Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 15 Oct 1956, p. 1

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mn) k g i i . TIMES-GAZETTE . TELEPHONE NUMBERS | ssified Advertising - RA 3-3492 Hy Other Calls. ...... RA 3-3474 DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle Weather Forecast Variable cloudiness with possible showers tonight and Tuesday. Con- tinuing warm. i v OSHAWA-WHITBY, MONDAY, OCTOBER Price Not Over 15, 1956 ies Nt Orer TWENTY PAGES - --NO. 240 urday test a Picton, Ontario, | but missed a chance to set a new record. Official timers said the boat was travelling at just 200 mph when the accident hap- Danny Foster in the face. A | sponson is a fin which sticks out from both sides of the hull The boat travelled at speeds in excess of 190 mph in the Sat- Supertest missed a o set a new speed re- [urday when a sponson '1 loose and hit driver rael-Jordan Border es Mounting Tension ALEM (AP) Tension about 3,000 troops to strengthen! Israeli sources said Peter West- loday on both sides of the Jordan's government against col- lake, temporary head of the Brit- Han border as Israel lapse circulated in Washington last.ish diplomatic mission to Israel, me four ambassadors Wednesday. The United States and delivered a note to the foreign Arab kingdom held mili- Britain are said to have approved ministry warning that Britain with its stronger ally, the idea, believing the Iraqis would not tolerate any Israeli at- would agt as a stabilizing influ- tempt to interfere with Iraqi troop reported plan to move ence during the country-wide elec- movements ; : jo Jordan brought talks tions next Sunday Britain also is obligated to de- ld danger of war to the But Israel saw the move as 'a/fend Israel in case of an Arab tor of Jerusalem direct threat to Israel's integrity." attack under the British-French- David Ben - Gurion "This threat the government of American agreement of 1950 guar- a 90-minute speech to Israel . .. is determined to meet," anteeing Palestine's borders Parliament on security Foreign Minister Golda Meir said] Moscow also warned Israel kn policy today. in a statement. against warlike acts against Arab t8an, Jordan's capital, an, An appeal to the United Nations nations. The Soviet government $atement ' also was = ex- Security Council against the Iraqi newspaper Izvestia says: "The the conferences between troop movement was reported un- game with fire the ruling circles g Hussein and the Iraqi der consideration. of Israel are conducting carries headed by Crown Britain took an increasingly dangerous possibilities -- primar- bdul Ilah. The talks grave view of the situation. The ily to Israel itself." : hnday. A Jordani a n|British-Jordan collective defence] The Israeli envoys in Washing- seribed them as 'of a|agr t 1 blig Brit- ton, London, Paris and Moscow ry nature." in to help the little Arab nation were ordered home for urgent con- am Iraq planned to send if it is attacked. 'sultations. i { t i § i Moscow radio. PIGKETS F IGHT POLICE, BOSSES Diefenbaker To Seek Leadership Hungarian Reds Only If General Demand Seen WINNIPEG (CP) -- John Dief- enbaker, Progressive Conserva- tive Member of Parliament for ership, said he is concerned over Prince Albert, said during the weekend that if there is a "gen- 175.8 mph. The boat must travel eral demand" he would stand for el at faster than 175.8 mph [the party leadership. "Otherwise over a specified distance to |I shall not be in it." break the record. | He made the statement in an| ER nes pig |interview here. pened. The present record is Red Chinese VIENNA (Reuters) -- The new| Austrian army welcomed its first recruit early today with a bottle of wine and a written testimonial to his enthusiasm in arriving early. He turned up soon after midnight. The 'young man"--the word re- cruit is shunned in this army-- was met at the Vienna barrack gates by his commanding officer By dawn thousands of young men began pouring into barracks all over Austria, accompanied by parents and relatives and wel- comed by blaring brass band In Hong Kong LONDON (AP) -- Red China de- clared Sunday night it cannot tol- erate further disorders on its doorstep in British Hong Kong. Premier Chou En-lai told a group of foreign correspondents in Peiping last week's riots, in which 47 persons were killed, could be traced to "the policy of the British of keeping large numbers 'of anti- Communist elements in Hong Kong." "If the British authorities con- tinue the policy any longer," Chou said, "then such disorders can arise in the future and on an even greater scale. The Chinese gov- Belleville Sends ernment "cannot tznore uc 5: 70 Newfoundlan Chou's comments 'were reported] MONTREAL (CP) -- Seventeen in a Tass dispatch broadcast by diesel locomotives and 24 refrig- New Rustrian Army Welcomes Ban Disorders First Recruit At Midnight In Belgrade ToSee Tio | Of BELGRADE (AP)--A party of! WINDSOR (CP) Picketers, general election top Hungarian Communist leaders police and company officials bat- He said he hoped that out of arrived today to re-estabtish ties led briefly at the Canadian the national convention scheduled With President Tito's brand of Bridge Co. this morning and 11 for Ottawa Dec. 10 would come 'independent' communism. picketers were arrested. "a spirit of unity and dedicated The head of the delegation, Hun-| One police report said two pick- purpose." garian party boss Ernoe Geroe, eters, a man and a woman, were - 4 said the visit was an expression of slightly injured in the five-minute | Hungary's wish to resume rela- melee. tions with Yugoslavia on princi-| Licence plates were ripped off ples of non-interferenee and inde- company cars and fenders pendence. scratched and dented as picketers It is the first visit of Hugarian|tried to keep company cars from officials to Belgrade since Yugo- entering the plant. |slavia was ousted from the Krem- The fight marked the first vio- The new Austrian army, which Jin-led Cominform in 1948. Geroe lence in the four-week walkout at was authorized after the four oc- had an ghofficial Visit wi Yugo. restraining pickets from stopping i GM « o Siavia's President 1ito two weeks the steel company. An injunction eupying powers left the country a ago during Tito's visit with Rus-| company i A en the year ago, appears to be the most gian leaders at Yalta, Geroe later plant, pampered fighting unit in Europe. | conferred withsSoviet Deputy Pre- The fight marked the first vio- Parents were invited ro accom- mier A, I. Mikoyan in Moscow. lence in the four-week walkout at pany recruits so they could tour, The delegation also included -------- - -- h-- the barracks and visit bedrooms Hungarian Premier Andras Hege- equipped . with rubber-spring mat- dus tresses instead of the old straw- Hungary removed its pro-Stalin- filled bags. ist party boss, Matyas Rakosi, The new soldiers will work a from office last July. He was one 5%-day week with evenings free Of the key figures behind the anti- and no night duties at all through-| Tito drive of 1943. out their nine months of service. -- Newgpaper Predicts | | . | nt Monckton To Retire police sources, wicovered five LONDON (AP) The News Sicilian stowaways in a weekend Chronicle predicts Defence Min- raid on the French freighter Jol:- New Equipme . Ml d Railroad |ister Sir Walter Monckton will re- ette as she sailed up the St. sign in the next day or two to|Lzwrence River to Montreal. feet six inches wide, more than 14) Make way for a younger man, An all-out investigation was im- inches narrower than tracks on| Lhe paper says Sir Walter, 65, mediately launched to determine I laa Mr. Diefenbaker, 61, who twice ran unsuccessfully for the lead- party unity on the threshold of a (CP)--The RCMP, acting on a tip from European MONTREAL erator cars, huilt for Newf di | The C: Phen Tar Dispu this discrimination; (2 YEgypt's soy mmarsk h, " " b - | BYILLIAM N. OATIS at UN headquarters - L#) NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) month. _|eignty should be respected; (3) i Gtions Secretary-General However, the three ministers, "operation of the canal should be imarskjold today makes! plus U.S. State Secretary Dulles, insulated from the politics of any tempt - to bring Britain, Soviet Foreign Minister Dmitri country;" (4) tolls should be fixed nd Egypt to agreement Sheplov and others are expected by agreement between Egypt and ez Canal dispute to be on hand for the opening the users; (5) A fair part of the ¥ k of mediation was Nov. 12 of the General Assembly. tolls should go for canal improve- ck to the secretary-gen- Dulles, before his return to ments, and (6) Arbitration should Security Council en- Washington, conferred with Lloyd settle disputes between Egypt and of six principles for a early Sunday after the marathon the management of the Suez Ca- This followed talks council meeting which ended the nal Co. which operated the canal ! 'marskjold last week and '11-nation body's consideration of before Egyptian President Nasser "a'eto Saturday of a British the dispute for the time being. A took it over on July 26. he emand for international British spokesman said it was pos- The 78th Russian veto in UN his- 'of the waterway. sible Dulles and Llovd discussed tory killed the balance of the Ie Foreign Secretary Sel- the 15-nation Suez Canal Users British-French resolution which has an appointment to Association, which Britain is anx- weuld have endorsed the 18-nation arskjold today. Egyp- ious to get into operation London proposals for international hign Minister Mahmoud The six principles, agreed on by control of the canal and would . still in New York but Lloyd, Pineau and Fawzi in their also have called on Egypt to co- oreign Minister Chris'ian talks with Hammarskjold last operate with the Canal Users As- s returned to Paris week, were unanimously endorsed sociation. Shepilov contended this bh spokesman said it has by the Security Council as require- would encroach on Egypt's sover- ween settled when Lloyd, ments "that any settlement of the eignty dnd Fawzi will get to- Suez question should meet." Yugoslav Foreign Minister Pop- : more talks with Ham. These are the six ovic also voted against this por- 51. He denied reports they, (1) Passage through the canalition, making the lineup 9 to 2 in Med to meet in Geneva or should be free, open and without'its favor. ! late | rs' Loot Is $12,000; Hungary's Nagy Again Accepted By Communists BUDAPEST (AP)--Ex-premier Imre Nagy has been restored to full membership in Hungary's "be inty More Lying Around RIBABYLON, N.Y. (AP How much did the thugs miss in ian to count today the the money-cluttered house? { of crumpled bills and First estimates placed the total #' coins they found scat- at $50,000. But later Police Chief ¥ rough the ramshackle Percy K. Hempstead said he Communist party. His "rehabilita- {Ma retired cab driver and couldnt say how much there was. ij,n" marked another major step je sister : Asked why the'money was kept in the de-Stalinization campaign Xhen stumbled in the house, Van Huda's sister, in Hungary jeasure hoard Saturday Jeanette, 64, said: An advocate of more liberal ain Van Huda, 58, tele-| 'That's because of shat Hitler. government policies and an im- *=8nd said two men had . , , Johnnie got very excited be- proved standard of living, Nagy 4m of $12,000 at his home. cause he thought Hitler was going wus booted from the premiership [. lice arrived they were to take over the whole world. He in April 1955 and expelled from 4. to find money littered [| i i | on the thought if he kept the money in the party seven months later. e nine-room Long Island the house, Hitler wouldn't look for, Matyas Rakosi, the old Stalinist %e 80 much trash. Each'it there." who headed the party at the time, 4s also stuffed with old Van Huda said: "You know how accused Nagy of rightist devia- rs, rags, boxes and bot- it is, you need money around the tionism. Rakosi was deposed last house for emergencies." July 18 in a de-Stalinizing move. Neighbors were startled to learn' Nagy, now 59 and a leading that the shabby Van Huda house Communist party liberal, has been was crammed with riches. Some rumored on the way back info fa- said they had lived in the area vor for months. Some observers d nibbled on some of the on the floor. Other bills thin from passing feet. ist premier-foreign land's narrow-guage railway, to. of- left Belleville bound for St minister already had ficially. to Britain about the Foe | To State Policy by Canaftian National . Railwals' offitals' here as thei the railway, the @quipment 5 loaded aboard 58 flat cars for the journey from Belleville to Mon- freal. LS Ld » {. The equipment had to ride n ng ito "piggy-back' because of its nar: ow-guage specifications. In New- WASHINGTON (AP)--President foundland railway tracks are three Eisenhower is expected to issue --r---- A RE ve Tuesday a policy decision to con- . | tinue limited economic and mili- 1 tary assistance to Communist ueen u ana Yugoslavia. a How long the aid will continue R would depend on results of fre eorganizing Officials said the administration Household is determined to avoid any action x . which might push Yugoslavia into! THE HAGUE (AP) The closer association with Russia, At Dutch government today an- the same time there is consider- Mounced that Queen Juliana is re- buildi tight li ith Moscow the recent furor over her relation- ne Neg osLoy ship with the faith healer Miss The basic decision to keep the Greet Hofmans. aid pipeline open in spite of Tito's| A communique issued by the recent mysterious c on fe rences government information service press conference, however, that/contact with the 61-year - old he would delay action until the Woman whose influence over the last minute to take into account/MONarch was said to have caused every development. The deadline 2 deep rift between Juliana and set by congress is Tuesday her husband, Prince. Bernhard quent reviews of Yugoslavia's re- lations with Russia. able concern over how rapidly Yu-|0rganizing various departments of goslav President Tito may be re- the royal household as a result of with Soviet leaders was shaped denied recent reports that the last week. Eisenhower told a dueen still has direct or indirect |was brewing because the queen {was still in touch with the faith Wide Areas Flooded |healer and had been slow in rid- Around New Delhi ding the palace of persons still NEW DELHI (AP)--The Jumna joval to Miss Hofmans River, at its highest level in 32| 'Earlier today the Dutch govern- years, today flooded wide areas ment issued a communique deny- around the Indian capital ing a British newspaper report of Unconfirmed reports listed 46/3 plot among Dutch government dead as a result of the floods and ministers and politicians to induce week-long rains which preceded the queen to abdicate in favor of the overflow of the river and its her 18-year-old daughter, Princess tributaries. Beatrix. Hungarian Held In Killing Of "Great Friend," Also Girl SUDBURY, Ont. (CP) 37-year-old Hungarian immigrant today faces charges of murdering his "great friend' and a 19-year- old girl. Istavan Gyorgy is charged In the deaths of Lorraine LaLonde, A strange man entered and asked for their sister. Told she was upstairs, he went up, followed by the boy. The man entered the bedroom and tore aside a curtain behind which Lor- raine was sitting on the floor, most tnlisiak oad gher Carried by, The announcement followed re-| wm ports that a new crisis in the cgurt! | probably would be raised to the|yhet & of 8 mainland i the peerage and appointed the now ether the men were being uipment vacant post of paymaster general. - and Mice No one was mentioned to succeed flemorial Held the nature nd its $6,000, oo E. ia v} rg to travel at spbeds: me needing 2% miles. an. hour To carry the locomotives and cars from Montreal to Newfound- land, the CNR arranged a. marine piggy-back in the shape of a s cialized Norwegian vessel w heavy lift booms aloft and nar- row-guage railway tracks below. The ship wil] sail for St. John's in mid-November. of the crew on charges of smug {gling following discovery of a |! {teen bottles of cognac, on wh = For Principal M. F. Kirkland duty hag not been paid, wera a The student body and faculty BOARDED SHIP of the Oshawa Collegiate and Vo- cational Institute attended a me- day morial service in the school this ment which boarded the ship at morning for their late principal,|Father Point, Que., 130 miles |M. F. Kirkland, who died last downriver from Quepec City. Friday The Sicilians were discovered in More than 1,200 were at the an isolated cabin bv the time the service, which was conducted by ship reached Quebec City. They Austin Hiltz, head of the school's ty : classics department. The funeral service was to be held at the Armstrong Funeral Home at 2 p.m. today, with the Rev. Dr. George Telford, of St Andrew's United Church, officiat- in ic Is Cobalt Mine Loses Buildings By Fire COBALT (CP) Fire today de- stroyed the mill and shops of the Cobalt Consolidated Mining Corp.,| near this community, 55 miles south of Kirkland Lake Loss was estimated at between $400,000 and $500,000. The mill, originally built in 19086, was one of the oldest in Ontario The blaze was. spotted by em ployee Archie Fleming Before firemen arrived the crusher room, scale house, me- chanics', carpenters' and boiler-| pop y Ini + Aa ere: at / smiths shops, the boiler house] Pallbearers i and mill were razed {George Roberts, J. A. Robbins, The plant processed ore for sil-| Maurice Hutcheson, David ver concentrates and employed 35/ieson and John Kirkland, men, 'phew of the deceased. MWANZA, Tanganyika (AP) -- Snake dancers carrying spitting cobras and a huge, spade-headed python marched past Princess Margaret at. "baraza' (tribal gathering) today It was part of a display of tra- ditional African dances put on by 29 groups of performers. They had been trekking in for the last four days from 200 miles around Clouds of dust swirled up from g. Senior students from the OCVI graduating classes were to attend the service and form an honor guard afterwards. All students were to attend the graveside Jam- a ne- {smuggled into Canada by an alien fies are "naturall {ring or are wanted by Europeanithe case as "it | police. i in addition' to the "stowaways, the RCMP arrested two members Ww |dozen women's skirts and several {dozen bottles of perfume. Seven- h The raid was carried out Satur- by & 30-man RCMP detach- Africans Dance, Display Snakes To Entertain Princess Margaret indsor Scene Wild Melee the steel company. An injunction restraining pickets from stopping company personnel entering the plant was served on a picket cap- tain Saturday. Officials said today Milton Rocheleau, deputy sheriff, went to the plant today to read the injunc tion to the pickets. About 40 policemen formed a flying wedge to get company of- ficials into the plant, Police said oné company official was roughed up in the melee. Every available off-duty police- man has been called in and police are standing by for possible fur- ther trouble Picket lines around the plant have been re-enforced and police estimate more than 100 picketers now are on the scene. Mounties Nab Five Sicilians Trying To Enter Canada were clean-shaven and well fed, "indicating _ that someone, knew they were aboard and was taking care of them." Supt. E. Brakefield-Moore of the RCMP called the five-man haul the largest in recent years. U.S. INTERESTED He said United States authori- interested in States. Storm Moving Toward Florida MIAMI, Fla. (AP)--A Carib- bean storm of uncertain temper edged northward toward Florida today where its every move was watched for signs of possible peril A 5 am. EST bulletin from the Miami weather bureau located the storm about 120 miles south of Miami the stamping of dancers' feet as they hurled themselves into wild, abandoned dances .to the throb- throb of tribal drums Ostrich plumed warriors pranced around on six-inch thick clobs, leaping high in the air. Lion-headdressed hunters, their bodies wound round with colored beads and wearing sheep pelt an klets, jumped and ecapcred wav- ing spears and axes. bs ga tale police consulted w id id two thugs posing as n talked Van Huda into in. They hit him over and dug out an estimated m under a mattress fers stuffed the cash in a and fled. oslav Vice-consul's Wife sted For Shoplifting RANCISCO (AP) -- The downtown branch of the J.C. Pen TORONTO (CP Suburban » Yugoslavian vice-consul ney Co. Police: inspector Al Cor. North York firemen stood by e to appear in municipal rassa said that th her shopping helplessly early today as a $300, answer a complaint if bag was $26.75 of store merchan- goo fire swept through three build- Attorney Thomas C. dise, including two sheets ing silk screen es one in connection with pairs of men's socks, five towcis plant Advertising| Township police had been called iting arrest, a woman's sweater and five slide [tq ito investigate Miss LalLonde's tonje Juznic, 26, was ar 'fasteners A 40,000-gallon cistern, designed| shooting in adjoining Minnow p aturday and held for five. Lynch was for fire protection, was rendered | Lake h awaiting definite word (rom useless when a wall of one of the] There tate department official. Washington as vhether Mrs. buildings collapsed on it. A sec-| Clarence d been halted earlier in'Juznic enjoys diplomatic immu- ond cistern was covered by one of his brott by a store detective in the nity, the buildings which burned down. |foot of shot in the bedroom of her McKim Township home early Sunday morning, and of Sandor Nemeth, 35, who died of bullet wounds a short time later at his Sudbury apartment, about a mile from the LaLonde home. Sudbury police arrested Gyorgy after being called to Nemeth's apartment building by Mrs. Har- old Doyle, whose hushand said he {found a man holding a rifle at the {door of Nemeth's apartment. Ne- meth, shot twice, lay dying at his | feet The for 30 years and had never seen expect him eventually to resume Miss Van Huda a leading role in the party, per- "That's not true." she said. "I haps even the premiership, if the was out 10 years ago, It's my feet. frend toward liberalization con- They keep me in most of the time. tinues . They always hurt me." - However, others feel it would be i unwise for Nagy to risk his great popularity by joining a , govern- ment which faces difficult eco- nomic problems. Accident Leaves Firemen Helpless man gave the rifle to Doyle, saying, 'vou can have 'he gun, It's all over now." Sudbury police received the Doyle call at 1:35 a.m.\ Twenty seven minutes earlier, McKim wo which house the of Associated a said Sunday he her 12.year-old brother described how he and hers were sitting at thie the stairway when a reading. "ARE YOU CRAZY?" When she saw the man, Clar- ence said, Lorraine jumped to her feet and yelled 'are you crazv"" "Then he shot her," the boy told police "He went right he was going out. My dad had never seen him before." Mr, LaLonde followed the man out of the house but lost him in a thick fog. A fellow Hungarian, Joseph Nage, described Gyorgy and Ne meth as "great friends" and said Gyorgy knew the LaLonde gil "very well He said Nemeth was to been joined in Canada in . weeks by his wife and two da ers, 13 and | Nage said the only troubule | knew of Nemeth having was v a Minnow Lake woman who did not want him to have his family join him "1 guess she wanted niture," Nage said. near us when 5 the fur MR. ST. LAURENT MEETS MR. MEIGHEN In his first Toronto, official ecivie Prime Minister Laurent a full | | and busy day Saturday. visit golf clubs "The best money could bij Mr, Laurent met the Rt. Hon Arthur Meighen, a former polit- ical great who is now 83. Mr. an address fo the | set of and included the a new wing to the College Hospital nted with a began with city council opening of Women's It | After being prese to Louis St spent ot Meighen led the Conservative government as prime minister of Canada in 1919-20, and part of 1926. Mr. St. Laurent, left, is shown with Mr. Meighen,

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