‘The Wester. ) ws. Weather Bureau Forecast Details page two _ od “J14th YEAR onvicted of Workers Battle Great La es After Storm . PARIS (INS)—Thirty four per- East Digging Out Start Clearing. Clogged Roads Paris. Two Italian passengers, a A < and woman, survived the crash but’ Drifts Hit New York; both were in serious condition. Snow Belt Stretches Across 3 States the crash. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | houses, Marcel Cramotsi, was re- | ported by police to have died to- Workers labored in 2 day 05 2 result of the crash. giant snow removal job in Aca the! Goud were (toro) Armee: the storm-swept areas in ican fashion experts Elizabeth region today. New York. squalls hampered the work en in Turin, Italy, Weste N York. Wednesday. in. estern ew or The new four engined DC6B mak-! r trouble in flight, just after taking ‘were reported in most o po in the off from Orly airport where it areas of the storm belt. Army tani:s, bulldozers and passengers on its way from rome snow plows were -pressed into The plane, containing 25< ‘service in removing~ the tons of 5¢28ers and a crew of 10. exploded snow from highway ad “rest m the air and dived downward w eS sA sireetS in a huge sheet of flames. and restoring transportation and The airliner first grazed a tw business to normal. operatian, | story building, Then it puns The cold weather spread across | burning into a residenc i : t, whieh stretehed Spewing flames destroyed anoth- across the northeastern corner of : er smal] building nearby. The | Cube, the serthwestern section of sane was smashed almost beyond | Penosylvania and eastward inte . recognition. sod tS Towering columns of smoke and Train and bus service was not flame belched high above the vil-| operating on schedule in many lage in the early morning. dark. the city. Stalled cars made it impossible for snowplows to reach the curbs, “DOWNTOWN ERIE AT NIGHT — As night _ falls in Erie, Pa., this street (10th ‘street) shows the effect of a 24-inch snowfall which paralyzed ~ say cities. Thousands of cars re- b z ‘mained stranded on snow-clogged, % gasoline = fire. highways. Many communities: lwere isolated. In western New “* fire trucks rushed to the York, at least four deaths were) SCM. hate uo) Sent attributed to the storm, — = Sy ese the ae | The 33 bedies were ‘extricated DRIFTS TO 10 FEET | from the wrecked mass two and Drifts of 10 feet were reported! a half hours after the crash. in western New York, which was | The New York offices o hit by the storm which swept in Italian airline released an incom- off Lakes Erie and Ontario, A plete list of the passengers and \blizzard was reported moving crew members but was able to south toward the Mohawk .Valley iteday. Up to ® inches of snow jwas reported and temperatures in , |were below zero in some areas. Erie, Pa., one of the hardest | it cities with\33 inches of snow * liminary continued im state of emer- cans had been killed .| gemey. He said he was awaiting word Mayor Arthur Gardner: who-de-|from the next of kin of the Ameri-| ‘clared the emergency after the cans on disposition of the bodies |Thanksgiving Day storm, said he which were taken to an improvised | (There was’ none from “Michigan: in the list.) American Consul Jchn Wood went to Orly airport where he -reported that according to the pre- ‘Some 500 National Guard troops buildings. - joired in the cleanup operations yp, snow fell as the rescue <2 J im the lakeport city of 130.000. workers recovered bodies, U.S. --..| Opening two main Buffaio! and Italian consular officials Cleveland highways, Routes 5 and reaching the scene in bitter cold (20, was a job undertaken by high- minh pieces of clothing scat- way crews of Pennsylvania, Ohio tere about the ground and bits and New York. All motorists) of cloth on the trees nearby. ? ray Vielle Poste were destroyed by) the Eastern Great Lakes Green and Mildred Kador both of The wamen had received “gold! Biting cold and snow medals from the Italian fashions talion of British troops from the British-French expe- bast ditionary force in the Suez Canal Zone is set for Monday. stopped off to refuel and pick up, investigation, I3 Ameri-' ‘hoped to end it within 24 hours. chapel in one of the local council | PARKED ABOUT HERE — Near Springville, N. Y., deer hunters William J.-McLaughlih (left) and Wayne G. Foit, of Buffalo, dig into a snow- bank in search of their car, whack they parked were stopped from -crossing New before the big snow. . York into Pennsylvania. FOOD BY HELICOPTER A ri n s One of the towns isolated, We merica Gal ‘Springfield, Pa., got food sapces and Eisenhower idropped from two helicopters flown from Pittsburgh. Mere drops Please Pri ince re. jwere planned today if roads NEW YORK ( — Morocco's mained unopened into the village’ of 1900 about 30 miles west of Cyown Prince Moulay Hassan flew into town _ today, ‘Erie. N.Y., a village of chance to see President Eisenhow- t I * Springville, * * | ‘falo, also was snowbound. fin American women, hoping for a | '4,000 some 30 miles south of Buf-| ler, and pleased by what he sees. Plane Crash Kills 34 on Outskirts of Paris At one point, a white bride’s'can conductor Arturo Toscanini in isons, including 13 Americans and dress trimmed with orange blos-'N Italian opera conductor Guido Can-|soms lay spread out atop a shrub. jtelli, were killed early today when) a New York bound Italian airliner ‘among the bushes 200 yards from crashed and e&ploded outside the aircraft,’ One of the gurvivors was found) ope A body of a baby was pulled an frem the wreckage along with the 32 other victims.~ Conductor Cantelli, one of the Three homes in the village of Pa- dead, was on his way to see Ameri- New York. Cantelli was the con-! ductor at Milan's famed La Scala rThe plane which mage its maid- en voyage last Nov. 5, was cap- tained by Attilio Vazzler, known to American aviators as a seasoned pilot. Several members of the same families were lost. An tmhabliant of ene of the Token Gesture Toward U.N. j Battalion of British Troops Sherry’s Mother fo Be Sentenced for Burning Brothers, Sisters Back 7-Year-Old’s Testimony of Maltreatment By PETE LOCHBILER A Circuit Court jury, 11 of them parents, took 40 /minutes yesterday to find ‘Ada Wyatt, 33-year-old mother of 12, guilty of child cruelty. Her husband, William, Set to Leave Canal Zone. was found innocent of PORT SAID, Egypt ®— The withdrawal of a bat- | This will be the token withdrawal promised by Britain the United Nations. The |However, only light flurries ing its sixth crossing ,developed in what it described as a gesture of good will toward UN, General Assembly has, :W.S. Tominsky =~ Heart Victim Press Report Faulty, Listed Brother Stanley as Stricken to leave Egyptian soil. | At the United Nations in New York, bekind-the-scene pressure 4called: for all British, | French and Isfaeli forces’ ithe same charge. Mrs. Wyatt. was convict- ed, mostly on her own children’s testimony, of tor- turing and cruelly punish- jing a daughter by her- previous marriage, Sherry } Wilkinson, 7. . Wyatt had been accused .as her collaborator. . The Keego Harbor couple im- passively heard the verdicts re- ‘mounted today to get Britain and turned by the 10-woman, two-man France to pinpoint a withdrawal jury after a five-day “trial. jot their armed forces from Egypt. It came as the U. N. General Assembly called a special week- = asion issue. The Assembly prepared to seal on a resolution by 21 Asian-African The eleventh heart attack victim nations; for an immediate pull out $1,000 bond. ‘ness as the craft's 5,000 gallons of the Michigan deer hunting sea- from Egypt by the two Western Judge George B. Hactrick, who end the‘ mother’s alleged acts “the work of a fiend,” will sen- dmagees on the thorny Suez ‘cane her -Dec. 3. Conviction can bring up to four years imprison- ment and $2,000 fine. Mrs. Wyatt remained free under Sherry, limping, and with a son Thursday was Waiter Stanley Powers and Israel. Many delegates efeft upper , lip and a maimed Tominsky, 62, of 1059 Premont St., 2PPeared uncertain how they would right hand, had testified: not his brother Staniey John Tom-) vote. France has reported that shent! insky of 431 Marion Ave., as The one-third of her forces have heen ‘Pontiac Press reported yesterday. i \brother and five friends. and hunting. Walter ae ploye of the A ‘Socket Co. nsky Was an em-' erican Forging and No Winner —— Contest Goes on to No. 25 —— $700 | After another week and 7,242 en- \tries for Pot-O-Gold puzzle 24, the. \fudges found no winner, so that ‘brings the total for puzzle No. 25 up to $700. If you haven't already done so, clip out the puzzle from Friday’ s| Press and see if you can find the e ANSWER FO. 32 POR MELEaSE BOVEMBRS 25 CR APTER winning answer, Just be sure to Walter Tominsky was hunting in| { the the Iron River area with his back te some degree on all Egyp- : He died Thursday in an Iron) River hospital five hours alter be- name all the Americans aboard. iné stricken eo his way back from [peat ont of Feet tian fronts. Neither gave details. GengMaj. Gen. EL. M. Burns, U. N. force Command-. ,er, scheduled a visit. to.Cyprus to-| day for talks. on the -withdrawal | plans, Burns will inspect the Port) Said area Sunday preparatory to! bringing in more U. N. troops. denied ~ _—_ asserting the Despite mounting - pressure at children lied : U. N. headquarters in New York, ‘Britain, France and Israel WeTe and - County Her mother broke her arm and leg; hurled a butcher knife at her |face, splitting the lip and loosen- ~ ling two front teeth; and held the ~’ Israel said ‘she has pulled ‘hand over the stove as punishment, SAT ON-HOT STOVE She said her mother sat ber on ‘the hot stove and that she had been itied to her bed. * Testimony by four other children backed up the girls story. The mother and Wyatt. flatly All of the children are in Oak- Children’s Home standing firmly on their’ position awaiting a courf: hearing on their that a complete withdrawal will be/ 'made only when’ wfiat they have “m.. ch custody. No date has been Set. arges resulted from the called a “competent” U.N. force aiccovery of 10 of the children takes over. All- Couiylemes: Are Revealed Today j unattended in their home last Aug. 23. Two older girls had run away and already were at the children’s ‘Home. | * * * The conviction came after three |hours of argumentation by Chief. Assistant Prosecutor George F. All-Oakland County Foot- Taylor and defense attorney Mil- ‘ball Team for 1956 is re- ‘vealed, in. today’s sports ‘section of The Pontiac Press. ‘Selected by coaches of the ‘ton R. Henry. Absent when the verdict was an- nounced, Henry had not indicated (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) county's high schools the) ‘Police Wonder iteay represent the best of the year’s outstanding ath- lletes. Turn to page 14 for ithe coaches’ choices. Young Men (?) Pay for Mailbox.Spree— PORT. HURON W—Because they tore out.24 rural mailboxes by the roots, four youths were out bright and early today digging 24 post holes along a 244 mile stretch a highway. They were under order by Jes: tice George Hart who sentenced them yesterday for a Thursday night mailbox spree. The youths are Charles Sarsfield, 17, of Avoca; Lavern Lisek, 18, of were fined $25 each. i t Just How Cold It Really Was Pontiac police wonder just ~how cold it was last night. They were stumped by the story Ezelle Moore, 32, of 546 ‘Bloomfield |Ave., told at St. Joséph- Mercy Hospital Clinic. Doctors had removed a bullet from Moore's left foot, Moore claimed he was trudging home with numb feet near mid- night on Franklin road, south of Nebraska avenue, when. he thought he heard g gun shot. Dismissing the - incident, he aokea ax 5 Deck aad 5 Pe ee his left Jeg gave way. Jeddo; Charles Beam, 19,.and Don-|. Fallen to the sidewalk, he ex- ald Smith, -21, both of Melvin. ‘amined his left ankle. There was All of the Port Huron area youths/a gun wound which } Moore claimed he had never felt. snowfall was reported to have) ** Ameri I a. measured from 4 to 48 inches in’, aocee au a Pao said. have it mead by Tuesday, other-| . depth ne eee ot ink aM wi Ht wll ot be counted Face! — =a COR, and de.” And you “might just as well’save. in near reat Lakes re- : ae . 2 : se ww, i. 4 | |gion during the night and in the aan piel that goterlag a Se -|Upper and Middle Mississippi ay Visi o plans to ask for a velope. The rules definitely~state | = |Valleys. The flurries were expect-|. oe that all entries must be on a post- 2 x | “led te moye into New England dur-| (Morocco Story on —_ 3%). eard,,.and all those_ mailed in en- . ) fing the . oy.