mmwnes, THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE 220 All Other Calls........ RA 3-3474 Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle Uay, Warmer, VOL. 85--NO. 266 Authosisnd As Second Close, Mal) OSHAWA-WHITBY, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1956 Price Not Over TWENTY-TWO PAGES GOURT | | " "Meagher, 2 Pals Dag Posipanes Refused Bail I'1p (0) airo '| Three Oshawa men were to ap-/hoodlums, When Cragg wpe over- " : ' in York County Court at powered, the 75 year old woman By ROD CURRIE {Then they would gradually retire pear m dik ith | Canadian Press Staff Writer lto the armistice line set up be- " 4 . | Searhorough Joday charged Jith was bound, gagged, and thrown UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. 10P) tween Jsrae] alg Ngypt it 1060. . | Cragg -- Scarborough GM dealer| Entering the home, the hood: The rosiporiernent of Secretary) lammarskion switched Dis gk. : wir home in Scarborough last lums took all the cash they could Teneral Dag Hammarsijold's ihp\plans: after ecciving 8 message ' 4 kK Saturday night. > find, $300, and several thousand = to Cairo brought speculation today |irom the Hungarian government | Charged are: Real Desnoyers,| dollars worth of jewellery, Cragg : that a hitch may have developed |saying it was willing to meet with 7 : e | 3 FREEDOM TRAIN RIDS REFUGEES lin moving the United Nations po-| UN representatives to discuss the : / 23, of 83 Patricia avenue. Johnitold police that as he lay blesding lice force into Egypt. "best means of providing the as- : } "8 4 Meagher, 25, of 201 Cadillac street jon the floor, the thugs threaten Crowds of Hungarian refu- | thousands of Hungarians fled | port for the dying rebellion = Hammarskjold's departure, sistance." : at : ; |Joseph Karas, 20, of 347 Bloor | him yith & Juping nite, sa bg gees wait to board a train at | through bursts of bullets at the | was reported waning, it was |scheduled for 5 p.m. Tuesday, first| Earlier the Communist govern- ; street east. : : bind wou 1 th Is my er th Kli bach, Austria, f fu- | border to find hav in reported that resistance to [was postponed 24 hours. Later a ment had turned down demands ; | The trio are being held without did not tel em where they ngenbach, i i or i { ~ hey OT hesgpie) In 'ree overwhelming Soviet might [UN spokesman said he would |of the UN General Assembly call- bail, by Scarborough Police. Four/coulg tot ue, eves had gee' camps in Austria afte ustria. ough civilian sup- | a. tinuing in: H gE ; " oh wihdvaw: i : or five rings, out of thousands was continuing in Hungary leave today "if circumstances per-|ing for withdiawal of Russian : ! OF dollars "worth of jowenlery|told him that they had watched -- Ga iE SN RES mit." troops from Hungary, the holding 4 . : ici ' ions a i i stolen in the robbery, have been his home for some time, and that Official reason for the delay was of free elections and an inspection 3 Sr they had cut the telephone wires. | y 'Sweden Begi veh that Hammarskjold was turning of the situation by an observer . : 4 we en egins his attention to handling relief team appointed by the UN. . aie " VIOLENT CRIME 3 He told police that he owed his supplies for vebellion-torn Hun-| Meanwhile, the General As- i | On Saturday night, the Eglinton|life to his mother, who managed a g 3 avenue home of Cragg, 53, was|to free herself from the neckties . " . - |gary. But the fact that the move-| sembly today had before it on a " basrr.z Rationing Oil ment of the UN troops from their priority basis the problems of " A or | the scene of one of the most which bound her feet, and ran to | Italian assembly point had not! Hungary and the Middle East. ' violent crimes in reent Jonths, 2 hos), Wo Janis Sway, With her nswering his doorbell, x, 8 . Sedl- \a [J | ; | a - Istarted on scnedule heightened, The Hungarian item was ap- ' 4 Be 1 At Midnight | speculation that the plan had run proved for debate after a day- ] 4 Fe Cragg, who is head of five com-|meir, who later treated Cragg's {into trouble. long wrangle in the steering com- ; 3 panies, was attacked by three|wounds, said that it was e STOCKHOLM (AP) -- Sweden's| Britain and France were re- mittee and assembly which de- £4, ! men, who attempted to force worst beating he had ever seen. government today rushed plans to|ported Feluctant to move out of cided to eliminate he usu] re i helt Jay inte his home. Cragg) Early Tussday mioraing, Scar- i ind-! 14 " begin rationing oil at midnight to the Suez Canal zone unless it was cedure of sending it first to the h & ba wi e men for ten min-|borou police, under tective- oie tons hal ean BERL GLE GG week De conserve dwindling supplies cut agreed that the UN force would political committee. ; : utes, trying to drive them off AL Norman Brickell, _to- Press on Charles street today. ers employed by Alger are work- Short by the Middle East crisis. continue patrolling the area. The same procedure for han- ; 4 y verandah, until one of the thugs|gether with Deputy Chief T. Fer- Forty-six members of the local/ing a 40-hour week A sweeping government request] Under the UN-Egyptian agree- dling the Middle East situation : struck him on the head with a|guson and Det. W. Jordan of employed by the Alger Press went. 3 That th a betw for wartime economic powers was ment, the UN force would move also was approved. but without ob- & , ¥ irevolver. The barrel snapped off| Oshawa City Police, quietly ar- out on strike when they decided sp ha, pega Be weak | yt before Parliament today. into the canal zone only until the jection from anyone, including 4 h 4 fl {the weapon with the force of | rested the trio who are mow that the report of a conciliation a bind 00, be ers, and 1oronto|quick approval was regarded as Anglo - French forces withdrew. Britain and France. Bi : _ fl | the blow, which inflicted a wound| charged with the robbery. ookbinders, be narrowed. Mr. , foregone coriclusion. Sry -- cis % : § Gi |requiring 56 stitches, almost sev- Deputy-Chief H. Adamson, of ons, Members of Local 194, Inter- specified period. | board was unsatisfactory. | "ay > i 3 te v3 3 Wurbs would mot quote any|" Closing of the Suez Canal and L y ; HE 4 {ering Cragg's right ear. |Scarborough police, praised the Company officials refused to/figures, but said that wages paid|capotage of the oil i ® i 3 z a aL E: f pipeline through | ing : A | Cragg's -elderly mother, Mrs./two police departments, for the Sommeat of we issue but Hervert is , Oshawa gre 4 o ageously Syria has cut heavily into the i Fanny Cragg, screamed for help, | speedy arrest. t was a good urbs, local president, sai e low', compared with other parts) amount of Middle East oil avail- while her son battled with the'job, well done," he said. members felt the report was "un-|of the province. |able for Europe reasonable". 4. That employes be granted 9 i ! The main issue in the strike, he{two weeks holiday with i after oad ed today to oe i : Zz : said, is to establish a Union shop one year in the company's em- ing stations were blocked by long! Oo ' : ourt mn ar contract, with Alger. The last con-/ ploy. At present, Mr. Wurbs said, lines of cars and ple with con- Rers of ex- [two h Th Li fe AL fh : i i pany and the union have # [company's employ. | United Nations poiice force units Cap, south of the port. y d ' ! 0 a or Degotiating since then, without| he Wanagement of Mgr Press! XCar Lands for EEvpt was stalled again foday,| ast ale forward Britian ¥ - ' reac! accord. wou ssue no statement, regard-| and there was no indication when an tions an ea | for - The s of the strikers|ing their position, or the oars) the vanguard of about 200 men| Ismailia gp with Egyptian TOT MAY LOSE BOTH EYES "The municipality should take Thornton's road, om Oct. 31. The are: they have made to the union. Unex ected] | would depart. |officials about the movement of| : : py steps regarding this locality," accident, he said. involved 1. That a Union shop contract] Local 194 members will meet y | No official reason was given for the police force into the area, | Carol Ann Molinaro, 3, of | will remove her right eye. Doc- |said Magistrate A. S. Mitchell, lone car, driven by the ac: A should be signed, between the|with the management again REGINA (CP)--An RCAF C-119 the second postponement in two| Until the arrival of the bulk of East Boston, Mass. fondles a | tors gave Carol Amn only a |Tuesday, "a driver is expected which had collided with an em- company and the employes. All today. Flying Boxcar aircraft carryingldays for the first UN troops, the UN force, the chief mission| doll and holds a purse given her | three-to-one chance that the left (to drive with care, but is not ex- bankment. workers in the bookbinding de-| Out of the 46 strikers, 38 are 50 soldiers of the 1st Battalion, drawn from the Danish, Norwe-|of the observers will be to help b: lativ u t too | CYC. can be saved from the pected to be superhuman. |The officer went on to say that partment of the factory, at pres-| women. Queen's Own Rifles of Canada, on|gian and Colombian armies. A UN|keep the cease-fire in the canal| Y F®allVes, apparen.y nol 100 | malignant cancer that is caus- | With these words, His Worship Dewar's car was extensively ent, are members of the union, One picketer said "We are motithe first leg of their journey to spokesman said it was uncertain zone. | aware of the fact that dootors ! ing the child to go blind. dismissed a careless driving damaged, and that Dewar receiv- and such an agreement would re-|out here for our health. We know Egypt made an unscheduled land-| when the men would board wait-| Secretary = General Dag Ham:| SAE TT L (charge against Allan Dewar, 34,'ed injuries which necessitated quire any new employes who are what we want, and will do our|ing here Tuesday night with en-'ing Swiss airliners for the flight to! marskjold had been scheduled tol F of Long Branch. hospital treatment. hired, to join the union within a best to get it." gine trouble. Cairo from the Capodichino stag-|arrive in Rome today to led to NEMESIS NEARING NASSER Sgt. E. Parker, of Oshawa City| Appearing on behalf of the ac- p ing area, near Naples, Italy. [with Maj.-Gen. E, L. M. Burns, Police, told the court that the cused, George Boychyn told the PRINCESS ANNE PASSES CAKE Sump nd. noiing proses, Canadian commander af the ney : SE mE 0 en rh Chegtics svept ei and disagreement between Egypt force, and to inspect the assemb- : : 3 2 and Britain, France and Israel on|ling troops before going to Cairo. Canadian Infantry In Italy tion of Champlain Ave, 2nd | Sores 3a dead Sud at lm the force's mission, were seen as|But the secretary-general post- | |statement, taken from Dewar in L the reasons for the postponements. |poned his departure from New! - . Rospital : | Officials at the staging area ap-| York, ostensibly to work on ar: | ospital, said that Dewar had Prince Charles Marks | peared to be waiting for the rangements of relief to revolt-torn! n ou e 0 1 e as | eves e Dee og oan hich hen {completion of landing arrange-/Hungary. that he had not been able slow . ht ments between the Egyptians and| Burns said today that while] CAPODICHINO (CP) Three, The nine officers in the contin | % : 0 re ) ' ' -- i A A enough to make the turn. {UN headquarters in New York. ia for the arrival of Ham-|RCAF planes arrived at this Ital-jgent are staff officers who will H ul | Mr. ie. cross - examin- One high source said that "prob-| marskjold, he would make a. b today. dari rorning|S€t up battalion headquarters. The 7 ling Sgt. Parker, brought forth ably the Egyptians are making lan base today during a n Bi h them are husky in- the information that there is mo 2ypll "quick inspection trip" from|'®" troops wit By FERN RICH It was one of the smallest birth- from the Duke of Edinburgh, now| mos Complications about land- Rome to the staging area. drizzle, carrying the first 35 mem-| fanirymen, some of them veter-| PICKERING (Times - Gazette stop sign, or other indication, on LONDON (Reuters) -- Prince day gatherings the prince ever in New Guinea on his world-wide l; The ranks of the force were bers of Canada's contingent oflans of Korea and the Second giaff Reporter) -- Thieves broke Champlain avenue that it termi- Charles celebrzted his eighth has had. He was permitted to in-' Commonwealth (our. {12 OBSERVERS BUSY [increased by the arrival of the troops for the United Nations|World War. linto the residence of Thomas J. nates in a dead-end. Mr. Boy- birthday today. vite boys from the weekly gym pucyv 1iFE While the troops stood by in first 35 Canadians, along with 65|Middle East police force. Some of the Canadians looked| Wheeler, Brock road, Pickering, |chyn told His Worship that t Queen Elizabeth's mop - haired class he attends in Chelsea, not =, >% JF * 'ap Italy, a team of 12 UN truce ob-| Danish troops and 53 Norwegians.| The planes, which took off from serious and some happy-go-lucky|on Tuesday afternoon while the was the fifth cecent accident, of little son, whose smile has been! far from the palace. The "increasing activities" the servers from Palestine landed at|Other planes were expected later|Montreal Monday night, also car- as they returned to the land where home was unoccupied, and got/the same nature, at the same Son, > Sm . palace spokesman referred to|Port Said Tuesday and drove im-!today from Denmark and Norway. ried equipment for the advance|the 1st Canadian Division made away with loot estimated at|spot. somewhat rakish lately since he The prince's birthday party was °° ett Pm ch Roe lost a front tooth, played host to advanced a day. the palace said, Were the prince's "extras. unit of the Canadian force which! history in the Second World War. $1000. | 10 of his young pals at an advance 'because the royal children's in. ,, Part from lessons all day--in eventually may reach 1,200. i i i ) y ined by smashin afternoon tea narty at Bucking. creasing activities tend to clash, the same palace schooiroom used : The first Canadians arrived to Wl Pic Mh ola ci Roark: door The| ham Palace Tuesday an] inday Yas foundito be more Jone $0.08 Je Queen gd, org. S 11 H join the 'fast-assembling ear for troops of the southern home was thoroughly ransacked. | ane al Princess Anne at six more convenient : Si lessons, music ie ee Jeuch tional group as word came that|European headquarters of the|Drawers and cupboards had been ut a Hungarian baker in Soho, ' i pte the scheduled departure for Cairo|North Atlantic alliance forces at|searched. Jewellery, belonging tol today of the initial units had been nearby Bagnoli. Mrs. Wheeler is missing. | n 0 L] | ting. ladylike every day. helped to pass ) : John's Woa y the cake, a special iced one made London's cosmopolitan centre aris Loveon, dane a : [J ® " i ling class, riding L ] C \ by the palace chef mentioned hat auother birthiay Ing Sass, Titi lessons and gym | postponed. Earlier, 65 Danish in| A 10-man crew brought the first| Watches that belonged to the After tea, Charles and his.® This b By ho ie Pa ace Loqay In his spare time he is takén, fantrymen and 53 Norwegians had| plane in. The pilot was Fit. Lt.|Wheelers' parents and regédrded guests watched a movie. Tusoas a ser 33 JUrned ou suen to London museums, parks pr flown in to join the force ofp Jy. Major, 27, of Leamington, | as heirlooms were also taken. wm gq The Queen missed the earlier the past--in the shape of ships Places of interest where, dressed NEW YORK (AP) -- A CBS/would comply with the reported Danish, Norwegian and Colombian ont, Souvenls, od hci orice: Pilot e part of the party. She had been'and castles--that on one occasion in dlegan grey flannel short pants broadcast from Moscow said to-| Egyptian request if their "state. | {r00PS already assembled in We Fad a easy uneventful | 31 7T bi only to the Wheel- of Pera a ea Ie ower Prince Canes pelused 1 fmt 1 second py one sives him * day tha Egypt, according to reli-| iS, © yoeen: Jays Wien oY: eae, Yivange MIEN, Coiniaas arrived armed|€rs are gone. | A light two-passenger aircraft the Commonwealth Antarctic ex- was for the quiet, always unpub- Now that he is entering nis| eu ring ion, has as ail Bus Shore said in the broadcast: |Own Rifles of Canada, from|with rifles. Like the other UN| Mrs. Wheeler said today "they made a safe forced landing on to pedition ship, Magga Dan. But licized family hirthday tea which ninth year, newspapers have been | ian re otto ers x Middle 'The Middle Eastern crisis has| Currie barracks in Calgary. The police force elements who came even took my small bank of | Highway 401, three miles east of she managed to return to the Princess Margajet and the Queen filling columns with advice to the Fans crisis y 8; © taken a grave new turn tonight. commanding officer is Lt.-Col.|earlier, they also had other light{change I was saving for the|Oshawa last night after it' wings palace to join in some of the fun. Mother usually attend. Yosal Souple on how to educate| p,- Shore, CBS correspondent ]. 2m, reliably riormed thet the|G. K. Wade, Montreal. weapons. handicapped children. Iheoatie overizden with ice from - - NC il wen HH (12 1 Gl Some pl 1s & ' \ Egyptian embass, ere s % ~ = ea-------- Si y [leading English rap for He a Moscow, was cut off the air by pdt) orders riot Cairo 2s 51 Pilot Joseph Colborne, 31, of |school--Eton--while others urge Ne Russians when he started to for the volunteers that Russia has Corunna, Ontario, brought the » - - Big Ben Strikes Again; something more democratie--sush Stumerate details of the volunteer offered and that this request is El fot 20 minutes Defore 1} as a lesser public school. orce. being relayed to the Soviet gov- ; % the highway would have been But a palace spokesman said He later was alowed to resume ernment. jammed with homegoing factory . today that the Queen is not con- after all such references had been "If the Soviet statements of re- workers. red om 1 enc on templating any change in her eliminated. |cent days mean anything, the re- Colborne said he ran into bad son's educutior. Shore predicted the Russians quest will be complied with, di : w a 10 Ta or Oshawa and began to lose air LONDON (Reuters)--Big Ben whether Great Tom would not per- speed and altitude. "I knew I boomed out over the sleeping city manently replace its more famous Ld | ke. 7 k at midnight Tuesday after having rival. During its performance as | : Gi would never make the Oshawa been silent for four months, 11 understudy it won many admir- 11 Le oy £34 y or S60 | 4 § : ; airport," he said, "so I brought days and three hours. | : : Slide the plane down and flew low ers who insisted Tom was The great bell--Ben is not the "sweeter'" than Ben. ' ® ey ; ; : beside the road so motorists parliamentary tower or the clock,! But Big Bens admirers thund £3 would know I was trying an only the bell-will not return to ered back, deriding the "tinny and IO & X Tl o ! § §. 3 emergency landing." its famous nine o'clock spot on feeble" efforts of the St. Paul's | 2 # bs A former RCAF gunner, Col- the BBC for a fcw days, pending bells. One said Great Tom sym-| s a ; ; ; = borne taxied the craft off the tectmical adjusments, In the bolized 'how far we have de-' UXBRIDGE -- Investigating of-) She said she could not carry at first believed to be superficial ; road after the landing. He said he 10° use Ere: Tom on continne patted from aur great days f ficers of the Ontario Provincial him into the house so she covered but an autopsy indicated it was a only passed over one car prior to Cathedral as ie, Tal Bi This is not the fivst stoppage for, 1,500 vesterday od ine de. Nim with all the blankets she deep wound and had been a cause a ; bringing the plane down and that Cathe iral as a substitute trade the 13 Aton poll witeh sports a fete DosiaTis ye 3 mile ce could find, then attempted to flag of death. An investigation was nn : a the driver stopped when 'he saw a : 4 : $s own _. : i : ~.1 down passing motorists to get aid. begun. the plane. o $ \ x F a2 while it was a question hammer, Be a lay have Plercedigy, said she could not leave him| On Monday, Inspector Needham TOW TO PORT week, later causing his death. |'© 80 to a neighbor's home be- was assigned to the case to work ¥ ; : pe Provincial Police vented Matthews, 53 - year - old De | 2uSe he was writhing on the with Provincial Constable. W. L. Colborne from ahtempiije 3 ta e partment ~ Highw a ke ae ground and would not keep Smith, of the Whithy Detachment k off and said he wou h aye 0 was found unconscious in I \PLOVE, | covered. of the OPP. They questioned tow the plane to the Oshawa air- } scious in his front| She could not stop any cars, she Peggy Humphries and Matthews' port. Colborne was bound to Port > yard November 5. He died with-|g, ; ' : : J 2 # 2 ) f 1 - ' } said, and finally gave up and! daughter, Mrs. D. B. Cotton, 183 : 3 Hope where he is employed as emp S 0 Censure Ben Gurion out Tegaining consciousness in To- spent the rest of the night with Park road south, Oshawa, who § i il ix E ; an engineer at the Catalytic con- ronto on Sunday November hn. In- Matthews on the lawn, trying to were at his home to make funeral 4 a elev i i hh struction company. : ied of t he keep him covered against the arrangements. k 4 2 *¥ 3 Colborne is the second pilot to the OPP Investigation Bureau of|cold. In the morning she went to| Yesterday, Constable J. Roller, 4 s ; pr i 3 : Ab make a forced landing on the nists to censure Israel's Premier to 13 with three abstentions by Lic, OPP is conducting the investi-|a farm house for help. of the scientific section of the : 4 y ; , highway in the past four months. David Ben-Gurion for his policy Communists, * | gation. Matthews was taken to the To- CIB, was brought into the case g : Last July a Kingston pilot landed on occupation of the Sinai desert! Ben Gurion made a short state-| Peggy Humphries, a friend of \ronto General Hospital im- The area around the Matthews , do A : 4 / i and took off safely in a blinding were defeated today by over- ment only in reply to the Free-| Matthews, said that she came to mediately and officials believed house was thoroughly searched by Sis : : bi » 3 wih 4% rainstorm. It was at that time whelming majorities dom party's motion, ignoring that|his home, at the corner of High-|he had suffered a stroke. He died with a mine detector, in that provincial police were issued The Communist censure motion, of the Communist faction. He said way 47 and the Brock road, four on nday, after being un- lan effort, said Insp. Needham, to . instructions from the Dept. of alleg that Ben Gurion served it was impossin'e to consult Par- miles south of Uxbridge, about conscious for six days learn if any object had been ibid 4 . + Highways that in future planes a8 0] of the erialist 1S ilamant nis reply to the United midnight November 4. Matthews It was then that doctors found buried which might have caused . > a % suet i which made forced landings on defeated by 7 the highway would have to be / vates to 3, while a Nations regarding the withdrawal she said. was unconscious on the a small und o his Kk, th 3 oy g, SE \ TR 3 SER ~ r Ea Freedom Movement motion. cen of troops fice Boyon front lawn. : Oui. sat uspecion Notant Io taps: They found wotting,) JOSEPH COLBORNE HAS CLOSE ESCAPE IN PLANE De Ne \ : JERUSALEM (Reuters) -- Mo-'suring hi is : 3 ] g him for his change of po- gpector IL leedhz tions by both the right-wing Free- licy in agreeing to give up the Spector Lous Neediam, dom Movement and the Commu- Sinai desert, was defeated by 66 YP]