Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 18 Dec 1956, p. 1

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TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising All Other Calls. ...... RA 3-3492 RA 3-3474 E DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle Weather Forecast Cold tonight. Cloudy Wednesday. Authorized As Second Cless Mail Post Office Department, Ottawe OSHAWA-WHITBY, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1956 TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES VOL. 85--NO. 294 SUEL Gifford Asks Refugee Plan By HAROLD WATSON Times-Gazette Staff Reporter Alderman Lyman Gifford Mon- day night called for a "national emergency plan" whereby the Provincial and Federal govern- ments would pay for the full cost of welfare and relief for Hungar- ian immigrants after one year instead of the municipalities, prvi ALDERMAN GIFFORD Under an existing Provincial agreement, cost of welfare and relief for im- migrants up to one year is paid for by Ontario and the Federal government, the alderman told city council. Gifford made his views known to the Hon. John W. Pickersgill, Federal minister of immigration, Federal- the full ed it not be made solely against Ottawa. : The alderman made his com- ments following a report by Mayor John Naylor on the first meeting of a Hungarian refugee committee. "My sympathy is with these people," remarked Gifford, who stressed that he wanted the fed- eral and provincial governments to assume their obligation to refu- gees and not saddle the munici-| palities with the cost of possible relief and welfare. He said he supported the work of the Hungarian refugee commit- §& tee, set up to aid in locating homes and employment for the refugees. Fifty per cent of the Hungar- ian refugees would come to On- tario, he said, and of this figure 50 per cent would settle between here and Welland. He noted that already 107 immigrants of vary- ing nationalities had received welfare and relief assistance from the city on and off during the past two years. For ordinary immigrants, the 1952 agreemen: was satisfactory: but for the Hungarian refugee situation, it's not adequate, said Gifford. The federal and provincial gov- ernments had a race to see who could get to Austria first he said. In view of their efforts to out- bid each other in getting immi- grants over here, he suggested they assume the responsibility for their welfare. To mayor Naylor, he said: "Il ask you to memorialize the federal and provincial govern- ments to declare this a national |emergency. There should be no |stipulation that municipalities be } ible for these people after in a long-distance hy con- versa to Ottawa yesterday. he immigration minister said he ' be criticism of but suggest-! la year." | The alderman said he would make a formal Teeviution on this rw io i I y, gon At WARREN ROGERS Jr. G, Pa. (AP)-- t Eisenhower and Prime | 3 A TKS |their talks again, this time inside | festivities in every forest com- the house rather than on the! ° porch. None of th "Swiss Nab Folk Spying ¥ For Hungary BERN (AP)--The Swiss govern- | ment today reported breaking u a large-scale espionage networ! it said was headed by an official of the Hungarian legation. Several persons were reported under arrest. Attorney-General Rene Dubois declined to give the name of the Hungarian diplomat, or to indi- cate how many persons were ar- rested. "Absolutely no additional in- formation can be given at this time," he said. ONLY SWISS HELD believed to be Swiss. The Hungar- ian diplomat presumably was protected from arrest by diploma- tic immunity, Officials at the Hungarian lega- tion refused all comment. The le- gation has five officials of the status of diplomat, headed by Minister Bela Nemety. The spy case was first reported in the Bern newspaper Der Bund, which is considered close to the Swiss government. Der Bund says the spy network was uncovered after a 'long in- vestigation" by the Swiss counter- espionage. x However, all those arrested were | SALVAGE DEAL MADE ',/Nasser's Consent Needed Before Operations Begin PORT SAID, Egypt (Reuters)--| Yugoslav units of the UNEF are United Nations representatives occupying the territory evacuated and the British-French command by the Israelis. today agreed to condition sunder 125 MILES TO GO which the British-French salvage! There was no official indication fleet would help clear the Suez how soon Israel's forces will Canal. y back the remaining 125 miles to Two key conditions said the UN|the border. ' Emergency Force will provide| [Lt.Col. Moshe Pearlman, chief protection for the salvage fleet Israeli army spokesman, said flying the UN flag and British Te] Aviv "we are sorry that this U=|is being pressed on us at a thine " {when the United Nations has not The conditions are subject to the transmitted to us any undertaking approval of Egyptian President from the Egyptians regarding asser. : . freedom of shipping, rebuilding of British officials estimate it bases on Sinai or fedayeen com- would take seven to eight weeks mando activity." to clear the canal completely if| Asked about veports that Egyp- the Anglo-French salvage fleet tian troops were moving back into and personnel were used. They es-|Sinai in the footsteps of the ad- timate it would take at least twice vancing Yugpslavs, Pearlman as long without their vessels and said: "We can't conceive that the crews. | United Nations will tolerate such WANT CREWS TO STAY a situation, This will mean a res- The British so far have refused|toration of the same dangerous to permit their salvage ships lo situation that existed before the be utilized without their crews, as campaign." 3 suggested a week ago by Lt.-Gen.| The Israelis actually have with- Raymond Wheeler, the American drawn most of their forces from salvage expert heading the United the peninsula.leaving behind only Nations canal clearance mission. patrols and garrisons at forward Nasser has said he wants no positions and key military cen- British navy personnel on the job, tres. but the British have insisted that| There was doubt here that the it is to the interest of many coun- Israelis would evacuate Sharm el tries that the clearing of the canal Sheikh, a Red Sea port on should be tackled with all avail- southern tip of the Sinai Peain- , able reserves of whatever country. sula which commands the ap- Some 350 black-uniformed Egyp-| proaches to the Gulf of Aqaba. tian police, the vanguard of more The Israeli chief of staff, Maj» STUDENT WANTED LONG RIDE CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP)-- The Daily Tar Heel, student newspaper at the University of North Carolina, 'invited stu- dents who wanted a ride home for the Christmas holidays to submit their names and des- iinations for publication, One of those signing up was Kenneth Chi-kun Yang. who wanted a ride to Taipei, For- mosa. than 1,000, moved into Port Said Gen. Moshe Dayan, said Sunday this morning as the buildup f the the withdrawal was being made British-French fleet which willjin the direction of Sharm el evacuate troops from Egypt was| Sheikh but gave no indication that completed. {the port itself would be evacuated. The Egyptian police force will| Nor was there any official ward place Port Said, the Suez Canal's' whether the Israelis would pull off northern gateway, once more un-|the Tiran Islands, at the mouth der the rule of President Nasser's of the gulf. Cairo government. | Egyptian guerrillas harassed UNEF WILL LEAVE the departing British. French The UNEF intends to phil out| forces at dockside Monday, killing as soon as possible after the Brit-|8 French Foreign Legionnaire as ish and French troops, leaving/he boarded ship. Other Legion- Port Said's administration strictly naires rushed ashore, flushed to the 'Egyptians. {a sniper hideaway and Indications were that the com- three guerrillas. plete withdrawal of British and] The Egyptian government | part of our --Photo b ' d bove are) symblical off t he I skill in competition with the | Canadian way of life. Ami all | | rail d Treigh y Malak the East and West. to seven per cent in five per cent in the French forces would take place by| claims the guetrilia attacks have Wi been made fanatic ep rhood, Ar by Tegime he ser i the E. L. M. Burns, the UNKF major, oo EL commander, that his men would] The British troops: then with get out of Port Said as soon as drew to their narrow, bal sible after the withdrawal. Presiden | . Minister Ney west. due back in! is say intormalily $30,000 Fire Loss ashington ay after a full day was in prospect for Nehru in of private talks on world prob. | Washington today. His schedule At Clarkson Factory lems. : included lunch with Vice-President] CLARKSON (CP) -- A fire of James C. Hagerty, White House Nixon, a reception at the Indian "mysterious origin" destroyed press secretary, said their talks embassy and dinner as the guest $30,000 worth of baskets at the Ca- Monday took more than 12 hours. |of State Secretary Dulles, followed 'nadian Wood Products Company They were "entirely personal," by his radio-TV talk. storage shed early today possib | wire-guarded strip on the water- Israeli troops in the Sinai Penin- front. They ventured out Monday sila ed back another 15 miies/to help UN soldiers guard the de- today, to bring their withdrawal parture of 384 Italian oi A to'a line about 47 miles east of!Port Said who sailed for Naples the Suez Canal. aboard the liner Argentina. A seven-per.cent rate raise pro- posed by southern. carriers is be- ing considered separately. Under the ICC order, the rail roads can put the rate increases in effect on five days notice fo the public. The ICC estimated they Only Few Hungarian Athletes |Eden Trying Return From Olympic Games To Reconcile _ By ENDRE MARTON Hungary sent 175 BUDAPEST (AP)--Hundreds of coaches and managers to the | with no aides on hand. Hagerty quoted Eisenhower as Thursday and then go to Ottawa fo, saying he and Nehru discussed Friday for a weekend in Canada. passing highways department "many things in the international On Monday he will fly to London. [truck radioed an alarm field."" Asked what kind of things, Hagerty replied: "They did not describe those 'many things." Nei- ther did they describe or break them down into topics." Some of them seemed obvious: Possible recognition of Commun- ist China, the Suez crisis, eco- nomic aid, the Soviet satellites, disarmament. Some word on the course of the conferences is expected from Nehru tonight, when he makes a 15-minute broadcast over Amer- ican and Canadian networks. Eisenhower, dressed in tweeds and a western-style hat, con- ducted Nehru on a tour around the farm Monday. Nehru, wear- ing his Indian pajama-like cos- tume, showed obvious enjoyment around the horses Aside from the hour they spent outside, Eisenhower and Nehru spent most of their time talking on the farmhouse sun porch, where they had lunch and o'clock tea. They didn't dress formally for dinner. Afterwards, they went at He will fly to New York City 'REAL SERVICE GIVEN -- IN U.S.A. EASTON, Pa. (AP) -- Mrs. Roy Henry dropped the last of her 50 Christmas cards into the mailbox near her home Monday--and then remembered that she had forgot- ten to put stamps on them, She hurriedly called the post of- Ifice to find out what could be done. Would the cards' remain in the post office? Would her friends have to pay postage to receive their greetings? A post office spokesman sug- gested that she bring in a com- plete list of names and addresses and the stamps to go with the cards already mailed. Mrs. Henry did so. And in the midst of the Christ- mas rush, a postal employee took time to sort out the cards, find Mrs. Henry's and stamp them. FRANCE'S VIEWPOINT Neutralize Hungary, Pineau Advocates PARIS (Reuter Foreign Minister Christian Pineau of France urged today that the Hun- garian problem should be solved by making Hungary neutral He was addressing the National Assembly at the start of a four- day debate on foreign policy which is due to end Friday with a vote of confidence in Premier Mollet's 10%2-month-old government Pineau said the French govern ment recommends for Hungary "'a, solution of neutrality similar to that which" was found for Aus- tria and which would meet the dual desire to restore liberty to Hungary and provide guarantees for Soviet Russia concerning the international consequences which this freeing would bring about." Communist deputies turned out in full force but sat sullenly in as the debate began A s Bidault, a member of the left-of-centre Cath- olic party Mouvement Republicain Populaire, was warmly applauded | by all but the Communists when he demanded reform of the United Nations. "The United Nations should be reformed so that it is no longer a simple auxiliary of collective in- security," he said. .mendations on Pincau, intervening in the de- bate although his main speech will be Wednesday, again hammered his favorite them that the UN has two sets of standards -- one for the democracies and the other for dictators "One feels shame for the inac- tion of the United Nations (on Hungary)," he said In a speech Monday, Pineau charged the United Nations has failed to impose its decision on] all members equally. "The United Nations," said Pi- neau bitterly, *'is interested in in- ternational ethics only when it deals with nations respecting such ethics and much less when it faces nations which don't respect them." Pineau addressed a meeting of French and foreign diplomats, gathered to honor the 30th anni- versary of the. French Academy | "The great weakness of the United Nations lies in the fact that| this organization imposes rules| on some and not on others," Pi- neau said. "France and England recently | were the object of severe recom-| the part of the | | | UN." the he continued, UN decision to stop Hungarian sports fans shivered in Games in Australia. | would yield the railroads about Forty firemen fought the blaze referring to or the imposition of the rule of the force." cold fog around 'Budapest's bat- Budapest radio reported Mon- tered Wester railway station to-day night that 200 "counter-revo- day to gieet the returning rem- lutionary terrorists" were ar- 4 p nants of Hungary's Olympic rested during the day. Today it LONDON (Reuters) squad _ (reported 151 "'escaped convicts" Minister Eden today began the dif- creases became effective Nov. 1. The team came from Milan via taken into custody. ficult task of patching together | Belgrade in a special train. It| Austrian security officials near C vative party r 9 i avoided the route through Austria, the Hungarian border said the hservative party ranks, split by where thousands of Hungarian ref. /flood of refugees streaming into! "¢ 8overnment's Middle East pol- en an | w more than six hours after a | revenue. The higher rates. were sought on | an emergency basis after wage in- : -- Primi Fire department officials here e] said there were at least two sep- {arate fires, and that an investiga- tion will be ordered. Jeweler Says Watch Markup 150 Per Cent TORONTO (CP)--Morris Was- serman, 56, a Toronto jeweler, said in court Monday that the av- erage markup on watches by re- tailers is 150 per cent. Wasserman, who has been in the jewelry business for 32 years, was testifying at the trial of Lhrothers Max and Benjamin Lightstone auctioneers charged with theft and fraud involving $40. Mrs Mary West charges they took that amount from her during an auc- tion sale Nov. 2 The trial is continuing whose ugees have found temporary Austria today was showing a ICV. haven a : I , sing trend * More than 1,100 Eden, future as prime 1€é Crowd gave a heros wel- re ugees crosse into Austria dur- ar is regarde i 3 come to boxer Laszlo Papp, who ing the night, A " minister 's regarded in Some po- at Melbourne won his third gold! The total number of refugees litical quarters as being in the medal He had won at London and who have come over Since the balance, faces strong opposition Helsinkt In 1948 and 2 ok start of the Hungarian fighting from several party members who 1ad been rumored here that Oct. 23 is estimated to be close pither dics Ove 2 i Papp was not returning. When his (to 140,000. Of these. 65,000 have Tier Jisapproy o of Brien, iu. beaming face appeared at the|found asylum in other Western quent *'prema vp thdrawal LONDON (CP)--Prime Minister window of his sleeping car, he re-! countries. uel i alure : wikharawa |Eden said today he would like to ceived a tremendous burst of ap. ------ p-- Eden was cheered by his Sup- | eet with President Eisenhower. pause ' . Dd k ing No hc 2D-|He added that "my desire . . . is "Where is v mother?" wer Ch 1 | pear hefore th louse of Com-| i) Why, y Papp's ot Jy Mather obey Queen S ap alin imons for the first time since his (SRL) We mow to the "United his way through the crowd. He . | three-week rest cure in Jamaica. | The British leader, answering was lifted up by young boxing Dies In Scotand But there was ominous silence not | questions by the opposition in the fans and carried to a taxi. only among Labor party members | gage of Commons, said, however, In the confusion of the arrival. EDINBURGH (AP)--Very Rev, but among certain wings of his ihe hag no detailed statement to it was impossible to ascertain how | William White Anderson, 68, chap- 0Wn party. {make at this time about the possi- many athletes had returned and lain to the Queen and former mo-| Eden is to confront some 250 bility of early face-to-face talks how many stayed abroad. The derator of the Church of Scotland, Conservative members of Parlia- with the president. government newspaper Nepsza-|died Monday. ment at a meeting tonight. Some| Both Eden and French Premier badsag says that "almost 50 pre-| He was minister of St. Cuth- of them, according to political ob-|Guy Mollet are known informally ferred not to return" and added |bert's Church here and had been servers, have been calling for|to have sounded Washington in that Hungarian sports fans were the Queen's chaplain in Scotland wholesale changes in the party's/recent weeks ahout prospects of a "disappointed to hear this news." 'since 1952. |leadership. . abi Ah rem ----p-- | Three heads of goverument. Eisenhower has cold-shouldered {the idea for the time being, diplo- mats have reported. Pistol Accident Fatal {To St. Thomas Child | ST, THOMAS (CP)--Larry Hop- per, 9, was killed Monday night iby a .32 calibre pistol which po- {lice said apparently was fired ac |cidentally by an older brother in {the family home near Port Stan- ley. The boy was shot through the chest. He is a son of Mr. and Mrs. John Hopper, Port Stanley. One Killed, "Three Injured Near Windsor WINDSOR (CP) -- Philip Kah, 53, of Harrow was killed today {when the car he was driving | smashed into the rear of a tractor: |trailer on Walker Road. Three passengers were seriously injured and taken to hospital. Mr. Kah's car smashed into the " |rear of a truck driven by Charles |Glowa, 38, of Conemaugh, Pa. Mr, |Glowa said he was traveling south with a load of steel coils when his gearshift stuck and he pulled over to the side of the road His right hand wheels were on the shoulder i and the rest of the vehicle on the Times-Gazelle Photo paved part ef the road, French-British invasion of Egypt "They have respected the deci- sions of this organization and their public opinion has under- stood it. But whak they don't un- derstand that other countries had been the object of similar recommendations which they nored openly "This unilateral ethical the United Nations," Pineau con tinued, "is for some ko obey and for others to disobey and obtain benefits from this disobedience." This was clearly a reference to the Soviet intervention in Hunzary and the suppression of the free- dom rebellion in that country Both the Soviet Union and the So- viet-supported Hungariz puppet government have ignored UN con demnations of their actions Said Pineau "From aggression to aggression from subversion to subversion, the countries which don't respect the international law will eventually triumph over those that respect it. That is why we must demand that all international rules be ap plied to all nations. If not, we are running the risk of helping the dis- integration of the United Nations code of D / 11th Min- Armored Ontario Regiment re- Col, | cently contributed $143 to the | Stephen Wotton. officer com- Hungarian Medical Relief manding the regiment at the ! "Fund, A cheque for this amount { annual Barrack"s Room Din Monday Adams is Armories E. W the RSM shown Men ner night also Julius by Lt presented to above left, and officers of the was acs, $402,600,000 a year in additional |conference of the western Big| 78 Deported Jews Arrive In Tel Aviv From Egypt TEL AVIV (AP) -- A plane dered any 'mass deportation of graying oy Sows Jeported fPom Jewish residents. gypt landed here today. One pas-| The lat i i senger carried what he described wher Tora] Sal She sina as an Egyptian deportation order Peninsula, Egyptian soldiers and and said he had smuggled it out police serched their house and by hiding it in his clothes. in some cases took away mem- Previous arrivals have said|bers of the families for ques- Egyptian authorities took their ex- tioning. pulsion orders from them before! Some arrivals said members of they left Egypt. their families were beaten. They The paper was produced by Jo- Said all requests for delays in the seph Avigdor, former teacher of XPulsion orders and requests to Hebrew at the Jewish community|{ake possessions with them were high school in Cairo. Vvigdor, 26, © used. holds a French PARSpOTtY or They took away all our valu: The ex-keacher and the other ables including wedding rings," arrivals left Alexandria Doc. 7 aid one arrival. "The Egyptians I did not hesitate to t e Ship. They were flown here from which Jookod good 4 ones lens. they took methi t! ship. They were flown here from TO er id : ! say 'this is for Port Said' or 'this Egypt has denied that it has or./is for the aggression in Sinai} Egypt Announces Ejection Of 800 Britons, 280 Jews LONDON (Reuters) -- Abdel aimed at "misleading and deceiv- Kader Hatem, director of the in2"" world public opinion. Egyptian information office, said, Hatem said not one of the 35,000 in a statement broadcast by Cairo Egyptian Jews living in Egypt has {radio Monday night that the been expelled. Of 7,000 stateless | Egyptian governthent had ordered | Jews, 280 had been asked to leave 800 Britons and 280 stateless Jews the country, he added. to leave the country. Hatem said that of the 11,046 He added that 994 French citi- Britons in Egypt, 800 had been zens had already been expelled. asked, DY ihe I ap gover Hatem accused Britain, France been ory Jorause British In. and Israel of waging a "menda- telligence and because their pres- |clous campaign' in which they al- nee in Egypt is harmful to the [leged that Egypt was expelling country's security." Egyptian Jews, Of the 7,013 French citizens, 584 He said this campaign was had been expelled, he continued. 'How Egypt Treats British, F rench Discussed Before United Nations DO ITED NATIONS, SAE Diplomatic sources said that espite objections by the United ig az wi {States and Dag Hammarskjold, ys delegate Henry Cabot Lodge Britain anc France today form. JI and Sccretary-General Ham- ally requested an assembly meet- marskjold sought to persuade the ing to take up treatment of their British and French to hold off un- {nations by Egypt. til the situation could be eased A French source said the as- through diplomatic channels |sembly would discuss this ques-|These sources said a wordy row |tion at the session beginning at broke out between French Ambas- 3 p.m. EST today. The UN secre- sador Vincent Broustra and Ham- tariat had no immediate comment marskjold and thes French insisted on this report. on a session. This source said the French gov-| Broustra and Sir Pierson Dixon ernment has sent strong orders of Britain have repeatedly coms {for the delegation to press a full plained in the last few days fo debate on the issue in the assem- Hammarskjold about the treat. {bly. Britain was said to have sim- ment of British and French na- lar orders. Itionals in Egypt. ( |

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