Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 11 Mar 1957, p. 1

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TIMES-GRZETTE TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising RR 3-3492 All Other Calls ...... RR 3-3474 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle Weather Report Continuing mild. Rainshowers end early Tuesday. : TWENTY PAGES Not Authorized As Second Class Mall Department, Ottawe OSHAWA-WHITBY, MONDAY, MARCH $ Cents Per Copy 11, 1957 YOL. 86--NO. 59 ue | k - P% - Arabs Ask Gaza Return Said Unique; A LONG WAY FROM HOME Three members of the 356th Infantry Workshop, Royal Ca- nadian Electrical and Mechan- fcal Engineers, erect a sign- post reminding Canadians with UN Emergency Force how Jack Smith, Timmins, paints a sign while Cpl. E. Mc- Clafferty, of Annapolis Royal, N.S., (left) and Craftsman Ches MacLean, North Sydney, N.S., nail them to the post. Speeds 100 MPH Gets $100 Fine Karl Heinz Bader, 25, of 216, officer reported his cruiser was Park street north, Peterborough, travelling 110 miles an hour but who sped east along Highway #01 Bader was pulling away from the Yonge street clover- him. leaf and Oshawa Sunday night at RADIO CALL speeds which members of the On-| Ag the result of a radio call to : Police estimate the Whitby detachment headquar- 100 hour was|ters, Constable Selwin Halroyd g 8S. Ebbs, by Magis- proceeded erpool this morning. | lover Rd A a d Bader p / for his wild drive! Another call resulted in was "I wanted to get home." |road block, consisting of a his hair - raising ride, tractor - trailer unit and a police! . Bader e through two road cruiser was placed at the Picker- before he slowed up at theling - Whithy town line with Con- street cloverleaf in Osh-/stables Al. Breward and John awa- and was taken into custody Seymour in charge. pursuing members of the Constable Seymour reported detachment of the OPP. later that the speeding car cut was first sighted by a into the boulevard and continued member of the Bond Lake de-jon its way. He said that Bader, ent of the OPP at thelfollowing his arrest, said he was onge street cloverleaf in Toron-/in.a hurry to get home fo. was chased as far as the) Bader was lodged in the eoun- Markham sideroad. The pursuingity jail at Whitby over night, Lady Korda, 27, New Revolt Is Re-Married In Sumatra LONDON (Reuters) -- The re- marriage of Lady Alexa Korda,) JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) 27-year-old third wife of the late Mineral-rich South Sumatra has Sir Alexander Korda, the British joined the spreading bellion | movie ts was disclosed i the central a erlioent here Sunday. The latest revolt caused open The former Alexandra Boycun|Concern today among Jakarta of- of Ft. William, Ont., was married ficials already trying to cope with | secretly last month to David rebellious groups who have seized Patrick Metcalfe, a 29-year-old in- Power in central Sumatra, much surance broker and son of Maj.|0f that island's northern sector C. D. Metcalfe, a former aide de and the islands of East Indonesia. camp to the Duke of Windsor There were warnings of new de- | Mrs. Metcalfe married Korda in| f6Ctions as the sprawling nation | 1953 and he died last year. of 80,000,000 waited tensely to see --_ a e---- . | whether President Sukarno would | {carry out his controversial plan| jo bring Communists into the gov- | | ernment, The rebel leaders still! generally promised allegiance to| Sukarno, although they demanded | an end to the government of Pre- fh) . Hi Messenger, 13, Held In Texas mier Ali Sastroamidjojo. DALLAS, Tex. Ap -- Police HEAR DISCONTENT aturday a 13-year-old mes- Rumblings. of discontent c | Jenger boy who said he stole $860 from Borneo, world's third el fiom Jie aa Pacific Rail. est island and least explored ter-| od or-/ ri i yay at maph ¢ Hiory in the 3,000-mile archipel- Officers said the boy told them Local sources said the ly he came to Dallas by bus and thing that has delayed .an outright bought 2 big game rifle. a hunting coup in Borneo has been a polit- e and powerful binoculars to'ical squabbl is i | hunt Texas jackrabbits. cials, i . i in island' och Post Office ocke _"|trolling 1,000,000 of the building FIRST QU INT TO WED Plan To Swell Flow, Mortgage Money; Gas Used To Quell Riot; By ANGELO NATALE mayor under the Egyptian admin-|of Egyptian administration. When GAZA (AP) -- United Nations|istration who was held a political|UN. troops in vehicles herded the forces had to use tear gas and prisoner for 45 days during the demonstrators down Gaza's main : shoot in the air Sunday to disperse Israeli occupation, was asked to street and out of the centre of Arabs rioting for the Gaza Strip's|serve. He declined, saying that/town, the rioters began throwing return to Egyptian control. the pre-invasion municipal coun-|stones. A committee of Arabs claiming cil objected. | The Arabs tried to smash the to represent more than 1,000 civil FOR TALKS gates of the UNEF police head- workers employed in the strip be- The clash between UNEF and quarters. The UN troops, using fore the Israeli invasion said they the Arabs erupted while Maj.-Gen. tear gas and firing over the riot- would work only if Egypt ap-E. L. M. Burns of Canada, UNEF ers' heads, forced them to dis- far they are from home. Cpl. proved the civil administration commander, was in Gaza for talks perse. The demonstrators made from using savings-account money | Ont., set up by the UN Emergency with his staff on plans to transfer several unsuccessful effort to res, chort-term loans and instead| Force. his headquarters from the Suez form their rank. The rioting resulted from ap- Canal Zone to Gaza. No casualties were reported on pointment of a temporary admin-| There is strong feeling among either side. istration headed by Danish Col. the 310,000 residents of the strip, After the outbreak, a curfew Carl Ingholm as military gover- including some 215,000 Palestine previously ordered for 6 p.m. was nor. He named a committee of Arab refugees, against even the moved up to 1 p.m. Sound trucks five residents of Gaza City to appearance of international con-'drove through the streets order-| supervise all civil affairs in the trol. ing the population to obey, but town itself. About 300 Arabs stormed the military police had difficulty | Ingholm will preside over the through the streets, waving ban |in getting the excited Arabs to {council. Munir Rayess, Gaza ners and shouting for the return'comply. 3500000 Arabs Strike At May Strike UN Headquarters | By JACK BRAYEY In Br tain Canadian Press Staff Writer AZA, Egypt (CP)--Arab dem hi | streets.) Jui Tepo : Force head rs, and were Withdrawing Ista of 19 unions €on-|yattied back in 'g clon of high-spirited. dem: manual workers tear gas bom warning shots. | from the initial stage, industry Canada's Maj.-Gen. today to consider calling a strike Burns replied tersely "I think so' ito back demands for a wage in-|W! |crease of fourpence (five cents) smacked of an hour. Employers have refused, saying it would cost £40,000,000 a year. | Unions already have issue r, who was in 1] iy asi i ike The leaders "Communist tactics." seethed with emotional d of thelr lorientors before order guests | " Sind i : Por (was restored. | But it was calmer Sunday 'han Strike orders t0 200.000 sipbulld- Gen. Burns ordered an early|Friday, the Moslem Sabbath. feet next Saturday unless employ- curfew and the streets were CLAIM FOR EGYPT ers meet wage demands. cleared early in the afternoon. Banners proclaimed that A dispute in the general engi- Agitators demanded release of stamp-sized Gaza Strip--an area neering industry threatens to send Prisonrs whom they said had comparatively worthless in .tself |fedayeen (commandos) in Gaz s that there would be no large tax elif, saw the|™ EL. M. evidence of organized propaganda. Whatever the top-level consider pla asked whether the uproar ations involved, this ancient city that it would be "disturbing to. ) anrest think of an import surplus of such|cann and killed one passenger| Arabs heaved tear gas bombs|while street banners blossomed magnitude continuing for an in. and injured five others. 'AGAIN AT 73 back at the UNEF soldiers, who with new slogans stating that the definite period." were forced to fire over the heads UN forces are here as "Nasser" the Date Set For Cecile TORONTO (CP)--The Telegram|a suburban Montreal apartment. says in a dispatch from Montreal] The fifth quintuplet, Emilie, that friends say Cecile Dionne is|died of epilepsy in 1954. in love and plans to be married] The story says Cecile informed next September. : her father of the engagement in The story says Cecile, ane ofl, jetter last week. the Dionne quintuplets, and Phil- "i e's fiance is the son of Mr. lippe Langlois, 25, already con-, "wr. Alphonse Langlois of sider themselves engaged, Quebec City. though they do not intent to an- nounce it until after Cecile's final] The Telegram adds that a sec- examinations as a student nurse ond romance is. developini be- in May. tween Annette, now compl a k| The Telegram says the an- four-year music teacher's course nouncement may come on the|at Nicolet, Que., and Germain Al quints' 23rd birthday, May 28. lard, a student at the University The four surviving quintuplets, of Montreal. It says it is under- Cecile, Yvonne, Annette and Ma-|stood that there will be no serious rie, share in a $1,000,000 trust'talk of marriage until he is grad- fund. They keep house together in'uated next year. Mighty Quake Hits Aleutians SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- The|day along northern shores of the nervous northeastern Sun of ge stands, 154 Deople were Jeft homme. Pacific continued to tremble Sun-|less in two villages on become a mother when she met |day night in the wake of Satur-4,000 others were isolated by with an accident. In a conla for |day's mighty earthquake in the washed out bridges. 169 days, she was packed in ice | oi, Tslands. | Damage estimates ranged up to and doctors were uncertain if $2,000,000. ; The restless earth that sent 1 fe Waborn Suild cond survive [tidal waves crashing into villages| No direct loss of life was re- New Policy For Banks By HAROLD MORRISON Caadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP) -- Parliament was informed teday of a revolu- | &2 Rin i i J ionary proposal by the Bank of] Canada to change the character of MEDICAL MIRACLE the chartered banks and swell the Fourmonthold Stephen flow of mortgage money from this Moore is quite disinterested in 3 : i .| the announcement that he is re- nor James'C. Coyne in hls annual §arded by British physicians as qd pp "a medical miracle". report, would prevent the banks phen is the son of Mrs, Ellen Moore, 23, who was about to would direct all savings deposits into insured mortgages, govern- ment bonds and other long-term| investments. | | At the same time the central {bank would step up the country's money supply to ensure there is an "adequate" amount available to banks for short-term customers --those who borrow for a few {months or for a year or so. CONSIDER CREDIT CONTROLS |again Sunday at 7:20:28 p.m.|/but Paul O. Beam, a veteran Captai ious' inflation of 1956 has er | ap all geodetic survey office in Honolulu| Ge Hours after the alert had ended in Hawaii and Japan rumbled ported because of early warnings, Vi ; PST (10:20:23 p.m. EST) and the newspaper man, and Sarah Park, ! tering the shock 2% hours later. photographing the waves. Mr. Coyne warned that the "'ser- ently a vigorous aftershock, ap-|age reports before asking for {been fully arrested and suggested | Is Blamed | Meanwhile the U.S. coast and|disaster area and placed " {distribution of available credit to| that Mount V EE | ada-United States board of inquiry belching smo! 2 Offi-jin Hawaii, nine -foot crashed into {University of California seismo-|Honolulu Star-Bulletin reporter, Research assistant John Den-| Governor Samuel King of Ha- peared again to be in the Aleu-|eral aid, but had declared a 10- |the government might want to (remove regional discrimination. OTTAWA (CP)--A joint Can- reported a Mount, Ysevido a8 1957-58 {said toda; captain of a TCA ing dormant for 3 00, Years, Sei] graph at Berkeley was still regis- were killed in the crash of a plane oyer said the new quake, appar-|waii said he was waiting full dam tians, mile coastal stretch on Kauai a |consider direct controls over the| int! This appeared to be another hint he ound f ¥ said it cuts in the government's to be brought down ing from three to nine feet high|with others wreck: over the beaches Satur-|than 50 flooded. Bet rd Te sre GRANDMA WEDS [Pipe Iraqi Oil For W. Europe uncoupled from its engine over Flat Rock, Mich., pierced the DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) -- The Iraq Petroleum Company an- nounced today that it will start pumping Iraqi oil for Western Eu- rope through its sabotaged Banias pipeline in Syria within 48 hours. The company said the amount pumped will be 40 per cent eof nd ices soa a record $1,400,000,000 in 1956, dou- that of 1955, and concluded The plane, flying between Chi- cago and Montreal with intermed- iate stops scheduled at Toronto and Ottawa, was commanded by NO AGREEMENT Reviewing steps by the central b Captain R. D. Smuck, 40, and was |piloted by Captain A. C. Adam- ank to restrain the expansion of 3 pA in the jace & Julation; Mr. Coyne reca at he had| : : held talks with various credit ag-|°O™ 34 first officer. encies to have them aropt volun- BASIC PROCEDURE | tary credit restrictions. But he The report said "maintaining a LONDON (AP)--Mrs. Annie Sibley, 78 - year - old grand- mother who was widowed five years ago, was married Satur- day to Leslie Fullick, 33. Her six middle-aged children refused to take part in the ceremony and one of them, Mrs. Doris Humphreys, 42, said: "I'm strike. Unions asking a in both 10-per-cent wage ment in rejecting industries are| in | crease. Employers have been ada- the claims which they say would cost ship . ) builders £10,000,000 a year and|their weapons as a warning and engineering industries even more. (tossed the tear gas bombs, only [some 2,250,000 workers out on been jailed for political reasons. but priceless as an international They tried to lead a . crowd pawn--belongs to Egypt. through the prison gates but troops| In fact, one new banner Sunday blocked the way. Then the crowd hinted that more than Gaza be grew angry and threatened to tear|longs to Egypt, stating that the |down aii iron fence. 26-mile strip is an integral part of It was then the troops Palestine, thereby grating on the nerve of the nerve of the ancient quarrel between Arabs and Jews. them hurled back. The] UNEF troops--in which Cana- used {to have la NABS BURGLAR, AIDS FAMILY DENVER, Colo (AP) -- A grocer who captured a burg- lar in his store played Santa Claus to the suspect's wifé and nine children Sunday. Raquel Cordova, 62, took eight boxes of fruits, vege- tables, meats, and canned goods from his store and de- livered them personally to the five-room apartment of Mrs. Corina Vigil, 30, and her nine children. Cordova learned of their plight after he captured Al- fonso Vigil, 30, Thursday night. In his city jail cell, the tearful Vigil said: "It was a wonderful thing for Mr. Cor- dova to do, after what I did to him." He said there "wasn't a stick to eat" when he re- sorted to burglary to feed his children, who range in age from two months to 11 years. | ration reached its peak|dian support elements played a about noon and lasted an hour. |vital part--were not drawn into Two ringleaders were arrested violent response by the celebra-| and troop reinforcements, reported tions. to be Yugoslavs, were rushed fo A spokesman for Gen. Burns, the. city. Many shops were closed, admitted the UNEF was "having| apparently in a gesture of defi-|a little trouble" keeping the dem- ance. The uproar began shortly al- onstrators in order but he said] ter Gen. Burns, setting up head-|no casualties had been reported.| quarters here, arrived for staff "The UN troops have not fired conferences. on the crowds and nobody has| (The Jerosalem Post quoted an|fired on the UN forces, although) Arab refugee as saying a number the populace is doing a lot of| of Arabs accused of collaborating shooting in the air to celebrate," | {with the Israelis were lynched by he said. i 7-Year-Old Gives Tips ] SYDNEY, Australia (Reuters)-- {A Sydney schoolteacher recently |asked her class of seven - year-| {olds to write essays on highway|car in the shed, |safety, drunken drivers and pre-/into the sitting room and after tea |vention of highway accident. {he takes off his boots, gets a big| One entry was so good she for-|glass, lies down on the carpet, {warded it to the New South Wales opens the crates and bottles, and| and put them in the back of the car. Misfortune Marred Life Dynamite'Bank Robber MONTREAL (CP)--Police had t ? he dynamite he carri the details pieced together tod : har pe Hed. But_he 1 ay had feared that he might be ca in a bizarre bank holdup attempt | tured bodily and a the Fou and an abortive try to explode a mite in the station as a way out. time bomb in. Montreal's Central!If he had been captured, he would Station Friday : have told police to let him go or After talking in hospital during a 'arge building would be blown the weekend to a young gunman up who attempted. to ward off cap-| A key found in the youth's pos- ture by carrying with him 39 session in hospital led police to sticks of dynamite, they said he!the five sticks of dynamite, at- had also planted a time bomb in tached to a detonator and an he railway tation as his hole card |alarm-clock timer. It was overdue in case anything went wrong. to go off but a mechanical failure The youth identified as 22-year- prevented an explosion old Andre Deblois, was shot, The device had been timed to through the neck and seriously exjlode at 5 p.m. Friday--the rush | wounded by constable Joséph Per- hour for commuters 'and week- | ron; who risked hitting the dyna-lend travellers--and police ballis- mite by firing. He is in hospitak{tic Expyrts sald It could have fralyzed San the neck down, jilled 1,000 people. if it had gone Police said the gunman hadn't SUFFERED MISFORTUNE sxpecied to be shot at because of | Police said Deblois had suffered | a series of misfortunes during the last two months. In October his seven-month-old child died. Early Want E in January Deblois had a serious accident with his truck, injuring | his head and leg. Also in January, | his house at St. Simeon, Que., nesday his® father-in-law died. After his house burned down, Deblois, his wife and three-year- old daughter moved into his par-| He had been | looking unsuccessfully for work. | the youth carried with him into the the north end of the city would have been enough to blow up the four- storey building if he had thrown the cunstabie's ents' home here. Police said the dynamite Toronto - Dominion Bank in the switch or if bullet had hit it, in| Charlevoix County, burned down. ' He had lost his job and last Wed- {Road Safety Council, which re-loff he goes {leased it to the press. It reads:| "He's sure not to meet with any | My dad never meets with ac- kind of accident. He cannot even) cidents. He never gets stunned fall down, as he is already on the| and staggers across the street and|floor. He cannot get run over as get knocked down by cars. he is indoors, and he cannot hurt] "What dad does is go to the hotel anyone else as the car is in the' and get two or three crates of beer!shed." |OTHER had got no agreement from the low airspeed to reduce r.p.m. instalment fin ance companies, (revolutions per minute) of an un- some of which received funds controlled propellor has been for |{from large parent companies in/many years the basic procedure [the United States. in use for reciprocating engine- This had hampered bank mone: propellor combinations and is tary policy. The central bank had widely known. t 1 is- horoughly ' dis iy Suleiman Mudarres, chief Teh resentative of IPC, said ofl |begin flowing through pi} |line to Tripoli, Lebanon, at same rate toward the weekend. gusted." But the bride danced a merry jig for photographers and snorted: "My life's my own." {no control over the finance com- -- panies. In fact, all it could do was {restrain the country's over-all ieredit. It could not prevent dis {erimination among regions or |among - distributors. The voluntary talks had gone as far as they could go. If further results were desired, "some form of legally enforceable regulatory action would be necessary." At another point, Mr. Coyne said: "Direct controls to restrict c: tain types of borrowing and fi ancing, ir uding the provision of fund anadian subsidiaries] by fore iterprises, could re- duce ir ary pressures. . JINTS He said also: 1. While Canada's total spend- ing rose to a record $29,700,000 in 1956, about $1,200,000,000 represented the price rise. Spend- To Tipsy Motorists RE sen ghd of "general stability and sound economic growth." 2. Bills owing by consumers buy: "He then drives home, puts the/ing on credit reached a peak $2 takes the crates|465,000,000 at the end of 1955, Increase of $283,000,000 in the year | and some 78 per cent higher than the amount outstanding at the end' {of 1952. 3. Bank of Canada profits in- creased to $47,272,000 in 1956 from | $42,937,000 in 1955. Because of a new method of valuing its secur- ities, the bank also credited $42,- 592,000 from its inner reserves to profit, turning over a total of $89,- 365,000 to the federal treasury. EXPLAINS PLAN Mr. Coyne made clear his plan for rev chartered banking loperations is not aimed at reduc- NEWS FLASHES ling the volume of commercial or $ general loans but at expanding gypt To Take Over Gaza Strip CAIRO (Reuters) -- The Egyptian government said today it has decided that an Egyptian administration should "'im- mediately' take over in the Gaza Strip. Strong Quake Rocks Greek Area ATHENS (AP) Another strong earthquake today rocked the Volos area in Central Greece. The panic-stricken popu- lation ran into the streets for safety, but no casualties were reported, Oil Starts Flowing From Iraq LONDON (AP) A spokesman for the Iraq Petroleum | Company said today oil has started flowing again from Iraq through a repaired pipeline across Syria to Baniyas on the Mediterranean eoast. | mortgage loans and other invest- ments based on future increases in savings deposits. f In the past, the banks had gen- * erally -used savings money fo» long-term investments. But in the] 1956 scramble for loans, more and | more of these savings were used to make short-term loans. The banks" mortgage lending came to almost a dead halt at the end of 1956, In fact, so heavy was the demand for shodt-term loans that| § banks even sold their holdings of ¥ government bonds at a loss tol raise sufficient funds. i Under Mr. Coyne's new plan, | k the chartered hanks would be|™ split into two distinet operations They would continue to make ordinary commercial loans and in this field central bank monetary policy would continue to operate --these loans would be subjected te eentral eredit restrictions, EC i Private Astor Bjorklund from Onge, Sweden, checks a travel 6 | | ler moynted on a eamel at a | ber of the United Nations Emer- Thm x Ee a a + y BPE ty Fa Poul 3 ot a hE wi UN KEEPS CLOSE CHECK IN THE DESERT gency Force who took over pole icing of the Gaza strip area, after Israeli forces had with- drawn. Mar. 7. Raffah, in the id is a mem- road block at Gaza strip. Bjorkl | |

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