Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily Times-Gazette, 20 Mar 1952, p. 17

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German Rearmament Has Its Strongest In Red-Occupied Sectors Berlin (AP)--While West Ger- mans fret about rearmament for western defence, many East Ger- mans pray for it as the only hope of deliverance from the Soviet yoke. It is amply clear in Berlin that the Germans in the Soviet occupa- tion zone welcome any addition to western strength. It seems clear, too, that West Berlin also favors the arming of Germans in a European commun- ity of defence against the Rus- sians. West Berliners are isolated deep inside the Soviet zone and see the Russians in operation every day. This is part of a strange situa- tion in which Communists are win- ning Cold War battles in Western Germany--and losing them in their own Soviet-occupied east zone. The heaviest Communist propa- ganda fire is directed against the remilitarization of Germany and is coupled with the bait of German unity. Both appeals have a power- ful effect in Western Germany. But West Berliners and East Germans indicate they feel it will take power to meet power. If a vote could be taken tomorrow in the Soviet zone and West Berlin, they feel, the result would be an overwhelming "yes" to German remilitarization and a German contribution to western defence. DEAF EARS The Soviet propaganda campaign for German unity and against re- militarization falls on deaf ears here. "We know the sound by now," a West Berlin official said. West Berliners, almost to a man, feel that the Soviet promises of German unity are bunk. As they see it the only possibility of unity lies in free election of an all-Ger- man parliament, followed by a peace treaty with the wartime Allies. SINGAPORE 1S BUSY HIVE OF SMUGGLERS Singapore (AP) China and boom conditions Singapore have transformed this great trading centre into a teeming hud of two-way smuggling. Bigtime operators, who long have used loopholes to smuggle in opium for rich Chinese addicts, now use the. same loopholes to send out strategic war materials to munist countries. Advocates -- The United Nations' blockade of Communist | in| Com- | PERRY GAGERS OUTED FROM COSA FINAL MRS. C. PARKINSON Correspondent Port Perry -- The Port Perry Junior Boys came up with their lowest scoring effort of the season and this cost them the right to enter the junior "B'" COSSA finals held at Danforth Tech on Saturday. After scoring 145 points in their last three play-off games with St. Peter's and Port Hope, the Port Perry lads tallied but 28 against Trenton on Saturday with the re- sult that they dropped the contest 28-32. , Carrying a 7 point lead at quar- ter time, it decreased to 5 at the half when the tally read 20-15. Up until this time the locals had been playing fairly well as Owen had 7 points, Lawrence 5, Dobson and Warriner 3 each and Peel 2, The Trenton scoring was fairly well distributed between Wannamaker, Workman, Alexander and Gillings. But in the third and fourth quart- ers the Port lads fell off in their shooting while the Trenton quintet started hitting the hoop regularly. Possibly one of the important fac- tors in the poor showing of Port Perry during the last half of the game could be attributed to the roughing up given Warriner and Owen, and to a lesser extent Peel and Lawrence. Twice big Bud War- riner was helped off the flcor, while Jack Owen was crashed into the wall on a break. Trenton col- lected 19 fouls in a game which was called evenly but, on occasions rather loosely. Another factor which contributed to the Perryites down- fall was their inability to capitalize on foul shots with 7 of these being missed in the last half. While the Port lads still held a 2 point lead at the three-quarter mark Trenton tied it up and surged into a 4 point lead that Port Perry reduced to one. Then Trenton tal- lied two baskets and one foul shot to take 6 point lead. With seconds ticking off Owen sank a long one and cut the lead to 4 and just be- fore the final horn. Dobson stole the ball from the Trenton guards but his hasty lay-up missed. The final score was 32-28 for Trenton. Sparkling the Trenton successful surge were Workman, Wannamak- er, Alexander and Gillings. This brings a conclusion to the activities of*the Port Perry Junior | Boys squad which, won 15 out of 17 tilts this year, the two losses | being one to Whitby and ome to Trenton. For their efforts in win- ning the Lakeshore title the team BRITAIN MAKES PLASTIC PLANE WING A pioneer step toward an all-plastic aeroplane in this British-produced plastic delta-shaped wing which will be shown at the 1952 British Indus- tries Fair from May 5 to 16, Plastic aircraft promise to be much easier to build than present-day metal planes, and from 50 to 80 percent cheaper. The British expect the delta-shaped plastic plane to be airborne within two years. --Central Press Canadian. Milk Price Kept Low For Danes bottles of milk are sold annually and similar consumptive capacity is shown Danes elsewhere on a per capita basis. Everyone is milk con- scious. A poor receipt of milk at a dairy brings about at once a tracer to find out the cause and everyone on the farm wants to find out what causes the default because otherwise the consequences for themselves would not be good. Producers, technicians, industrial- IMMIGRANTS FROMHOLLAND RATED HIGH Montreal (CP)--Officials of the federal immigration service here have found that language prob- lems do not present insurmount- able difficulties to the newcomers to Canada. One prize example is a little | girl from the Netherlands who came three years ago without knowing a word of English. Two days after settling down in her new home, she started to school, and at the end of the school year was second in a class of 19 stu- dents. Two field placement officers, C.I Coutu and A. W. Gunn, believe the immigrants from Holland are 2ihong the best that come to Can- ada. A large proportion of the Dutch immigrants are farmers, and their placement in Canada is arranged before they leave Holland. Many have gone to farms in dairy dis- tricts of Quebec such as Hunting- don, or the Saint John river valley of New Brunswick, while others of course move on to Ontario and the west. Among the Dutch immigrants in Quebec, Coutu discovered many success stories. Typical is that of C. Lakx who in two years at Arundel built up a half-share in a hog farm which shows profits New Zealand Food Exports Increasing | Auckland, N.Z, (CP) -- Almost alone among countries producing food cf animal origin, New Zealand | (has steadily increased her export (surplus since the war and seems | likely to continue to do so. | { In' many countries the drop in export surplus is due to rising stan-! dards, but no great rise in food | consumption has occurred here. The immigration policy has been cau- tious and caused no sudden rise in demand for domestic foods. | Coupled with the steadiness orf local demand, there has been a] drive to increase production. More | land has been opened up and grass- | land farming techniques have en- | abled land to carry far more ani-4 mals than in the past. New Zealand expects to export | every month. He is married and has four children. While entry of European farm immigrants has temporarily been stopped because of the Saskatche- wan outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease, the flow is expected to be resumed before long. Canada and the Netherlands have already agreed on precautionary measures to ensure that Dutch immigrants do not bring the virus to Canada, and discussions are continuing with other European governments. | the same time she has built THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Thursday, March 20, 1952 17 400,000 tons cf meat to the United! Kingdom this season, more than Argentina and Australia combined. At the same time she is actively seeking new export markets in North America and other countries. The position is not so marked in dairy produce, Denmark again be- ing a competitor with New Zealand as Britain's largest supplier. How- ever, this country's export surplus is steadily rising, reaching a rec- ord 303,400 tons last year. New Zealand has also been ex- panding her dairy prcduce markets in other countries and has sent butter or cheese to Eire, Canada, the United States, Italy, Germany and Belgium. For years New Zealand sold the bulk of her food surplus to Britain at prices well below world parity. In spite of this and high freight rates on food from New Zealand as Ottawa Pastor Takes Service 'At Hampton M. HORN Correspondent |. Hampton -- Rev. Dr. D. N. Co- burn, Ottawa, was a weekend guest at the home of his daughter, Mrs G. Empey, at the parsonage, and occupied the pulpit, at the Sunday morning church service. He took as his theme a portion of the Lord's Prayer, which was a practical message. The male choir led in the music of the service with Mrs. J. War: rack acompaning. A number of adults were received into member- ship in our church. compared with nearer , countries, the Dominion has been able to pay | farmers enough to create an in- centive to increase production. At] up | hig reserves in the stabilization or | "guaranteed price" funds to enable | payments to farmers to be main- | tained at a reasonable level. These funds are becoming so large as to be a serious embarrassment and | attention is being given to their utilization. | Big price increases in the last few years have brought payments to] New Zealand for her food exports nearer world parity. | | BIG EXPORTER Ceylon, known as the "tea garden | of the world." exports annually Sympathy is extended to Mrs. death of her brother Albert G. Avery of Benito, Man. Congratulations to Mr. and Bruce Yeo, Orono, formerly of Hampton, on the gift of a baby daughter. | about 300,000,000 pounds of tea. | [ae There are four million people and 1,586,000 dairy cows in Den- mark (total livestock figure usually stands around three million.) The cow and her milk are a corner- stone in the economic life of Een mark, but it was not always thus and it would not have been so but for the way in which all sections determined that their milk would be the best, the cows the greatest producers, and the consumers well served including foreign markets, writes Wellington Jeffers, financial editor of The Toronto Globe and Mail. RETAIL PRICE CUT Toronto consumers may well be envious when they read that since 1937 the retail price of milk in Copenhagen has been reduced from the "producer price plus 100 per- cent'"' to "the producer price plus 50 percent." Cost of processing and distribution have been halved, and the credit for it is given to the| ists and scientists, trade associa- tions and public bodies are all in on it. If Ontario wants to make as good or a better success, producers and consumer and distributors mignt find a meeting ground in this preg- nant sentence: "If an-industry is to prosper it is essential that there should be an economic basis for profitable production and market- ing." That was what made Danes first switch over from exporting corn to feeding it and exporting butter and bacon, but it also needed among the people the ability to co-operate. To develop cattle breed- ing there was great reliance on cattle shows, milk recording so- cieties, herd books, cattle breeding societies, herd competitions, pro- geny tests, bull testing stations as well as general research and advisory services. Great Bear Lake covers an area Quantities of tin, rubber, tires, wij shortly be presented with auto parts, tinplate, carbon black crests and, later it is hoped, jack- and other war necessities are flow- | ets may be obtained. ing out of the colony despite the Port Perry Jrs. G F Pts. official ban. | British authorities admit cargoes are getting past customs. One customs spokesman said: "Contraband, opium, gold, liquor | and tobacco coming in is small compared to the volume of pro- hibiters goods going out." | "Strategic materials are the money-making exports of smug-| glers," he said, and named Red China and Indo-China as the main "importing countries." | BIG MONEY | Customs. men have made large seizures of strategic materials banned by Britain but they admit the biggest barrier to cleaning up the rings is reluctance of minor smugglers" to reveal identities of their bosses. "There is big mongy involved, and | em eee where big money is concerned little | PAPAL MESSAGE talking is done," a spokesman said.| Oshawa, Ont. (CP) -- Rev Paul "Stooges arrested have sufficient Dwyer, who had a special audience inducement to keep their mouths With Pope Pius in Rome recently, shut. And they do." | said the Pontiff is keenly interest- Side by side with smuggling of ed in Canada and sent his bless- strategic goods, illicit supplies of ings and felicitations to all Cana- opium are pouring into the colony. |dians. His Holiness expressed the Ships of all countries which con- hope that Canadians would never verge on this port bring the sup- Cease to pray for peace. plies. Agents on board dump water- RE IT tight packages of the drug over- NO RETURN TRIP board. Small sampans pick up the| Canso, N.S. (CP) -- Most. of the crew that brought a new trawler Owen Dobson Drake Lawrence Warriner Fairman Hadden Redman COOOHMHMIONWM OOO HWO HW ey IRooowuoui Trenton Jrs G F 0 Wannamaker Workman Baker Hennessey Alexander Burleigh Brown Gillings Totals NOOO NOOSOOSOO -- Baocowoobasce cargoes. .| of flats by roundsmen from three complete centralization and ration-| > ; i of 12,200 square miles, while Great $jizeiion started by the Milk A ava Lake is 11,170 square miles. Since then the annual consump-| tion of milk per head increased, while the number of processing firms dropped. Guaranteed earn- ings and increased sales permitted | modernization and an extension of control and research to improve! milk. The dairies that were worst | in equipment, capacity, hygiene | and situation were eliminated and | the number of retailers were cut | in two. Near chaos ruled at the end of World War 1. Butter and. cheese prices slumped. Liquid milk was | overloaded on the home market and increasing costs from this competition prevented price reduc- | tion. Too, many units made reasox- | able prices difficult and more and | more were opened. | MUCH DUPLICATION , | "Milk carts belonging up to 20 different firms drove through the | same Copenhagen street to supply | 30 shops, and milk was delivered | on the steps of nearly every block Ww \ different companiespplus a couple | of local shops. It was regarad as "an absurd waste of manpower and foot leather." So rationalization | and concentration were applied, | one case where the state interven- ed helpfully in privat enterpris. Did it hurt the farmer? On the | contrary the cow chewing her cud | in the fields accounts for one-third of all Danish exports. The farmers have constantly striven to develop Is is 7 ~~ A «P SUPER RIGHT MEATS Government Inspected for Your Protection QUALITY PROTECT|ON AT A&P THE BEEF IS THE BEST. iT'S GOVERNMEN GRADED AND STAMPED RED AND BLUE BRANDS -- CANADA'S FINEST. LOOK FOR THESE STAMPS ON YOUR BEEF PUR- Friends . ear! More than anyone else the Store Manager symbolizes A&P and what A&P service stands for. He's there to see you get what you want--and he's there to lis- ten when you have something on your mind. of If you have a question, a sug- gestion, even a criticism, he'll be "all ears"--and he'll do his ut- most to please you. That's part it's the part he likes the most. Customer Relations Dept. Customers' Corner . . he'll lend you his his job. When he can help you A&P FOOD STORES 135 Laughton Ave. | Toronto, Ont, NH CHASES AT A&P AND BE SURE OF THE HIGHEST QUALITY AND PROTECTION. BOILING FOWL OUTSTANDING VALUE - WHY PAY MORE Grade A BACK BACON PEAMEALED By The Piece Ib 49. Centre Cuts or Slices |b 53 » 39: CUSTOM GROUND BOKAR stock with a high average of top quality milk. The Stensby cow re- | cently broke all records with a | year's milk output of 25,754 pounds | milk so rich that it made 1,345] pounds of butter. In proportion to size Denmark is the world's largest supplier of | milk products. In exports its bui-| ter, cheese and condensed milk | powder really count but liquid milk should interest Ontario because one-seventh of all the milk pro- duced is sold that way. As fhe = \ | Smoked Shankless Meaty t ib 45¢ ib 65c Fresh Silverbright SALMON STEAKS Ib 39 ib 45¢ Clover Leaf Sockeye Clover Leaf -- Solid Meat TUNA FISH Catelli Cooked SPAGHETTI Ready Cut Macaroni CREAMETTES Sultana PEANUT BUTTER Plain. Cheese Mild Canadian Guardsman Stokely's Spanish Rice Kraft Large w's tin @8c 7-oz tin 39: 2 15-02. tins &Dc 8-0z pkg 10c 9-0z jar 19. 's pkg 3c Ib 49: 4:0: 29: 2 15-0z tins 3c 2 pkgs 29c COFFEE 96: 19: VALUES AT A:P Tasty Fresh CHRISTIES RITZ Popular Brands CHICKEN HAPDIE Habitant PEA SOUP A&P Choice Pitted RED CHERRIES Aunt Jemima PANCAKE FLOUR Aylmer TOMATO SOUP Southern Cross Flaked TUNA FISH sor oko 1 Qc oz in J Qe 2 502m: 1 Qe 15.02 in 1 Qe oko 1 Qc 20.021in 1 Qe sor in 1 Qe Outstanding Low Price--Why Pay More? Sometimes larger cargoes are landed on the many islands lying off Singapore and hidden in the undergrowth, Motorized junks bring them into Singapore. Even the |from England, instead of going home | left for various parts of Canada to | start new careers. The trawler nam- ed "Boston Swallow" then sailed for the fishing banks on her first trip with a Canadian crew. milk is all disease-free that is an enormous help to the nation. It was the first country t6 clear out bovine tuberculosis. Quantities of good milk are an immense bene- fit to school children, nursing "With living costs so high one has to be careful of expenses even when taking a trip, huge fleet of high-powered, radio ana and searchlight-equipped customs ERECT NEW RANGE L o . IGHT patrol boats cannot put an end 0 Sarnia, Ont. (CP) -- Found to the traffic. |have been undermined by storms a and high water, the range light at Libel Law mothers and invalids. The co-op- erative movement in Denmark fell into step With the great plan; milk companies helped by exacting high requirements from producers as most of them do in Ontario, DEFECTS CHECKED In Copenhagen alone 225 million « That's why the low bus fares appeal to me-- > | have a little extra A to spend on enter- tainment or for some of my shop- ERE Hits Hard In Britain flashing light will also be erected. London (CP)--British Mbel laws are so rigid that even an innocent sentence sometimes results in pen- | alties for newspapers, Labor mem- | ber Tom Driberg told the House of Commons. i Speaking on a bill designed to | revise and clarify existing regula- | tions, Driberg recalled that as a! Journalist he once described a well- | COME ONE, COME ALL TO ANOTHER ROUSING RALLY BY OSHAWA YOUTH FOR CHRIST Geared for Youth, Enjoyed by All known British racehorse trainer as being "equally popular at, Newmar- ket and at White's Club." Newmarket is headquarters of British racing and White's is an exclusive London club. 'For that single sentence," Dri- berg said, 'the newspaper for which I was writing had to pay him quite a substantial sum though it was settled out of court." Driberg said the lawyer in the case claimed the sentence sugges- ted the trainer spent half his time "gadding about in London at ex- pensive clubs." The bill now is in committee stage. It has already passed second reading, { |g Place--Simcoe St. United Church Time--Sat., March 22, 7:45 p.m. EVERYBODY WELCOME | | Talent -- REY. and MRS. RALPH HOBSON of Peterboro in vocal duets THENIUS BOTHA of S. TINY TOMMY WRIGHT, Boy Soloist Speaker--REY. RALPH HOBSON ping while I'm && away. And travel ling by bus these days is really enjoyable." FARES ARE LOW ROUND TRIP (Subject to change) | BOSTON PITTSBURGH ....... 18.95 DETROIT 13.25 Fr NEW YORK . 24.05 3 | Tickets and Information at i 3g Gray Coach Lines 14 Prince St. Dial 3-2241 Africa and his accordion QUAKER OATS 48-0z pkg 33 J PRICES IN EFFECT UNTIL SATURDAY, MARCH 22nd SPINAC Florida SW Fresh Florida TO Yellow Fancy, hand 8 Jumbo oxas Curly Leaf, New Crop elected quality) No. 1 size 9's, No: 1 | PINEAPPLES MONARCH MARGARINE MI Ib 29: @ Hun Page LK BREAD WHITE OR BROWN SLICED 24-02 oy | 5 \l FROZEN FOODS ORANGE JUICE Pasco & 6-0z tins 31: Snow Crop French Cut pkg &9c CAULIFLOWER Snow Crop pkg &8¢ POTATOES Baxter French Fried & pkas 39c Ss HADDOCK * 1b pkg @7c

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