preparing to goltions gathering. Third, we give! sonal wi ati Akhbar. says the court nich | . to A war immediately if Egypt re-|the impression of being more in-|the interview. He said the two|will try the case will he named | T HIE CAPTURE |Dudley as saying: | J MN ™ "Some time ago we had i ap- | plication from an advertising Sabre-Rattlin Held In Egyptian Jail pals, Toul" of Still ' | levent for a possible sponsor. Ij | CAIRO (Reuters) -- British dip-/ing material which the Egyptian expect we shall have an announce- | {lomats, allowed Thursday night to] authorities undertook to provide. ment to make by next week." see two Britons held by Egypt on/COULD FACE DEATH |FULL SEASON JOB |espionage charges, reported that! The diplomats, however, were, Taylor's column says a CAHA {the men were tired and dazed, but refused permission to see James executive meeting in Toronto brands the movement of French showed no signs of physical ill-| Zarb, a British businessman re hree weeks ago, which produced {dent in Cairo, who also was de-|liitle news at the time, decided to move," | The two prisoners, James Swin-|tained on spy charges, {conduct a country-wide drive for asking: "What conceivable burn, business manager of the|l Meanwhile, the newspaper Allfynds should no sponsor be found. ical advantage lies in it?" British-owned Arab News Agency, Akhbar reports Egypt's pros-|The $75,000 was in addition to |slowly," "First, we associate ourselves|and Charles Pittuck of the Mar-lecutor Hafez Sabek as saving he|what the team might earn in pre- Britain's Liberal and left-wing even more directly with a colonial coni Telegraph Co. of Egypt, were|wiil demand the application of ar- championship exhibition games. newspapers meanwhile have _at-ipower (France) regarded as par-|interviewed in the presence of theiticle 80 of the penal code Provid-| "c.nada's team, the column tacked the government for i reactionary by Arab jail governor and two other Egvp-/ing fhe death penalty for Persols. vs, is fo be recruited from ! military moves. (tian officials. jcouvicted of spying in wartime |, Uy ont \lie: country and to The Manchester Guartian| "Second, Nas.| A British Embassy spokesman Sabek. pointed out that Egypt stilll } 1 that family and per- is fn a state of war with ere a justify going to war." rather than a military "We should rely on economic polit-| $s | ticularly |opinion, { we strengthen tect Na- ald later rael. | } charges editorially that the Eden|ser's cage at a future tent than ever on dictating rather asked for clean clothes and rcad- within two days. jects the committee's proposals. than negotiating "British and French troops are | The Labor rs val STRANGE LOOT comprise players prepared to de- vote the whole season to training, playing and other preparation. "The team will assemble in Ver- non, B.C., home of the Allan Cup champion:, and will train there about three weeks. 'Then it will work its way across the country, west to east, playing exhibitions here and pos- sibly in the United States wl in Europe many weeks ahead of| the world tournament, March. DAY MAY COACH "At the moment W. F. (Bunny) | Aherne, president of the E Ice Hockey Federation, is busy| rope for the team prior to competition, "Actually the decision to send a team has not been confirmed and] will not be settled until the mat-| ter of money is clearer. But it is! evident the CAHA now expects| ahead on that hasis." 1 ¢ Taylor says vice-president Clar-| ence (Hap) Day 'of the National] Hockey League Toronto Maple head Disding team; There would be two | assistant Boaches: Nominations for players would be sought from all Senior A and Junior A coaches throughout Can-| | More hk SIXTEEN PAGES FRENGH TROOPS NEARING GYPRUS | North Atlantic Group Meets In Paris To Ponder Suez NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) -- The|troops on the British-ruled island first sizable contingent of French | 2€5 | troops was expected to reach this swimming | Mediterranean itary position area. | : ¥ An advance liaison {planned to leave immediately for into Nicosia forces, ported supplies to and island about 150 today bolster the French - British mil- in the tense Suez party flew Thursday night to prepare for arrival of the French while a cargo ship re- be carrying military troops dropped anchor off Famagusta. : Unofficial Is run- shiploads of French soldiers were expected today at Limassol, ma- {jor port on Cyprus' south coast. carrying French |troops are expected to reach this bastion before the Pro vessels {uneasy British week ends. sources COUNCIL TO MEET _ These were other developments | 51,004 against the vessel's hull, the crisis: Atlantic continuing Suez will said meet Canal only 250 miles north of Egypt for the stated purpose of protecting French citizens and interests in the event of a breakdown in Stez negotiations. MINE EXPLODES Arrival of French units brought them in contact immediately with an eruption of violence linked to another tough British problem-- the Greek Cypriot drive for union of this island with Greece, ' An explosion in Famagusta har- to three bor damaged a British LST (land- ing ship, tanks) near the spot where the French cargo ship reported carrying troops was an- chored, The explosion, apparently engineered by a frogman of the - Greek FEoka underground, {holed the LST above the water jline. The blast was believed caused by a limpet or sticky mine all" Earlier, the wives of two Brit- i army 'sergeants were aceci- ish 1. Britain announce the North dentally wounded by bullets ounci fired In at terrorists by British soldiers Paris Wednesday "to consider thelon a busy Nicosia street. Suez Canal question." 2. Egypt objected to statements eign office of Wednesday's meet- by President Canal Eisenhower |State Secretary Dulles describing the Suez tionalized waterway. "The Canadian entry will arrive EXPEL ATTACHES The five-member Suez com- which is to/mittee headed by - Australian be played in Russia the last week Prime Minister Robert Menzies |in February and the first week in|{met again in London to further meeting in Cairo {Monday with Egyptian President Nasser. The committee will pre- a proposal Uropean {tional control of fhe walerw oh ~> |dorsed by 18 of the 22 lining up a 16-game tour of Eu-| which attended the recent Lon- the don conference. sent 4. Britain ordered two attaches of the Egyptian embassy in don to leave British soil in retalia- tion for Egypt's expulsion of two Brien diplomats 3 r Cis {char were mixed up in a s there will be an entry and is 20INg ring. The British denied the pd its' drive harges. ships the {plans for its got for 5. Egypt pushed abroad to recruit pilots fo guide +g through the Leafs is to be invited to become!was no indication what hick she coach of the championship-|was having. France Britain earlier ission from is week to base ¢ as an intern; interna- ay en- powe: the Egyptians Lon. There The announcement by the for- and |ing of the NATO council said Brit- ain's Foreign Secretary Sel Lloyd would attend. Diplomatic sources said it was presumed Britain and France wanted the meeting in order to tell their allies what they plan to do ¥ negotiations with Nasser break own. The Menzies committee will fiy to Cairo Sunday. EXPRESSES "REGRET" Nasser called in U.S. Ambas- sador Henry Byroade to eTprasy "regret" over President FEisen- hower's' Wednesday statement en- dorsing the 18-power plan for ine ternational control. An Egyptian government communique. said Nasser objected to Ei er's saying the canal was "inl tionalized by a treatv of ad gg RL under Egyptian sovi says the Constantinople ven ton of Fi only guarantees frees x the En ta). | Nate ed aynt P."] the free- a- TS declared her respect convention in regard to ulles Weather Delays Had died, Jat the Precautionary sikely to land in Egypt almost at me "lonce," it adds. ish government were in fact the | CHARGES BLUNDER nde to imposing a solution on! The government had "misled gypt by force. {the country by its talk of military "In spite of rumors I cannot be- movements which are 'precaution- Meve that after the London con-|ary only,' and by its blanket on ference they can be seriously Son military information. It has cre- templating the use of force tolated a false lull." 'impose a solution' on Egypt." ' The Liberal News tionalized" in referring the right of passage through the leanal and were hof talking about ownership. : Pressing its drive to find re- placements for British and French pilots on the canal, Eevpt bought advertising space newspapers in New York, London and Paris. They offered high pay to experienced seamen. ada, and the CAHA was" prepared . = : to draft any player wanting to| Tennis Championships try out if it feels he is of the] FOREST HILLS. N.Y. (A) jcalibre required. Lo | Today's opening matches in the The CAHA proposition was an 75th annual United States national an exiib- all-winter project or none at all. (tennis championships were post- Th" might eliminate prospects poned until Saturday because of holding responsible positions from showers which followed more than which they could not be absent|24 hours of high humidity and ine five or six months needed. |'"'soggy" weather. says "the government is | public confidence in its capacity to act responsibly so that Cries oi U.S, Olympic Hockey Team | hut 13 vir nace Planning Exhibition Tour Daily Express, however, applauds FITCHBUG, Mass. (A) md move to. Cyprus. | schedule of American and Europ- herlands, y oi Seibition Sines Jor i y said the team wil ay| False Telephone, Radio Appeals_ POLITICIANS United States entry nthe 197 Mately said. 1 glo Bring Arrest To Young Matron ~~ AT EARLY AGE world hockey championships at|two exhibition games in Moscow {Moscow was announced today by! With the Russians world title- team manager Jack Mately, holders before the start the A Li. (AP He said the team will leave for Championships Feb. 21 - . $05 PASADENA, Cali ( Europe after a 28-day tour of The team manager said prac- ( g - - y P : n f A Pye} ry , is ie i pari 2 yeasledly Ee Hi Ry All may be fair in love and |American cities starting -Jan. 1.|tice sessions for prospective play- observation as a result of alleged, Although believing that the ra- War: but Jetactive Fran Re {On the Continent, the team will'ers will start at Boston Get. 1. false radio and telephone appeals/dio and phone calls were part of pet 12 Xm ey et iby that touched off a plane search a hoax, authorities followed ohn iro eo by helicopter, boats and 'policz. [through '"'just in case." An eight- Yepetti caught the youths Early Thursday police radio hour search turned up no trace of > iy Nix: ast lise and Nixon picked up an SOS in a woman's|a missing plane pasting Eisenhower an ] LJ LJ LJ Surrey Wins Cricket Title voice saying her vane Je After the hunt was Salleg, Sif posters on the Stevestonfor: . . was running out oi as an she | police seized Mrs. Marjorie Py For Fifth Consecutive Year Lit to forestall possible strikes and would be forced to land m the mother of four children, as she ake em off he ordered. vicinity of Floyd Bennett field, altried to rent a plane at the Ma- y LONDON (Reuters) -- Surrey; Lancashire seemed headed for|disorders by Peronista labor lead-| today made English cricket his-|victory when they dismissed the ers. | " F " , py ent y t! military airport in Brooklyn. rine Park seaplane base in Brook- ja they Wert on, but :they Ping during the early morning lyn. Police said she admitted 4 urs an unidentified woman tele. making the telephone calls but de- tory b; inni : a | : | In , 1 | y winning the county cham-{champions for 96 runs on Wed- ow a phoned police, frantically urging nied any knowledge of the spur- | pionship for the fifth successive nesday and then replied with AL Bre eR i Ri ers 10 find her "sister," suppos-ious radio messages. | year. [runs for the loss of two wickets. |g ; I | oni ania ; ; | k dictator, Juan Peron, before he| It was the first time any county But a saturated pitch prevented was overthrown. Locked in al had won five times running. since{play Thursday. struggle with the Roman Soil | | flatly shaking RHINEBECK, N.Y. (AP) -- State police set up a special hunt today for an odd item of stolen property one aduit skunk. Robert Underhill, itor at the Dutchess county fair, reported one of eight skunks he had for sale was missing when the show closed. Gone with the animal was the "For Sale" sign and the top of the screen cage. Police weren't sure whether the animal had been de- scented. Police Nabbing Peron Backers BUENOS AIRES (AP) -- Argen- tine government security forces were reported to have carried out mass arrests before dawn today Alplay exhibition games in The Net Switzerland and Ger- Chronicle of | "Crazy Man Harms 'Buffalo Youngster BUFFALO. N.Y. (AP)--When 10-year-old Elizabeth Croakman woke early today, she thought she was "having a bad dream,' she Canadian Pacific Hirlines the championship was started in! There were no cheering crowds| Church and faced by growing dis- A sli h that 1 h at the famous ground, to Pipi te sension in the army, Peron thveat- A slim chance that Lancashire ute to Surrey and gallant ~aptain d i P to rl would win the championship by Stuart Surridge who led the ered 1 & speech lator leaders beating Surrey at London's Oval all five championship » " fd I Discloses Crash Victims' Names told police » (vanished this morning when the will relinquish the captaincy at killed. He was VANCOUVER rCP) Canadian, Miss Toshiko Yamane, 35, for-| An 'apparently demented man', Pacific Airlines today provided mer attache at Japanese Embassy police said, had entered her bed-| this list of persons aboard. its!office, United Nations room through an open window them ina year ago that five of his foes winds. Helwould die for each Peronista | match was abandoned. ousted shortly} ithe end of the season. after Short, Van- Victoria, injured. at Hong Kong, uninjured. : . . ~hool has cc ZreRs av ar, i | Manager Tommy Whyte of the Elgins phonefi at noon today school has changed this peaceful school board to end segregation have been paraded beafing such DC6B that crashed Wednesday! An early report said Rev. Roger beaten her savagely and stabbed the back HIGH SCHOOL PICKETED er | Navigator Robert couver, injured Patricia Edelstein, 7 T, ssee i i i "G od 5 : yh y ; ennessee fown into a place of this fall. Prior to that the Ander-|legends as Go home, coons,"| sister, uninjured to say that the Elgins would not be coming, as they could mot [racial tenseness and hatred. {son County school hoard had sent|'"Coon season open," and 'Keep field a team--this determines the St. Thomas elimination. { night in Alaka Pellow of Kingston, Ont,, was her in SURVIVORS aboard the Vancouver to Tokyo, The man escaped when hi I i t C 1 tise ero LATE NEWS FLASHES = Trouble In Tennessee | Burnaby, B.C., formerly of Cal- | Qork Sing Chan, Vancouver. | Last Monday Clinton High be-|its Negro high school students by|Negroes out." DEAD OR MISSING Russ Admit Nuclear Tests came the first state-supported| bus to Knoxville, 20 miles away.| Kasper conducted nightly meet- | LONDON (Reuters) The official Soviet news agency Tass Capt. Thornton Alexander flight, but it was later learned he screams brought her mother and Tweed, 33, Burnaby, B.C., injured. had already arrived in Japan'stepfather, Robext Whelan, to her| Second Officer Robert Love, 28, Safely. room. ; gary, injured. : § Sharon Edelstein, 16, daughter St. Thomas Elgins Default CLINTON, Tenn. (AP)--In less, by a group of Clinton Negroes was to form a white citizens' council | of Ted Edelstein, CPA manager St. Thomas Elgins have defaulted the Inter-County baseball (han a week, court-ordered mix- climaxed last spring when federal here. And since Monday, the] h doubleheader scheduled for the Kinsmen stadium here tonight. ing of races in the local high Judge Robert Taylor ordered the|school has been picketed, signs Sharon's Vr Sb {high school in Tennessee to end| Clinton, the county seat which |ings on the Anderson courthouse 5 a Officer Philip D. Iverson, segregation whet, it admitted 12 votes Republican and for prohibi- (lawn, harranguing against integra-| Navig ri ¥ announced tonight that nuclear tests were held Rus on Aug, |Negro students along with about|tion, took it in stride. Most of its|tion and against local school and Navigator William R. Hunter, 24 and glen Aussia 0 Aug 750 whites. | sparse Negro population live in a|law-enforcement officials, The town's leaders agree {hat neat settlement on a hilljop over-| Over and over, he has repeated: most of the trouble was stirred upllooking the city, "We must keep the Negroes by a fiery segregationist from D. J. Brittain, the high school | out." Washington who never saw this| principal, called parents of the 12] He demanded that Brittain oust town of 4,000 persons until last|Negro students together a couple the Negroes or resign. Brittain Sunday. {of weeks before school opened and |rejected the "ultimatum," and "Everything had been quiet un- told them what to expect. |students and parents both gave til he arrived," said Sheriff Joe| Then last Sunday Kasper ar-| him. overwhelming votes of 'con- Owen. 'Now we've got a pretty rived fidence. ugly situation on our hands." | Early in the week he landed in| Anderson school. officials Wed- He was talking of John Kasper, jail, charged with vagrancy and nesday got a temporary restrain-| § 26, executive secretary of the trying to incite a riot. Police ac-|ing order against Kasper and five| drews. N.S "Seaboard White Citizens' Coun-|cused him of distributing inflam- | followers. The order pro-| FESS oo : 1 , , N.S. ieil" of Washington matory literature and trying to|hibited acts interfering with | a i CT dl . For two days this week, minor [induce Clinton parents to picket |peaceful integration. | {incidents of violence involving|the school. The charges were dis-| Kasper was jailed Thursday a-| FOREIGN LEGIONNAIRE FINDS TIME TO C | Negroes and whites have erupted. \missed for Jack of evidence. ter another mass meeting Wednes-| ) " Most of those involved were non-/WILL FIGH day night, and held in lieu of $10,- A soldier and his dog at the | 'rench Foreign Legionnaire Canada during the week ended Aug 4 or 50 fa : 4 4 : il g 8 Blx ng the week ended Aug but the number so far |g, gents, 'We will go on with our picket- 000 bond. A hearing was sched-| French army observation post at | feeds his puppy. the company Rev, Vincent McGough, Toronto Mrs. Margaret R. Lem, Toronto. this year was less than half that of the corresponding period 'RE "N i " i ' " > {ORDERED TO END ing - and fight until we win," as- uled today on a contempt cita-| it i 4 ie a. f last year. | A five-year-old integration suitiper told a reporter. He promised tion against him, 4 De Tizi Ouzon 'in Algeria. This | mascot, some . precious water 32, North Vancouver, B.C. for merly of Herbert, Sask . . . a Stewardess Evelyn Lee, 2, van Provinces To Divulge Decisions couver. rd OTTAWA (CP) -- The provinces likely will divulge their de- Vou ardess cisions in connection with the federal government's tax-sharing offer at confidential talks to be held at Victoria Sept. 10-11, it was learned today Yukeo Shimoda, booked passage " Lumsdon, Park To Race in Toronto for Tokyo. Lee Wah, hooked passage Toronto for Hong Kong Lai Chee Lee, hooked passage TORONTC (CP)--A pair of unsuccessful challengers of Lake Ontario, Cliff Lumsdor, 25, of Toronto and Tom Park, 32, of Marineland, Calif., are to race next week over an undetermined waterfront course in Toronto for Hong Kong Five New Polio Cases Rev James MacIntosh, St OTTAWA (CP)--Five new cases of polio were reported in Anita Wong, 25, Jd An- 3 a i IP RE FOR MASCOT from a'Coke bottle. Wherever you find soldiers the world over, | the inevitable dog mascot is ! sure to be around. ~ ter of Mrs. Lem Chan Tai, Victoria Hai Choweng, Victoria Lee Lock, about 60, Victoria. | Jude eight months, usugh-| oz 25 Wh

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