Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 26 Oct 1956, p. 1

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NY Sea? |< =o bt ii 2 S00 = 0 8 TIMES-GRZETTE | TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising RA 3-3492 All Other Calls....... RE 3-3474 AILY TIMES-GAZ Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle Weather Forecast Scattered showers tonight. Cloudy early Saturday, clearing about noon. Colder. VOL, 85--NO. 250 OSHAWA-WHITBY, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1956 8 Cones Por Copy TWENTY PAGES Says Oshawa weranks | Gave Him comm mies say (rood Break Salsberg said the present up- heavals in Hungary were | By JACK HAYSTEAD (Times-Gazette Staff Reporter) caused by the present evils an terrors of ' the current a Al J Tas? ; : William Brad1 -- the man who Rruschev-Bulganin regime "in escaped jail in 1950 and lived the oa life of a respectable citizen in Oshawa during the past six years will be returned in custody today to the Perth County Jail; scene of his escape. Bradt, alias Bradd, used the name Bob Jarman while working ER 'DISUNITY SEEN IN Contradictions were the or- | for the meeting are being care- der of the night at the { fully scrutinized by organizers secret meeting he B19 | in foreground, but they heard Youto by 2.000 members of the opposite views stated by two Labor Progressive (Commun- y iat) Party oo Canada, in the | leaders, Tim Bucka and Joseph wake of the Eastern Europe | Salsberg. Buck, told the meet- ing that the recent uprisings in revolutions against the present Soviet regimes. Here, arrivals | Hungary and Poland should not | of Battered Orenda Movi New Battle Toward Southwest England Erupts fer 1 Wermer wher company's - assembly line, By ROBERT RICE Canada, Mrs. Violet Smith and » | Bradt, who previously served Canadian Press Staff Writer Mrs. Blanche Battersby, were be- | nn 17 d ore four terms in Kingston Peniten- DARTMOUTH. England gen. Neved Jaiting today at nearby vb ttiary and finished his last term in 3d ing wind today | Palmomh. 1943, bought a house on Grand- ane} the ed The wives have been in England SINGAPORE (AP)--New vio- view Sug in partnership. with dian yawl Orenda on the last lap for Some weeks. and clung grimly lence Jared. in Singapore today, | Ray Kay, 20, who also works at h ic voyage from Canada, [to the lef that their husbands and six Chinese were repor Werner Co. and resided there. ol er bn given up for were sale Seshiie, reports last killed by police bullets. Bradt said today that! the; peo- Jost. mon at the boat was de! :| British tnoops mounted machine- ple of Oshawa had been *'won- Te enn A mm ing "on; Lada, 24M | uns at strategic point i the oI erful" to. him, beiore. aad. after Blackpool. Pa Lim aboard, was was 'sighted Thursday night offi ony 2S A B's or |S arrest. sighted Thursday night off the the Lizard, a point on the coast jug which injured 50 persons, in-| iM an interview at the city Cornish coast making in the gen-|some 80 miles west of Dartmouth. {eluding rine Furopeans, in Singa- police headquarters, he said: eral direction of this Devon coast| Archie Rowe, a burly Cornish| "00 400 suburbs I can't say enough for Oshawa. town. Later the two-ton boat was fisherman, said he spotted the Or-| PO 8) . | The firm left me in charge of the sight of. Coast guard stations 'enda bouncing abaut on the rough| The ribts began on the east side stores. They trusted me and I Jost a oi AL had no def- sea like a soa Singapore gaand near the proved I want to 'do what is x ae Ls + |Chung {heng inite information. She was going like the wind, 0 sible | eam Row [-IhGy are two fin fh toe hie "schoo hard, saved : ve : Br Sighs lowe said the speed of the Or-!bave nm on a wn strike right. ¥ve ji t my own hone, by eniia i SPs e- Since ; Oet, 10 protes HHov- pal with friend, Ray ie Oa Just Al BA ps Me : the ues ince "s 'ban on pv ap BM Lay," "hal new éar, al said ne official at P an. "There with his 18-foot motorboat. {unio} and the arrest of four union! though ,F guess I'll have to sell was a small aireraft overhead at| Smith and Battersby set sail for officfals. : {it now. the id |England from North Sydney, N.S.,| Rebellious students managed to WILL KEEP HOME The wives of the sailors from Sept. 1. ___|stay in the schools another night,| Bradt said he is going to keep EE RED a buy police chased them out this his house on Grandview boule- France Says Egypt Responsible mdrning with clubs and tear gas. vard as he wants to come back fater the Students joined strik-land live in Oshawa. ingz workers and hoodlums in| uy gon't want to go to Jail clashes with police. Stones were | gis "pve proved to Ey a {Hurled at automobiles and acid 1" can live honestly if given a 'was thrown into one police station. decent chance. Ever since I was For Rebellion In Algeria Three of those reported killed 16 1 have never had a chance to UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP), Curnu.-Gentile's letter was ac- jfel] before police guns in down- lead the Kind 'of life I wanted France charged Egypt today withcompanied by a memorandum | town Singapore at noon, the others ysl 1 same to Oshaa. direct responsibility in the Alger-| i uing details of the seizure earl/|in the Paya Lebar airport area Bradt went back. and forth to ian rebellion and called on the outside the city. i aac : UN Security Council to act, ier this week of the yacht Athof | A curfew was imposed ordering Bingston Feuheutiary our times, A formal request for UN action|loaded with arms allegedly 17: a1) persons off the stress. pverytime. 1 Jit om, ihe first was handed to Secretary-General tended for the Algerians. J ------------ 3 [person WOU ee as Svme, ers The French National Assembly - that T would have D: Hammarskjold by French The memorandum said the ! i Dale are Curnut-Gentille. arms were loaded in Ae ibe J Some Jnoney', All I ever got was The complaint was listed as:/and charged the Athos had on! ew 10 ence ingston again. "Military assistance rendered by board six clandestine passengers He went on to explain that the the Egyptian government to the!trained in Egypt for military sand last time he got out he went to rebels in Algeria." Isabotage activities. L Smith Falls to make a new life. wae - - EE mum hE SHAE fe He got a room with another | oC friend however, who did not have : the same ideas. The friend appar- Arabs a nera in e » ently went out aod broke io a store and brought the loot home. ' ' . =. North Africa "The police raided the house, and To Protest Leaders' Kidnapping meng an exon soi, charted ! TUNIS (CP) New violence | With. possession € ven though I PARIS (Reuters)--As Premierigave an overwhelming ote of rocked North Africa as border in-|didn't have anything to do with Guy Mollet faced a growing crisis| confidence Thursday night to Mol-|cidents strained French-Tunisian it," he said. in North Africa today, the Inter-|let's policies in Algeria ; and the relations another notch today. | Regarding the break Bradt national Federation of Arab Labor newly independent stateg of Mor-| Premier Habib Bourguiba's gov-| said, 'They took me to Perth and Unions in Cairo called a 24-hour!occo and Tunisia. : ernment claimed that many Tunis-|] waited there three months for general strike throughout the In Cairo, the newspaper All ians were wounded when a French| sentence. 1 didn't break out. Arab world next Sunday to protest Shaab says events have: reached military convoy from Algeria|walked out. They left the cell France's '"piratical Kkidnapping"/such a head that it is 'almost a tried to smash through a road-| door open and also the back of five Algerian nationalist lead-istate of actual was: between|block the Arabs had set up to pre<{door, Another chap and I just France and the Araly states of Vent such crossings. _ |picked up what we had, and North Africa." | "The French denied breaching |walked out." f-- {any barricade, and said there had | "I decided 13 Per Cent Ri / (have been patrolling the frontiers 10, Chande my name and get a e ob. I came to the Uxbridge area, er Len 15e BIGGER, SM {LLER 10, Preven: arms running to th a | worked : Jor farmers olor . : het a while an n came sh- In Farm Income SIMULTA OUSLY Elsewhere in Tunisia, Algeria|awa Everyone has been wonder- £ ' {and Morocco, French troops and ful here. They gave me a break, MONTREAL (CP) -- Farm in- MANCHESTER. Conn. (AP) [Arabs clashed in fresh flareuns ang 1 think that I have proved come increased 13 per cent during " A |sparked by resentment over that I can be a model citizen." ; i A group of wom¢'n here is get- French seizure of five leading Al- A the first six months of 1956 and ting bigger as {ie women got 8 e leading / 8 ana: smaller, / {route to a conference in Tunis. "I've worked at the same job it was a year ago, the Bank of Seven overfyveight women [PRICEMEN BILLED Morea for oe fast oid Years 1 Montreal said today in its October, who startesd Manchester's |, Sablanca, | started off as a laborer a policemen were killed and #wo|I am an inspector. Since my ar- | WATES (Whmen's Associa- |wonnded Thursday night in the rest everyone has been so won- rom mr lit lt | months of 1936 was _$1,188,000,000, 3 {ing the four was sprayed by ma- employment and my friends. The the report said, an increase of 13 ned 2% Women Who have chine-gun fire ly Ny . y ih per cent over the corresponding: "99m nif In Algiers, six Europeans were came down here to jail and told period last year and the highest| gi wounded when extremists fired me that if 1 can come back, my | 7 linto a cafe. job will be waiting for me." |gerian rebels Monday while en'AT SAME JOB business review. tion to Enjoy Slimming) have |European quarter. A jeep carry-'derful. The police, my place of first-half figure since 1951. SCHOOL MILK SUBSIDY URGED Dairymeyi Want Permission To Sell Ll'ower Grade Products QUEBEC (CP) The National{to hel} widen the Canadian mar-| criticism of the lack of sanitation] Dr. L. B. Pett, chief of the fed- Dairy Council today decided to ket fcg- dairy products. ii some cheese and milk factor-' gral health department's nutrition considdr asking federal and pro-| [UOFLRE WP 8 threcaly semunliics oon STUDENTS division, warned that the. old em- vincial governments to 10w er hoard of directors should consider! 3. Find ways of encouraging an phasis on fats in milk must be dairy composition standards so thesf: other committee recommen-| increased flow of students into changed. The value of milk, he that milk may he pro- said, was in the solids and not datif ns: agricultural colleges to overcome duced with low-fat gontent in keep- the fats. 1. Develop concrete plans for @n acute shortage of trained per- ing with current dietary trends. bog sting the flow of milk to Cana- sonnel in the dairy industry. Currently, under federal law, ice éream must contain a mini e council's membership of dig n school children, including the 'the question. of seeking a low- hundreds of Saity Jrotessors and ufle of government subsidies. ering of minimum dairy composi- mum of 10 per cent butterfat, In distributors also to seek| 2. Complete work on a new tic standards apparently stem-|the United States, a soft ice ways of increasing plant automa- plant sanitary code with the help med from repeated medical warn-|cream containing only between tion to help ease on re-|g)f federal and provincial author- ings that a high fat diet could four and five per cent fat is sold tail prices and To Boost a 45.000, ies. The code would be designed contribute to heart disease for in 40 of 48 states and is reported 000-a-year sales promotion outla to meet federal health department some persons, "to be selling well, 4 ¥ tb i here with R. J. Werner Co. where | use 1 always paid SERS ER i YEE li THE BUNGALOW ON * Job Back: Firm ad | sell to raise funds for a lawyer's GRANDVIEW . BOULEVARD | fees to defend him on a charge alias in top where William Bradt Bradd, lived is shown picture. In the rear can be seen | Bradt's car which he plans to of escaping from the Perth {| County jail in 1950. Bradt, shown in lower picture, led the life of a respectable citizen here for six years. Magyars Appealing To British To Take Case To United Nations | | LONDON (AP)--A foreign of-| | fice spokesman today said dem- | onstrators in Budapest have asked |the British minister to Hungary| to take their case before the, United Nations. * | He said about 2,000 persons ap-| peared before the British Em- bassy in Budapest to protest to Minister Leslie Fry that Russian | |troops had been used illegally to! [personel manager. R. J. Britton put down the disturbances. They|Sir George Young, said it was fair {contended that the Warsaw pact,|t0 say that in the three-day re-| rulers bellion the Soviet army--and not| (have said the Russian troops were|the Hungarian army--had er) Small Town In Hungary under which Hungary's jcalled into action, provided only {for Russian assistance in case of | attack from abroad. | Fifty demonstrators were re- ceived by Fry, who told them he was doing his utmost to keep his government informed of the situa- tion. The party then was reported to have left to visit the American legation. BEATEN BY RUSSIANS The foreign office spokesman, vened to crush the resistance. The spokesman added this com- ment: LATE NEW S FLASHES Rebels Promised Amnesty gime late today promised an am four-day revolt if they put down East Hun Army Stirring | BERLIN (AP) | emergency footing as the Red anti-Soviet rebellion in Hungary, VIENNA (Reuters) -- Premier Imre, Nagy's embattled re- nesty to all rebels in Hungary's their arms by 10 p.m. tonight, Va -- The East German army today went on an regime nervously watched the No Word On Canadian Hungarians | OTTAWA (CP) -- Np word h as been received by the external | affairs department of deaths or injuries among Canadian citizens |Princess Margaret Home | in Hungary, it was learned today. | LONDON (Reuters) -- Princess Margaret returned to Lon- don by air today from her five-week visit to Fast Africa, Return Bradt Toda IN REBELS' HAND Y Magyars Too Tough For Russ? VIENNA (AP)--Hungary's anti- Communist civil war over much of the country despite orders from the government for an all-out military effort to crush the rebels. he Three Bel diplomats arrived at the Austrian border after leaving Budapest at 11 a.m. r oe, said: out Thursday eh also i» day in Budapest, with scores of ial takin, BradtCanHave::: "Bob Jarman can have his Job | back. We only wish we had] another 150 employees like him." "Bob Jarman" is a popular em- ployee of R. Werner Co. (Canada) Ltd. This statement was made today by the firm's personnel manager, Richard J. Britton, | But to police "Robert Jarman" | is an ex-convict, William Bradt, alias Bradd, sought for six years. He was picked up by local police on a tip Wednesday night and is being held here for return to Perth County jail, | "Bob (he is still Bob to his associates of the past five years) is a fine employee. If this hadn't happened he would have gone on with us without us ever realizing he was ever anything but what| he appeared to be." "His record with us was excel- lent", said Mr. Britton. "He was only late once and this is the first time he has been absent since coming here in December of 1950. "He was steady and well-liked by his fellow employees. His re- cord shows no grievances, no warnings and no garnishees." Bradt was first employed by Werners as a plant laborer. He is now one of three shift inspec- tors. Bradt's old life was a complete surprise to his friends. Fellow employees, in their concern for this man, are considering making a petition on his behalf. Bradt's employers have talked with him since his arrest. They have learned that he got the name Jarman from a former ac- quaintance who is now dead. They are convinced that he has tried i all sincerity to "build a new ife". Bradt had relatives in Oshawa, although he did not associate with them. However, he was visited | last night by a brother, John Bradt, from out of town. Russ Troops Said Moving Back To Bases In Poland | WARSAW (Reuters) The movement of Russian troops back to their bases in Poland was ex-| pected to be completed today, ac- cording to a special announce- [ment by the Polish news agency, | PAP. | Pol Five Soviet divisions which| were moved to the Polish frontier! |area of East Germany during last| weekend's Warsaw rioting now | are withdrawing to their normal | stations, reliable sources in Ber- lin reported. {of th {No reports were received here, today of any further disturbances, | APPEALS IGNORED ; The pledges of the new govera- ment of Premier Imre , for a new deal with even with. drawal of Soviet troops from the country, apparently got nowhere. Budapest radio broadcast re- peated urgent appeals to the reb- els to give up their arms and cease ie Blovdshied; These broadcasts pledged re- forms of all kinds, amnesty for rebels, better living conditions, in- d d from Mi , and a new popular front government "today or tomorrow." : The general strike apparently had stopped all rail t ex- cept military traffie. Some of the dead in Budapest had been shot down by Russian tanks when demonstrators ad- vanced with only Hungarian flags and no weapons. REBEL BROADCAST Western Monitors in this Aus. trian capital said they had picked up faint broadcasts apparently soming Som a tr: tter oper- ated by the ilungarian rebels. T he transmitter, repeatedly changing its wavelength, called on Hungarian workers to go on a eral strike. It also demanded release of Cardinal Mindszenty and his reinstalement as Roman oing on normally. Meanwhile, the Presidium of the Polish Central Council of Trade Unions announced today that its members will resign. At the same time came news of the resignations of high officials of the and work was olish Communist party in the provincial capitals of Krakow and Bydgoszcz. "Prime Minister (Imre) Nagy is reported to have promised the Hungarians that Russian troops would leave Hungary by the end e year. I am authorized to say that if that promise is kept it will be warmly welcome." Scene Of Russ | NICKELSDORF, _Austro - Hun-| «| garian Frontier (AP) -- Russian|opened | soldiers fired on Hungarian dem-| |onstrators in the small town of| |Magyarorvar and killed and| | wounded many, a witness return-| |ing across the frontier reported | today. | | An Austrian border official te-| ported that Hungarian farmers | also. had rioted near Sopron, as| the anti-Soviet rebellion spread! from Budapest to the countryside. | Franz. Hackenberger of Vienna said he saw the Russians shoot down the Hungarians at Magyar- orvar, a small town about 10 miles from the Austrian border. About| 100 Hungarians, carrying flags and shouting "Freedom for Hun:| gary," marched to the local Rus- sian garrison barracks and tried to tear down the Red flag, Hack \ Massacre saberger said. The Russians then ire. Hackenberger was the first eye- witness to report on fighting in the Hungarian countryside. | Other reports at this border | point said farmers in Hungary had revolted and that railroad workers were on strike, Reports here said only military trains for troop movements were moving in Hungary. Danube shipping also was halted, | Hackenberger told reporters! that since this morning a general strike was being staged in Hun- gary. He said he did not know on whose instructions Hungarian workers were striking, but there was "great excitement every- Catholic Primate of Hi ; The station called itself. Free dom radio of the Hungarian peo- ple." Both Factions Hanging Foes In Budapest VIENNA (Reuters) -- The. inde- pendent Austrian Sveling pews aper Bildtelegraf quotes a 3 ir we who returned from Hun- gary Thursday as "I have seen with my own eyes leaders of the Budapest rioters hanged on flag masts and lamp posts at the promenade along the Danube." Bildtelegraf claims to have re- ceived this report from Werner Henne of Berne, who arrived at the Austrian border station 'at Nickelsdorf Thursday. He said words "cannot describe the events in Hungary terribly enough." CROWDS MASSACRED "The reality exceeds the wildest imagination. ., .. People have been driven together and executed at ounce." Rioters who occupied the radio station in Budapest had ' been Hows hg a the windows from e fourt r of that building, "but the rebels, too, are without mercy whenever they win tempor ary control." "1 have also seen Soviet soldi. ne oe a thout " s a fignt without mercy, My impression is that. if there is no help coming from outside, the rebels are lost, the Hungarian where" in the revolution - torn country 1 people then face hlood without precedent." Judgment

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