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Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 16 Dec 1955, p. 1

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TIMES-GAZETTE TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising. . RA 3-3492 All Other Calls .......RA 3-3474 THE Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle DAILY TIMES-GA Weather Forecast Occasional «cl oud and light snow, Cold, light winds. Low tonight 20, high tomorrow 30. OSHAWA-WHITBY, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1955 * * VOL. 84--NO. 293 x CROWDS LINE UP AT UAW HALL TODAY 1 Plans Stricter Curb #8 On Mental Patients ---- TORONTO (CP) -- Hearth Minis- one of the two who trrorized, a[ness that might lead to further er Phillips said Thursday night young miother and son at Ajax for offences. : ntal wi nts 'who have po imearly an hour before Mrs, Sam He said that during the last two ime! Pp te peg and Lynn, 3, were rescued years police intervention has been of mental illness that might lead hy police. to a crimipal offence y Paul Jalmstou, 1 in Lat | ter/Oshawa with his Fuller was aceompan-| needed for only eight persons Who! tions, in Nominate 45 For ODLC Posts Striking members of Local 222, UAW-CIO voted last night to elect | delegates for the Oshawa and Dis- {trict Labor Council. The maeting, held in UAW hall, Bond street, was fully attended, | { | | Cochrane Trio Will Stand Trial COCHRANE (CP) ~ Three bush workers were charged with in he ag of Josepn 70, eat) un of A ; a TM0-year-old nearby Hunta store- keeper. ii rd Florent Lapointe, 23, i Ar mand Hebert, 24, both of Ci \ were standing on robbing the merchant when word: of his death 'was announced, The trial was interrupted and the two, who had pleaded guilty to the charges, were remanded in euss tody. The third man, Paul Gauthier, 26, also of. Cochrane, was re- manded Yadnesday. % This morning, the three were charged with murder, ~ Moy Tent. a wat Hag Monday . He was conscious and bound hand and in his store Tuesday by a . company qenvery man. Police said they think Rizzo whe lived behind his store 15 miles of here, heard prowlers up to investigate, niw according - to union leaders. Qut of 45 members nominated, ill be elected, including gates yoy i. 3 groups awa. 4 4 |The smaller Trades and Labor Bs Tom HOGE |Council, which includes delegates| UNITED Horii N.Y. (A from AFL craft unions locally, is| YM ; y N.Y, (AP)-- expected to merge with the Osh-| With its - schtduled adjournment lawa and District Labor Council/only hours away, the Uni Na- carly next year. tions General Assembly headed to- ht ---- day into its sixth round of hallot 26 Escape es As delegates "prepared fo Vote |the United Stafes again pledged |its support for the Philippines. | Communist Czechoslovakia and the Chile hi balloting reached. the last bed being adjourn the already|night her 3a was sl i by tonig as- miles sembly President Jose Maza of farm 25 west of here, Mrs. Henry Mullins, listed as in warned he will keep the/serious condition from a bullet joing until a decision was wound in her neck, was testifying at the preliminary hearing of Ed- Negotiationg aimed at ending the|ward Waucaush, 32-year-old treaty deadlock have become urgent overiindian charged with murder in two weeks, Delegates|connection with the Dec, 4 slaying feared that if the assembly ad-\of her som, Daniel. Night Of Dé ath LONDON, Dnt. (CP) =~ An 84 Police said later Mullin had| year-old widow, her neck swathed been shot once at close range with) in ages, fold from her hospital { shot the on. their a .22-calibre rifle. They the telephone wires had appar- ently been cut. Waucaush, six-feef, three inches tall, stood silently listening to Mrs. Mullins' hospital-bed testimony. He was "handcuffed to a provincial police constable, He was arrested after 50 policemen, armed shotguns, rifles and tear-gas bombs combed the Muncey Indian reserve near the Malling' farm. also said { 'Color' Cotint | TORONTO (CP)--Morley Smilth |of Dresden, Ont., is scheduled #o |appear in Chatham court Jan. § (face charges of refusing service 1o {two Negroes in his restaur |department of labor sald with|day. | The department laid the char {under the Fair Accomm {Practices Act after Percy Bruce . Rizzo was driven to h but he died 'without Goospiia bare over a disputed Security Council Toronto Fire {Philippines are tied in the contest journed without filling the seat, seat, TORONTO (CP) -- Twenty-six|for the seat after a record 29/the council would be out of busi- persons escaped early today when|ballots. There was, however, grow- ness. Under the UN charter, the {tire raced through three houses on ing belief that a compromise|it.power body cannot function with. Seaton street in east-central To-|choice might emerge before night-louf full membership. lronto. |fall. The United States has tried to | Two women, clinging to a sec-| Both sides claim that the addi- resolve the 'problem by proposing | ond-storey window ledge, were res- tion of 16 new member states willla rotation 'plan calling for eleec- cued by a neighbor who propped swing the trend in their favor. Andition of the Philippines this year red dangerous. He had re-|a ladder up to them minutes before both voiced confidence that they and Yugoslavia in 1957. The court moved into the hos-| He was sleeping in his parents'|and Jake Alleyne of Toronto pital when doctors said they|house on the reserve when ar-|they were not served in the ges thought Mrs. Mullins would be|rested. {taurant because of their color, Prices Rising caush had been remanded to Dec. 20, but the adjournment was set back after doctors said Mrs. Mul- lins could be questioned. She said she was watching tele- | vision while her son was feeding] --- reatment, they e been con- e soon. war. In addition to the foreign | the member countries' defence and iinance ministers. | THREAT OF WAR | Iles, with Britain's ' Foreign] ary Harold Macmillan and} sign Minister Antoine Pinay of ce, was expected to empha-| ial anxieties about the Middle! East, Worsening relations there} between Israel and the Arab states! holds 'the threat of a real war, | that Portugal's Foreign Minister Paulo Cunha would seek NATO's! endorsement of Portugal's eon tinued hold on Portuguese India, which Prime Minister Nehru's gov- © 52 Py ; % rn p 4 Oo 5, ". : > : ; fovesiigation into the c<cape Wed- MAY JCONFINE CLOSETY {1 He said about "0 per seht of of the two men has already been ero. have shows (wiolane hich show criminal tendencies. The man is Francis Fuller, 32,ithey have the type of miental ill. ype at Penetanguishene and ca- Whitby E VANDERGRIFT, Pa, (AP) -- Ajage of dynamite, along with a bat-{of Toronto. third patient to escape {holes in the walls--Fallone couldn't night at Brockville, police here with a posse which had hunted him| lone several months ago and that appeared Wednesday while on 'a Armstrong county memorial hos-| "wouldn't let me talk critical condition from shots fired| re Warren Smail, and her uncle, Will community, closed in on the youth Thursday,|Met again today behind closed dition this morning. He missed|Russia's post-Geneva return to the eve and ranged upward 'to lodge United States warned the ministers ging, had opened two dangerous About 100 shots were fired in the After the ministers end their can- as the youth stuck his head out sion. It will discuss ways in which| invaded the home of Mr. and Mrs. scope to include the economic and ernment wants ended, nesday of two patients from the! Dr, Phillips said patients Who 22,000 patients in "mental institu sent to the Penetanguishene Hos-| may have to be kept 'il rivileges now are restricted { = acity was being' doubled. A 2 ° . ad Triple-Killer love-crazed youth who killed fhiree|tery to explode the dynamite. The from the Ontario Mental Hospital died Thursday night six hours after explode it with bullet for 16: hours. her parents had forbidden her Christmas shopping trip in nearby see him again. She said t - pital where his would =be girl/boys," and had threatene into her chest by the berserk boy. NATO Nati Di Ld iam Smail, were shot down by Fal- Policeman Gus Zanos, wounded | PARIS (AP) «= The 15 foreign "ldoors for more discussion of the death by a fraction of an inch as cold war, under his: skull. Thursday that the Russians, after new fronts in the cold war: the exchange before a sharpshooting vass of global problems, the NATO from behind a tree stump. its Smail, He had a rifle and a pack-lisocial fields in fighting the cold 4 To : Whitby Mental "Hospital, said ome jiper have committed a criminal tons in' Ontario may be the type pital for the Criminally Insane, custody if psychiatrist® enne There was provision for 150 of this i RL Dies In G Fight : g WHITBY (CP)--Peter Callas, 31, persons and wounded two others Pattery failed and -- from bullet here, was recaptured Thursday he was shot down in a gun fight Gladys said she had dated Fal-! ; said Callas, who dis- John Fallone, 17, died at nearby the date Fallone was so je Mother, Was Jit friend, Gladys Smail, 15, lay inthe entire Smail family, ! sidered for rele Her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. H n - 7 7 ¢ night 4 ig { lone Wednesday nizht in this rural ussian ecurity reat by Fallone as the 50-man posse Ministers of the Atlantic alliance was reported in satisfactory con-ithreat to their security raised by a bullet hit him under the right| State Secretary Dulles bof the! F. nearly a year of political zigzag CARRIED OUT- THREAT Middle East and southern Asia. state policeman picked off Fallone council will hold another full ses- Félione died 24 hours after heithe organization can broaden Tr size to the foreign ministers their/to the rooms on: the second floor. There were unconfirmed reports| Commission with an engineer for | flames ate into the ledge. | his pigs when she "felt something Six of the persons were children. | The fire, which firemen said was bust" in her neck. started by an overheated wood | | "1 was hurt, I knew that. IT went stove, caused $3,500 damage. |lo the back door and called for | { Order Change 'To Stand Firm A mass membership meeting of In Ice Rink {Local 222 UAW-CIO voted unanis An alteration 'has to be made mously last night to keep the strike in Oshawa to comply with fire/bargaining team sees fit to re-| protection regulations. The change/commend a settlement on the basis| was ordered by Fire Chief R. A.lof a company offer. Hobbs after an inspection of the| pouglas Sutton, chairman of the rink had been 'carried out. Local 222 bargaining committee, Changes have"fo be made injigld strikers that GM employed the width of the stairway leading «stalling tactics" to delay negotia- Contractors are now doing this. | 0": a eas Hoard of, Furs terday strike talks in Toronto hag) ide the Oshawa Children's Arena "bogged down", with little or no : progress made during the past few| the winter season. days. Parks board will be reimbursed] Bargaining has been concentrated | by the Arena Commission for|on non-economic issues, including wages or salary and the engineer | Wage inequities at the Oshawa, will remain with the board during plants. | the summer months. Major 'monetary {ssues have not CPL. DONALD CLEMENGER GUNNER CALVIN REID New Reich Rises From War Rubble Stories of Germany's. near -|listment ends, he plans to sign complete recovery from the de-lup for another. He would like to feat she suffered in The Second|spend the next year in Canada, World War were related here to-/then perhaps return to Europe. day by two homecoming Oshawa "People treated us ve well soldiers. lover there," he reports, "The Ca- Both agreed there is ample evi- nadian troops generally got along| deace ip Germany today of that!well with the Germans. They cov iry's prosperity. Evérybody| didn't seem to mind us being wor.; hord, there is ample food there at all." | and totally absent is the former A former employee of Field Avia-| "We will conquer the world" spir- tion, Reid joined the Royal Cane i dian Horse Artillery in July, 1953. Gunner Ie left Fort Osborne barracks wri at Winnipeg in November of that it. The two soldiers are Calvin Reid, who is staying the home of his sister, Mrs, E. A.|year to go to Germany. Townsend, 194 Nassau street, and, Upon arrival in Germany, he Corporal Donald Clemenger, of 80 moved into new quarters at Fort Gibb street. Reid is a member of Prince of Wales, the Canadian the Royal Canadian Horse Artil-|barracks, 30 miles from Dort-| lery while Clemenger belongs to/mund, | the Royal Canadian Army Sery-| The Canadian troops are kept ice Corps, {busy with training schemes, but The army life is hard to beat, (there is time for recreation too. in the opinion of Cnr. Reid, who| There is a show just outside the| served two years in Germany. NEW REICH RISES | When his present term of en-| (Continued on Page 2) js been discussed since the strike began Sept. 19. Only a break-through on these ministers, the council also includesito the children's ice skating rink|against GM in full force until their | hard-core items could bring an end to the 89-day strike. More than 17,000 GM Workers are affected by the walkout from plants at Oshawa, St. Catherines, Windsor, London and Scarboro. Both sides appear entrenched for the battle, with the international {union pouring $140,000 weekly into 4 the strike at Oshawa alone, and the A company spokesman said yes-|o,nany adamant in its refusal to recognize far - reaching monetary| demands of the workers. Three major union demonds so far not discussed since the walkout started are: 1. A fully company paid health pian, 2. A 15-cent hourly rate increase across the board. 3. Eight paid statutory holidays instead of six. Contained in & union-estimated 17.7 cent hourly package offer, GM agreed to pay half the Gost of the health plan, a 5-cent annual im- provement factor for each year of a three-year contract, and seven paid statutory holidays, instead of SIX. he didn't come.' She tried to telephone for help put could not raise the operator. Then she fainted. Regaining consciousness the next morning, she staggered 200 yards to a neighbor, Mrs. Gwen Dunn, for help. Mrs. Dunn ran to the Mul- lins' farm and found the §9-year- old farmer's body, badly mutilated, lying in the pig-pen. Much Alcohol Shrinks Brain | . SAN FRANCISCO {AP)--X-ray | evidence that severe -alcoholism can cause shrinkage of the brain Daniel. I called three times, pati .|he "had doubled production On Gobblers The cost of Christmas dinner in; Quebec breeders report produe many Oshawa homes will be high- er this year because a strong de-| mand has forced up prices. | Local turkey producers say that although they have increased their stocks this year, the demand has been higher, despite the strike and restricted financial conditions. R. Litz of Oshawa, one of the largest turkey producers in the district, said today that althouch S year, he had insufficient birds to meet demand. : "Prices are up on last year by quite a bit. he general price range is about 12 cents over last year's figures, "Orders are coming in faster than are short for they aré asking me| [is reported by a U.S, Navy med- ical researcher. holic retired veterans yielded the| information, said the researcher, Dr. S. A. Sillicorn, 'of the us| | Naval Hospital, San Diego. | Dr Sillicorn x-rayed the stu-| | dents while acting as an instructor lin neurology at the University of| | California medical school. He re-| | ported in the journal, Neurology. The six veterans all had symp-|sons for the price boost--increased|boarded a nearby bus. Films of the brains of six alco (C8 tion down. Ly inore than six per cent this year to 895,759 turkeys. Biggest demand in most centres is for small birds of 10 to 1S pounds and these are scarce. The lighter birds have been specially developed to meet the needs -of small families and householders in flats and apartments where . ing facilties are limited. Store- keepers say plenty of large birfi- over 18 pounds--are on hand.. Some cities, such as Montreal, Toronto and Vancouver, report a large demand for birds supplied cleaned and quick-frozen in:vas cuum packages. - we expected. Big dealers elsewhere| 1-Legged Thug ; for supplies," he said. Fails In Holdup . Mr. Litz said that his own prices| were unchanged. They had stayed| at 66 cents a pound for many | A spokesman for the Townline] Turkey Ranch said that orders are coming in better than expected. The spokesman added that the| strike had caused some restriction| of orders, but demand had been suf-| ficient to force up prices of better | quality birds. ! Retailers say there are two rea- HAMILTON (CP) -- A bank robber with an artificial walked into the Bank of Monts on James street north before . ing time Thursday and said™te teller Dianne Laking: "This is: 5.) {holdup, can we do it quietly?" As he talked to the teller an accountant rang the bank alarm, Just before police arrived the man walked out empty handed and Police fol foms of severe damage to the cere-{demand and decreased supply. The(lowed and arrested him, The man The tompany offer was rejected | bellum, the part of the brain below|gobbler's popularity as Chrisimasiwas unarmed. by the union a few hours before the | and back of the cerebrum or think-/fare has jumped 200 per cent since, strike was called. ing apparatus. the Second World War. Forest Barnes, 35, was charg with attempted robbery. ' 'UNITED NATIONS, N.Y, (AP)-- Egyptian reprisal threats lent new urgency today to United Nations Security Council debate on Syria's charge of Israeli aggression. As the 11 members of the Secur- ity Council gathered to take up the Syrian protest this afternoon they had before them a letter from Egyptian Premier Gamal Abdel Nasser asserting that the Israeli attack was 'positively considered as an aggression against Egypt" also. Nasser pointed out that Egypt and Syria had concluded a mutual defence pact in October. The council meeting was called to consider Syria's profest against a raid on her posts east of the Sea of Galilee Sunday night. Conflict ing reports have put the death toll as high as 59 in the action. Nasser's letter was addressed to Secretary-General Dag Hammar- skjold, with the request that it be relayed to the council. It said Egypt must meet force with force and is "about to deal with the situation herself" with her land, air and naval forces, SYRIAN DEMAND Ahmed Shukairy, chairman of Assembly, fold correspondents he] would ask the council for "meas- ures which- have not been asked before." 'That could mean a pro- posal that the council request UN members to cut diplomatic, eco-| nomic and communication ties with Israel or even to use military force. Israeli Ambassador Abba Eban was prepared to reply that the attack was necessary to silence Syrian guns which had been har- assing Israeli police launches and fishing boats. Israeli * President Izhak Ben-Zvi| : Egypt Threatens War On 'Aggressions the Arab countries with seeking the "annihflation of Israel" and said the Syrian firing on the Galilee boats was part of such-a campaign, . The oduncil is =zpected to heme both sides, then adjourn until fiext week while members ponder pos- , sible action. In-the past the cotine cil has never gone farther than a censure of one side or the other and a request that both sides work with the chief UN truce supervisor --Canadian Maj.-Gen. E. L. "M. Burns--to prevent further incl 'syria's delegation to the Genmeralin Jerusalem Thursday charged'dents. on pe i Seo

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