TIMES-GAZETTE TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising RA 3-3492 | All Other Calls ......" RR 3-3474 Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE .. Weather Report some snow, 'Flurries Sunday VOL. 86--NO. 28 Authorized Post Office As Second Class Mall Department, Ottawe OSHAWA-WHITBY, SATURDAY, FEBRUA RY 2, 1957 SIXTEEN PAGES ? ho MOUNTAIN VIEW, CALI- FORNIA, firemen battle flames in a house set afire and com- pletely destroyed when an Air Force F-84G jet plane crashed in the Moffett Field Naval Air Station landing pattern. The - 3 So | pilot wa: 7, i 3 s killed and one resi- | | It was one of crashes in the past three days in the U.S. dent slightly injured. The house was destroyed but the occupant jumped out of a window and es- ai, 20 Killed ory On Airliner | pa dInNew York a seri f air | RS { By CHARLES BANKS NEW YORK (AP) -- A Miami- | -- bound airliner crashed in a driv-| - Westerners | WereHeld To Fete St. Laurent To Extend - By HAROLD MORRISON | n 0 dl Canadian Press Staff Writer | QUEBEC (CP) -- A tumultuous NAR y welcome and a big, $10-a-plate NICKELSDORF, Austria (AP)iyoat beef dinner is being planned Six young Westerners expelled, prime Minister St. Laurent, from Hungary arrived in Austria Quebec's native son, as he returns today. All had been held in Hun- fom Ottawa today to celebrate of Quebec East riding to his three-|€ garian jails. . his 75th birthday The party included four Britons, Thousands are expected to turn Judith Cripps, 19, a grand daugh-| out at the local railway station to ter of the late Sir Stafford Cripps, greet him and his wile on their British Labor party leader; Roger arrival. scheduled for 2 p.m. EST. Cooper, 20, and Christopher Lord Mayor Wilfrid Hamel says he'll/to help him celebrate. Some 1,400 with President Eisenhower. | 21, all Oxford students, and Chris- deliver words of welcome "right They were accompanied by Richard Roraback, 26, of Dobbs/A guard of honor from Les Vol- Ferry, N.Y., also a student, and|tigeurs de Quebec, of which Mr. dent. The four Britons looked pale carnival season in Quebec, there and tired, though they all said|also will be a man disguised as a| fused to say anything of their ex |Carnaval." S riences while under arrest injing for the h ungary. |carnival, will turn out, dressed in : HEADS FO a aeian the six would be re. the station, $5, St. Lae; fonday wnat a series of strong nro. xX a Noe Sm i ; id they e Hungarians sal ey ar- rested Roraback near Andau wa POLICE WANT was helping refugees across the border and charged he had taken part in "smuggling persons" into NEW YORK (AP) -- "Joe the Crow" has been put on the He was being released, the Hun-| Staten Island police wanted garians said, because he had ad- mitted and regretted his guilt. Joe is a delight to school- children with his antics around been told that proceedings against, school grounds in the Anna- the four students had been Sae ED a IT vi f i e is a pes m . Topped in view of their youth, as Mrs. Irene Suhr told officers they admitted their guilt. that Joe is, for one thing, a The four Britons were arrested Br crow: Dace Ue Tid OF her hi 17 0 J Jan. 17, three days after they mail box and fiy off with a Hungary with 24-hour transit visas letter to get them to Austria. a other ot that Joe has a habit of swoop- SAY PAPERS FORGED ing down on her clothesline, eommunique said they had tried, removing clothespins and fly- to contact a former "revolution- : Hoa' | eral other persons claimed the ary committee" in Budapest, car-| pesky Joe rings their door- gather information on Hungarian bells then flies away. and Russian forces. For Miss Cripps, release from C.B. Sherwood Heads ent. A stack of birthday greetings . . from England were being for |Holstein-Friesian Group warded for her from (he British Birthday greetings also awaited Minister C. B. Sherwood of New Cooper, nephew of poet-novelist| Brunswick last night was elected Robert Graves, who was 22 last president of the Holstein-Friesian Their Own Dollar Share TORONTO (CP) -- The chair-| Sometimes, he said, this made ers' Association has told farmers man's efforts were aimed at mak- to stop leaning on the middleman ing certain no new tendencies in and start reaching for their own|marketing have a chance to sur- J. R. Kohler told the associa- | But the beef producers "woul tion's annual have become altogether too de-|individualism than unite in organ- the producer and the consumer. selves . . . continue as we are Dairy producers had made some aud let the number of farmers de- advance toward seli-help but beef cline every year, as it has been their own organization without we will be an even greater im- the middleman having a voice in porter of agricultural products their efforts." than we are now." topher's brother, Basil, 22. from the heart." Einar Roos, 25, a Norwegian s'u-/St. Laurent is honorary colonel, "we were well treated." They re-| snowman, known as "bonhomme STRONG PROTESTS |old-time French costumes. | tests from American, Britis and the Hungarian border while he 'JOE THE CROW' | Austria since Dec. 31. list. Earlier the British legation had dale area of Staten Island. But a gesture of goodwill, and because thief. Twice, she said, she saw crossed the Yugoslav border into Another resident told police A Hungarian interior ministry ing off with her hosiery. Sev- ried forged papers and tried to prison was a 20th birthday pras- legation in Budapest. TORONTO (CP) -- Agricultural Tuesday. 'Association of Canada. man of the Ontario Cattle Breed-| one suspicious that the middle- share of the consumer's dollar. vive. d pendent on the persons between !ized marketing and help our- producers have 'failed to set up'doing over the last few years, and Denies Union F | i | Liberal Bi meeting farmers rather sit idly by and retain our |W g-Wigs united with his two sons, three daughters, about 15 of his 17 grandchildren and perhaps with his great - grand - daughter, little Anne. A l4-car motorcade headed by the Voltigeurs' regimental band will lead him through the streets storey home on fashionable Grande-Allee. But the big feature will be in the evening. Liberal big-wigs from across the country have gathered of them have paid $10 each to at- tend the hotel banquet where Mr. There will be lots of local color.'St. Laurent will be presented with the talks have been going well. A a big birthday cake. ; His birthday actually was on Friday. The celebration was held Iwill be there. And this being the over till today to make it easier | for more Liberals to attend. Some sources close to the Lib- eral party see more in this than even pretty girls, vy-/a social gathering. With a general he title of queen of the election likely to take place next| June, this may be the last occas- jon on which Liberal leaders from across the country will be able to huddle in one spot on political ling snowstorm Friday night after | taking off a few moments earlier| {from nearby La Guardia field. At least 20 persons were killed and| only a handful of the others |aboard escaped unhurt in. the! flaming tragedy. i Figures on the total number = -. aboard varied. The Boston office | His 1s1t of Northeast Airlines said 100; the L] = airline's New York office said 101 : and New York police set the total WASHINGTON (AP) King at 103. Hospitals reported caring Saud of SAUDI Arabia has decided for 80 survivors. lo extend his siay in Washingion.| police said that at feast hal the Fini : ; survivors, who include e U5, ji ticials on Middle Eastern plane's six-member ' crew, suf- PIO oy 7 as immediate. specula fered serious injuries, { was » specula- tion that some difficulties might oh Dan and womep ftom Si, have arisen in Saud's conferences listed gi NE. Mrs. Wilfrid] Giroux and Joseph Lessard were | unaccounted for as officia 1s] checked the passenger Bist against i ) i known survivors. Mrs, Giroux's Spokesimay or the Fag gad the husband, at first also reported atmosphere of warm cordiality."" missing; later was found fo be in Such t he: - t Miami, awaiting his wife's arrival. [ich an atmosphere was present At last two Canadians were in ""lured in the crash. Sam Dubrov-| gave jor Fisentower at a down-| po 56, of Montreal, suffered a/ ai _| broken leg and fractured ribs. His | rary praised the US. for condition in hospital was reported United Nations in sponsoring|3s fair. Another Mostregles "peace in the world and self-de-|aboard the plane, Hartley Ander- termination" for peoples under Son, 35, of the suburban town of colonial rule. Mount Royal, was taken to hos- h sald he feels their King Saud But American officials said they were certain this is not true; that i Car Outpu Sets Record WINDSOR (CP) Canadian manufacturers established a Jan- uary record for new car produc- tion when they turned out 38,100 new automobiles. This surpassed a mark of 33,158 set in 1954. Truck production how- ever was down at 6,800 vehicles but still gave manufacturers an all-time high car-truck production of 44,900. Ward's Automotive Reports sald {that if the turnout continues at its present pace manufacturers will produce 34,500 cars and trucks in February as against 23,212 last year in the same month, Ward's said U.S. car makers built 642,511 passenger autos in January. This compared with out- put for January, 1956, of 612,078 units, The agency sald this week's {assemblies in the U.S. will come y, to 146,897 cars and 23,151 trucks, compared with 145,191 cars and 23,138 trucks last week and 140,582 cars and 26,600 trucks in the like 1956 week. Yanks Shocked" By Mr. Dulles | LONDON (Reuters)--The Amer-| fighting men, whatever State Sec- retary Dulles may say. |d | The committee declared in an| ~~ open letter to a British ex-ser- vicemen's association they were "shocked" by the statement Dulles made in Washington last eek, Dulles, it said, was "not speak- ing for the broad mass of the American veterans when he said on Friday, Jan. 25, that if he were] an American soldier he would not] want British or French soldiers to be fighting alongside him in the Middle East." "If American boys have serve in the Middle East we are! certain that they will welcome and never oppose serving 'with the magnificent soldiers of your na- tion." To Aid CCF Party 20 hylcze espy. NORTH feb2k MONTREAL (CP)--Union offi- clal Cleve Kidd of Toronto has de- nied that union dues collected by the United Steelworkers of Amer- ica (CLC) would be used to sup- port the CCF party. His denial 'was in reply to a statement made by J W. Stovel of Toronto, assistant general man- ager of the Noranda Mining Com- pany, before a Quebec arbitration board. It was appointed to rule on union demands on behalf of 1.600 employees at the Noranda mine, _ Mr. Kidd's rebuttal, made dur- ing his presentation of the union's brief to the board, will be followed by a written denial. He is United Steelworkers' research director, 4 The union asked an hourly pay increase of 15 cents. a reduced work week to 40 from 44 hours, shift premiums of 10 cents an hour, double time for work om QUEEN'S PARK ire roots A T-R-GLANCE i | said to be the union demand for By THE CANADIAN PRESS the check-off, a point on which Friday, Feb, 1, 1957 the two parties have argued each| First reading was given to CCF time a new contract is negotiated. bills which would have voting for It was mainly instrumental in union certification and marketing Bringing about a S-month strike plans calculated on the number of h : ine a few years ago. votes cast instead of the number CAN REVOKE IT of eligible voters which now ss At present, a voluntary check-ithe law off is in operation at Noranda, Allan Grossman (PC St but employees have the right to|Andrew) said voters should not be revoke it any time. The union fooled by new tactics employed wants it extended to include all hy the Labor-Progressive (Com- union members munist) party = In arguing against institution of SR the check-off, Mr. Stovel said the Monday, Feb. 4 CCF party was the political arm| John Yaremko (PC -- Toronto of the Steelworkers' union and Bellwoods) will report on his tour CCF leaders had discussed bring- of Hungarian refugee centres in ing "alienated mines" back to the Austria as a representative of the 'public domain." iOntario government, | statutory holidays, a pension-wel- fare plan, pay-day and vacation | changes | | LATE NEWS FLASHES Recover Body Of Co-Pilot GLOUCESTER, NM ass. (AP) The coast guard today re covered the body of man identified the co-pilot of a B-47 jet bomber's four-man crew which crashed in flames off this fishing port Friday night. Dead was First Lieut, Stanley Jen- kins Jr., 28, Pendleton, Ore. ' Driver Killed In Accident LONDON, Ont. (CP)--Alphonse Wsebert, of RR Strathroy, was killed early today when his car was in collision with a transport in dense fog on Highway 2 about a mile east of Strathburp. i pital with undeterm injuries. talks will "bring our - countries, The 'hedvily-l ortheast into closer understanding with | Airlines DC-6A ashed Into the] each other and, therefore, into ground of Rikers Island in the | closer friendship." East River less than two minutes Earlier, the state department after it left the airport. announced that Saud had can-| Doctors, nurses, firemen and po- | celled plans to spend next week|lice used ferry boats to get to the in White Sulphur Springs, W.Va. |island. | The announcement said Saud will] Police planned to begin remov- spend some additional days at! ing the bodies of victims from the Blair House, the government guest island today. Police Commissioner house. The king and Eisenhower Stephen Kennedy said names of are expected to meet again late the dead will not be released until next week. {all next-of-kin have been notified, | Te He said the death list also was being checked against the plane's manifest. Rikers Island, site of a city prison, is three-quarters of a mile from La Guardia. | Angel Gorbea, confined in the Convent Gets Compensation | Rid OTTAWA (CP) -- The federal government has agreed to pay 649,000 compensation for a con- vent destroyed last May in an air crash, it was reported Friday. The convent, at nearby Orleans, irned and 13 persons died when | | passenger plane, Two explosions, the louder than the first, announced from a prison window, Gorbea re- lated this scene: | oh The whole sky, even] through the snow, was lighted, We an RCAF jet-interceptor fighter (the prisoners) stood at the win- aircraft plummeted into it last|dows. We saw people tumbling out May 15, kiliing its two-man crew. |of that ship--they were all lighted, The judge - advocate - general's|too, by the flames. We saw them | branch of the defence department|and their shadows. We saw them | was reported to have agreed today |stumble. | to pay the Grey Nuns of the Cross,| "We saw some fall, we saw who owned the convent, $649,000. some just jump out, land on. their Claims for compensation arising hands and knees and then get up from the death of 11 nuns still and run. They beat at themselves were under discussion | because maybe their clothes were The department also is to pay burning, Some just ran a few feet | $19,500 to the family of Rev. Rich-|from the plane and rolled in the| ard Ward, naval chaplain assigned |snow, as if they were trying to] {ican Veterans Committee Friday to the convent and who perished smother the fire on their clothes." | {assured Britons that Americans in the disaster, and 5.000 to the have a high regard for British family of Miss Aline Lapointe of|jeast one died, Six children were aboard and at Masson, Que., a convent cook who led. One survivor told of kicking a hole in the fuselage to escape. He | turned towards the plane for a second and found himself in the | ath of a child thrown at him. He caught the child and ran to safety. | A prison trusty told of retriev-| ing a mother and her 18-month- old infant from foot-deep snow that covered the crash scene, a field used by the prison io raise garden vegetables. A team of investigators flew to | the scene from Washington. An-| other group of investigators made a four-hour survey of the wreck- age scene. The investigation is to resume today. Government sources said the plane was not overloaded accord-| PARLIAMENT AT-B-GLANCE Friday, Feb. 1, 1957 Trade Minister Howe said the {Gordon economic commission's ideas on wheat marketing are contrary to government policy. Opposition Leader Diefenbaker said Mr. Howe's statements were contrary to prairie farmers' de- sires for cash advances on farm- held wheat. Justice Minister Garson said the KILL 32 IN U.S. GERARD CASTONGUAY, who with his wife Charlotte was | stabbed to death Friday, is car- AT SUDBURY 2 Killed, 3 Wounded In 'Commando' Style SUDBURY (CP) -- Police still sought a motive today in the bayonet-slaying of a Sudbury high school teacher and his wife in their neat boarding house and the # subsequent commando style wounding of three officers as they attempted to arrest a sus pect. Police have charged Walte! Laaneoja, a 40-year-old Estonian miner, with the slaying Friday of Gerard Castonguay and his wife Charlotte, both 47, but Inspector Tom Temple said Friday night no motive for their deaths has been uncovered. {penitentiary on the tiny island, | paaneoja, a seven-year boarder, Ln Oshawa bus fare increase -- {gave a vivid account of the re-|waq arrested after a hand-to-hand | fnywhere from 1% to three cents {sounding crash of the four-engine knife battle in the Castonguays' cer ticket depending | rooming house in which three po- Saany are bought at a time -- will second | jicomen were wounded before their fio into effect Sunday morning. attacker was finally knocked un- the crash, Gorbea said. Watching | ooncrious when a chair crashed sare will cost 15 cents. A block! down on his head. Constable Gino Pollesel is in critical condition in hospital with a stomach wound. Constable Rich- ard Dixon, was. knifed in the | thigh and suffered abdominal in-k | ried on a stretcher from a neighbor's house in Sudbury, | | Ont, Castonguay died in am juries and constable Bob Young | shiffered a wounded hand. | § Police were called after Cas- | #hnguay staggered from the 'front our 'across the street to his sis- er-in-law's home leaving a trail bf blood behind him. i "I'm stabbed. I'm going to die," e told her. He died in an ambu- nce on his way to hospital bustares {Jp Sunday 5 on how Starting Sunday a single adult 3 Planes Take Plunge In Cities NEW YORK (AP) -- Five air- | planes have crashed in the United |States in two days, killing 32 peo- |Dle and injuriug more than 100. Three of the planes fell in cities, one of them after colliding with | another plane in the air. | The crashes at a glance: New York A Miami-bound | Northeast Airlines DC-6 carrying ¢ |about 100 persons took off in a I blinding snow storm Friday night |and crashed minutes later on Rik- ers Island in the East River. Po- lice fixed the death toll at 20. Some of the survivors were se- verely hurt, and few escaped in- | | | jury. | Gloucester, Mass, -- About the {time of the New York crash | (shortly after 6 p.m., EST) & . {U.S. Air Force B-47 with a crew lof four made its last radio report before crashing in flames in the Atlantic Ocean about nine miles off Gloucester, Fishermen in the area found no survivors but picked up four life belts. Mountain View, Calif.--A U.S, Air Force F-84 jet fighter ex- ploded Friday and crashed into a home in the San Francisco penin- sula city of Mountain View, killing the pilot. The house was destroye but its one occupant jumped out a window and escaped with leg and hip injuries. SCHOOL TRAGEDY Van Nuys, Calit.--A DC-7 alr- liner and a U.S. Air Force jet fighter, both on test flights, col- lided at 20,000 feet Thursday. The four-en gine transport smashed into a ool yard, killing its four crew members and two children, |Seventy-eight persons were in. Police say their assailant fought injured. The jet. an F-89 Scorpion, so expertly with his bayonet that dived to the Eround, Sveral miles |away ng the pilot. he must have had commando "my. New York crash was the training, : first in 24 years of service in Police think Mrs. Castonguay, which Northeact had lost a pas- who died at her sink wearing her |SeNger. ? brightly-colored apron, must have| It was the second commerc been killed at 10 a.m. Her slayer airliner crash of 1957. An AM then waited for her husband do ican Airlines plane went ow! Ir waay Woula your efgik ésJoHs" ror Which me rob neighbors think if we repos- |is five dollars. Her next eourse sessed your Le customer {will be starting in mid-March. wrote back, "I asked my neigh | «The sort of people who come bors: 2d they 2, think it would | most to the classes" she added a 'ousy trick. "are school teachers." If someone's pressing you to pay an overdue account, here's a good trick: Sell something you don't need for cash by offering it in the Classified Ads. Just dial RA 3-3492. ambulance en route to hospital. His wife died on the spot. A 46- year-old miner, Walter Laanoja, has been charged with murder. BIG FISH The mahseer, an Indian game fish common in Himalayan moun- tain streams grows up to nine {feet in length and 200 pounds in | weight. lif four tickets will cost 50 cents -- | wr 12% cents each. | p The existing adult price is 12| yents for a single ticket and 50 {hents for a block of five -- or 10 ents each. | TWO YOUTHS FACE CHARGES Three charges were laid against two Oshawa youths fol- lowing their arrest in the early | hours of this morning by city police. Constable Tom Fairbrother, while on regular patrol of Sim- coe north, at 12.30 a.m. found Stephen Browne, and Robert Salter, both 16, in a laneway behind the A and A surplus store, 86 Simcoe north. The two were taken to police station and questioned by Natectives John Powell and Ken Young. They were later charged with attempting to break into the A and A store, and also with the Tuesday night breaking, enter ing and theit from Jamieson's Drug Store, on King street east. This breakin was also discover- ed by PC Fairbrother. The pair face an additional charge of stealing a car from Jackson's Apartments, Dec. 30. ing to the number of passengers. Such type planes have been al- lowed aloft with 100 persons aboard. The crash might have turned into a greater tragedy if the fal- tering airplane had veered in al- most any direction other than it did RCMP musical ride will tour Brit- ain this year The Commons approved a $1,- 000,000 loan to the United Nations for clearance of obstacles from the Suez Canal Prime Minister St. Laurent was congratulated in the Commnos on his 75th birthday, 57, 2 the | Special student and children's fates are also higher. | Now students and children pay even cents for a single fare or jet five for 25 cents, The new | fates call for a single fare to cost | © cents. And a block of four can je bought for 25 cents -- or 6% tents each. A company spokesman said the ncrease is needed to help pay for| | hereased operating deficits. The Jus service here is operated by| pe Oshawa Street Railway, which! a Canadian National Railway jubsidiary. Holders of bus tickets going out if use tomorrow may get refunds it the bus office. Old tickets may le used on buses after the new, fates go Into effect, by paying an| \dditional five cents por foket| Refunds end Feb. 28. } As in the past, student tickeis| ire only good between 7 a.m. and| | p.m. Monday through Friday.| iideuts must be under 21 years To get a children's rate the| thild must be under 51 inches in leight. OSHAWA LIBERAL ASSOCIATION ANNUAL MEETING AND ELECTION OF OFFICERS Thursday, February 7th, 1957 Mclaughlin Library Auditorium 8 P.M. SHARP Guest Speaker: DR. CLAUDE VIPOND 12 KING ST. E. Buehler's Delay Inquest, Lack Evidence MEAT SPECIALS! MONDAY ONLY! TORONTO (CP) -- An inquest] | into the death of 'Mrs. Louise| | Couch, 42, of Toronto, whose bat-| tered body was found lying on a snow-covered road last November TENDER CLUB STEAKS wu. 39°¢ Las been adjourned indefinitely because of lack of evidence. Crown attorney A, G. Davis, re auesting the adjournment, saif4 Friday it would be impossible fee, LEAN RIB STEW BEEF 5.1.00 the jury to reach a verdict whos so much evide concerning We Geath was lacking "idicul oY : tof T>dical evidence was thay ory | had been drinking an hour p'er \ TENDER WING STEAKS uw 59° her death and must have hg' fd toxicated when the injuriefdng r inflicted Ch, jt- Dr. Noble Sharpe ney-general's departmenfof 4 was reasonable to assug u f bay De of thPep rd 5. | FRESH MINCED CHUCK STEAKS we. 59° ent 7 | juries were caused by Haag,