Ld w | Germany And Japan Guilty Of Unfair Trade Practice British Leader in Egypt THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE. OSHAWA Combining The Oshawa Times and Whiidy Gazeste and Chronicle WHITBY VOL. 11--No. 13 OSHAWA-WHITBY, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 16, 1952 PAGE NINE Britain Worried As Former Enemies Noted For Firm Decisions Ismailia, Egypt (Reuters)--Lt.-|colonel. He won a Distinguished Cut Into Business By EDWIN S. JOHNSON -Canadian Press Staff Writer London (CP) -- A relentless drive by Japan and Wes Germany to regain their pre-war grip on world markets is causing grave concern in Britain. While Britain is bogged down by expanding peacetime rearmament, her erstwhile foes, rapidly recovering from aereat, are being accused of waging an indiscriminate cut-price war for export trade. Already West Germany has cashed in on the current dispute * between Britain and Egypt.: Recently German representatives | signed contracts worth more than | million, including construcsion | bridge over the Nile and a| power station at Cairo. | To meet new orders Germany has not only stepped up her own steel production but has drastically reduced her shipments of ore and scrap, urgently needed by Britain. In 1950 Britain bought about two million tons from Germany. This year she may be cut to 250,000 tons. Charges of unfair business meth- ods have also been-aired in the press. As an example of what is reported to be going on in the Middle and Far East, Lancashire textile manufacturers are con- cerned over wthe large - scale increase in the import of Japanese- made cotton fabrics into" British possessions in Africa, Singapore, Hong Kong and other centres. In some areas the Japanese are] reported to be offering deliveries | at a price 40 per cent below that of other countries. Furthermore, Japanese export- ers have been accused of attempt- ing to burrow into established mar- kets by offering at drastically- reduced prices, products claimed to be infringements of British | trade marks and design. Without the burdens of heavy arms outlays, British spokesmen explain, taxation in Japan and Western Germany is much lighter, permitting them to sell cheaper, and goods can be delivered quickly. Too Much Help Not Helpful In Homework Toronto (CP) -- Z. 8. Phimister, | superintendent of Toronto public | schools, said last night that par-| ents should not help their children | too much with homework. Teac- | hers were trained to do the job. Not all children have the same ability, he told a home and school association. "The parents say to the children, 'why don't you do as | well as your cousin?' It's the same | as asking me why I don't do as well as Einstein." J Plant Medicals Start This Fall Kitchener (CP) -- A pilot plant program designed to encourage regular medical inspection in small industries in Ontario is scheduled to start here next September. Ontario department of health and local authorities hope the plan will run for two years -- at a cost of about $150,000 a year -- but federal funds so far have been granted for one 'year only. Some 10,000 employes in 50 industries will be checked. i It is hoped that industry will take over the plan when the trial period is ended. Ontario Spotlight 'HOSPITAL SEES DEFICIT Brantford (CP) -- G. T. Baskett, office manager of the Brantford General Hospital, yesterday said the hospital board could expect a deficit of $62,700 over the 1951 budget. He expected the total def- icit to reach $169,826, of which $107,100 has been budgeted for. A $70,000 increase in wages and a $135,864 cost-of-living bonus were said to be largely responsible for the defieit. +* + L HAS MOST TRAVELLERS Toronto (CP) -- A. H. Mun- day, Bahamas development board official, names Ontario as the "most travel-conscious" area in Canada and, per capita, North America. He said a pass- port is issued for every 145 per- sons in Ontario as compared to one for every 225 Canadians. In United States the ratio is one in every 552 persons. + + + INJURED BY GLASS Toronto (CP) -- Leopold Vailla, 42, last night suffered head cuts, a broken leg and shoulder injuries when 40 sheets of glass fell on him while he was working at a glass company in suburban = Scarboro township. His condition in hospital was reported as fair. Says Ottawa 'Hinders Food | Processing Quebec (CP) -- The federal gov- ernment is hindering the expansion of the food processing industry, E. M. Smart of Collingwood, Ont., presidént of the Canadian Food | Processors Association, said today. In a speech prepared for delivery at' the 'association's fifth annual convention here, he said: "We sometimes think that the attitude of our federal government is not conducive to the expansion of the food processing industry. This is difficult to understand, for our climate is such that year-round productivity is impossible. Due to our winters it is necessary to import large quantities of fruits and vegetables. "If our industry could expand in such a way that a larger crop could be grown and processed we might quite easily effect a saving for our country's dollar revenues." WARM WALKING The early Egyptians wore san- dals with thick leather soles lo protect their feet from the hot desert sands. oy British Guns Guard Suez Canal Shipping A view of Port Said harbor, showing some of the shipping that passed through the Suez canal and was handled and berthed by the British navy after civilian employees of the canal quit under Egyptian intimida- tion. Since the middle of October, the Royal Navy handled some 1,500 merchant ships in the canal. --~Central Press Canadian. US. AID CUTS SHAKE GREEKS Athens (Reuters) -- The big cut in American aid to Greece, an- nounced just before the new year, has deeply shaken the man-in-the- street here. He sees the longed-for improve- DEATH ACCIDENTAL Sault Ste. Marie (CP) | carbon monoxide poisoning of Wil-| | liam Caleb Bennett, 39 - year - old | war veteran found asphyxiated in| an airtight garage Dec. 7 near his | home. Police testified that the | ment in living conditions receding again this year into a new period of sullen austerity and privation. He realizes now, for the first time, that although $2 billion in foreign aid has been absorbed by this country since 1945 -- either because of the Communist rebel- lion or other reasons -- Greece is still 'far from having recovered from her war wounds. American aid was slashed to $1582 million from an expected $250 mil- on. As a result, the Si sappbinted Greek government is being forced to revise completely the country's economic program. In turn, the Greek people face a lower standard of living and a higher cost of.living -- more in- flation, more taxes, more unem- ployment. erally complain that the substan- tial reduction was announced six months after the beginning of the current fiscal year. Credits, they already spent both for the armed forces and for the import of con- sumption goods -- on the basis of an anticipated higher allocation of dollars. The budget will also have to be revised. To balance a deficit due largely to increased military ex- penditure, an allocation of 1,200 billion drachmae ($80 million) was expected from the drachmae coun- terpart of the sale of consumer goods imported with American aid dollars. The gap will have to be filled by fresh taxation. The reconstruction program, in- cluding ambitious projects of elec- trification and land reclamation, will have to be slowed down. The establishment of two basic indus- tries, manufacturing of caustic soda and nitrogen fertilizers, will have to be abandoned. stress, have been fixed -- and some | arage doors were latched from |the inside. Cracks had een |chinked with empty potato sa ks. | WATCH FOR STOLEN MEAT | | Toronto (CP) -- Thieves yester-| | day stole a truck loaded with $1000 | {worth of beef, unloaded the cargo |ana abandoned the truck' near %he | | waterfront. Police now dre watch- | {ing butcher shops for any sudden ! |increase iM their stocks of beef. | btesee---- 1 FREED OF SERIOUS CHARGE | Goderich (CP) -- A supreme' |cotirt jury here, last night acquit-| |ted Robert Benson Fowler, 25, of | Blyth, of rape. The alleged offence | {presbytery of the United Church | | of Canada, said yesterday that ugly | land caricatured drawings of Bibli- | | cal peoples in some religious com- | ics cannot help but prejudice young | persons against Jews. He was dis-| the | Church news- be added to United ! supplement | Observer, pager. TOO DIFFICULT FOR JURY Toronto (CP) --Mr. Justice G. A. | Gale yesterday dismissed the assize court jury which for two {days has been trying the action | brought by Josephat Neporany of | Toronto against Dr. Peter Kir of | Windsor for damages for aliena- |tion of his wife's aifections. Mr. | Justice Gale will continue the trial | alone because of the difficult princ- |iples of law involved. | TAX COLLECTIONS RECORD Stouffville, Ont. (CP) Tax collector K. R. Davis said yester- day that all but $111.48 of $47,000 on the 1951 tax roll has been col- lected. "I think that is a record for any municipality in the prov- ince," he said. ROBBED OF MEDICINE MONEY Owen Sound (CP) -- On his way | $ News In Brief- from Hanover to Durham to buy An | medicine inquest jury last night returned a |Grant Kingston, 16, was robbed of verdict of accidental death in 'the |$1.50 yesterday by three men from | or his sick mother, whom he tried to hitch a ride. | Provincial police failed to capture | the culprits. | WANT WOMEN REPRESENTED | Toronto (CP) -- The local coun-| cil of women yesterday urged: revision of labor laws to prevent public utility workers from strik- ing. The resolution said that when | conciliation fails all subjects under | dispute should be submitted to an arbitration board composed of rep- resentatives of labor, management and . non - unionized citizens, at least one of whom shall be a woman," FREED ON TECHNICALITY Toronto (CP) -- Bruce Leonard Musson of Windsor, Ont., yester- day was ordered freed from prison where he now is serving a one- vear sentence for contributing to the delinquency of a juvenile, He | was convicted Oct. 18. The Ontario attorney - general's department, in checking Musson's written appeal, found that the judge who convicted Greek government quarters gen- | cussing a suggestion that a colored | him had no jurisdiction to try the case, = VALUE COL AT $1 MONTH Toronto (CP) -- Members of the academic and administrative staff of the University of Toronto yester- day received a letter from presi- dent Sidney Smith informing them of a cost - of - living bonus amount- ing to $1 a month for every one- point increase in the cost-of-living index. They also will receive a lump sum of $85 as a retroactive borius to July 1, 1951. CAR GOES THROUGH LAKE ICE Sutton (CP)--Three men escaped drowning last night when they jumped from their auto as it plunged through thin ice a. mile from shore on Lake Simcoe. Thomas Taylor, Bud Charpentier and Charles Brooks were driving out to a fishing hut when water on top of the ice stalled the engine. The men scrambled to safety as the ice cracked open and the auto] plunged into the lake. splendid Aroma of a § reat coffee Chase & Sanborn All the flavor Jour cup car Let fim me down tothe ® He'll joyfully "follow his nose" down to breakfast when the splendid, tantaliz- ing aroma of Chase & Sanborn Coffee is wafted abovestairs. Blended, since the early sailing-ship- days, from the world's choice aromatic coffees--Chase& Sanborn has been a great hold! a coffee for nearly a hundred years. So richly fragrant, so deeply satisfying that mil- lions have turned to it in sure preference "to every other coffee. Let its heartening aroma waken you to new breakfast delight. Come downstairs every morning to a great coffee! t Court Bans Football Donnybrook Glasgow (Reuters) -- One of Scotland's great soort institutions-- the annual New Year's Day soccer match between Glasgow Celtic and Glasgow Rangers -- was banned today. Each year, when the two teams meet in Ibrox Park or Hampden Park, two of the world's largest stadia, the enthusiasm 'of their supporters. leads to fist fights, bottle-throwing and often rioting. At this year's game there were 12 arrests, . Today Glasgow magistrates and soccer officials decided that in the interests of safety the two teams will never meet again on New Year's Day. Gen. Sir George Erskine, Britain's "strong man" in the Svez Canal zone, is a tall. burly soldier who likes to describe himself as a "very normal person." Faced with the Egyptian crisis towards the end of his three-year term as General Officer Command- ing British troops im Egypt, he has made quick, firm decisions, !when clashes occurred between the 100 - mile zone. To his men the 52 - general is known as even - tempered man acknowledge servic 3 him but difficult to fool: Outside his work, which he says is his main interest, he is devoted to his family. Even when busiest, he likes to spend some time each day alone with his wife and their six - year - old daughter, Polly. He talks with pride of his two sons, training in Britain, Erskine, commissioned in time to see service in the First World War was by 1939 a lieutenant- year - old 4 © patient, quick to {Egyptians and British troops in! rendered | !Service Order at the battle of EI | Alamein and was mentioned four times. in dispatches. In Africa he served for a time as chief-of-staff to Gen. Sir Bernard Montgomery. After the capture of Tripoli, he took command of the 7th Armored division and landed with them at {Salerno and on the Normandy beaches on D-day. The general plays golf and tennis and shoots well." He also likes to read, especially biography but re- cently has had little time for re- laxation. Cocktail parties are one thing |he dislikes. Although he sometimes {has to attend for diplomatic rea- sonsy he never gives one himself, preferring a dinner party with some wine and 'good plain food." Erskine recognizes the solution in the canal zone must be political. He normally would have left the canal zone at the" end of 1951 to take over the northern ctmmand in England. But he now is stay- ing on until spring. Low-cut we products, all sold on EPSOM SALTS MINERAL OL TOILET TISSUE 65 'FIIs ory NEW.. BETTER WAY J T0 SHAVE! Way Shove Ly LIMITED TIME ONLY SPECIALS COMBS -- BOBBY, POCKET or CURL, REG. 10c--8¢c, 2 for 15¢ POWDER PUFFS VELOUR, REG. 10c--8¢, 2 for |I5¢ Richard SPECIALS ON ek-end prices bring a money COCORNUT OIL SHAMPOO HOT WATER BOTTLE ooo [DASAL PAIN TABLETS 16 & 40 oz., reg: Re PRIENDLY PER » SPECIAL VALUES & REMINDERS FOR THIS WEEK-END BRANDS n these you extra savings © back guarantee. 1.D.A. & 8 oz. 33c & 49¢ 4 Reg. npependabl guarantee--Re SET n__.4 year Reg. 2.39 19 als-- 25¢ iam ---5 groin = 300's, reg. 89c amin one poun d--reg. a ---- y dg ---- -- Heavy QM9EE "3 1.10 2 for 23¢, olls 0 shee 7c tr g. 2 for 27c, 39: 199 IER rh 69: 44c, 87 4 ior 45¢ SONAL SERVICE y PACQUINS HAND CREAM Get Acquainted Offer, $1.00 value 5¢ for 25¢ Jar-Free With Each 75¢c Jar Pecquins c lp ly in the building resistance to col mended products supplyin, Ayerst Alphomettes Ayerst 10-D Cod Liver oil 5 Ayerst Beminal Tablets Frosst's Neo-Chemical Food--Fluid i avi gis Halibut Liver Oil PIII 00's & 500%, reg. $1.29 & $4.79 I.D.A. Cod Liver 3 I.D.A. Cod Liver g needed Oil Capsules, 100's ds and other ills. Oil, B.P, Standerd, 16 oz, best of health this winter by ; | Many well recom- vitamins are listed here, $1.00, $1.85, $3.50, $15.00 : $1.00, $2.23 $1.50, $3.75, $16.75 1.55, £3.35, $5.9 es $2.95, 36.30 99¢, $3.99 Horner's Intantol $1.00, $3.25 Kepler's Malt & C.L. coo. $1.00, $1.75 Mead's Oleum Percomorph One-A-Day A & D - 95¢, $3.99 A pl CREME SHAMPOO New liquid creme shampoo enriched [Ii with egg, 'gives hair | egg creme [ radiance and soft- sh 0 | >Nampoy nw | 5 i po GV | | ness. 1.25 , Tablets ... | $1.35, $2.50 arke Davis Abdol with" itamin C $2.70, $4.95, $11.50 Scott's Emulsion 73¢, $1.33 Squib 10-D Cod Liver Mees ia) 91.00, $2.28 prepa I Ib. 2 |b. reg. | 4 Ib. $1.25 Waterbury's € Toorry? Compound, . $1.28 2.00 Children like it~--and it" Extract of Malt & C tritious reg. 73c reg. 2.09, s good for them! IDAMALT od Liver Oil easant, nu- vitamin ration. jar 53c jar 19 | 89¢ iar 1.59. 1.D.A. Camphorated 3 ounce, Pinex Cough Lantigen "B" Dissolved Oral Vac Bronchida Cough Syrup, Vicks VanoRub 19¢ 1.D.A. Cold Toblets, reg. 25¢ NOXZEMA for hands 10-0Z. JAR nn 1 25 For a Limited Time lodized Throat Gargle or Tablets, reg. 3% . .- oil, I.LD A. Brand, Dr. Chase's Antihi Groves Bromo-Quinine Prepared Pinex .. Thermogene Me Idophedrin Aqueous Nose Drops .. 8 oz. bottle . . 33¢ ss 59¢ 39¢, 69%¢ rive "revs. S0¢c, 850 . 89¢, $1.19 i san ese regularly 40c ... oe stamine Compound ... Tablets Syrup Compound dicated Wool ... ©. $6.00 cine 60¢ S3¢c; Vicks Va-Tro-Nol Ox | : ee ill [rrr 2EMA n Cream, DeVilbiss Vaporizers dt PATRICIA BATH SOAP LANOLIN, PINE OINTMENT Zo Soothes tired 3 S00 cy : Cr 50¢ S MEDICATED SOA MANGE MEDICINE 75: 51.25 | hampoo with CI BOA 31 "POWELLS DRUG STORE 35 SIMCOE ST. N. We Deliver DIAL 5-4734 KARN'S DRUG STORE 28 KING ST. E. (Next to Post Office) Prompt Delivery (Next to Loblows) DIAL 3-462} -- MITCHELL'S 'DRUG STORE 9 SIMCOE ST. N. DIAL 3-3431 5 a 3