Ontario Community Newspapers

Flesherton Advance, 31 Jul 1946, p. 6

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HOUSE OF THE BIG WIND Latest development in scientific aviation research is this 12-foot low turbulence pressure wind tunnel, dedicated recently at Moffett Field, Calif. The tunnel is used for studying problems of flight at speeds of 790 m.p.h. or more. It was built by the National Ad- visory Committee for Aeronautics. Last of U.S. POWS 1,420 (Jcrnian prisoners of war wore to sail for Hiirope last week. After their departure only 200 German prisoners of the :)7C,734 wlio were once witliin the borders of tlie United Stales, will remain in that country. The 20u, scattered in hospitals and disciplinary barracks . throughout the country, are too sick to travel, or have been con- victed for murder of fellow prisoners, robbery, destruction of American property and other crimes. They will be sent to Eu- rope as they recover or complete their prison sentences. British Army H.Q. Wrecked A Palestine police communique said at least 50 persons were believed killed and 60 wounded in the palatial King David Hotel, Jerusalem, headquarters of the British Army and secretariat of the Palestine government, when "terrorists" ex- ploded a bomb there. Five assassins were said by eye- witnesses* to have planted the ex- plosive after' shooting at a British officer, storming the hotel grounds and herding its employees against the walls. The blast marked the latest phase in the effort to bring peace between Arab and Jew in the Holy Land. I£"en as the bomb explod- ed, negotiations in London were proceeding between Jewish and British officials. Prime Minister Attlee said: "His Majesty's Government has stated and stated again that they will not be diverted by acts of violence in their search for a just and final solution of this problem." Black Marketeers Lose A nation-wide survey in the United States indicated that con- sumers were showing increased re- sistance to price rises in many cities. Operators of black- markets in meat products were estimated to have lost $10,000,000 since July, because they tried to compete with the legitimate packing plants for the control of the meat indus- try in free trading. Some black marketeers sold beef at more than $20 a hundred pounds lower than the prices they charged last month. '''o Scrap Normandie Fate of the once-proud French liner Normandie, rusting at a Brooklyn pier, was up to President Truman. The Maritime Commission an- nounced last week that if the President approves, tlie 83,000-ton luxury liner will be sold for scrap. The United States seized the Normandie in 1940 when German panzer divisions overran France. Plans to convert the ship into a military transport were abandoned when it caught fire and capsized. The United States recently agreed to pay France .$13,500,000 for the liner's loss. Hevolution in Bolivia Revolutionary leaders in Bolivia promised inunediate restoration of civil liberties after seizing the Gov- ernment in a bloody four-day up- rising climaxed by the assassma- tion of President Gualbcrto Villar- roel. Street fighting, in which ap- proximately 2,000 persons were reported killed or wounded, abated' after the revolutionists paraded through La Paz with the battered, semi-nude body of the President draped over an army tank. Villarroel seized control of the country in a military coup in 1943. BIRDMAN Style note for flyers is the new pressure suit worn by Army Air Forces air crew member above It will enable airmen to live while flying as high as 62,000 feet Pre- viously, flying at this altitude would have meant instantaneous death. STEEL STILL BEING PRODUCED Stcd was still being manufactured, according to the above picture, some time after the strike in the basic steel industry was called with both sides apparently settling down to wait one another cut at the Steel Company of Canada at Hamilton. The picture shows workmen remaining at the Steel Company plant to carry on production being supplied with work clothes by the company. EXPLOSION KILLS NINE, INJURES SCORES Four buildings were demolished, nine persons Uled and more than 60 others injured when a gas ex- plosion rocked Onset, Mass. Many of the dead and injured were vacationers at the seaside resort. Ex- plosion was believed to have been touched off by a lighted match or a spark from a refrigerator. TROUBLE IN TRIESTE Ci\'il police of the Allied Military Government arrest a demon- strator for participating in street fighting during recent Italian- Yugoslav riot. Several were killed in blasts from land mines which cut Trieste-Udine railway. YOU CANT TAKE IT WITH YOU An official dressing-down, and maybe a ticket, is the fate of Nelson Carman, right above, 22-ycar-old former Seabee who hit a power line pole near Baldwin, L. I., with his converted 'recon" car, broke it off and carried it 390 feet before he could stop. No one was injured in the accident. PALACE READIED FOR WORLD PARLEY By Rosette Hargrove The bedroom in the Luxembourg Palace at Pari.s, where Marie de Mcdicis once swapped palace chit- chat with her husband, Henry IV of France, has become the informa- tion center for the World Peace Conference that starts July 29. Marie certainly never expected her 17th century love nest to be a hangout for the reporters of the world; but French authorities are making every effort to see that both reporters and the delegates have everything for their comfort. The Luxembourg Palace lacks the imposing majesty of nearby Versailles, where the last peace treaties were made, but it ranks second among France's royal abodes. In the elaborate chapel of Luxembourt. Palace, clerks unpack rec- ords arriving for the World Peac* Conferenci Built for Marie on her marriage to Henry IV some 330 years ago, it is almost pure Florentine in de- sign. Its towering windows open onto the beautiful palace gardens. Ceilings are high and panelings are all hand carved. The I'cace Conference will be held in that section of the building which has been used by the French Senate for its sessions. The Hall lias :i si'arii'K capacity of 314 plus a double-tiered balcony which can aci oiiiiuiiilale anotiier 30(1. Accom- modations for 150 working press will be reserved here. In a room immediately below the Conference Hall, 4C telcplione booths plus teleprinters have been installed for newsmen. The news- room has been wired for sound so that reporters can sit at their desks and follow all debates. A moderil' recorchng studio has been built on the first floor. Right off the newsroom tlie thoughtful French Foreign Office has installed a bar. .'\nothcr bar and tearoDiu was built on the first floor for delegates and their guests. In one wing, five large rooms over- looking the gardens are being trans- formed into a restaurant and kit- chens. I.inich and dinner here will cost a little more tlian a dollar, cheap in l-'raiice today. No Elevators Delegates and reporters are go- ing to have to climb the grand or- namental staircase to the confer- ence chamber. The building has no elevators. But once they get there, they should be comfortable. Cush- ions for their chairs have been up- holstered in leather on one side to make iheiii cooler in the summer Should the conference extend over into winter, all the delegates will have to do is turn the cushions over; the other side is upholstered in red velvet for cold weather. Acoustics in the conference hall arc excellent, and the French have installed a system of indirect light- ing that automatically increases in brilliancy as daylight outside begins to fade. During the war, German Field Marshall Speerle, commanding the Western Approaches of France, es- tablished his headquarters at Lux- einliinirg, and stayed there until General Jacques Leclerc's tanks ran him out. WIN APPROVAL by serv- ing delicious Maxwell House . . . the coffee that is "Radiant-Roasted", This special process cap- tures every atom of good* iiess in the supremely fine Maxwell House blend. Vnii Will l<':n|07 srtiytntt At The St. Regis Hotel lOUOIV'IO S l';>t'r> lliiiim nllli llnlh <hM%%pi iiiMi l>leph»ii« « Slndr. |S-.>..'ill up - Doiihlr. s;i Ml HP % 4;i,oil l.'niifl IMiilna nnil Itiinc- llIK IVlKtlll> ^lirrhHtirii^ nf ('nrttOD Irl. II A *\M HOTEL METROPOLE All Beautifully Furnished With Running Water Rates : $1.50 up NIAGARA FALLS OPPOSITE C.N.R. STATION At Quality 1 1' t I - ^ f 4 r

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